It is unnecessary to decide whether under the civil law as in
force in New Mexico in 1868, a written instrument was not necessary
for the transfer of real estate (about which
quaere), as
if such a provision had previously existed, it had been supplanted
at that time by territorial enactments. Under the most liberal
construction of the civil law, a transfer of title to real estate
could not be effected without identification of the land,
delimitation of the boundaries, and delivery of possession, all of
which were wanting in this case.
Certain loose parol statements and certain hearsay evidence are
held to be inadmissible in this action of ejectment either to fix
the boundaries of the defendant's deed or to show the character and
extent of his alleged adverse possession.
When the defendant in an action of ejectment sets up title under
adverse possession, it is competent for him to show that it was
generally known in the neighborhood that he was in possession of
the disputed premises, and was generally regarded as their
owner.
When the description in the deed through which a plaintiff in
ejectment
Page 151 U. S. 587
claims covers a large estate, as a whole, excepting from the
grant such tracts, "parts of said estate," warranted not to exceed
a stated number of acres, "which the parties of the first part have
heretofore sold and conveyed," the burden of proof is on the
plaintiff to show that the land in suit does not come within the
exception.
The New Mexico statute of limitations as to real actions,
Comp.Laws New Mexico, 1884, § 1881, operates when the period
of limitation has expired, if set up and maintained by the
defendant in an action of ejectment, to extinguish the right of the
plaintiff, and to vest a complete title in the defendant.
This was an action of ejectment brought by the plaintiff in
error in the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of New
Mexico to recover of the defendant the possession of a large tract
of land within what is known as the Beaubien and Miranda or Maxwell
land grant.
The declaration was in the ordinary form of a declaration in
ejectment, averring the right of the plaintiff to the possession of
the entire Maxwell grant and the unlawful entry of the defendant
into that portion thereof situate in the County of Colfax.
Defendant disclaimed as to all the land described in the
declaration except a certain tract described in his first
additional plea, as follows:
"All the land in the valley or drainage of the Vermejo River, in
the County of Colfax, Territory of New Mexico, within the following
boundaries: commencing at the dam on said river at the upper end of
John B. Dawson's farm; thence running to a high point of rocks on
the north side of the Vermejo canyon; thence following along the
top of the divide west of Rail Canyon to the head of Saltpeter
Canyon; thence down along the top of the divide east of Saltpeter
Canyon to a point on a line with John B. Dawson's rock fence;
thence following the line of said rock fence across the Vermejo to
the top of the divide between the Vermejo and Van Bremmer Canyon;
thence following the top of said divide to the head of Coal Canyon,
and thence along the top of the divide east of Coal Canyon to a
point on said divide nearest the place of beginning; thence to the
place of beginning."
He further pleaded adverse possession of these lands for more
than to years next before the commencement of the suit, and
Page 151 U. S. 588
that the plaintiff's right to sue for the same accrued more than
ten years prior thereto.
Plaintiff deraigned title from the original grantees, through
Lucien B. Maxwell, but in the deed from Maxwell and wife to the
Maxwell Land Grant and Railway Company of April 30, 1870, there was
the following exception:
"Excepting from the operation of this conveyance such tracts of
land, part of the said estate, hereby warranted not to exceed in
the aggregate fifteen thousand acres, which the parties of the
first part have heretofore sold and conveyed by deeds duly recorded
on or prior to the 25th day of January, one thousand eight hundred
and seventy,"
and all the subsequent deeds under which the plaintiff claimed
contained the same exception, though not exactly in the same
words.
Upon the conclusion of the plaintiff's case, defendant offered
evidence tending to show that he occupied under claim of title, and
was generally reputed to own, a large tract of land, described in
his plea, the lower line of which was the projection, for a
distance of about six miles east and west, of a stone fence built
by him across the valley of the Vermejo River, and including within
its east and west limits the entire of what was known as the Coal
and Rail canyons, and the upper waters of the Lacey, Spring, and
Saltpeter Canyons, with the lands and drainage incident thereto.
The testimony upon the question of adverse possession, of which
there was a large amount, showed that defendant made use of the
canyons for the purpose of ranging or pasturing cattle, horses, and
hogs, and indicated that from the year 1872 to 1883 he had an
average of 125 horses, 200 cattle, and some hogs, which were turned
loose in the canyons within the tract. He looked after them from
time to time, and, if cattle belonging to other people were there,
he turned them out. There was also evidence tending to show that
below him, the valley of the Vermejo River was pastured by one
Lacey, and below him by one J. W. Curtis, and also by Miller and
Maulding. The testimony of Maulding himself tended to show that he
and Dawson and two others went into possession of the land under a
contract of purchase from Maxwell, and that they were virtually
tenants in common under this contract;
Page 151 U. S. 589
that after Maxwell put them into possession, they divided up the
entire tract which he undertook to sell them, each one taking
exclusive possession of his particular part. There seems to have
been what the witness termed "a kind of a bond for a deed," to
which Maxwell and Curits were parties, but it was not produced, and
testimony of its contents was ruled out.
