The Act of Congress of March 3, 1801, "to ascertain and settle
the private land claims in the State of California," 9 Stat. 631,
c. 41, created a board of commissioners to which all persons
claiming land by virtue of any right or title derived from the
Spanish or Mexican government were required to present their claims
for examination and determination within two years from its date,
with such documentary evidence and testimony of witnesses as they
relied upon to support their claims, and provided in substance that
if upon examination they were found by the board and by the courts
of the United States to which an appeal could be taken to be valid,
the claims should be confirmed and surveyed, and patents issued
therefor to the claimants, but that all lands the claims to which
were not presented to the board within that period should be
considered as a part of the public domain of the United States.
Held:
(1) That this provision requiring the presentation of their
claims was obligatory on claimants, and that they were bound by the
judgment of the board, if confirmed by the courts of the United
States on appeal, and by the survey and location of the claim by
the officers of the Land Department following the final decree of
confirmation.
(2) That the patent of the United States, issued after the claim
was surveyed and located, is conclusive both as to the validity of
the title of the claimant and the extent and boundaries of his
claim as against all parties not claiming by superior title such as
would enable them to contest the action of the government
respecting the property.
In order that a perfect title to land might vest under a grant
from the Mexican government, a delivery of possession by its
officers was necessary. The proceeding was termed a judicial
delivery of possession.
The authority and jurisdiction of Mexican officials in
California terminated on the 7th of July, 1846. No alcalde
appointed or elected subsequent to that date was empowered to give
judicial possession of land granted by the previous government.
The doctrine that the laws of a conquered or ceded country,
except so far as affected by the political institutions of the new
government, remain in force after conquest or cession until changed
by it does not apply to laws authorizing the alienation of any
portions of the public domain or to officers charged under the
former government with that power. No proceedings affecting the
rights of the new government over public property could be taken
except in pursuance of its authority on the subject.
Page 127 U. S. 71
Under the Code of Civil Procedure of California, a plaintiff
asserting title to lands, though out of possession, may maintain an
action to determine an adverse claim, estate, or interest in the
premises.
The case as stated by the court was as follows:
This is a suit in equity to determine the adverse claims of the
defendants below, appellants here, to certain lands in the County
of Ventura, in the State of California. One of the plaintiffs,
Rudolph Steinbach, is an alien and a subject of the Emperor of
Germany. The other plaintiff, Horace W. Carpentier, is a citizen of
the State of New York. The defendants are all citizens of the State
of California. In their complaint, the plaintiffs allege that they
are the owners in fee of the premises, which are fully described;
that the defendants claim an estate therein adverse to them; that
such claim is wholly unfounded and invalid in law or equity, and
that its assertion depreciates the value of their title and
property and prevents them from using or selling the property, and
otherwise harasses and annoys them in its possession and ownership.
They therefore pray that the defendants may be required to set
forth the grounds and nature of their claims and pretensions, that
the court may determine each of them, and that it may be adjudged
that they are unfounded in law and equity, and that the plaintiffs
are the owners of the premises and entitled to their possession,
and may have a writ of assistance for the possession of such
portions as may be found to be in the occupation of the defendants,
and for such other and further relief as may be just.
In their answer, the defendants disclaim all interest in a
portion of the premises and deny that the plaintiffs have any
estate in the residue. As to such residue, they admit that they
claim an estate in fee simple therein, and aver that the defendant
A. P. More is now, and his grantors have been since 1843, the
owners thereof in fee by virtue of a grant made April 28, 1840, by
Alvarado, then governor of the department of California under the
Mexican government; that the grant was approved by the departmental
assembly on the 26th of May, 1840, and that thereafter, on the 1st
of April,
Page 127 U. S. 72
1843, Micheltorena, then governor of the department, ratified
and confirmed the grant, and that, on the 17th and 18th of
November, 1847, the grant was duly surveyed, and the grantee placed
in possession by the first alcalde of the district in presence of
the neighboring proprietors, who consented to the lines thus
established.
