In reviewing questions arising out of Mexican laws relating to
land titles, it is difficult to determine with anything like
certainty what laws were in force in Mexico at any particular time
prior to the occupation of the country in 1846-1848.
Looking through the provisions to which its attention has been
called, the Court finds nothing in them providing in terms, or by
inference, for a general delegation of power by the supreme
executive to the various governors to make a grant like the one set
up in this case, and it holds that the appellants have not borne
the burden of showing the validity of the grant which they set up,
either directly or by facts from which its validity could be
properly inferred within the cases already decided by this
Court.
The appellants in this case come here on appeal from a judgment
of the Court of Private Land Claims rejecting their claim, which
arose under a grant of land in New Mexico called La Estancia grant,
consisting of some 415,000 acres, made in 1845 by Governor Armijo
to one Antonio Sandoval, under whom they claim. Upon the trial, it
appeared that Sandoval, in 1845, was a Mexican citizen of high
distinction residing in the Territory of New Mexico. By petition
dated December 5, 1845, and presented on the 7th of that month,
Sandoval petitioned the governor of New Mexico for a grant of land
in the name of the supreme authority of the Mexican nation, the
land being described in the petition, and the petitioner stating
that it was
Page 181 U. S. 105
vacant land in a condition of mortmain, and might be granted
without prejudice to any third party. He stated in his petition
that he had for the last thirty years and more been rendering
services to the country, both by personal service and property, and
without ever having been paid anything in the way of compensation
for such services, and in consideration of all of which he asked
and prayed the governor for the sake of justice to accede to his
prayer. On December 7, 1845, Governor Armijo granted the petition,
and placed the following memorandum thereon:
"This government being convinced of the valuable services Don
Antonio Sandoval has rendered and is now rendering the country, as
well during the time to which he refers as also during the six
years he served administering the prefecture of the second
district, with the salary of $1,500, of which not even a half real
has been paid to him, the sum due him amounting to $9,000, and the
statements in this petition being true, I do, in the exercise of
the power in me vested by the laws, and also in consideration of
all the premises and as a just title acquired, make to him the
grant for the land he solicits, with all the dimensions and pasture
land he asks, that he may enjoy the same in the name of the supreme
government of the Mexican nation and under my concession, free and
exempt from all tax or tribute."
"Manuel Armijo"
Following the memorandum is a written certificate signed by the
comptroller of the departmental treasury of New Mexico and acting
treasurer of the same, certifying that Antonio Sandoval, during the
period of forty years, as appears from the record of the books of
the treasury, has been serving the nation as a military and civil
officer, and has loaned during that time numerous sums of money to
the nation without receiving one-half real interest, and that there
are now due him large sums, as appears from the interest entries in
the office and the evidences in possession of the parties
interested on account of salaries and loans. Then follows the
written certificate of Jose Bacay Ortiz, dated at La Estancia,
December 15, 1845, in which
Page 181 U. S. 106
he certifies that, on that day he, accompanied by witnesses,
placed Antonio Sandoval, through his agent, Juan Antonio Aragon, in
juridical possession of the granted lands.
On July 8, 1848, Sandoval conveyed, by a deed of gift, the
above-described land to his nephew, Gervacio Nolan. This conveyance
was acknowledged before the Clerk of the County of Bernalillo,
Territory of New Mexico, on July 8, 1848.
After the passage of the Act of Congress, July 22, 1854,
establishing the office of surveyor general in New Mexico, and on
July 12, 1855, Nolan, the grantee of Sandoval, filed in the office
of the surveyor general the papers above described, upon which he
asked for the approval of that officer, and that he would recommend
the grant for confirmation by Congress. Nolan died in 1858, before
anything was done in regard to his petition. After his death, his
widow and children, by guardian, applied to the surveyor general,
stating the fact of his death, and asked that the grant of the land
should be confirmed to them as the present owners, and that a
patent should be issued in their favor. Testimony was taken in 1861
relating to the petition before the then surveyor general, but no
final action was had in the case until it was submitted to Surveyor
General Proudfit, who, on January 4, 1873, reported that in his
opinion the title was perfect in the legal representatives of
Nolan, deceased, and recommended that it be confirmed by Congress.
