Jackson v. Oltz

By the Court, Marcy, J.

The act of the legislature, (sm. 13, ch. 59, 1790,) by virtue of which the patent was issued, directed the surveyor general to survey the lands which had been promised as bounty to the soldiers in the line of this state into lots, and fifty acres in one of the corners of each lot was declared to be subject to the payment of forty eight shillings, as a compensation to the surveyor general for his services and expenses in marking, numbering and surveying each lot. It was further provided in that act, that if the said sum of forty eight shillings should remain unpaid for the term of two years next after issuing the patents, the surveyor general should sell the fifty acres at public vendue, after giving six weeks notice, and apply the money arising from such sales to pay the expenses of the surveys.

In 1791, the legislature made a further regulation relative to the sale of the fifty acres in each lot, subject to the expenses for the survey. (Sess. 14, ch. 42, 1791.) The fifty acres were, by the last act, directed to be sold out of one of the corners of each lot ¡on which the forty eight shillings should remain unpaid after the 1st July, 1792.

It appears from the recital in the- surveyor general’s deed, that he sold and conveyed, on the 21st day of July; 1792, to Robert Dill the premises in question as the survey fifty of lot No 21, in Virgil, for the non-payment of the forty eight shillings, the expense of survey, after giving notice according to the requirement of the first mentioned act.

It is true that the patent under which the plaintiff derived title to the premises in question, and which bears date the 8th July, 1790, was for the entire lot; yet, to ascertain its effect, we must look to the act by virtue of which it was issued. By *540the fourth section of that act, fifty acres in one of the corners of each lot is declared to be subject to a charge for the expenses of survey, and provision is made for the sale of these fifty acres, in case the expenses are not paid. The soldier, therefore, took the whole lot under the patent, with fifty acres in one of its corners, subject to a defeasance. The act directed the surveyor general to sell, after six weeks notice, if the expenses should remain unpaid for two years after issuing the patent. It is contended, on the part of the plaintiff, that the patentee had two years, by the terms of the contract, implied in the law, for the payment of the charge on the lot, and that it was not competent for the legislature to authorize, at the succeeding session, a change in the time and manner of the sale, so as to require the patentee to discharge this encumbrance at an earlier period than was fixed by the law directing the issuing of the patent. I am inclined to regard the time and manner of selling the fifty acres encumbered with the expenses of the survey as a matter of mere regulation, within the control and direction of the legislature, and not a constituent part of the agreement between the state and the soldier; but on this point it is not necessary to give a decided opinion.

The act of the 22d March, 1791, directed the surveyor general to sell, after the 1st day of July, 1792, the fifty acres in each lot, in case the forty eight shillings should remain unpaid. The objection to the regularity of the sale of the premises is precisely the same, whether he proceeded under the first or second act. The patent to John Gee, the soldier, was issued the 8th of July, 1790, and the surveyor generaos sale of the premises was the 21st of July, 1792. Whether he sold under the one act or the other, he did not sell until the time had elapsed when he was at liberty to sell; but it is said a sufficient period had not elapsed after that time to allow him to give the six weeks notice required expressly hy the act of 1790, and impliedly by that of 1791. It is insisted that before notice could be given, there must have been a default in the payment, and the date of the deed of the surveyor general shews that six weeks notice could not *541have been given, and therefore the sale is void, because the law was not strictly complied with.

The deed executed by the surveyor general recites that notice was given pursuant to the act of 1790. It was not, I apprehend, necessary that the surveyor general should wait till the day on which he was permitted to sell before he published the notice. He was authorized to sell at any time after two years from the day of issuing the patent by the first act, and after the first day of July, 1792, by the second act, giving six weeks notice. A notice commencing previous to the time when he was permitted to sell, would satisfy the requirement of the law. The language of the act does not require that the first publication of the notice should be subsequent to the default in the payment. We are therefore disposed to uphold the construction which was given to the act by a public functionary of the state nearly forty years ago, and upon which the title to a large amount of real estate must now depend. Nothing hut this objection to the sufficiency of the notice is shewn to impeach the sale by the surveyor general, and that being considered unfounded, the sale and conveyance of the surveyor general must be adjudged valid, and such sale operated as a defeasance to the patent to Gee, so far as it related to the premises for which this action was brought

New trial granted.