Enslin v. Bowman

Tilghman C. J.

It appears by the.speciai’verdict in this case, that George Enslin, the defendant below, claimed under a warrant to Sarah Hollenback, dated 10th May 1792,for 400 acres of land, a survey in pursuance of the said warrant on the 9th December 1793, regularly returned to the land office, and a patent on the 11th June 1798, the purchase money having been paid .on the 5th June 1792. It appears also that the first and the only actual settlement made on the land in dispute, was by the defendant, or those under whom he claims. He had been long in possession previous to the bringing of this ejectment, had cleared thirty or forty acres, planted an orchard, and built a dwelling-house and barn. The plaintiffs derived their title from a patent dated 30th July 1808, founded on a certificate from Thomas Cooper and John M. Taylor, commissioners for carrying into execution the provisions of the “ act for offering compensation to the Penn-u sylvania claimants of certain lands within the seventeen u townships in the county of Luzerne, and for other pur- “ poses therein mentioned,” passed the 4th, April 1799, and the supplementary acts passed the 15th March 1800, and the; 6th April 1802. This certificate bears date the 16th January 1804, and sets forth that the land was occupied by a Connecticut claimant, and actual settler there, before the time of the decree of Trenton. This assertion seems at first to be in ‘ direct opposition to the finding of the jury; but is rendered consistent with it bv the explanation afforded by the plain*466tiff’s counsel. They suppose that by the certificate of the commissioners it is only meant, that the land was occupied by one who was an actual settler, according to the rules and regulations of the Susquehanna Company. Now, according to those rules, a man may be an actual settler without having ever been in the state of Pennsylvania. The Susquehanna Company sold by townships, some of which contained 23,000 acres. The purchaser was to place twenty able bodied men on the township, which being done, the condition of settlement was complied with, and the title of the purchaser became perfect.

In order to determine whether the commissioners were right in their construction of the laws .under which they acted, it will be necessary to consider not only the laws themselves, but certain well known historical facts which led to the making of them.

Soon after the purchase made by the late proprietaries of Pennsylvania of the Indians, in the month of November 1768, a number of men from Connecticut took pbssession of a tract of country about Wyoming, on the north branch of Susquehanna, claiming under a deed from the Indians to certain persons associated under the name of the Susquehanna Company. These persons claimed adversely to the proprietaries of Pennsylvania, and asserted that the country included in their deed was within the bounds of the charter of Connecticut. This unfortunate controversy was attended with riot, disorder and bloodshed, which continued until the commencement of the revolutionary war, when the Congress of the United States, alarmed at the consequences which might result from a dispute of so serious a nature between two powerful states, recommended that all acts of force should be abstained from, and each person should remain in possession of the land occupied by him, until a proper season should arise for determining the matter on principles of justice. This recommendation was complied with. The Connecticut settlers were the most numerous, and held possession during the war, in the course of which they suffered great hardships and lost many lives, being on a remote frontier much exposed to the attacks of the British and the Indians. In the month of December 1782, the cause between Pennsylvania and Connecticut, having been heard by a court of *467commissioners appointed under the articles of confederation, was finally decided in favour of Pennsylvania. From this period the courts of Pennsylvania must consider the title of Connecticut of no validity, either in law or equity, except as it may have sincedoeen confirmed'by our own acts of assembly. .; ■

