In Pennsylvania, a warrant and survey and payment of the
purchase money confer a legal estate as against all but the
Commonwealth, together with a legal right of entry which will
support ejectment, and this action of ejectment may be maintained
by the owner who paid the purchase money, without any conveyance
from the person in whose name the application was made and the
warrant issued.
The plaintiff in an action of ejectment in Pennsylvania, to
prove title, offered in evidence certified copies of (1) an
application numbered 12,969, in the names of six separate persons
for six separate tracts of four hundred acres each, adjoining lands
of A; (2) of old purchase voucher, dated November 26, 1793, also
numbered 12,969, in the same names, with like quantities of land
also adjoining lands of A; (3) of old purchase blotter dated June
14, 1794, also numbered 18,969 at the side of which were
Page 120 U. S. 465
written the words: "A gen'l rec't wrote" and in the body of
which, after the number and date and the name of A, were the words
"6 W'r'ts of 400 a's Am't, 2400 a's 50s p. c't p'd specie ch.
�60 ==. Fees 60s p'd, rem'r charge of 168 D's. Rec't d'd."
Held, (1) that these documents were competent evidence to
prove the payment of the money and by whom it was paid; (2) that
the money for the six tracts was all paid in full by A; (3) that he
was the owner of the warrant by virtue thereof; (4) that
notwithstanding the differences between the date of the application
and warrant (November 26, 1793), and the date of the receipt of the
purchase money (June 14, 1794), the issue of the warrant was, in
view of the settled practice in Pennsylvania, evidence of the
payment of the purchase money sufficient to establish
prima
facie a legal title in A, which was not liable to be overcome
by a subsequent patent from the commonwealth purporting on its
face, but not otherwise proved, to be connected with the warrant
and survey, and under which no claim of title had been asserted for
more than seventy-five years.
When the Orphans' Court in Pennsylvania has jurisdiction of a
subject matter, its orders, judgments, and decrees therein cannot
be impeached collaterally.
The plaintiff in ejectment in Pennsylvania having proved title
to the premises by establishing a warrant and survey and payment of
the purchase money perfected by return of the deputy surveyor into
the land office, evidence on the part of the defendant of a
subsequent patent from the commonwealth, with no proof of its
connection with the warrant and survey except recitals to that
effect in it is inadmissible.
Ejectment. Plea, the general issue. Judgment for plaintiff.
Defendant sued out this writ of error. The case is stated in the
opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action of ejectment, brought by the defendants in
error in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western
District of Pennsylvania, to recover possession of a tract of land
situated in Northumberland and Columbia counties containing about
230 acres. There was a
Page 120 U. S. 466
verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiffs below, to
reverse which this writ of error is brought.
Both parties claim title under the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
It appears from the bills of exception taken during the progress of
the trial that the plaintiffs put in evidence a certified copy of a
document, called an application, No. 12,969, as follows:
"William Elliott applies for four hundred acres of land on a
branch of Roaring Creek, adjoining Dr. Thomas Ruston's lands, in
Catawissa Township, Northumberland County."
"Joseph Tyson applies for four hundred acres of land, lying one
mile north of a road leading from Reading to Sunbury, adjoining Dr.
Thomas Ruston's other land, in Catawissa Township, in North'd
County."
"William Shannon applies for four hundred acres of land, lying
one mile north of a road leading from Reading to Sunbury, adjoining
other lands of Dr. Thomas Ruston, in Catawissa Township, North'd
County."
"Lewis Walker applies for four hundred acres of land, lying one
mile north of a road leading from Reading to Sunbury, adjoining Dr.
Thomas Ruston's other lands, in Catawissa Township, North'd
County."
"Nathaniel Brown applies for four hundred acres of land on a
branch of Roaring Creek, adjoining Dr. Thomas Ruston's lands, in
Catawissa Township, North'd County."
"Ebenezer Branham applies for four hundred acres of land on a
branch of Roaring Creek, adjoining Dr. Thomas Ruston's lands, in
Catawissa Township, North'd County."
Also a certified copy of old purchase voucher No. 12,969, as
follows:
"26 November, 1793. Certified copy of old purchase voucher No.
