By the Treaty of St. Ildefonso, made on the 1st of October,
1800, Spain ceded Louisiana to France, and France, by the Treaty of
Paris, signed the 30th of April, 1803, ceded it to the United
States. Under this treaty, the United States claimed the country
between the Iberville and the Perdido. Spain contended that her
cession to France comprehended only that territory which, at the
time of the cession, was denominated Louisiana, consisting of the
Island of New Orleans and the country which had been originally
ceded to her by France, west of the Mississippi.
The land claimed by the plaintiffs in error under a grant from
the Crown of Spain made after the Treaty of St. Ildefonso lies
within the disputed territory, and this case presents the question
to whom did the country between the Iberville and Perdido belong
after the Treaty of St. Ildefonso?
Had France and Spain agreed upon the boundaries of the
retroceded territory before Louisiana was acquired by the United
States, that agreement would undoubtedly have ascertained its
limits. But the declaration of France, made after parting with the
province, cannot be admitted as conclusive. In questions of this
character, political considerations have too much influence over
the conduct of nations to permit their declarations to decide the
course of an independent government in a matter vitally interesting
to itself.
However individual judges might construe the Treaty of St.
Ildefonso, it is the province of the Court to conform its decisions
to the will of the Legislature if that will has been clearly
expressed.
After the acts of sovereign power over the territory in dispute
which have been exercised by the Legislature and Government of the
United States asserting the American construction of the Treaty by
which the Government claims it, to maintain the opposite
construction in its own courts would certainly be an anomaly in the
history and practice of nations. If those departments which are
entrusted with the foreign intercourse of the nation, which assert
and maintain its interests against foreign powers, have
unequivocally asserted its rights of dominion over a country of
which it is in possession, and which it claims under a treaty, if
the Legislature has acted on the construction thus asserted, it is
not in its own courts that this construction is to be denied.
If a Spanish grantee had obtained possession of the land in
dispute so as to be the defendant, would a court of the United
States maintain his title under a Spanish
Page 27 U. S. 254
grant, made subsequent to the acquisition of Louisiana, singly
on the principle that the Spanish construction of the Treaty of St.
Ildefonso was right, and the American construction wrong? Such a
decision would subvert those principles which govern the relations
between the Legislative and Judicial Departments, and mark the
limits of each.
The sounds construction of the 8th article of the Treaty between
the United States and Spain of 22d February 1829, will not enable
the Court to apply its provisions to the case of the plaintiff.
The article does not declare that all the grants made by His
Catholic Majesty before the 24th of January, 1818, shall be valid
to the same extent as if the ceded territories had remained under
his dominion. It does not say that those grants are hereby
confirmed. Had such been its language, it would have acted directly
on the subject, and it would have repealed those acts of Congress
which were repugnant to it; but its language is that those grants
shall be ratified and confirmed to the persons in possession,
&c. By whom shall they be ratified and confirmed? This seems to
be the language of contract, and, if it is, the ratification and
confirmation which are promised must be the act of the legislature.
Until such act shall be passed, the Court is not at liberty to
disregard the existing laws on this subject.
A treaty is in the nature of a contract between two nations, not
a legislative act. It does not generally effect, of itself, the
object to be accomplished, especially so far as its operation is
infra-territorial, but is carried into execution by the sovereign
power of the respective parties to the instrument.
In the United States, a different principle is established. Our
Constitution declares a treaty to be the law of the land. It is
consequently to be regarded in courts of justice as equivalent to
an act of the legislature whenever it operates of itself, without
the aid of any legislative provision. But when the terms of the
stipulation import a contract, when either of the parties engage to
perform a particular act, the treaty addresses itself to the
Political, not the Judicial, Department, and the Legislature must
execute the contract before it can become a rule for the Court.
The plaintiffs in error filed their petition in the district
court setting forth that, on the 2d of January, 1804, Jayme Joydra
purchased of the Spanish government for a valuable consideration,
and was put in possession of, a certain tract or parcel of land
situated in the district of Feliciana, thirty miles to the east of
the Mississippi within the province of West Florida, containing
forty thousand arpents, having the marks and boundaries as laid
down in the original plat of survey annexed to the deed of sale,
made by Juan Ventura Morales then intendent of the Spanish
Government, dated January 2d, 1804, which sale was duly confirmed
by the
Page 27 U. S. 255
King of Spain by his resolves dated May 29, 1804, and February
20th, 1805.
