By the laws of Tennessee anterior to 1856, a deed for lands
lying in Tennessee could not be acknowledged or proven in another
state before the clerk of a court.
In 1856, a law was passed allowing this to be done. This statute
was prospective.
The circumstance that the law of 1856 was called an amendment of
the prior law does not change this view of the subject.
Where a deed was acknowledged in 1839, before the clerk of a
court in another state, a copy of it from the record was improperly
allowed to be read in evidence to the jury.
Where the defendant claimed under the statute of limitations and
showed possession of Evans' coal bank, the validity of this plea
will depend upon the fact whether or not Evans' coal bank is within
the lines of the plaintiff's patent. The case remanded to the
circuit court for the purpose of ascertaining this by a corrected
survey made according to the rules laid down by this Court.
This was an ejectment brought under the circumstances stated in
the opinion of the Court.
Page 65 U. S. 243
The principal question in the case was whether the possession of
the defendants below was upon the tract of land claimed by the
plaintiffs, so as to constitute a bar to the action through the
statute of limitations. Maps were produced in court, but so many
tracts of land were laid down upon them that it was difficult to
decide the point. The arguments of counsel bearing upon it could
not possibly be understood by the reader.
MR. JUSTICE CATRON delivered the opinion of the Court.
Bulkley sued McEwen and Wiley in an action of ejectment, for
5,000 acres of land. At the trial, the plaintiff introduced a
patent issued to Thomas B. Eastland, dated December 21, 1838, No.
22,261. The plaintiff next offered to read the copy of a deed from
Eastland to Bulkley for the tract granted, with other lands, to the
reading of which objection was made, but the court admitted the
copy to be read, to the admission of which the defendants
excepted.
By the laws of Tennessee, the fee in land does not pass unless
the conveyance is proved or duly acknowledged and registered. This
deed purports to have been acknowledged by the grantor, Eastland,
before the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas for the City and
County of New York, and is certified under his seal of office. And
this was accompanied by a certificate of the judge of said court
that Joseph Hoxie, before whom the deed was acknowledged, was
clerk, and that the court of which he was clerk was a court of
record. On this evidence of its execution, the deed was registered
in the county where the land lies, but at what time it was
registered does not appear. The acknowledgment was taken October
25, 1839. At that time, a deed for lands lying in Tennessee could
not be acknowledged or proven in another state before the clerk of
a court.
In 1856, an act was passed, ch. 115, which it is insisted
validates this probate. It provides that deeds proved or
acknowledged before the clerk of any court of record in any of the
states of this Union, and certified by the clerk under his seal of
office, and the chief magistrate of the court shall certify to the
official character of the clerk, the probate or acknowledgment
Page 65 U. S. 244
shall be valid. And the second section declares that all deeds
proved or acknowledged and certified in manner aforesaid may be
registered in this state, and shall be good to pass title
&c.
It is insisted that the act is retrospective as well as
prospective in its operation, and covers the acknowledgment made in
1839 in New York.
We think the statute of 1856 is prospective, and that to hold
otherwise would be a strained construction and violate a general
rule of jurisprudence, to-wit, that it is of the very essence of a
new law that it shall apply to future cases, and such must be its
construction unless the contrary clearly appears.
It is next insisted that the act of 1856, being an amendment of
the act of 1839, carries with it the provisions of this law. The
act of 1856 declares that the act of 1839 "be so amended" that all
deeds, powers of attorney &c., proved or acknowledged before a
foreign clerk, may be registered, and have full effect. An
additional mode of probate is provided; nor does the act go any
further.
The deed offered in evidence was recorded without legal proof of
its execution, and therefore a copy of the record could not be
evidence. The court erred in admitting the copy to go to the
jury.
The plaintiff below described the land sued for in his
declaration, which is required to be done by the laws of Tennessee.
The declaration calls for the boundaries of grant No. 22,261, made
to Thomas B. Eastland, December 21, 1838. The defendants then gave
in evidence two other grants, for 5,000 acres each; one to Thomas
B. Eastland, No. 22,267, being one of the tracts contained in the
deed from Eastland to Bulkley; and another to Henry H. Wiley, one
of the defendants, No. 26,086. The two junior patents covered the
principal possession of the defendants, at a place known as Evans'
coal bank. This fact was admitted; and it furthermore appeared,
that the defendants had held seven years' adverse possession at the
coal bank, under Wiley's grant. And it was insisted below, and is
again here, that as Bulkley had shown himself to be the owner of
both the tracts granted, and as the operation
Page 65 U. S. 245
of the act of limitations drew to Wiley's younger patent the
title of Eastland's junior grant, and vested this title in the
defendants, they were protected by the statute, because Bulkley had
the right to sue at all times during the seven years, by virtue of
grant No. 22,267. But the court instructed the jury to the reverse
of this assumption, and we think correctly. From the facts stated,
it is true that the right of action founded on the younger grant to
Eastland was barred, to the extent that Wiley's grant interfered
with No. 22,267; and assuming it to be true, that the defendants
could avail themselves in defense, or affirmatively, of this title,
still it could avail them nothing, as both No. 22,267 and No.