Congress did not, however, confirm the grant, and under
instructions from the Commissioner of the General Land Office, the
case was reexamined by Surveyor General Julian, who, in a report to
the Commissioner, dated July 21, 1886, recommended the rejection of
the claim by Congress for the reasons therein stated by him. This
report was concurred in by the Commissioner, and by him transmitted
on December 17, 1886, to Mr. Lamar, Secretary of the Interior. No
further action seems to have been taken. The appellants herein take
title from the widow and children of Nolan by conveyance dated
September 23, 1880.
Page 181 U. S. 107
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, after making the above statement of facts,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The judges of the court below, while rejecting the claim of
appellants, differed widely in regard to the grounds upon which
such rejection should be placed. Mr. Justice Sluss, in an opinion
that was concurred in by Mr. Justice Fuller, said that the case was
to be decided under the Mexican colonization law of August 18,
1824, and the regulations of November 21, 1828, which in his
judgment had not been totally repealed by the law of April 4, 1837,
and the grant, being subject to the first-named law and to the
regulations above mentioned, could not be valid for a greater
quantity than eleven square leagues, nor become a perfect title
until the grant had been approved by the departmental assembly.
It appears that eleven square leagues would embrace about 50,000
acres of land, and hence a grant of 415,000 acres would, under the
law and regulations, be far beyond the power of the officials to
make to any one person.
Mr. Justice Murray, while concurring in the conclusion to reject
the claim, was of opinion that the law of 1824 and the regulations
of 1828 had been entirely repealed by the law of April 4, 1837, but
he did not think that the governor had the power merely as
representative of the supreme executive to make the grant, and
there was no evidence of any special power having been delegated to
him.
Mr. Chief Justice Reed also concurred in the conclusion to
reject the claim, but did not agree with all that was said in the
opinion of Mr. Justice Sluss, being himself of opinion that, while
the law of 1824 was repealed by that of 1837, the regulations of
1828 were not thereby wholly repealed. He thought that the grant in
this case was made not under the law of 1824, but under the
regulations of 1828; that the law regulated the matter of the
disposition of the public lands
within the states, and
conferred upon the Executive the power to make all necessary
Page 181 U. S. 108
regulations for the disposition of such lands
within the
territories, of which New Mexico was one, and the question in
his judgment was not whether the law remained in force, but whether
the regulations continued operative when the grant was made; that
it was manifest the law which governed the matter within the states
might be repealed without at all affecting the regulations
established by the Executive governing the same subject within the
territories. Being subject to those regulations, we suppose the
quantity of the grant was an insuperable bar to its validity in the
view of the Chief Justice.
Mr. Justice Stone dissented from the decree rejecting the claim,
and was of opinion that the making of the grant in question was
within the competency of the supreme executive, and that Governor
Armijo was his appropriate ministerial agent in its execution.
In reviewing questions arising out of Mexican laws relating to
land titles, we recognize what an exceedingly difficult matter it
is to determine with anything like certainty what laws were in
force in Mexico at any particular time prior to the occupation of
the country by the American forces in 1846-1848. This difficulty
exists because of the frequent political changes which took place
in that country from the time the Spanish rule was first thrown off
down to the American occupation. Revolutions and
counter-revolutions, empires and republics, followed each other
with great rapidity and in bewildering confusion, and emperors,
presidents, generals, and dictators, each for a short period,
played the foremost part in a country where revolution seems during
that time to have been the natural order of things. Among the first
acts of each government was generally one repealing and nullifying
all those of its predecessors.
If, however, the validity of this grant were to be decided under
the provisions of the colonization law of 1824 and the regulations
passed in 1828, it seems to us there would be little difficulty in
determining that the appellants had failed to make out their case.
