The first survey, under a military land warrant in Virginia,
gives the prior equity. The survey is the act of appropriation.
The certificate of survey is sufficient evidence that the
warrant was in the hands of the surveyors.
That clause of the land law of Virginia which requires every
survey to be recorded within two months after it is made is merely
directory to the surveyor, and his neglect to record it does not
invalidate the survey.
It is not necessary that the deputy surveyor who made the survey
should make out the plat and certify it. It may be done from his
notes by the principal surveyor.
A subsequent locator of land in Virginia, without notice of the
prior location, cannot protect himself by obtaining the elder
patent. A survey is not void because it includes more land than was
directed to be surveyed by the warrant.
The patent relates to the inception of title, and therefore, in
a court of equity, the person who has first appropriated the land
has the best title unless his equity is impaired by the
circumstances of the case.
The locator of a warrant undertakes himself to find waste and
unappropriated land, and his patent issues upon his own information
to the government, and at his own risk. He cannot be considered as
a purchaser without notice.
The equity of the prior locator extends to the surplus land
surveyed, as well as to the quantity mentioned in the warrant.
Error to the District Court for the Kentucky District in a suit
in chancery wherein Taylor and Quarles were complainants against
Brown. The bill of the complainants was dismissed by the court
below.
Both parties claimed under military warrants upon the King's
proclamation for services rendered prior to the year 1763.
The complainants claimed under a warrant in favor of Angus
McDonald for 2,000 acres issued
Page 9 U. S. 235
5 February, 1774. The defendant claimed under a warrant in favor
of Jethro Sumner for 2,000 acres, issued 3 December, 1773.
McDonald's survey was made on 7 July, 1774. Sumner's was made on 24
June, 1775, and he obtained a patent on 5 January, 1780. The patent
upon McDonald's survey, was not issued until 10 January, 1792, so
that the complainants had a younger warrant and patent, but the
elder survey. The defendant had the elder warrant and patent but
the younger survey. McDonald's survey included 3,025 acres;
Sumner's included, 2,576 acres. The quantity covered by both
surveys was 1,080 acres, of which Taylor claimed 660 and Quarles
200; it did not appear who claimed the other 220 acres included in
the interference.
McDonald's survey was made by Hancock Taylor, an assistant
surveyor of Fincastle County, where the lands lay, who, before his
return to the office, was killed by the Indians on the last of
July, 1774, but his field books and papers were preserved by his
attendants and delivered to the principal surveyor of the county in
September, 1774, who made out a plat therefrom.
The complainants' bill charges, that the survey of Sumner was
fraudulently made, so as to interfere with McDonald's. The answer
denies the fraud, and there was no evidence of fraud or even of
notice on the part of Sumner.
Page 9 U. S. 241
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the
Court.
In this case the title of both parties originates in surveys
made by the surveyor of Fincastle County previous to the passage of
the land law of Virginia. Both surveys were made on military
warrants issued under the proclamation of 1763. The survey under
which the plaintiffs claim being prior in point of time, they have
the first equitable title, and must prevail unless the objections
made to that survey be valid or unless their equity is defeated by
the circumstances of the case.
Several objections have been made to the survey, each of which
will be considered.
1. It is said that the warrant was not in possession of the
principal survey or when the survey was made.
Page 9 U. S. 242
The answer given to this objection is conclusive. The warrant is
an authority to, and an injunction on, the surveyor to lay off
2,000 acres of vacant land which had not been surveyed by order of
council, and patented subsequent to the proclamation. Whether acts
under this authority are valid or void if the authority itself be
not in possession of the officer is perfectly unimportant in this
case, because the Court considers the certificate of the surveyor
as sufficient evidence that the warrant was in his possession if in
point of law it was necessary that it should be lodged in the
office. That certificate is in the usual form, and states the
survey to have been made by virtue of the governor's warrant, and
agreeably to His Majesty's royal proclamation.
2. The second objection is that the survey does not appear to
have been recorded within two months after it was made.
The opinion that this omission on the part of the surveyor
avoids the title which accrued under the survey is founded on the
6th section of an act passed in the year 1748 entitled "An act
directing the duty of surveyors of land." In prescribing this duty,
the law, among other things, enjoins the surveyor
"to enter or cause to be entered in a book well bound, to be
ordered and provided by the court of his county, a true, correct
and fair copy and plat of every survey by him made during his
continuance in office within two months after making the same."
