The patent to the defendant in error does not preclude this
Court from inquiring into the effect of the Act of July 23, 1866,
c. 219, "to quiet land titles in California," and the Court holds
that that act does not require proof of an actual grant from the
Mexican authorities to some grantee through whom the title set up
is derived, but that the proper officers of the United States had
jurisdiction to issue a patent upon being satisfied of the
existence of those facts in regard to which it was their province
to determine, and that the act includes those who, in good faith
and for a valuable consideration, have purchased land from those
who claimed and were thought to be Mexican grantees or assigns,
provided they fulfill the other conditions named in the act.
The facts in this case do not show as matter of law that Millett
could not have been a
bona fide purchaser of these lands
for a valuable consideration, and whether in fact he were so was a
fact to be determined by the government on the issue of the patent,
which precluded further inquiry into that question.
A person who was within the statute and had the right to
purchase land as provided therein could assign or convey his right
of purchase, and his grantee could exercise that right.
The rejection by the Secretary of the Interior of the first
application made by the defendant in error for a patent and the
subsequent granting of a rehearing and the issuing of a patent
thereafter were all acts within his jurisdiction.
The defendant in error, who was the plaintiff below, brought
this action in the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Northern District of California to recover the possession of
certain lands described in his complaint and also the value of the
rents, issues, and profits thereof. He alleged that he was the
owner in fee of the lands in question, and entitled to their
possession, and that while such owner, the defendants wrongfully
entered upon the lands and ousted him therefrom, and have since
wrongfully withheld from him the possession thereof. He further
alleged that he was the owner of the land by virtue of a patent
duly and regularly issued to him by the United
Page 169 U. S. 354
States in the year 1893, under and in pursuance of the
provisions of the Act of Congress of April 24, 1820, entitled "An
act making further provision for the sale of the public lands," and
the acts supplemental thereto, and also under the provisions of
section 7 of the Act of Congress of July 23, 1866, entitled "An act
to quiet land titles in California," and that the defendants denied
the validity of that patent.
The defendants answered, denying the various allegations of the
complaint, and the case came to trial without a jury, a jury having
been waived by all the parties.
The plaintiff put in evidence the patent issued to him from the
United States for the land described in the complaint and proved
that, while he was in the peaceable and quiet possession of such
land, the defendants entered upon it and ousted him therefrom, and
have ever since detained the land from him. He also proved its
rental value.
The bill of exceptions contains the following:
"It was then admitted by the defendants' counsel that at the
time of the issuance of the patent hereinbefore described, the
lands therein and in the complaint described were public lands of
the United States, subject to sale under the laws of the United
States. It was here conceded by defendants' counsel that defendants
did not propose to connect themselves in any manner or form with
the title of the United States to the premises described in the
complaint herein, or any part thereof, either by certificate of
purchase, patent, or anything of the kind."
"The plaintiff then rested."
The plaintiff's action rests primarily upon section 7 of the
statute of the United States entitled "An act to quiet land titles
in California," approved July 23, 1866, 14 Stat. 218, 220. That
section, so far as material, reads as follows:
"SEC. 7. And be it further enacted that, where persons in good
faith, and for a valuable consideration, have purchased lands of
Mexican grantees or assigns, which grants have subsequently been
rejected, or where the lands so purchased have been excluded from
the final survey of any Mexican grant, and
Page 169 U. S. 355
have used, improved and continued in the actual possession of
the same according to the lines of their original purchase, and
where no adverse right or title (except of the United States)
exists, such purchasers may purchase the same, after having such
lands surveyed under existing laws at the minimum price established
by law, upon first making proof of the facts as required in this
section, under regulations to be provided by the Commissioner of
the General Land Office, joint entries being admissible by
coterminous proprietors to such an extent as will enable them to
adjust their respective boundaries."
To maintain their defense, the defendants then offered in
evidence the application made by the plaintiff to purchase the
lands from the United States pursuant to the seventh section above
quoted. The application and the accompanying papers were offered
for the purpose of showing that there had in fact never been any
grant from the Mexican government to the Romeros, through whom, as
supposed Mexican grantees, the plaintiff below derived his claim,
and by reason of which claim he had made application to the land
office under the provisions of the seventh section of the
above-mentioned act of Congress. The papers offered in evidence by
defendants showed that while the country was under Mexican rule,
the Romeros had taken proceedings to obtain a grant of lands, which
included the land in question, from the Mexican government, and
that such proceedings had certainly gone as far as a final decree
by the governor providing for the making of a grant asked for, but
there was no record evidence of any actual grant's ever having been
made. The facts as to the documentary evidence in the case are
fully set forth in the report of the case of
Romero v.