The answer further alleges that the grant was adjudged to be
valid and confirmed under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1851, "to
ascertain and settle the private land claims in the State of
California," 9 Stat. 631, c. 41, and that the defendant A. P.
Moore, on the 4th of March, 1858, succeeded by proper conveyances
to all the interests of the grantee in the premises, and still
remains the owner thereof except as to a portion not in dispute
here, which he has alienated, and as to portions which are
described as belonging to the other defendants, all of whom assert
title to the parcels held by them under conveyances from him.
A replication being filed, proofs were taken from which it
appears that the plaintiffs claimed under a patent of the United
States issued to one Manuel Antonio Rodrigues de Poli, bearing date
on the 24th of August, 1874. It is conceded that whatever title was
acquired by Poli under the patent had passed by proper mesne
conveyances to them. The patent recites the proceedings taken by
Poli before the land commissioners under the Act of March 3, 1851;
the filing of his petition in March, 1852, asking for the
confirmation of his title to a tract of land known as the mission
of San Buenaventura, his claim being founded upon a sale made on
the 8th of June, 1846, by the then governor of the department of
California; the decree of confirmation rendered by the board of
commissioners in May, 1855; the affirmation of said decree by the
District Court of the United States for the Southern District of
California in April, 1861, to the extent of eleven square leagues,
and by the Supreme Court of the United States, as shown by its
mandate issued in December, 1868, and the subsequent depositing in
the General Land Office of a plat of the survey of the claim
confirmed, authenticated by the signature of the Surveyor General
of the United
Page 127 U. S. 73
States for California, the descriptive notes and plat of the
survey being set forth in full.
The land of which the plaintiffs claim to be the owners is
embraced in this patent, and upon its efficacy in transferring the
title they rely.
The defendants, as stated in their answer, claim under a grant
made by Governor Alvarado to Manuel Jimeno on the 28th of April,
1840, which was confirmed under the Act of Congress of March 3,
1851, to ascertain and settle private land claims in California. It
appeared in evidence -- a fact not averred in the answer -- that
the claim thus confirmed was subsequently surveyed as required by
that act, and on the 22d of April, 1872, a patent of the United
States therefor was issued to the claimants, Davidson and others,
who had acquired by proper conveyances whatever rights Manuel
Jimeno possessed under the grant. The defendants afterwards
succeeded to the rights and title of these claimants.
The patent to Davidson and others recites the various
proceedings taken by them for the confirmation of the claim to the
land covered by the grant to Manuel Jimeno, issued by Governor
Alvarado on the 28th of April, 1840, and approved in a subsequent
instrument by Governor Micheltorena on the 1st of April, 1843,
which two instruments are described as separate grants; the
confirmation of the claim by the Board of Land Commissioners on the
22d of May, 1855, and that, an appeal having been taken to the
District Court of the United States for the Southern District of
California, the Attorney General of the United States gave notice
that it was not the intention of the United States to prosecute it,
and thereupon, at its December term, 1857, it was dismissed by the
court.
The patent also recites the subsequent proceedings taken for the
location and survey of the claim, by which it appears that two
surveys were made, both of which were brought before the district
court of the United States under the act of 1860, and that the one
made under instructions of the United States Surveyor General in
December, 1860, and approved by him in February, 1861, was adopted
by the court "as the correct and true location of the lands
confirmed." The descriptive
Page 127 U. S. 74
notes of the survey approved are set forth in full in the
patent, with a plat of the lands.
This patent does not embrace the premises to which adverse
claims are asserted by the defendants. Their contention is that the
grant followed by the judicial possession given by the alcalde of
the vicinity in 1847, vested in the grantee a perfect title to the
lands within such judicial possession, which does embrace these
lands, and that their right to such lands is not lost by reason of
the fact that they are not included in the subsequent survey of the
claim under the act of 1851, and the patent of the United States.
The court below held against their contention and adjudged that the
plaintiffs were owners in fee of the described premises, and that
the adverse claims of the defendants to an estate of interest
therein were unfounded in law or equity, and gave a decree as
prayed for the plaintiffs. From this decree the defendants have
appealed to this Court.