This section is merely directory to the surveyor. It does not
make the validity of the survey dependent on its being recorded,
nor does it give the proprietor any right to control the conduct of
the surveyor in this respect. His title, where it can commence
without an entry, begins with the survey, and it would be
unreasonable to deprive him of that title by the subsequent neglect
of an officer, not appointed by himself, in not performing an act
which the law does not pronounce necessary to his title,
Page 9 U. S. 243
the performance of which he has not the means of coercing.
If the omission to record the survey in two months would avoid
it, then the omission of any other act enjoined by the same section
would equally avoid it. The surveyor is directed to see the land
"plainly bounded by natural bounds, or marked trees." Has his
conforming to this direction ever been inquired into, in a contest
respecting the validity of a survey? Would any gentleman of the bar
contend that the land was not plainly bounded, and that for this
reason a survey actually made was void? He is, within five months,
to deliver to his employer a plat and certificate. Suppose six
months should elapse before he complies with this duty -- is the
survey void? He is to certify the true quantity of land contained
in the survey. Would the gentlemen from Kentucky be willing to
adopt it as a principle that every survey expressing a quantity
more or less than the true quantity is absolutely void? He is to
state the watercourses and also the plantations next adjoining.
Should any one of these be omitted, is the survey void? He is to
return a list of surveys in the month of June annually to the
clerk's office. Should he fail in this, are the surveys void? On
these points it is impossible seriously to insist, and the Court
can perceive no distinction between them. They are all merely
directory to the officer, and none of them affects a title which
commenced before they are to be performed. He is subjected to a
penalty for failing in any one of these duties, but his performing
or omitting them is unimportant to the rights of those for whom
surveys have been made.
3. The third objection is of more weight. It is that the survey
must be certified by the person who made it, and can be
authenticated in no other manner.
That in point of fact this survey was certified as made is not
doubted. But it is said that the
Page 9 U. S. 244
plat and certificate want those appropriate forms which alone
the law will receive as evidence of their verity.
The survey was made by Hancock Taylor, assistant surveyor of
Fincastle County, from whose field notes the plat and certificate
were made out by his principal, who also signed them. Hancock
Taylor was prevented from performing this duty by a mortal wound
received from the Indians. It is understood to be usual for the
assistant, where surveys are actually made by him, to sign the plat
and certificate, which are also signed by his principal.
The 46th section of the act, "for settling the titles and bounds
of lands, and for preventing unlawful hunting and ranging," enacts
"that every survey of lands intended to be patented shall be made
and returned by a sworn surveyor duly commissioned for that
purpose."
Let us inquire whether, under this section, the plat and
certificate must be made out by the person who made the survey, and
whether a survey actually made by an assistant must be plated and
certified by him.
It may be of some importance in the construction of this section
to inquire whether the return alluded to is to the office of the
principal surveyor, or to the land office, out of which the patent
is to issue.
In construing this section, the accompanying sections afford us
no aid. But the general object of the act, and the allusion to
patenting which is made in the section, would lead to the opinion
that returns to the land office were in contemplation of the
legislature. If we examine the laws generally, we shall find that
most usually the word "surveyor" is applied to the principal, and
where the law alludes to the assistant, he is designated by the
term "assistant surveyor." If the return directed by this section
is to be made to the land office for the purpose
Page 9 U. S. 245
of obtaining a patent, then the principal surveyor is the person
who is to certify it, and a survey actually run by himself or by
his assistant is to be considered in law as a survey made by
himself. It is believed to be most usual for the plat and
certificate returned to the land office to be signed by the
principal and by his assistant, but this section seems not to
require both. The signature of the assistant is the justification
to the principal for recording and certifying the survey, and is
the best testimony that it has been made; but the law does not
require in terms that where that best testimony is unattainable, no
other shall be received. So far as the section which has been
recited goes, the signature of the principal surveyor sufficiently
authenticated this plat and that a patent has issued upon it is
proof that such was the opinion entertained in the land office. A
patent certainly does not issue of course unless the papers on
which it issues be regular. A plat not legally authenticated is no
plat, and the register cannot justify issuing a patent on it.