Soon after the decree of Trentori, the Connecticut settlers seem to have been proceeded against with'undue severity. This produced an act of assembly for- restoring the possession from which they had been forcibly ■ removed. The council- of censors too made a remonstrance in their favour in the year 1/84. At length, ,on the -28th March 1/8/, an act of assembly, called the confirming act, was passed, of which it will be necessary to take particular notice, as it is alluded to in the special verdict. Tfie preamble of this act recites the decree of Trenton, and the settlement of a number of thé inhabitants of Connecticut on the disputed territory prior to the said decree. It recites also that the interfering claims of the Pennsylvania and Connecticut men had occasioned much contention, expense qnd bloodshed; and that the assembly were desirous of putting an end to these evils, by confirming such of the Connecticut claims as were acquired by actual settlers prior to the decree of Trenton. It is then enacted that “ all the said rights or lots now ly- “ ing within the county of Luzerne, which were occupied a or acquired by Connecticut claimants, who -were actually settlers there, at or before the termination of the claims of “ the state of Connecticut, by the decree aforesaid, and “ which rights or lots were particularly assigned to the said “ settlers prior to the said decree, agreeably to the regula- “ tions then in force among them, be and they are hereby u confirmed to them and their heirs and assigns.” It is very clear, that the only persons intended to be relieved by this law, were persons actually settled in the county of Luzerne prior to the decree of Trenton; and that the words “ agreea- ■ “ bly to the regulations then in force among them" refer not to the actual sttlement, but to the assignment of particular rights' or lots to particular settlers. By actual settlers we understand persons residing on the land. -It is' a class of people always favoured by the late proprietaries, and by the state of Pennsylvania; and it having been thought of impor*468tance to define the term settlement precisely, it wáá enacted by the act bf 30th December 1786, (passed by the very same persons who made the confirming law) that by a settlement should be understood “ an actual, personal, resideht settle- “ ment, with a manifest intention of making it a place of abode, and the means of supporting a family, and continued from “ time to time, unless interrupted by the enemy, or by go- ■ “ ing into the military service of this country during the “ war.” That persons of this description should be confirmed in their claims, there was some reason, because they had entered into possession while the right was undecided; they had all suffered, and many bled in defence of the country. But it will be difficult to assign any motive, either of justice or policy, which should have induced the legislature to take away the rights of their own citizens, in order to make way for persons who had rendered the state no service, but on the contrary had been the authors of much disturbance, expense and vexation. The confirming law at the same time made compensatiori to the Pennsylvania claimants, who had acquired titles before its passage, by a grant of lands in other parts of the state.

This law which was mácle with such beneficent intentions, did not prove satisfactory to either party. Its execution was opposed even in the county of Luzerne. The commissioners were interrupted before they had made much progress in their work. In consequence of this, their powers were suspended by the act of 29th March 1788, in which it is said, “ that the commissioners had been interrupted in their pro- “ ceedings by the combinations, thfeatenings, and outrageous “violence of certain lawless people in the said county of “ Luzerne, and obliged to fly for the preservation of their “lives.” At length the confirming law was repealed in terms of strong reprobation by the act of 1st April 1790, by which it was declared, that the repealed act was “ unconstitutional and of the most dangerous consequence.” The opinion thus expressed of its unconstitutionality, was confirmed by the Circuit Court of the United States, in the case of Vanhorne’s Lessee v. Dorrance. That cause was removed to the Supreme Court of the United States by writ of error, where it was terminated by a non pros suffered by the plaintiff in error. It is unnecessary to enter now into the-consti*469tiltional question, because the commissioners under the con- _ firming law were interrupted before they had completed any business, and the law itself was annulled by the same authority from which it derived its existence.

From the 29th of March 1788 the Connecticut claimants were neglected by the legislature until the 4th of April1799, when the act was passed under Which the certificate of the commissioners was issued, on which the plaintiffs found their title. It was the object of the act to induce the Pennsylvania claimants to release their rights for a moderate compensation in money, in order to quiet the country by confirming the title of such Connecticut claimants in the ■seventeen townships of Luzerne county, “as were actually “ settlers there at or before the time of the decree of Tren- ton, and whose rights or lots had been particularly assigned “ to them prior to the said decree, agreeably to the regula- “ tions then in force among them,” just in the words of the confirming law. In order then'to give the commissioners jurisdiction, it was necessary, that the pérson in whose favour the certificate was to be issued, or those under whom he claimed, should have been actually settled within the seventeen townships prior to the decree of Trenton. Whether there should not also have been a, settlement on each tract included in the certificate, I give no opinion at present, because the special verdict finds no settlement of any kind within the seventeen townships.