Defendant himself took the stand, and testified that in 1867,
Curtis, Maulding, and Miller came onto the Vermejo and told him
"they had a contract" and claimed to have possession of the land
from the dam, which marked the starting point of his (Dawson's)
deed, down the river to a place known as the "O'Donnell Farm," with
all that drainage and lands the water would flow in between these
points and the Vermejo River; that it included the land claimed by
him, the defendant; that they were residing upon a part of the land
themselves, and that Maulding and Curtis told him to take
possession of the land he claimed, and on the line fixed by them as
his lower boundary he built a stone fence across the valley. He
also testified that in June, 1868, he had a conversation with
Lucien B. Maxwell in regard to the tract of land which he claimed;
that Maxwell knew he was in possession of it; that the boundaries
of the tract set forth in his plea were pointed out by Maxwell, and
that he paid $3,700 for the land, though he afterwards stated that
he paid the money to Mr. Curtis, who gave it to Maxwell. On
cross-examination, he produced a deed from Maxwell and wife to
himself, bearing date January 7, 1869, in which, for a
consideration of $3,700, Maxwell conveyed to him the property
admitted in this suit to belong to him, and described as
follows:
"All the land or ground now suitable for farming or cultivating
purposes in the valley or drainage of the Vermejo River, County of
Mora, Territory of New Mexico, within the following boundaries,
to-wit: beginning at a certain dam at the head of a certain ditch
at the right-hand point of rocks, from thence running down on the
north side of said river to a certain other pile of rocks, on a
knoll or elevation, with some bushes near thereto; thence running
very near southward across said river to a pinon tree
Page 151 U. S. 590
to the right of a ridge, near a wash, which tree is marked with
a letter 'L;' thence running up said river on the south side to the
place of beginning; containing about _____ acres, more or
less."
This deed he claimed to have received by mail some time in 1869,
and admitted to have shown to one Morley, who, in 1871, came to his
house, under orders from the president of the plaintiff company, to
survey the land. He appears to have entered upon the land the year
before the deed was given, to have made numerous improvements, such
as houses, orchards, and fences, and to have put the land under
cultivation by means of irrigating ditches. All these improvements,
except some cattle fences, were put upon the land described in the
deed. Upon redirect examination, he stated that when he first came
on the Vermejo, in the early part of 1868 or 1869, passing through,
Curtis and Maulding told him that they had a contract with Maxwell
for a piece of land there, beginning at the dam and running down
the river to the lower end of what was known as the "O'Donnell
Farm," with all the drainage, with the water that flowed from
between this dam and the lower end of the O'Donnell farm. That they
asked him (defendant) if he wanted some of it.
"I studied a good while, and said, 'If you will let me have the
upper part,' which they agreed to do. . . . The contract which they
had was for a block of land. . . . Curtis and Maulding told me that
they had this whole drainage belonging to this block of land, and
this was my part, and I talked with them often about it, and I
talked with others."
He further testified that when Maxwell pointed out to him the
boundaries of the land, they were down at a stage station, some
four miles away, though they could see the prominent points of the
tract from where they were, and that this was six months before he
received his deed.
The case was tried by a jury, and a general verdict of not
guilty returned, upon which final judgment was entered. The case
was then carried to the supreme court of the territory, by which
the judgment of the district court was affirmed. Plaintiff
thereupon sued out a writ of error from this Court.
Page 151 U. S. 591
The third assignment of error, on which the case turns in this
Court, will be found in the margin.
*
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The controversy in this case relates to a tract of land within
what is known as the "Maxwell Land Grant," to a portion of which,
about 1,000 acres, described in the deed from Maxwell and wife to
Dawson, it is admitted the defendant has a good title, Defendant,
however, claims title to about 20,000 acres lying outside of the
boundaries of the tract admitted to belong to him, which is the
property in dispute. The case is before us upon certain errors
assigned to the admission of testimony, and to the charge of the
court.
(1) The third assignment of error is taken to the admission of
the testimony of Dawson as to the parol statements of Maulding and
Curtis touching their contract for the purchase of the land, which
included that in controversy. The court below held that there was
no error in the admission of this testimony, because, under the
civil law, land could be conveyed by parol, accompanied by delivery
of possession, and that it was immaterial whether the statements of
Maulding and Curtis were properly admitted or not, because Dawson
had testified that he had conversations with Maxwell, the party
from whom they claimed to have purchased, and that Maxwell pointed
out the boundaries of the land he would receive under his agreement
with Maulding, Miller, and Curtis, who were then in possession, and
so recognized by Maxwell under his sale to them.
