Action of ejectment in the state court of Alabama for a lot of
ground in the City of Mobile. The plaintiff claimed the title to
the lot under an act of Congress, and the decision of the state
court was against the right and title so set up and claimed. A writ
of error was prosecuted to the Supreme Court of Alabama. It was
held that this case was embraced by the twenty-fifth section of the
Judiciary Act of 1789, which gives this Court jurisdiction to
revise the judgment of the state court in such cases.
The act of Congress under which title was claimed being a
private act and for the benefit of the City of Mobile and certain
individuals, it is fair to presume it was passed with reference to
the particular claims of individuals, and the situation of the land
embraced in the law at the time it was passed.
A lot of ground was granted by the Spanish government of Florida
in 1802 to Forbes & Company in the City of Mobile, which was
afterwards confirmed by the commissioners of the United States. The
lot granted was eighty feet in front and three hundred and four
feet in depth, bounded an the east by Water Street. This, while the
Spanish government had possession of the territory, was known as "a
water lot." In front of the lot was a lot which, at the time of the
grant of the lot to Forbes & Company, was covered by the water
of the Bay and River of Mobile, the high tide flowing over it, and
it was separated from Forbes & Company's lot by Water Street.
It was afterwards in part reclaimed by Lewis, who had no title to
it, and who was afterwards driven off by one of the firm of Forbes
& Company. A blacksmith's shop was then put on the lot by him,
and Lewis again, by proceedings at law, obtained possession of the
blacksmith's shop, it not being his improvement. The improvement
was first made in 1823. The Spanish governor, in 1809, after the
Louisiana Treaty of 1803 and before the territory west of the
Perdido was out of the possession of Spain, granted the lot in
front of the lot owned by Forbes & Company to William Pollard,
but the commissioners of the United States, appointed after the
territory was in the full possession of the United States, refused
to confirm the same "because of the want of improvement and
occupation." In 1824, Congress passed an act the second section of
which gives to those who have improved them the lots in Mobile
known under the Spanish government as "water lots" except when the
lot so improved had been alienated and except lots of which the
Spanish government had made " new grants" or orders of survey
during the time the Spanish government had "power" to
grant the same, in which case the lot is to belong to the
alienee or the grantee. In 1836, Congress passed an act for the
relief of William Pollard's heirs by which the lot granted by the
Spanish government of 1809 was given to the heirs, saving the
rights of third persons, and a patent for this lot was issued to
the heirs of William Pollard by the United States on 2 July, 1836.
Held that the lot lying east of the lot granted in 1802 by
the Spanish government to Forbes & Company did not pass by that
grant to Forbes & Company, that the Act of Congress of 1824,
did not vest the title in the lot east of the lot granted in 1802
in Forbes & Company, and that the heirs of Pollard, under the
second section of the act of 1824, which excepted from the grant to
the City of Mobile, &c., lots held under "new grants" from the
Spanish government, and under the Act of Congress of 1836 were
entitled to the lot granted in 1809 by the Spanish governor to
William Pollard.
The term "new grants," in its ordinary acceptation, when applied
to the same subject or object, is the opposite of "old." But such
cannot he its meaning in the Act of Congress of 1824. The term was
doubtless used in relation to the existing condition of the
territory in which such grants were made. The territory had been
ceded to the United States by the Louisiana Treaty, but, in
consequence of a dispute with Spain about the boundary line, had
remained in the possession of Spain. During this time, Spain
continued to issue evidences of titles to lands within the
territory in dispute. The term
Page 39 U. S. 354
"new" was very appropriately used as applicable to grants and
orders of survey of this description, as contradistinguished from
those issued before the cession.
The time when the Spanish government had the "power" to grant
lands in the territory, by every reasonable intendment of the Act
of Congress of 1824 must have been so designated with reference to
the existing state of the territory as between the United States
and Spain, the right to the territory being in the United States
and the possession in Spain. The language "during the time at which
Spain had the power to grant the same" was, under such
circumstances, very appropriately applied to the case. It could
with no propriety have been applied to the case if Spain had full
dominion over the territory by the union of the right and the
possession, and in this view it is no forced interpretation of the
word "power" to consider it here used as importing an imperfect
right, and distinguished from complete lawful authority.
The Act of Congress of 25 March, 1812, appointing commissioners
to ascertain the titles and claims to lands on the east side of the
Mississippi and west side of the Perdido and falling within the
cession of France, embraced all claims of this description. It
extended to all claims by virtue of any grant, order of survey, or
other evidence of claim whatsoever derived from the French,
British, or Spanish governments, and the reports of the
commissioners show that evidence of claims of various descriptions,
issued by Spanish authority, down to 1810, come under their
examination. And the legislation of Congress shows many laws passed
confirming incomplete titles, originating after the date of the
treaty between France and Spain at St. Ildefonso. Such claims are
certainly not beyond the reach of Congress to confirm, although it
may require a special act of Congress for that purpose. Such is the
Act of Congress of 2 July, 1836, which confirms the title of
William Pollard's heirs to the lot which is the subject of this
suit. The judgment of the Supreme Court of the United States in a
case brought by writ of error to a court of a state must be
confined to the error alleged in the decision of the state court
upon the construction of the act of Congress before the state
court.
In the Circuit Court for the County of Mobile, State of Alabama,
an action of ejectment for a lot of ground situated in the City of
Mobile, was instituted by the plaintiffs in error and was
afterwards removed, by change of venue, to the Circuit Court for
the County of Baldwin. It was tried before a jury in that court,
and on the trial the plaintiffs filed a bill of exceptions to the
charge of the court. A verdict and judgment were given for the
defendant. From this judgment of the circuit court the plaintiffs
prosecuted a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the State of
Alabama, and the judgment of the circuit court in favor of the
defendant was affirmed by the supreme court.
The plaintiffs prosecuted this writ of error to the Supreme
Court of the United States under the twenty-fifth section of the
Judiciary Act of 1789.
The following is the bill of exceptions filed by the plaintiffs
on the trial of the cause in the Circuit Court of the County of
Baldwin.
"On the trial of this cause at the above term, the plaintiffs,
to maintain the issue on their part, gave in evidence an instrument
signed by Cayetano Perez, written in the Spanish language, a
translation of which is hereto annexed as part of this bill of
exceptions, but which instrument was shown to have been reported
against and rejected by the commissioners appointed by the United
States government to investigate and report on such matters because
of the want of improvement and occupancy. "
Page 39 U. S. 355
"
THE SPANISH GRANT, TRANSLATED."
"Mr. Commandant: "
" William Pollard, an inhabitant of the district, before you
with all respect represents that he has a mill established upon his
plantation, and that he often comes to this place with planks and
property from it, and that he wishes to have a place propitious or
suitable for the landing and safety thereof, and that, having found
a vacant piece at the riverside between the channel which is called
'John Forbes & Company's' and the wharf at this place, he
petitions you to grant said lot on the riverbank to give more
facility to his trading, a favor he hopes to obtain of you."
" Mobile, 11 December, 1809 WILLIAM POLLARD"
"Mobile, 12 December, 1809"
" I grant the petitioner the lot or piece of ground he prays
for, on the river bank, provided it be vacant."
"CAYETANO PEREZ"
"They further gave in evidence an act of Congress passed 26 May,
1824, entitled an act granting certain lots of ground to the
corporation of the City of Mobile and to certain individuals of
said city. They further gave in evidence an Act of Congress passed
July 2, 1836, entitled an act for the relief of William Pollard's
heirs. They then gave in evidence a patent, dated 14 March, 1837,
issued in pursuance of said act of Congress of 2 July, 1836, which
patent embraced the premises in question. The plaintiffs further
proved that in the year 1813 or 1814, some wreck and driftwood was
removed from the place where the premises in question now are by
the hands of William Pollard, the grantee. The defendant gave in
evidence a Spanish grant dated 9 June, 1802, to John Forbes &
Company for a lot of ground, for eighty feet front on Royal Street,
with a depth of three hundred and four feet to the east and bounded
on the south by Government Street, which grant was recognized as a
perfect title, and so confirmed by act of Congress. Attached to the
original grant was a certificate signed by W. Barton, Register, Wm.
Barnet, Receiver, P.M.; Attest, John Elliott, Clerk, a copy of
which is the following: "
"
PROCEEDINGS OF THE COMMISSIONERS"
"Land Office, Jackson Courthouse"
"Commissioners Report, No. 2; Certificate, No. 3"
" In pursuance of the Act of Congress passed on 3 March, 1819,
entitled 'an act for adjusting the claims to land, and establishing
land offices in the district east of the Island of Orleans,' we
certify that the claim No. 3, in the report of the commissioners,
numbered 2 (claimed by John Forbes & Company, original
claimant, Panton Leslie and Company) is recognized by the said act
as valid against any claim on the part of the United States or
right derived
Page 39 U. S. 356
from the United States, the said claim being for eighty feet in
front and three hundred and four in depth, area 24,320 feet,
situate in the Town of Mobile and claimed by virtue of Spanish
grant executed by J. V. Morales and dated 9 June, 1802."
" Given under our hands this 8 January, 1820."
"W. BARTON,
Register"
""
WM. BARNETT,
Receiver, P.M.
" Attest, JOHN ELLIOTT,
Clerk"
"A map, or diagram, indicating the property claimed, as well as
that covered by the above grant, with other lots, streets, &c.,
was submitted to the jury, and is to make a part of the bill of
exceptions, by agreement between the counsel of the parties."