This consideration certainly deserves some weight, but if the
Court inspects this section, it seems in fair construction to
require only the signature of the principal surveyor, who
consequently judges in the first instance of the testimony which
will enable him to certify a survey. If the signature of the
assistant can be dispensed with, then other testimony than his
signature may authorize the principal to certify a survey, and if
in any possible case other testimony can be deemed competent, it
surely may in this.
If the return directed by this section be understood to be a
return to the office of the principal surveyor, it is necessary to
inquire what it is that the section exacts. It is that the "survey
shall be made and returned by a sworn surveyor," not that the plat
shall be made out and certified to the principal by the assistant
who run the lines. The courses and distances contained in the field
book of the assistant represent to the principal as correctly
Page 9 U. S. 246
and as intelligibly the survey actually made as the plat and
certificate could do. From these data he is as capable of placing
on his record book a correct plat, and of returning that plat to
the land office, as if the lines of the survey had been placed on
paper by the assistant himself. It would seem reasonable,
therefore, even on this construction of the section, in the actual
case where death has disabled the assistant from plating his works,
to consider the law as satisfied by the delivery of those works to
the principal surveyor.
The "act directing the duty of surveyors of land" does not
appear to this Court to contain any provisions which are opposed to
the construction here made of the preceding act of the same
session. The 6th section of that act, which has been particularly
referred to by counsel, prescribes the duty of surveyors, but
contains no direction respecting the signature of plats and
certificates except this:
"Every surveyor making a survey of land shall see the same
plainly bounded by natural bounds or marked trees, and within five
months after survey shall deliver to his employer a plat and
certificate thereof."
It has never been understood that this plat and certificate may
not be delivered by the principal, and other parts of this section
show that the duties enjoined are some of them to be performed by
the principal. The section proceeds to say
"and shall also enter or cause to be entered in a book well
bound, to be provided by the court of his county, a true, correct,
and fair copy and plat of every survey by him made."
Now this book is the book of the principal. It is, of course,
his duty to superintend the entries in it. They are to be "of the
surveys by him made." The survey made by the assistant is then to
be entered by the principal as a survey by him made. He is also to
return annually a list of the surveys by him made to the county
court clerk's office. This return is made by the principal.
Certainly the list must include all the surveys made by
Page 9 U. S. 247
his assistants. They also are considered as made by him. Upon a
view of the whole section, the Court perceives nothing in it which
renders it improper for the principal to plat and certify a survey
made by his assistant whose field notes are returned complete to
him and who has been disabled by death from making the plat
himself.
This construction is very much strengthened by the terms of the
act of 1779. That act declares
"That all surveys of waste and unappropriated land made upon any
of the western waters before 1 January, 1778 . . . by any county
surveyor commissioned by the masters of William and Mary College,
acting in conformity to the laws and rules of government then in
force and founded either upon charter, . . . or upon any warrant
from the governor for the time being, for military service, in
virtue of a proclamation either from the King of Great Britain or
any former Governor of Virginia shall be and are hereby declared
good and valid, but that all surveys of waste and unpatented lands
made by any other person or upon any other pretense whatsoever
shall be and are hereby declared null and void."
Notwithstanding this declaration, we find that patents have
actually issued under which both parties in this cause claim on
surveys made not by the county surveyor in person, but by his
assistant. It is perfectly well known that a great proportion of
the surveys recognized by this act have been really executed by
assistant surveyors. Upon what principle of construction are they
brought within the act? Clearly upon this -- the law, so far as
respects the validity of the survey, considers the act of the
deputy as the act of his principal. A survey made by an assistant
is, in law language, made by the principal. And if this idea be
taken up on so material a clause as that which confirms or
invalidates every survey previously made and which is expressed in
terms much more explicit and decisive than any of the clauses in
the preceding acts, must
Page 9 U. S. 248
not the idea be carried throughout? Must not the survey in all
cases be considered in a legal point of view as made by the
principal through the agency of his deputy, and must not this
principal be kept in view in construing the laws upon the
subject?
This survey, then, is, in law language, made by William Preston.
It is confirmed as a survey made by him. The law recognizes it as
his survey. Assuredly, then, his certificate may authenticate
it.