United States, 1 Wall. 721.
The evidence so offered by defendants was objected to on the
part of the plaintiff as immaterial, incompetent, and irrelevant
for the purpose of affecting the validity of the patent under which
the plaintiff claimed title to the lands in question. The court
sustained the objection, and the defendants duly excepted.
Thereupon the defendants rested, and the court ordered judgment to
be entered in favor of the plaintiff and
Page 169 U. S. 356
against the defendants for a recovery of the land in accordance
with the prayer of the complaint. This judgment was affirmed by the
United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, 73 F.
120, and the case is brought here for review.
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the court.
I. The defendant in error insists that his patent is conclusive
evidence that he is a purchaser within the meaning of the seventh
section of the statute above quoted, and that, no fraud being
alleged, no evidence can be received for the purpose of in any
other way invalidating the patent issued to him by the government
of the United States.
The patent does not preclude this Court from construing the act
of 1866, nor does it preclude an inquiry by the court whether the
patent was issued without authority or against the expressed will
of Congress, as manifested in the statute.
Burfenning v.
Chicago &c. Railway, 163 U. S. 321, and
cases there cited. If it were so issued, it is the duty of the
court to give no weight to it. The proper construction of the act
of 1866 is therefore the first question to be considered.
In order that a person may avail himself of that act, is it
necessary that an actual grant from the Mexican authorities to some
grantee through whom the title is derived should be proved? If so,
the judgment in favor of the plaintiff in this case must be
reversed, as no such grant was proved. We are of opinion, however,
that the statute does not require proof of such a grant.
When the United States took possession of that portion of the
country in which the lands in question are situated, it is public
knowledge that there were many claims made by
Page 169 U. S. 357
private individuals to lands under alleged grants from the
preceding Mexican government. In order to ascertain and settle the
questions arising thereunder, Congress, on the 3d of March, 1851,
passed an act, c. 41, 9 Stat. 631, in which a commission was
constituted and before which claims of that character might be
proved. The eighth section provided
"that each and every person claiming lands in California by
virtue of any right or title derived from the Spanish or Mexican
government shall present the same to the said commissioners when
sitting as a board, together with such documentary evidence and
testimony of witnesses as the said claimant relies upon in support
of said claims, and it shall be the duty of the commissioners, when
the case is ready for hearing, to proceed promptly to examine the
same upon such evidence and upon the evidence produced in behalf of
the United States, and to decide upon the validity of said claim,
and, within thirty days after such decision is rendered, to certify
the same, with the reasons on which it is founded, to the district
attorney of the United States in and for the district in which such
decision shall be rendered."
It will be noticed that the jurisdiction here given was only to
decide upon the validity of the claim presented, and if the
commission decided that the claims were not valid ones, as derived
from the Mexican or Spanish government, it was the duty of the
commission to reject them. Provision was made for a review of the
decision of the commissioners by the district court of the district
in which the lands claimed were situated, which court, upon such
review, was authorized and required "to decide on the validity of
such claim," and an appeal from the decision of the district court
was allowed to be taken to the Supreme Court of the United
States.
It appeared from the documents offered in evidence in this
action that the Romeros had presented their claim to this
commission, which had rejected it as not being a valid claim, and
this rejection had been affirmed by the district court and by the
supreme court in the case in first of Wallace, mentioned above.
