Under § 35 of the Foraker Act, appeals from the District
Court of the United States for Porto Rico are subject to the
provisions applicable to appeals from the supreme courts of the
territories under the Act of April 7, 1874, under which the
jurisdiction of this Court is confined, in a case where there are
no errors assigned upon questions of evidence, to determining
whether the findings of the court below support the judgment.
Rosaly v. Graham, 227 U. S. 584.
Even if the commanding officer in territory occupied by military
forces of the United States has all the legislative power as to
such territory possessed by Congress, he is still subject, as
Congress is, to the provisions of the Fifth Amendment, and cannot
by military orders deprive persons of their property without due
process of law.
To shorten the period for acquisition of title by prescription
and give the order a retroactive effect so that the period has
elapsed at the time the order is made without giving those who have
interests in the property an opportunity to be heard and saving no
existing rights amounts to taking property without due process of
law.
The provision in the judicial order of General Henry published
April 7, 1899, during the military occupation of Porto Rico by the
United States, reducing the period for prescriptive title to real
estate in that island from the periods previously established by
law down to six years with retroactive effect and without any
opportunity for third parties to be heard amounted to a deprivation
of property of the actual owners without due process of law, and
was beyond the power of the Military Governor; nor was this
provision ratified by any subsequent action of Congress.
The status of Porto Rico during the military occupancy and
before the exchange of ratifications of the treaty of peace was the
same as that of the Philippine Islands during the same period.
From the exchange of ratifications until Congress acted by the
passage of the Foraker Act, the provisional government established
in Porto Rico continued as before the peace.
During the entire period, General Orders No. 101 relating to
Cuba and
Page 230 U. S. 140
reiterated
mutatis mutandis as to Porto Rico by General
Miles continued in force as the recognized declaration of
principles by which the Military government was limited, and, under
this, the Governor was without authority to make any order that
would deprive any person of his property without due process of
law.
While the exact definition of the term "due process of law" may
be uncertain, it is certain that it inhibits the taking of one
man's property and giving it to another, contrary to settled usages
and modes of procedure, and without notice or an opportunity to be
heard.
Statutes of limitation may be modified by shortening the time
which is still running, but only so that a reasonable time still
remains for commencement of an action before the bar takes
effect.
Wherever.registry laws are in force, the rule is that a
purchaser takes subject to any defects and infirmities that may be
ascertained by reference to the chain of title as spread on the
record, and this includes invalidity of an order on which title is
based.
Under the registry law of Porto Rico, rights of third parties
were preserved, and a mortgagee or grantee acquired no better right
before the expiration of the period of prescription than the
grantor, but took subject to the rights of infants who owned
property the title to which had been fraudulently registered in the
name of the grantor.
Where the limitations on a person exercising authority are
notorious, and are simply in accord with national and international
law, there is no hardship in applying the rule that rights cannot
be acquired under orders made by such person which are wholly
beyond his authority.
5 P.R. 463 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the title to real estate in Porto Rico
and the constitutionality of certain military orders during the
military occupation of that Island, are stated in the opinion.
Page 230 U. S. 143
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a suit in equity to establish the right of the
complainants (appellees) to a parcel of land containing 106 acres,
situate in the Barrio Nuevo, in the Jurisdiction of Naranjito, in
the Island of Porto Rico, found to exceed in value the sum of
$5,000. The district court decreed that the complainants were the
legal owners of this land by inheritance, and entitled to the
possession of it as against the appellants, a firm doing business
under the name of J. Ochoa y Hermano; that the firm should deliver
possession to the appellees; that all entries in the registry of
property, of
dominio and
posesorio title by or in
favor of that firm, and all other entries of either kind of title
as against the appellees, should be cancelled, etc. 5 P.R. 463.
Defendants appealed to this Court.
At the time the appeal was taken, § 35 of the Act of April
12, 1900, known as the Foraker Act, 31 Stat. 77, 85, c. 191, was in
force -- since superseded by § 244 of the Judicial Code of
March 3, 1911, 26 Stat. 1087, 1157, c. 231 -- and subjected appeals
from the District Court of the United States for Porto Rico to the
regulations applicable to appeals from the supreme courts of the
territories. These were controlled by Act of April 7, 1874, c. 80,
§ 2,
Page 230 U. S. 144
18 Stat. 27, 28, by which it was provided that, instead of the
evidence at large, a statement of the facts in the nature of a
special verdict, with the rulings of the court on the admission or
rejection of evidence when excepted to, should be made and
certified by the court below and transmitted to this Court with the
transcript of the proceedings and judgment or decree. Our
jurisdiction therefore is confined to determining whether the facts
found by the district court support its judgment, for no errors are
assigned upon questions of evidence.
Rosaly v. Graham,
227 U. S. 584,
227 U. S. 590,
and cases cited.
