This was an agreed case commenced in the Bedford Circuit Court.
The case states that the appellant, in August, 1806, settled on a piece of vacant land; that on the 6th day of May, 1807, he caused it to be surveyed with a view to appropriate it by right of occupancy; and that on the 3d day of March, 1809, he applied a warrant and made an entry for three hundred acres, including his improvement, and the next day procured a grant. He made improvements on the land by clearing, building cabins,c. and resided thereon from the time of his settlements until the year 1812.
The ancestor of the appellees, on the 8th day of August, 1807, entered five hundred and thirty-two acres, including all the improvements which were then and afterwards made by the appellant; and on the 4th day of December, 1808, obtained a grant. In October, 1808, he commenced an ejectment and, on the trial of that suit, recovered the possession of the land from the appellant, who surrendered the improvement in 1812.
The appellant then commenced the present suit, viz, an action on the case, to recover the value of his improvements. The verdict and judgment being against him in the Circuit Court, he obtained an appeal.
Whiteside, for the appellant. Several questions arise in this cause: first, is the appellant entitled to payment for his improvement at all: and, secondly, if so, can he be allowed to recover for such as were made after the declaration in ejectment was served on him?
The Act of 1809 declares that "any person in possession of any land under patent grant or lawful entry, and shall at any time be dispossessed by due course of law, in that case the person so dispossessed shall be *Page 295 entitled to recover, c." It would seem clear from the provisions of this Act that the appellant is entitled, at all events, to be paid for such improvements as were made before the 3d day of March, 1809, which is the date of his entry; but I contend further, that he is entitled to recover for those that were made at a subsequent period. The true object of the act of Assembly was to encourage agriculture and industry by protecting men in the enjoyments of the profits of their labor. Under this principle it would be going too far to say that every person who voluntarily seats himself upon the lands of another shall be paid for the performance of labor which, perhaps, might not be required by the true owner of the soil; but, at the same time it ought to be considered that there may be a variety of instances of the occupancy of the land by innocent persons ultimately proving to possess the inferior title; and it was but an act of bare justice to say that persons so circumstanced, and who had been honestly and fairly making valuable improvements, as they supposed, upon their own land, should receive a compensation from the successful claimant. The entry upon the land in question was not tortious, because he did not violate the right of Other persons. At the time the appellant first took possession of the land it was vacant, and indeed he seems to have manifested the first disposition to appropriate it.
His survey, which is the commencement of his title, is long anterior to any act on the part of the appellee's ancestor toward procuring a title. It is true he did not make his entry until after the date of the entry and grant of Shipp, but he made it within the time mentioned by the act of Assembly, prescribing the mode which shall be pursued for the purpose of perfecting titles to occupant claims. These subsequent acts on the part of the appellant, evincing an early disposition to appropriate this land to his own use in a manner conforming to the laws of the land, ought, and do, in reason and justice sanctify the original entry. It is from that period, therefore, that his right to be paid for his improvements commenced.
It has been and will no doubt be again contended *Page 296 that, although the appellant may be, in part, entitled to be paid for his improvements, yet it must be for those only which were made anterior to the service of the declaration in ejectment, which is considered as notice of an adversary claim. That this principle is manifestly unjust, it seems to me can not with propriety be questioned. The effect of it would be to discourage agriculture, and produce a paucity of improvement throughout the country. It is considered fair that where a person occupies a tract of land to which he supposes he has a good title — and a man has a right to presume that, when he has taken the means prescribed by law to effect it — but which ultimately turns out to be deficient, he should be entitled to recover for all lasting and valuable improvements. The moment the idea is recognized that the right to recover shall cease with the notice of an adversary claim, that moment it is in effect said that so soon as a declaration in ejectment is served, no further improvement shall be made, because the defendant, who can not possibly know what may be the event of the suit, will not hazard the making of improvements which he may not be permitted to enjoy, and which, if his adversary prevails, will not be remunerated.
Laying the different acts of Assembly entirely out of the question, and I do not choose to advert to all of them, the appellant is entitled to recover at common law. Hardin's Rep. 599. The acts of Assembly are not intended to abridge the rights of the improver; they are only intended to support and confirm rights which before existed. And as the principles of justice and sound policy forbid the idea of making the single fact of notice the line of demarcation; and as the different statutory regulations on the subject of paying for improvements are wholly silent on that head, I humbly trust that this Court will not interpolate a principle so manifestly injurious to the best interest of the country.
