White v. Nicholson

48 Ky. 268, 9 B. Mon. 268, 1848 Ky. LEXIS 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 30, 1848
StatusPublished

This text of 48 Ky. 268 (White v. Nicholson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Nicholson, 48 Ky. 268, 9 B. Mon. 268, 1848 Ky. LEXIS 64 (Ky. Ct. App. 1848).

Opinion

Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This writ of error is prosecuted to reverse a judgment against White, as defendant in an action of ejectment. On the trial the plaintiff read a patent to the lessor, Nicholson, bearing date “the 27th day of Feby., in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fourteen, and of the Commonwealth, the twenty second,” purporting to be issued in virtue and in consideration of part ofaremoved certificate, No. 1408, alias 1399, (the State price paid without interest,) granted by the County Court of Warren, in July, 1815, agreeably to an act of Assembly, for settling and improving the vacant lands of this Commonwealth. The patent grants 200 acres of land in the county of Clay, by survey bearing date in 1810. And it was admitted that the defendant was in possession within its boundary, at the commencement of this action.

The defendant read a settlement certificate for 400 acres, bearing date in 1803, and granted by the County Court of Madison county, to James Heve -, and it was admitted that in 1806, a survey had been -made on said certificate, covering the land now in contest — that the defendant had been in actual possession of the land within the interference, for ten years prior to the institution of this suit, without any house on it, “but cleared and under fence,” holding and claiming under the said certificate; and that he and those under whom he claims, have had actual possession of land within the survey for thirty years, and that at the date of the certificate Clay county was a part of Madison. The case was submitted to the Court instead of a jury. And a judgment having been rendered for the plaintiff, and a motion for a new trial overruled, the case is presented [269]*269to this Court, mainly upon the objection that the patent is void, and should have been so held by the Court below. The ground chiefly relied on in support of this objection, is that the patent shows upon its face that it is illegal, inasmuch as the alleged consideration on which it was founded, was itself wholly illegal and void. And that the patent being thus illegal on its face, may, and should, on the authority of the case of Bledsoe’s dev’s. vs Wells, (4 Bibb, 329,) be declared void even in this collateral proceeding. But before any question can arise as to the correctness of this conclusion, the premises on which it rests must be established. In support of these premises, it is contended — first, that in 1812, an act was passed, prohibiting the entry and survey of any certificate, original or removed, in-any other county than that in which it was issued, or others formed out of it after the date of the certificate: (Stat. Law, 971.) And second, that as early as 1806, the power of granting certificates of removal was taken away from the County Courts, and vested in the Circuit Courts of the counties in which the land may lie, and for two years only: (Stat. Law, 759.) And third, that the several County Courts had no power, under the act of 1800, (Stat. Law, 941,) which first gave them authority on the subject, to issue a settlement certificate, except for lands within their own county, and had no power under the act of 1804, (Stat. Law, 951,) which alone gave them authority with respect to the withdrawal or removal of certificates, to authorize the location of any removed certificate, except in the county in which it was originally issued, that is in their own county.

The court will not presume on account of a date of a remo-1 val of a certificate for heads right land given in a patent that the court acted when it had no authority to grant removal, & declare a patent void.

. The argument in support of the two first of these grounds, assumes that the certificate in virtue of which the patent issued, was granted, or at any rate, removed in 1815, as stated in the patent. But that this date is a mistake either in the original patent, or in the copy used on the trial or in transcript before us, is evident from the fact that the patent itself was issued in the year 1814. And as the date of the patent is written out in words, referring to two epochs, and the date given to the certificate is in figures only, it may be assumed that [270]*270the mistake is in the recited date of the certificate, rather than in tiie date of the patent itself. The fact insisted on, that in 1815 there was no power to grant such certificate, or to authorize the removal of one previously granted, corroborates the conclusion that the mistake is in the date given to'the certificate, as upon the face of the patent it is manifest that the date of the certificate is not correctly stated,.hut that it was issued and removed at a period antecedent to the date of the patent, the recited date furnished no means of testing the legality of the certificate or of its removal. And as there should be no presumption that either of these acts was done either by the County or Circuit Court after their respective powers had ceased under the law, it cannot be said that the patent on its face shows that it was illegal on either of the two first grounds. If the patent had wholly omitted the date of the certificate, or left a blank for it which had never been filled up, the presumption should be, (at any rate in this collateral proceeding,) that the certificate had been issued and removed by a tribunal authorized to do these acts, if any was so authorized, and at a time when they might be legally done. And if the mistake may be corrected by conjecture, then as it should be assumed that the certificate was removed before the date of the survey in September, 1810, and while there was a legal authority to remove it; and as it may be presumed to have been granted so long before the removal as to have allowed the grantee an opportunity of ascertaining that he had by mistake located it on a military or other previous claim, or so long that lie may have been evicted from his original location in the interval, then by taking as much of the recited date as would accord with these .presumptions, the inference is that the certificate was granted in 1805, and that in reciting the. date, the figure 1 has been placed before the figure 5, when it should have been a nought. And the date of the withdrawal, or removal of the certificate not being staled, the presumption is that it was legally authorized.

A county court ted in the county where it was granted, when withdrawn in the same county, might be re-located in any othej county.

[270]*270There is no doubt that the inconsistency of the two dates on the face of the patent, authorizes 1 he rejection [271]*271or correction of one of them by construction, if there be enough apparent in the instrument to determine which should be rejected, or to supply a correction of an apparent mistake. And under any construction authorized by this principle, the patent does not upon its face show a violation either of the act of 1812, or that of 1806, above referred to.

The third ground of alleged illegality m the patent, presents the question whether under the act of 1804, which authorizes the withdrawal of certificates located on a militrry or other appropriated lands, and their location upon other lands, a certificate issued by the County Court of Warren county, could after such withdrawal, be located upon land in the county of Clay, which as wo judicially know, never was a part of the county'of Warren. The second section of the act referred to, (S'tat. Law,

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Related

Bledsoe's devisees v. Wells
7 Ky. 329 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1816)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 Ky. 268, 9 B. Mon. 268, 1848 Ky. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-nicholson-kyctapp-1848.