Van Ness v. the Bank of the United States

38 U.S. 17, 10 L. Ed. 38, 13 Pet. 17, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 409
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 22, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 38 U.S. 17 (Van Ness v. the Bank of the United States) 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
Van Ness v. the Bank of the United States, 38 U.S. 17, 10 L. Ed. 38, 13 Pet. 17, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 409 (1839).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Taney.

The case is fully stated in the following opinion of the Court, delivered by

This case comes before'the Court upon a writ of error, directed to the judges of the Circuit Court for the District of Columbia, sitting for the county of Washington.

' ft is an. action of ejectment brought by the Bank of the United States, to recover sundry lots of ground in the city of Washington. The declaration contains four demises, purporting to have been made for the same, premises by different lessors. The jury found' for the plaintiff- upon one of -the demises, but said nothing of the other three; and the judgment of'the Court is entered, in like manner, iiport the .particular demise on which the jury found for the plaintiff; and( without taking any notice of the others.

• At the'trial in the Circuit Court/it was admitted that David Burnes was seized in fee of the premises in controversy in his life time, and-thathe died seized thereof, intestate, leaving Marcia Burnes his only child and heiress at law. The plaintiff in the Court, below, then offered in evidence the exemplification of a record from the Court of Chancery of Maryland, duly certified, by which it appeared that a'certain isaac-Pollock, on the 17th of May/1800, filed his bill •in the said Court, against Marcia Burnes, then an infant,in order to obtain the conveyance of-a large number of lots, in the city of Washington, among.which are the lots now in controversy; and claiming the same under’a contract made with David Bumes in his life time, which, had-not been carried into execution .by proper conveyances at the time of his death. It further appeared, by the said record from the Court of Chancery, that after various proceedings in the case, the chancellor, on the 1st of November,.1800, decreed, that upon the ■ complainant’s securing the purchase money to the satisfaction of the chancellor, the infant defendant, Marcia Burnes, should, by William Mayne Duncanson, who had been appointed her guardian ad litem, convey the said lots to Pollock in fee. Afterwards, •further proceedings having been had, the Court,, on the 26th of October, 1801, passed another decree, approving the security which Pollock offered, (which was security on other real property,) and directing that , upon the complainant’s executing mortgages for the said .real property to the said Marcia, to secure the. payment of the purchase money, she should make the conveyance by her guardian, as directed by the former decree: ■’ It is .unnecessary to state more in detail the proceedings in the Maryland Court, because it is admitted that they were fully warranted by the laws of that state. The plaintiff in the Circuit Court offered also in evidence, together with this record, the deeds of mortgage executed by the said Pollock, pursiiant to the aforesaid decree; and. also a deed of conveyance for the said lots from Marcia Bumes to Pollock, executed by William Mayne Duncanson as her guardian.. This deed- is dated *19 January 13, 1802, after Congress had assumed the government of this district. The defendant in the Circuit Court objected to the admissibility and competency of all -the evidence above stated; but the objection was overruled by the Court, and this forms the first exception.

In the further progress of the trial in the Circuit Court, various other deeds were Offered in evidence on the part of the plaintiff, in order to show a title derived from Isaac Pollock; and among the deeds thus offered, was one from Walter Smith to Benjamin Stoddart, dated March 5, 1807, acknowledged before Richard Parrott and Thomas Corcoran. This acknowledgment was dated “ District of Columbia, Washington County, to wit;” but it was not stated in the acknowledgment, nor did it appear by that instrument, that Parrott and Corcoran were justices of the peace for Washington county. In point of fact, however, they were such justices, and it is so admitted in the exception. The defendant objected to the admissibility of this deed; and this forms the substance of the second exception; for although other papers are mentioned as objected to at the time,' the only point raised here is upon the acknowledgment of this deed.

Upon the first exception the plaintiffs in error insist that the deed of conveyance from Marcia Burnes to Pollock, of the 12th of January, 1802, executed by her guardian as .above mentioned, pursuant to the decree of the Maryland Court of Chancery, conveyed no title ; that the sovereignty of Maryland over Washington county, in this .district, having terminated on the 27th of February, lSOf, when Congress assumed the jurisdiction, the decree of the state Court could not be. executed without filing' an exemplification of the record, according, to thé' 13th section of the Act of Congress; which provided for the government of the territory; and obtaining' an order for the execution of' the decree, from the Chancery* Court of. this district.

This objection cannot De sustained. The Act of Assembly of Maryland, of 1791, ch. 45, which ceded the territory to the United States, provided, “ That the jurisdiction of the laws of- the state over the persons and property of individuals residing within the limits of the cession, should not cease or determine until Congress should by law provide for the government thereof under their jurisdiction.” -The United States accepted the cession made by this law of the state; and the conditions above mentioned, therefore, formed a part of the contract between the parties; and consequently, the laws of Maryland, and the jurisdiction of its Courts, continued in full force, until Congress took upon itself the, government of the district:' and as it was uncertain át whát time the United S’tates would' assume the jurisdiction, it must have been foreseen,'that whenever that event should happen.many suits would be foünd pending and undetermined in. the state Courts. It was certainly not the intention of the parties to the;"Session, that sucb suits, should abate* and *20 .that individuals who had rightfully instituted proceedings in the tribunals of the state, and incurred the expen'se and delays which are' unavoidable in .-such cases, shouldimmediately upon the assumption of jurisdiction by the United States, be compelled to abandon the state Courts, and to begin anew in the Courts of the district.. There could be no reason of policy or justice for adopting such a.measure: and without stopping to inquire what, upon general, principles of law, would-be the effect of a cession of territory, upon, suits then pending in the Coürts of the ceding sovereignty, it is. evident that in this case, the state and the United States both intended that the suits then pending in the Maryland tribunals should be proceeded in until the rights of the parties should be finally decided; and that the judgments and decrees there made, should be as valid and conclusivé as if the sovereignty had not been transferred. We have already’stated' the provisions of the Act of Assembly of Maryland; and Congress in • assuming.the jurisdiction recognised-the rights of the state Courts, and by the 13th section of the Act’of February 27th, 1801, placed judgments and decre.es thereafter tó be Obtained in. the state Courts, in suits then pending, upon the same footing with judgments and decrees rendered before.' In either case, upon :filing an exemplification of the proceedings had in-the state Courts, it authorized process of execution from the District Court of the United States, in the same manner as if the judgment or descree had been there rendered.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

River Farms, Inc. v. Superior Court of San Bernardino Cty.
252 Cal. App. 2d 604 (California Court of Appeal, 1967)
In re Universal Storage & Transfer Co.
4 F. Supp. 425 (D. Maryland, 1933)
Hurst & Co. v. Leckie
34 S.E. 464 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1899)
Lockhead v. Berkeley Springs Waterworks & Improvement Co.
21 S.E. 1031 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1895)
Hudson v. Fishel
20 A. 100 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1890)
Thomas C. Basshor & Co. v. Stewart
54 Md. 376 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1880)
Morse v. Hewett
28 Mich. 481 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1874)
Sharp v. Hunter
47 Tenn. 389 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1870)
Gourley v. Hankins
2 Iowa 75 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1855)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 U.S. 17, 10 L. Ed. 38, 13 Pet. 17, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-ness-v-the-bank-of-the-united-states-scotus-1839.