Haywood and Hayes, for the appellees. We will first consider this question as at common law. Suppose an action at common law were brought, what would be its form? It would be an action of assumpsit *Page 297 for work and labor; and, to support it, the request of the defendant would be necessary to be established. 1 T. R. 20. There is not a more sound and universal maxim than that no man shall be charged upon a contract, but upon his own consent. There are some cases, indeed, where a court of equity has interfered and compelled the successful party to pay for the improvements; but this has only been done where it was reasonable to presume that the improver labored under an honest belief that he was entitled to settle on the land. And, even in that case, to entitle the improver to recover, the improvements must be valuable, and made without notice of the adversary claim. 1 Wash. Rep. 336.
Townsend is not entitled to recover for the improvements that were made before the entry of Shipp was made, because, until after that period he had no kind of title. It is true, he had caused a survey to be executed, but this is no appropriation of land. It is at best but a dubious act, and does not certainly evince a disposition to procure a title. He is not entitled to be paid for such as were made afterwards, and before his entry, because Shipp's entry was record notice to him that there was an adverse claim; nor afterwards, because the land had been already appropriated by an entry and grant, and an ejectment actually served upon him. Hardin's Rep. 497; 3 John. 512; 2 John. 272.
The act of Assembly of 1797, ch. 43. section 3, declares that "any grantee or other person claiming by deed of conveyance founded upon a grant who shall be dispossessed by due course of law, the person so dispossessed shall be entitled to recover," c.
The plaintiff can not be entitled to the benefit of this Act, because of the absence of facts upon which that law is to operate. The Act of 1805 does not alter the principle; it only places those who are in possession under a lawful entry upon the same footing with those who have a grant; but, in neither case can the improver be entitled to recover, where that which was the foundation of the right to recover, viz. *Page 298 the entry or grant, were not made until actual notice of a conflicting claim.
It will not be necessary to animadvert upon the Act of 1809. ch. 31, section 11. because it can only apply to posterior cases; besides, if it is examined, it will not be found to conflict with the principles which we have assumed. This is an action on the case brought by the appellant, and the questions made go to question his right to a recovery. The Court will examine this subject in the order observed by the defendant's counsel.
1. On the principles of the common law;
2. On the principles governing a court of equity;
3. With a view to the principles contained in our statutes.
If a recovery can be had according to the principles of the common law, it must be for work and labor done on the land by agreement of the person to be charged, or, in other words, at his request; and this seems conformable to the opinion of the Court in 5 John. 272. If the law were otherwise the idea of property in lands would be almost annihilated. If owners could not have the exclusive use and control of real estate, it would be in the power of others, by taking possession without permission and making large improvements, to acquire a property in the soil. It would be manifestly repugnant to the first principle of property, of society, and of free government, that any person should pay for work and labor done without his consent.
The idea of property, so dear to freemen, would at once be lost if it can be controlled by others without the owner's approbation. Therefore, at common law, a person who cleared or improved another's land without his consent or request, was not only entitled to no compensation, but was liable to an action of trespass. Nor is it believed, on the second ground of inquiry, that a court of equity would directly sustain an action for the value of improvements. They have, and uniformly would afford relief under *Page 299 particular circumstances, for the value of improvements to the tenant in possession, as against the rightful owner claiming that possession. These circumstances occur when an individual takes possession of land under a title, believing the land to be his own, and under that belief makes improvements. A person having the better title sues for the possession and recovers. Here equity would interpose in favor of the possessor innocently making those improvements by enjoining the claimant from taking possession until, by the rents and profits the improver could compensate himself for his labor; or by putting it in the power of the person recovering to take possession by paying the tenant the value of the improvements after deducting for use and occupation. Equitable principles have usually been applied in behalf of the possessor, against the person seeking the possession by suit. If the possessor resign the possession without claiming compensation, the law would presume that he either had been satisfied by the reception of the rents and profits or that, knowing of the better claim, he did not design to claim any. This seems to be the course of reasoning to be collected from equitable precedents; but it is not the intention of the Court to give any conclusive opinion on this ground, as it is not necessary. One point seems to be well settled in equity, that the improver can not claim any compensation after he has notice that the holder of a better title means to claim the land. These principles are recognized in Kaims's Prin. Eq. part 1, section 2; Hardin, 579; and have reference to a clear and uniform principle in equity, that he who asks equitable relief must show that he has acted conscientiously and equitably himself; before he can obtain it. Now, after clear and express notice that another holding a better title means to assert his right, the possessor can not, in equity, say that the improvements were not made at his own risk. This much seemed to us proper to state respecting the general course of reasoning in equity, in order to clear the way for a more perfect view of the subject under the *Page 300 statutes of 1796, ch. 43, and 1805, ch. 42. Hay. Rev. 247-372.