The provisions of the act of 1824 were plainly violated in this
grant, because it contained more than eleven square leagues. This
was prohibited by that law. Reynolds'
Page 181 U. S. 109
Compilation of Spanish & Mexican Land Laws, pp. 121, 122, ยง
12; Hall's Mexican Law, p. 149, sec. 498.
And also, before the grant in question was made, there had been
a previous one, dated November 28, 1845, conveying to Sandoval the
land embraced in what was called the Bosque del Apache grant, which
also exceeded eleven square leagues in extent, the grant being made
by the same governor (Armijo), although juridical possession was
not delivered until March 7, 1846. Having obtained a grant of more
than eleven square leagues before he made his petition for the
grant now in issue, he had acquired all that the law of 1824
permitted him to take, and the subsequent grant was not valid.
United States v.
Hartnell, 22 How. 286.
Another objection to the title is that there is no record of its
existence in the archives of New Mexico. Although no question is
made as to the genuineness of the papers set forth in the foregoing
statement of fact, namely, the petition of Sandoval, its allowance
by Governor Armijo, the certificate of the comptroller and acting
treasurer, and the certificate of the delivery of juridical
possession by the justice of the peace, yet none of these came from
the archives of the country, and there is no record that the
departmental assembly ever concurred in the grant, as is necessary
under the law of 1824. Reynolds, p. 142, sec. 5. If the approval of
that body could not be obtained, the governor was to report to the
supreme government, forwarding the proceedings in the matter for
its consideration. Sec 6. Nothing of this kind appears in the
archives or in the records of the assembly. Nor has there been
produced, even from the hands of the claimants, any approval of the
grant by the assembly. No matter how formal and complete the
written documentary evidence of title may be, yet, when coming from
private hands, it is insufficient to establish a Mexican grant if
there is nothing in the public records to show that it ever
existed.
Peralta v. United
States, 3 Wall. 434,
70 U. S. 440.
Mr. Justice Davis, in delivering, the opinion of the Court in that
case, said:
"The Mexican nation attached a great deal of form to the
disposition of its lands, and required many things to be done
before the proceedings could ripen into a grant. But the
important
Page 181 U. S. 110
fact to be noticed is that a record was required to be kept of
whatever was done. This record was a guard against fraud and
imposition, and enabled the government to ascertain with accuracy
what portions of the public lands had been alienated.
The
record was the grant, and without it the title was not
divested. The governor was required to give a document to the party
interested, which was evidence of title, and enabled him to get
possession; but this '
titulo' did not divest the title
unless record was made in conformity with law."
The title here is incomplete, because there is no evidence
whatever of approval by the assembly, or, failing in that, any
record of further proceedings to obtain the approval of the supreme
government.
In
United States v.
Teschmaker, 22 How. 392, Mr. Justice Nelson said at
63 U. S.
405:
"We do not say that the absence of the record evidence is of
itself necessarily fatal to the proof of the title, but it should
be produced, or its absence accounted for to the satisfaction of
the court."
In
Berreyesa v. United States, 154 U.
S. 623, the Court held that the case came within the
principle of those cases in which it had decided adversely to
claims made under alleged Mexican grants, all because it did not
appear that a grant from the Mexican government had been "deposited
and recorded in the proper public office among the public archives
of the republic."
See also United States v. Ortiz,
176 U. S. 422;
United States v. Elder, 177 U. S. 104.
In this case, as we have said, there is no record or mention of
the case in the archives in New Mexico. The papers came from
private hands, the claimant Nolan presenting them to the surveyor
general in 1855, when he applied to that officer for his
recommendation to Congress for a confirmation of the grant. That
they have remained in the surveyor general's office since that time
does not make them a record or an archive of the government within
the meaning of those cases above cited.
