It is essential to the validity of an entry that the land
intended to be appropriated should be so described as to give
notice of the appropriation to subsequent locators.
In taking the distance from one point to another on a large
river, the measurement is to be with its meanders, and not in a
direct line.
In ascertaining a place to be found by its distance from another
place, the vague words "about" or "nearly" and the like are to be
rejected if there are no other words rendering it necessary to
retain them, and the distance mentioned is to be taken
positively.
Entries made in a wilderness, most generally referring to some
prominent and notorious natural object which may direct the
attention to the neighborhood in which the land is placed and then
to some particular object exactly describing it, the first of these
is denominated the general or
descriptive call and the
last the particular or
locative call of the entry.
Reasonable certainty is required in both; if the
descriptive
call will not inform a subsequent locator in what neighborhood
he is to search for the land, the entry is defective unless the
particular object is one of sufficient notoriety. If, after having
reached the neighborhood, the locative object cannot be found
within the limits of the
descriptive calls, the entry is
also defective. A single call may at the same time be of such a
nature (as, for example,
a spring of general notoriety) as
to constitute within itself both a
call of description and of
location, but if this
call be accompanied with
another, such as a
marked tree at the spring, it seems to
be required that both should be satisfied.
The
call for an unmarked tree of a kind which is common
in the neighborhood of a place sufficiently described by the other
parts of the entry to be fixed with certainty may be considered as
an
immaterial call.
Therefore, where the entry was in the following words,
"D. P. enters two thousand acres on a Treasury warrant on the
Ohio, about twelve miles below the mouth of Licking, beginning at a
hickory and sugar tree on the river bank, running up the river from
thence one thousand and sixty poles, thence at right angles to the
same, and back for quantity,"
it was
held that the
call for a sugar tree
might be declared ,
immaterial and the location be sustained on the other
calls.
The entry was decreed to be surveyed, beginning twelve miles
below the mouth of Licking on the bank of the Ohio and running up
that river one thousand and sixty poles, which line was to form the
base of a rectangular parallelogram to include two thousand acres
of land.
Page 15 U. S. 207
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the
Court.
This case depends on the validity and construction of an entry
made in the State of Kentucky by David Pannel, the ancestor of the
appellees, in these words:
"David Pannel enters 2,000 acres on a Treasury warrant on the
Ohio, about twelve miles below the mouth of Licking, beginning at a
hickory and sugar tree on the river bank, running up the
Page 15 U. S. 208
river from thence 1,060 poles, thence at right angles to the
same and back for quantity."
The appellant having obtained an elder patent for the same land
on a junior entry, the appellees brought a bill in the Circuit
Court for the District of Kentucky, sitting in chancery, praying
that the defendant, in that court, might be decreed to convey to
them. The circuit court directed the entry of the complainant to be
surveyed, beginning twelve miles below the mouth of Licking on the
bank of the Ohio and running up that river 1,060 poles, which line
was to form the base of a rectangular parallelogram, to include
2,000 acres of land. So much of this land as was within Pannell's
patent and also within Johnson's patent the court decreed the
defendant to convey to the plaintiffs. From this decree the
defendant has appealed to this Court.
He contends that the decree is erroneous because
1st. It affirms the validity of this entry, which is too
uncertain and defective to be established.
2d. If the entry be established, it ought to be so surveyed that
the whole land should lie twelve miles below the mouth of
Licking.
First. It is undoubtedly essential to the validity of an entry
that it shall be made so specially and precisely that others may be
enabled with certainty to locate the adjacent residuum. The land
intended to be appropriated must consequently be so described as to
give notice of the appropriation to subsequent locaters. In
obtaining this information, however, it would seem to be the plain
dictate of common sense that the person about to take up
adjoining
Page 15 U. S. 209
lands, would read the whole of a previous entry which he wished
to avoid, compare together its different parts, and judge from the
entire description what land was appropriated. If with common
attention and common intelligence the land could be ascertained and
avoided, the requisites of the law would seem to be complied
with.
Test Pannel's entry by this standard.
The mouth of Licking is a place of acknowledged and universal
notoriety which no man in the country could be at a loss to find.