May 17, 1805, Jayme Joydra sold and conveyed six thousand
arpents, part of the said forty thousand, to one Joseph Maria de la
Barba; and upon the same day, Joseph Maria de la Barba sold and
conveyed three thousand arpents, parcel of the six thousand so
purchased on the same day of Jayme Joydra, to one Francoise Poinet,
for the consideration of $750. These three thousand arpents,
situated in the district of Feliciana, about thirty miles east of
the Mississippi, bounded on the north by the line of demarcation
between the United States and the Spanish territory; on the west by
lands of Manuel de Lanzos; on the east by the lands of the said
Jayme Joydra; and on the south by the lands of the said Joseph
Maria de la Barba.
In June, 1811, Francoise Poinet, by her attorney, Louis Leonard
Poinet, sold to the petitioners the said three thousand arpents,
for the sum of $3,200.
The petition then avers that the three thousand arpents of lands
justly and legally belong to them, and that, nevertheless, David
Neilson, the defendant, a resident of the parish of east Feliciana
in the State of Louisiana, had taken possession of the same, and
refuses to deliver the same up.
On the 23d of March 1826, the defendant in the district court
filed exceptions to the petition, and the questions before this
Court arose out of the third exception, which was as follows:
That the petition does not show any right in the petitioners to
the land demanded, which they aver lies in a district formerly
called Feliciana, in the province of West Florida; and they claim
under a grant made at New Orleans on the 2d of January, 1804, and
regularly confirmed by the Spanish Government; whereas, as
defendant pleads, all that section of territory called Feliciana
was, long before the alleged date of said grant, ceded by Spain to
France, and by France to the United States, and the officer making
said grant had not then and there any right so to do, and the said
grant is wholly null and void.
The judgment of the district court is founded on this
exception,
Page 27 U. S. 256
and decides that the grant under which the plaintiffs claim was
made by persons having no authority at the time of the grant to
grant lands within the territory within which the lands are
situated, and dismisses the petition.
Page 27 U. S. 299
Mr Chief Justice MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the
Court.
This suit was brought by the plaintiffs in error in the Court of
the United States for the Eastern District of Louisiana to recover
a tract of land lying in that district, about thirty miles east of
the Mississippi, and in the possession of the defendant. The
plaintiffs claimed under a grant for 40,000 arpents of land, made
by the Spanish governor, on the 2d of January, 1804, to Jayme
Joydra, and ratified by the King of Spain on the 29th of May, 1804.
The petition and order of survey are dated in September, 1803, and
the return of the survey itself was made on the 27th of October in
the same year. The defendant excepted to the petition of the
plaintiffs, alleging that it does not show a title on which
Page 27 U. S. 300
they can recover; that the territory within which the land
claimed is situated had been ceded before the grant to France, and
by France to the United States; and that the grant is void, being
made by persons who had no authority to make it. The court
sustained the exception and dismissed the petition. The cause is
brought before this Court by a writ of error.
The case presents this very intricate, and, at one time, very
interesting, question: to whom did the country between the
Iberville and the Perdido rightfully belong when the title now
asserted by the plaintiffs was acquired?
This question has been repeatedly discussed with great talent
and research by the Government of the United States and that of
Spain. The United States have perseveringly and earnestly insisted
that, by the Treaty of St Ildefonso, made on the 1st of October in
the year 1800, Spain ceded the disputed territory as part of
Louisiana to France, and that France, by the treaty of Paris,
signed on the 30th of April, 1803, and ratified on the 21st of
October in the same year, ceded it to the United States. Spain has,
with equal perseverance and earnestness, maintained that her
cession to France comprehended that territory only which was at
that time denominated Louisiana, consisting of the island of New
Orleans and the country she received from France west of the
Mississippi.
Without tracing the title of France to its origin, we may state
with confidence that, at the commencement of the War of 1756, she
was the undisputed possessor of the province of Louisiana, lying on
both sides the Mississippi and extending eastward beyond the Bay of
Mobile. Spain was at the same time in possession of Florida, and it
is understood that the River Perdido separated the two provinces
from each other.
Such was the State of possession and title at the Treaty of
Paris, concluded between Great Britain, France, and Spain on the
10th day of February, 1763. By that Treaty, France ceded to Great
Britain the River and Port of the Mobile and all her possessions on
the left side of the river Mississippi except the town of New
Orleans and the island on which it
Page 27 U. S. 301
is situated; and, by the same Treaty, Spain ceded Florida to
Great Britain. The residue of Louisiana was ceded by France to
Spain in a separate and secret treaty between those two powers. The
King of Great Britain, being thus the acknowledged sovereign of the
whole country east of the Mississippi except the island of New
Orleans, divided his late acquisition in the south into two
provinces, East and West Florida. The latter comprehended so much
of the country ceded by France as lay south of the 31st degree of
north latitude and a part of that ceded by Spain.