The certificate of Baca, the justice of the peace, certifying to
his delivery of juridical possession to Sandoval on December 15,
1845, bears the indorsement that it was recorded in book letter B,
pages 166, 167, and is certified to by the recorder, Donaciano
Page 181 U. S. 111
Vigil at Santa Fe, November 17, 1849. This book has been lost,
but it was kept in obedience to a provision contained in what is
called the "Kearney Code," providing for the recording of papers
brought to the recorder by parties, which affected or constituted
their title to lands they claimed to own. The book was not an
original archive of the country. The certificate of record indorsed
upon the paper shows that it was produced from private hands, and
no presumption that any papers relating to this grant were recorded
in or placed among the archives of the government of New Mexico
arises from the fact that a record of this paper was made pursuant
to the provisions of the Kearney Code. There is no proof that this
paper or any document connected with the grant under discussion had
ever been delivered to the recorder for record and retained by him
in his official custody from 1849 until it had been turned over to
the custody of the surveyor general upon the creation of that
office in 1854. The language contained in the report of Surveyor
General Proudfit would negative any such presumption, because he
says that the papers were filed in his office July 12, 1855, by
Gervacio Nolan, the claimant himself. The fact, however, would have
been immaterial in any event. The paper would not have been a
document found in the records or archives of New Mexico, because it
came from private hands, and was by the claimant delivered to the
recorder, and his keeping it thereafter and turning it over to the
surveyor general would not have constituted it a record or a paper
found among the archives and turned over to that officer.
It does appear from the evidence that there may have been some
loss or destruction of papers which constituted a part of the
records or archives of New Mexico in the possession of the
territorial librarian in the year 1869 or 1870. The history of the
transaction is stated by the witness Bond, and it would seem from
his account that it was extremely doubtful whether any really
important papers relating to grants of land had in fact been
destroyed, although some of them may have been. Unless we should
regard this possibility as a sufficient excuse in every case of a
land grant in New Mexico for the failure to show any archive title
or record of title of such
Page 181 U. S. 112
grant, it cannot be admitted in this particular case. That it is
not a sufficient excuse has been decided by this Court.
United States v.
Castro, 24 How. 346. The appellants did prove by
the witness Tipton, whose great experience in connection with the
surveyor general's office in New Mexico is well known, that he had
not seen in the archives of the government any record of grants
made by Armijo or signed by him, although the witness knew nothing
about the condition of the archives prior to the spring of 1876. We
think this is insufficient to show the destruction of all archives
pertaining to grants made by Armijo about this time (1845).
Taking all these objections to the title into consideration, we
think it clear that no case for confirmation under the colonization
law of August, 1824, and the regulations of 1828, was made out.
In the early history of these Mexican land titles, it had been
supposed that the colonization law and the regulations above
mentioned were all that were in force in Mexico after their dates.
United States v.
Cambuston, 20 How. 59,
61 U. S. 63;
United States v.
Vallejo, 1 Black 541,
66 U. S. 552;
United States v.
Vigil, 13 Wall. 449,
80 U. S.
450.
Subsequently, the claim was urged that that law and the
regulations had been repealed by virtue of the law of April 4,
1837. Reynolds, p. 222;
see also law of April 17, 1837, p.
224 of Reynolds' Compilation.
The claim was urged by way of argument by counsel, and referred
to by Mr. Justice Lamar in his opinion in
Interstate Land Co.
v. Maxwell Land Grant Co., 139 U. S. 569,
139 U. S. 578.
Again, in
United States v. Coe, 170 U.
S. 681,
170 U. S. 696,
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA, in speaking of the colonization law of August
18, 1824, said that "by a law passed April 4, 1837, all
colonization laws were certainly modified, and may be
repealed."
The weight of the argument of counsel for appellants rests upon
the assumption and assertion that this grant was not made under the
law of 1824 or the regulations of 1828, nor under the law of 1837
above mentioned, but that it was made by the supreme Executive of
Mexico through his trusted minister and agent, Governor and
Commandant General Manuel Armijo,
Page 181 U. S. 113
who, in making such grant, was not restricted by any prescribed
rules or limitations. This broad proposition counsel has sought to
maintain by reference to the various acts of Mexico subsequent to
1828, and up to the making of this grant.