"According to that map and the proof, the lot sued for is east
of Water Street, and also immediately in front of the lot conveyed
by the above mentioned grant to John Forbes & Company, and only
separated from it by Water Street. The proof showed that previous
to 1819, then and until filled up, as after stated, the lot claimed
by plaintiffs, was at ordinary high tide, covered with water, and
mainly so at all stages of the water; that the ordinary high water
flowed from the east to about the middle of what is now Water
Street, as indicated on the map referred to, between the lot
claimed by plaintiffs, and that covered by the grant to John Forbes
& Company. It was proved that John Forbes & Company had
been in possession of the lot indicated by their deed since the
year 1802, and that said lot was known under the Spanish government
as a water lot, no lots at that time existing between it and the
water."
"It was proved that in the year 1823, no one being then in
possession, and the same being under water, Curtis Lewis, without
any title or claim under title, took possession of and filled up
east of Water Street and from it eighty feet east, and thirty-six
or forty feet wide, filling up north of Government Street, and at
the corner of the same and Water Street; that Lewis remained in
possession about nine months, when he was ousted in the night by
James Innerarity, one of the firm of John Forbes & Company, who
caused to be erected a smith shop and from whom Lewis sometime
after regained possession by legal process and retained it till he
conveyed the same. Proved that when said Lewis took possession,
Water Street at that place could be passed by carts, and was
common. The defendant connected himself, through conveyances for
the premises in controversy, with the said grant to John Forbes
& Company; also with the said Curtis Lewis, also, with the
Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Mobile, from each of which
sources his title, if any, was derived by deed."
"It was admitted by the parties to the suit that the premises
sued for were between Church Street and North Boundary Street; this
was all the evidence introduced on the trial."
"On this evidence, the court charged the jury that if the lot
conveyed as above to John Forbes & Company by the deed
aforesaid
Page 39 U. S. 357
was known as a water lot under the Spanish government, and if
the lot claimed by the plaintiffs had been improved at and previous
to 26 May, 1824, and was east of Water Street and immediately in
front of the lot so conveyed to John Forbes & Company, then the
lot claimed passed by the Act of Congress of 26 May, 1824, to those
at that time owning and occupying the lot so as above conveyed to
John Forbes & Company."
"The court further charged the jury it was immaterial who made
the improvements on the lot on the east side of Water Street, being
the one in dispute; that by the said acts of Congress, the
proprietor of the lot on the west side of Water Street, known as
above, was entitled to the lot on the east side of it. To which
charges of the court the plaintiffs by their counsel excepted, and
this was signed and sealed as a bill of exceptions. "
Page 39 U. S. 360
MR. JUSTICE THOMPSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The writ of error in this case brings up the record of the final
judgment of the Supreme Court of the State of Alabama. This case is
brought here under the 25th section of the Judiciary Act of 1789,
that court being the highest court of law in that state in which a
decision could be had. It was an action of ejectment brought to
recover possession of a lot of land in the City of Mobile. Upon the
trial of the cause, the plaintiff claimed title to the premises in
question under an act of Congress, and the decision in the state
court was against the right and title so set up and claimed. It is
therefore one of the cases embraced in this section of the
Judiciary Act, which gives to this Court jurisdiction to revise the
judgment of the state court.
The act under which title was claimed was passed on 26 May,
1824, Land Laws 885, granting certain lots of ground to the
corporation of the City of Mobile, and to certain individuals of
that city. Although the judgment of this Court must be confined to
the error alleged in the decision of the state court, upon the
construction
Page 39 U. S. 361
of the act of Congress under which title was claimed, it becomes
necessary to the right understanding of the act which was drawn in
question to look at the state of facts appearing on the record. It
being a private act for the benefit of the City of Mobile and
certain individuals, it is fair to presume it was passed with
reference to the particular claims of such individuals and the
situation of the land embraced within the law at the time it was
passed.
These facts, as they appear on the record, are briefly as
follow. On the trial, the plaintiff gave in evidence an instrument
signed by Cayetano Perez, dated at Mobile, 12 December, 1809,
purporting to be a petition of William Pollard for a certain lot of
ground, which is described as vacant, at the river side between the
canal, which is called John Forbes & Company's, and the wharf
of this place, corresponding in description with the location of
the lot in question, and a grant accompanying the petition, in
these words: "I grant the petitioner the lot or piece of ground he
prays for on the river bank, provided it be vacant," which grant
was rejected by the commissioners appointed by the government of
the United States to investigate and report upon such claims
because of the want of improvement and occupation of the lot. The
defendant gave in evidence a Spanish grant dated 9 June in the year
1802 to John Forbes & Company for a lot of ground eighty feet
front on Royal Street, with a depth of three hundred and four feet
to the east and bounded on the south by Government Street, which
grant was recognized by the commissioners as a perfect title, and
so confirmed by Congress. A map or diagram is referred to in the
record, by which it appears that the lot sued for is east of Water
Street, and immediately in front of the lot conveyed by the above
mentioned grant to John Forbes & Company, and only separated
from it by Water Street. It appeared in evidence that previous to
the year 1819, and until filled up by Curtis Lewis, the lot in
question was, at ordinary high tide, covered with water, and mainly
so at all stages of the tide. That the ordinary high water flowed
from the east to about the middle of what is now Water Street. It
was proved that John Forbes & Company had been in possession of
the lot granted to them since the year 1802, and that said lot was
known under the Spanish government as a water lot, no lots at that
time existing between it and the water.
In the year 1823, no one being in possession of the lot in
question and the same being under water, Curtis Lewis, without
title or claim under title, took possession of and filled up east
of Water Street, about thirty-six or forty feet wide and eighty
feet deep from Water Street, the filling up being north of
Government Street at the corner of that and Water Street. Lewis
remained in possession about nine months, when he was ousted in the
night time by James Innerarity, one of the firm of John Forbes and
company, who caused to be erected thereon a smith's shop. Lewis
sometime after regained the possession by legal process, and
retained it until he conveyed away the same. When Lewis took
possession, Water
Page 39 U. S. 362
Street at that place could be passed by carts, and was common.
The defendant connected himself through conveyances for the
premises in question, with the grant to John Forbes & Company,
and also with Curtis Lewis and the Mayor and aldermen of the City
of Mobile.
Such being the situation of the lot in question and of the
several claims to the same, the Act of the 26 May, 1824, was
passed. The first section of this act can have no bearing upon the
claim set up to the lot in question. It only vests in the City of
Mobile all the right and claim of the United States to all the lots
not sold or confirmed to individuals either by this or any former
act and to which no equitable title exists in favor of any
individual under this or any other act. If, therefore, the second
section applies to the lot in question at all, it is excepted out
of the first section. That the second section does apply to this
lot has not been and cannot be doubted. That section is as
follows:
"That all the right and claim of the United States to so many of
the lots of ground east of Water Street and between Church Street
and North Boundary Street, now known as water lots, as are situated
between the channel of the river and the front of the lots known
under the Spanish government as water lots in the said City of
Mobile whereon improvements have been made be, and the same are
hereby, vested in the several proprietors and occupants of each of
the lots heretofore fronting on the River Mobile, except in cases
where such proprietor or occupant has alienated his right to any
such lot, now designated as a water lot, or the Spanish government
has made a new grant or order of survey for the same, during the
time at which they had the power to grant the same, in which case,
the right and claim of the United States shall be and is hereby
vested in the person to whom such alienation, grant, or order of
survey was made or in his legal representatives. Provided that
nothing in this act contained shall be construed to affect the
claim or claims, if any such there be, of any individual or
individuals, or of any body politic or corporate."
There are two facts to be collected from this description of the
lots embraced in this section of the act which must be kept in view
in deciding this question,
viz., that the lots on the west
side of Water Street were known under the Spanish government as
water lots, and that the lots on the east side of Water Street are
now known as water lots, and may properly be distinguished under
the denomination of old water lots and new water lots.
The only question for this Court to decide is whether the state
court misconstrued this act by deciding against the right and title
set up under it by Pollard's heirs. The record states that the
court charged the jury that if the lot conveyed as above to John
Forbes & Company by the deed aforesaid was known as a water lot
under the Spanish government, and if the lot claimed by the
plaintiffs had been improved at and previous to 26 May, 1824 (the
date of the law) and was east of Water Street and immediately in
front of the lot so conveyed to John Forbes & Company,
Page 39 U. S. 363
then the lot claimed passed by the Act of Congress of 26 May,
1824, to those at that time owning and occupying the lot so as
above conveyed to John Forbes & Company.
The facts hypothetically put by the court to the jury had been
fully proved in the affirmative, and indeed were not at all denied
-- to-wit that the lot conveyed to John Forbes & Company was
known under the Spanish government as a water lot and that the lot
claimed by the plaintiffs had been improved previous to 26 May,
1824, and was in front of the lot conveyed to John Forbes &
Company.
The construction, therefore, of the court was substantially that
the act conveyed the lot in question to the owners and occupants of
the lot conveyed to John Forbes & Company. That such was the
construction of the act given by the court is conclusively shown by
the subsequent part of the charge: that it was immaterial who made
the improvements on the lot in dispute on the east side of Water
Street. That by the said act of Congress, the proprietor of the lot
on the west side of Water Street was entitled to the lot on the
east side of it.