The findings are in substance as follows:
Jose Maria Hernandez, the paternal grandfather of complainants,
was, at the time of his death in the year 1872, the owner and in
possession of a tract of land in which was included the parcel of
106 acres in controversy. His title to this parcel was never
recorded. Upon his death, his son, Juan Hernandez, became by
inheritance the owner of it, and entered into and remained in
possession as owner until his death, which occurred in the year
1887, but his title was never recorded. Upon his death, Juan
Hernandez left surviving him two young children, the complainants,
and also a widow, their mother; she died in the year 1906, and the
complainants, then still minors, became sole owners of the tract by
inheritance from their father, but their title has never been
recorded.
In the year 1890, the title to the land in question did not
appear of record in favor of any person, either in the books of the
present or modern registry or in the books of the old registry, the
ancient
anotadurias or
contadurias. In that year,
Raimundo Morales, the maternal grandfather of the complainants,
fraudulently representing himself to be the owner, appeared before
the Municipal Court of Naranjito, an insular court, and by certain
ex parte proceedings obtained from that court a decree
declaring him to be entitled to the possession of the land,
Page 230 U. S. 145
but without prejudice to third parties who might show a better
right to such possession. The possessory title so obtained was duly
recorded or inscribed in the proper registry of property, in the
same year, and was the only title to the land that then appeared
recorded or inscribed in the registry.
In the year 1899, Morales again appeared before the same insular
court, and petitioned for a decree converting the possessory title,
or entry of possession in the registry, into a record of ownership
(
titulo de dominio). His petition and the proceedings had
thereon in the insular court were based upon the provisions of a
judicial order, dated April 4, 1899, and promulgated in the
Official Gazette of Porto Rico under date April 7, 1899. This order
was made under authority of Major General Guy v. Henry, U.S.
Volunteers at that time Military Governor of Porto Rico, and, by
its terms, reduced from twenty years to six years the period during
which real estate must be held in order to permit the conversion in
the registry of a
posesorio title to a
dominio
title. Upon the application of Morales, such proceedings were had
in the insular court as were provided for in the judicial order,
and the court in due time made and entered its decree to the effect
that the entry of possession, or possessory title, which appeared
in the registry recorded in favor of Morales, be converted into a
record of ownership, or
dominio title. Thereafter, and in
the same year (1899), this decree was duly recorded or inscribed by
Morales in the proper registry of title, and the
dominio
title thereafter appeared in the registry recorded solely in his
name.
In the year 1901, there appearing in the registry no claim or
right or title in the land on the part of any other person or
persons, Morales, still fraudulently representing himself to be the
true owner, mortgaged the land for value to the defendants,
constituting the firm of J. Ochoa y Hermano, who truly and in good
faith believed him (Morales)
Page 230 U. S. 146
to be the owner of it, and were entirely ignorant of the rights
of the complainants therein. The mortgage was duly recorded in the
proper registry of property in the same year.
Thereafter, and in the year 1903, the record still showing
nothing respecting the ownership of the lands besides the
dominio title of Morales and the mortgage of the
defendants, and they being still ignorant of the rights of the
complainants, Morales by deed duly executed before a notary public
in which his wife joined, sold and transferred the land to
defendants in full payment of the amounts due and secured by the
mortgage. The defendants duly recorded the deed in the same year,
and by their agent immediately took possession of the land.
The present action was commenced in 1908, shortly after the
complainants arrived at full age.
Upon these facts, the district court concluded as matter of law
that the judicial order of General Henry, dated April 4, 1899, so
far as it operated retrospectively upon the rights of the
complainants, who were minors at the time and for some time
thereafter, and who owned the land during the entire period of nine
years that elapsed between the fraudulent entry of possessory title
in the name of their maternal grandfather, Morales, and the
promulgation of General Henry's order, was null and void because in
contravention of the "due process of law" clause of the Fifth
Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
For an understanding of the questions presented, it should be
premised that Congress declared war to exist between this country
and Spain by an Act of April 25, 1898, 30 Stat. 364, c. 189; that
Porto Rico, then a colony of Spain, was occupied by the military
forces of the United States from and after July 25th; that a
protocol was signed in Washington, August 12th, 30 Stat. 1742,
under which hostilities between the two countries were
Page 230 U. S. 147
suspended pending negotiation of a treaty for the establishment
of peace, by the terms of which protocol (
inter alia)
Spain agreed to cede the Island of Porto Rico to the United States
and to immediately evacuate it, and commissioners were appointed to
meet at Paris and proceed to the negotiation and conclusion of the
treaty; that, accordingly a treaty was signed at Paris under date
December 10, 1898, ratifications being exchanged at Washington,
April 11, 1899, 30 Stat. 1754, and, by its terms, Porto Rico was
ceded to the United States, and (Article IX, p. 1759) "the civil
rights and political status of the native inhabitants of the
territories hereby ceded to the United States shall be determined
by the Congress." The military occupation of Porto Rico was
immediately followed by the establishment of a provisional
government, as will be mentioned below, and this government
continued in control of the affairs of the Island continuously
until the ratification of the treaty, and thereafter until the
enactment of the Foraker Act of April 12, 1900, entitled "An Act
Temporarily to Provide Revenues and a Civil government for Porto
Rico, and for Other Purposes" (31 Stat. 77, c. 191).
