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Kilty's Land-Holder's Assistant, and Land-Office Guide
Volume 73, Page 373   View pdf image (33K)
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LAND-HOLDER'S ASSISTANT. 373

stated in the former book, and, indeed, shewn by the forms
of commissions, that the judges were to decide all questions
coming before them according to right reason and good
conscience
, having regard, at the same time, to the instructions
of the proprietary, which, in matters regarding the land
office, were considered at least by his officers, equivalent to
laws. The late chancellor, Mr. Hanson, a number of whose
decrees will presently be exhibited, seems however, not to
have been aware that the state legislature, in directing that
trials in the land office should be conducted on chancery
principles, adopted no new rule. It is true that this direction was
not expressly given until the year 1789 ; but it is seen that
questions were determined under the former government on
principles of general equity, though subjected, in their
application, to a conformity with positive ordinances. In like
manner, the principles of equity which now govern those
decisions cannot be so applied as to overbear positive laws, and
it is only the general and acknowledged principles of chancery
proceedings, and not the accidental powers of the chancellor,
which are permitted to be applied in contests in the land office.
The meaning of this distinction is that no special authorities
given to the chancellor, as such, by acts of assembly, enlarge
his power, or alter his rules of proceeding, as judge of the
land office. The matter rests then substantially upon its
ancient footing. The equitable right, or incipient title,
acquired under warrants and certificates of survey, which are the
subjects of Contest in the land office, is tried and determined
on principles of equity, subject, as I presume they are also in
courts of equitable jurisdiction, to the controul of the law, and
it could, I believe, be determined on no other.

    Having said thus much relative to the general principle of
decision in the land office, which, on account of the kind of
judicial power therein exercised, has been sometimes deemed,
as has been before hinted, to partake of the nature of a court
of record, I shall proceed to notice the provisions of our acts
of assembly on that subject. The chancellor was, in effect,
created judge of the land office by the act of 1781, ch. 20,
which provided that if any dispute should arise concerning the
validity of surveys, or the grant of lands
, the same should be
heard and determined by the CHANCELLOR, as to all warrants
or surveys theretofore granted or made, agreeable to the former
rules of the land office
; and, as to all warrants and surveys
thereafter to be issued or executed, according to such rules and
orders as should be established by the governor and council,
who,
by the same act, were empowered to make and establish rules
and orders
for the government of the office, by instructions to
the treasurers in regard to the issuing of titlings for warrants,





 
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Kilty's Land-Holder's Assistant, and Land-Office Guide
Volume 73, Page 373   View pdf image (33K)
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