A grant of land by Estrada, the Governor of East Florida, was
made on 1 August, 1815, to Elizabeth Wiggins on her petition
stating, that "owing to the diminution of trade, she will have to
devote herself to the pursuits of the country." The grant was made
for the quantity of land apportioned by the regulations of East
Florida to the number of the family of the grantee. It was
regularly surveyed by the surveyor general according to the
petition and grant. No settlement or improvement was ever made by
the grantee or by anyone acting for her on the property. In 1831,
Elizabeth Wiggins presented a petition to the Superior Court of
East Florida praying for a confirmation of the grant, and in July,
1838, the court gave a decree in favor of the claimant. On an
appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States, the decree of the
Superior Court of East Florida was reversed. The court held that by
the regulations established on 25 November, 1818, by Governor
Coppinger, the grant had become void because of the nonimprovement
and the neglect to settle the land granted.
The existence of a foreign law, especially when unwritten, is a
fact to be proved like any other fact, by appropriate evidence.
A copy of a decree by the Governor of East Florida granting land
to a petitioner while Spain had possession of the territory,
certified by the secretary of the government to have been
faithfully made from the original in the secretary's office, is
evidence in the courts of the United States. By the laws of Spain
prevailing in the province at that time, the secretary was the
proper officer to give copies, and the law trusted him for this
particular purpose so far as he acted under its authority. The
original was confined to the public office.
The cases of
Owings v.
Hull, 9 Pet. 624;
Percheman's
Case, 7 Pet. 51;
United
States v. Delespine, 12 Pet. 655, cited.
Prima facie evidence of a fact is such as in judgment
of law is sufficient to establish the fact, and if not rebutted
remains sufficient evidence of it.
Kelly
v. Jackson, 6 Pet. 632, cited.
The eighth article of the Florida treaty stipulates that
"Grants of land made by Spain in Florida, after 24 January,
1818, shall be ratified and confirmed to the persons in possession
of the land to the same extent that the same grants would be valid
if the government of the territory had remained under the dominion
of Spain."
The government of the United States may take advantage of the
nonperformance of the conditions prescribed by the law relative to
grants of land if the treaty does not provide for the omission.
In the cases of
Arredondo, 6
Pet. 691, and
Percheman, 7
Pet. 51, it was held that the words in the Florida treaty "shall be
ratified and confirmed," in reference to perfect titles, should be
construed "are" ratified and confirmed. The object of the Court in
these cases was to exempt them from the operation of the eighth
article for that they were perfect titles by the laws of Spain when
the treaty was made, and that when the soil and sovereignty of
Florida were ceded by the second article, private rights of
property were, by implication, protected. By the law of nations,
the rights to property are secured when territories are ceded, and
to reconcile the eighth article of the treaty with the law of
nations, the Spanish side of the article was referred to in aid of
the American side. The Court held that perfect titles "stood
confirmed" by the treaty, and must be so recognized by the United
States in our courts.
Perfect titles to lands made by Spain in the Territory of
Florida before 24 January, 1818, are intrinsically valid, and
exempt from the provision of the eighth article of the treaty, and
they need no sanction from the legislative or judicial departments
of the United States.
The eighth article of the Florida treaty was intended to apply
to claims to land whose validity depended on the performance of
conditions in consideration of which the concessions had been made
and which must have been performed before Spain was bound to
perfect the titles. The United States was bound after the cession
of the country, to the same extent that Spain had been bound before
the ratification of the treaty, to perfect them by legislation and
adjudication.
Page 39 U. S. 335
The appellee, Elizabeth Wiggins, on 1 August, 1815, presented a
petition to Estrada, the Governor of East Florida, stating that,
"owing to the diminution of trade, she will have to devote herself
to the pursuits of the country," and wishing to establish herself
on the eastern side of the Pond of St. George, "she asked the
governor to grant three hundred acres in the said place, as she had
five children, and five slaves, with herself."
By a decree of 6 August, 1815, the object of the petition was
granted by Governor Estrada and "a certified copy of this instance
and decree" was ordered to be issued to the petitioner "from the
secretary's office." A certified copy of these documents was given
to the petitioner on the same day by "Don Tomas De Aguilar."