The act proceeds to say that
"All and every person or persons, his, her or their heirs,
claiming lands upon any of the before recited rights, and under
surveys made as hereinbefore mentioned [that is, by a county
surveyor] against which no caveat shall have been legally entered
shall, upon the plats and certificates of such surveys being
returned into the land office, together with the rights, &c.,
upon which they were respectively founded, be entitled to a grant
for the same."
To the Court it seems clear that the law authorizes a plat and
certificate of survey from the person whom it contemplates as the
maker of that survey -- that is, from the county surveyor. The
formal requisites of the law are complied with by a plat and
certificate under his signature. He has given it, in this case, on
testimony which the Court deems as full and complete as even the
plat certified by the assistant who made the survey would have
been.
These are the objections which have been made to the survey
under which the plaintiffs claim. After bestowing on them the
utmost attention, the Court is decidedly of opinion that the survey
of McDonald was and ought to be considered as a good and valid
survey.
4. The 4th objection to the plaintiffs' claim is founded on
their negligence.
Page 9 U. S. 249
At law this objection is clearly of no validity. The proviso to
that section of the act of 1779, which has been considered,
declares that such surveys shall be returned to the land office
within twelve months after the expiration of that session of
assembly or should become void. The time for returning them,
however, was prolonged until this patent issued. Consequently a
caveat to prevent the emanation of the patent because the survey
was not returned in time could not have been maintained. If the
survey of McDonald came within the law, the circumstance that the
subsequent survey of Sumner was made without notice in fact cannot
alter the case. His warrant only authorized him to acquire vacant
land, and he took upon himself to find lands of that description.
The principle
caveat emptor is directly applicable.
5. The 5th objection made by the defendant is that the patent of
the plaintiffs contains surplus land. The warrant, it is said, was
an authority to survey only 2,000 acres, and for the surplus the
survey was made without authority.
It is a fact of universal notoriety in Virginia not only that
the old military surveys but that the old patents of that country
generally contain a greater quantity of land than the patents call
for. The ancient law of Virginia notices this fact and provides for
the case. It prescribes the manner in which this surplus may be
acquired by other persons, and it is worthy of notice that the
patentee must himself reject the surplus before it can be acquired
by another, and after having so rejected it, he has the election to
allot it in such part of his patent as he pleases.
It is contended, however, that although a grant containing
surplus land might give a legal right to such surplus yet a survey
could not be carried into grant so far as such surplus appeared
upon a caveat.
Page 9 U. S. 250
On this subject we find no act of Virginia under the regal
government. At that time, the governor and council constituted a
branch of the legislature and the general court of the colony. They
also held a distinct court in the council chamber for the trial of
caveats, their decisions on which were regulated by rules
established by themselves. These rules, it is believed, are lost,
and it is also believed that the means of ascertaining
satisfactorily what they were are no longer attainable. The land
law of 1779 was framed by men who understood them, and it is not
unreasonable to suppose that in drawing that law, some respect was
paid to them. That law gives a caveat against a survey not returned
to the land office within twelve months after it is made, or whose
breadth shall not be one-third of its length, but gives no caveat
on account of surplus land contained in a survey, nor does it
indicate the idea that on a survey containing such surplus, a
caveat could not be supported. If such survey is not absolutely
void for the whole, the difficulty of assigning the exact quantity
is sufficient to have induced legislative regulation, had it been
contemplated as the subject of a caveat. It would seem that for
security in this respect, the government trusted to the oaths
prescribed for surveyors and chain carriers. It is also worthy of
remark that the law of 1779 superadds to the restrictions formerly
imposed on taking up surplus lands contained in any patent, that it
can only be done during the life of the original patentee and
before any alienation has been made.
It is also to be observed that the act of 1779 confirms this
survey, and it is understood that no previous entry was deemed
necessary to its validity. The entries made on Treasury warrants
are most frequently in such terms that a survey for a greater
quantity of land might be considered as being so far contrary to
location, and might be restrained by the location; but where there
is no entry, the difficulty of restraining the survey is much
increased because there exists no standard by which to reduce it.
There is indeed a standard as to quantity, but
Page 9 U. S. 251
not as to form and place. The survey is an appropriation of a
certain quantity of land by metes and bounds, plainly marked by an
officer appointed by the government for that purpose, and it would
seem that the government receives his plat and certificate as full
evidence of the correctness of the survey. This being the case, it
is admitted by the government to be an appropriation of the land it
covers, and it is difficult to discern a rule by which the survey
could be reduced on a caveat by the owner of an interfering survey
unless the entry on which it was made was in such terms that the
excess might be considered as surveyed contrary to location. For to
every and to each part of the land surveyed its owner has an equal
right.