Page 127 U. S. 78
MR. JUSTICE FIELD, after stating the facts as above, delivered
the opinion of the Court.
The question presented for determination in this case relates to
the effect of proceedings taken under the Act of March 3, 1851, to
ascertain and settle private land claims in California, upon the
claims of parties holding concessions of lands in that state under
the Spanish or the Mexican government. By the session of California
to the United States, the rights of the inhabitants to their
property were not affected. They remained as before. Political
jurisdiction and sovereignty over the territory and public property
alone passed to the United States.
United
States v. Percheman, 7 Pet. 51,
32 U. S. 87.
Previous to the cession, numerous grants of land in California had
been made by the Spanish and Mexican governments to private
parties. Some of these were of tracts with defined boundaries; some
were for specific quantities of land to be selected from areas
containing a much larger quantity, and others were of lands known
only by particular names, without any designated boundaries. To
ascertain what rights had thus passed, and to
Page 127 U. S. 79
carry out the obligation which the government of the United
States had assumed to protect all rights of property of those who
remained citizens of the country, Congress passed the Act of March
3, 1851. By it, a board of commissioners was created to which all
persons claiming land by virtue of any right or title derived from
the Mexican or Spanish governments could present their claims and
have them examined and their validity determined, and the claimants
could appear by counsel and produce documentary evidence and
witnesses in support of their claims. The act required all persons
thus claiming lands in California to present their claims to the
board within two years from its date, and declared in substance
that if, upon examination, they were found by the board, and by the
courts of the United States to which an appeal was allowed, to be
valid, the claims should be confirmed and surveyed, and patents
issued therefor to the claimants. But the act also declared that
all lands the claims to which were not presented to the board
within that period should be considered as part of the public
domain of the United States. In
Beard
v. Federy, 3 Wall. 490, this Court, while stating
that it was unnecessary to express any opinion as to the validity
of the legislation in respect to perfect titles acquired under the
former government, held that it was not subject to any
constitutional objection so far as it applied to grants of an
imperfect character which required further action of the political
department to render them perfect. The grant to Manuel Jimeno,
under which the defendants claim, was one of an imperfect
character. Upon the cession of the country, there remained a
further proceeding to be had with respect to that grant before an
indefeasible title could vest in the grantee. A formal transfer of
the property to the grantee by officers of the government was
necessary. The proceeding was termed a judicial delivery of
possession. Until it was had, the grant was an imperfect one. As
preliminary to or as part of the official delivery, the boundaries
of the land were to be established, after summoning the neighboring
proprietors as witnesses to the proceeding.
Malarin v.
United States, 1 Wall. 282,
68 U. S. 289.
No such official delivery of possession was had under the former
government
Page 127 U. S. 80
to the grantee, Jimeno, though the grant to him contains these
conditions:
"He shall petition the proper judge to be put in judicial
possession by him in virtue of this document, by whom the
boundaries shall be marked out, on the limits of which he shall
place the proper landmarks. The land now granted is of the extent
of four square leagues, more or less, as shown by the map which
accompanies the expediente. The judge who shall give him possession
shall have it measured in conformity with the evidence, the surplus
that results remaining in the nation for its proper use."
The authority and jurisdiction of Mexican officials terminated
on the 7th of July, 1846. On that day, the forces of the United
States took possession of Monterey, the capital of California, and
soon afterwards occupied the principal portions of the country, and
the military occupation continued until after the treaty of peace.
The political department of the government designated that day as
the period when the conquest of California was complete and the
authority of the officials of Mexico ceased. In this matter, the
judiciary follows the political department.
United
States v. Yorba, 1 Wall. 412,
68 U. S. 423;
United States v.