If this construction of the act was erroneous and against the
right claimed by the plaintiffs, the judgment must be reversed. The
act is undoubtedly very obscurely worded, and its construction, it
must be admitted, is doubtful.
The principal difficulty arises upon the true understanding and
reference of the words, "whereon improvements have been made,"
whether they refer to improvements on the lot on the west side of
Water Street or on the lot in question on the east side of Water
Street. The grammatical construction would undoubtedly refer the
improvements to the lot on the west side of the Street, and would
be carrying into effect what is believed to be the general course
of policy in most of the United States of giving a preference to
the owner of land on the shore of navigable streams of water to the
right and privilege of the land under the water between high and
low water mark. And on the other hand, it would seem unjust, where
actual improvements had been made on the land below high water
mark, to disregard and take away such improvements and give them to
the owner of the lot on the west side of the street.
The evidence as to the extent and value of the improvements on
the lot in question is very loose, and affords but little
information upon that point. They could probably have been but of
little value. They were made by Curtis Lewis, he not having any
title or even claim of title. And it is not reasonable to suppose
that under such circumstances and from the short time he was in
possession before the passage of this act, that he would have made
very valuable improvements. And if the intention of Congress had
been to give the lots on the east side of Water Street to those who
had improved them, it would have required but a very plain and
simple declaration to that effect, and might have been just and
equitable if such improvements were valuable. But it is difficult
to conceive how
Page 39 U. S. 364
the phraseology in the act could have been adopted to indicate
such intention.
It is not, however, necessary to decide upon the construction of
this act as between the conflicting claims of the owner of the lot
on the west side of Water Street and those who had made
improvements on the lot on the east side of that Street. For there
is excepted out of the act all cases where the Spanish government
has made "a new grant" or order of survey for the same during the
time at which they had "the power" to grant the same, in which
cases the right and claim of the United States are vested in the
person to whom such grant or order of survey was made or his legal
representatives. And if the plaintiffs bring themselves within this
exception, the right is secured to them. And this presents the
question as to the construction to be given to this exception.
Two points of inquiry seem to be presented: one relates to the
description of the grant or order of survey therein mentioned, and
the other as to the time when made. The exception describes these
grants or orders of survey as "new grants" or orders of survey. The
term "new," in its ordinary acceptation, when applied to the same
subject or object, is the opposite of "old." But such cannot be its
meaning as here used, for there is no pretense that two grants or
orders of survey had at any time been issued for the same lot. Some
other meaning must therefore be given to it. And it doubtless was
used in relation to the existing condition of that part of the
territory, when grants or orders of survey like the one in question
were made. The territory had been ceded to the United States by the
Louisiana Treaty, but in consequence of some dispute with Spain
respecting the boundary line, this part of the territory remained
in the possession of Spain. And it is a fact established by the
public documents and laws of Congress and cases which have come
before this Court that during the period between the cession by
France and the acquiring possession by the United States, Spain
continued to issue evidences of title of various descriptions --
some complete grants and others which were only inchoate rights or
concessions. And the term "new" was very appropriately used as
applicable to grants and orders of survey of this description, as
contradistinguished from those issued before the cession. And this
construction is rendered certain when the description of the grants
is connected with the subsequent part of the sentence as to the
time when made, to-wit during the time at which the Spanish
government had "the power" to grant the same. This time, according
to every reasonable intendment, must have been so designated with
reference to the existing state of the territory as between the
United States and Spain, the right to the territory being in the
United States and the possession in Spain. The language "during the
time at which Spain had the power to grant the same" was, under
such circumstances, very appropriately applied to the case. It
could with no propriety have been applied to the case if Spain had
full dominion over the territory by the union of right and
possession,
Page 39 U. S. 365
and in this view it is no forced interpretation of the word
"power" to consider it here used as importing an imperfect right,
and distinguishable from complete lawful authority. And indeed no
other sensible construction can be given to the language here used,
and the course of the government of the United States with respect
to the claims originating during this period would seem necessarily
to call for this construction. The act of Congress of 25 April,
1812, appointing commissioners to ascertain the titles and claims
to lands on the east side of the River Mississippi and west of the
River Perdido and falling within the cession by France, embraced
all claims of this description; it extended to all claims by virtue
of any grant, order of survey, or other evidence of claim
whatsoever derived from the French, British, or Spanish
governments. And the reports of the commissioners show that
evidence of claims of various descriptions, issued by Spanish
authority down to the year 1810, came under the examination of the
commissioners, and the legislation of Congress shows many laws
passed confirming incomplete titles, originating after the date of
the treaty between France and Spain at St. Ildefonso.
Such claims are certainly not beyond the reach of Congress to
confirm, although it may require a special act of Congress for that
purpose, and the present claim, being founded upon such act,
distinguishes it from the doctrine of this Court in the cases of
Foster and Elam v.
Neilson, 2 Pet. 253, and
Garcia v.
Lee, 12 Pet. 511. And such claims have been
recognized by this Court as existing claims, and not treated as
being absolutely void. In the case of
Delacroix
v. Chamberlain, 12 Wheat. 599, an order of survey
issued during this period came under the consideration of the
Court. It bore date in the year 1806. The Court said this order of
survey was not sufficient to support an action of ejectment, not
having been recorded or passed upon by the board of commissioners
so as to vest a legal title. But the Court observed that this order
of survey bears date at a time when the Spanish authorities were in
the actual possession of Mobile, where the land lies, and it was
claimed as a part of the Floridas, then belonging to the Spanish
Crown, and the United States claimed it as a part of Louisiana.
That the United States, having since purchased the Floridas without
having previously settled the controverted boundary, rendered it
unnecessary to examine these conflicting claims. And the Court
added if the United States and Spain had settled this dispute by
treaty before they extinguished the claim of Spain to the Floridas,
the boundary fixed by such treaty would have bound all parties. But
as that was not done, the United States has never, so far as we can
discover, distinguished between the concessions of land made by the
Spanish authorities within the disputed territory, while Spain was
in the actual possession of it, from concessions of a similar
character made by Spain within the acknowledged limits. We will
not, therefore, raise any question upon the ground of want of
authority in the intendant to make such concession. Nothing
more
Page 39 U. S. 366
is to be understood from this case than that the Court did not
consider the circumstance that the concession being made whilst
Spain was in the actual possession of the territory had prevented
Congress from acting on the subject of such concessions. And when
Congress, in the Act of 26 May, 1824, excepts certain grants or
orders of survey made by Spain during the time at which they had
the power to grant the same, the conclusion is irresistible that it
included grants like the one to William Pollard now in question.
This grant bears date on the 9 December in the year 1809, and was
rejected by the commissioners for want of improvement and
occupation, and not because it was absolutely void. But suppose it
had been void under the then existing laws in relation to these
lands, it could not prevent Congress from afterwards confirming
this grant. The Act of 26 March, 1804, 2 Story 939, sec. 14,
declaring certain grants void could not affect the one to Pollard,
which was made in the year 1809, after the passage of that law.
But if the construction of the Act of 26 May, 1824, is doubtful,
as it is admitted to be, the Act of 2 July, 1836, is entitled to
great weight in aiding to remove that doubt. It is an act specially
for the relief of William Pollard's heirs. It declares that there
shall be and hereby is confirmed unto the heirs of William Pollard,
deceased, a certain lot of ground situated in the City of Mobile
and bounded as follows, to-wit: on the north by what was formerly
known as John Forbes & Company's canal, on the west by Water
Street, on the south by the King's Wharf, and on the east by the
channel of the river, being the description of the lot now in
question, and directing a patent to be issued in the usual form for
the same. There is a proviso declaring that this act shall not
interfere with or affect the claims of third persons. But giving to
this proviso its full force and effect, the enacting clause is a
legislative construction of the act of 1824, and locates the patent
thereby directed to be issued upon the lot now in question. They
are acts
in pari materia, and are to be construed
together, and in such a manner, if the language will reasonably
admit of it, as to permit both acts to stand together and remain in
full force. It is not to be presumed that Congress would grant or
even simply release the right of the United States to land
confessedly before granted. This would be only holding out
inducements to litigation. And these two acts cannot stand together
without considering the lot in question as coming within the
exception of the act of 1824 and the act of 1836, as a confirmation
(as it purports to be) of the title to the heirs of William
Pollard.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of the State of Alabama is
accordingly
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE McLEAN.
I agree to the judgment of reversal in this case, and as my
opinion is mainly founded on the construction of the second section
of the
Page 39 U. S. 367
act of 1824, without reference to the exceptions it contains, I
will state in a very few words my views in regard to that
section.
It declares
"That all the right and claim of the United States to so many of
the lots of ground east of Water Street and between Church Street
and North Boundary Street, now known as water lots, as are situated
between the channel of the river and the front of the lots known
under the Spanish government as water lots in the said City of
Mobile, whereon improvements have been made be and the same are
hereby vested in the several proprietors and occupants of each of
the lots heretofore fronting on the River Mobile, except in cases
where such proprietor or occupant has alienated his right to any
such lot, now designated as a water lot, or the Spanish government
has made a new grant,"
&c.
The lots first named in this section are those to which the
right of the United States is relinquished, and those lots are now
denominated water lots, in contradistinction to those called water
lots under the Spanish government.