There must undoubtedly have been at the time of the enactment of
the act of 1866, many cases existing
Page 169 U. S. 358
in that part of the country where claims of
bona fide
purchasers for value, founded upon supposed rights or grants de
rived from the Mexican or Spanish government, had been held to be
invalid by the commission appointed under the act of 1851, and
where, notwithstanding such decision, the claimants had remained in
possession of the lands as originally acquired by them, there being
no valid adverse right or title to the lands of which they were in
possession, excepting that of the United States. This would have
been the natural result arising from the difficulty in making
formal and sufficient proof before the commission of valid rights
and titles derived from the Mexican or Spanish government. It was
only valid claims that the commission had power to allow. Where
claims had been made and theretofore adjudged invalid by the
Supreme Court of the United States, Congress had, in some
instances, by private act, permitted those who were
bona
fide purchasers from the claimant whose claim had been
adjudged invalid, or from his assigns, to enter the land so
purchased according to the lines of the public surveys then
provided for at $1.25 per acre, to the extent to which the lands
had been reduced to possession at the time of the adjudication by
the Supreme Court. Such is the Act, approved March 3, 1863, c. 116,
12 Stat. 808, entitled "An act to grant the right of preemption to
certain purchasers of the
Soscol Ranch' in the State of
California." See also a similar Act approved June 17,
1864, c. 133. 13 Stat. 136; also the Act approved July 2, 1864, v.
218, 12 Stat. 372; also the Act approved March 3, 1865, c. 115, 13
Stat. 534.
Other acts were also passed by Congress recognizing, in effect,
the equitable rights of parties who were grantees of those who had
claimed a right or title under the Mexican or Spanish government,
and which right or title had subsequently been held to be invalid
by the courts of our own government. The hardship to be relieved
from by these special acts and by the general act of 1866 did not
solely exist in the fact that there had been a formal grant from
the Mexican authorities, which was in some manner defective, so
that no valid claim or right could grow out of such grant, but it
also existed when a claimant in possession of land which he
Page 169 U. S. 359
had
bona fide and for a valuable consideration
purchased of one who claimed his right or title from the Mexican or
Spanish government, by way of a grant therefrom, was nevertheless
unable to prove such grant, and as a consequence could not prove
any valid title or claim in himself. Whether such invalidity were
on account of some defect in the proceeding which resulted in a
defective grant, or whether it existed by reason of an inability to
prove an actual grant, was not material so long as the claim of
title actually rested upon what was in good faith supposed to have
been a valid claim under the government of Mexico and so long as
there was no valid adverse right or title other than that of the
United States. Persons occupying lands which they possessed under
such circumstances and by such a claim were entitled to considerate
treatment from the government of the United States. They had in
good faith paid a valuable consideration for the land of which they
were in possession by virtue of such purchase, and they ought to
have the first right to make good their title by purchase from the
government at the lowest price named.
The defendants on the trial conceded these lands were, when the
patent in this case was issued, public lands of the United States,
subject to sale under the laws thereof, and that they did not
intend to connect themselves in any manner or form with the title
of the United States to the lands in question. There is no proof or
offer of any proof in the record tending to show the existence of
any adverse valid claim to the land other than the United States,
and the admission just alluded to, taken in connection with the
absence of such proof, shows that when the patent issued, there
existed in fact no other adverse valid claim upon the land than
that of the United States. Those who could not show actual grants
from the Mexican government might nevertheless have equities quite
as strong in their favor as those who could show an actual grant
which was defective. The act of Congress should not be so construed
as to except from its remedial provisions those who were without an
actual grant while at the same time filling every other requirement
of the act, unless the language used therein is open to no other
interpretation.
Page 169 U. S. 360
Such a construction ought to be put upon a statute as will best
answer the intention which the makers had in view, for
qui
haeret in litera, haeret in courtice. In Bacon's Abridgement,
Statutes 1, 5; Puffendorf, book 5, c. 12; Rutherford, pp. 422, 527,
and in Smith's Commentaries 814, many cases are mentioned where it
was held that matters embraced in the general words of statutes
nevertheless were not within the statutes, because it could not
have been the intention of the lawmakers that they should be
included. They were taken out of the statutes by an equitable
construction. In some cases, the letter of a legislative act is
restrained by an equitable construction; in others, it is enlarged;
in others, the construction is contrary to the letter. The
equitable construction which restrains the letter of a statute is
defined by Aristotle, as frequently quoted, in this manner:
"
Equitas est correctio legis generaliter latae qua parti
deficit."
Riggs v. Palmer, 115 N.Y. 506, 510. Opinion
by Earl, J.