12,969. Joseph Tyson, 400 a's lying one mile north of a road
leading from Reading to Sunbury, adjoining Dr. Thomas Ruston's
other land, in Northumberland County."
"William Elliott -- 400 a's situate on a branch of Roaring
Creek, adjoining Dr. Thomas Ruston's other land, in Catawissa
Township, said county."
"Lewis Walker, 400 a's lying one mile north of a road
Page 120 U. S. 467
leading from Reading to Sunbury, adjoining Dr. Thomas Ruston's
other land, in said county."
"William Shannon, 400 a's lying one mile north of a road leading
from Reading to Sunbury, adjoining Dr. Thomas Ruston's other lands,
in said county."
"Ebenezer Branham, 400 a's on a branch of Roaring Creek, joining
Dr. Thomas Ruston, in said county."
"Nathaniel Brown, 400 a's on a branch of Roaring Creek, joining
land of Dr. Thomas Ruston, in said county."
"Amount, �60, interest from date thereof."
"[On the side:] A gen'l rec't wrote."
The plaintiffs also offered in evidence a copy of old purchase
blotter No. 12,969, as follows:
1794 12969
June 14 Dr. Ruston. 6 W'r'ts of 400 a's Am't
2400 a's, 50s p.c't p'd specie ch., �60==
-----
Fees 60s p'd, rem'r Charge of 168 D's.
Rec't d'd.
To this the counsel for the defendants objected on two grounds:
1st, that, the warrant to Lewis Walker appearing to be dated
November 26, 1793, it was not competent to prove payment of the
purchase money by Ruston on June 14, 1794, and 2d, that if any
title whatever accrued to Ruston, it would be but a resulting
trust, as the plaintiffs did not propose to follow it with any
evidence showing a conveyance of the legal title to Ruston or those
claiming under him, or any possession of the land by him or them,
or the bringing of any action of ejectment to recover it within
twenty-one years from the date of the warrant. The objections were
overruled and an exception taken. The plaintiffs also put in
evidence a copy of the warrant to Lewis Walker, dated the
twenty-sixth of November, 1793, for 400 acres adjoining Dr. Thomas
Ruston's other lands, and a copy of a survey for Lewis Walker,
dated the 22d of October, 1794, in pursuance of the warrant,
containing 371 1/4 acres. The survey was followed by a certified
copy of the return made by William Gray, deputy surveyor, into the
land office showing
Page 120 U. S. 468
that on February 23, 1795, he returned to the land office the
Lewis Walker survey for 371 1/4 acres. Warrants and surveys of five
other tracts were introduced in evidence in connection with the
warrant and survey of the Lewis Walker tract, being the same tracts
of land which are mentioned in the application and purchase
voucher. The plaintiffs then traced title into Nicholas Le Favre by
virtue of a judgment against Thomas Ruston in 1796, and levy on
lands of the defendant Ruston, including the Lewis Walker tract,
and a sale and conveyance of the same to Le Favre by a marshal's
deed. Nicholas Le Favre having died, his will was admitted to
probate on the 12th of August, 1815, on which day William R. Smith
took out letters of administration with the will annexed. A
schedule attached to the will of the testator, of his lands in
Pennsylvania, included the Lewis Walker tract for 371 1/4 acres. In
1836, William R. Smith, the administrator, with the will annexed of
Nicholas Le Favre, petitioned the Orphans' Court of Philadelphia
for an order to sell real estate to pay the debts of the decedent.
By further proceedings upon said application in the Orphans' Court
of Northumberland County, where a portion of the lands of Le Favre
were located, a decree of sale was obtained, and the Lewis Walker
tract, among others, was sold on the 9h of May, 1837, to Joseph
Brobst, as the property of Nicholas Le Favre. A deed was made to
Brobst for the land, and the sale confirmed in Northumberland
County, where the lands were located. By sundry mesne conveyances,
the title of Brobst was vested in the plaintiffs below.
There was evidence tending to show that the lands in controversy
were wild and unimproved until 1864, when the parties through whom
the plaintiffs claim title took actual possession thereof, and
improved the same by the erection of a house and sawmill, and put
to work a corps of men for the purpose of proving the coal veins.
