Notwithstanding the contention of appellant in this case, the
decision of this Court in
Ainsa v. New Mexico & Arizona R.
Co., No. 2,
175 U. S. 91, that
the District Court of Arizona had jurisdiction of an action to
quiet title brought by a grantee of the Mexican government of land
in the territory included in the Gadsden Purchase, did not proceed
upon a mistake in fact and is not inconsistent with the reasoning
of the decision of
Ainsa v. New Mexico & Arizona R.
Co., No. 1,
175 U. S. 76.
Under the Gadsden Purchase Treaty with Mexico of December 30,
1853, 10 Stat. 1031, the good faith of the United States was
pledged to respect Mexican titles, and one whose title was
absolutely perfected prior to the treaty was not bound to present
his title for confirmation to the Court of Private Land Claims
under the Act of March 3, 1891; nor did the fact that he prayed for
confirmation, in a suit brought by the United States against him in
that court to declare the patent void or to determine boundaries if
valid, limit his claim to the recovery of the price specified in
the act for land included within the grant but patented to others
by the United States.
While, under § 14 of the Act of March 3, 1891, where the
claimant of a Mexican land grant himself presented his claim to a
Mexican grant in the Gadsden Purchase to the Court of Private Land
Claims, he might be limited to recovery in the case of lands within
his grant sold by the United States to the price specified in the
act, where he is brought into the court by the United States in a
suit attempting to set aside a grant title to which was perfected
before the treaty, he is not so limited and patents issued by the
United States to lands within the boundaries of his grant are mere
usurpations and void.
95 P. 103 affirmed.
The fact, which involve the title to land in Arizona
Page 218 U. S. 290
in the territory known as the Gadsden Purchase, are stated in
the opinion.
Page 218 U. S. 294
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit to quiet title, brought in 1887 by the appellee's
intestate in the district court of Arizona. The decision was in
favor of the appellee, and this decision was affirmed by the
supreme court of the territory,
Page 218 U. S. 295
whereupon the defendant Richardson appealed to this Court.
The appellant represents a title derived from a grant by the
Mexican government of land in the portion of Arizona afterwards
acquired by the Gadsden Purchase, December 30, 1853. 10 Stat. 1031.
At the time of the Gadsden Purchase, this title was complete. The
appellant claims through mesne conveyances from holders of patents
issued by the United States in 1879 and 1880 under the homestead
laws.
The first error assigned is that the district court was without
jurisdiction. That point already has been decided against the
appellant in this very case under the name of
Ainsa v. New
Mexico & Arizona R. Co., No. 2,
175 U. S.
91, so that it is not open to him to urge it.
United
States v. Camou, 184 U. S. 572,
184 U. S. 574.
But it is proper to say that, in our opinion, the decision did not
proceed upon a mistake of fact, and is not inconsistent with the
reasoning of the immediately preceding decision between the same
parties,
175 U. S. 175 U.S.
76,
175 U. S. 86,
although No. 2 was begun before, and No. 1 after, the passage of
the Act of March 3, 1891, c. 539, 26 Stat. 854, establishing a
Court of Private Land Claims.
In 1892, the United States brought a suit against the present
appellee in the Court of Private Land Claims, alleging that his
claim was void and that the United States had granted patents for
portions of the land, praying that the title might be adjudicated,
and, if valid, the boundaries established, excepting such parts as
might have been disposed of by the United States. The appellee
answered, setting up title and praying confirmation. Ultimately, in
pursuance of the decision of this Court,
Ely's Administrator v.
United States, 171 U. S. 220, a
decree was entered in his favor, and a patent issued to him on
October 29, 1906, specifying no exceptions other than one of "gold,
silver, or quicksilver mines or minerals of the same."
Page 218 U. S. 296
The appellant, however, contends that, by virtue of the
above-mentioned statute of March 3, 1891, the effect of the
appellee's appearance in the Court of Private Land Claims was to
forfeit all portions of the land in controversy that had been
patented by the United States, and to give the appellee in place of
it a claim for not exceeding $1.25 per acre so patented against the
United States. The contrary decision is the other error
assigned.