"All the right and claim of the United States is relinquished to
so many of the lots of ground . . . " -- then follows a description
of the locality of these lots, lying
"east of Water Street, and between Church Street and North
Boundary Street, now known as water lots, as are situated between
the channel of the river and the front of the lots known under the
Spanish government as water lots, in the said City of Mobile,"
and here the description of the locality of these lots ends, and
the words "whereon improvements have been made" follow. Now I
entertain no doubt the improvements must be made on the lots first
named, and to which the United States relinquish their right, and
not on those lots named merely to show the local situation of the
present water lots. And this is the construction given to the
section by the Supreme Court of Alabama.
The improvements then must be made on the water lot, and the lot
in controversy in this case is a water lot.
The court instructed the jury that
"if the lot claimed by the plaintiffs had been improved at and
previous to 26 May, 1824, and was east of Water Street and
immediately in front of the lot so conveyed to John Forbes &
Company, then the lot claimed passed by the act of Congress to
those at that time owning and occupying the lot so as above
conveyed to John Forbes & Company, and that it was immaterial
who made the improvements on the disputed lot."
The second section gives to the proprietor of the lot fronting
the water lot such water lot, provided it has been improved.
Now two things must concur to give a title under this act, and
these are proprietorship of the front lot and improvements on the
water lot. But by whom must these improvements be made or owned at
the passage of the law?
The act does not specify, and the court instructed the jury that
if improvements were made, it was not material by whom they were
made. Can this be the true construction of the act?
Congress did not intend to give to the proprietor of the front
lot
Page 39 U. S. 368
the water lot unless it was improved; nor did they intend to
give to the person who had improved the water lot such lot unless
he was the proprietor of the front lot. The improvements of the
water lot were as essential to the claim of title under this act as
the proprietorship of the front lot. And can it be supposed that
Congress intended to give the water lot to the proprietor of the
front lot, for the reason that the water lot had been improved by a
stranger? In other words, that Congress, by a solemn act of
legislation, would give a lot of ground to one man because it had
been improved by another? This is the principle asserted by this
construction, and it is so unjust and so directly opposed to the
legislation of Congress in regard to the preemptive rights on the
ground of improvements, that I am unwilling to sanction it. There
is no instance in the entire history of legislation by Congress
where they have sanctioned such a principle. The policy has been to
secure to the individual the benefits of his own labor and
expenditure. And I am of the opinion that unless the proprietor of
the front lot was, on 26 May, 1824, also the proprietor of the
improvements on the water lot, he can claim no title under the
act.
MR. JUSTICE BALDWIN.
I fully concur with the Court on all the points embraced in its
opinions, as well as the reasons assigned, being fully satisfied
with the construction given to the acts of Congress of 1804, 1824,
and 1836, I have no desire to add anything to the conclusive views
presented in the opinion. But there are other important
considerations necessarily connected with the merits of the case
which induce me to notice them in a separate opinion, leading to
the same conclusion on other grounds.
As it has been my assigned duty on several occasions to examine
the subject of claims and titles to land in the various territories
which the United States acquired by cession from Georgia, France,
and Spain, a broad and varied field of investigation has been
opened on a part of which there has been no opinion of this Court
as yet delivered. That part is a review of the political condition
of the territory between the Perdido and Mississippi from 1800 to
1821, under the Louisiana Treaty, the various acts of the executive
and legislative departments of this government in relation to its
cession, occupation, government, and adjustment of claims therein,
the Constitution, and laws of nations before the ratification of
the treaty of 1819, and in connection with that treaty; the
judicial exposition of both treaties by this Court. It is a subject
of high concern to numerous claimants of land within that
territory; to the United States, both in interest and in relation
to the formal complaints made by Spain of the omission "to cause
the grants of the King to be respected, according to the
stipulation of the eighth article of the treaty of 1819." This
complaint was made soon after the decision of the case of
Foster and Elam v. Neilson in 1829, and in 1832 the
Secretary of State, after the decision of the case of
Page 39 U. S. 369
Arredondo, made to the House of Representatives a long and full
report in relation to these grants in which he states the opinion
of the executive department to be most decidedly in favor of their
confirmation on every ground on which they could be considered, and
especially on the faith and honor of the United States pledged in
the treaty. He felt himself to be unable to answer what he declared
to be the just demands and complaints of Spain, and assigned as the
sole reason why the executive had not recommended an immediate
confirmation of the grants by Congress the two decisions of this
Court in those two cases.
Under such circumstances, I take this occasion to throw this
responsibility from the Court in the course now pursued, and hope
to show most clearly that those decisions have hitherto been much
misapprehended, and when taken in connection with subsequent ones,
they most conclusively establish the right of the grantees of Spain
in the disputed territory, derived from grants made between 1803
and 1810, while Spain was in the undisputed possession west of the
Perdido, independently of the treaty of 1819,
a fortiori
by its stipulations. In so doing, I admit in the fullest manner,
for all the purposes of this case and the principles it involves,
that this Court is bound to take the east boundary of Louisiana to
be the Perdido; that it was a political question, which having been
settled by the political departments of the government, cannot be
questioned in this; and that, as held in
Foster
and Elam, 2 Pet. 309, no title can be maintained
under a Spanish grant "singly" on the ground that the Spanish
construction of the Treaty of 1803 was right and the American
construction wrong.
Keeping this principle in view, I shall consider the title of
the plaintiff under a Spanish concession made in 1809 by the lawful
authority of the King, independent of its confirmation by any
special act of Congress, as resting on its validity by the laws of
nations, the Constitution of the United States, the ordinance of
1787, the two treaties, and the general course of legislation by
Congress in relation to government and property in the disputed
territory. It will be observed that the claim of the plaintiff was
duly filed and recorded, pursuant to the acts of Congress for
adjusting claims to land west of the Perdido; he is therefore not
deprived of any benefit which they confer or rights which are
reserved, but may rely on any support they may give to his title by
his having complied with all the requisitions enjoined. On a
subject so broad, so interesting, so vitally affecting the rights
of private property, under cessions by foreign powers or the states
of this Union to the United States, and course of argument or
opinion has hitherto been too limited on the course of the
political departments of the government to save the necessity of
the course herein pursued. It has been rather assumed than deduced
from that detailed investigation which can alone lead to a
satisfactory result, on matters so complicated and interwoven into
our system of territorial, state, and federal governments.
Page 39 U. S. 370
In 1800, Spain ceded Louisiana to France, by the Treaty of St.
Ildefonso, but retained peaceable possession till May 1803, when it
was surrendered to France in the same manner in which it was ceded
by the previous treaty, declaring that,
"the limits of both shores of the Mississippi shall remain
forever fixed by the treaty of Paris in 1763, and consequently the
settlements from the River Manshack or Iberville to the line which
divides the American territory from the dominions of the King shall
remain in the possession of Spain and annexed to West Florida."
Vide 27 U. S. 2 Pet.
303. White's Comp. 164.
In October, 1803, Congress authorized the President to take
possession of and occupy the territory ceded by France to the
United States and to organize a temporary government "for
maintaining and protecting the inhabitants of Louisiana in the free
enjoyment of their liberty, property, and religion." 2 Story
907.
In December following, France surrendered the province to the
United States, as it was ceded by Spain to France, under the same
clauses and conditions, &c., and as this Court has declared,
"in every respect with all its rights and appurtenances as it was
held by France and received by France from Spain."
35 U. S. 10
Pet. 732.
Spain then was in the possession of the disputed territory by
the consent of France expressed in the surrender of Louisiana, and
the acceptance of the surrender by France to the United States, as
she received it from Spain, was equally a consent by the United
States to the continuance of the possession of Spain. Though the
United States soon asserted her right to the "sovereignty and
propriety" over and in the territory as far east as the Perdido, no
attempt was made to disturb the possession of Spain till 1810. From
1803 till October, 1810, the condition of the country was this:
Spain was the acknowledged sovereign
de facto, in the
peaceable exercise of all the powers of government, and claiming to
be also the sovereign
de jure, the United States neither
asserting nor exercising the powers of a government
de
facto, but asserting her right as sovereign
de jure
under the Treaty of 1803, and as this Court said
"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."
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
304.
In October, 1810, the President, by his proclamation, ordered
military possession to be taken of the disputed territory, declared
the laws of the United States to be in force within it, and ordered
the inhabitants to be obedient thereto; but it was also declared
that in the hands of the United States, the territory was "still
left a subject of fair and friendly negotiation and adjustment,"
&c., and "under the full assurance that the inhabitants shall
be protected in the enjoyment of their liberty, property, and
religion."
Vide 3 State Papers, Foreign Relations 397-398.
Proclamation at large. At this time there was a revolutionary
convention in session at Baton Rouge, within the disputed
territory, claiming to be an independent
Page 39 U. S. 371
government, to be admitted into the Union, and also claiming the
"unlocated lands" therein.
Id., 395-396.
In replying to these propositions, the Secretary of State, in
November, 1810, in asserting the right of the United States as far
as the Perdido by the Treaty of 1803, says:
"The delivery of possession has indeed been deferred, and the
procrastination has been heretofore acquiesced in by this
government from a hope patiently indulged that amicable negotiation
would accomplish the purpose of the United States,"
&c. The Secretary then makes these remarks:
"The vacant land of this territory, thrown into common stock
with all the other vacant land of the Union, will be a property in
common for the national uses of all the people of the United
States. The community of interest upon which this government
invariably acts, the liberal policy which it has uniformly
displayed towards the people of the territories (a part of which
policy has ever been a just regard to honest settlers), will
nevertheless be a sufficient pledge to the inhabitants of West
Florida, for the early and continued attention of the federal
legislature to their situation and their wants."
