"That every prerequisite has been performed is an inference
properly deducible, and which every man has a right to draw, from
the existence of the grant itself. It would therefore be extremely
unreasonable to avoid a grant in any court for irregularities in
the conduct of those who are appointed by the government to
supervise the progressive course of a title from its commencement
to its consummation in a patent. But there are some things so
essential to the validity of the contract that the great principles
of justice and of law would be violated did there not exist some
tribunal to which an injured party might appeal and in which the
means by which an elder title was acquired might be examined."
And the Court, after showing
Page 40 U. S. 106
that a court of equity was the proper tribunal to make this
examination, remarked
"But there are cases in which a grant is absolutely void, as
where the state has no title to the thing granted or where the
officer had no authority to issue the grant. In such cases, the
validity of the grant is necessarily examinable at law."
The same case was again brought before the Court by a writ of
error, and is reported in
18 U. S. 5 Wheat.
293, in which the Court held that the system under which land
titles originated in Tennessee, being peculiar, constituted, with
the adjudication of its courts, a rule of decision for this
Court.
In the case of
Miller v. Kerr,
7 Wheat. 1, it was held that an equity arising from an entry of
land made on a warrant which had been issued by mistake could not
be sustained against a patent issued on a junior entry. The Court
said
"The great difficulty in this case consists in the admission of
any testimony whatever which calls into question the validity of a
warrant issued by the officer to whom that duty is assigned by law.
In examining this question, the distinction between an act which is
judicial and one which is merely ministerial must be regarded. The
register of the land office is not at liberty to examine testimony
and to exercise his own judgment respecting the right of an
applicant for a military land warrant."
And in the case of
Hoofnagle v.
Anderson, 7 Wheat. 212, another question was raised
on an entry made by virtue of the same warrant. The mistake in the
warrant consisted in this. Thomas Powell having performed military
services in the Virginia state line, a certificate by the executive
counsel of Virginia was obtained by his heir which entitled him to
a certain amount of land. On this certificate, the register of the
land office at Richmond, Virginia, issued a warrant which, instead
of reciting that the services were performed in the state line,
stated that they were performed in the state line on continental
establishment. This mistake was important, as the tract of country
in Ohio in which the warrant was located was reserved, in the
cession by Virginia, for the satisfaction only of warrants issued
for military services in the state line on continental
establishment, and consequently was not subject to the right of
Powell. And the Court remarked
Page 40 U. S. 107
how far the patent ought to be affected by this error is the
question on which the cause depends. It said there was no ground to
suspect fraud; that the warrant was assignable, and carried with it
no evidence of the mistake which had been committed in the office;
that it had been assigned for a valuable consideration, and the
purchaser had obtained a patent for the land, without actual notice
of any defect in the origin of his title, and it held that the
patent gave a good title as against any one whose entry was
subsequent to its date.
A patent appropriates the land called for, and is conclusive
against rights subsequently acquired. But where an equitable right
which originated before the date of the patent, whether by the
first entry or otherwise, is asserted, it may be examined. The
patent, under the Virginia land law, as modified by usage and
judicial construction in Kentucky and Ohio, conveys the legal
title, but leaves all equities open.
Bouldin v. Massie's
Heirs, 7 Wheat. 149. The controversy in this case
does not arise from adverse entries, but between claimants under
the same warrant. And it is admitted that Ware, as executor, had no
power to assign the military right, which, on the decease of
Hockaday, descended to his heirs. It is too clear to admit of doubt
that Ladd, by circumvention and fraud, obtained the assignment from
the executor, which enabled him to procure the warrant from the
register. As between Ladd and the complainants, can there be any
doubt that this case would be examinable in equity? Could the
issuing of the warrant by the register interpose any objection to
such an investigation?
It is insisted that the register, of necessity, before he issues
the warrant, must determine the right of the applicant, and that in
doing so, he acts judicially; that presumptions not only arise in
favor of such acts, but unless fraud be shown, they are not open to
examination. The Executive Council of Virginia, in determining the
right of Hockaday's heirs, may be said to have acted judicially,
but the register, in the language of the court in one of the cases
above cited, acted ministerially. The court said he was not
authorized to examine witnesses in the case, but was bound to act
upon the face of the certificate. The parties interested were
not
Page 40 U. S. 108
before him, and he had no means of ascertaining their names,
giving them notice, or taking evidence. And under such
circumstances, would it not be a most extraordinary rule which
should give a judicial character and effect to his proceeding? He
acts, and must necessarily act from the face of the paper, both as
regards the certificate of the executive council and the assignment
of such certificate. His acts, in their nature, are strictly
ministerial; they have neither the form nor effect of a judicial
proceeding.