26,086 were inferior to grant No. 22,261.
The main question in the cause turns on the fact, whether the
possession at Evans' coal bank was within the boundary of the grant
No. 22,261, described in the declaration, and alone relied on at
the trial by the plaintiff. It calls to begin on the south bank of
Coal creek, four poles below Bowling's mill; thence running south
with the foot of Walden's Ridge, 894 poles, to a stake at letter H,
in Henderson & Co.'s Clinch river survey; then west, crossing
Walden's Ridge, 894 poles to a stake; thence north 894 poles to a
stake; then a direct line to the beginning.
It was proved at the trial and is admitted here that no line was
originally run and marked but the first one, and that at H there is
a marked poplar corner tree, which is a line mark of the grant. It
being admitted that the first line is established, and that it is
regarded as a north and south line, and that the other lines of the
tract were not run or marked, it follows they must be ascertained
by course and measurement. How they are to run is matter of law,
and on this assumption the circuit court instructed the jury as
follows:
"To identify the land appropriated, the jury must look to the
calls, locative and directory, the foot of the mountain, the creek,
the coal bank, the marked trees, courses and distance, number of
acres demanded and paid for &c., and they will look to the
survey, full or partial; that assuming the correct mode of survey
to have been by horizontal measurement, and that the surveyor
Page 65 U. S. 246
based his identification of the land entered on surface measure,
in accordance with his custom and the custom of the mountain range
of country in which he resided, this would not of itself defeat the
location of the land, and the boundaries of the grant as indicated
by the survey, calls, and other evidence, to all of which they
would look in adjusting the boundaries of the plaintiff's
grant."
To this charge, exception was taken. We think the instructions
given were too vague and general to afford the jury any material
aid in ascertaining the true boundaries of the land granted. The
first line calls for two corners admitted to exist; this line must
govern the three others. 1 Meigs' Digest 154. It falls short of the
distance called for, being only about 800 poles long. Its course
being found, the next line running west must be run at right angles
to the first one. In ascertaining the southwest corner of the tract
at 894 poles from the poplar corner, the mode of measuring will be
to level the chain, as is usual with chain-carriers when measuring
up and down mountain sides, or over other steep acclivities or
depressions, so as to approximate, to a reasonable extent,
horizontal measurement, this being the general practice of
surveying wild lands in Tennessee. The reasonable certainty of
distance, and approximation to a horizontal line is matter of fact
for the jury to determine.
The 3d line running north, from the ascertained western
termination of the second, must run parallel with the first line
and be continued to the distance of 894 poles, the chain being
leveled as above stated. The 4th line will be run from the northern
terminus of the 3d line to the beginning near Bowling's Mill.
The surveyor who made the survey on which grant No. 22,261 is
founded, deposed at the trial,
"That no actual survey was made in 1838 of said land except the
first line from A to H. That the other three lines of the grant
were not run, but merely platted. That the proper mode of making
surveys was by horizontal measurement, but that he had not been in
the habit of making them in that way, that in making the line from
A to H in this survey, he had measured the surface, that the custom
of the country was to adopt surface measure,
Page 65 U. S. 247
and that he had made the survey in accordance with such
custom."
The grantee was bound to abide by the marked line from A to H,
but the other lines must be governed by a legal rule, which a local
custom cannot change. Should this custom be recognized as law,
governing surveys, it must prevail in private surveys, in cases of
sales of land, when the purchaser who bought a certain number of
acres might, by surface measure across a mountain, lose a large
portion of the land he had paid for. And such would be the case
with this grantee, were he restricted to surface measure; whereas,
by the terms of his patent, the government granted to the extent of
lines approximating to horizontal measurement. How far the act of
limitations will affect the plaintiff's title, will depend on the
fact whether Evans' coal bank falls within the boundary of the
patent sued on, as it is not claimed that the other possession at a
different place on grant No. 22,261, and for which trespass the
recovery was had, was seven years old when the suit was
brought.
It is ordered that the judgment below be reversed, and the
cause remanded for another trial to be had therein.