As the case before the Court is a suit at law, and not in equity, it remains to be considered how far these statutes are coincident with common law principles. The first Act is in these words: "That if any grantee or person claiming by deed of conveyance, founded on a grant, hath, by virtue thereof, obtained peaceable possession of any tract of land, and shall at any time thereafter, be dispossessed by due course of law, or otherwise put out of possession, without his, her or their consent, first had and obtained, that then, in that ease, the person so dispossessed shall be entitled to recover at common law from the person to whose use the dispossession was so made the value of the improvements which he, she or they have made on the said land." The second Act, being in pari materia, must be taken in connection with the first. It re-enacts the provisions contained in the first, and introduces two new ideas: First, that a person claiming under a lawful entry shall be entitled to compensation for improvements. Secondly, that the value of the improvements shall be a lien on the land improved. In the interpretation of these Acts, it is insisted on the part of the plaintiff that he is entitled to compensation for all improvements made previous to the time of eviction. In a waste and woodland country, as this is, the Legislature must have designed to favor those who had opened land, and had contributed to clear the country of the incumbrances of forest timber. To give the Acts a restrictive interpretation would discourage agriculture and the improvement of the country, — two, objects which the Legislature evidently had in view.
This interpretation involves fundamental principles of the highest concern to society in a free country. At this day it would be time misspent to descant at length on the principles of the Constitution and government under which we live. Let it suffice to observe that they secure to the honest and industrious the exclusive enjoyment of the fruits of that honesty and industry, and, in other words, the undisturbed *Page 301 use of their property. No man can be deprived of it but by his own consent, unless for public use, and not then without just compensation. These principles being inseparably interwoven in the frame and texture of our Constitution, can not be destroyed by a legislative act. In deference to the legislative authority, however, we never presume they designed to violate the Constitution or the sacred rights of freemen. Any interpretation having this effect can not be admitted. The Acts under consideration must be so interpreted as to steer clear of a violation of these constitutional principles. Where an act can have effect without obtruding on first principles, it is fair to give it that interpretation, because the Legislature are never presumed to violate these principles where a meaning can be fixed to their expressions which would avoid such a conflict. To give the Acts the large and literal interpretation contended for by the plaintiff's counsel would unavoidably conflict with the fundamental principles adverted to. Thus, A is living on a tract of land, for which he has a grant; B makes an entry and obtains a grant, having a knowledge of A's grant; he then, without the permission of A, settles on it, with a large number of slaves, and before A can evict him by a due course of law he makes extensive clearings, builds houses, and plants orchards. Agreeably, to the literal interpretation of the Act, he is entitled to the value of these improvements; and not only so, but such value is a lien upon the land, let it go into whose hands it may. A suit is brought for these improvements against A, and a judgment recovered for as much or more than the whole land is worth. B takes out execution; the land is sold; most probably he becomes the purchaser. Though it is admitted that the Legislature was not competent to the power of passing an act directing that A's land should be vested in B, yet the construction contended for enables. B to do the same thing indirectly. Hence it results that these Acts must be so interpreted that they may stand with the principles of the Constitution. It seems to the Court that, consistently *Page 302 with these principles, the remedial part of the Act can not be extended any further than the ground on which courts of equity have previous to this acted. The general principles laid down in the Acts were perfectly coincident, we believe, with the grounds of relief heretofore established by those courts. It is true the limitations or modifications of those principles which are recognized in equity make no part of the Act; they were too numerous to be delineated, or capable of definition if seen. We believe neither was the case in the nature of things; nor has it been usual, when legislating on general principles, to specify exceptions or modifications of those principles. Such things, from the nature of legislation, which is conversant in generals and not particulars, are peculiarly the subject of judicial interpretation.
Before the passage of these Acts, any remedy which might have existed to recover the value of improvements was in a court of equity, and not at law. The acts are so far alterative that they afford a remedy at law where equity formerly afforded relief; but it can not at present be seen that a rational construction of those Acts will enable us to go any further. At the same time it seems proper to remark that, as the Act has made a legal subject of complaint out of an equitable one, it necessarily affords to the owner of the better title a legal defence on all the grounds on which he could have defended himself or opposed the claim of the improver in a court of equity.