It may be admitted that presumptions arise in favor of the act
of a ministerial officer, if apparently fair and legal, until they
shall be impeached by evidence. But in this case there is no
impeachment of the acts of the register. The evidence on which he
acted is stated on the face of the warrant, which enables the
proper tribunal, as between the parties interested, to determine
the question of right, which the register had neither the means nor
the power to do. The complainants do not deny the genuineness of
the certificate, the assignment, or the warrant, but they say that
the executor had no right to make the assignment, and that the
issuing of the warrant by the register does not preclude them from
raising that question.
Until the patents were obtained, this warrant, though assigned
and entered in part on the land in controversy, conveyed only an
equitable interest. Hoffman, to whom Ladd assigned it, and the
other assignees took it subject to all equities. In their hands,
unless affected by the statute of limitations or lapse of time, any
equity arising from the face of the instrument could be asserted
against them the same as against Ladd. Brush, being the last
assignee, obtained the patents in his own name, as assignee, and
these vested in him the legal estate. But this, on the principles
which have been long established in relation to these titles, does
not bar a prior equity. The complainants are proved to be the heirs
of Hockaday, and a part of them were minors at the commencement of
this suit. All of them in age were of tender years when the warrant
was assigned, and it appears that none of them came to a knowledge
of their rights until a short time before the bill was filed. And
this is an answer both to the statute of limitations and the
lapse
Page 40 U. S. 109
of time. The statute of Ohio does not run against nonresidents
of the state, nor can lapse of time operate against infants under
the circumstances of this case.
The great question in this controversy is whether Brush is
chargeable with notice. The certificate of the Executive Council of
Virginia stated that, "the representatives of John Hockaday were
entitled to the proportion of land allowed a captain of the
continental line, for three years' service." To this was appended a
request to the register of the land office to issue a warrant in
the name of Joseph Ladd, his heirs or assigns, signed by Ware,
executor of Hockaday, he having received, as stated, full value for
the same. Four military warrants of 1,000 acres each were issued by
the register, "9 August, 1808, to Joseph Ladd, assignee of Robert
S. Ware, executor of John Hockaday, deceased." By virtue of one of
these warrants, 400 acres of the land in dispute were entered, 8
June, 1809, in the name of George Hoffman, assignee, and 200 acres,
in the same name, 18 August, 1810. These entries were surveyed in
May, 1810, and on 20 January, 1818, patents were issued to
"Brush, assignee of John Hoffman, who was assignee of Joseph
Hoffman
et al., assignees of George Hoffman, who was
assignee of Joseph Ladd, assignee of Robert S. Ware, executor of
Hockaday,"
&c.
It is insisted that the general doctrine of notice does not
apply to titles of this description. And this position is true so
far as regards the original entry. To make a valid entry, some
object of notoriety must be called for, and unless this object be
proved to have been generally known in the neighborhood of the
land, at the time of the entry, the holder of a warrant who enters
the same land with full notice of the first entry will have the
better title. And so, if an entry be not specific as to the land
intended to be appropriated, or in any respect be defective, it
conveys no notice to a subsequent locator, nor can it be made good
by a subsequent purchaser without notice.
Kerr
v. Watts, 6 Wheat. 560. But with these exceptions,
the doctrine of notice has been considered applicable to these
military titles, as in other cases. And no reason is perceived why
this rule should not prevail.
Page 40 U. S. 110
From the nature of these titles and the force of circumstances,
an artificial system has been created unlike any other, which has
long formed the basis of title to real estate in a large and
fertile district of country. The peculiarities of this system,
having for half a century received judicial sanctions, must be
preserved, but to extend them would be unwise and impolitic.
