The jurisdiction of the circuit courts of the United States
extends to a case between citizens of Kentucky, claiming lands
exceeding the value of five hundred dollars under different grants,
the one issued by the State of Kentucky and the other by the State
of Virginia, but upon warrants issued by Virginia, and locations
founded thereon prior to the separation of Kentucky from Virginia.
It is the grant which passes the legal title to the land, and if
the controversy is founded upon the conflicting grants of different
states, the judicial power of the courts of the United States
extends to the case, whatever may have been the equitable title of
the parties prior to the grant.
The opinion of the court in this cause was delivered by MR.
JUSTICE WASHINGTON.
This suit in equity was removed into the Circuit Court of
Kentucky upon the petition of the defendant filed in the state
court, and upon a motion made in the circuit court to dismiss the
suit from
Page 15 U. S. 378
that jurisdiction, the judges of that court were opposed in
opinion, and caused the following facts to be stated, to enable
this Court to decide the question. Those facts are that the value
of the land in controversy exceeds $500, that the complainants are
citizens of Virginia, and that the grant under which they claim
title is derived from the State of Kentucky by virtue of warrants
issued from the land office of Virginia and locations upon the
warrants before the separation of Kentucky from Virginia; that the
defendant's grant is from the State of Virginia by virtue of a
warrant issued from the land office and a location made thereon
before the separation of Kentucky.
The question referred to this Court is whether the Circuit Court
for the District of Kentucky can take jurisdiction of the cause
because the grants for the land in controversy, lying in Kentucky,
were issued, the one by the State of Virginia and the other by the
State of Kentucky, when both grants purport to be founded upon
warrants and locations made under the authority of the laws of
Virginia.
It is the opinion of this Court that the question which is
referred to us by the circuit Court of Kentucky is settled by the
decision of this Court in the case of
Town of
Pawlet v. Clark, 9 Cranch 292.
The only difference between the two cases is that in the case
referred to, both parties claimed immediately under grants, the one
from the State of Vermont and the other from the State of New
Hampshire, before the separation, which grants were
Page 15 U. S. 379
the inception of title, and that in this case both parties claim
under grants, the one issued by the State of Kentucky and the other
by the State of Virginia, but upon warrants issued by Virginia, and
locations founded thereon, prior to the separation of Kentucky from
Virginia. But where the controversy arises upon claims founded upon
grants from different states, as the present case is understood to
be, the principle decided in the case which has been cited
precisely governs this. The decision in that case is founded on the
words of the Constitution of the United States, which extends the
judicial power of the United States to controversies between
citizens of the same state claiming lands under grants of different
states. It is the grant which passes the legal title to the land,
and if the controversy is founded upon the conflicting grants of
different states, the judicial power of the courts of the United
States extends to the case, whatever may have been the equitable
title of the parties prior to the grant.
Certificate accordingly.