A survey of the land was made by the surveyor general of the
province on 23 March, 1821. On 26 May, 1831, Elizabeth Wiggins
presented a petition to the judge of the Superior Court of East
Florida stating her claim to three hundred acres of land granted to
her by Governor Estrada and praying that the validity of the claim
might be inquired into and decided by the court in pursuance of the
acts of Congress.
The answer of the district Attorney of the United States to this
petition denied the right of Elizabeth Wiggins to the land claimed
on many grounds. Those which were brought into examination and
decided upon were:
First, that the petitioner had never taken possession of or
cultivated the land.
Second, the petitioner was required to make proof that a grant
for the land had been issued.
Third, that the petitioner having failed and neglected to
occupy, improve, or cultivate the land and having abandoned it, the
right and title thereto, if any had existed, were wholly forfeited
and lost.
Subsequently a replication to the answer of the United States
was filed, and the original certified copy of the grant to
Elizabeth Wiggins of the land, the same being certified by Tomas De
Aguilar, secretary, &c., was offered in evidence by the
claimant and was objected to by the United States.
The court admitted the evidence.
By an amended bill the petitioner also stated that no condition
of settlement or improvement was contained in the grant of the
land, and that if any condition of settlement had been contained in
it, the unprotected situation of that part of East Florida from
Indian depredations and aggressions, from the time of the grant to
the cession of the Territory of Florida to the United States, had
rendered it impossible to settle in that portion of the country
with safety to the persons or property of those who might venture
so to do.
The United States, in an amended answer, set up in further
opposition to the claim of the petitioner the usage, practice, and
custom
Page 39 U. S. 336
of the government of Spain which prevailed when the alleged
grant was made that ten years' occupancy and cultivation of the
land, under such a grant, was necessary to give the grantee the
title in fee simple to the land. The United States stated other
objections to the title claimed by the petitioner, and denied that
the settlement of the land was rendered dangerous by the disturbed
state of the country.
The parties to the cause proceeded to take evidence in support
and in opposition to the claim of the petitioner, and the cause was
heard on the documents and evidence. At July term, 1838, the
superior court made a decree confirming the title of Elizabeth
Wiggins to the land claimed by her. From this decree the United
States took an appeal to this Court.
Page 39 U. S. 344
MR. JUSTICE CATRON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The first question arises upon the admission in evidence of the
memorial of Mrs. Wiggins and the decree thereon by the Governor,
Estrada, on the certificate of the Secretary, Aguilar. They are as
follow:
"
MEMORIAL FOR GRANT"
"
Translation"
"Isabel Wiggins, an inhabitant of the Town of Fernandina, with
the greatest respect appears before your Excellency and states that
she has never importuned this attention of the government with
petitions for lands, as she procured to support her family with the
fruits of her industry in this town, but owing to the diminution of
trade, she considers that she will have to devote herself to the
pursuits of the country, and wishing to establish herself on the
eastern side of the Pond of St. George, she supplicates your
Excellency to be pleased to grant to her three hundred acres in the
said place, as she has five
Page 39 U. S. 345
children and five slaves, with herself, which favor she begs of
the just administration of your Excellency."
"Fernandina, 1 August, 1815"
"ISABEL WIGGINS"
"
DECREE"
"St. Augustine, 6th August, one thousand eight hundred and
fifteen"
"The tract which the interested party solicits is granted to
her, without prejudice to a third party, and for the security
thereof, let a certified copy of this instance and decree be issued
to her from the secretary's office."
"ESTRADA"
"
CERTIFICATE OF AGUILAR"
"I, Don Thomas de Aguilar, sublieutenant of the army and
secretary of the government of the place and province of East
Florida for his Majesty, do certify that the preceding copy is
faithfully drawn from the original which exists in the secretary's
office under my charge, and pursuant to the order I give the
present, in St. Augustine of Florida, on the sixth of August, one
thousand eight hundred and fifteen."
