A question relative to the title of the late Major General
Nathaniel Greene to twenty-five thousand acres of land given to
him, within the bounds of the land reserved for the use of the
army, by the tenth section of the act of the legislature of North
Carolina passed in 1782 as a mark of the sense entertained by that
state of his eminent services.
This was a bill in chancery, filed in the Circuit Court for the
District of Tennessee, by the appellant, against the heirs of the
late Major-General Greene.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the
Court.
As this case depends entirely on the validity of Greene's title,
the Court will notice only so much of the record as respects that
title.
In the year 1777, the State of North Carolina opened a land
office for the purpose of selling all the vacant lands east of a
line described in the act.
In the year 1780, an act passed, reserving a certain tract of
country for the officers and soldiers of the line of that
state.
This act is lost.
Page 15 U. S. 197
In the year 1782, an act passed, "for the relief of the officers
and soldiers in the continental line, and for other purposes
therein mentioned." This act gives certain specified quantities of
land to the officers and soldiers; then the 7th section commences
thus:
"And whereas, in May, 1780, an act passed at Newburn reserving a
certain tract of country to be appropriated to the aforesaid
purposes, and it being represented to this present assembly that
sundry families had, before the passing the said act, settled on
the said tract of country, Be it enacted,"
&c. The section then proceeds to grant 640 acres of land to
each family which had so settled. The 8th section appoints
commissioners to lay off, in one or more tracts, the land allotted
to the officers and soldiers. The 10th section enacts
"That 25,000 acres of land shall be allotted for and given to
Major-General Nathaniel Greene his heirs and assigns within the
bounds of the lands reserved for the use of the army, to be laid
off by the aforesaid commissioners as a mark of the high sense this
state entertains of the extraordinary services of that brave and
gallant officer."
This is the foundation of the title of the appellees.
On the part of the appellant it is contended that these words
give nothing. They are in the future, not in the present tense, and
indicate an intention to give in future, but create no present
obligation on the state nor present interest in General Greene.
The Court thinks differently. The words are words of absolute
donation, not indeed of any specific
Page 15 U. S. 198
land, but of 25,000 acres in the territory set apart for the
officers and soldiers.
"Be it enacted, that 25,000 acres of land shall be allotted for
and given to Major-General Nathaniel Greene." Persons had been
appointed in a previous section to make particular allotments for
individuals out of this large territory reserved, and the words of
this section contain a positive mandate to them to set apart 25,000
acres for General Greene. As the act was to be performed in future,
the words directing it are necessarily in the future tense.
"Twenty-five thousand acres of land shall be allotted for and given
to Major-General Nathaniel Greene." Given when? The answer is
unavoidable -- when they shall be allotted. Given how? Not by any
future act -- for it is not the practice of legislation to enact
that a law shall be passed by some future legislature -- but given
by force of this act.
It has been said that to make this an operative gift, the words
"are hereby" should have been inserted before the word "given," so
as to read, "shall be allotted for, and are hereby given to,"
&c. Were it even true that these words would make the gift more
explicit, which is not admitted, it surely cannot be necessary now
to say that the validity of a legislative act depends in no degree
on its containing the technical terms usual in a conveyance.
Nothing can be more apparent than the intention of the legislature
to order their commissioners to make the allotment, and to give the
land when allotted to General Greene.
The 11th section authorizes the commissioners to
Page 15 U. S. 199
appoint surveyors for the purpose of surveying the lands given
by the preceding sections of the law.
In pursuance of the directions of this act, the commissioners
allotted 25,000 acres of land to General Greene and caused the
tract to be surveyed. The survey was returned to the office of the
legislature on 11 March, in the year 1783. The allotment and survey
marked out the land given by the act of 1782, and separated it from
the general mass liable to appropriation by others. The general
gift of 25,000 acres, lying in the territory reserved for the
officers and soldiers of the line of North Carolina, had now become
a particular gift of the 25,000 acres, contained in this
survey.