Id., 398.
In enclosing the President's proclamation to the Governor of
Mississippi, the Secretary of State directs him to do whatever his
powers will warrant to
"secure to the inhabitants the peaceable enjoyment of their
liberty, property, and religion and to place them as far as may be
on the same footing with the inhabitants of the other districts
under his authority."
Id., 396-397.
In January, 1811, the President recommended to Congress in a
confidential message the expediency of authorizing him
"to take temporary possession of any part of Florida in
pursuance of arrangements with the Spanish authorities and for
making provision for the government of the same during such
possession."
3 State Papers, Foreign Affairs 394-395. A law was accordingly
passed giving the authority required as to the territory east of
the Perdido and south of Georgia and the Mississippi Territory, and
for organizing a government for the protection and maintenance of
the inhabitants of the said territory in the full enjoyment of
their liberty, property, and religion. At the same time, Congress
resolved under certain contingencies, on the
"temporary occupation of the territory adjoining the south
border of the United States, they at the same time declare that the
said territory shall in their hands remain subject to future
negotiation."
6 Laws 592-593.
In February, 1813, the President was authorized "to occupy and
hold all that tract of country called West Florida which lies west
of the Perdido not now in the possession of the United States," for
which purpose and
"for affording protection to the inhabitants under the authority
of the United States, the President was authorized to employ the
military and naval force of the United States."
6 Laws 593. This resolution and law remained unpublished till
1821, after the final ratification of the
Page 39 U. S. 372
treaty of 1819, but under them the whole disputed territory was
taken and held by the United States till it was annexed to the
adjacent states by acts of Congress.
In 1812, that portion which was situated between the Iberville,
the Mississippi, the east branch of Pearl River, and the
Mississippi Territory was annexed to Louisiana on condition that a
law should be passed
"securing to the people of the said territory, equal rights,
privileges, benefits, and advantages with those enjoyed by the
people of the other parts of the state."
Vide 2 Story 1224, 1230. A law was passed by Louisiana
in compliance with this condition. In May of the same year, that
portion which was situated between the east boundary of Louisiana
and the Perdido was annexed to the Mississippi Territory, to be
governed
"by the laws now in force or which may be hereafter enacted, and
the laws and ordinances of the United States relative thereto, as
if the same had originally formed a part thereof,"
&c., 2 Story 1248; by subsequent acts, this part of the
territory was divided between Mississippi and Alabama, and thence
formed a part of those states, the former of which was admitted
into the Union before the signature of the treaty of 1819 and the
latter in December following.
Vide 3 Story 1617, 1620,
1635, 1735, 1804.
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
308.
From this summary view of the course of the executive and
legislative branches of the government it is apparent that they
were in the assertion of the territorial rights of the United
States as claimed by them under the Treaty of 1803; it is also
apparent from the solemn pledges made by both departments that the
possession of the country was taken and held by force, yet subject
to future negotiation as to the right of sovereignty and propriety,
and full assurances to the inhabitants of being maintained and
protected in the free enjoyment of their property.
Before proceeding to the stipulations of either treaty, it is
now necessary to notice those acts of Congress which are referred
to in the President's proclamation of 1810, in which he
declares
"That the acts of Congress relating to this territory, though
contemplating a present possession by a foreign authority, have
contemplated also an eventual possession of the said territory by
the United States, and are accordingly so framed as to extend their
operation to the same."
3 State Papers, For.Aff. 397.
The principles of this proclamation were adopted by Congress,
whereby the laws which bound the inhabitants of the disputed
territory at the same time protected them in their rights of
property as completely as in the Island of Orleans or west of the
Mississippi; these laws were suspended in their operation during
the occupation of Spain, but applied to the whole country ceded by
France to the United States as soon as it came into their
possession, and their provisions, from the first to the last, are
of a uniform character. Whenever Congress gave authority to take
possession of the ceded territory and provide for its temporary
government, the declared
Page 39 U. S. 373
object was "to maintain and protect the inhabitants in the
enjoyment of their property," &c., as has been seen in the act
of 1803. 2 Story 907.
By the act of 1804 it was provided that "no law shall be valid
which is inconsistent with the laws and Constitution of the United
States." 2 Story 933. "The laws in force in the said territory and
not inconsistent with this act shall continue in force until
altered, modified, or repealed." 2 Story 937.
The act of 1805 authorized a government similar to that of the
Mississippi Territory, and declared the ordinance of 1787 in force
(except as to the descent of estates and slavery) and continued the
existing laws till altered, &c.; it also authorized the
admission of the territory into the Union according to the third
article of the Treaty of 1803. 2 Story 963, 964.
As this act placed the whole ceded territory under the same
system of government as Mississippi, we must look to the acts of
1798 and 1800, which organized a government over that territory
(before any cession was made by Georgia to the United States)
without the consent of Georgia, and while the whole territory over
which the United States thus assumed jurisdiction, was claimed by
Georgia. This is necessary in order to ascertain what effect the
United States intended that their occupation of the territory then
in controversy should have upon the rights of Georgia, or of the
proprietors of lands claiming under that state. This is the more
important when the compact with Georgia in 1802 is applied to the
preexisting state of things in the territory in dispute between her
and the United States, for it will be found in all respects
analogous to the state of things existing in the country west of
the Perdido before the treaty of 1819 took effect, and that the
proclamation of the President and the acts of Congress for taking
the possession of West Florida and annexing it to the contiguous
territories first and then to the states, contain pledges fully as
strong, and to the same import, as those given to Georgia by this
provision of the acts of 1798 and 1800:
"That the establishment of the said government shall in no
respect impair the right of the State of Georgia or of any person
or persons either to the jurisdiction or the soil of the said
territory, but the rights and claims of the said state and of all
persons interested are hereby declared to be as firm and available
as if this act had never been made."
1 Story 495, 778.
In connection with this provision it must be observed that up to
1797, Spain had claimed and occupied the southern portion of the
Mississippi Territory as part of Florida; pursuant to the treaty of
1795, she surrendered all the country north of the 31� north
latitude to the United States. The words "any" and "all persons"
extend, therefore, as well to those who claimed lands north of that
line under Spain as those who claimed under Georgia, and as Spain
had relinquished her rights to the territory, those of Georgia
alone were noticed, while the granters of either stood on the same
precise footing under these laws. But the treaty of 1795
between
Page 39 U. S. 374
the United States and Spain, gave those claiming under her this
protection.
"It is also agreed that the inhabitants of the territory of each
party shall respectively have free access to the courts of justice
of the other, and they shall be permitted to prosecute suits for
the recovery of their property, &c., and the proceedings and
sentences of the said courts shall be the same as if the contending
parties had been citizens or subjects of the said [same]
country."
Art. 20, 1 Laws U.S. 276.
This analogy between the condition of the territory south of the
31� north latitude and west of the Perdido, and that which
lies north thereof, has been made the more applicable by the act of
1812, which, it has been seen, applies the laws and ordinances of
the United States, and the laws then in force, to the territory
west of the Perdido, precisely as "if it had formed originally a
part of the Mississippi Territory." 2 Story 1248. And as the act of
1805 put the territorial government of Louisiana and Mississippi on
the same footing, all the laws applicable to the one must be
applied to the other and every part of it whenever the United
States assumed the powers of government. The act of 1805 adopted
the ordinance of 1787, enacted for the government of the territory
north and west of the Ohio in general terms; the act of 1798 is
more explicit in declaring
"That from the establishment of the said government, the people
of the aforesaid territory shall be entitled to and enjoy all and
singular the rights, privileges, and advantages granted by that
ordinance"
in as full and ample manner as they are enjoyed "by them." 1
Story 495.
Among these rights, &c., are that of trial by jury, the writ
of habeas corpus, judicial proceedings according to the course of
the common law, the protection of property, the inviolability of
contracts, and the right of admission into the Union on an equal
footing with the original states. 1 Laws U.S. 479. In addition to
which, the third article of the Louisiana Treaty stipulates
that
"The inhabitants of the ceded territory shall be incorporated in
the Union of the United States and admitted as soon as possible,
according to the principles of the federal Constitution, to the
enjoyment of all the rights, advantages, and immunities of citizens
of the United States, and in the meantime they shall be maintained
and protected in the free enjoyment of their liberty, property, and
the religion they profess."
This, then, was the condition of the disputed territory and its
inhabitants from the time the United States took possession and
governed it as a part of their territory. The right of sovereignty
and general propriety remained subject to pending negotiation; the
civil rights of the people, and their rights of property were
protected by various acts of Congress -- the Ordinance of 1787, the
Treaty of 1803, and the Constitution of the United States. The
local laws remained in force till altered, and the political rights
of the people were such as existed in all the other territories.
26 U. S. 1 Pet.
542. When these territories became states, the inhabitants thereof
became
Page 39 U. S. 375
citizens of those states, and as such entitled to all the rights
which citizens enjoyed in other states, and the subjects of Spain,
who owned or claimed property, had, by the twentieth article of the
treaty of 1795, the same right of suing for its recovery in the
courts of the United States as one of its citizens had.
34 U. S. 9 Pet.
234.