Brush, it is insisted, was a
bona fide purchaser for a
valuable consideration without notice. The answer under which this
defense is set up is neither in substance nor in form free from
objection. It does not state the amount of consideration paid, the
time of payment, nor does it deny the circumstances from which
notice can be inferred.
Boone v.
Chiles, 10 Pet. 211212. But passing over the
considerations which arise out of the answer, we will inquire
whether the defendant is not chargeable with notice from the facts
which appear upon the face of his title. The entry on the books of
the surveyor, kept at the time in the State of Kentucky, was the
incipient step in the acquisition of the title. This entry could
only be made by producing to the surveyor and filing in his office
the original warrant or a certified copy of it. The survey was then
made, and a plat of the land, by a deputy, who returned the same to
the principal surveyor's office. This survey is called the plat and
certificate, and is assignable by law, but without an entry founded
upon a warrant, it is of no validity. On the transmission of this
survey, under the hand and seal of the principal surveyor,
accompanied by the original warrant, or a copy, to the General Land
Office, a patent is issued to the person apparently entitled to it.
In issuing the patent, the commissioner of the land office performs
a ministerial duty. He examines no witnesses, but acts from the
face of the papers and exercises no judgment on the subject, except
so far as regards matters of form. The patent therefore conveys the
legal title only, leaving prior equities open to investigation.
This is the history of this title and of every other in the same
district of country. And the question arises whether the
respondent, under the circumstances, was a
bona fide
purchaser for a valuable consideration without notice. In his
answer he says that he never saw the warrant, the
Page 40 U. S. 111
entries, nor the surveys on which the patents were founded, and
that he had no information as to the derivation of the title except
that which the patents contain. The question is not whether the
defendant in fact saw any of the muniments of title, but whether he
was not bound to see them. It will not do for a purchaser to close
his eyes to facts -- facts which were open to his investigation by
the exercise of that diligence which the law imposes. Such
purchasers are not protected.
It is insisted that the plats and certificates being assignable,
the defendant might well purchase them, without a knowledge of the
facts contained on the face of the warrant. But was he not bound to
look to the warrant as the foundation of his title? The surveys
were of no value without the warrant. No principle is better
established than that a purchaser must look to every part of the
title which is essential to its validity. The warrant was in the
land office of the principal surveyor, and although this at the
time was kept in Kentucky, the defendant was bound to examine it.
In this office his entries were made, and to it his surveys were
returned, and from this office was the evidence transmitted on
which the patents were issued. Can it be contended that the
defendant, who purchased an inchoate title, a mere equity, was not
bound to look into the origin of that equity? As a prudent man,
would he not examine whether that which he bought was of any value?
The records of the land office, and the papers there on file showed
the origin of the title and the steps which had been taken to
perfect it. By the exercise of ordinary prudence, he would have
been led to make this examination, and in law he must be considered
as having made it.
And here the question arises whether the statements of the
warrant, which were afterwards copied into the patents, that the
right originally belonged to Hockaday, descended to his heirs on
his decease, and had been assigned to Ladd, by his executor, were
not sufficient to put the defendant on inquiry? Now an executor has
not ordinarily any power over the real estate; his powers are
derived from the will, and he can do no valid act beyond his
authority. Where a will contains no special provision on the
subject, the land of the deceased descends to his
Page 40 U. S. 112
heirs, and their rights cannot be divested or impaired by the
unauthorized acts of the executor. The warrant, then, showed the
purchaser that this right, which pertained to the realty, and
which, on the death of Hockaday, descended to his heirs had been
assigned by the executor. Was not this notice? Was it not a fact,
essentially connected with the title purchased by the defendant,
which should have put him upon inquiry? If it would do this, it was
notice, for whatever shall put a prudent man on inquiry is
sufficient. And this rule is founded on sound reason as well as
law. How can an individual claim as an innocent purchaser under
such a circumstance?