Whatever rules might have been established in the tribunal
having jurisdiction of the subject under the regal government, the
caveat in this cause, had one been entered, must have been
regulated by the act of 1779. That act gives validity to both
surveys, and although it directs caveats depending in the council
chamber, at the commencement of the Revolution, to be transferred
to the general court and to be tried by the rules which governed
when they were entered, it subjects future caveats to the law then
introduced. Under this law, as has already been stated, the Court
can perceive but one principle on which a survey can be reduced on
a caveat, and that principle is inapplicable to this case.
In conformity with this opinion is that of the judges of
Kentucky. Not a case exists, so far as the Court is informed, in
which, on a caveat, the quantity of land in the survey of plaintiff
or defendant has been considered as affecting the title upon the
single principle of surplus. Yet the fact must have often occurred.
And in the case of
Beckly v. Bryan and Ransdale, the
contrary principle is expressly laid down. In that cause, the court
said
"It is proper to premise that there is but one species of cases
in which any court of justice is authorized by our land law to
divest the owner of a survey
Page 9 U. S. 252
of the surplus included within its boundaries -- namely where
the survey was made posterior to an entry made by another person on
the same land; and to do more would be unequal and unjust inasmuch
as a survey which is too small cannot be enlarged."
This position, it is true, was laid down in a contest between a
military survey and a patent on a Treasury warrant. But it is laid
down in terms equally applicable to a contest between two military
surveys, and the Court does not understand that the law has ever
been otherwise understood in Kentucky.
The opinions delivered by the judges of appeals of Virginia in
the case of
Johnson v. Buffington, 2 Wash. 116, would
incline this Court very much to the opinion that the same rule
prevailed in the council chamber before the Revolution. In that
case, under a warrant from Lord Fairfax for 300 acres of land, 450
acres had been surveyed, and the excess appeared on the plat. This
survey had lain in the office many years, and was clearly
forfeitable, but Lord Fairfax had not taken advantage of the
forfeiture. After his death, a patent issued on a subsequent entry
and survey, and the patentee was decreed to convey to the person
claiming under the prior entry. In delivering his opinion, Judge
Fleming said
"The first objection made by the counsel for the appellant is
that the survey does not pursue the warrant; but I think there is
no weight in this, as the variance is only in the quantity. If the
land had been imperfectly described, it might have been fatal."
Judge Carrington said "He did not consider the variance between
the warrant and survey, as to the quantity, as being of any
consequence."
The president, who had been an eminent practitioner in the
council chamber, said "He felt no
Page 9 U. S. 253
difficulty about the variance in the quantity of the land."
The rules established by Lord Fairfax were known to conform to
those of the Crown, and the declarations of the judges in this
case, all of whom were acquainted in some degree with the usages
under the regal government, make a strong impression on this Court
in favor of the opinion that in the council chamber, the law was
understood to be that excess in the survey was not to be
regarded.
The law of this case, then, so far as respects the state of
title previous to the emanation of either grant, appears to be with
the first survey. It remains to inquire whether a court of equity
will relieve against the legal title acquired by the first
grant.
The principle on which relief is granted is that the patent,
which is the consummation of title, does, in equity, relate to the
inception of title, and therefore, in a court of equity, the person
who has first appropriated the land in contest has the best title
unless his equity is impaired by the circumstances of the case.
In this cause, the first patentee is said to be a purchaser
without notice. But, for the reasons assigned in a former part of
this opinion, the Court does not consider him as clothed with that
character. His warrant authorizes him to survey waste and
unappropriated lands, and he undertakes himself to find lands of
that description. The government acts entirely on his information,
and the terms of his grant are that the lands were waste and
unappropriated. It is not for him to say that he had misinformed
the government, and had surveyed appropriated instead of vacant
lands, and had thereby entitled himself to be considered as a
purchaser without notice.
Neither does the Court conceive that the plaintiffs
Page 9 U. S. 254
have forfeited their right to come into a court or equity by
their negligence.