Page 151 U. S. 595
We think the court erred in this particular. In the first place,
we are not prepared to coincide fully in its opinion that under the
civil law as in force in New Mexico in 1868, no written instrument
was necessary for the transfer of title to real estate. To justify
us in upholding such a radical departure from the existing methods
of land transfer in this country from its earliest settlement, we
think that it should clearly appear not only that no written
instrument was required by the usages of the civil law, but that
the oral transfer was accompanied by all the customary formalities
prescribed by that law for the identification of the land and
delivery of possession. The question whether an oral transfer of
land was recognized as valid by the law of Mexico was not argued
upon the hearing of this case, and may be open to some doubt. There
appears to be a diversity of opinion upon the point. Upon the one
hand, the Supreme Court of California, which state also inherited
the civil law from Mexico, has uniformly held that a conveyance of
land resting solely upon parol was void by that law. In
Hoen v.
Simmons, 1 Cal. 119, it is said that by the
Recopilacion
de las Indias, Law 29, Liber 8, Title 13, a code of the
sixteenth century, every sale of real estate was required to be
made before the
escribano (notary) of the place where the
contract was entered into, and, if there were no
escribano, before the judge of first instance, and these
officers were required to furnish a copy and statement of the
writings and contracts made before them, with the day, month, and
year in which they were made, the names of the seller and
purchaser, the property sold or exchanged, and the price. In the
opinion of the court in that case it is said:
"There has never been a time since the adoption of the Fuero
Juzgo [a Visigothic code of the seventh century] in which lands
could be conveyed, under Spanish or Mexican law, without an
instrument in writing, unless it was, perhaps, in the case of an
executed contract, where corporeal possession was delivered at the
very time of the sale by actual entry upon the premises, and the
doing of certain acts analogous to the livery of seisin at common
law."
The question was again fully considered in the case of
Hayes
v. Bona, 7 Cal.
Page 151 U. S. 596
153. It was contended in that case that the civil law, so far as
it required transfers of land to be made in writing, was never
extended to California, and, even if it were, it never had any
force or practical operation there. That the condition of the
country, its illiterate population, together with the fact that
there were no
escribanos or judges of the first instance
residing in San Francisco, warranted the assumption that the law
was never regarded as authoritative, and that evidence of a custom
of conveyance existing for many years, by which these requisitions
of the law seem to have been disregarded, was sufficient to warrant
the court in holding that contracts for the sale of land were in no
way controlled by it. "It may be admitted," said the court,
"that there is some doubt whether this law was in force in
California. From what we can learn, it was a fiscal law, and
extended over all the states and territories of Mexico. That it
fell somewhat into disuse there is no doubt; but so far as we are
informed, contracts for the sale of land, by the custom of the
country, were required to be in writing, and although all the forms
prescribed were not strictly followed, still it was necessary that
the instrument should contain the names of the parties, the things
sold, the date of the transfer, and the price paid. . . . We have
always been willing to extend the greatest liberty to contracts
executed before the acquisition of California by the United States,
and to uphold them, if possible, where there were any equities
existing. But to go further and extend the rule to verbal contracts
for the sale of land or conveyances like the present, would open
the door to stupendous frauds, and unsettle every title in the
state."
See also Stafford v. Lick, 10 Cal. 12;
Merle v.
Mathews, 26 Cal. 455.
It will be observed in this connection, however, that the court
relies largely upon the extract from the
Recopilacion,
which appears to have embodied a system of laws applicable to all
the Spanish possessions in the Indies. The law referred to seems to
have been a mere fiscal regulation, designed for the purpose of
securing to the government its
alcabala, or excise tax
upon the transfer of land, rather than for the protection
Page 151 U. S. 597
of the parties to such transfer, and, as there seem to have been
no
escribanos or judges of the first instance in New
Mexico, and no tax upon land transfers, it is very doubtful whether
this law was ever enforced there. From Schmidt's Civil Law of Spain
and Mexico, published in New Orleans in 1851, three years after the
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, under which New Mexico and California
were ceded to the United States (book third, title 3, "Contract of
Sale"), it would appear that no distinction was made between
personal and real property, and by article 596, "the sale is
perfect from the moment the parties have agreed as to the thing
which is to be sold, the price, and other particulars," although by
article 598,
"the sale is not considered complete, when it is stipulated at
the time of making it that it shall be reduced to writing, until
that stipulation is complied with."
It is also said, in the useful and exhaustive work of Mr. Hall
upon Mexican Law, page 489, that there was no statute of frauds in
Spain or Mexico, and that a verbal sale of real estate was valid.
He also speaks of the public writing (
escritura publica)
stated by earlier authors to be essential to the sale of real
estate, as being a mere fiscal law, created for the purpose of
collecting the
alcabala, or tax on sales, and that the law
did not declare that sales made otherwise should be null and
void.