Treating Armijo as the
alter ego in New Mexico of the
supreme executive of Mexico, and claiming for the latter full and
absolute power to dispose of the public lands in accordance with
the views held by that officer, counsel ask that the same
presumption of the validity of grants made by Governor Armijo
should be indulged which was accorded to the grants of certain
officials in the Louisiana and Florida cases, herein referred to.
We think no such presumption ought to obtain in this case.
In
United States v.
Cambuston, 20 How. 59,
61 U. S. 63, Mr.
Justice Nelson, in speaking of the difference between the cases
involving Spanish titles in the Territories of Louisiana and
Florida, such as
United States v.
Arredondo, 6 Pet. 691,
31 U. S. 729;
Delassus v. United
States, 9 Pet. 117,
34 U. S. 134;
United States v.
Peralta, 19 How. 343,
60 U. S. 347,
and those which involved Mexican titles, said:
"But no such presumptions are necessary or admissible in respect
to Mexican titles granted since the Act of the 18th of August,
1824, and the regulations of the 21st of November, 1828. Authority
to make the grants is there expressly conferred on the governors,
as well as the terms and conditions prescribed upon which they
shall be made. The court must look to these laws for both the power
to make the grant and for the mode and manner of its exercise, and
they are to be substantially complied with, except so far as
modified by the usages and customs of the government under which
the titles are derived, the principles of equity, and the decisions
of this Court.
58 U. S. 17 How. 542."
The case was decided under the Act of Congress of the 3d of
March, 1851, to adjudicate private land claims arising under our
treaty with Mexico, and the decision, as is seen from the above
extract, proceeds upon the assumption that the law of 1824 and the
regulations of 1828 furnished the rule of decision. Their existence
is denied by counsel for the appellants, and it is upon the
assumption of their nonexistence that his argument rests. Assuming,
however, that the law and regulations were
Page 181 U. S. 114
not in force, we still cannot base a presumption that the
governor was authorized by the supreme executive to make the grant
simply because the governor exercised the power. The difference
between the act relating to Spanish titles to lands above referred
to and the act of 1891 under which Mexican titles to lands have
been examined by the Court of Private Land Claims and by this Court
is clearly recognized and enforced in
United States v.
Ortiz, 176 U. S. 422. In
that case it was held that, under the provisions of the act
establishing the Court of Private Land Claims (sec. 13, Act of
March 3, 1891, c. 539; 26 Stat. 854), the burden of showing the
existence of the grant was upon the person claiming under it, and
that no presumption of authority on the part of the granting
officer existed, as in the case of the above-mentioned territories.
This last case was approved in the
Elder case,
177 U. S. 104,
where it was again held that the claimant must prove his title by a
preponderance of evidence, and no presumption of authority
existed.
And in
Hayes v. United States, 170 U.
S. 637,
170 U. S.
647-648, this difference is also pointed out by MR.
JUSTICE WHITE. Speaking of the act of 1891, he said:
"But in the act of 1891, the court is required to be satisfied
not simply as to the regularity in form, but it is made essential
before a grant can be held legally valid that it must appear that
the title was 'lawfully and regularly derived,' which imports that
the court must be satisfied from all the evidence that the official
body or person assuming to grant was vested with authority, or that
the exercise of power, if unwarranted, was subsequently lawfully
ratified."
P.
170 U. S.
648.
We are not satisfied that there was a general power on the part
of the governor of a territory at any time to make a valid grant of
lands in all cases and simply as the agent of the supreme
executive, such as is contended for by counsel for the appellants.