When placed there, he is informed by the entry that Pannel's land
lies twelve miles below him on the Ohio. He proceeds down the river
twelve miles, and is there informed that the entry begins at a
hickory and sugar tree on the river bank. He looks around him and
sees hickory and sugar trees. Here, then, he would say, while
uninformed of decisions which have since been made, is the
beginning of the entry. In what direction does the land lie? The
paper which is to give his information says "running up the river
from thence 1,060 poles, thence at right angles to the same, and
back, for quantity." Would he say this description is repugnant in
itself, containing equal and contradictory directions, neither of
which is entitled to any preference over the other, and leaving the
judgment in such a state of doubt and perplexity as to be incapable
of deciding the real position of this land? Would he say the whole
land must lie twelve miles from the mouth of Licking? This is so
clearly and definitely required, that the entry will admit of no
other construction? That the subsequent
Page 15 U. S. 210
words directing him to run up the river from that point 1,060
poles, and thus approach the mouth of Licking, are not explanatory
but contradictory? That the one or the other must be totally
discarded? Were this the real impression which would be made on the
mind, it cannot be denied that the state of uncertainty in which
these equal and irreconcilable descriptions would place a
subsequent locator, ought to vitiate the entry. But if, on the
contrary, the obvious and natural construction would be that since
every part of the land cannot be placed precisely twelve miles
below the mouth of Licking, the distance is applicable to any part
of the tract, and this part of the description may be so explained
and controlled by other parts, as to receive a meaning different
from that which it would have if standing alone, then the
subsequent locator would take the whole description together, and
if its different parts could without difficulty be reconciled, he
would reconcile them. He would say the beginning must be twelve
miles from the mouth of Licking, but the residue of the land must
approach that place because the entry requires positively to run
from the beginning up the river. This would, it is thought, be the
manner in which this entry would be understood by a person guided
by no other light than is furnished by human reason. But the courts
of Kentucky have constructed a vast and complex system, on the
entire preservation of which their property depends, and this Court
will respect that system as much as the courts of Kentucky
themselves.
Page 15 U. S. 211
In applying the decisions of that country to this cause, we find
many points now settled which were formerly controverted questions.
In taking the distance from one point to another on a large river,
the measurement is to be with its meanders, not in a direct line.
And in ascertaining a place to be found by its distance from
another place, the vague words "about" or "nearly" and the like are
to be discarded if there are no other words rendering it necessary
to retain them, and the distance mentioned is to be taken
positively. A subsequent locator, then, must look for the beginning
called for in this entry twelve miles below the mouth of Licking,
measured by the meanders of the Ohio.
In construing locations some other principles have been
established which seem to be considered as fundamental. Entries
made in a wilderness would most generally refer to some prominent
and notorious object which might direct the attention to the
neighborhood in which the land was placed, and then to some
particular object which should exactly describe it. The first of
these has been denominated the general or descriptive call, and the
last the particular or locative call, of the entry. Reasonable
certainty has always been required in both. If the descriptive call
will not inform a subsequent locator in what neighborhood he is to
search for the land, the entry is defective unless the particular
object be one of sufficient notoriety. If, after having reached the
neighborhood, the locative object cannot be found within the limits
of the descriptive call, the entry is equally defective. They
must
Page 15 U. S. 212
both be found, and neither can be discarded unless deemed
immaterial. A single call may be at the same time so notorious and
so formed -- as, for example, a spring of general notoriety -- as
to constitute in itself a call both of description and location,
but if this call be accompanied with another, as a marked tree at
the spring, it seems to be required that both calls should be
satisfied.
Thus, in the case now under the consideration of the Court, the
call for a beginning twelve miles below the mouth of Licking would
be sufficiently descriptive, and is sufficiently precise to be
locative. It would be unquestionably good were it not accompanied
with the additional call for a hickory and sugar tree. Whether it
is vitiated by this additional call is to be determined by a
reference to the decisions in Kentucky.
The case of
Grubbs v. Rice, 2 Bibb 107, depended on the
validity of an entry made in these words:
"James Thomas enters 300 acres of land, &c., on the south
side of Kentucky, about two miles below the mouth of Red River,
beginning at a tree marked 'I.S.' on the bank of the river, and
running down the river for quantity."
No tree marked "I.S." was found at or near the distance
required. It was proved that a tree had been marked "I.S." by the
person who afterwards made the entry for Thomas, and that it stood
on the south side of Kentucky, but instead of being two miles, it
was three miles and a quarter by the meanders of the river, and two
miles and two-thirds of a mile on a direct course, below the mouth
of Red River.
Page 15 U. S. 213
The inferior court disregarded the call for the tree and fixed
the beginning of the entry at the termination of two miles below
the mouth of Red River. On an appeal this decree was reversed and
judge Wallace, in delivering the opinion of the court, said
"This rejection of the call for the tree marked 'I.S.' is
certainly subversive of the well established principle that no part
of an entry ought to be rejected unless what is evidently mere
surplusage or absolutely repugnant to other expressions which are
more important, because to do more would not be construing entries,
but making them. But the expression 'about two miles below the
mouth of Red River' is obviously only a general call, and to
substitute this in the place of the expression 'beginning at a tree
marked 'I.S.,' &c.,' which is the only special or locative call
in the entry, is still more inadmissible."