On this state of things, the treaty of 1819 had no influence; at
the time of its ratification, the whole disputed territory was
annexed to the contiguous states; the inhabitants were incorporated
in the Union, and were citizens of the United States, and the
respective states, in virtue of what this Court most truly
denominate acts of "sovereign power" exercised by them under the
Treaty of 1803 over a part of what the United States insisted and
Spain denied, was a part of Louisiana, claiming only to stand in
the place of the King, and, during negotiation, to exercise the
powers and rights which he had exercised till 1810; the United
States had never attempted by law to impair any right of private
property or to insert such stipulation into the treaty of 1819 (2
White's Rec. 498), but expressly disclaimed such intention and
admitted the validity of all fair grants. 2 White's Rec. 499,
&c.
Every public act of Congress from 1803 till 1813 which
authorized the President to take possession of Louisiana or to
establish therein a temporary government, and every law which
related to the subject, contained an express guarantee of property;
the same guarantee was also given by the President in 1810, when,
in virtue of the act of 1803, he took forcible and military
possession of the disputed territory. And Congress confirmed this
guarantee by their secret acts of 1811 and 1813, unless protection
to the inhabitants of the territory consisted in confiscating their
lands and depriving them of the property acquired under the
government and laws of Spain while she held possession with the
consent of the United States. Every act of the executive and
legislative branches of the government shows that the contest with
Spain was for the right of sovereignty over the territory and the
propriety in the vacant land therein, not for the right to what had
been granted according to the laws of Spain or which had otherwise
become private property.
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
735.
Claiming the territory between the Perdido and the Mississippi
by the Louisiana Treaty, the United States was bound by the express
terms of the second article, which included
"islands belonging to Louisiana, all public lots and squares,
vacant lands, and all public buildings, fortifications, barracks,
and other edifices, which are not private property."
32 U. S. 7 Pet.
87-88. No land which was not vacant (no land which was private
property) passed to the United States but was excepted from the
cession not only by the second article but by the guarantee by the
United States to the inhabitants in the third article of the free
enjoyment of their property until their admission into the Union.
From the pledge to maintain and protect this right the United
States never set up any absolution, or from the pledge to hold the
territory subject to future negotiation. What was considered as
vacant land by the Executive Department
Page 39 U. S. 376
in 1810 has been seen by the letter of the Secretary of State on
the same day as the proclamation of the President that land which
was to be thrown into the common stock with all the other vacant
land of the United States for the national uses of all the people
thereof -- land which remained as a part of the royal domain when
the United States took possession in virtue of the Treaty of 1803,
which was not private property.
This state of things as to government and property in the
disputed territory fully justified the view which the executive
department of the government took of this subject in 1832, which
was in perfect accordance with the proclamation of the President
twenty-two years before and with the course of the legislature from
1811 to 1819 in relation to the rights of private property in the
disputed territory held under grants of the Spanish authorities
before the United States took possession. It was by both
departments the most solemn recognition of the principle that a
contest between the two governments concerning territorial boundary
did not and should not impair individual rights of property and of
its practical operation on grants made by the government in
possession, and such recognition carried with it the most sacred
obligations to carry that principle out in all its consequences
independently of any stipulation in the treaty of 1819.
By the third article of the Louisiana Treaty, the United States
were bound to protect and maintain the inhabitants of the ceded
territory "in the free enjoyment" of their "property" until they
were incorporated into the Union, and when so incorporated to admit
them "to the enjoyment of all the rights, advantages, and
immunities of citizens of the United States." From the moment of
such incorporation, the Constitution of the United States and its
amendments interposed between the inhabitants and the legislative
power of the United States the same guarantee which any citizen of
any other state had a right to claim for the enjoyment of his
property, and every proprietor, alien, or citizen, had the same
constitutional right to invoke the protection of the judicial power
of the state or Union against the invasion of his rights of person
or property, wherever he might be located.
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
235.
That such incorporation was by acts "of sovereign power by the
United States" exerted by military operations expelling the
existing authority of Spain and compelling the inhabitants to
submit to that of the United States, so far from diminishing,
increases their constitutional and treaty obligation, for such
forced submission is in the nature of articles of capitulation, the
observance of which is enjoined by the laws and practice of all
civilized nations.
26 U. S. 1 Pet.
542. The proclamation of the President and the acts of Congress
declared the terms on which the United States established their
authority; the inhabitants submitted, and thereby became entitled
to the threefold protection of the Constitution, treaty, and law of
nations.
2 U. S. 2 Dall. 1,
&c.
Had Spain made a voluntary transfer of the allegiance of her
Page 39 U. S. 377
subjects in this part of Louisiana, as she did in the residue,
the duty of the United States could not have been doubted; it never
has been doubted by any department of the government or any member
of it as to every other portion of the territory ceded by the
Treaty of 1803, and the universal opinion of the people and
government has been that the rights acquired and the obligations
imposed by that treaty were throughout concomitant. Spain, indeed,
might deny the right of the United States west of the Perdido to
have become in any way strengthened by the annexation of that part
of Louisiana to the adjacent states by an act of war or mere
sovereign power, but when the United States undertook to construe
and execute the treaty in their own way, and as they did in
asserting their rights accruing by the cession, every rule and
principle of national honor, faith, and law would be violated if
they should deny their duty to comply with the terms of the treaty,
which alone gave them any right, or with the pledges which they
gave when they took possession in virtue of its stipulations.
It matters not by what right the United States held the disputed
territory at the time of its incorporation into the Union; had it
been done without the color of right or had East Florida been so
incorporated before the treaty of 1819, the consequences would have
been the same; by the very and sole act of such incorporation, the
inhabitants became citizens of the United States, their property
was protected, and alien proprietors became entitled to all rights
secured to them by any treaty between their sovereign and the
United States.
In addition to these considerations, the acts of Congress from
1803 till 1811, before the United States took forcible possession,
which, as the President declared in his proclamation in 1810, were
"so framed" as to apply to that territory whenever the contemplated
eventual possession by the United States should take place, secured
to the inhabitants every protection which those laws, the treaty,
and ordinance of 1787 could impart, and no subsequent law has
attempted to impair any right thus secured, denied its existence,
or asserted any right in the United States to lands which were
private property in 1810. A more clear and correct exposition of
the policy and course of the United States cannot be presented than
the following remarks of the Secretary of the Treasury in
presenting a plan for the final adjustment of all claims by Spanish
grants pursuant to resolutions of the Senate and House of
Representatives in 1818.
"In presenting a plan of final adjustment, in which no other
description of claims are comprehended than those which are founded
upon patents and concessions issued by the several governments
which have at different times exercised sovereign jurisdiction over
the late province of Louisiana, as held by France, the undersigned
. . . has proceeded upon the conviction that ample provision has
already been made for the adjustment of all claims to lands
contemplated by the resolution founded upon evidence inferior to
patents and concessions.
Page 39 U. S. 378
He has arrived at this conviction by a careful examination of
the several acts of Congress for ascertaining and adjusting land
titles in Louisiana which have been passed since 20 December, 1803,
the period at which possession was taken of that province by the
United States. This long series of acts, commencing with 26 March,
1804, and terminating with 29 April, 1816, presents an
uninterrupted and uniform course of relaxation in favor of land
claimants of every description. This relaxation has generally been
effected by comprehending descriptions of cases not recognized by
previous acts, by extending the time within which notices of claims
and production of evidence were required, and by giving authority
not only to decide upon such claims, but to revise and confirm such
as had been previously rejected. When it is considered that in all
these respects relaxations have been frequent, and that the
evidence upon which the claims have in the first instance, and in
each successive revision been decided, has in most cases been that
alone which has been produced by the party in interest, it is
extremely improbable that injustice has been done by the rejection
of claims which ought to have been confirmed."
"Considering, then, that the titles to lands in the State of
Louisiana west of the east boundary of the island of New Orleans,
so far as they are derived from or dependent upon any act of
Congress, are correctly and finally settled, nothing more is
necessary than to prescribe a rule by which the validity of titles
not dependent upon the acts of Congress may be promptly and legally
determined,"
&c. 3 state Pap. Public Lands 393.
The Secretary then presented a bill providing for the final
adjustment of claims to lands throughout the whole extent of
Louisiana, including those in the disputed territory, but it was
not enacted into a law; Congress however continued to act as they
had before done, in a spirit of unceasing liberality toward
claimants, each successive law relaxing from the strictness of
former ones.
This is apparent from an inspection of the various acts of
Congress from 1805 in relation generally to claims to land in
Louisiana; as the principles of this case require a reference only
to those laws which relate to the territory between the Perdido and
the Mississippi, the others need not be noticed any further than in
the preceding general review by the Secretary of the Treasury and
the following declaration made by this Court in 1827 in reference
to the legislation of Congress, which is quoted in the opinion in
the present case, that
"the United States has never, so far as we can discover,
distinguished between the concessions of land made by the Spanish
authorities within the disputed territory, whilst Spain was in the
actual occupation of it, from concessions of a similar character
made by Spain within the acknowledged limits."
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 600-601.