"Sales of real estate, or contracts in relation thereto, made in
the territory ceded by Mexico to the United States, and subsequent
to the concession, could not possibly have been affected by such a
fiscal law. There was no law in force in the United States
authorizing the collection of an
alcabala, and no officer
had power to collect such an impost. Such a fiscal law could not
have been carried into execution in said territory."
See also Devall v. Choppin, 15 La. 566;
Gonzales v.
Sanchez, 4 Martin N.S. 330. Important changes were, however,
made in the law of Mexico subsequent to the Treaty of Guadalupe
Hidalgo, and by the Civil Code of 1871 of the federal district and
the Territory of Lower California, which also seems to have been
adopted by many of the Mexican states, it was provided (art. 832)
that "the division of immovable property is void if it is not made
by
Page 151 U. S. 598
public writing," and (art. 3056) that "the contract of purchase
and sale [
compra-venta] requires no special formality to
give it validity, unless it relates to immovable property." By art.
3057,
"the sale of an immovable, whose value does not exceed $500, may
be made by private instrument, which has to be signed by the vendor
and the vendee before two known witnesses."
By art. 3059, this instrument was to be executed in duplicate,
one for the vendor and one for the vendee, and, if the value of the
immovable exceeds $500, the sale shall be reduced to a public
writing.
In a subsequent chapter, a system of public registration is
provided, somewhat similar to our own. These provisions are also
carried into the Civil Code of December 14, 1883.
It is unnecessary, however, for the purpose of this case, to
express an opinion whether, under the civil law, a transfer of land
was valid without a written instrument, since we are of the opinion
that the civil law in this particular had been supplanted by
territorial enactments.
While no statute of frauds appears to have been adopted in New
Mexico as early as 1868, the Compiled Laws of 1865, art. 19, c. 44
required all conveyances of real estate to be subscribed by the
person transferring his title or interest (sec. 4) and to be
acknowledged and certified by a public officer (sec. 5). Although
there is nothing in this chapter saying in so many words that no
transfer can be made without an instrument in writing, the careful
provisions made for the execution and acknowledgment of conveyances
of real estate indicate very clearly that written instruments were
considered essential.
But, however this may be, and giving full force and effect to
all that is claimed for the civil law in this particular, it is
very clear that there was no such identification of the land,
delimitation of the boundaries, and delivery of possession as were
necessary, under the most liberal construction of the civil law, to
convey a title. The testimony as to any contract which Maulding and
Curtis may have had with Maxwell with regard to the large "block of
land," of which a portion claimed by the defendant was a part, was
not only hearsay,
Page 151 U. S. 599
but hearsay of the loosest description. Taking Dawson's own
version of it, all it amounted to was that Maulding and Curtis told
him they had a contract with Maxwell for the purchase of this
property, and that he might take a part of it. Neither the property
which they purchased nor that which they allowed Dawson to take
appears to have been identified in any way beyond the general
statement that it included the drainage of the Vermejo River
between certain points. If this testimony as to the contract
between Miller, Maulding, and Curtis on the one part, and Maxwell,
on the other, was entitled to any weight whatever, we think the
court should have admitted the deeds from Maxwell and wife to
Miller and Maulding and to Joel W. Curtis, showing the lands
actually conveyed to them, as having a tendency to contradict, or
at least to qualify, their general statements. These deeds appear
to have been ruled out upon the ground that defendant could not be
bound by recitals in deeds between other parties; but as both the
grantors and grantees in these deeds were the parties from whom
Dawson himself claimed title, it was competent to show definitely
what land was conveyed by Maxwell to Miller, Maulding, and Curtis,
from whom Dawson claimed title. Nor was this error cured by the
admission of counsel as to the contents of these deeds, since the
deeds themselves were excluded, and the admission was simply for
the purpose of enabling the appellate court to pass upon their
relevancy in reviewing the action of the trial court in excluding
them.
The court below also held that whether the statements of
Maulding, Miller, and Curtis as to their contract with Maxwell were
or were not properly admitted in evidence, was immaterial, from the
fact that defendant Dawson further testified that he had
conversations with Maxwell, the party from whom they claimed to
have purchased, and that Maxwell pointed out the boundaries of the
land he would receive under his agreement with Maulding, Miller,
and Curtis, who were then in possession. All this conversation
amounted to was that Dawson met Maxwell in June, 1868, at a stage
station some four miles from the land in question; that Maxwell
pointed out to him the boundaries of the land he would receive
Page 151 U. S. 600
under his agreement with Maulding, Miller, and Curtis, and that
some of the permanent objects on the land in question were visible
from the spot where they stood. There was no attempt in this
conversation to identify the land, to fix the boundaries, or to
deliver possession. All he said in this connection was that "the
boundaries were what you read in that description there," meaning
thereby his plea. There was nothing in the nature of a livery of
seisin, which the Supreme Court of California pronounced to be
essential to an oral transfer of lands under the civil law. No
weight whatever should be given to testimony of this description in
connection with the transfer of lands. It is incredible that any
man should have paid $3,700 for such an indefinite purchase of real
estate. A more probable explanation of the transaction was given by
Dawson upon his cross-examination, when he produced a deed from
Maxwell and wife, bearing date June 7, 1869, in which, to himself,
for the consideration of $3,700, Maxwell conveyed to him the
property admitted in this suit to belong to him.