"TOMAS DE AGUILAR"
Before the memorial and concession were offered in evidence,
Elizabeth Wiggins made affidavit:
"That, in August, 1815, she petitioned for the grant; that she
received shortly after from the secretary of the government a
certified copy of the petition and decree; that she never had had
possession or control of the original; that she always understood
that it was, at the date thereof, placed in the proper public
office, as was usual in such cases; that she understood from her
counsel the same could not be found; and that she is ignorant what
has become of the same."
The affidavit was objected to on the part of the United States
and rejected by the court, and the evidence offered received
without its aid on proof's being made of the handwriting of
Aguilar, the government secretary.
Much evidence was introduced to prove the practice and rules in
use in the offices of the Spanish government from which titles to
lands issued. We think the evidence was admissible; the existence
of a foreign law, especially when unwritten, is a fact to be
proved, like any other fact, by appropriate evidence. The Spanish
province of Florida was foreign to this country in 1815, when the
transaction referred to purports to have taken place.
A principal witness to prove the practice in the government
secretary's office was Alvarez, who had been a clerk in it from
1807 to the time of the change of government in 1821. He and others
establish beyond controversy that persons wishing grants of land
from the Spanish government presented a memorial to the governor,
and he decreed on the memorial in the form pursued in Mrs. Wiggins'
case; that the decree of the governor was filed in the secretary's
office and constantly retained there unless in cases where a royal
title was ordered to be issued, when the decree was transferred
Page 39 U. S. 346
to the escribano's office. Mrs. Wiggins' is a case of the first
class, and the petition and decree could not be removed from the
government secretary's office. These papers were not recorded in
books there, but kept in files or bundles.
The evidence given to the grantee was a certified copy of the
decree, or of the memorial and decree, by the government secretary,
and that it was one of the ordinary duties of the secretary to make
certified copies of memorials and decrees for the use of the
parties. Generally the decree of the governor directed the copy to
be made for the use of the party, and that copies made by the
government secretary and certified by him were generally received
as evidence of title in the Spanish courts of justice; the copies
were made immediately after making the decree, and delivered to the
party when he called for them. No seal was affixed to the
secretary's certificate, which was evidence of the facts to which
it certified in a case like this. From the evidences of the duties
incumbent on the government secretary of Florida, derived from this
record and other sources, we have no doubt the duties were such as
proved, that the secretary was the proper officer appointed by law
to give copies, and that the law trusted him, for this particular
purpose, so far as he acted under its authority. It follows. in
this case as in all others where the originals are confined to a
public office and copies are introduced, that the copy is (first)
competent evidence by authority of the certificate of the proper
officer, and (second) that it proves
prima facie the
original to have been of file in the office, when the copy was
made. And for this plain reason: the officer's certificate has
accorded to it the sanctity of a deposition; he certifies "that the
preceding copy is faithfully drawn from the original, which exits
in the secretary's office under my charge."
The same doctrine was holden in this Court in
Owings
v. Hull, 9 Pet. 624-625. The copy of a bill of sale
for slaves, made and of record in a notary's office in New Orleans,
was offered in evidence without accounting for the original, and
objected to for this reason. By the laws of Louisiana, the original
could not be removed from the notary's office, and he was
authorized to give a copy. This was received and deemed evidence of
what was contained in the original, and of course that it existed
when the copy was made.
Again, in
Percheman's
Case, 7 Pet. 85, it was decided by this Court that
a copy of a Spanish grant certified by the government secretary
could be given in evidence without accounting for the nonproduction
of the original, and this on general principles, which did not
require the aid of legislation, much reliance in that case having
been placed upon acts of Congress to give effect to the
certificate.
This Court, in
United States v.
Delespine, 12 Pet. 655, recognized the principle
that a certified copy such as the one before us was evidence, for
there a copy of the first copy was introduced, and when speaking of
the first copy, the Court said
"The
Page 39 U. S. 347
first copy was made from the original filed in the proper
office, from which the original could not be removed for any
purpose. That copy, it is admitted, would have been evidence in the
cause."
The original copy having been lost, and no decree being found in
the government secretary's office in favor of Delespine, although
there was proof that one had existed, the copy of the first copy
was received, and a decree founded on it.