Construing the act of Congress of 1866 under the circumstances
above outlined and in view of the general rules of construction
already stated, we hold that the provisions of the seventh section
of that act include such a case as this. The purpose of the act is
to quiet titles in California, and, as stated by the court below,
it is a remedial statute, and one entitled to a liberal
construction in order to effect the purpose and object of its
enactment. When the act therefore speaks of
bona fide
purchasers for a valuable consideration of lands from Mexican
grantees or assigns, which grants have subsequently been rejected,
we do not think that the words "grantees" and "grants" should have
such a rigid and technical construction as to require the actual
existence of a formal grant from the government of Mexico, but we
are of opinion the act should be construed in accordance with what
we conceive to have been its plain purpose, which was to cover the
case of those persons who in good faith and for a valuable
consideration have purchased lands (and taken and retained their
possession) from those who claimed and were supposed to be Mexican
grantees, but whose claims had been subsequently rejected.
Otherwise, it seems to us clear that the purpose for which this
Page 169 U. S. 361
seventh section was passed would be so circumscribed as to
reduce it to much narrower limits than the known mischief to be
remedied called for.
The circumstances existing at the time of the passage of this
act necessarily lead to the belief that the purpose of its
enactment was to remedy (by purchase of the land from the United
States at the lowest rate) a defect in a title supposed to have
been derived from the Mexican government, where the claimant had in
good faith and for a valuable consideration purchased from one who
claimed to be a Mexican grantee or from his assigns and where there
was no adverse claim other than that of the United States. A
remedial statute ought not to be so construed as to defeat in part
the very purpose of its enactment.
United
States v. Hodson, 10 Wall. 395.
In the case now before us, it appears there had been very strong
parol evidence of the existence of an actual grant from the Mexican
government, but it was not thought to be strong enough to overcome
the absence of any record evidence of such a grant. We think that
under the statute of 1866, record proof of the existence of a grant
was not necessary in order to give the officers of the United
States jurisdiction to issue the patent upon being satisfied of the
existence of those facts in regard to which it was their province
to determine. The act has received the same construction in the
Supreme Court of California in the case of
Bascomb v.
Davis, 56 Cal. 152. The court there construed it so as to
include those who in good faith and for a valuable consideration
had purchased lands which were supposed to have been granted by the
Mexican government, and who had used, improved, and continued in
the actual possession of the lands as provided in the act. This
construction by the California court is entitled to very high
consideration, and especially is this so in a case where the act
was directed to a condition of things in existence at the time of
its passage, and with which the courts of that state would be
particularly familiar.
In
Winona & St. Peter Railroad v. Barney,
113 U. S. 618,
this Court construed an act of Congress which alluded to lands
"granted as aforesaid" as including lands
purporting to
have
Page 169 U. S. 362
been "granted as aforesaid," and this inclusion was made because
the Court was satisfied, taking all things into consideration, that
such construction was what Congress meant. The Court simply carried
out that intention by supplying a word not found in the act.
For the reasons thus given, we think this act includes those
persons who in good faith and for a valuable consideration have
purchased land from those who claimed and who were thought to be
Mexican grantees or assigns, provided they fulfill the other
conditions named in the act.
II. Coming to the conclusion we have, there is another objection
made to the title on the part of the plaintiffs in error. They urge
that the statute requires that the person who purchased the land
should have made his purchase from the Mexican grantee or his
assignee in good faith, and it is stated that as the defendant in
error made his purchase from a remote grantee of the Romeros on the
15th of May, 1876, twenty years after the claim had been rejected
by the commissioners appointed under the act of 1851, eighteen
years after it had been rejected by the United States district
court, and thirteen years after it had been rejected by this Court,
it was clear, as a legal result from these facts, that he could not
be a purchaser in good faith.
It appears, however, that, on the 8th of August, 1859, one S. P.
Millett became a grantee and entered into the possession of the
lands, used, improved, and cultivated them, and continued in the
actual possession thereof, according to the lines of the original
purchase, until 1868, and that the defendant in error claims
through Millett by several mesne conveyances. Plaintiffs in error
object that Millett was not a purchaser in good faith because he
did not purchase until October, 1859, before which time the claim
of the Romeros had been rejected by the commissioners and by the
United States district court. An appeal from those decisions was
pending at the date above mentioned before this Court, and it was
therein contended that the Romeros had a valid claim under the
Mexican government such as should have been recognized by the
commissioners and by the district court, and such as ought to be
recognized by
Page 169 U. S. 363
the supreme court. We do not think the facts thus stated show as
matter of law that Millett could not have been a
bona fide
purchaser of these lands for a valuable consideration, and whether
in fact he were such
bona fide purchaser was a question to
be determined by the government on issuing the patent, and an
inquiry into that question of fact is precluded by the patent
itself.