As the location of the dam mentioned in this deed as the upper
boundary of the tract conveyed is admitted, and the pinon tree,
which marked its lower boundary "to the right of a ridge, near a
wash," was admitted by Dawson to have been seen by him when he
first went there, and was on the southwest side of the Vermejo
River, near the traveled road up and down the river, and only a
little over a hundred yards from the bank of the river at the
southwest end of the stone fence built by the defendant to mark his
lower boundary line, there was and could have been no uncertainty
as to the upper and lower boundaries of his tract. The "pile of
rocks, on a knoll or elevation, with some bushes near thereto," to
which the line ran from the dam Dawson swears he never found, and
it must be admitted that the side lines of the tract are very
vague, and justify the remark made by Morley, the surveyor employed
by the plaintiff, when he was shown the deed from Maxwell and wife
to Dawson, that there was not a man in the world who could take the
deed and survey the land. From the fact, however, that the line was
run from a pile of rocks on a knoll or elevation, which could not
have been far
Page 151 U. S. 601
from the dam, southward across the river to a pinon tree, and
from this tree up the river on the south side to the place of
beginning, it is quite evident that it was never intended to
include the vast territory claimed by the defendant in his plea,
and that the land probably contemplated by the parties was the
immediate drainage of the Vermejo River, between the dam and the
pinon tree, including all the land between the watersheds on either
side of the river, with perhaps grazing privileges over the
surrounding territory, which, according to the custom of the
country, seems to have been incident to the ownership of the water.
If he had purchased all the land he now claims, it is very
improbable he would have accepted a deed with this limited and
ambiguous description. If he has any title to the territory claimed
in his plea, it must be a title by adverse possession. This was
evidently the theory upon which he tried his case, though, after
the deed was introduced against his objection, he apparently
shifted his ground and endeavored to reconcile his claim with the
vague description in his deed. It is impossible, however, under any
theory of construction, to give it that effect. While possession of
the land under the deed would not absolutely conclude him from
showing an adverse possession of the much larger tract claimed by
him in his plea, the presumption is against him, and if his
testimony as to such possession were reconcilable with his position
as grantee under the deed, the theory that he held under the deed,
and not by virtue of an adverse possession, should be adopted. This
presumption is strengthened by the fact that he appears always to
have claimed under his deed up to the time this suit was begun,
when, by the filing of his plea, plaintiff was first apprised of
the nature and extent of his claim. His disclaimer of holding under
the deed is the more apparent from the fact that he made no mention
of it in his examination in chief; that he exhibited it to his son
as the foundation of his title, and produced it to Morley, the
plaintiff's agent, as the basis of a survey, when Morley told him
it was impossible to locate the land by it. In another part of his
testimony, he admits that he frequently claimed that under the deed
from Maxwell, he was entitled to the
Page 151 U. S. 602
drainage of the Vermejo River between the dam and the stone
fence.
While defendant may have gained a title by adverse possession
for ten years, it is difficult to believe that when he went into
possession he claimed anything more than the tract covered by the
deed from Maxwell, though, having command of the water for a
certain distance, he may have treated this as giving him the
control of the grazing privileges over a much larger extent of
territory.
Under no theory of the case, however, were the loose talks which
the defendant had with Miller, Maulding, and Curtis, or with
Maxwell, admissible either to fix the boundaries of the deed or to
throw light upon the character and extent of his alleged adverse
possession. They were calculated to prejudice the plaintiff's case
and to leave an impression upon the jury that defendant's claim of
adverse possession was justified by a contract with Maulding,
Miller, and Curtis of which there was no legal evidence. The
admission of such testimony would create a most dangerous precedent
and open up possibilities of fraud that might operate to the
unsettlement of great numbers of titles.
It is insisted, however, that this evidence was admissible to
supplement the vague and uncertain language of the deed; that it
was essential for defendant to explain why he did not claim the Van
Bremmer Canyon and why he did claim the land in controversy; that
he could only do this by relating his conversations with Curtis and
Maulding in regard to their contract with Maxwell, and that the
question at issue was not the actual contents of this contract, but
the good faith of Dawson's claim to the land in controversy. The
question, however, was one of actuality and continuity of
possession, rather than of good faith, and even if the good faith
of the defendant had been material to this inquiry, it is difficult
to see how loose conversations with parties who, whatever they
claimed, were not shown to have had a contract with Maxwell tended
to throw any light upon this question. The difficulty both with
this testimony and with that respecting the conversations with
Maxwell is that it was likely to lead the jury to believe that
Page 151 U. S. 603
defendant had a title other than that arising from adverse
possession.
