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Kilty's Land-Holder's Assistant, and Land-Office Guide
Volume 73, Page 135   View pdf image (33K)
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LAND-HOLDER'S ASSISTANT. 135

bad, and taking in of better lands, sometimes, it is
believed, unfairly, so as essentially to change the original
locations; The exclusion of lands comprised in elder surveys;
the obtaining allowance for actual deficiency; for water
comprehended in the first surveys, or for ground subsequently
washed away, &c. In regard to these allowances, it seems
to have been an early principle that the proprietary
guaranteed the quantity of land expressed in his grants, while, on
the other hand, he laid claim to all excess, by the denomination
of surplus land, concerning which many regulations in course
of time took place. This surplusage, which was more
common than deficiency, gave rise to innumerable warrants
of resurvey, sometimes demanded by the patentees, when
they found that the excess of their grants could not be
concealed, and on other occasions, issued by direction of the
government where information of surplusage was obtained.
For a long course of years however the successive
proprietaries were very tender on this article:¾They called indeed
upon their tenants by repeated proclamations to ascertain and
pay for the surplus lands in their possession, limiting
particular periods for that purpose, and threatening to dispossess those
who did not comply, but still without putting those threats
in execution, until, in the year 1735, it was determined to
grant warrants to the first discoverers, enabling them to make
resurveys on the lands of other persons, and to become
purchasers of the surplusage found therein. This kind of
warrant, which is not generally known to have existed,
occasioned, as appears by some memorandums worthy of credit
in my possession, " great confusion in the province" and was
out of use before the approach of our revolution. It is
noticed here as forming from its object a distinct species of
resurvey warrant. Many others although differing little in
form, were also distinguished in their design from the
warrant of resurvey now in practice, which is always taken by or
for the use of the person owning or having title to the land
to be resurveyed, and for the declared purpose of taking in
adjoining vacancy, and, if for several tracts, of connecting
them in one survey; comprehending also, by necessary
consequence, the ascertainment of locations, quantities and
bounds, and the exclusion of lands belonging to elder
surveys, with the further object of obtaining allowance for
deficency, which the state of Maryland still continues to deem
itself accountable for, while it exacts nothing for surplusage.
Having given this general (c) account of the warrant of
resurvey, which, from the various purposes to which it was

(c)The 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 9th, 10th, 13th, 17th and 18th articles of
the preceeding instructions to the land council relate in whole or in part
to the subject of resurveys: the reader will find it useful to recur to them.





 
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Kilty's Land-Holder's Assistant, and Land-Office Guide
Volume 73, Page 135   View pdf image (33K)
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