This declaration will be found to be fully justified by a
reference to all the acts of Congress in relation not only to their
whole territory acquired by the Treaty of 1803, but to that which
was acquired
Page 39 U. S. 379
by the compact or treaty of cession between Georgia and the
United States in 1802. By this compact, Georgia ceded to the United
States the right of soil and jurisdiction to all the territory
within her chartered boundaries which was situated west of the
Chatahouchee on certain conditions, one of which was that all
grants of land made by the British or Spanish governments before 25
October, 1795, should be confirmed, to carry which into effect
various laws were passed in 1803, 1804, and 1805. 2 Story 894, 952,
966. These acts related to the territory north of 31� of
latitude which had been the subject of controversy between the
governments of Florida while under Great Britain and Georgia within
which the Governor of West Florida had made grants before the
cession to Spain by the treaty of peace in 1783, within which Spain
made grants from that time till 1797, when she gave up possession
to the United States, and within which Georgia had also made grants
up to the Mississippi. It was therefore in the strictest sense
disputed territory, claimed by the three parties -- the United
States, Spain, and Georgia -- at the date of the grants. The laws
relating to the adjustment of titles to land therein, necessarily
referred to grants made by a government
de facto, which
the United States denied was a government
de jure, and the
laws, being on a kindred subject, would of course be analogous in
their provisions and receive the same construction as those which
related to the territory which was in dispute between the United
States and Spain from 1804 till 1821.
In examining the provisions of all the laws for adjusting the
claims to lands in Louisiana and Florida, they will be found to be
patterned from those in relation to the compact with Georgia, and
as will be seen hereafter, have been construed alike by this Court.
The first law which related exclusively to claims to land west of
the Perdido was passed in 1812; the previous laws applied generally
to Louisiana as ceded by the treaty, making no distinction between
that part which was disputed and that which was in the possession
of the United States as surrendered in 1803. But as the practical
operation of the laws of the United States depended on the
President in his execution of the authority conferred on him by the
Act of 1803, 2 Story 907, it is evident that these laws could not
be carried into effect by establishing land offices and organizing
boards of commissioners to adjust claims to land within that part
of the territory, which was at the time occupied and governed by
Spain. No government can exercise legislative powers within the
territory actually in the possession of another sovereign; this can
be done only when such possession is displaced by force or
surrendered by treaty or otherwise; hence it appears that no
provision was made for the adjustment of claims to lands west of
the Perdido till by the President's proclamation, the resolution
and acts of Congress, the United States had obtained possession of
the greater part of West Florida. Then the act of 1812 provided for
the appointment of commissioners, with the powers conferred by
former laws; directed all
Page 39 U. S. 380
claimants to lands in the disputed territory to deliver notice
and evidence of their claims within a limited time and to state the
written evidence thereof, whether the claims arose under the
British, French, or Spanish governments, together with the nature
and extent thereof, &c., provided that where the claim is by a
complete grant, it shall not be necessary to have any other
evidence entered than the original grant, order of survey, and plot
of the land. On failure to deliver notice of the claim as required
by law, the claim shall never after be confirmed or recognized by
the United States or any written evidence thereof which shall not
be recorded, ever after be admitted in evidence in any court of the
United States, against any grant which may thereafter be made by
the United States. 2 Story 1235. The commissioners are empowered to
inquire into the justice and validity of all claims filed with
them, and it is made their duty to ascertain whether the land
claimed has been inhabited and cultivated, when it commenced, when
it was surveyed, by whom, on what authority, and every matter which
may affect the justice and validity of the claim; to arrange the
claims into classes, according to their respective merits, and to
make a report thereon for the final action of Congress. 2 Story
1235. By the act of 1814, the commissioners were directed to
receive evidence in support of any claims not embraced in the
former law. 2 Story 1427. Pursuant to these laws, reports were made
by the commissioners classifying the claims thus:
1. Claims founded on complete British, French, or Spanish
grants, which in their opinion are valid, agreeably to the laws,
usages, and customs of such governments, in all four hundred and
thirty claims.
2. Claims founded on orders of survey (requette), permission to
settle, or other written evidence of claim derived from either
government, which ought to be confirmed, in all four hundred and
twenty-six claims.
3. Claims founded on complete grants said to be derived under
such governments which, in the opinion of the commissioners, are
not valid, in all fifty-eight claims.
4. Claims founded on orders of survey &c., which ought not
to be confirmed, in all two hundred and ninety-eight.
5. Claims of actual settlers not derived from either government,
in all one thousand four hundred and twenty.
Vide Reports
of Commissioners, 3 State Papers, Public Lands, 6, 7, 5, 38-48, 13,
58, 59, 66, 67-76, 254-268.
The reasons for rejecting the third and fourth classes of claims
are founded on the fourteenth section of the act of 1804; that they
were made after the cession by France to the United States; that
the grants were unusually large, and made after Spain had ceased to
have any right or interest in the soil, but it is added,
"Admitting the claim of the United States to the country above
mentioned to be unquestionable (and I see no reason to doubt it),
the question then arises how far the possession of that country by
the Spanish government, after the right of the United States
accrued, ought to
Page 39 U. S. 381
affect those claims which were granted by the former government
during the time which intervened between the purchase and the time
when possession was taken by the United States? If the United
States had taken possession of West Florida at the same time that
they did of Louisiana west of the Mississippi, many serious
injuries to individuals might have been prevented. As this was not
the case, it becomes an inquiry of interest and importance whether
the government is not morally bound, both by considerations of
equity and policy, to make them a compensation commensurate to the
injuries they may have sustained. This could be done by making them
donations of any quantity of land which the government may deem
just, particularly that class of claimants who have improved and
cultivated their lands. They are not numerous, and with few
exceptions their claims are moderate. It may not be impertinent
also to remark that, generally speaking, they were such persons as
were most liable to be deceived by the Spanish officers."
"In relation to that class of claimants who have not inhabited
or cultivated their lands, which is generally the case with those
who hold large claims, it appears to the commissioner that the
government of the United States is not legally bound to confirm
them. Nevertheless, from a variety of considerations which will
doubtless enter into the decision of this question, the government
may deem it politic either to confirm their claims to a certain
extent or in some other way to effect a compromise with them. Their
unlimited confirmation would, in the opinion of your commissioner,
seriously injure many individuals, some of whom probably resided on
the lands before they were surveyed for the patentees."
3 State Papers, Pub.Lands 66.
The reasons for adjudging the claims of the first class to be
valid are that they
"comprehend patents derived from the British and Spanish
governments at a time when they possessed and exercised the
undisputed sovereignty of the soil, and they ought, in the opinion
of the undersigned commissioner, to be confirmed by the United
States."
3 State Papers, Pub.Lands 66.
That he alluded to the sovereignty
de facto is evident,
for the list of cases under this class is that in which there
appear eighty-six cases of grants made by Spain after the date of
the Louisiana Treaty, on twenty-seven of which no settlements were
made till after 20 December, 1803. This is the more apparent in the
reasons for confirming the claims of the second class under
incomplete titles.
"Those made by Miro, &c., were originated by the Spanish
authorities prior to the purchase of Louisiana by the United
States, and agreeably to the laws, usages, and customs of the then
existing government, would have been completed by the same power
that made them."
3 State Papers, Pub.Lands 66.
In relation to the claims issued by Morales subsequently to the
aforesaid "purchase," &c., he observes that
"Although in his estimation they do not occupy the same grade
with those of the first class,
Page 39 U. S. 382
yet he conceives it just and equitable that they should be
confirmed. This opinion is not predicated upon the validity of
their orders of survey, but simply upon the fact that they occupied
and cultivated their lands and complied with all the requisitions
of the government which at that time exercised ownership over the
soil. By reference to the register it will be seen that some of the
last mentioned claims exceed in quantity the ordinary donations
made by the Spanish government prior to the purchase of Louisiana
by the United States. When this is the case, it is believed the
government of the United States may limit its confirmation to any
extent which it may be deemed just, both in regard to the number of
arpents in each tract, and the number of tracts claimed by the same
person."
In this class of incomplete titles there are two hundred and
sixty claims by orders of survey, &c., made after the Treaty of
1803, on few of which settlements were made till after 20 December,
1803.
These reports were transmitted according to law and laid before
Congress in 1816. 3 State Pap. 6. In April, 1818, the Senate and
House of Representatives instructed the Secretary of the Treasury
to report a plan for the final adjustment and settlement of these
claims, which he submitted in December following, accompanied with
the draft of a bill enacted 3 March, 1819, and classing the claims
as follows:
1. Claims founded on complete grants from the Spanish
government, which are in the opinion of the commissioners valid and
agreeable to the laws, usages, and customs of the said government.
The first section declares that
"They be and the same are hereby recognized as valid and
complete titles against any claim on the part of the United States
or right derived from the United States."
And certain claims under British grants are so recognized. 3
Story 1748.
2. Claims founded on orders of survey, permission to settle,
requette, or any written evidence of claim derived from Spain
before 20 December, 1803, and the land cultivated, &c., before
that day, which in the opinion of the commissioners ought to be
confirmed. The second section declares that they "shall be
confirmed in the same manner as if the title had been completed." 3
Story 1748. Burchard 316.
3. All other claims comprised in the reports of the
commissioners and which ought in their opinion to be confirmed,
"the claimant shall be entitled to a donation not exceeding one
thousand two hundred and eighty acres," &c.
4. All persons embraced in the reports who have no written
evidence of claim and had settled the land claimed before 15 April,
1813, "shall be entitled to the same as a donation," not exceeding
six hundred and forty acres.
5. Every person in the list of actual settlers who has no
written evidence of title and on 12 April, 1814, had inhabited or
cultivated a tract of land "shall be entitled to a preference on
becoming a purchaser."