The statement of facts is silent upon the question of the
possession of the property from the death of the father of the
appellees, in the year 1887, until the appellants entered into
possession under the deed given to them by Morales in the year
1903. Assuming (in favor of appellants) that Morales had possession
from the time he procured the entry of a possessory title in his
name, the effect of this, as between him and the true owners, was
that uninterrupted possession for thirty years would ripen into a
good title and confer immunity from action (former Civil Code, P.
R., Articles 1959, 1963, New Civil Code, P. R., §§ 1860,
1864). He was not entitled to avail himself of article 1957, that
declared a prescription by possession for ten years as to persons
present, and for twenty
Page 230 U. S. 148
years with regard to those absent, because this was confined to
possession "with good faith and proper title," and Morales had
neither within the meaning of those terms as employed in the Code
(former Civil Code P. R., Arts.1940, 1941, 1950, 1952-1954; present
Civil Code, §§ 1841, 1842, 1851, 1853-1855). The entry of
a possessory title in his name was in effect a judicial certificate
declaring him to be entitled to the possession, but without
prejudice to third parties who might show a better right to it. It
gave him no title as against them, but conferred a
prima
facie legitimacy upon his possession, being "provisional and
presumptive evidence of ownership," and it fixed a date from which
his possession should be treated as originating, and so the entry
amounted (for present purposes) to no more than public notice that
from that time his possession was adverse to the true owners.
Soto v. Registrar of Property, 15 P.R. 597, 600;
Morales v. Landrau, 15 P.R. 761, 772;
Pares v. J.
Reynes & Co., 2 P.R. 402, 428.
But appellants rest their case upon the provisions of the
Mortgage Law as amended by the judicial order of General Henry. The
Mortgage Law is a somewhat elaborate system of registration for
instruments of conveyance, that, having been long in force in the
Peninsula, was extended to Porto Rico and the Philippines in or
about the year 1893. It was designed to give to purchasers and
mortgagees acquiring interests in lands in reliance upon recorded
titles, protection against claims and interests of which no notice
was conveyed by the records. Its provisions are to be read in
connection with those of the Civil Code. By Art. 27, "those who
have not participated in the recorded instrument or contract" are
considered as third persons. By Art. 33, "the record of instruments
or contracts which are null in accordance with the law are not
validated thereby." But, notwithstanding this, by Art. 34,
"instruments or contracts
Page 230 U. S. 149
executed or covenanted by a person who, according to the
registry, has a right thereto shall not be invalidated with regard
to third persons after they have once been recorded, although later
the right of a person executing them is annulled or determined by
virtue of a prior deed not recorded, or for reasons which do not
clearly appear from the registry. Only by virtue of a recorded
instrument may another later instrument, also recorded, be
invalidated to the prejudice of third persons [with exceptions not
now material]. The provisions of this Article [34] may at no time
be applied to the instrument recorded in accordance with the
provisions of Article 390 unless the prescription has validated or
secured the interest referred to therein."
By Art. 36,
"suits for rescission or determination of title shall not be
instituted against third persons who have recorded the instruments
of their respective interests in conformity with the provisions of
this law."
But, by Art. 37, exceptions are made to the rule thus declared,
and one of them is, "suits for rescission or determination of title
which are due to the causes plainly expressed in the registry."
Subsequent sections provide for the mortgaging of different
interests in real property, and for various purposes, and declare
the effect that shall be given to the mortgages, provide for the
manner of keeping the registries, for making and correcting entries
therein, and for proceedings for clearing the title of unrecorded
mortgages and other charges and interests. Art. 389 prohibits the
admission in the courts, etc., of unrecorded documents or
instruments if presented for the purpose of enforcing, to the
prejudice of third persons, interests which should have been
recorded. Articles 390 to 395, inclusive, contain provisions under
which owners who lack a recorded title of ownership are permitted
to record their interests by previously proving their possession
before the judge of first instance, or the proper municipal judge,
with
Page 230 U. S. 150
the consent of the Department of Public Prosecution and citation
of the adjacent property owners, should they desire to record the
absolute ownership of some estate, and with the citation of the
owner or other participants in the ownership, should they desire to
record some property right. Article 391 prescribes the form of the
proceedings. Article 392 provides that the court, on approving the
proceedings, shall "order that the record requested be made in the
registry without prejudice to a third person having a better
claim." Among the prerequisites for converting entries of
possession into records of ownership under this procedure it was,
by par. 6 of Art. 393, provided that twenty years must have elapsed
since the date of entry of possession. By Art. 394,
"If the twenty years calculated from the date of the entry [of
possession] have not elapsed, or the requisites mentioned in
Article 393 of this law have not been complied with, the entries of
possession shall have the legal effect embraced in the provisions
contained in the following paragraphs, [
viz.]. The period
of possession which appears to have elapsed at the time said
entries are made shall be computed for the prescription which does
not require a just title, unless a person prejudiced thereby denies
it, in which case said period of possession must be proven in
accordance with the common law. Entries of possession shall
prejudice or favor third persons from the date of their record, but
only with regard to the effects which the laws attribute to mere
possession. The entry of possession shall not prejudice the person
who has a better right to the ownership of the realty, although his
title has not been recorded, unless the prescription has confirmed
and secured the claim recorded. Between the parties, the possession
shall be effectual from the date prescribed by the common law. The
provisions contained in the preceding articles, regarding the
entries of possession, cannot be applied to mortgage rights, which
cannot
Page 230 U. S. 151
be recorded unless an instrument in writing is presented."