Of course, the patents for homesteads issued in the name of the
United States, on the facts that we have stated, were a mere
usurpation and were void. The lands covered by them, whether
reserved or not by the Acts of July 22, 1854, c. 103, § 8, 10
Stat. 308; July 15, 1870, c. 292, 16 Stat. 304, were not public
lands, but private property, which the government was bound by the
express terms of the Gadsden Treaty of December 30, 1853, to
respect. The appellant's claim rests solely on an interpretation of
§§ 8 and 14 of the above-mentioned Act of 1891, that
would cut down the performance of the treaty promise by the United
States to at least the narrowest limits consistent with good faith.
We are of opinion that the different construction adopted by the
court below, and also by the Acting Secretary of the Interior in
Ely v. Magee, 34 L.D. 506, 512, is correct. After providing in
§ 6 for incomplete titles, the act goes on in § 8 to deal
with complete ones. Holders of claims under such titles, it says,
"shall have the right (but shall not be bound) to apply to said
court" for a confirmation of their title. Of course, this means
that the title is recognized as good without the proceeding in
court.
Ainsa v. New Mexico & Arizona R. Co.,
175 U. S. 76,
175 U. S.
90.
The confirmation is granted, "excepting any part of such land
that shall have been disposed by the United States," and without
prejudice to conflicting private interests. Then, in § 14, it
is enacted that
"if, in any case, it
Page 218 U. S. 297
shall appear that the lands or any part thereof decreed to any
claimant under the provisions of this act shall have been sold or
granted by the United States to any other person, such title from
the United States to such other person shall remain valid,
notwithstanding such decree,"
with a provision for a judgment in favor of the claimant,
against the United, states, for the proved value of such granted
lands, not exceeding $1.25 per acre. If this were all, there could
be no question that the exception of lands granted by the United
States was merely a condition attached to the decree of
confirmation, and did not purport to affirm such grants if the
claimant did not see fit to go into the Court of Private Land
Claims.
But in § 8 there is a further provision by which the United
States may proceed against the claimant, as it did against the
appellee, on the ground that the title or boundaries are open to
question, and therefore the court is to determine the matter,
"but subject to all lawful rights adverse to such claimant or
possessor, as between such claimant and possessor and any other
claimant or possessor, and subject in this respect to all the
provisions of this section applicable thereto."
The appellant argues that this provision gives a wider meaning
to § 14. He says that the words "if in any case" it shall
appear that lands have been sold by the United States apply as well
to a proceeding by the United States as to one where the claimant
goes forward. He argues that so to apply them is just in view of
the supposedly unknown boundaries of the old Mexican grants and the
policy of the United States in offering its public lands to
settlers -- that otherwise there is a suspended threat, and
possibility of a claimant turning up after many years, and
dispossessing those who had been encouraged by the United States to
go upon the land.
Botiller v. Dominguez, 130 U.
S. 238. But the considerations mentioned in the case
cited did not prevent the United States, in the Act of March 3,
1891, from leaving
Page 218 U. S. 298
the holders of perfected titles free not to present them to the
court, as they were required to do in earlier statutes. The good
faith of the United States was pledged to respect the Mexican
titles. It recognized in the Act of 1891 that holders of such
titles need not go into the land claims court to get them
confirmed, and we should be slow to suppose that it meant to make a
doubt in the Department of Justice as to the validity of a perfect
title a ground for cutting down what otherwise it was bound to
protect, and did, by the statute, leave intact. But for that
unfounded doubt, the appellee would have been secure in his rights,
and could have turned the holders of the homestead patents off his
land.
United States v. Martinez, 184 U.
S. 441,
184 U. S. 445.
The proceeding by the government was a matter over which he had no
control, and ought not to affect his rights. Looking at the words
of § 14 more exactly, they do not require the appellant's
construction. "If in any case" means in any case before the court
that the act established. And when the section goes on, "it shall
appear that the lands or any part thereof, decreed to any claimant
under the provisions of this act, shall have been sold," it is
reasonable to suppose that it has reference to those cases in which
a claimant is seeking a decree -- that is to say, where the
claimant is the plaintiff in the case. It is true that a petition
by the United States may end in the same result, but the terms of
the sentence and the duty of the government concur in leading us to
limit the words as we do. On the other hand, the consideration
mentioned sufficiently shows that the claimant did not impair his
position by praying for confirmation in his answer. The prayer
merely expressed what would have happened without it by the force
of law.
Judgment affirmed.