These operations and expenditures were continued for a period of
about eighteen months at a cost of between $40,000 and $50,000,
when the work was suspended as not being profitable; but possession
was maintained through agents and tenants until 1875, when the
defendants took forcible possession, claiming title.
Page 120 U. S. 469
The defendants below objected to the admission in evidence of
the records from the Orphans' Court of Philadelphia, showing the
proceedings resulting in the sale of the lands of Nicholas Le Favre
to Joseph Brobst, on the ground that the debts of the decedent, as
set forth in the petition of the administrator, to pay which the
order of sale issued, were barred by the statute of limitations and
their lien extinguished, by reason of which it was claimed that the
orphans' court had no jurisdiction to grant the order. The
objection was overruled, and an exception taken.
There was also evidence introduced by the plaintiffs, which was
objected to, tending to show payment of taxes by those under whom
the plaintiffs claim. The defendants below offered in evidence on
their part an application of Daniel Reese, Lewis Walker, and
others, filed in the land office November 26, 1793, endorsed "Ent'd
by Wm. Lane for Daniel Rees;" also the warrant from the
commonwealth to Lewis Walker for 400 acres, dated November 26,
1793; also the survey to Lewis Walker, made October 22, 1794, in
pursuance of the warrant of November 26, 1793, describing the tract
in dispute, and then offered a certified copy of a patent from the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to Peter Grahl, dated April 12, 1797,
for the same tract, which patent contained a recital to the effect
that Lewis Walker, by deed dated November 27, 1793, had conveyed
the said tract with the appurtenances to Peter Grahl. Counsel for
the plaintiffs below objected to the introduction in evidence of
this patent on the ground that Dr. Ruston held a prior title to the
land from the commonwealth. This objection was sustained, the court
refusing to allow the patent to be read to the jury, to which the
defendants excepted.
The defendants below then renewed the offer of the patent to
Peter Grahl for the land in dispute, in connection with an offer to
prove a connected chain of title from Peter Grahl to themselves, to
be followed by proof that they took actual possession of the land
in dispute in 1875, paid taxes by redeeming the land from tax
sales, made improvements, expended large sums of money in opening
coal mines, and have ever
Page 120 U. S. 470
since held actual possession of the land, and also that Nicholas
Le Favre, who purchased the alleged title of Dr. Ruston at
marshal's sale on October 11, 1803, received notice in October,
1814, of the title of Peter Grahl under the patent to him, and that
the plaintiffs below, when they purchased at sheriff's sale in
1872, received notice of the same facts. This offer was rejected,
and an exception duly taken.
The court below also refused to allow the defendants to read in
evidence certain parts of the return of William Gray, deputy
surveyor, to the Commissioners of Northumberland County, made in
1796, other parts of which had been read by the plaintiffs below,
in order to show that the taxes paid by Dr. Ruston on the lands,
which he did in fact own in the same county, and paid into the same
office during the same time, were paid to or by a different person
than were the taxes paid on the land in dispute, and to show that
there was another tract surveyed by the commonwealth in the same
locality, and in the same county, in the name of Lewis Walker, as
warrantee, which was claimed by Dr. Ruston. These offers were also
rejected by the court, to which ruling the defendants excepted.
The court below charged the jury, among other things, as
follows:
"The plaintiffs put in evidence a certified copy of an ancient
paper, dated November 26, 1793, on file in the land office,
designated as old purchase voucher No. 12,969, and, in connection
therewith, a certified copy of an entry, under date of June 14,
1794, from the old purchase blotter in the land office. These
documents were offered to show, and they are evidence tending to
show, that Dr. Thomas Ruston was the owner of the Lewis Walker
warrant, and paid to the commonwealth the purchase money for said
tract of land."
And also:
"The plaintiffs have shown that by sundry mesne conveyances, the
title which Nicholas Le Favre thus acquired became vested in them
prior to the bringing of this action. In connection with their
paper title, the plaintiffs gave evidence tending to show that for
many years, they and those under whom
Page 120 U. S. 471
they claim asserted title to the land and paid taxes thereon
without any hostile claim's being set up against them until the
year 1875, when the defendants took possession. If the evidence on
the part of the plaintiffs is believed by the jury, it makes out a
prima facie case for the plaintiffs, and they are entitled
to your verdict upon this branch of their title."