Under the Mortgage Law, it seems to be settled that these
proceedings for proving possession or ownership before the courts
of first instance or municipal courts, although judicial in form,
are intended merely as aids to the establishment of a system of
authenticated instruments of title for purposes of the public
records; that, although under some circumstances it is required
that notice be given to the owner or other persons interested
adversely to the applicant, the proceedings are really
ex
parte, have not the effect of
res judicata, and do
not bind anyone who does not appear.
Gonzalez v. People,
10 P.R. 458;
Calderon v. Garcia, 14 P.R. 407, 416. And
even with respect to a party who appears and opposes the entry of a
possessory title or its conversion into a
dominio title,
his rights cannot be adjudged or passed upon in these proceedings,
but must be decided in an ordinary action of revindication; the
court being limited, in the proceedings under the Mortgage Law for
a conversion of a possessory to a
dominio title, to saying
whether petitioner has shown a right to the conversion asked for,
but without passing upon the rights of others.
Paris v.
People, 5 P.R. 29;
Diaz v. Waymouth, 13 P.R. 317.
This is conceded by the appellants, who indeed base their
argument upon it, contending further that, because of what has just
been said, the rights of appellees in the land in question were not
affected by the proceedings whereby Morales converted his
possessory title into a title of ownership, and that the recording
of this
dominio title by him did not cut off any of their
rights; that, if such title was fraudulent, it was liable to
attack, even after registry, within any period short of thirty
years after he has entered into possession of the land and while
still recorded in his name, or in that of any other person
Page 230 U. S. 152
excepting an innocent purchaser without notice, or, in the
language of the civil law, "a third party with good faith."
Paris v. People, 5 P.R. 29, 37;
Gonzalez v.
People, 10 P.R. 458, 462;
Abella v. Antunano, 14 P.R.
485, 494;
Merchant v. Lafuente, 5 P.R. 638, 644.
Upon the strength of this, it is ingeniously argued that, under
the law of Porto Rico, it was not the conversion of the apparent
title of Morales from a possessory to a
dominio title that
cut off the rights of the appellees, but it was the fact that the
appellants, in reliance upon that apparent title, and (as is said)
without notice of the rights of the appellees, purchased the land
from Morales which, by virtue of the Mortgage Law, gave to them a
better right than the appellees. And from this it is contended that
the judicial order, in reducing from twenty years to six years the
time that must elapse between the entry of a possessory title and
its conversion into a
dominio title, did not cut off any
right of appellees, and therefore was not and is not inconsistent
with "due process of law."
But it seems to us that there can be no difference in principle
-- so far as concerns the question whether the property of the
appellees was taken from them without due process -- whether there
were two steps or three steps in the course of procedure by which
the end was accomplished. Whether the retroactive effect of the
judicial order resulted in conferring upon Morales a title that he
himself could maintain against the true owners, or whether it
conferred upon him an apparent title that not he himself but his
grantees could maintain, makes no difference in a controversy
between his grantees and the true owners.
In short, the position of appellees is that, by the fraudulent
conduct of Morales, plus the Mortgage Law, plus the judicial order,
plus the
dominio title in Morales founded thereon, and the
recording thereof, plus the
Page 230 U. S. 153
mortgage and deed to appellants, their property has been taken
from them and given to appellants, without notice to them or an
opportunity for a hearing, and that the proceedings in court for
converting the possessory into a dominion title, while bearing the
semblance of judicial proceedings, departed therefrom in the
essentials. To this it is no answer to say that those proceedings
in court did not, under the Mortgage Law, purport to be judicial
proceedings at all, nor to say that they would have done no harm
except for the subsequent conveyance by Morales to the
appellants.
We proceed therefore to consider the fundamental question upon
which the court below rested its decree.
The Judicial Order of General Henry, dated April 4 and published
April 7, 1899 (Mil.Ord.Porto Rico, vol. 2, p. 71), contains seven
clauses or paragraphs, of which the first amends Art. 1957 of the
Civil Code so as to reduce the period for prescription by
possession accompanied with good faith and a proper title from ten
years with respect to persons present, and twenty years with
respect to persons absent, down to six years as to persons both
present and absent. This has no direct bearing upon the present
case, for reasons already indicated.