By the Treaty of Peace between Great Britain and Spain, signed
at Versailles on the 3d of September, 1783, Great Britain ceded
East and West Florida to Spain, and those provinces continued to be
known and governed by those names as long as they remained in the
possession and under the dominion of His Catholic Majesty.
On the 1st of October in the year 1800, a secret treaty was
concluded between France and Spain at St Ildefonso, the third
article of which is in these words:
"His Catholic Majesty promises and engages on his part to
retrocede to the French Republic, six months after the full and
entire execution of the conditions and stipulations relative to his
Royal Highness the Duke of Parma, the Colony or Province of
Louisiana, with the same extent that it now has in the hands of
Spain, and that it had when France possessed it, and such as it
should be after the treaties subsequently entered into between
Spain and the other States."
The Treaty of the 30th of April, 1803, by which the United
States acquired Louisiana, after reciting this article, proceeds to
state that
"the First Consul of the French Republic doth hereby cede to the
United States, in the name of the French Republic, forever and in
full sovereignty, the said territory, with all its rights and
appurtenances as fully and in the same manner as they have been
acquired by the French Republic in virtue of the above mentioned
Treaty concluded with His Catholic Majesty."
The 4th article stipulates that
"there shall be sent by the Government of France a commissary to
Louisiana to the end that he do every act necessary, as well to
receive from the officers of His Catholic
Page 27 U. S. 302
Majesty the said country and its dependencies in the name of the
French Republic, if it has not been already done, as to transmit it
in the name of the French Republic to the commissary or agent of
the United States."
On the 30th of November, 1803, Peter Clement Laussatt, Colonial
Prefect and Commissioner of the French Republic, authorised, by
full powers dated the 6th of June, 1803, to receive the surrender
of the province of Louisiana, presented those powers to Don Manuel
Salcedo, Governor of Louisiana and West Florida, and to the Marquis
de Casa Calvo, Commissioners on the part of Spain, together with
full powers to them from His Catholic Majesty to make the
surrender. These full powers were dated at Barcelona the 15th of
October 1802. The Act of Surrender declares that, in virtue of
these full powers, the Spanish Commissioners, Don Manuel Salcedo
and the Marquis de Casa Calvo,
"put from this moment the said French Commissioner, the Citizen
Laussatt, in possession of the Colony of Louisiana and of its
dependencies, as also of the Town and Island of New Orleans, in the
same extent which they now have, and which they had in the hands of
France when she ceded them to the royal Crown of Spain, and such as
they should be after the treaties subsequently entered into between
the States of His Catholic Majesty and those of other powers."
The following is an extract from the order of the King of Spain
referred to by the Commissioners in the act of delivery. "Don
Carlos, by the grace of God, & c."
"Deeming it convenient to retrocede to the French Republic the
Colony and Province of Louisiana, I order you, as soon as the
present order shall be presented to you by General Victor or other
officer duly authorised by the French Republic, to take charge of
said delivery; you will put him in possession of the Colony of
Louisiana and its dependencies, as also of the City and Island of
New Orleans, with the same extent that it now has, that it had in
the hands of France when she ceded it to my royal Crown, and such
as it ought to be after the treaties which have successively taken
place between my States and those of other powers."
Previous to the arrival of the French Commissioner, the
Page 27 U. S. 303
Governor of the Provinces of Louisiana and West Florida, and the
Marquis de Casa Calvo, had issued their proclamation, dated the
18th of May 1803, in which they say,
"His Majesty having before his eyes the obligations imposed by
the treaties, and desirous of avoiding any disputes that might
arise, has deigned to resolve that the delivery of the Colony and
Island of New Orleans, which is to be made to the General of
Division Victor, or such other officer as may be legally authorised
by the Government of the French Republic, shall be executed on the
same terms that France ceded it to his majesty; in virtue of which,
the limits of both shores of the River St Louis or Mississippi
shall remain as they were irrevocably fixed by the 7th article of
the definitive treaty of peace, concluded at Paris the 10th of
February 1763, according to which the settlements from the River
Manshac or Iberville, to the line which separates the American
territory from the dominions of the King, remain in possession of
Spain and annexed to West Florida."
On the 21st of October, 1803, Congress passed an act to enable
the President to take possession of the territory ceded by France
to the United States, in pursuance of which Commissioners were
appointed, to whom Monsieur Laussatt, the Commissioner of the
French Republic, surrendered New Orleans and the Province of
Louisiana on the 20th of December, 1803. The surrender was made in
general terms, but no actual possession was taken of the territory
lying east of New Orleans. The Government of the United States,
however, soon manifested the opinion that the whole country
originally held by France, and belonging to Spain when the Treaty
of St Ildefonso was concluded, was by that Treaty retroceded to
France.