To these charges the defendants excepted. These several rulings
of the court are now assigned for error.
In the case of
Sims v. Irvine,
3 Dall. 425, which was an ejectment for land lying in Pennsylvania,
decided by this Court in 1799, it was said that, in that state,
"payment, or, as in this case, consideration, passed, and a
survey, though unaccompanied by a patent, gave a legal right of
entry which is sufficient in ejectment. Why they have been adjudged
to give such right, whether from a defect of chancery powers or for
other reasons of policy or justice, is not now material. The right
once having become an established legal right and having
incorporated itself as such with property and tenures, it remains a
legal right notwithstanding any new distribution of judicial
powers, and must be regarded by the common law courts of the United
States in Pennsylvania as a rule of decision."
The case of
Evans v.
Patterson, 4 Wall. 224, decided in 1886, was
similar. In that case, Mr. Justice Grier, delivering the opinion of
the Court, said:
"The case cannot be made intelligible without a brief notice of
the very peculiar land law of Pennsylvania. The proprietors of the
province, in the beginning, allowed no one man to locate and survey
more than three hundred acres. To evade this rule in after times,
it was the custom for speculators in land to make application in
the names of third persons, and, having obtained a warrant, to take
from them what was called a 'deed poll,' or a brief conveyance of
their inchoate equitable claim. Pennsylvania, until of late years,
had no courts of equity. Hence, in an action of ejectment, the
plaintiff might recover without showing a legal title. If he had a
prior inchoate or equitable title, either as trustee or
cestui
que trust, he might recover. The courts treated the applicant
or warrantee as trustee for the party who paid the purchase money,
or paid even the surveying fees, for the
Page 120 U. S. 472
purchase money, under the location or application system, was
not paid at the time, and sometimes never. When the state succeeded
to the title of the proprietors, the application system was
abandoned and warrants were granted on payment of the purchase
money for the number of acres for which his warrant called. Hence,
where the claimant of the warrant was unable to show his deed poll,
he might recover by showing that he paid the purchase money; that
the warrantee whose name was used was therefore trustee for him.
And an ejectment might also be maintained in the name of the
warrantee although he had no beneficial interest in the land and
had no knowledge of the institution of the suit.
See Campbell
v. Galbreath, 1 Watts 78, and also
Ross v. Barker, 5
Watts 391, which was decided on the title now in question."
It is equally well established that the action of ejectment may
be maintained upon a warrant and survey by the owner who paid the
purchase money, without any conveyance from the person in whose
name the application was made and the warrant issued.
Brown v.
Galloway, Peters C.C. 291;
Willink v. Miles, Peters
C.C. 429. It was said by Mr. Justice Washington in
Huidekoper
v. Burrus, 1 Wash.C.C. 113, that
"the person whose name appears on the warrant is considered as
merely a nominal grantee, and a trustee for the person who pays for
the warrant and has it executed,"
stating as a matter of fact in the history of the practice of
the state that "whenever one person takes out many warrants, he
borrows the names of certain persons, no matter who they are."
See also Griffith v. Tunckhouser, Peters C.C. 418;
James v. Gordon, 1 Wash. C.C. 338;
Copley v.
Riddle, 2 Wash.C.C. 354. This doctrine is established as the
law of Pennsylvania by many decisions of the supreme court of that
state. In
Duer v. Boyd, 1 S. & R. 203, 210, that court
said:
"For above fifty years past, lands held by warrant and survey,
without patents, have been considered as the legal estate in
England, subject to the liens of judgment, curtesy, dower, and
other incidents of real property."
In
Maclay v. Work, 5 Binney 158, it is said:
"An estate held by warrant and survey, or other imperfect title,
without
Page 120 U. S. 473
patent, is of a singular nature. In many and indeed in most
respects, it is considered as a legal estate against all persons
but the commonwealth. It is subject to the same laws of descent,
devise, and conveyance as the legal estate. Tenancy by the curtesy
and in dower are attached to it. An ejectment may be supported on
it."