Delespine's Case is, however, prominently distinguished
from the present on the main point in controversy; in that case,
there was positive proof of the existence in the secretary's office
of the original concession; here, there is none save the inference
that arises from Aguilar's certificate, with some other
circumstances, and the question is can a decree for the land be
founded upon these proofs in the face of the fact that no decree,
or evidence of the claim now exists or has ever been known to exist
in the proper office.
We have established that the copy of the petition and decree are
made
prima facie evidence by the certificate of the
secretary.
"What is
prima facie evidence of a fact? It is such as,
in judgment of law, is sufficient to establish the fact, and if not
rebutted, remains sufficient for the purpose."
Kelly v.
Jackson, 6 Pet. 632. And is it rebutted in this
case? Had the papers in the government secretary's office been
carefully kept, and had this claim been first brought forward at a
late day, as it is insisted in argument it was -- that is, eighteen
years after its date -- then the presumption would stand against
its original existence, and it ought to be rejected if the
certificate had no support. But this is far from being the fact.
The survey was made by the proper surveyor for Mrs. Wiggins March
23, 1821, in conformity to the memorial and decree, and which
refers to their date. Then again, she pursued this claim before the
register and receiver of the Land Office of East Florida whilst
they acted as a board of commissioners for the examination of
Spanish claims and titles, and they rejected it because there was
no evidence of cultivation. Truly the certificate and plot of the
survey were only before them, but as no exception appears to have
been taken, for want of sufficient evidence of the existence of the
concession, the circumstance of the nonproduction of it before the
board has not so much in it as was supposed in the argument.
The record shows why such vigorous exertions were made either to
reject or to destroy the force of Aguilar's certificate. The
attorney for the government offered to prove by William G. Davis
that Aguilar, just before the delivery of the province was made to
the United States, offered to forge a grant in favor of the witness
for a tract of land, and the attorney also offered to prove by
William Levington that about the same time, Aguilar offered to
forge or did actually forge, under the signature of the former
governor, White, of that province, a grant of land in favor of the
witness, which evidence the court rejected, and, we think,
correctly. Aguilar was not introduced as a witness, but the proof
offered sought to establish upon him forgery and fraud in other
instances so as to
Page 39 U. S. 348
destroy the credit of his certificate in this. The secretary may
have been honest and faithful in the discharge of his duties in
1815 and grossly the reverse in 1821, and although any number of
frauds should be established upon him, still, if the particular act
sought to be avoided be not shown to be tainted with fraud, it
cannot be affected with other frauds.
29 U.
S. 297. If there had been a forgery in this instance, it
is probable it would have been brought to light at the time the
survey was made, the making of which is the controlling fact with
this Court coming in aid of the certificate of Aguilar. For it must
be admitted that if the unsupported certificate had been brought
forward and the claim for the first time set up under it in July,
1833, eighteen years after it bears date, that it could not have
furnished any foundation for a decree or been evidence of title
worthy of credit. The lapse of time, the silence of the claimant,
and her failure to have presented it for confirmation would, under
the circumstances, have been conclusive objections to its
credibility. But the existence of the claim in 1821 is rendered
certain by the return of the surveyor general, and before the
American tribunals it has been steadily pursued.
Furthermore, the presumption that the original memorial and
concession, supposed to have been on file in the government
secretary's office, have been lost or destroyed is very strong.
After the papers were taken possession of in 1821 by the
authorities of the United States, they were almost abandoned in an
open house subject to the inspection and depredation of everyone;
many of the files were seen untied, and the papers scattered about
the room, the doors and windows of the house being open. There can
hardly be a doubt that some of the papers were destroyed or
lost.
Nothing is therefore found in the condition of the office to
rebut the
prima facie presumption furnished by the
secretary's certificate, as might be the case had the papers been
kept with proper care, and especially had the concessions been
numbered, and no number been missing.
The next question is does the concession carry with it the
conditions imposed by law on those having lands given to them for
the purposes of settlement? The object of the applicant, Mrs.