On the 24th of February, 1804, Congress passed an act for laying
and collecting duties within the ceded territories, which
authorised the President, whenever he should deem it expedient, to
erect the shores, &c. of the Bay and River Mobile, and of the
other rivers, creeks, &c. emptying into the Gulf of Mexico east
of the said River Mobile and west thereof to the Pascagoula
Inclusive, into a separate district, and to establish a port of
entry and delivery therein. The
Page 27 U. S. 304
port established in pursuance of this act was at fort Stoddert,
within the acknowledged jurisdiction of the United States, and this
circumstance appears to have been offered as a sufficient answer to
the subsequent remonstrances of Spain against the measure. It must
be considered not as acting on the territory, but as indicating the
American exposition of the treaty, and exhibiting the claim its
government intended to assert.
In the same session, on the 26th of March, 1804, Congress passed
an act erecting Louisiana into two territories. This act declares
that the country ceded by France to the United States south of the
Mississippi Territory, and south of an east and west line to
commence on the Mississippi river at the 33d degree of north
latitude and run west to the western boundary of the cession, shall
constitute a territory under the name of the Territory of Orleans.
Now the Mississippi Territory extended to the 31st degree of north
latitude, and the country south of that Territory was necessarily
the country which Spain held as West Florida; but still its
constituting a part of the Territory of Orleans depends on the fact
that it was a part of the country ceded by France to the United
States. No practical application of the laws of the United States
to this part of the territory was attempted, nor could be made,
while the country remained in the actual possession of a foreign
power.
The 14th section enacts
"that all grants for lands within the territories ceded by the
French Republic to the United States by the Treaty of the 30th of
April 1803, the title whereof was at the date of the Treaty of St
Ildefonso in the Crown, Government, or Nation of Spain, and every
act and proceeding subsequent thereto of whatsoever nature towards
the obtaining any grant, title or claim to such lands, and under
whatsoever authority transacted or pretended, be, and the same are
hereby declared to be, and to have been from the beginning, null,
void, and of no effect in law or equity."
A proviso excepts the titles of actual settlers acquired before
the 20th of December, 1803, from the operation of this section. It
was obviously intended to act on all grants made by Spain after her
retrocession of Louisiana to France, and,
Page 27 U. S. 305
without deciding on the extent of that retrocession, to put the
titles which might be thus acquired through the whole territory,
whatever might be its extent, completely under the control of the
American government.
The President was authorised to appoint registers or recorders
of lands acquired under the Spanish and French governments, and
boards of Commissioners who should receive all claims to lands, and
hear and determine in a summary way all matters respecting such
claims. Their proceedings were to be reported to the secretary of
the treasury, to be laid before Congress for the final decision of
that body.
Previous to the acquisition of Louisiana, the ministers of the
United States had been instructed to endeavour to obtain the
Floridas from Spain. After that acquisition, this object was still
pursued, and the friendly aid of the French government towards its
attainment was requested. On the suggestion of Mr Talleyrand that
the time was unfavourable, the design was suspended. The government
of the United States, however, soon resumed its purpose, and the
settlement of the boundaries of Louisiana was blended with the
purchase of the Floridas and the adjustment of heavy claims made by
the United States for American property, condemned in the ports of
Spain during the war which was terminated by the treaty of
Amiens.
On his way to Madrid, Mr Monroe, who was empowered in
conjunction with Mr Pinckney, the American minister at the court of
His Catholic Majesty, to conduct the negotiation, passed through
Paris; and addressed a letter to the Minister of Exterior Relations
in which he detailed the objects of his mission and his views
respecting the boundaries of Louisiana. In his answer to this
letter dated the 21st of December, 1804, Mr Talleyrand declared in
decided terms that, by the Treaty of St Ildefonso, Spain retroceded
to France no part of the territory east of the Iberville which had
been held and known as West Florida, and that, in all the
negotiations between the two governments, Spain had constantly
refused to cede any part of the Floridas, even from the Mississippi
to the Mobile. He added that he was authorized by his Imperial
Majesty to say that, at the
Page 27 U. S. 306
beginning of the year 1802, General Bournonville had been
charged to open a new negotiation with Spain for the acquisition of
the Floridas, but this project had not been followed by a
treaty.
Had France and Spain agreed upon the boundaries of the
retroceded territory before Louisiana was acquired by the United
States, that agreement would undoubtedly have ascertained its
limits. But the declarations of France made after parting with the
Province cannot be admitted as conclusive. In questions of this
character, political considerations have too much influence over
the conduct of nations to permit their declarations to decide the
course of an independent Government in a matter vitally interesting
to itself.