Other clauses of the order amend Articles 391, 393, 394, and 395
of the Mortgage Law. The most important is that which amends
paragraph 6 of Article 393 so as to reduce from twenty years to six
years the period during which possession must continue in order to
convert an entry of possession into a record of ownership upon the
public records. The final clause declares: "This order shall have
retroactive effect."
The court below held (5 P.R. 463) that, assuming General Henry
possessed all the legislative power that is possessed by Congress
under the Constitution, he was still necessarily subject (as
Congress would be) to the
Page 230 U. S. 154
"due process of law" clause of the Fifth Amendment. And since
his judicial order, because of its retroactive clause, by its
terms, covered the present case, where the real owners of the land
were infants and unable to protect themselves, and where they still
had, under the Mortgage Law as it stood, nearly twelve years in
which to attain maturity and contest the possession and right of
Morales, and since the order shortened the period of limitation to
six years, which period in their case had already elapsed, the
order at the same time containing no provision for saving existing
rights or giving to them or to others in like situation any
opportunity to assert their rights, it was the same in effect as
taking their property without due process of law.
We find it unnecessary to consider whether the authority of
General Henry was subject to the same constitutional limitations as
that of Congress; for we have reached a like result, so far as the
present case is concerned, upon different reasoning.
Porto Rico at the time was still foreign territory, and was
under a provisional military government established by President
McKinley as Commander in Chief. In order to determine the extent of
the authority of General Henry, and the limitations upon it, we
must look to the orders under which the military government was
established and maintained.
The Island was occupied by the forces of the United States under
Major General Miles, Commanding United States Army, on July 25,
1898. He appears to have had no special instructions from the
President respecting the government that should be established, but
it was well understood that he and those under him were subject to
the instructions communicated by President McKinley to the
Secretary of War under date July 13th with reference to Cuba (10
Mess. & Pap. 214) and published by the War Department as
General Orders No. 101,
Page 230 U. S. 155
under date July 18, of which a copy is set forth in the margin.
[
Footnote 1]
Page 230 U. S. 156
The clauses especially pertinent to the present question are the
following:
"The first effect of the military occupation of the enemy's
territory is the severance of the former political relations of the
inhabitants and the establishment
Page 230 U. S. 157
of a new political power. Under this changed condition of
things, the inhabitants, so long as they perform their duties, are
entitled to security in their persons and property and in all their
private rights and relations. . . . Though the powers of the
military occupant are absolute and supreme, and immediately operate
upon the political condition of the inhabitants, the municipal laws
of the conquered territory, such as affect private rights of person
and property and provide for the punishment of crime, are
Page 230 U. S. 158
considered as continuing in force, so far as they are compatible
with the new order of things, until they are suspended or
superseded by the occupying belligerent, and in practice they are
not usually abrogated, but are allowed to remain in force and to be
administered by the ordinary tribunals, substantially as they were
before the occupation. This enlightened practice is, so far as
possible, to be adhered to on the present occasion. . . . Private
property, whether belonging to individuals or corporations, is to
be respected, and can be confiscated only for cause."
General Miles was second in command only to the President, and,
as his representative, had full control in Porto Rico. That he
fully sympathized with the purposes of the President, and intended
that all subordinate officers should govern themselves accordingly,
appears from his declaration to the inhabitants under date of July
28, in which he said:
"The first effect of this occupation will be the immediate
release from your former political relations, and, it is hoped, a
cheerful acceptance of the government of the United States. The
chief object of the American military forces will be to overthrow
the armed authority of Spain, and to give to the people of your
beautiful island the largest measure of liberty consistent with
this military occupation. We have not come to make war upon the
people, . . . but, on the contrary, to bring you protection, not
only to yourselves but to your property, to promote your
prosperity, and to bestow upon you the immunities and blessings of
the liberal institutions of our government. It is not our purpose
to interfere with any existing laws and customs that are wholesome
and beneficial to your people, so long as they conform to the rules
of military administration, of order and justice. This is not a war
of devastation, but one to give to all within the control of its
military and naval forces the advantages and blessings of
enlightened civilization. "
Page 230 U. S. 159
And under date July 29, a letter of instructions was published,
under the authority of General Miles, for the information and
guidance of all concerned, in which the substance of General Orders
No. 101,
mutatis mutandis, was embodied, so as to be
binding upon the military government of Porto Rico (Rep. War
Dept.1900, Vol. 1, pt. 13, pp. 18-22).
The protocol of August 12, 1898 (30 Stat. 1742), the purport of
which has already been given, left our government, by its military
forces, in the occupation and control of Porto Rico as a colony of
Spain, and bound by the principles of international law to do
whatever was necessary to secure public safety, social order, and
the guaranties of private property. From this time until the
interchange of the ratifications of the treaty on April 11, 1899
(30 Stat. 1754), General Orders No. 101, and the instructions of
General Miles to his subordinates dated July 29, 1898, continued to
form the authority, and the sole authority, for the military
government of Porto Rico.