Pico, 23 How. 321,
64 U. S. 326;
Hornsby v. United
States, 10 Wall. 224,
77 U. S. 239.
After that date, no alcaldes elected by the citizens had any
jurisdiction to deliver judicial possession. This was distinctly
held in the case of
Fremont v. United
States, 17 How. 542,
58 U. S. 563.
In answer to the objection there taken that there was no survey or
judicial possession of the land granted to Alvarado, under whom
Fremont claimed, the Court said:
"The alcalde had no right to survey the land or deliver judicial
possession except by the permission of the American authorities. He
could do nothing that would in any degree affect the rights of the
United States to the public property, and the United States could
not justly claim the forfeiture of the land for a breach of these
conditions, without showing that there were officers in California,
under the military government, who were authorized by a law of
Congress to make this survey, and deliver judicial possession to
the grantee. It is certain that no such authority existed after the
overthrow of the Mexican government. "
Page 127 U. S. 81
The doctrine invoked by the defendants, that the laws of a
conquered or ceded country, except so far as they may affect the
political institutions of the new sovereign, remain in force after
the conquest or cession until changed by him, does not aid their
defense. That doctrine has no application to laws authorizing the
alienation of any portions of the public domain, or to officers
charged under the former government with that power. No proceedings
affecting the rights of the new sovereign over public property can
be taken except in pursuance of his authority on the subject. The
cases in the Supreme Court of California and in this Court which
recognize as valid grants of lots in the Pueblo or City of San
Francisco by alcaldes appointed or elected after the occupation of
the country by the forces of the United States do not militate
against this view. Those officers were agents of the pueblo or
city, and acted under its authority in the distribution of its
municipal lands. They did not assume to alienate or affect the
title to lands which was in the United States.
Welch v.
Sullivan, 8 Cal. 147;
White v. Moses, 21 Cal. 34;
Merryman v.
Bourne, 9 Wall. 592. It follows from what is thus
said that it would be a sufficient answer to the contention of the
defendants that the grant under which they claim to have acquired a
perfect title conferred none. The grantees were not invested with
such title, and could not be without an official delivery of
possession under the Mexican government, and such delivery was not
had, and could not be had, after the cession of the country except
by American authorities acting under a law of Congress. But
independently of this consideration, and assuming that the title
under the grant was perfect, the obligation of the grantee was
nonetheless to present his claim to the Board of Land Commissioners
for examination. The ascertainment of existing claims was a matter
of vital importance to the government in the execution of its
policy respecting the public lands, and Congress might well declare
that a failure to present a claim should be deemed an abandonment
of it, and that the lands covered by it should be considered a part
of the public domain. Certain it is that a claimant presenting
his
Page 127 U. S. 82
claim to the board for examination and confirmation, in order
that he might subsequently acquire a patent from the government, is
bound by the adjudication of the board. After submitting his claim
to its examination and judgment, he cannot afterwards be heard to
say that in adjudicating upon his title the board erred, or that
the Land Department, in determining the boundaries of his claim,
erred, in order that he may claim outside of the survey and patent
other lands which he considers covered by his grant. He cannot
repudiate a jurisdiction to which he has appealed, and the estoppel
extends to parties claiming under him.
Boyle v. Hinds, 2
Sawyer 527;
Cassidy v. Carr, 48 Cal. 339.
In determining claims under Mexican grants, the Board of Land
Commissioners was required by the act under which it was created to
be governed by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, the law of nations,
the laws, usages, and customs of the government from which the
claim was derived, the principles of equity and the decisions of
the Supreme Court of the United States, so far as they were
applicable. And in
United States v.
Fossatt, 21 How. 445,
62 U. S. 449,
this Court, in considering what was involved in the inquiry into
the validity of a claim to land under that act, said:
"It is obvious that the answer to this question must depend in a
great measure upon the state and condition of the evidence. It may
present questions of the genuineness and authenticity of the title
and whether the evidence is forged or fraudulent, or it may involve
an inquiry into the authority of the officer to make a grant or
whether he was in the exercise of the faculties of his office when
it was made, or it may disclose questions of the capacity of the
grantee to take or whether the claim has been abandoned or is a
subsisting title or has been forfeited for a breach of conditions.