No evidence that the governors legally had that power has been
given other than the fact that they sometimes exercised it. It
appears, however, that for some years prior to 1845, grants of land
were made not only by governors, but even by alcaldes, prefects,
justices of the peace, and by judges of first instance, so that, in
the language of one of the judges of the
Page 181 U. S. 115
court below, "it was a poor officer indeed who did not assume to
be able to dispose of the public domain belonging to the nation."
Hence the reluctance to presume the validity of a power because of
its exercise. It may be that in some particular period of those
disturbed times, and up to 1846, the supreme executive of the
Mexican nation exercised arbitrary and irresponsible power, and
granted the public lands according to his own views of what was
proper and needful for the nation, and upon occasion delegated such
power to a governor, but the exercise of that kind of power was in
violation of the ordinary and general laws which had been adopted
by the nation, and no presumption that the supreme executive had
delegated his power to a governor or political chief of a province
or state can be indulged for the purpose of upholding a grant of
land made by the governor in violation of the constitution or laws
which had theretofore been adopted or passed.
Counsel also urges that such power is to be found in the "Bases
of 1835," the "Constitution of 1836," and the "Bases of 1843," not
to speak of the "Plan of Taxubaya" and the attending laws or
decrees, in which it is contended there are specific provisions
plainly expressive of the intimate representative and ministerial
relations which the governor and commandant general bore the
supreme executive. It might be assumed that the relations between
the supreme executive or Dictator and his governors and commandants
general were intimate and confidential, but such relations of
intimacy and confidence do not take the place of an actual
delegation of power to the governors to make grants of this
description; nor do we find any such delegation in the various
provisions contained in the Bases of 1835 or of 1843 and the
constitution above referred to. The governor does not assume to
make the grant by virtue of any special or general delegation of
authority to him by the supreme executive, but he asserts in his
grant above quoted that he makes it "in virtue of the power in me
vested by the laws," etc.
Section 10 of the "Bases for the New Constitution," law of
October 23, 1835 (Reynolds, p. 201), simply provides that the
executive power of the departments shall reside in the
governors
Page 181 U. S. 116
in subordination to the supreme executive of the nation. The
same law divides the national territory into departments on the
basis of population, etc., and provides that there shall be
governors and departmental boards for the government of these
departments. This obviously gives no authority to the governor to
make a grant of the public lands within his territory according to
his own unrestrained views of propriety. It does not assume to
alter the general laws in relation to the disposition of the public
lands or of the manner in which they shall be disposed of. The same
may be said regarding the Constitution of 1836, which entrusts the
interior departments to the governors in subordination to the
general government. Reynolds, pp. 203, 204. The law of March 20,
1837, Reynolds, p. 211, subd. 17, p. 215, provides that the
governors shall be the usual channels of communication between the
supreme powers of the nation and the departmental counsels
(juntas), and between the latter and the officials of the
department. This provision does not tend to show the power
contended for.
In fine, looking through the provisions to which our attention
has been called by counsel, and without specific reference to each
one of them, we may say in regard to all of them that we find
therein nothing providing in terms or by inference for the general
delegation of power by the supreme executive (assuming that he
himself had it) to the various governors to make a grant like this.
The appellants are therefore compelled to show some specific
delegation of authority from the supreme executive for making such
a grant. If that were shown, we might say, following the case of
United States v.
Castillero, 23 How. 464, the other conditions
therein mentioned being fulfilled, that the grant was a valid one,
and ought to have been confirmed by the court below, and within the
case of
United States v.
Osio, 23 How. 273, if there had been a special
delegation of power, it would follow that the conditions contained
in such special delegation must be fulfilled before title passed.
The necessity for showing what the special power was becomes
evident from these cases.
What we have already said as to the absence of all record in
Page 181 U. S. 117
the archives relating to the grant applies to the case as here
considered.
Looked at from any point of view, we do not think the appellants
have borne the burden of showing the validity of their grant either
directly or by facts from which its validity could be properly
inferred within the cases already decided by this Court. The
judgment of the court below must therefore be
Affirmed.