United States v. Lawton

46 U.S. 10, 12 L. Ed. 27, 5 How. 10, 1847 U.S. LEXIS 292
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 18, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 46 U.S. 10 (United States v. Lawton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Lawton, 46 U.S. 10, 12 L. Ed. 27, 5 How. 10, 1847 U.S. LEXIS 292 (1847).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CATRON

delivered the opinion of the court.

We are called on. to ascertain .thé correctness of an opinion and decree pronounced by the Superior Court of East Florida, by which there was confirmed to certain claimants,- through James Darley, a tract of land containing 23,040 acres. The only question proposed to be examined, regards a location of the land by the decree. Darley solicited the governor of East Florida, in 1817, to grant to him in absolute'property six miles square of land, u at the place called Dunn’s lake, upon the river St. John’s” ; and the grant was. made as solicited. This is the entire description. The river .St. John’s is one of the principal waters of East Florida; and a principal object in its geography, and may therefore be judicially noticed, ás -minor objects have been, in our decisions affecting Spanish claims in the same section of country. • The river is of considerable length, and runs through several lakes ; there is no place on the. river, however, known as Dunn’s lake, so far as we are informed, by the proofs or otherwise ; but there is a considerable lake, well known as “ Dunn’s lake,” lybg near the St. John’s ; it is proved to lie east of the river, nearly parallel with it', and about five miles from the river on an average. The lake iá about fifteen miles long, and three or four miles widé. From the description of the. land solicited, it is difficult to say whether the petitioner asked to have it laid off on the river or on the lake, but the purpose for which the grant was made decides the ambiguity of expression. The object was the erection-of machinery for the sawing of lumber, and the advancement of commerce in the province, from the article of lumber ; and therefore the land was solicited to be laid' dff on the river, for the purpose of establishing machinery, to be propelled by water power. Giving the most favorable intendment to the locality described in the petition and grant, still we can only say, .that the grant was for land on the river, opposite tó the Jake ;. and by further indulging a fayor-able construction, *> as. to limit the territory referréd to'within narrower bounds, hold that the' survey should be made on that side of' the; river next the lakh, and between the lake and the river.This-was obviously the view-tafeen, of the matter by the experienced judge of the Superior Court,' and in.which we concur.

. • The St: John’s river in its genéral course of. northeast makes a large bend ,to the west, opposite to the,upper end of the lake, and there passes;through Lake' St. George, and.by.its meanders lies op *27 posite to each end and one side of Dunn’s lake. A copy of the plat filed in die land-office, representing the township surveys of that locality, is in the Record as evidence, from which these facts appear ; and also, that the St. John’s lies opposite. Dunn’s lake, by its various bends, for a distance of some thirty miles. This is ■ the base line, on which the survey might front. Then, again, by the Spanish ordinances existing in Florida and governing such surveys, the front on the river could not exceed one-third of . the longitudinal extension back; nor does the description- of “ six miles square” alter the rule' prescribed by the general law. Sibbald’s case, 10 Peters, 313; United States v. Hanson, 16 Peters, 201. Governed by these rules, .and with this extent of territory before it, the. Superior Court was called on to identify the land granted, and render, a decree. The difficulty lay in finding a point at which to commence the survey : from .the face of the grant this could not be done, and therefore the court sought aid from the following additional circumstances. Ip December, 1817, Geo. Clarke, the surveyor-general of the province, filed a plat and certificate of survey in his office, purporting to have been made of this grant; but no proof was offered to show that any such survey had ever been made by Clarke on the ground, and the Superior Court expresséd its apprehensions that the survey was fictitious, as appears by the opinion found in the1 record ; yet, as it mignt turn out otherwise on search being made on the ground, and aS the survey might reasonably conform to the calls of-the concession, should landmarks be found, a search and resurvey was ordered, and one was, made and returned to the court by Gould, corresponding as near as might be, in the judgment of the surveyor, to the lines laid down on Clarke’s plat, at the upper end of Dunn’s lake. But no line-marks were'found that had been made by Clarke, and his. plat and certificate^ proved to be merely fictitious ; his work not extending beyond what he had done on paper. As no aid could be derived from this source to direct .the surveyor, Gould, when in the field, he resorted to another; it was this. In the spring of 1818, Darley had-employed McHardy, a private surveyor, to lay off the six miles square of land, with the. aid of Darley, and where he was present. They commenced at the head of Dunn’s lake, and run and marked a line about a mile, and then disagreed4 as to the propriety of making the survey as proposed by Darley; for what particular reason does not appear. - This was all that was ever done in the field previous to the time Gould went on the ground, in July, 1843. Gould took with him Pellicier, who assisted McHardy in marking the line in 1818, for the distance of the mile above spoken of; and finding the marks at that point, Gould commenced the survey on which the decree is founded, and laid off the grant in a square form of six miles to each side, fronting on Dunn’s lake, and extending to St. George’s lake, through, which the river St. John’s passes. The survey has no connection with the St. John’s river, further than that *28 at its southwest corner it reaches, to the extent of about one mile, the margin of Late St. George..

In the first place, we are of opinion, that the fictitious plat and-certificate of Clarke can have no influence in fixing the identity of the land granted; nor, secondly, can any consideration be accorded to the line-marks made by McHardy in 1818 ; and, therefore, we are compelled to resort to the.face of the concession for a description that will identify the land granted. .And here, some legal principles interpose themselves for our government; the first of which is, that the. powers of the United States courts are conferred'by acts of Congress, and cannot extend beyond the powers conferred. Previous to the passing of the act of May 26, 1824, conferring the jurisdiction Jon the courts to adjudge incipient titles, such as the. present is, the1,political power could alone finally pass on them, and Congress uniformly did. so. By that act the courts were invested with’the jurisdiction that Congress had previously exercised ; but’ to an extent considerably' limited. The governing rules of adjudication, as • prescribed, aré found in the second section of that act; first, — The courts shall.have full power and authority to hear and determine all questions in said cause relative to the title of the claimant.. Second, the extent, locality, and boundaries of the said claim,” &c. And by the sixth section, on a decree being had; and a copy thereof being served on the surveyor-general of the district, he shall survey the land decreed, for ■ which a patent shall be issued by the President to the claimant.' The “ locality, extent, and boundaries,” the court must find, before it can make an effective decree ; and if these cannot be found, no de'cree can be made: for any specific piece or parcel of land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 U.S. 10, 12 L. Ed. 27, 5 How. 10, 1847 U.S. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lawton-scotus-1847.