In the case of 1 Wash. 116, the prior right of the plaintiff had
been absolutely forfeited, so that the defendant had the first
title both in equity and law, and the plaintiff's bill was
dismissed because he failed to prove the fraud which he alleged and
which was, in that case, necessary to give the court
jurisdiction.
In the cases of
Picket v. Dowdale and of
Currie v.
Burns, there were both forfeiture and abandonment.
In the case of
Johnson v. Brown, 3 Call. 259, more than
sufficient time had elapsed between the entry and survey of the
plaintiff to produce a forfeiture, but, by the old law, notice was
to be given by the surveyor before a forfeiture could take place,
and this fact was not proved. During forty years this entry had
been totally neglected, and the court was of opinion that after
such a lapse of time, the fact of notice by the surveyor might be
presumed. This case then also turned on the principle of
forfeiture. There were, besides, a great many circumstances in
Johnson's title which gave a strong bias to the judgment of the
court.
The difference between the case under consideration and those
cited is apparent. But the case of
Johnson v. Buffington
was much stronger than this. The prior survey was actually
forfeitable, but had not been forfeited, and in that case, after a
much longer time than exists in the present, a court of equity
supported it against the eldest grant.
The general principles which have been relied on in this branch
of the argument cannot be considered as applicable to a case in
which the act, which constitutes the foundation of the charge of
negligence, was performed within the time allowed by statute
Page 9 U. S. 255
for its performance. The circumstances which excused the owners
of military surveys for not returning them were before the
legislature and have been declared by law to be sufficient.
But it is contended that the plaintiffs can have no equity
beyond the 2,000 acres contained in the warrant on which McDonald's
survey was made.
If this Court is to consider itself as merely substituted for a
court of law, with no other difference than the power of going
beyond the patent, this question is already decided. But in the
case of
Bodley and Hughes v. Taylor, an opinion was
indicated that its jurisdiction, not being given by statute, but
assumed by itself, must be exercised upon the known principles of
equity. This opinion is still thought perfectly correct in itself.
Its application to particular cases, and indeed its being
considered as a rule of decision on Kentucky titles, will depend
very much on the decisions of that country. For in questions
respecting title to real estate especially, the same rule ought
certainly to prevail in both courts.
But in its equity, this case differs essentially from
Bodley
and Hughes v. Taylor. In that case, Taylor had the eldest
entry as well as the eldest patent. In this, the eldest equitable
right is with him who holds the eldest [
quaere: youngest?]
grant. In that case, the variance between the entry and survey of
the elder right is established by a set of rules growing out of
expositions subsequent to the survey. In this, the eldest grant is
founded on a survey made on land which, in point of fact, was
previously appropriated. But, which is of great importance, in that
case, the terms of the subsequent location prove that the locator
considered himself as comprehending Taylor's previous entry within
his location, and consequently did not suppose so much of the land
covered by his entry as being then subject to appropriation.
Page 9 U. S. 256
He either did not mean to acquire the land within Taylor's entry
or he is to be considered as a man watching for the accidental
mistakes of others, and preparing to take advantage of them. What
is gained at law by a person of this description equity will not
take from him, but it does not follow that equity will aid his
views and give more than the law gives him by allowing him to hold
what he has legally gained, while he demands what is legally
lost.
In this case, McDonald supposed himself to be appropriating, and
in fact was appropriating, land to which no other had at the time
any pretensions.
In addition to these strong differences in equity between the
two cases, no decision of Kentucky was shown to the Court which was
applicable to the case of
Bodley and Hughes v. Taylor. But
the case of
Beckly v. Bryan and Rausdale is conceived to
be an authority in point for this case. The decision of the Court
of Appeals of Virginia in the case of
Buffington v.
Johnson is also considered as expressly in point, and is to be
respected because both these surveys were made while the country in
which they were made formed a part of Virginia.
It is thought not absolutely unimportant in a court of equity
that one of the circumstances has occurred which at law rescues the
surplus land in McDonald's patent from the possibility of being
acquired by any other person. An alienation has taken place. The
decree, therefore, of the Court for the District of Kentucky is to
be
Reversed, and the defendant must be decreed to release to
the plaintiffs, respectively, the lands within Sumner's patent
which lie within the lines of the land conveyed by McDonald's heirs
to them respectively.