And in
Gingrich v. Foltz, 19 Penn.St. 40, it is
said:
"In Pennsylvania, a warrant and survey attended with payment of
the purchase money is to be considered, as against all but the
commonwealth, in the same light as the
legal estate in
England, and it is not to be distinguished, as to the mode of
conveying, entailing, and barring entails, from estates
strictly legal. . . . If the warrant, survey, and payment
of the purchase money constitute a
legal title, it is
impossible to comprehend how the commonwealth can, by any act
whatever, after she has parted with that title, prejudice, much
less extinguish, it."
Upon this view of the law, it appears from the record that the
plaintiffs below proved a legal title to the Lewis Walker tract in
controversy in Dr. Thomas Ruston. The old purchase voucher No.
12,969, offered in evidence, shows that the purchase money for the
six tracts described was paid by one person, and the receipt, being
a copy from the old purchase blotter, also No. 12,969 to
correspond, shows that the owner of the warrants, by virtue of the
payment of the purchase money, was Dr. Ruston.
Counsel for the plaintiffs in error seek to read the
abbreviations in that extract from the old purchase blotter as
showing that the purchase money had not been paid in full; but we
think it otherwise sufficiently appears not only on the face of the
receipt itself but also from the statement on the margin of the old
purchase voucher that a general receipt had been given,
corroborated by the fact that the warrants were actually issued. A
point is made on behalf of the plaintiffs in error that the issue
of the warrant cannot be considered as evidence of the payment of
the purchase money, because it is dated prior to the date of the
receipt taken from the old purchase blotter, the warrant being
dated the 26th of November, 1793, and the
Page 120 U. S. 474
receipt the 14th of June, 1794. This, however, is explained by
the practice, known to have existed, that while a warrant was never
issued except after the payment of the purchase money, yet it was
dated as of the date of the entry in the old purchase voucher,
which was the authority given to the surveyor to locate the land,
the warrant being subsequently issued so as to relate back to that
date.
In
Brown v. Galloway, Peters C.C. 291, Mr. Justice
Washington said:
"A warrant for land is, according to long and uniform practice,
dated on the day the application is made for the land, although it
is retained in the office until the purchase money is paid, when,
and not before, it issues to the party."
To the same effect is
Lewis v. Meredith, 3 Wash. C.C.
81.
The competency and value of the two documents from the old
purchase voucher and the old purchase blotter to prove the fact of
the payment of the purchase money, and by whom it was paid, are
stated by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in the case of
Oliphant v. Ferren, 1 Watts 57. It is there said that
these entries were made by John Keble, who was Chief Clerk in the
Receiver General's Office. Prior to 1823, proof of the payment of
the purchase money was made by the production of the original
receipt, or the testimony of Keble during his lifetime, and, after
his death, proof of his handwriting and entry in these books. In
1823, however, by a statute passed during that year, the books
themselves, and copies from them, were made
prima facie
evidence.
The matter is thus explained by Judge Huston in his essay on the
History and Nature of Original Titles to Land in the Province and
Pennsylvania, Charles Huston, p. 335:
"Even on warrants where money was paid, there was sometimes
difficulty as to who was the owner. The warrant, being in a name
different from that of the claimant on its face, proved nothing.
Where the owner, when he took out his warrant, took a receipt for
his purchase money and preserved it, this often decided the
question of ownership, and it became usual for a plaintiff to
recover on such a receipt without producing any conveyance from the
person whose name was used in the warrant. But where the owner
either took no receipt
Page 120 U. S. 475
or it was lost or mislaid, the ownership must be proved by other
means. The common books of the land office charged the warrantee
with the land and credited him with the payment of the money. When
it became necessary to pay the money before you got the warrant,
and while John Keble was Chief Clerk in the Receiver General's
Office, he kept an account of who paid the money on every warrant
sealed in that office. The entry, however, is not easily understood
except by those acquainted with the office. Every application was
numbered successively, as they were handed in, from one up to near
twenty thousand. Some of these applications were for a single
tract, and many for more than one hundred, the last written on a
single sheet of paper or several sheets attached together. On each
of these was marked the date when filed, and the name of the man
who paid the money always appeared. When you applied for a warrant,
there were marks by which you could refer to and find the
application, and from the application, and its number and date, you
could find the entry in John Keble's blotter, and there see who
paid the purchase money. The right to many tracts has been
ascertained by searching as here mentioned, and a copy of that
blotter, under seal of office, is now evidence in a court of
justice by a particular act of assembly. So careful was John Keble
that if the person who paid the money told him by whom it was sent,
that also appeared in the blotter."