But it is argued that it would impose on the defendant an
unreasonable duty to hold that he was bound not only to examine the
warrant in the land office in Kentucky, but to hunt up the will of
Hockaday and see what powers it conferred on the executor. The law
requires reasonable diligence in a purchaser to ascertain any
defect of title. But when such defect is brought to his knowledge,
no inconvenience will excuse him from the utmost scrutiny. He is a
voluntary purchaser, and having notice of a fact which casts doubt
upon the validity of his title, are the rights of innocent persons
to be prejudiced through his negligence? The will of Hockaday was
proved 11 July 1799, before the County Court of New Kent, in
Virginia, and recorded in the proper records of that county. When
the defendant purchased the title, he knew that it originated in
Virginia, had been sanctioned by the executive council of that
state, and that the warrant had been issued by the register at
Richmond. These are matters of public law, and are consequently
known to all. But independently of this, every purchaser of a
military title cannot but have a general knowledge of its
history.
Why was not the defendant bound to search for the will? The
answer given is the distance was too great, and the place where the
will could be found was not stated on the warrant, nor on any of
the other papers. That mere distance shall excuse inquiry in such a
case would be a new principle in the law of notice. The certificate
of the original right and the warrant were obtained
Page 40 U. S. 113
in Richmond, Virginia. And in the office records and papers of
the executive council, or in those of the register in Richmond, a
copy of the will probably could have been found. And if such a
search had been fruitless, it is certain that it could have been
found on the public record of wills of New Kent County. A search
short of this would not lay the foundation for parol evidence of
the contents of a written instrument. And shall a purchaser make a
bad title good by neglecting or refusing to use the same amount of
vigilance?
In the case of
Reeder v. Barr, 4 Ohio 458, the Supreme
Court of Ohio held that where a patent was issued to Newell as
assignee of the administrator of Henson Reeder, deceased, it was
sufficient to charge a subsequent purchaser with notice of the
equitable rights of the heirs of Reeder. It is difficult to draw a
distinction in principle between that case and the one under
consideration. An administrator in Ohio has no power unless
authorized by the court of common pleas to sell or convey an
interest in land, nor has an executor in Virginia any power over
the realty unless it be given to him in the will. In this case,
therefore, the purchaser was as much bound to look into the will
for the authority of the executor as the Ohio purchaser was bound
to look into the proceedings of the court for the authority of the
administrator.
The case
Lessee of Burkart v. Bucher, 2 Binn. 455, is
also in point. The defendant derived his title from William Willis,
to whom a patent had issued reciting that the title was derived
under the will of Henry Willis. This will did not authorize the
sale of the premises, and the court held, that this was notice to
the defendant. So, in the cases of
Jackson ex dem. Livingston
v. Neely, 10 Johns. 374, where a deed recited a letter of
attorney by virtue of which the conveyance was made, which was duly
deposited with the clerk of Albany, according to the act of 8
January 1794, it was held to be sufficient notice of the power, by
means of the recital, to a subsequent sequent purchaser, who was
equally affected by it, as if the power itself had been
deposited.
An agent receiving notes from an executor, payable to him as
executor as security for advances by the principal to the
executor
Page 40 U. S. 114
on his private account, and not as executor, affects his
principal with notice that it is a dealing of an executor with the
assets, for a purpose foreign to the trusts he was to discharge. 2
Ball & Beat. 491. When a purchaser cannot make out his title
but through a deed which leads to a fact, he will be affected with
notice of that fact.
Mertins v. Jolliffe, Ambl. 311. A.
made a conveyance to B., with a power of revocation by will, and
limited other uses. If A. dispose to a purchaser by will, a
subsequent purchaser is intended to have notice of the will as well
as of the power to revoke, and this is a notice in law. And so in
all cases where a purchaser cannot make out a title, but by deed
which leads to another fact, notice of which a purchaser shall be
presumed cognizant, for it is
crassa negligentia that he
sought not after it.
Moore v. Bennett, 2 Chan.Cas. 246.
Notice of letters patent in which there was a trust for creditors
is sufficient notice of the trust.
Dunch v. Kent, 1 Vern.
319. That which shall be sufficient to put the party upon inquiry
is notice. 13 Ves. 120. On a full consideration of this part of the
case, we think that the defendant must be held to be a purchaser
with notice.
The circuit court considered the defendant as vested with a
right to such part of the land as is usually given to a locator,
and directed onefourth of the two tracts to be laid off to him so
as to include his improvements, and they also decreed to the
defendant threefourths of the taxes paid by him, with interest.
This part of the decree is equitable, and as we coincide with the
views of the circuit court on all the points of the case, the
decree is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.