Study aid, not legal advice. caselaw is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice or engage in the unauthorized practice of law (UPL). All briefs, outlines, and citation tools on these pages are educational summaries for law students; they are not a substitute for advice from a licensed attorney admitted in your jurisdiction. Bar-admission rules vary by state. For court filings or client matters, verify every authority against the official reporter and your court's local rules. Use of caselaw does not create an attorney-client relationship.
WALLEN v. WILLIAMS, 1813 — 11 U.S. 602 · caselaw · US
IP
WALLEN v. WILLIAMS
11 U.S. 6027 Cranch 602·Supreme Court of the United States·1813
Araí»..,Livingston, Todb,«íw£ Btorv, J„
Brief incoming
Hand-reviewed Bluebook brief (procedural posture, facts, issue, holding, reasoning, dissent) ships once the AI generation pipeline runs through this case. Join the waitlist to get notified when 1L briefs go live.
Opinion
WALLEN v. WILLIAMS.
’Jflie Cil-cuit Court of Ten« nessee, as a C*urt of'equiiy, cannot award a writ oí hab. facial possessionem to enforce its , ecree.
Araí»..,Livingston, Todb,«íw£ Btorv, J„
ERROR tó the Circuit Court for the district of East Tennessee, in a suit in equity, in which Joseph Williams on the 15th of November, 1799, brought his •bill of complaint against Elisha Wallen and John Williams,. whereby lie stated that the Defendants and others in the year 1779 entered into a co-pártnership in the entering of lands in the land office for, the sale of lands in that part of the state of North Carolina which now lies within the district of East Tennessee ; and that each party was, on demand, to pay his proportion of the money due to the state upon the entries, to the party who should advance it: and that if any party so failed to pay his'proportion, lie should-forfeit his share of the lands entered, and should «'ease to be a partner. That Joseph Williams., the Complainant, paid the whole of the money due to. the ¡state for the lands .entered, and that John Williams, one of the Defendants, not having paid' any/ thing, sold his. share of the lands to the other Defendant, Wallen.' who had 'notice that nothing had been paid by John Williams'. Wallen obtained patents, upon this assignment of John Williams, for two tracts of 640 acres each, and one fo.r 440. The latter tract of 440 acres he sold to a purchaser without notice; but he still held the other two tracts. That the Complainant had demanded from Wallen payment of John Williams’s proportion of the money due tó the state, which Wallen refused to pay. The Defendant in his answer relied in part pn the statute of limitations.
The facts being proved to the satisfaction pf the judgve, he decreed that the said Elisha Wa]leu .be di» 44 vested of all the right, title, interest, property and 44 claim which he had, or has, to the s,aid two tracts of “640 acres, and each of them, and that all the right, 44 title, interest, property and claim of, in and tq said 44 two tracts of land and each of them, and every part 44 and parcel thereof, be vested in the said Complainant, “Joseph Williams, his heirs and assigns forever, to « have; hold, occupy, possess and enjoy the same and ft eacli and every part thereof, \Vlth their hereditaments «and appurtenances against-the said Elisha Wallen, « his heirs and assigns, forever.” And it was further decreed that the Defendant, Wallen, should pay to the Complainant the sum of 8 593 33 1-3, the value of the tract of 440 acres as found by the. jury which had been inipanndied to ascertain its value; and that for the purpose of compelling payment thereof the Complainant should have execution, which was accordingly issued and satisfied
The Complainant afterwards obtained a writ of hab. facias, grounded upon the affidavit of the marshal that the Defendant refused to deliver possession to the Complainant according to the decree.
By virtue of this writ the Complainant was put into possession of the two tracts' of 640 acres each $ and the ■Defendant, Wallen, brought his >vrit of error.
Jones, for the Plaintiff in error,
’Moved the Court to direct the Court below to quash the writ of hab. facias, and to award a writ' of restitution ; upon the ground, ás it is understood, that the Court below, as a Court of equity, could not award such a writ.
lie cited • 5 Com. Big. Tit. Pleader. 3 B. 20, and 9 Vhi. ah. 478. fs to. Ed. ) TiU Error, F. pi. 3.
x’hcre was no appearance for the Defendant in error.
[MAJORITY]
The Court made the order agreeably to the motion.