Vide also Campbell v. Galbreath, 1 Watts 70.
There is nothing in the case of
Strimpfler v. Roberts,
18 Penn.St. 283, cited and relied upon by the plaintiffs in error,
inconsistent with the foregoing. In that case, the plaintiffs in
the ejectment were permitted to prove that Benson, under whom they
claimed, had paid the purchase money, and they did so by the
blotters, vouchers, etc., as in the present instance, and it was
admitted and decided in that case that such proof established a
prima facie title in them, but one, however, which might
be overcome by proof of the fact that Benson, who appeared to have
paid the purchase money, had done so not on his own behalf, but as
agent for others, and, that fact
Page 120 U. S. 476
being made to appear, it was held that a patent issued to the
assignee of the warrantee conveyed a superior legal title. The
conclusion is summed up by Chief Justice Black, in the opinion of
the court, as follows (p. 302):
"That where a warrant is issued to one person and the purchase
money is paid by another, and the patent is afterwards taken out by
the nominal warrantee, the right of him who paid the purchase money
is gone, unless he takes possession of the land or brings ejectment
to recover it within twenty-one years from the date of the warrant,
and after that lapse of time he cannot recover, no matter how
clearly he may be able to prove that the legal owner was in the
beginning a trustee for him. . . . When I say that the suit must be
brought within twenty-one years from the date of the warrant, I
speak of a case like the present one, in which the alleged trust is
prove by the naked and solitary fact of the payment of purchase
money. Where the
cestui que trust has superintended the
survey and paid the officer's fee, or exercised other acts of
ownership over the land, the presumption in favor of the trustee
would perhaps not begin to arise until he did some act of
hostility, such as selling his title, or taking out a patent to
himself."
In the present case, the evidence admitted was held to establish
a
prima facie legal title in Dr. Thomas Ruston. It was
sufficient to establish that he paid the purchase money, and the
other proof in the case showed that he and those who claimed under
him exercised acts of ownership over the property until their
possession was disturbed violently by the defendants below in the
year 1875. The defendants were able to offer nothing in opposition
to this except the patent under which there had been no claim of
title for more than seventy-five years and which was not connected
by any proof, other than its own recitals, with the warrant and
survey.
In
Glass v. Gilbert, 58 Penn.St. 266, it was decided
that the doctrine of
Strimpfler v. Roberts, 18 Penn.St.
283, and
McBarron v. Glass, 30 Penn.St. 133, that a trust
will not be sustained between the warrantee and one who has paid
the purchase money after twenty-one years, without possession taken
by the claimant, etc., does not apply to a
Page 120 U. S. 477
stranger to the title of the warrantee. If twenty-one years
elapse before interference by a junior survey, the presumption in
favor of the first, although a chamber survey, becomes
absolute.
It follows from the foregoing that the evidence introduced by
the plaintiffs below was competent and sufficient to establish in
Dr. Ruston a legal title to the lands in question.