This island, and the islands and keys adjacent and belonging to
it, were by order of October 1, 1898 (General Orders No. 158),
established as a military department, and Major General John R.
Brooke was assigned to its command. He assumed the command on
October 18th, and held it until December 8th. General Henry
succeeded him on that date, and remained in command until after the
ratification of the treaty.
The status of Porto Rico during the military occupancy, and
before the exchange of ratifications, was the same as that of the
Philippines during the same period, and is dependent upon
principles expounded in frequent decisions of this Court.
Fleming v.
Page, 9 How. 603,
50 U. S.
614-615;
Cross v.
Harrison, 16 How. 164,
57 U. S. 190;
Dooley v. United States, 182 U. S. 222,
182 U. S. 230;
McLeod v. United States, 229 U. S. 416.
From the exchange of ratifications until Congress
Page 230 U. S. 160
acted by the passage of the Foraker Act, the provisional
government continued as before the peace.
Santiago v.
Nogueras, 214 U. S. 260,
214 U. S. 265;
Leitensdorfer v.
Webb, 20 How. 176,
61 U. S. 178.
And see Delima v. Bidwell, 182 U. S.
1,
182 U. S. 174,
etc.
During the entire period, General Orders No. 101, as reiterated
by General Miles, continued in force as the recognized declaration
of principles by which the military government was limited.
References to official sources of information respecting the period
of military occupancy are given in a marginal note. [
Footnote 2]
Under all the circumstances we deem it clear that the Governor
was without authority from the President to make any order,
judicial in its nature, that would have the effect of depriving any
person of his property without due process of law.
It is said that § 8 of the Foraker Act (31 Stat. 79, c.
191) had the effect of ratifying the judicial order of General
Henry. That section declared:
"That the laws and ordinances of Porto Rico now in force shall
continue in full force and effect, except as altered, amended, or
modified hereinafter, or as altered or modified by military orders
and decrees in force when this act shall take effect, and so far as
the same are not inconsistent or in conflict with the statutory
laws of the United States not locally inapplicable, or the
provisions hereof, until altered, amended, or repealed by the
legislative authority hereinafter provided for Porto Rico or by act
of Congress of the United States,"
with provisos not now pertinent. We can find here no legislative
purpose to validate any
Page 230 U. S. 161
order of the military governor that was in excess of the
authority conferred upon him by the President.
Without the guaranty of "due process," the right of private
property cannot be said to exist in the sense in which it is known
to our laws. The principle, known to the common law before Magna
Charta, was embodied in that Charter (Coke, 2 Inst. 45, 50), and
has been recognized since the Revolution as among the safest
foundations of our institutions. Whatever else may be uncertain
about the definition of the term "due process of law," all
authorities agree that it inhibits the taking of one man's property
and giving it to another contrary to settled usages and modes of
procedure and without notice or an opportunity for a hearing.
Now, the effect and operation of the retroactive clause in the
judicial order of April 4, 1899, as applied to the facts of the
concrete case, were such that, although Morales had until then no
right, title, or interest in the land in question, and had merely
established through fraudulent means and without notice to the
persons concerned a footing of possession, as a result of which, if
they should permit his claims to remain unchallenged, and he should
in fact maintain continuous possession for nearly twelve years
longer, he would thereby be enabled to procure, by
ex
parte proceedings, an apparent title in himself as against
them, yet the order permitted him at once, and without notice to
the owners, to procure such record of ownership in his name,
although they were then infants, and, so far as appears, not
cognizant of his possession of the land or of any of his
proceedings, and then, by virtue of other provisions of the
Mortgage Law, he could completely deprive them of their property if
he could make sale of it to a
bona fide purchaser without
notice of the infirmity of his apparent title.
With reference to statutes of limitations, it is well settled
that they may be modified by shortening the time
Page 230 U. S. 162
prescribed, but only if this be done while the time is still
running, and so that a reasonable time still remains for the
commencement of an action before the bar takes effect.
Terry v.
Anderson, 95 U. S. 628,
95 U. S. 632;
In re Brown, 135 U. S. 662,
135 U. S. 701,
135 U. S. 705;
Wheeler v. Jackson, 137 U. S. 245,
137 U. S. 255;
Turner v. New York, 168 U. S. 90,
168 U. S. 94;
Wilson v. Iseminger, 185 U. S. 55,
185 U. S. 63.
Many other cases might be cited. The question of what, under given
circumstances, is to be deemed a reasonable time to be allowed for
the bringing of an action when a change is made in a statute of
limitations has sometimes given rise to discussion. In the present
case, there is no such embarrassment, for here no time whatever was
allowed with respect to the case of these appellees and all others
against whose lawful ownership an unlawful possession had been held
for more than six years but less than twenty years at the time of
the making of the judicial order.