The case of
Kincaid v. Blythe, 2 Bibb 479, turned on
the validity of an entry made "on a branch of Silver Creek, about
four miles from the little fort on Boone's old trace, including a
tree marked D.B." In this case too, the inferior court disregarded
the call for the tree, which could not be proved to have existed
when the location was made, and directed the land to be surveyed at
the termination of the distance of four miles from the little Fort.
On appeal, this decree also was reversed, and in delivering the
opinion of the court, judge Wallace said
"It is evident that when the entry was made, Boone's old trace,
the little Fort, and Silver Creek were all well known by those
names to the generality of those who were conversant in
Page 15 U. S. 214
the vicinity. And it further appears that about four miles from
the little Fort, on a southern direction, Boone's old trace struck
Hayes' Fork of Silver Creek, which may be presumed to be the branch
of Silver Creek intended, and if the entry contained no other
calls, it would deserve serious consideration whether the place
where the trace crossed Hayes' fork of Silver Creek ought not to be
assumed as the center of the survey to be made thereon. But this
entry calls to include a tree marked 'D.B.,' which is obviously a
locative and material call, and, therefore, conformably to the
uniform decisions of this Court on similar entries, must be taken
into consideration in deciding on this entry."
These cases are admitted to have settled the law to be that a
material locative call, as for a marked tree, cannot be
disregarded, and that if the existence of the tree cannot be
proved, the entry cannot be sustained. The only distinction between
these cases and that under the consideration of the Court is that
in them, the entries call for a marked tree; in this it calls for a
sugar tree and hickory, not stating them to be marked. For the
importance of this distinction we are again referred to the
decisions of Kentucky.
The case of
Greenup v. Lyne's Heirs turned on an entry
of land "lying on Kentucky River opposite to Leesburg, beginning at
a beach tree and running up the river and back, for quantity." The
validity of this entry was affirmed in the inferior court, and on
an appeal was also affirmed in the superior court.
Page 15 U. S. 215
In delivering the opinion of the superior court, judge Logan
said
"Had the only call in the entry been to lie on the river
opposite to Leesburg, we should have concurred with the circuit
court in the manner of surveying it by running up and down the
river equal distances from a point opposite the center of Leesburg,
and if the call to begin at 'a beech tree' had been the only other
call, we should still have thought that opinion correct, as the
common growth of the timber there is beech, and a tree of the
description could have been had at almost any point within the
limits of the claim. This circumstance, we conceive, ought not to
affect the entry, for whether the call is regarded or rejected in
the construction of the entry is totally immaterial, because it
seems to the court that where an uncertainty arises from the number
of objects presented, answering the calls of an entry, and it had
other calls sufficiently precise to sustain it, that, of the many
doubtful objects, that should be taken as intended which will best
preserve the consistency of the others, and in this case it seems
the call for the tree could be complied with without changing in
the least the position given by the first call, so that it is left
as an immaterial call. We are more confirmed in this opinion when
we consider that the entry, from any other view, must be invalid
for uncertainty, although we believe no one could doubt, from a
liberal and just construction of it, as to the general body and
position of the land it calls for. "
Page 15 U. S. 216
This case, if not overruled, certainly goes far in
distinguishing between a call for a marked tree and for a tree not
marked, provided such trees as the call requires are found about
the place where the entry must begin. It goes further and strongly
indicates the opinion that an unmarked tree was an object of less
importance in the mind of the locator than one selected from all
others by a mark peculiar to itself. While the latter must have
been deemed important, and have strongly fixed his attention, the
former may have been thought not very essential. Coming to the
place where he intended to begin, looking around him when there,
and seeing trees of a particular kind from the common growth, he
might suppose it unimportant at which of these trees he should
commence and call for one of them. In such a case a court may well
say "whether the call is regarded or rejected in the construction
of the entry is totally immaterial." There is much reason for this
opinion. Certainty is required in entries for the purpose of giving
notice to subsequent locators. The subsequent locator who comes to
the place described in the entry in order to find the land he
wishes to avoid will, if a marked tree be called for, search for
that marked tree, and if it cannot be found may well conclude that
this is not the land intended to be appropriated; but if only a
tree is called for and trees stand all around him, he will
naturally suppose that the nearest may be taken as a beginning, and
that to him it is quite immaterial whether the commencement be at
the spot on which he stands or within ten feet or ten yards of
him.
Page 15 U. S. 217
The subsequent locator is not misled by this call, nor is there
any danger of his mistaking the position of the land. It is not
without reason, therefore, that the call is pronounced immaterial
and one which may be regarded or rejected. The entry may be
sustained by other calls which are sufficiently precise to sustain
it.
