Case Name: FELLOWS v. PEDRICK
Court: United States Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
Jurisdiction: United States
Decision Date: 1824-10
Citations: 8 F. Cas. 1134
Docket Number: Case No. 4,724
Parties: FELLOWS v. PEDRICK.
Judges: 
Reporter: Federal Cases
Volume: 8
Pages: 1134–1135

Head Matter:
Case No. 4,724.
FELLOWS v. PEDRICK.
[4 Wash. C. C. 477.]
Circuit Court, E. D. Pennsylvania.
Oct. Term, 1824.
Mr. Rawle, for plaintiff.
Mr. Tilghman, for defendant.
[Originally published from the MSS. of Hon. Bushrod Washington, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, under the supervision of Richard Peters, Jr., Esq.]

Opinion:
WASHINGTON, Circuit Justice
(charging jury). The plaintiff has laid before the court an unexceptionable paper title, from the warrant down to the conveyance of the land in dispute to himself. An objection has been made to the length of time which intervened between the survey of the warrant, and its return to the office. But as the defendant does not set up a title under the state adverse to the plaintiff's, it is not competent for him to charge the plaintiff with negligence in any of the steps taken previous to the grant. It is sufficient that the survey was returned and accepted at the land office.
The defendant sets up no title under the state, and as to the title under Dyer, which appears to have been derived under Connecticut, it cannot avail him for any purpose whatever. How far it destroys his title by length of possession, will depend upon the correct construction of the acts of 1800 and 1813, which are relied upon by the plaintiff's counsel. It is perfectly clear, that, if the act of 1813 had not passed, the act of limitation could not be set up in a case where the defendant claims, or has at any time claimed «title under the Susquehanna Company, or in any way under the state of Connecticut, to lands within this state. What then is the effect of the act of 1813? We think it is merely to repeal the repealing act of 1800, after two years from the date of the former act, except as to those persons who should bring their actions within the two years; and as to them, the act of 1800 continues in force in like manner as if the act of 1813 had never passed. The consequence is, that, against those who brought their actions within the two years, no person claimiug, or who has claimed title under Connecticut, can, at any time, set up a title by possession, either as a bar, or as a ground of recovery in ejectment To give to the act 1813 the construction contended for by the defendant's counsel, would be to render it absurd, and altogether inefficient It would make the act declare, that though possession should give no title to the defendant in the action which should be commenced within the two years, it should, nevertheless, give him a title in the action which he might bring, immediately after he was turned out of possession, to recover back the land. This could have no other effect but to encourage litigation, since an ejectment to recover back the land, would, in all cases, be brought, if the title of possession could, in such action, be asserted. It would have been much better for all parties not to have made the exception at all, if such was its meaning, and have permitted-the defendant, in the first ejectment, to set up his possession as a bar.
The opinion of the court, therefore, is, that the plaintiff is not barred by the twenty-one years possession of the defendant, prior to the recovery against him by Dewitt
Verdict for plaintiff.