Williams v. Jacob

1 Va. Ch. Dec. 145
CourtVirginia Chancery Court
DecidedMay 15, 1792
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Va. Ch. Dec. 145 (Williams v. Jacob) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Virginia Chancery Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Jacob, 1 Va. Ch. Dec. 145 (Va. Super. Ct. 1792).

Opinion

THE plaintiffs, in right of settlement, clamed the land in controversy, lying in the county Ohio.

[146]*146They stated in their bill that they bad located on this land a military warrant, no proof of the warrant and entry with the surveyor for the purpose of locating it appeareth ; but the grants to them, hereinafter mentioned, are proof of this warrant or of some other legal warrant, because, otherwise, those grants could not regularly have issued.

David Rogers, in 1775, located a military' warrant partly on the lands clamed by the plaintiffs, and at that time in their pos-ssession, and partly on land then clamed by the defendant David Jones, in right of settlement, or in character of agent for the in-diana company, and procured a survey of them, with other lands adjacent, the sum of all which quantities was 1193 acres, to be made and certified by the proper officer.

The plaintiffs exhibited their clames before the special court of commissioners, constituted by statute of may session, 1779, who, on the 19 day of february following, affirmed the right of the plaintiff Joseph Tomlinson ; but do not appear to have given sentence on the dame of the other plaintiff, they postponed it at their first meeting, as he suggested, because the defendent Mary, who clamed the land in controversy by devise in the testament. of David Rogers then dead, did not attend, and they declined any further consideration of it, at a subsequent meeting, because they thought the matter transferred to another tribunal by the caveat after mentioned, but these proceedings before the court of commissioners seem unimportant, unless it be to shew that the plaintiffs persisted in endeavoring to assert the rights which they clamed.

The plaintiff Joseph Tomlinson, however, is supposed to have believed his right secured by the adjudication in affirmance of it by' the court, of commissioners ; for he did not unite with the other plaintiff in a caveat which he entered against emanation of a grant upon the survey made for David Rogers,

The plaintiff Isaac Williams stated, that conn sil was retained and instructed to prosecute the caveat; but 'that subpoenas, which were sent hyT the counsil, for summonning witnesses to support objections against the grant, not having come to him in due time, which is supposed to have happened from the distance between Ohio, the place of his residence, and Richmond, where the eounsil resided, the caveat was dismissed.

After dismission of the caveat, a grant to the defeudents John Jeremiah Jacob and Mary his wife of the land surveyed for David Rogers, dated the first day of april, 1781, passed the seal.

The plaintiffs obtained grants also of the lands which they clamed, but the operation of those grants, as conveyances of legal titles, the dates of them being, one iu 1785, and two oth-[147]*147erg m 1787, was Hindered by the anterior grant to John Jeremiah Jacob and Mary his wife.

To remove this impediment to the benefit of their grants the plaintiffs filed their bill in the high court of chancery praying that those defendents might be decreed to convey to the plaintiffs so much as they claimed of the lands granted to the representatives of David Rogers.

The defendents John Jermiah Jacob and Mary bis wife, by their answer insisting that David Rogers had the right, by settlement, prior to the settlements, in virtue of which the plaintiffs claimed, said they had sold their right to David Jones, and required that he should be cited to defend it.

Before this answer, to which oath "was made in november, 1789, was filed, David Jones was no party to the suit, and for some time instead of claiming any title derived from the representatives of David Rogers, had confederated with the plaintiffs in opposition to that title, which was adverse to his own right by settlement, or derived from the indiana company, stated before, but his purchase of that title since from the other defendents did neither vitiate his present right, because he was not tjpnnd, by any general praeeept of'justice, or by a particular com pact, to admit the plaintiffs to participation of the benefits of the purchase, nor render his title to the litigated lands better than the title of those from whom he purchased, because he had notice of the dames which the plaintiffs at that time were endeavouring to assert, and never had abandoned.

The plaintiffs apprised of the purchase by David Jones, finding that thereby, from a syntagonist with them, he was become the only party against whom they must finaly have redress, and whose changes of sides, they seem improperly to have thought a perfidious tergiversation, filed a bill against him. if he were a lite pendente purchaser, this bill was unnecessary, because, without being made a party, he would have been made subject to a decree against the other defendents.

Great part of the answer to this bill by the defendent David Jones is the history of his procedings in the character of agent for the indiana company, which is unimportant; for he did not state that he derived his title from the company, nor explane what their title was. in the remaining part of the answer he chiefly relied upon the priority of settlement by men from whom David Rogers claimed.

By the examinations of witnesses which, although taken before David Jones was made a defendent, might regularly be [148]*148read against him, if he were, as he is presumed

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Bluebook (online)
1 Va. Ch. Dec. 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-jacob-vachanct-1792.