But it is contended that the certificate of the commissioners is conclusive evidence of the truth of the facts asserted in it. Respecting the title' under Connecticut, it may perhaps be conclusive between Connecticut claimants, because the commissioners are authorized to decide between them, although if either party chuses, he may withdraw the cause previous to their decision, and carry it to the court of Common Pleas. But if the commissioners are permitted to make the decision, the certificate of their clerk is declared by the law to be sufficient evidence to obtain a patent from the land office. Touching the rights of Pennsylvania claimants the commissioners had no power to decide. If they difíen among themselves the board of property decides in the first instance, with liberty to the party against whom the decision is made, to bring an ejectment for the purpose *470. of having the cause re-heard in the courts of common law.' The Pennsylvania claimant never appears before the commissioners. It would be unjust therefore, that he should be concluded by their certificate, nor is there any thing in the law which favours such injustice. It is no where said that he shall be concluded.

It is to be remarked, that the act of 4th April 1799 left it optional with the Pennsylvania claimant to release or not, and unless he released, the commissioners had no power to grant a certificate in favour of a Connecticut claimant. But the act of 6th April 1802 went farther, and authorized the commissioners to certify not merely such parts of the tracts of land claimed under the title of the Susquehanna company as should be released by the Pennsylvania claimant, but “ the whole of each tract claimed by a Connecticut claimant, u who should establish his title thereto in the manner pre- “ scribed by the act of 4th April 1799,” whether released to the Commonwealth by the Pennsylvania claimant or not. The act then goes on to provide, that such Pennsylvania claimant as should not release to the Commonwealth under the provisions of the said act of 4th April 1799, on or before the 1st of August 1802, should be disabled from recovering the land in any action against the Connecticut claimant in whose favour a certificate had been issued, but might institute an action against the Commonwealth in which he should be entitled to recover a just compensation for his land.

Hitherto we see that no Connecticut claimant was entitled to a certificate, unless he derived title through a person who was a settler prior to the .decree of Trenton; nor could any Pennsylvania claimant release to the Commonwealth and demand compensation, unless his title accrued prior to the said decree. But by the act of 9th April 1807, all Pennsylvania claimants were let in who had acquired title prior to the 25th of March 1787, (the date of the confirming law) and by the same law it is enacted, “ that the com“missioners in examining the claims of the Connecticut “ claimants, shall not require the same lands to have been (c occupied prior to the decree of Trent onP This last provision may produce consequences more important than perhaps were foreseen at the time it was made, although it cannot affect the present certificate which was issued long *471before its date. But what is there in any of these laws to affect the title of the defendant, which accrued subsequent to the 28th of March 1787, and who consequently is not entitled to an action against the Commonwealth for the recovery of compensation? It is contended that his right is extinguished by the act of 6th April 1802. But this appears to me to be a position not'to be supported, because the words of that act only embrace the case of Pennsylvania claimants, who shall refuse or neglect to release to the Commonwealth under the provisions of the act of 4th April 1799. Now it is clear that no Pennsylvanian can release'under the provisions of that act, whose title accrued subsequent to the 28th of March 1787; therefore no such titles are within the meaning of the act of 6th April 1802. Nothing less than the most pointed, unequivocal expressions would ever convince me, that it was the intent of the- legislature to take any man’s property without a reasonable compensation; because not only would it be an act of injustice, but a violation of the constitution, which has prescribed' limits to the legislative power. The legislature are the judges of those great occasions when it may be expedient to break in upon the rights of private property making just compensation. But to take property-without compensation is beyond their power. Such I take to be the decided opinion throughout the United States; and I am confident that the legislature of Pennsylvania will never act in contradiction to it. Upon the whole of this case then it appears, 1st, that the defendant has a perfect title by warrant, survey and patent, from the state of Pennsylvania; and, 2d, that the title remains 'unimpaired by any act of assembly. I am therefore of opinion that the judgment should be reversed, and judgment entered on the special verdict for the plaintiff in error.