Applying these principles to the case before the Court, had the plaintiff any claim for improvements made previous to the defendant's entry? The Court are of opinion that he had not, because he had neither an entry, grant, nor deed, which the Acts require. Besides, it must be admitted that the Legislature of this State had not a full and absolute right, agreeably to the cession and other acts on that subject, to legislate respecting the disposition of the vacant soil. It was communicated to them only sub modo, as to make good the claims or warrants originating under the laws of North Carolina. Before these claims were satisfied, it would seem highly probable *Page 303 that they had no power to obstruct the perfecting of these claims by permission to improve, and requiring that the improvements should be paid for. It is considered on all hands that the plaintiff could not acquire a better claim to the land than the defendant's ancestor by occupancy; so that his claim is merely that of a younger entry and grant, opposed to those of an older date. It is next to be ascertained whether the plaintiff could recover for improvements subsequent to the date of Shipp's entry. As he can not derive any claim to compensation under the occupant law, in this case, the subject must be named independently of it. Agreeably to the two Acts referred to, he could not claim compensation in any event until he had an entry, which was not until the 23d day of March, 1809. Could he claim compensation from that time? The record does not state when the writ of ejectment was executed; it is said to have been issued in October, 1808. By a recurrence to the Act respecting the time of the commencement of the fall term of the District Court of Mero, it appears to have been on the second Monday of November. Hence, it would seem by legal presumption that the ejectment must have been executed previous to the commencement of that term, as it was then returnable. So that it appears the plaintiff had no express notice previous to the time of making his entry. Knowing that he had no right to claim by occupancy, and that the defendant's ancestor had a grant for the land, founded on an older entry, he ought to have stopped his hands as to making improvements. In progressing, he acted at his own risk, and therefore ought not to recover.
The provisions of these Acts seemed to be bottomed on the equitable principle, that a person improving land, believing it to be his own, ought to be compensated by him who obtains the use of such improvements; but the general principles of equity debar such improver from obtaining compensation if he knows another has a better claim. It is not now necessary for the Court to decide how this notice shall be afforded. It is sufficient for the Court to say that *Page 304 notice by the service of an ejectment is sufficient, without doing anything further. That notice was given in this case. If the Acts designed that improvers should be compensated for all improvements previous to notice being expressly given by the person having the better title, it would invert a presumption of law, founded in reason and the nature of property, to wit; that the state in which it is found conforms to the will of the owner. When land is permitted to remain uncleared, it is presumed to be the owner's desire that it should be so. Now, if the acts enforce compensation in all cases, as where improvers clearly know of a better rights, until notice of dissent is given it must be founded in the presumption that individuals owning uncleared lauds are desirous to have have them cleared at their own expense, and that the clearing will not be at the place and in the manner that will meet with their approbation. Whether such presumption naturally arises from the generally unimproved state of lands here, it is not necessary to determine. This much may be predicated with safety, that such a legal presumption would go great lengths in overthrowing the essential rights of ownership. These observations are applicable only to cases where the improver must unavoidably know he can not sustain a claim. If the owner stand by and see improvements made, it would be another consideration. In perplexed and doubtful cases, improvers having titles might well suppose their claims were good, until it should be otherwise determined by competent authority. In some of those cases, equity and these Acts would perhaps afford relief for lasting and valuable improvements up to the time of the judgment of the Court. On this legal presumption and its consequences, the Court, however, think it unnecessary to give any decided opinion. The judgment of the Circuit Court must be affirmed.
NOTE. — See the note to the case of Bristoe v. Evans, 2 Tenn., 341, where the unsatisfactory character of the decisions on these laws is noted, and the result shown to be this, that the acts in question only changed the forum of relief, without altering its extent. The Court determined, in McKinly v. Holiday, 10 Y., 479, after reviewing the previous cases, that the defendant in ejectment could, under these acts, recover compensation for such improvements as bettered the estate to the extent of the rents and profits chargeable to him, but no more. In Jones v. Perry, 10 Y., 59, the decision was, that, in equity, parties in possession under a void deed, but believing they had title, would be allowed for valuable and permanent improvements, not exceeding the rents and profits for which they were chargeable. — ED.