Questions of each kind here mentioned have been considered by the
Court in cases arising under this law. But in addition to these
questions upon the vitality of the title, there may arise questions
of extent, quantity, location, boundary, and legal operation that
are equally essential in determining the validity of the claim. In
affirming a claim to land under a Spanish or
Page 127 U. S. 83
Mexican grant, to be valid within the law of nations, the
stipulations of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, and the usage of
those governments, we imply something more than that certain papers
are genuine, legal, and translative of property. We affirm that the
ownership and possession of land of definite boundaries rightfully
attach to the grantee."
Trust relations respecting the property between the patentee and
others may be enforced equally with such relations between him and
others respecting any other property, but until the patent is set
aside or modified by proceedings taken at the instance of the
government, all the questions necessarily involved in the
determination of a claim to land under a Spanish or Mexican grant
and in establishing its boundaries are concluded by it in all
courts and proceedings, except as against parties claiming by
superior title, such as would enable them to resist successfully
any action of the government in disposing of the property. The
confirmation takes effect by relation as of the date of the first
proceeding commenced before the land commissioners, and an
adjudication that at that date it was valid is also an adjudication
that it was valid at the date it was made. And the patent which
follows the confirmation and approved survey, and is a matter of
record, is itself evidence of the regularity of preliminary
proceedings. As was said in
Beard v.
Federy, 3 Wall. 478,
70 U. S.
492,
"by it the government declares that the claim asserted was valid
under the laws of Mexico; that it was entitled to recognition and
protection by the stipulations of the treaty, and might have been
located under the former government, and is correctly located now,
so as to embrace the premises as they are surveyed and e scribed.
As against the government, this record, so long as it remains
unvacated, is conclusive. And it is equally conclusive against
parties claiming under the government by title subsequent. It is in
this effect of the patent as a record of the government that its
security and protection chiefly lie."
It remains to consider two other positions taken by the
appellants -- first that the sale to Poli of the ex-mission of San
Buenaventura was illegal and void, and hence that no
Page 127 U. S. 84
title passed to the patentee on its confirmation; second, the
want of any allegation in the complaint, or any evidence in the
proofs, that the plaintiffs were in possession of the premises when
this suit was commenced. In support of the first position, the
appellants cite
United States v.
Workman, 1 Wall. 745. In that case, it was held
that the departmental assembly of California had no power to
authorize the governor to alienate any public lands of the
department, and that its own power was restricted to that conferred
by the laws of colonization, which was simply to approve or
disapprove of the grants made by the governor under those laws. But
it does not follow that there were not exceptional circumstances
with reference to the sale to Poli, which authorized the governor
to make it. We are bound to suppose that such was the case, in the
absence of any evidence to the contrary, from the fact that the
validity of his claim under it was confirmed by the Board of Land
Commissioners, by the district court of the United States, and by
this Court on appeal. The question of its validity was thereby
forever closed except as against those who might be able to show a
prior and better title to the premises. The defendants show no
title whatever, but, on the contrary, the grant under which they
assert title has been, by the adjudication of the Board of Land
Commissioners and by the survey and patent, confined to other land.
Second, as to the want of any allegation in the complaint of
possession by the plaintiffs, or any evidence of that fact in the
proofs, it is sufficient to say that by § 738 of the Code of
Civil Procedure of California, a plaintiff asserting title to
lands, though out of possession, may maintain an action to
determine an adverse claim, estate, or interest in the premises.
People v. Center, 66 Cal. 551. A statute of Nebraska
authorizing a similar suit by a plaintiff out of possession was
before this Court for consideration in
Holland v. Challen,
110 U. S. 15, and
the jurisdiction of a court of equity to grant the relief prayed in
such case was sustained.
See also Reynolds v. Bank,
112 U. S. 405,
112 U. S. 411;
Chapman v. Brewer, 114 U. S. 158,
114 U. S.
170-171;
United States v.
Wilson,
Page 127 U. S. 85
118 U. S. 86,
118 U. S. 89;
Frost v. Spitley, 121 U. S. 552,
121 U. S. 557.
We see no error in the decree of the court below, and it is
accordingly
Affirmed.