Soon after the arrival of Mr. Monroe at his place of
destination, the negotiations commenced at Aranjuez. Every word in
that article of the Treaty of St Ildefonso which ceded Louisiana to
France was scanned by the ministers on both sides with all the
critical acumen which talents and zeal could bring into their
service. Every argument drawn from collateral circumstances
connected with the subject, which could be supposed to elucidate
it, was exhausted. No advance towards an arrangement was made, and
the negotiation terminated, leaving each party firm in his original
opinion and purpose. Each persevered in maintaining the
construction with which he had commenced. The discussion has since
been resumed between the two nations, with as much ability and with
as little success. The question has been again argued at this bar
with the same talent and research which it has uniformly called
forth. Every topic which relates to it has been completely
exhausted, and the Court, by reasoning on the subject, could only
repeat what is familiar to all.
We shall say only that the language of the article may admit of
either construction, and it is scarcely possible to consider the
arguments on either side without believing that they proceed from a
conviction of their truth. The phrase on which the controversy
mainly depends -- that Spain retrocedes Louisiana with the same
extent that it had when France possessed it -- might so readily
have been expressed
Page 27 U. S. 307
in plain language that it is difficult to resist the persuasion
that the ambiguity was intentional. Had Louisiana been retroceded
with the same extent that it had when France ceded it to Spain, or
with the same extent that it had before the cession of any part of
it to England, no controversy respecting its limits could have
arisen. Had the parties concurred in their intention, a plain mode
of expressing that intention would have presented itself to them.
But Spain has always manifested infinite repugnance to the
surrender of territory, and was probably unwilling to give back
more than she had received. The introduction of ambiguous phrases
into the Treaty, which power might afterwards construe according to
circumstances, was a measure which the strong and the politic might
not be disinclined to employ.
However this may be, it is, we think, incontestable that the
American construction of the article, if not entirely free from
question, is supported by arguments of great strength which cannot
be easily confuted.
In a controversy between two nations concerning national
boundary, it is scarcely possible that the courts of either should
refuse to abide by the measures adopted by its own government.
There being no common tribunal to decide between them, each
determines for itself on its own rights, and if they cannot adjust
their differences peaceably, the right remains with the strongest.
The judiciary is not that department of the government to which the
assertion of its interests against foreign powers is confided, and
its duty commonly is to decide upon individual rights according to
those principles which the political departments of the nation have
established. If the course of the nation has been a plain one, its
courts would hesitate to pronounce it erroneous.
We think then, however individual judges might construe the
Treaty of St Ildefonso, it is the Province of the Court to conform
its decisions to the will of the Legislature if that will has been
clearly expressed.
The convulsed State of European Spain affected her influence
over her colonies, and a degree of disorder prevailed
Page 27 U. S. 308
in the Floridas at which the United States could not look with
indifference. In October, 1810, the President issued his
proclamation directing the Governor of the Orleans territory to
take possession of the country as far east as the Perdido and to
hold it for the United States. This measure was avowedly intended
as an assertion of the title of the United States, but as an
assertion which was rendered necessary in order to avoid evils
which might contravene the wishes of both parties, and which would
still leave the territory "a subject of fair and friendly
negotiation and adjustment."
In April, 1812, Congress passed "an act to enlarge the limits of
the State of Louisiana." This act describes lines which comprehend
the land in controversy, and declares that the country included
within them shall become and form a part of the State of
Louisiana.
In May of the same year, another act was passed annexing the
residue of the country west of the Perdido to the Mississippi
Territory.
And in February, 1813, the President was authorized
"to occupy and hold all that tract of country called West
Florida, which lies west of the river Perdido, not now in
possession of the United States."
On the third of March, 1817, Congress erected that part of
Florida which had been annexed to the Mississippi Territory into a
separate territory, called Alabama.
The powers of Government were extended to, and exercised in,
those parts of West Florida which composed a part of Louisiana and
Mississippi, respectively, and a separate government was erected in
Alabama. U.S.L. c. 4, 409.
In March 1819, "Congress passed an act to enable the people of
Alabama to form a Constitution and State government." And in
December, 1819, she was admitted into the Union, and declared one
of the United States of America. The Treaty of Amity, Settlement
and Limits between the United States and Spain was signed at
Washington on the 22d day of February, 1819, but was not ratified
by Spain till the 24th day of October 1820, nor by the United
States until the 22d day of February, 1821. So that Alabama was
Page 27 U. S. 309
admitted into the Union as an independent State, in virtue of
the title acquired by the United States to her territory under the
treaty of April 1803.