Since the proceeding for converting the entry of possession into
a
dominio title, as well as the proceeding for an entry of
possession itself, was taken without notice to the owners, the
effect of the judicial order was precisely the same as if the
military governor had declared that the property in question should
be taken from the lawful owner and given to the fraudulent
occupant. Certainly General Henry can have had no such purpose, and
must have been wrongly advised with respect to the results that
would flow from making the order retroactive. Otherwise he would
have confined it to cases where there still remained a reasonable
opportunity for the real owner to contest the pretensions of the
possessor. And in view of the instructions under which he derived
his authority, the judicial order must be construed as if expressly
thus limited.
But appellants rely upon Articles 33, 34, 36, and 37, already
quoted; the effect of which is that the title of
"a person who according to the registry has a right thereto
Page 230 U. S. 163
[
e.g., Morales] shall not be invalidated with regard to
third persons [
e.g., appellants] after they have once been
recorded, although later the right of the person executing them
[Morales] is annulled or determined . . . for reasons which do not
clearly appear from the registry,"
and also that
"suits for rescission or determination of title shall not be
instituted against third persons [
e.g., appellants] who
have recorded the instruments of their respective interests in
conformity with the provisions of this law,"
except, however, "suits for rescission or determination of
title, which are due to the causes plainly expressed in the
registry." It is said that, since Morales secured the possessory
title in 1890, and recorded it in the same year, and secured the
conversion of that title into a title of ownership in the year
1899, and recorded this
dominio title in the same year,
and in the year 1901 mortgaged the lands for value to the
appellants, and followed this with a conveyance in 1903, he at all
times appearing in the registry as sole owner, and since, in their
transactions with Morales, appellants acted in good faith and in
the belief that he was the sole owner, they are protected.
But the findings show that the entry of possession in favor of
Morales declared that his right was "without prejudice to third
parties who might show a better right to such possession," and that
the proceedings for the conversion of the entry of possession into
a record of ownership showed upon their face that they were based
upon the provisions of the judicial order of April 4, 1899.
In other words, when appellants took from Morales the mortgage
and deed under which they now claim, they were charged with notice
upon the record that his entry of possession was subject to the
rights of others, and that, by the law as it formerly stood, those
rights could not be cut off in less than twenty years. They were
also charged with notice that his
dominio title depended
upon
Page 230 U. S. 164
the validity of an order made by the military governor
purporting to have a retroactive effect, and to cut off, without
notice or hearing, the claims of the identical third parties whose
rights were preserved by the entry of possession; for, at the time
of the making of the judicial order, the six years had already
run.
It is a familiar doctrine, universally recognized where laws are
in force for the registry or recording of instruments of
conveyance, that every purchaser takes his title subject to any
defects and infirmities that may be ascertained by reference to his
chain of title as spread forth upon the public records.
Brush v. Ware,
15 Pet. 93,
40 U. S. 111;
Simmons Creek Coal Co. v. Doran, 142 U.
S. 417,
142 U. S. 437;
Northwestern Bank v. Freeman, 171 U.
S. 620,
171 U. S. 629;
Mitchell v. D'Olier, 68 N.J.L. 375, 384.
This principle is recognized in Articles 34 and 37 of the
Mortgage Law. In referring to "reasons which do not clearly appear
from the registry," and "causes plainly expressed in the registry,"
they refer, of course, to matters of fact, not to matters of law.
In other words, if the registry gives notice of a state of facts
that renders the title invalid or subject to question in law, the
purchaser who relies upon the record takes his title subject to
whatever consequences may flow in law from the facts thus
notified.
Appellants must be presumed, in accepting the mortgage and the
conveyance from Morales, to have done so subject to whatever risk
there may have been, arising from the want of authority on the part
of General Henry to deprive third parties, without process of law,
of those rights that were saved by the terms of the entry of
possession in favor of Morales.
Nor is there any real hardship in applying this rule, for the
limitations under which the military governor exercised his
temporary authority in Porto Rico must be deemed to have been
notorious everywhere, since they
Page 230 U. S. 165
were proclaimed at the outset by General Miles, repeatedly
reiterated during the military regime, and indeed were such as
arise from general rules of international law, and from fundamental
principles known wherever the American flag flies.
Decree affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
"
[Corrected copy. -- Pleas destroy all others.]"
"GENERAL ORDERS WAR DEPARTMENT"
"ADJUTANT GENERAL's OFFICE"
"No. 101
Washington, July 18, 1898"
"The following, received from the President of the United
States, is published for the information and guidance of all
concerned:"
"EXECUTIVE MANSION"
"
Washington, July 13, 1898"
"To the SECRETARY OF WAR."
"Sir: The capitulation of the Spanish forces in Santiago de Cuba
and in the eastern part of the Province of Santiago, and the
occupation of the territory by the forces of the United States,
render it necessary
to instruct the military commander of the
United States as to the conduct which he is to observe during the
military occupation."