(2) There was no error in admitting testimony to the effect that
the land claimed by Dawson was generally reputed to belong to him.
Claiming, as he did, by open, notorious, and adverse possession of
these lands for a period sufficient under the statutes of New
Mexico to give him a good title, it was competent to prove that it
was generally understood in the neighborhood not only that he
pastured his cattle upon these lands, but that he did so under a
claim of ownership, and that his claim and the character of his
possession were such that he was generally reputed to be the owner.
While this testimony would be irrelevant in support of a paper
title, it had an important bearing upon the notoriety of his
possession.
Sparrow v. Hovey, 44 Mich. 64. It may be that,
as the tract upon which Dawson lived was admitted to be his
property and the question was one of boundaries or extent of
ownership, the testimony may not have been of much value, but we
cannot say it was inadmissible. It was a question for the jury to
say not only whether his adverse possession, but whether this
repute of ownership, extended beyond the property included in his
deed from Maxwell.
(3) Plaintiff has no just reason to complain of the instruction
of the court that the documents introduced by it were sufficient to
vest in it the title to the land in controversy, unless they found
from the evidence that the plaintiff had failed to prove that the
land in controversy, or some portion thereof, was not the whole or
part of the 15,000 acres of land excepted in the conveyances under
which plaintiff claimed title, or in the further instruction that
the burden of proof was on the plaintiff to show that it had the
legal title to, and the right of possession of, all the lands in
controversy, and unless they found from the evidence that the lands
in controversy were included in, and not excepted from, the deeds
of conveyance under which plaintiff claimed title, plaintiff could
not recover.
Under a certain deed from Maxwell and wife to the Maxwell Land
Grant and Railway Company, and in all the subsequent
Page 151 U. S. 604
deeds under which plaintiff claims title, there was an exception
of such tracts of land,
"part of the said estate, hereby warranted not to exceed in the
aggregate 15,000 acres, which the parties of the first part have
heretofore sold and conveyed,"
etc., and the question was whether the plaintiff was bound to
show that the lands claimed by him in this suit had not theretofore
been conveyed, or whether the burden was upon the defendant to show
that they had been so conveyed. Ordinarily the burden of proof is
upon the party claiming the affirmative of the issue. There are,
however, certain exceptions to this general rule. Bearing in mind
that the burden was upon the plaintiff to show its title to the
identical land claimed by the defendant, it is manifest that, as
the plaintiff did not take title to 15,000 acres of the Maxwell
land grant by reason of the fact that its grantors had already
conveyed this amount of land, it was incumbent upon it to show that
the land it sued to recover had not been previously conveyed, and
hence that it had taken title to it under its deeds.
An exception in a grant is said to withdraw from its operation
some part or parcel of the thing granted, which, but for the
exception, would have passed to the grantee under the general
description. The effect in such cases in respect to the thing
excepted is as though it had never been included in the deed. If,
for example, a person should convey to another a block of land,
excepting therefrom a certain lot previously conveyed, to sustain
ejectment for any particular lot it would be necessary for the
plaintiff to show that it was not the lot which had been previously
conveyed. There is a general rule, applicable both to conveyances
and statutes, that where there is an exception in the general
granting or enacting clause, the party relying upon such general
clause must, in pleading, state the general clause, together with
the exception, and must also show by the testimony that he is not
within the exception. Thus, in
United States v.
Cooke, 17 Wall. 168, it was held that if the
ingredients of a criminal offense could not be accurately described
if the exception in the statute were omitted, an indictment founded
upon the statute must allege enough to show that the accused was
not within the exception, but that if the
Page 151 U. S. 605
language of the statute defining the offense were so entirely
separable from the exception that the ingredients constituting the
offense might be accurately defined without reference to the
exception, the indictment might omit such reference, the matter
contained in the exception being matter of defense, and to be shown
by the accused.
See also Steel v. Smith, 1 B. & Ald.
99;
Vayasour v. Ormrod, 6 B. & C. 430;
Commonwealth v. Hart, 11 Cush. 130;
Commonwealth v.
Jennings, 121 Mass. 57;
State v. Abbey, 29 Vt. 66;
Myers v. Carr, 12 Mich. 63;
Lynch v. People, 16
Mich. 472. But, as said by Chief Justice Cooley of the Supreme
Court of Michigan in
Osburn v. Lovell, 36 Mich. 246,
250:
"This is not always the rule of pleading; it is sometimes a rule
of evidence only. It goes no further in any case than to require
the party relying upon the exception to present the facts in such
form as the case may require, and this may or may not be by special
pleadings. . . . Whether special pleadings are necessary must be
determined by other considerations and by the general rules of
pleading."