Against this conclusion has been urged that article in the
Constitution of North Carolina which directs that there should be a
seal of the state to be kept by the governor and affixed to all
grants. This legislative act, it is said, cannot amount to a grant,
since it wants a formality required by the Constitution.
This provision of the constitution is so obviously intended for
the completion and authentication of an instrument, attesting a
title previously created by law, which instrument is so obviously
the mere evidence of prior legal appropriation, and not the act of
original appropriation itself, that the Court would certainly have
thought it unnecessary to advert to it had not the argument been
urged repeatedly and with much earnestness by counsel of the
highest respectability.
After urging that these lands were not positively
Page 15 U. S. 200
granted to General Greene the counsel for the appellant
proceeded to argue that it was in the power of the legislature to
retract its promise, and that the legislature had retracted it.
Before attempting the difficult task of describing the limits of
the legislative power in cases where those limits are not fixed by
a written Constitution, the Court will proceed to inquire whether
the government of North Carolina has in fact revoked its promise or
recalled its gift.
At a session, begun on 12 April, 1783, the assembly passed "an
act for opening the land office," thereby extending the line
describing the country in which lands might be entered so far west
as to comprehend the territory reserved for the officers and
soldiers of the North Carolina line.
The 11th section of this act contains a proviso saving from
entry the lands within the bounds reserved for the officers and
soldiers.
At the same session, an act was passed "to amend the act for the
relief of the officers and soldiers of the continental line, and
for other purposes."
The first six sections of this act prescribe the mode of
individual appropriation, and of obtaining titles.
The 7th section, "For prevention of disputes," enacts "that the
officers and soldiers aforesaid shall enter and survey the lands
within the following lines, beginning" &c.
This section, it is said, changes the place reserved, and marks
out a new territory for the officers and soldiers. It is, then,
contended that this act and
Page 15 U. S. 201
the preceding act for opening the land office are to be
construed together, and the proviso of the 11th section of that act
applied to the 7th section of this, by which operation the whole
territory before reserved for the officers and soldiers, including
the land surveyed for General Greene is opened for entry.
The Court does not concur with the counsel for the appellant in
any part of this argument.
There is nothing in the law leading to the opinion that the
place reserved for the officers and soldiers was changed. The fair
construction of the acts is that the reserve was restricted to
narrower limits, not transferred to different ground.
It has been contended that the Court is restrained from giving
this construction to the acts under consideration because the bill
avers that the place was changed, and the demurrer admits the
fact.
The Court will not inquire whether this averment is founded on
an apparent misconstruction of the law, and is therefore to be
disregarded, or is the averment of a fact compatible with the law,
because the fact itself does not essentially affect the case.
If the place in which lands were reserved generally for the
officers and soldiers, but not individually appropriated, was
changed, the individual appropriation made for General Greene
within their original limits was not also changed. The act did not
profess to remove him with them, and he consequently
Page 15 U. S. 202
remained on the same ground, protected by his preexisting title,
whatever it might be.
But it is contended that his title was annulled by the general
authority given in the 9th section of the act to enter all the
lands within the enlarged limits then opened to purchasers.
To this argument it is answered
1st. That the 11th section reserves the land allotted to the
officers and soldiers, then comprehending the land surveyed for
General Greene, and
2dly. That a general permission to enter lands within a given
tract of country must of necessity be limited to lands not
previously appropriated.
The positive exception contained in the 11th section, it is said
by the appellant, must be applied to the land reserved to the
officers and soldiers by the subsequent act changing their
position, because the two acts must be taken together, and if so
there is no exception comprehending the lands of General
Greene.
The two acts have distinct objects. The first opens a land
office for the purpose of redeeming the public debt by the sale of
lands, and the second prescribes the manner in which officers and
soldiers are to obtain titles for lands given to them by the state
and amends an act passed at a previous session on the same day. The
legislature has not considered the reserve in the first act as
transferred into the second, but has, by the 8th section of the
second act, reenacted in a modified manner the prohibition intended
for the protection of those for whom this reserve was expressly
made.