After these acts of sovereign power over the territory in
dispute asserting the American construction of the treaty by which
the government claims it, to maintain the opposite construction in
its own courts would certainly be an anomaly in the history and
practice of nations. If those departments which are entrusted with
the foreign intercourse of the nation, which assert and maintain
its interests against foreign powers, have unequivocally asserted
its rights of dominion over a country of which it is in possession
and which it claims under a treaty, if the Legislature has acted on
the construction thus asserted, it is not in its own courts that
this construction is to be denied. A question like this respecting
the boundaries of nations is, as has been truly said, more a
political than a legal question, and, in its discussion, the courts
of every country must respect the pronounced will of the
Legislature. Had this suit been instituted immediately after the
passage of the act for extending the bounds of Louisiana, could the
Spanish construction of the Treaty of St Ildefonso have been
maintained? Could the plaintiff have insisted that the land did not
lie in Louisiana, but in West Florida; that the occupation of the
country by the United States was wrongful; and that his title under
a Spanish grant must prevail because the acts of Congress on the
subject were founded on a misconstruction of the treaty? If it be
said that this statement does not present the question fairly
because a plaintiff admits the authority of the Court, let the
parties be changed. If the Spanish grantee had obtained possession
so as to be the defendant, would a Court of the United States
maintain his title under a Spanish grant, made subsequent to the
acquisition of Louisiana, singly on the principle that the Spanish
construction of the Treaty of St Ildefonso was right, and the
American construction wrong? Such a decision would, we think, have
subverted those principles which govern the relations between the
legislative and judicial departments and mark the limits of
each.
Page 27 U. S. 310
If the rights of the parties are in any degree changed, that
change must be produced by the subsequent arrangements made between
the two governments.
A "Treaty of Amity, settlement, and Limits between the United
States of America and the King of Spain," was signed at Washington
on the 22d day of February, 1819. By the 2d article,
"His Catholic Majesty cedes to the United States, in full
property and sovereignty, all the territories which belong to him,
situated to the eastward of the Mississippi, known by the name of
East and West Florida."
The 8th article stipulates, that
"all the grants of land made before the 24th of January, 1818,
by His Catholic Majesty or by his lawful authorities in the said
territories ceded by His Majesty to the United States shall be
ratified and confirmed to the persons in possession of the lands to
the same extent that the same grants would be valid if the
territories had remained under the dominion of His Catholic
Majesty."
The Court will not attempt to conceal the difficulty which is
created by these articles.
It is well known that Spain had uniformly maintained her
construction of the Treaty of St Ildefonso. His Catholic Majesty
had perseveringly insisted that no part of West Florida had been
ceded by that treaty, and that the whole country which had been
known by that name still belonged to him. It is then a fair
inference from the language of the Treaty that he did not mean to
retrace his steps and relinquish his pretensions, but to cede on a
sufficient consideration all that he had claimed as his, and
consequently, by the 8th article, to stipulate for the confirmation
of all those grants which he had made while the title remained in
him.
But the United States had uniformly denied the title set up by
the Crown of Spain; had insisted that a part of West Florida had
been transferred to France by the Treaty of St Ildefonso, and ceded
to the United States by the treaty of April, 1803; had asserted
this construction by taking actual possession of the county; and
had extended its legislation over it. The United States therefore
cannot be understood to have admitted that this country belonged to
His Catholic
Page 27 U. S. 311
Majesty, or that it passed from him to them by this article. Had
His Catholic Majesty ceded to the United States "all the
territories situated to the eastward of the Mississippi known by
the name of East and West Florida," omitting the words "which
belong to him," the United States, in receiving this cession, might
have sanctioned the right to make it, and might have been bound to
consider the 8th article as coextensive with the second. The
stipulation of the 8th article might have been construed to be an
admission that West Florida to its full extent was ceded by this
treaty.
But the insertion of these words materially affects the
construction of the article. They cannot be rejected as surplusage.
They have a plain meaning, and that meaning can be no other than to
limit the extent of the cession. We cannot say they were inserted
carelessly or unadvisedly, and must understand them according to
their obvious import.
It is not improbable that terms were selected which might not
compromise the dignity of either government, and which each might
understand consistently with its former pretensions. But if a court
of the United States would have been bound, under the state of
things existing at the signature of the treaty, to consider the
territory then composing a part of the State of Louisiana as
rightfully belonging to the United States, it would be difficult to
construe this article into an admission that it belonged rightfully
to His Catholic Majesty.
The 6th article of the treaty may be considered in connexion
with the second. The 6th stipulates
"that the inhabitants of the territories which His Catholic
Majesty cedes to the United States by this treaty shall be
incorporated in the Union of the United States as soon as may be
consistent with the principles of the Federal Constitution."
This article, according to its obvious import, extends to the
whole territory which was ceded. The stipulation for the
incorporation of the inhabitants of the ceded territory into the
Union is co-extensive with the cession. But the country in which
the land in controversy lies was already incorporated into the
Union. It composed a part of the
Page 27 U. S. 312
State of Louisiana, which was already a member of the American
Confederacy.