If in the case at bar, it had been proved that sugar trees and
hickories were as common at the termination of twelve miles from
the mouth of Licking, as the beech tree opposite to Leesburg, the
two cases would in this respect be precisely alike. But this is not
proved. Only one witness has been examined to this point, and his
testimony is that there are sugar trees on the bank of the Ohio in
the neighborhood, and that the maple or sugar tree might be found
for many miles above and below the corner, standing within fifty
yards of each other on the second bank of the river. The report of
the surveyor shows that three elms and a hickory stood at the
termination of the twelve miles from the mouth of Licking.
There would certainly be much difficulty in supporting this as a
locative call, although it is not absolutely certain that it might
not be so supported. The not less important question is whether it
may be considered as an immaterial call. No case has been cited in
which the call for an unmarked tree has been thought material, and
there are cases in which a circumstance not important in itself has
been dispensed with. The difference between calling for a marked
and an unmarked tree has been
Page 15 U. S. 218
already noticed. It is difficult to suppose that they are viewed
as equally important by the person making the entry or by a
subsequent locator. If the person making the entry designed to
select for the beginning a particular tree, in exclusion of all
others, it is in a high degree improbable that he should omit to
mark it. If he made the entry from memory, then the place only, and
not the particular tree, would be the object to which his mind
would attach importance. So with the subsequent locator. The
distance would bring him to the place, or sufficiently near to it
for every beneficial purpose, and whether a sugar tree and hickory
stood at the end of twelve miles as measured by his chain, or
within thirty, forty, or fifty yards, would not essentially vary
his views with respect to adjacent lands. He could not doubt, to
use the expression of the court in the case of
Greenup v.
Lyne's Heirs, "as to the general body and position of the
land" described in the entry. The opinion that the call for an
unmarked tree of a kind which is common in the neighborhood of a
place sufficiently described by other parts of the entry to be
fixed with certainty may be considered as an immaterial call is
supported by the decision of the court in the case which has been
last mentioned. Although in that case the judge shows that a tree
might be found to satisfy the call at the place fixed as the
beginning, yet it is apparent that different places within a few
yards of each other would answer equally well for the beginning,
and that different trees might be selected for that purpose. And
the judge, after stating that this call
Page 15 U. S. 219
might either be considered as satisfied, or in itself
immaterial, proceeds to show that he thought it immaterial.
"Regarding," he proceeds to say, "the call for a beech tree as
immaterial, we come to consider," &c.
Upon the authority of the case of
Greenup v. Lyne's
Heirs, then, and upon a view of the whole of this entry, it
would seem that the call for the sugar tree and hickory may be
declared immaterial, and the location be sustained on its other
calls.
The second question is in what manner ought this entry to be
surveyed?
It is admitted to be a general principle that where a location
calls for land to lie a given distance from a given point, the
whole land must be placed at or beyond that distance if there be no
other words in the location which control this construction. But it
is not admitted that this call can overrule the plain meaning of
the whole entry taken together. It is believed to be unquestionably
decided that every material part of the entry is to be considered,
and that such construction is to be put upon the whole as is best
adapted to all its material calls.
This principle was laid down in
Greenup v. Lyne's
Heirs, which, on this point, bears a strong analogy to that
under the consideration of the Court. In
Greenup v. Lyne's
Heirs, the entry called for land "lying on Kentucky River,
opposite to Leesburg, beginning at a beech tree, and running up the
river and back for quantity."
It is perfectly settled in Kentucky that on a call for land
lying opposite to Leesburg, the center of the
Page 15 U. S. 220
land would be placed opposite to the center of the town, and a
square would be formed on a base line running up and down the
river, to include the quantity. The entry could not otherwise be
sustained. The inferior court laid off this entry in that manner,
and the appellate court declared that it would be the proper manner
were there not other words in it which controlled this general
description by one which was more particular. That more particular
description was "running up the river and back for quantity."
These cases are in principle the same. The one calls for land
twelve miles below the mouth of Licking, which description would
require land the nearest part of which is at the given distance;
the other calls for land lying opposite Leesburg, which requires a
tract the center of which is opposite to the center of the town.
The one calls for a beginning at a sugar tree and hickory, without
naming a place for the beginning otherwise than by the description
of the position of the land; the other calls for a beech tree under
precisely the same circumstances. In the case of
Greenup v.
Lyne's Heirs, the words "running up the river and back for
quantity" have changed the place of beginning from the center to
the lower end of the town, and the position of the land, so that
instead of lying above and below Leesburg, in equal quantities, it
lies entirely above that place. Why shall not the same words
influence in the same manner the position of Pannel's land?
From the language of Pannel's entry, every man would expect the
survey to begin at the place called
Page 15 U. S. 221
for, twelve miles below the mouth of Licking. If that is not the
beginning, the location is unquestionably uncertain and void. If
that is the beginning, it is the plain mandate of the entry to run
up the river 1,060 poles and back for quantity.
It is the opinion of the majority of the Court that the decree
ought to be affirmed with costs.
Decree affirmed.