Page 15 U. S. 203
But let it be conceded that the proviso of the 11th section was
repealed by implication when the position of the officers and
soldiers was changed and a new prohibition enacted and applied to
the new reserve; still it would be difficult to maintain that this
silent repeal, implied from the removal of the object for which it
was originally and chiefly intended, should apply to another object
originally preserved by the provision, and for which it continues
to be necessary.
But the Court does not found its opinion on this position,
however well it may be supported by justice. The proposition is
believed to be perfectly correct that the act of 1783, which opened
the land office, must be construed as offering for sale those lands
only which were then liable to appropriation, not those which had
before been individually appropriated. Whatever the legislative
power may be, its acts ought never to be so construed as to subvert
the rights of property unless its intention so to do shall be
expressed in such terms as to admit of no doubt and to show a clear
design to effect the object. No general terms intended for property
to which they may be fairly applicable and not particularly applied
by the legislature; no silent, implied, and constructive repeals
ought ever to be so understood as to divest a vested right.
But it is contended that this construction of the acts of 1783
is forced upon us, because the rights of others, and not the right
of General Greene, are exempted from the operation of that section
which offers
Page 15 U. S. 204
for sale all the land within the described territory, and the
exception of one object excludes others of the same character.
Without inquiring what would be the force of this argument if,
in point of fact, rights similar to those of General Greene were
received and his omitted, let the fact be examined.
The first reservation in the act for opening the land office
related to the lands of the Cherokee Indians.
Nothing could be more obvious than the necessity, as well as
propriety, of prohibiting all entries on Indian lands lying within
the boundary offered for sale if the legislature intended they
should not be entered. The Indian title was not derived from the
State of North Carolina, and to infer from the recognition of this
title that others actually derived from the state, if not also
recognized, are annulled is not admitted to be correct
reasoning.
The only other reserve in this act is of the land within the
limits allotted to the officers and soldiers, and within these
limits was the land surveyed for General Greene.
Our attention is next directed to the act to amend the act "for
the relief of the officers and soldiers," &c. This act narrows
the limits within which the military lands shall be surveyed, or
changes them, so that in either case the lands of General Greene
are no longer within them. Nothing can be more obvious than that
provisions relating to lands within this particular territory can
have no implied application to
Page 15 U. S. 205
a title previously acquired by General Greene to lands not lying
within it.
The 8th section of the act prohibits all persons from entering
lands within the bounds allotted to the officers and soldiers.
The 9th section excepts out of this prohibition the
commissioners and surveyors, &c., appointed to lay off the
military lands, and prescribes the mode by which they may
appropriate and acquire title to lands given to them by the
legislature.
The 13th section enacts that Governor Martin and David Wilson be
entitled, agreeably to the report of the committee, to two thousand
acres of land each, adjacent to lands allotted to officers and
soldiers for which they may receive titles in the same manner as
the officers and soldiers.
The insertion of this reservation in this act leads almost
necessarily to the opinion that the lands granted to Martin and
Wilson were a part of those to which the act related, and the words
of the section show that their title was acquired by this act. By
no course of just reasoning can it be inferred from these
permissions to make appropriations within bounds not open to entry
generally that a vested right to lands not lying within the limits
to which this act relates is annulled.
It is clearly and unanimously the opinion of this Court that the
act of 1782 vested a title in General Greene to 25,000 acres of
land, to be laid off within the bounds allotted to the officers and
soldiers, and that the survey made in pursuance of that act and
returned in March, 1783, gave precision to that title
Page 15 U. S. 206
and attached it to the land surveyed. That his rights are not
impaired by the acts of 1783 and the entry of the appellant, all of
which are subsequent to his survey, and that it is completed by the
grant which issued in pursuance of the act of 1784, and which
relates to the inception of his title. T he decree of the circuit
court dismissing the bill of the complainant is affirmed with
costs.
Decree affirmed.