III. It is also objected that even if Millett were adjudged a
purchaser in good faith from a Mexican grantee, he could not convey
to another his right under the statute of 1866, but that it was a
mere personal privilege which he might exercise to purchase the
land at the minimum price established by law. We think that a
person who was within the statute and who had the right to purchase
land as provided therein was not confined to the actual purchase
himself, but that he could assign or convey such right, and that
his grantee or assignee, immediate or remote, could, so far as this
point is concerned, exercise the same right of purchase which he
had before he conveyed or assigned.
In
Thredgill v.
Pintard, 12 How. 24, the Court recognized the right
of an individual in possession of land, and who was entitled to a
preemption right therein, to convey such right to another.
In
Webster v. Luther, 163 U. S. 331, it
was held that persons entitled under the Revised Statutes, section
2304, to enter a homestead, who may have theretofore entered under
the homestead laws a quantity of land less than 160 acres, and who
had the right under section 2306 to make an additional entry for
the deficiency, could transfer such right by a proper
conveyance.
In the above cases, the general rule of law which discourages
all restraints upon alienation was recognized, and the assignment
of a right before entry was held valid, one of the reasons for such
holding being that there was no restriction against such assignment
contained in the act creating the right. Nor is any such
restriction to be found in the act of 1866.
Upon this question, it must be assumed that Millett was a
purchaser in good faith. Being such a purchaser, he could
Page 169 U. S. 364
assign his right and title to another, and the rights under such
assignment were not affected by the fact that the defendant in
error did not purchase his title until many years after the final
determination by this Court that no formal, actual, or valid grant
had ever been made by the Mexican government to the Romeros.
IV. We are also of opinion that the rejection by the Secretary
of the Interior of the first application made by the defendant in
error for a patent, and the subsequent granting of a rehearing and
the issuing of a patent thereafter by the secretary, were all acts
within the jurisdiction of that officer. The fact that a decision
refusing the patent was made by one Secretary of the Interior, and,
upon a rehearing, a decision granting the patent was made by
another Secretary of the Interior, is not material in a case like
this. It is not a personal, but an official, hearing and decision,
and it is made by the Secretary of the Interior as such secretary,
and not by an individual who happens at the time to fill that
office, and the application for a rehearing may be made to the
successor in office of the person who made the original decision,
provided it could have been made to the latter had he remained in
office. The secretary who made the first decision herein could have
granted a rehearing and reversed his former ruling.
The case of
United States v.
Stone, 2 Wall. 525, has no bearing adverse to this
proposition. In that case, it was stated that a patent is but
evidence of a grant, and the officer who issues it acts
ministerially, and not judicially; that if he issues a patent for
land reserved from sale by law, such patent is void for want of
authority, but that one officer of the land office is not competent
to cancel or annul the act of his predecessor; that is a judicial
act, and requires the judgment of a court. The power to cancel or
annul in that case meant the power to annul a patent issued by a
predecessor, and this Court held no such power existed. The officer
originally issuing it would have had no greater power to annul the
patent than had his successor.
Neither does
Noble v. Union River Logging
Railroad, 147
Page 169 U. S. 365
U.S. 165, touch the case. The principle therein decided was in
substance the same as in the
Stone case,
supra.
The control of the department necessarily ceased the moment the
title passed from the government. It was not a question whether a
successor was able to do the act which the original officer might
have done, but it was the announcement of the principle that no
officer, after the title had actually passed, had any power over
the matter whatever. After the Secretary of the Interior had
approved the map as provided for in the act of Congress under which
the proceedings were taken by the company, the first section of
that act vested the right of way in the company. This was
equivalent to a patent, and no revocation could thereafter be
permitted.
See also Michigan Land & Lumber Co. v.
Rust, 168 U. S. 589, at
168 U. S.
592.
We have considered the other questions raised herein, but do not
think any error was committed in their disposition by the courts
below. The judgment of the circuit court of appeals must be
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN dissented.