But the exact question raised by the exception in this case was
considered by this Court in
Hawkins v. Barney's
Lessee, 5 Pet. 457, where a patent was issued for
50,000 acres of land, and by subsequent conveyance the patentee
sold small parts of said land, and particularly one parcel of
11,000 acres, within the bounds of the original survey, and it was
held that to sustain an action of ejectment, it was necessary for
the plaintiff to show that the land he sought to recover was
without the limits of the tract shown to have been conveyed away by
himself. The court quoted with apparent approval the case of
Taylor v. Taylor, 3 A. K. Marsh. 18, in which the Supreme
Court of Kentucky held that a plaintiff in ejectment, claiming
under a deed conveying the balance of a tract of 14,000 acres of
land, must show what that balance was, and where situated, and that
it included the land in contest. Also the case of
Madison's
Heirs v. Owens, 6 Littell 281, where, to recover in ejectment,
it was held to be necessary for the patentee to show that the
defendant was not within the bounds of certain claims excluded from
the language of his patent.
See also
Page 151 U. S. 606
Guthrie v. Lewis, 1 T. B. Mon. 142, in which a similar
ruling was made.
These cases are precisely in point, and show that the court was
guilty of no error prejudicial to the plaintiff.
Defendant, however, claims that as the plaintiff made no effort
to prove himself without the exception, the judgment of the court
ought, irrespective of every other consideration, to be affirmed.
It is true that the court may have erred in not granting the motion
of the defendant made at the close of the plaintiff's case to
direct a verdict for him upon that ground, as there does not seem
to have been any testimony offered by the plaintiff, in making his
original case, to show that the land in controversy was not within
the exception, but the defendant is in no condition now to take
advantage of it, as the instruction actually given was given upon
the request of the defendant himself. While the plaintiff has no
right to complain of this instruction, it does not necessarily
follow that defendant is entitled to an affirmance of the judgment
because the charge of the court was not sufficiently favorable to
him in that particular, when such charge was made upon his own
request. In putting in its rebutting testimony, plaintiff did put
in evidence the deeds of Maxwell and wife to Maulding and Curtis,
but they were not offered for the purpose of proving itself without
the exception, but for the purpose of contradicting the testimony
of defendant as to his conversations with Maulding and Curtis, and
it is too late for it now to claim that they were offered for the
purpose of proving itself without the exception.
4. Plaintiff also complained of the instruction of the court
upon the subject of the statute of limitation -- namely that if the
plaintiff permitted defendant to take possession of the tract,
claiming all of it as his own, and to continue such possession
adversely under such claim of title for an uninterrupted period of
ten years or more, such possession would ripen into a right and
title in the defendant, and forever afterwards prevent the
plaintiff from taking possession of the property. We think,
however, the instruction complained of was justified by the
language of the statute, which provides (Comp.Laws New
Page 151 U. S. 607
Mexico of 1884, § 1881) that
"no person, or persons, nor their children, or heirs, shall
have, sue, or maintain any action or suit either in law or in
equity for any land . . . but within ten years next after his, her,
or their right to commence . . . such suit shall have . . .
accrued, and that all suits . . . shall be had and sued within ten
years next after the title or cause of action or suits accrued or
fallen, and at no time after the ten years shall have passed."
Under similar statutes, it has been held by this Court that the
lapse of time not only bars the remedy, but extinguishes the right
and vests a complete title in the adverse holder.
See
67 U. S.
Warren, 2 Black 599;
Croxall v.
Shererd, 5 Wall. 268,
72 U. S. 289;
Probst v. Presbyterian Church, 129 U.
S. 182. In the last case, this Court held, construing
the statute of New Mexico here in question, that the defendant was
entitled to an instruction that an uninterrupted occupancy of land
by a person who in fact has no title thereto for a period of ten
years adversely to the true owner operates to extinguish the title
of the true owner thereto and vest the title of the property
absolutely in the occupier.
But for the error of the court specified in the third
assignment, in admitting the testimony of the defendant as to the
statements of Miller and Curtis, the judgment of the court below
must be
Reversed, and the case remanded, with instructions to set
aside the verdict and grant a new trial.
*
"III. In admitting the testimony of J. B. Dawson as to oral
statements of Maulding and Curtis touching their contract for
purchase of a tract of land as follows, to-wit:"
" They told me that they had a contract for a piece of land
there, beginning at this dam that has been described, running down
to the river to the lower end of what is known as the O'Donnell
farm, with all the drainage of the water that flowed from between
this dam and the lower end of the O'Donnell farm. They asked me if
I wanted some of it. I studied a good while and said, 'If you will
let me have the upper part,' which they agreed to."
"
* * * *"
" Curtis and Maulding told me that this whole drainage belonged
to this block of land, and this was my part, and I talked with them
often about it, and I talked with others. I talked with Maxwell,
and Maxwell and myself were frontiersmen at this time when I talked
with them at the stage station, and he observed that I did not get
as much land."