The next assignment of error is founded upon the objection made
to the admission of the record and proceedings in the Orphans'
Court of Philadelphia County, resulting in the sale of the title of
Nicholas Le Favre to the Lewis Walker tract to Joseph Brobst, by
the deed of May 9, 1837. This objection was that it appeared from
the face of the petition for the sale of the real estate of the
decedent that the debts, to pay which it was alleged that the sale
was necessary, were barred by the statute of limitations, and that,
as a consequence, the orphans' court had no jurisdiction to make
the order of sale. The course of proceeding taken in the present
case, as shown by the transcript, was 1st, a petition to the
Orphans' Court of Philadelphia for authority to sell, that being
the court which had jurisdiction of the accounts of the executor;
2d, a petition to the Orphans' Court of Northumberland County, in
which the land was situated, an order of sale granted thereon, and
sale made, and, as required by the express provisions of the
statute of 1832, then in force, the return of the sale made to and
confirmed by the same court sitting in the county where the land is
situated. It is scarcely necessary to cite authority in support of
the proposition that the orders, judgments, and decrees of the
orphans' court, in a case where it had jurisdiction of the subject
matter, cannot be impeached collaterally. Much less is it so in the
present case, because the statute of Pennsylvania of March 29,
1832, 2 Brightley's Purdon's Digest, p. 1279, pl. 3, 11th ed.,
provides as follows:
"The orphans' court is hereby declared to be a court of record,
with all the qualities and incidents of a court of record at common
law. Its proceedings and decrees in all matters within its
jurisdiction shall not be reversed or avoided collaterally in any
other court, but they shall be liable to reversal or modification
or alteration on appeal to the supreme court, as hereinafter
Page 120 U. S. 478
directed."
Iddings v. Cairns, 2 Grant 88;
Riland v.
Eckert, 23 Penn.St. 215. In
Dresher v. Allentown Water
Co., 52 Penn.St. 229, Mr. Justice Strong said: "Orphans' court
decrees are doubtless conclusive. They cannot be impeached
collaterally."
The next assignment of error is founded upon the refusal of the
court to admit as evidence the certified copy of the patent from
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to Peter Grahl, dated April 12,
1797, with a recital therein of the fact that Lewis Walker, by deed
dated November 27, 1793, had conveyed the tract in question to
Peter Grahl. The legal title of Thomas Ruston to the premises in
dispute, established by the warrant and survey and payment of the
purchase money, was perfected by the return made by the deputy
surveyor into the land office on February 23, 1795. According to
the doctrine established by the authorities already cited, it was
not competent for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to affect that
title by a subsequent patent to a stranger. Peter Grahl, the
patentee, was not connected with the title under the warrant and
survey otherwise than by the recital contained in the patent itself
that the tract had been previously conveyed to him by Lewis Walker.
Clearly that recital was not evidence against the plaintiffs, for
if the patent could not take effect against them without it, it
could not give any effect to that recital. Their right had already
vested prior to the existence of the patent, and the grant to them
could not be affected by a subsequent grant to a stranger. That
such is the uniform course of decisions in Pennsylvania appears by
numerous cases.
Penrose v. Griffith, 4 Binney 231;
Maclay v. Work, 5 Binney 154;
Woods v. Wilson, 37
Penn.St. 379;
Delaware & Hudson Canal Co. v. Dimock,
47 Penn.St. 393;
Urket v. Coryell, 5 W. & S. 60;
Balliot v. Bauman, 5 W. & S. 150, 155;
Smith v.
Vasbinder, 77 Penn.St. 127, 130.
It is next assigned for error that the court below erred in
rejecting that portion of the return of William Gray, deputy
surveyor, offered to be read in evidence by the defendants below.
That portion of the return related to other surveys in the same
township, returned as belonging to Dr. Ruston, and
Page 120 U. S. 479
was offered for the ostensible purpose of explaining that part
of the return of William Gray the deputy surveyor, and the
assessment for taxes received in evidence on the part of the
plaintiff below, and in order to show that the taxes alleged to
have been paid by Dr. Thomas Ruston might have been paid upon other
tracts than the Lewis Walker tract in controversy. It seems to us,
however, very clear that the offer was rightly rejected. That the
part of the return offered related to other lands than the tract in
question was wholly irrelevant to the issue in the case, and did
not tend to prove any material fact.
Neither was there any error in the other rulings of the court
excepted to, in reference to other offers of evidence by the
defendants below, made with the view of showing that Thomas Ruston
paid taxes and made claims to other surveys in the name of Lewis
Walker than that of the tract in dispute. None of them tended to
show that Ruston was not the owner of the Lewis Walker tract in
controversy, whatever they may have shown with reference to his
claims to other tracts for which warrants and surveys had been made
in the same name.
This disposes of all the questions raised by the assignments of
error.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment is
accordingly
Affirmed.