Wiggins, is distinctly set forth by her memorial, with the number
of the family of which she was the head -- that is, five children
and five slaves, with herself. By the regulations of Governor
White, published in 1803, it was declared that to each head of a
family there should be distributed fifty acres, and to the children
and slaves, sixteen years of age, twenty-five acres for each one,
but from the age of eight to sixteen years only fifteen acres.
Taking the slaves and children all to have been over sixteen,
there being ten of them, would have entitled the applicant to two
hundred and fifty acres on their account, and the fifty acres on
her own, which would have made up the three hundred acres applied
for.
The same ordinance provides
"That those employed in the city,
Page 39 U. S. 349
if lands be granted to them for cultivation by themselves or
their slaves, it shall be with the express condition that he shall
commence cultivation within one month after the concession of them,
with the understanding that if they do not do it, they will be
granted to anyone who will denounce him and verbally prove it."
And that all concessions, without time specified, shall be void
and held as though not made if grantees do not appear to take
possession and cultivate them within the term of six months.
In the concession to Mrs. Wiggins, no time is specified for the
settlement, and the government of the United States may take
advantage of the nonperformance of the condition prescribed by law
if the eighth article of the treaty with Spain does not provide for
the omission. It stipulates
"That grants of lands made by Spain before 24 January, 1818,
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 Spain."
It was adjudged by this Court in the cases of
Arredondo
and
Percheman, 6 and 7 Pet, that the words "shall be
ratified and confirmed," in reference to perfect titles, should be
construed to mean "are" ratified and confirmed, in the present
tense. The object of the Court in these cases was to exempt them
from the operation of the eighth article for the reason that they
were perfect titles by the laws of Spain when the treaty was made,
and that when the soil and sovereignty of Florida were ceded by the
second article, private rights of property were by implication
protected. The Court in its reasoning most justly held that such
was the rule by the laws of nations even in cases of conquest, and
undoubtedly so in a case of concession; therefore it would be an
unnatural construction of the eighth article to hold that perfect
and complete titles, at the date of the treaty, should be subject
to investigation and confirmation by this government and to
reconcile the article with the law of nations, the Spanish side of
the article was referred to in aid of the meaning of the American
side when it was ascertained that the Spanish side was in the
present tense, whereupon the Court held that the implication
resulting from the second article, being according to the law of
nations, that and the eighth article were consistent, and that
perfect titles "stood confirmed" by the treaty and must be so
recognized by the United States and in our courts.
The construction of the treaty being settled, a leading inquiry
in the cases referred to was were they perfect unconditional
Spanish grants?
Percheman's had no condition in it, and the only difficulty
involved was whether it had been made by the proper authority. The
Court held it had been so made.
The grant to Arredondo and son was for four leagues square, and
made as a present grant from its date, with the subsequent
condition that the grantees should settle and improve the land in
three
Page 39 U. S. 350
years, and on failure, the grant should become void; further,
that they should settle on it two hundred Spanish families; but no
time was fixed for the performance of this condition. Possession
was taken and improvements made within the three years, but the
families were not settled when the country was ceded. This Court
declared that after the cession of Florida to the United States,
the condition of settling Spanish families had become probably
impossible by the acts of the grantor, the government of Spain, and
certainly immaterial to the United States; therefore the grant was
discharged from the unperformed condition, and single.
That the perfect titles made by Spain, before 24 January, 1818,
within the ceded territory are intrinsically valid, and exempt from
the provisions of the eighth article, is the established doctrine
of this Court, and that they need no sanction from the legislative
or judicial departments of this country.
But that there were at the date of the treaty very many claims
whose validity depended upon the performance of conditions in
consideration of which the concessions had been made, and which
must have been performed before Spain was bound to perfect the
titles, is a fact rendered prominently notorious by the legislation
of Congress and the litigation in the courts of this country for
now nearly twenty years. To this class of cases the eighth article
was intended to apply, and the United States were bound, after the
cession of the country to the same extent that Spain had been bound
before the ratification of the treaty to perfect them by
legislation and adjudication, and to this end the government has
provided that it may be sued by the claimants in its own courts,
where the claims shall be adjudged and the equities of the
claimants determined and settled according to the law of nations,
the stipulations of the treaty, and the proceedings under the same
and the laws and ordinances of the government from which the claims
are alleged to have been derived.