"Also in admitting the testimony of other parties touching
Dawson's ownership of and claim to the land in question,
to-wit:"
" Q. Have you ever heard the people other than Dawson residing
in that vicinity speak of this land as belonging to anyone?"
" A. Yes, sir."
" Q. state the names of the persons that they always spoke of it
as belonging to."
" A. They have always spoken of it as belonging to Mr. John
Dawson."
" Q. How long have you heard the people in that vicinity speak
of it in that way?"
" A. Since I have been in the country."
"
* * * *"
" Q. While you were in the Vermejo for that year or two, did you
have any conversation with the people residing in that neighborhood
as to who owned this tract of land that I read you the description
of?"
" A. Yes, sir. "
" Q. Was that tract of land spoken of as belonging to
anyone?"
" A. Yes, sir. "
" Q. As belonging to whom?"
" A. Mr. Dawson's, and also of Miller, Maulding, and
Curtis."
" Q. Have you heard them speak of Miller and Maulding's land,
too?"
" A. Yes, sir."
" Q. Where were they with reference to this tract of land I read
you the description of?"
" A. They were further down the creek."
" Q. Did you ever hear the people there speak of Dawson's south
boundary line, as to where it was?"
" A. Yes, sir."
" Q. What was it, according to their statements? "
" A. They said it was above Lacey's ranch, adjoining Dawson's
land. At that time it belonged to De Graftenreid. "
" Q. During the time you were there, did you hear the people
residing in that vicinity talk about Dawson's south boundary
line?"
" A. Yes, sir."
" Q. What did they speak of as his south boundary line?"
" A. They said he was going to fence in his portion of the land
from this stone fence, when it was found he was going to continue
the stone fence to the high point to the divide."
"
* * * *"
" A. He claimed from the dam on the Vermejo above his house to a
rock fence below his house, and all drainages from either
side."
Also the following:
" Q. Was that land ever spoken of as the land of anyone?"
" A. Yes, sir."
" Q. Of whom?"
" A. John B. Dawson."
"
* * * *"
" Q. Have you ever heard the people in that neighborhood other
than Dawson speak of anyone as being the owner of this tract of
land? "
" A. Yes, sir."
" Q. Of whom did they speak as the owner of the land?"
" A. As Mr. Dawson's."
"
* * * *"
" Q. Did you ever hear any neighbors around there speak of this
tract of land as the property of anyone?"
" A. Yes, sir; I have heard a great many speak of it."
" Q. They spoke of it as whose property?"
" A. John B. Dawson's."
"
* * * *"
" Q. Did you ever hear any of these people speak of this land as
belonging to anyone?"
" A. Yes , sir."
" Q. They have spoken of it as belonging to whom?"
" A. To Mr. Dawson."
" A. I told them that my father claimed all the drainage of the
Vermejo River that was above his lower line, and the heads of the
canyons -- all the drainage above his lower line that come in on
the property of the Horseshoe property, including his own
place."
"
* * * *"
" A. It was the upper tract of this purchase or the upper part
of this purchase that Maxwell made to us on the Vermejo River."
" A. I talked with my neighbors and we spoke of his upper tract.
We often talked about this piece of land and Dawson owning this
piece of land with its drainage."
"~ "
" Q. While this defendant was in possession of this land in
1868, did Maxwell have actual knowledge of that possession?"
" A. Yes, sir."
"
* * * *"
" Q.Did you have any conversation with anyone in that
neighborhood as to who claimed to own this tract of land?"
" A. Yes, sir; I have heard several say who owned it."
" Q. Who did they speak of as owning it?"
" A. They said Mr. Dawson was the owner of it."
Also the following:
" Q. Do you know whether Maxwell knew that Dawson was in
possession of this tract of land?"
" A. He knew that he was."
"
* * * *"
" Q. What land did these people claim to have possession of at
that time?"
" A. They claimed to have possession of the land from the dam
that now belongs to me down the river to a place known as the
O'Donnell farm, to the lower end of the O'Donnell farm, with all
the drainage and lands the water would flow in between these points
to the Vermejo River."
"
* * * *"
" Q. Did Maxwell know that you were in possession of that tract
of land?"
" A. Yes, sir."
"
* * * *"
" Q. What was to be the extent of that southern line?"
" A. There was an extension from the east end, across Lacey
Canyon, across Saltpeter Canyon to the top of the divide of
Saltpeter Canyon and the waters flowing to the east, and the other
end, an extension from the rock fence across Lacey Canyon to the
top of the divide between Lacey Canyon and the Van Bremmer
Canyon."
" Q. Do you know why that line was established there at
all?"
" A. Yes, sir."
" Q. Why?"
" A. To divide my property from the next property below."