If as the plaintiff’s counsel seem to apprehend, this decision should produce results distressing to the inhabitants of the seventeen townships, I shall be sorry for it. I have always wished for their peace, and have done what I could to promote it, by releasing all my interest in lands in those -townships. But to a judge it is only permitted to interpret the law honestly and impartially. If when interpreted, it is attended with inconvenience, it is for the higher powers to ^provide á remedy.

*472Trates J.

The tenth section of the ninth article of the constitution of this Commonwealth declares, that “ no man’s “ property shall be taken or applied to public use, without “ the .consent of his representatives, and without just com~ u pansation being made.” In the exposition of laws We cannot suppose that the legislature have beep unmindful of this wise provision. Cases may undoubtedly occur, wherein however sacred the rights of property may be deemed, it would be necessary for the common welfare, that they should bepd to the public interests in matters of great national concern.

The decree at Trenton on the 30th of December 1782, grounded on the provisions of the old confederation, terminated the dispute between Pennsylvania and Connecticut as to the territory claimed by the latter; but the commissioners recommended the case of actual settlers, under the title of the Susquehanna Company, to the consideration of the Pennsylvania legislature; and the justice and equity of the claims of .those settlers, was also strongly reported by the council of censors in 1784. Hence arose the confirming act of 28th March 1787, upon which the defendants in error confidently rely, as plighting the faith of this government to the Connecticut claimants. To this it is answered, that this act has been solemnly determined in April 1795, in Vanhorne’s Lessee v. Dorrance, 2 Dall. 304, 320, to be unconstitutional and void, that it was invalid from the beginning, had no life or operation, and was precisely in the same state, as if it had not been made. It was suspended by the act of 29th March 1788, and finally repealed by the' law passed on the 1st of April 1790.

If the law of March 1787 was in full force, I should adopt the construction of it, as contended for by the plaintiffs’ counsel, that the actual settlers whose claims were intended to be confirmed thereby, were such persons only, as had acquired a title by actual settlement, prior to the determination of the dispute between the two states, as defined by our law of the 30th December 1786, and enacted by the same legislature. I take this to be the true meaning of the expressions made use of, most conformable to the reason and policy of the act, and 'the spirit which dictated it. The object of the lawgivers was not to recognize the *473Validity of tbe titles held under the Susquehanna Company, but to quiet the possessions of those who were the real occupants of lands under that claim.

The certificate signed by the commissioners on the 16th of January 1804, brings the case of James Stewart the defendant’s testator, within the words of the different laws of 4th April 1799,15th March 1800, and of 6th April 1802. But it is found by the special verdict, that neither he nor any one under whom he claimed, ever improved, lived or settled upon any part of the lands in question, and that the first actual settlement made thereon, was' under the warrant granted - to Sarah Hollenback, by the .Commonwealth of Pennsylvania on the 10th of May 1792.

This introduces the question, whether the certificate of the commissioners is conclusive evidence of the facts stated therein, against one claiming the same lands under a Pennsylvania title?

' . .Ip is admitted, that no express provision is to be found in any^ldw ascribing to these certificates such conclusive character; but it has been urged on the part of the defen- • dantspthat it necessarily arises from the act of 6th April 1802. To this I answer that the duties of the commissioners are -specially pointed out by the act of 4th April 1799» They decide merely between the Connecticut claimants, who by the eleventh section are allowed an appeal before they should make their decision. Such appeal, is not given to persons claiming under Pennsylvania titles; they are not even heard before the commissioners. How then can they be bound finally by acts, to which .they are neither parties nor privies, which it was not in their power to contest? This would be rank injustice. I fully agree, that these certificates given by judicial officers, on whom arduous duties have been imposed, are prima facie evidence, and may be admitted in suits against Pennsylvania claimants. They should be treated with due respect, but are open to proof by persons entitled to lands under Pennsylvania rights, although conclusive between claimants under the Connecticut title, if unappealed from. The same distinction has uniformly prevailed, -when the certificates of the Virginia commissioners have -been admitted to the jury in contests between persons claiming lands under either state.