A part of West Florida lay east of the Perdido, and to that the
right of His Catholic Majesty was acknowledged. There was then an
ample subject on which the words of the cession might operate
without discarding those which limit its general expressions.
Such is the construction which the Court would put on the
treaties by which the United States have acquired the country east
of New Orleans. But an explanation of the 8th article seems to have
been given by the parties which may vary this construction.
It was discovered that three large grants which had been
supposed at the signature of the treaty to have been made
subsequent to the 24th of January 1818 bore a date anterior to that
period. Considering these grants as fraudulent, the United States
insisted on an express declaration annulling them. This demand was
resisted by Spain, and the ratification of the treaty was for some
time suspended. At length, His Catholic Majesty yielded, and the
following clause was introduced into his ratification:
"Desirous at the same time of avoiding any doubt or ambiguity
concerning the meaning of the 8th article of the treaty in respect
to the date which is pointed out in it as the period for the
confirmation of the grants of lands in the Floridas made by me, or
by the competent authorities in my royal name, which point of date
was fixed in the positive understanding of the three grants of land
made in favour of the Duke of Alagon, the Count of Punon Rostro,
and Don Pedro de Vargas, being annulled by its tenor, I think it
proper to declare that the said three grants have remained and do
remain entirely annulled and invalid, and that neither the three
individuals mentioned, nor those who may have title or interest
through them, can avail themselves of the said grants at any time
or in any manner; under which explicit declaration, the said 8th
article is to be understood as ratified."
One of these grants, that to Vargas, lies west of the
Perdido.
It has been argued, and with great force, that this explanation
forms a part of the article. It may be considered
Page 27 U. S. 313
as if introduced into it as a proviso or exception to the
stipulation in favour of grants anterior to the 24th of January,
1818. The article may be understood as if it had been written
that
"all the grants of land made before the 24th of January, 1818,
by His Catholic Majesty or his lawful authorities in the said
territories ceded by his majesty to the United States (except those
made to the Duke of Alagon, the Count of Punon Rostro, and Don
Pedro de Vargas) shall be ratified and confirmed, &c."
Had this been the form of the original article, it would be
difficult to resist the construction that the excepted grants were
withdrawn from it by the exception, and would otherwise have been
within its provisions. Consequently, that all other fair grants
within the time specified were as obligatory on the United States
as on His Catholic Majesty.
One other judge and myself are inclined to adopt this opinion.
The majority of the Court, however, think differently. They suppose
that these three large grants, being made about the same time,
under circumstances strongly indicative of unfairness, and two of
them lying east of the Perdido, might be objected to on the ground
of fraud common to them all, without implying any opinion that one
of them, which was for lands lying within the United States, and
most probably in part sold by the Government, could have been
otherwise confirmed. The Government might well insist on closing
all future controversy relating to these grants, which might so
materially interfere with its own rights and policy in its future
disposition of the ceded lands, and not allow them to become the
subject of judicial investigation, while other grants, though
deemed by it to be invalid, might be left to the ordinary course of
the law. The form of the ratification ought not, in their opinion,
to change the natural construction of the words of the 8th article,
or extend them to embrace grants not otherwise intended to be
confirmed by it. An extreme solicitude to provide against injury or
inconvenience, from the known existence of such large grants, by
insisting upon a declaration of their absolute nullity can, in
their opinion, furnish no satisfactory proof that the Government
meant to recognise
Page 27 U. S. 314
the small grants as valid which in every previous act and
struggle it had proclaimed to be void as being for lands within the
American territory.
Whatever difference may exist respecting the effect of the
ratification, in whatever sense it may be understood, we think the
sound construction of the eighth article will not enable this Court
to apply its provisions to the present case. The words of the
article are that
"all the grants of land made before the 24th of January 1818, by
His Catholic Majesty, &c. shall be ratified and confirmed to
the persons in possession of the lands to the same extent that the
same grants would be valid if the territories had remained under
the dominion of His Catholic Majesty."
Do these words act directly on the grants so as to give validity
to those not otherwise valid, or do they pledge the faith of the
United States to pass acts which shall ratify and confirm them?
A treaty is, in its nature, a contract between two nations, not
a legislative act. It does not generally effect, of itself, the
object to be accomplished, especially so far as its operation is
infra-territorial, but is carried into execution by the sovereign
power of the respective parties to the instrument.
In the United States, a different principle is established. Our
Constitution declares a treaty to be the law of the land. It is
consequently to be regarded in courts of justice as equivalent to
an act of the Legislature whenever it operates of itself, without
the aid of any legislative provision. But when the terms of the
stipulation import a contract, when either of the parties engages
to perform a particular act, the treaty addresses itself to the
political, not the Judicial, Department, and the Legislature must
execute the contract before it can become a rule for the Court.