"
The first effect of the military occupation of the enemy's
territory is the severance of the former political relations of the
inhabitants and the establishment of a new political power. Under
this changed condition of things, the inhabitants, so long as they
perform their duties, are entitled to security in their persons and
property and in all their private rights and relations. It is
my desire that the inhabitants of Cuba should be acquainted with
the purpose of the United States to discharge to the fullest extent
its obligations in this regard. It will therefore be the duty of
the commander of the army of occupation to announce and proclaim in
the most public manner that we come not to make war upon the
inhabitants of Cuba, nor upon any party or faction among them, but
to protect them in their homes, in their employments, and in their
personal and religious rights. All persons who, either by active
aid or by honest submission, cooperate with the United States in
its efforts to give effect to this beneficent purpose will receive
the reward of its support and protection. Our occupation should be
as free from severity as possible."
"
Though the powers of the military occupant are absolute and
supreme and immediately operate upon the political condition of the
inhabitants, the municipal laws of the conquered territory, such as
affect private rights of person and property and provide for the
punishment of crime, are considered as continuing in force, so far
as they are compatible with the new order of things, until they are
suspended or superseded by the occupying belligerent, and in
practice they are not usually abrogated, but are allowed to remain
in force and to be administered by the ordinary tribunals,
substantially as they were before the occupation. This enlightened
practice is, so far as possible, to be adhered to on the present
occasion. The judges and the other officials connected with
the administration of justice may, if they accept the supremacy of
the United States, continue to administer the ordinary law of the
land, as between man and man, under the supervision of the American
Commander in Chief. The native constabulary will, so far as may be
practicable, be preserved. The freedom of the people to pursue
their accustomed occupations will be abridged only when it may be
necessary to do so."
"While the rule of conduct of the American Commander in Chief
will be such as has just been defined, it will be his duty to adopt
measures of a different kind, if, unfortunately, the course of the
people should render such measures indispensable to the maintenance
of law and order. He will then possess the power to replace or
expel the native officials in part or altogether, to substitute new
courts of his own constitution for those that now exist, or to
create such new or supplementary tribunals as may be necessary. In
the exercise of these high powers, the commander must be guided by
his judgment and his experience and a high sense of justice."
"One of the most important and most practical problems with
which it will be necessary to deal is that of the treatment of
property and the collection and administration of the revenues. It
is conceded that all public funds and securities belonging to the
government of the country in its own right, and all arms and
supplies and other movable property of such government, may be
seized by the military occupant and converted to his own use. The
real property of the state he may hold and administer at the same
time enjoying the revenues thereof, but he is not to destroy it
save in the case of military necessity. All public means of
transportation, such as telegraph lines, cables, railways, and
boats belonging to the state, may be appropriated to his use, but,
unless in case of military necessity, they are not to be destroyed.
All churches and buildings devoted to religious worship and to the
arts and sciences, all schoolhouses, are, so far as possible, to be
protected, and all destruction or intentional defacement of such
places, of historical monuments or archives, or of works of science
or art, is prohibited, save when required by urgent military
necessity."
"
Private property, whether belonging to individuals or
corporations, is to be respected, and can be confiscated only for
cause. Means of transportation, such as telegraph lines and
cables, railways and boats, may, although they belong to private
individuals or corporations, be seized by the military occupant,
but, unless destroyed under military necessity, are not to be
retained."
"While it is held to be the right of the conqueror to levy
contributions upon the enemy in their seaports, towns, or provinces
which may be in his military possession by conquest, and to apply
the proceeds to defray the expenses of the war, this right is to be
exercised within such limitations that it may not savor of
confiscation. As the result of military occupation, the taxes and
duties payable by the inhabitants to the former government become
payable to the military occupant, unless he sees fit to substitute
for them other rates or modes of contribution to the expense of the
government. The moneys so collected are to be used for the purpose
of paying the expenses of government under the military occupation,
such as the salaries of the judges and the police, and for the
payment of the expenses of the Army."
"
Private property taken for the use of the Army is to be
paid for, when possible, in cash at a fair valuation, and when
payment in cash is not possible, receipts are to be
given."
"All ports and places in Cuba which may be in the actual
possession of our land and naval forces will be opened to the
commerce of all neutral nations, as well as our own, in articles
not contraband of war, upon payment of the prescribed rates of duty
which may be in force at the time of the importation."
"WILLIAM McKINLEY"
"BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF WAR:"
"H. C. CORBIN"
"
Adjutant General"
[
Footnote 2]
Reports Major General Commanding Army 1898, pp. 31-33; 1899, pp.
321, 325.
Reports War Department 1899, vol. 1, pt. 6, pp. 488, 491, 565;
1900, vol. 1, pt. 13, pp. 18-30.
General Orders, Department of Porto Rico, 1898, Preface (General
Orders No. 101).