*474The plaintiff in error here claims under a regular warrant from Pennsylvania, dated 10th May 1792, upon which the purchase money has been paid, a survey made on the 9th of December 1793, and a patent granted to him on the 24th of February 1798. He and those under whom he claims, have made the first actual settlement on the lands in question, first erected a cabin, planted an orchard, then built a new house and barn, cleared between thirty and forty acres of land, and have been in the constant possession of the premises. Having acquired a title subsequent to 28th March 1787, he can obtain no compensation under the provisions of the act, of 9th April 1807, if he is doomed to be a sacrifice to the public tranquillity. Why then is he to be dispossessed of his right? What law has he offended? It is not correct to assert, that this Commonwealth by any legislative act, acknowledged the right of Connecticut or of the Susquehanna Company, to grant lands within the charter boundary of Pennsylvania. I can discover no law wherein the validity of such titles has been recognized.

The intention of the legislature in enacting the law of 28th March 1787, is fully disclosed in its preamble. It recites that, “ whereas before the determination of the claim of “ Connecticut, a number of its inhabitants with their asso- “ dates, settled upon and improved divers tracts of laud “ lying on and near the north east branch of the river Sus- “ quehanna, and the waters thereof, and. now within the “ county of Luzerne; and whereas parts of the same lands u have been claimed under titles derived from the late pro-a prictaries of Pennsylvania, and those interfering claims “ have occasioned much contention, expense, and blood- “ shed, and this assembly being desirous of putting an end “ to those evils by confirming such of the Connecticut claims as were acquired, by actual settlers prior to the determi- “ nation of the, said dispute, agreeably to a petition of a “ number of the said settlers, and by granting a just com-w pensation to the Pennsylvania claimants, &c.” It then proceeds to make provision for these professed objects of restoring peace and good order, and of preventing the effusion of human blood. The proceedings of the commissioners having been interrupted at Wilkesbarre in December 1787, its operation was suspended in March 1788, and finally *475repealed in terms of strong condeinnation by an act passed on the 1st of April 1790, “ whereby all .proceedings under " “the act of 2áth March 1787 were declared void, and dll “ titles and claims under it were revested in the former “ corners.”

Whithin a period somewhat exceeding two years froih the time of the repeal of the first act of 1787, when the tide of public opinion manifested by a strong act of the legislature, had evidently begun to run in a different direction, the warrant was taken out bj Sarah Hollenback, and an actual settlement took place on these lands. No man however prudent, could foresee what was -afterwards done by the laws of 4th April 1799, 15th March 1800, 6th April 1802; 4th April 1805, and 9th April 1807. The lands in the seventeen townships in Luzerne county had not been exclusively set out and reserved for the Connecticut claimants, and the law which had confirmed the occupation of certain of them under particular modifications, had been repealed. I see no ground to brand any person with the character of a speculator, or of having acted in a manner unbecoming a good citizen, who has taken out a warrant for vacant lands then not actually settled by Connecticut claimants; nor can I discover any impropriety in such person appealing to the laws of his country for the protection of his possession, until he has received a full equivalent for his title thus acquired.

Upon the whole matter I am of opinion, that the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne county be reversed, and that judgment for the plaintiff in error be rendered on this special verdict.

Brackenridge J.

It is not found by the special verdict, that the lot in question, “was occupied by a Connecticut claimant and actual settler there before the time of the decree of Trenton, and was particularly assigned to such actual settler prior to the said decree agreeable to the regulations then in force among the settlers.” But it is certified by the commissioners duly appointed &c., under an act entitled &c., that it was so occupied &c. as in the certificate of the said commissioners specified. But can this certificate be traversed, or the truth of it called in question? Not, I should take *476it as at present advised, by the Commonwealth, who has appointed these commissioners, and may be considered as bound by their proceedings. But can it be said that an individual, not a party to their proceedings, and who has an adverse claim or right, shall be bound? Shall not the táuth of the case be shown? It may be considered in the nature of an inquisition of office on the part of the state and the Connecticut claimant, but shall not affect third persons who claim a paramount or adverse interest.