The article under consideration does not declare that all the
grants made by His Catholic Majesty before the 24th of January,
1818, shall be valid to the same extent as if the ceded territories
had remained under his dominion. It does not say that those grants
are hereby confirmed. Had such been its language, it would have
acted directly on the subject, and would have repealed those acts
of Congress which
Page 27 U. S. 315
were repugnant to it; but its language is that those grants
shall be ratified and confirmed to the persons in possession,
&c. By whom shall they be ratified and confirmed? This seems to
be the language of contract; and if it is, the ratification and
confirmation which are promised must be the act of the Legislature.
Until such act shall be passed, the Court is not at liberty to
disregard the existing laws on the subject. Congress appears to
have understood this article as it is understood by the Court.
Boards of Commissioners have been appointed for East and West
Florida to receive claims for lands, and, on their reports, titles
to lands not exceeding ___ acres have been confirmed, and to a very
large amount. On the 23d of May, 1828, an act was passed
supplementary to the several acts providing for the settlement and
confirmation of private land claims in Florida, the 6th section of
which enacts that
"all claims to land within the territory of Florida embraced by
the treaty between Spain and the United States of the 22d of
February, 1819, which shall not be decided and finally settled
under the foregoing provisions of this act, containing a greater
quantity of land than the Commissioners were authorized to decide,
and which have not been reported as antedated or forged, &c.,
shall be received and adjudicated by the judge of the superior
court of the district within which the land lies, upon the petition
of the claimant,"
&c., provided, that nothing in this section shall be
construed to enable the judges to take cognizance of any claim
annulled by the said treaty or the decree ratifying the same by the
King of Spain, nor any claim not presented to the Commissioners or
register and receiver. An appeal is allowed from the decision of
the judge of the district to this Court. No such act of
confirmation has been extended to grants for lands lying west of
the Perdido.
The act of 1804, erecting Louisiana into two territories, has
been already mentioned. It annuls all grants for lands in the ceded
territories the title whereof was at the date of the Treaty of St
Ildefonso in the Crown of Spain. The grant in controversy is not
brought within any of the exceptions from the enacting clause.
Page 27 U. S. 316
The Legislature has passed many subsequent acts previous to the
treaty of 1819 the object of which was to adjust the titles to
lands in the country acquired by the treaty of 1803.
They cautiously confirm to residents all incomplete titles to
lands for which a warrant or order of survey had been obtained
previous to the 1st of October, 1800.
An act passed in April, 1814, confirms incomplete titles to
lands in the State of Louisiana for which a warrant or order of
survey had been granted prior to the 20th of December 1803, where
the claimant or the person under whom he claims was a resident of
the Province of Louisiana on that day, or at the date of the
concession, warrant, or order of survey, and where the tract does
not exceed 640 acres. This act extends to those cases only which
had been reported by the Board of Commissioners, and annexes to the
confirmation several conditions which it is unnecessary to review,
because the plaintiff does not claim to come within the provisions
of the act.
On the 3d of March, 1819, Congress passed an act confirming all
complete grants to land from the Spanish Government, contained in
the reports made by the Commissioners appointed by the President
for the purpose of adjusting titles which had been deemed valid by
the Commissioners, and also all the claims reported as aforesaid,
founded on any order of survey, requete, permission to settle, or
any written evidence of claim derived from the Spanish authorities
which ought, in the opinion of the Commissioners, to be confirmed,
and which by the said reports appear to be derived from the Spanish
Government before the 20th day of December, 1803, and the land
claimed to have been cultivated or inhabited on or before that
day.
Though the order of survey in this case was granted before the
20th of December, 1803, the plaintiff does not bring himself within
this act.
Subsequent acts have passed in 1820, 1822 and 1826, but they
only confirm claims approved by the Commissioners, among which the
plaintiff does not allege his to have been placed.
Congress has reserved to itself the supervision of the
titles
Page 27 U. S. 317
reported by its Commissioners, and has confirmed those which the
Commissioners have approved, but has passed no law withdrawing
grants generally for lands west of the Perdido from the operation
of the 14th section of the act of 1804 or repealing that
section.
We are of opinion then, that the court committed no error in
dismissing the petition of the plaintiff, and that the judgment
ought to be affirmed with costs.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the District Court of the United States for the Eastern
District of Louisiana, and was argued by counsel; on consideration
whereof, this Court is of opinion that the said district court
committed no error in dismissing the petition of the plaintiffs;
therefore it is considered, ordered and adjudged by this Court,
that the judgment of the said district court in this cause be, and
the same is hereby, affirmed with costs.