These are the rules of decision prescribed to the courts by
Congress in the Act of 1824, ch. 173, sec. 2, passed to settle the
titles of Missouri and Arkansas, and made applicable to Florida by
the act of 1828, ch. 70, sec. 6. By the sixth section of the act of
1824, the claimant who has a decree in his favor is entitled to a
patent from the United States, by which means his equitable claim
draws to it the estate in fee. These are the imperfect claims to
which the eighth article of the treaty with Spain refers.
That a Spanish concession carrying on its face a condition the
performance of which is the consideration for the ultimate perfect
title is void unless the condition has been performed in the time
prescribed by the ordinances of Spain was decided by this Court
after the most mature consideration, in the cause of
United
States v. Kingsley, 12 Pet., which is the leading decision
upon the imperfect titles known as Mill grants, and which has been
followed by all others coming within the principles then with so
much care
Page 39 U. S. 351
and accuracy laid down. The concession to Mrs. Wiggins, carrying
with it the conditions incident to settlement rights by the
ordinances and usages of Spain, a brief notice, in addition to what
has already been said, will be taken of the regulations and
ordinances governing the case. As, on the first point, the practice
of the government in disposing of the public domain may be proved
by those familiar with the customs, and there is in the record very
satisfactory proof by witnesses of the laws and customs governing
the provincial authorities in this respect, but as the proof is in
exact accordance with the published ordinances on the subject, of
course the written law will be relied upon.
After the passage of the act of 1828, it was the opinion of the
Attorney General of the United States that it was indispensable to
the correct decision of the Florida claims by the court that a
correct translation into the English language should be made of the
Spanish and French ordinances affecting the land titles in that
country. The task of translating and compiling them was assigned to
Joseph M. White, Esq., then of Florida. The collection was
accordingly made and translated, and the manuscript deposited in
the State Department, and Congress was informed of the fact by a
special message from the President of the United States of February
11, 1829. 2 White's Recopilacion 9-10. It was afterwards published
by Mr. White, and latterly he has published a second and enlarged
edition, which is the one referred to in this case.
The treaty with Spain for the cession of Florida was signed 2
February, 1819; on 25 November preceding, the political and
military governor (Coppinger) caused to be published an ordinance
setting forth the conditions on which concessions for settlement
claims had been issued, obviously with a view to the future
cession. 2 White's Recopilacion 282-285. From the ordinance it
appears
"That concessions made to foreigners or natives of large or
small portions of land, carrying their documents with them (which
shall be certificates issued by the Secretary) without having
cultivated or ever seen the lands granted to them, such concessions
are of no value or effect, and should be considered as not made,
because the abandonment has been voluntary, and that they have
failed in complying with the conditions prescribed for the
encouragement of population, . . . and therefore there is no reason
why they should not revert to the class of public lands, making
null the titles of cession which were made to them."
Ten years had been the time required for cultivation and
occupation; this rule was not rigidly adhered to, but the titles
were perfected in some instances, where valuable improvements had
been made, and the occupation had been short of ten years, the
governors taking into consideration the disturbed state of the
country. These exceptions were abatements of the general rule,
requiring ten years cultivation and occupation; as Mrs. Wiggins,
however, never cultivated or occupied the land claimed, she took no
interest under the
Page 39 U. S. 352
rule, or any exception made to it, and it is free from doubt,
had Spain continued to govern the country, no title could have been
made to her; nor can any be claimed from the United States, as
successors to the rights and obligations of Spain.
It is therefore adjudged that the decree below be
Reversed and the petition dismissed.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Superior Court for the District of East Florida, and was
argued by counsel. On consideration whereof, it is now here ordered
and decreed by this Court that the decree of the said superior
court in this cause be, and the same is hereby reversed and
annulled; and that this cause be, and the same is hereby, remanded
to the said superior court, with directions to dismiss the
petition.