It is found by the special verdict, that the lot in question was surveyed in the summer of 1787, and “ that no person uwas settled then on the lot.” Non constat, but that some one under whom the plaintiff claims had occupied and was settled on it before the decree of Trenton, and therefore the special vex-dict does not falsify the certificate, which cannot but be admitted to be prima facie evidence. Upon this point alone I find a difficulty in saying that the judgment should be set aside; for a temporary non occupance may have been owing to the falling in the war, or other causes, and that presumption of abandonment might be rebutted by showing the truth. As to the ground upon which the plaintiff has put the case, it is totally untenable; at least the ground upon which his counsel has argued it is not to be sustained. He seems to consider the commissioners as having had a' power to proceed in the case of a lot or piece of ground, not occupied by a Connecticut claimant, or settled before the decree« "Whereas it could not but have been the first object of their •enquiry, in order to ascertain whether they had jurisdiction. A constructive occupancy or settlement was unknown to. the laws or usages of Pennsylvania, and why should it be known in this case? Nor could an actual occupancy and settlement be considered as attaching to more than to the usual extent of 300 acres with the allowance &c.

What was the foundation of the interposition of the legislature? Not a grant from Connecticut under a pretended ox-alleged extent of charter. Not any title derived from a Susquehanna company under an alleged purchase from the Indians-. It was a moral obligation, aixd I have always considered it a moral obligation, to relieve the mistaken and misled inhabitants, who had settled on these lands under an idea of right, aixd where the situation of things, and the nature of the case, furnished a ground of mistake, *477So that they were not to be considered absolutely in the light of voluntary trespassers, more especially as Indian hostili- - ties, incited by the general enemy with whom we were at war, were combatted by those very settlers at their outposts, where many of them fell, and at whose peril and by whose sufferings the interior of the state had been so much defended. These were the considerations of the recommendation-of the council of censors, the act of 1787, and all the succeeding acts that have taken place on the subject) to relieve the actual- settlers and put them on the same fobting with our actual settlers, in other parts of the state, who were protected» from office rights, and by a usage known to our laws, both-as to the nature of the settlement and the extent of it. Such a thing as twenty settlers claiming six miles square, and allottiiig all within it to themselves or to others who might come after them, and to whom they might dispose of this territory, was never heard of, and it could not be within the meaning of the legislature. “ Rules and regulations amongst “the settlers or Susquehanna company,” where that word is used, could mean nothing more than the allotment of their' portions, shares or hstlf shares, the locus in quo of their settlements, the extent and boundaries, subject still to our ideas of quantity to any settler, if the allotment should exceed. Constructive settling, or allotment to those who had never settled, was absurd, and would be countenancing a speculation that was inimical to actual settlements, and the occupancy of the country. At least occupancy and settlement under this idea, and in this way, was never meditated, or in the . view of appointing commissioners with any powers whatever. Were it not that it is found by the special verdict, that no settlement had been made prior to the occupancy of the defendant, a venire de novo might be awarded with a view to give the plaintiff an opportunity to shew if he can, that an occupancy of the lot in question did exist before the decree of Trenton, and that he has succeeded to that possession, as evidence of which I will admit the certificate, but not as the foundation of the claim. A settlement must be established. Having proved an original occupancy before the decree of Trenton, the certificate may be evidence of the right derive'd to him, as the mesne conveyances may be considered as having been delivered up to the commissioners) and this *478is what is meant I presume by the title deeds &c. delivered UP* For what other papers would there be than these, the vouchers of transmission and the possession handed over, since, there is no other kind of deeds that could have been contemplated, no kind of grant being acknowledged under the charter of Connecticut, or Indian title to these lands, or the lot which is the object of the ejectment in this case.

. But it being found by the special verdict that no settlement had been at any time before the possession of'’the defendant, excludes the above considerations as to the awarding a venire on the reversal of this judgment, and to which reversal 1 accede in this case.

Judgment reversed.