Page 39 U. S. 383
Time for filing claims is extended, and provision is made for a
revision of claims which had not been recommended for confirmation.
Under the provisions of the act of 1819, the commissioners reported
numerous other claims for confirmation, comprising all classes,
vide 3 State Papers, Pub.Lands 436, 442, 447-451,
including lots in the Town of Mobile, which reports were acted on
by Congress by the Act of 8 May, 1822, as to the lots in Mobile, 3
Story 1860, and as to lands by an act of the same date, 3 Story
1867.
In both these acts, the claims are classed as in the act of
1819; complete grants are recognized as valid, &c., incomplete
grants are confirmed, &c., and donations made to settlers,
&c., as was done by that act, and the last recognizes the laws,
usages, and customs of Spain as the test of a grant's being
complete to vest the title.
Both the acts of 1819 and 1822, being founded on the reports of
the commissioners in 1816 and 1820, must be taken with reference
thereto, and recognizing the claims therein reported as valid, to
be complete titles by their intrinsic effect. In the report of
1816, the commissioner says those claims of the first class,
"being founded on complete grants of former governments, we
think are good in themselves on general principles, and therefore
require no confirmation by the government of the United States to
give them validity"
3 State Papers 267, and in that of 1820 that
"they are certainly entitled to unqualified confirmation, 3
State Papers 441, and in relation to surveys on incomplete grants,
the same rule is adopted in relation to those laws, customs, and
usages."
Section fourth directs the register and receiver, &c.,
except in relation to perfect titles as recognized in the first
section of the acts of 1819 and 1822, shall have power to direct
the manner in which all lands claimed thereby shall be surveyed and
located, having regard to the laws, usages, and customs of the
Spanish government on that subject, and also to the mode adopted by
the United States. 3 Story 1868. Burchard 352. 4 Story 2168.
Subsequent laws extended the time for filing claims, and various
reports continued to be made and laid before Congress; these laws
were more liberal in their provisions than former ones, in
accordance with the general policy of Congress, and more especially
on account of a strong remonstrance by the Legislature of Louisiana
on the subject.
Vide 3 State Papers 430. 432.
Vide
also 3 Story 1907, 1909, 1968, 2009, 2017. Burchard 312, 394,
404.
By the act of 1832, provision was made for the adjustment of all
claims filed by 1 July, 1833; the sales of land in the disputed
territory were suspended for one year, and where claims were
unconfirmed but were embraced within the provisions of previous
laws, and the land had been sold by the United States, the owners
were entitled to receive the purchase money for which the land was
sold at public sale. 4 Story 2303.
Pursuant to this act, reports were made and confirmed by the act
of 1835, 4 Story 2419, and decisions in favor of land claimants
Page 39 U. S. 384
pursuant to the act of 1835, were confirmed by the act of 1836.
4 Story 2514.
From this review of the course of the executive branch of the
government in 1810 and the decisive opinion expressed in 1832 as to
the title to land in the disputed territory being valid in the view
of the United States and Spain during the negotiations which
preceded the treaty of 1819, and from the whole legislation of
Congress from 1803 till 1836, there can remain no ground for
mistaking their mutual understanding of the effect of the Treaty of
1803 in its obligation on the United States to protect the private
property of individuals in the disputed territory. In this respect.
the treaty of 1819 was not taken into consideration, for the United
States was bound by every guarantee which a government could give
to the people, as strongly as any new treaty would bind them; but a
new treaty was necessary to disencumber the disputed territory from
the pledges under which the United States took and held possession
from 1810.
To this state of the disputed territory, as developed in the
preceding review in relation to its government and the rights of
private property during an adversary claim by Spain and the United
States, and pending negotiations for seventeen years, the final
treaty must be referred in order to ascertain its bearing on this
case.
The subjects of controversy were the east and west boundary of
Louisiana according to the cession by Spain to France in 1800 and
by France to the United States in 1803. The objects of the treaty
were 1. to define the west boundary, 2. to procure a cession of
East Florida to the United States, 3. to settle the controversy as
to the east boundary by a general cession and relinquishment of all
the claims and pretensions of Spain east of the Mississippi, and 4.
to stipulate the terms and conditions on which all past
controversies should be terminated and the cession made.
The title of the treaty shows its nature: "A Treaty of Amity,
Settlement, and Limits;" its declared objects, and the intention of
the parties are "the adjustment of all differences," "to finally
settle, determine, and adjust all differences and pretensions by a
treaty," "the restoration and permanent establishment of mutual and
sincere friendship, to consolidate, confirm, and forever maintain,
the good correspondence which happily prevails, and with the most
earnest desire of conciliation, and with the object of putting an
end to all the differences which have existed between them."
Vide the preamble to the treaty and the seventh
article.
"Art. 1. There shall be a firm and inviolable peace and sincere
friendship between the United States and their citizens, and his
Catholic Majesty, his successors, and subjects, without exception
of persons or places."
"Art. 2. His Catholic Majesty cedes to the United States, all
the territories which belong to him east of the Mississippi, known
by the name of 'East and West Florida,' . . . and all vacant lands
which are not private property. "
Page 39 U. S. 385
Art. 3. The first clause fixes the west boundary of Louisiana at
the Sabine, &c. By the second clause, his Catholic Majesty
"cedes to the United States all his rights, claims, and pretensions
to any territory east of said line," and forever renounced
them.
Art. 8. Stipulates for the confirmation and ratification of
"all the grants of land made before 24 January, 1818, by his
Catholic Majesty or his lawful authorities in the said territories
ceded by his Catholic Majesty to the United States,"
&c.
It is not necessary to take any further notice of the other
parts of this treaty or give any detail of its provisions; it
suffices for all the purposes of this case to consider it as having
effected all its declared objects according to the declared
intention of the parties without exception of persons or places. So
both governments have ever considered it, and the once disputed
territory has been peaceably held by the United States according to
the terms of its stipulations, and not by the mere force of the
Louisiana Treaty or "the acts of sovereign power" exercised by the
United States previous to the ratification. The political
departments of the government have uniformly recognized its
application to the disputed territory as a cession and renunciation
by Spain of all her claims and pretensions, and thereby putting a
final end to all existing differences and disputes concerning
boundary under the treaties of 1800 and 1803. This Court has also
so considered it by declaring in 1827 that "the United States have
since obtained the Floridas by purchase and cession from Spain,"
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 600, and in the first sentence of their opinion in
Garcia v. Lee repeating this declaration in language which
cannot be misapprehended or misapplied, and is in these words:
"The land is situated in the State of Louisiana and in the
territory lying north of the Iberville and between the Perdido and
the Mississippi, which was so long a subject of controversy between
the United States and Spain and which was finally settled by the
cession of the Floridas to the United States by the Treaty of
February 22, 1819."
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 515.
On this point, then, there is a perfect union of opinion by all
the departments of the government that this treaty applied to the
disputed territory; that it finally settled all former
controversies concerning it, and that it was done by a cession by
Spain, and a purchase by the United States.
These propositions are perfectly consistent with the assertion
by the United States of their original right to this territory
under the former treaties; they have bought their peace; Spain has
ceded her claims and pretensions; though neither party has
acknowledged the original right of the other,
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
310, yet both agree that for the future, it belongs to the United
States in full sovereignty and propriety, as it was claimed by
Spain. If, indeed, any doubt could be raised on the terms of the
treaty, the interest of the United States requires that they should
be construed so as to effect the objects declared, for if the
cession and purchase do not include the disputed territory, the
United States still hold it subject to future
Page 39 U. S. 386
negotiation, according to the declaration of the President in
1810 and Congress in 1811. It has not and cannot be asserted with
truth that there is yet subsisting a controversy between Spain and
the United States on this subject, nor can there be a suggestion of
any act of cession, relinquishment by Spain, or any recognition of
the right of the United States unless it is found in the treaty of
1819, or any release of the pledge under which possession was taken
by force unless by the operation of its stipulations upon the
territory thus seized, and further, if the confirmation of grants
by the eighth article, does not extend to those made for lands west
of the Perdido, the clause which annuls those made after 1818, and
the grant to Vargas, is equally inapplicable to defeat them, and if
there is any part of East or West Florida to which the treaty does
not apply or any exception of persons or places within either is
made by any construction of any part of the treaty, it is an
express contradiction of the first article, which negatives all
exceptions. The treaty must then be taken as the court has declared
it, or all its stipulations must be confined to East Florida and
that part of West Florida which lies east of the Perdido, leaving
all controversies before subsisting in full force as to territory
west of that river.
The nature and character of this treaty forbid an interpretation
which would make it a violation of the honor and faith of the
United States, so often pledged, and jeopard their interest by
considering the disputed territory to yet be in their hands,
subject to future negotiation, a conclusion from which there is no
escape if the negotiation which ended by the ratification of the
treaty in 1821 did not settle all controversies. By referring to
the terms of the ratification, there can be no doubt of the
declared meaning of the King of Spain and the treatymaking power of
the United States, as well as to what was ceded to the United
States, as the effect and force of the treaty when ratified, and
the ratifications exchanged. In the act of the King, it is
important to observe that he declares the cession to be made by the
second and third articles, the bearing of which on the eighth
article will be seen to have a most conclusive effect when the case
of
Foster and Elam v. Neilson comes under review. The King
says:
"Whereas, on 22 February, 1819, a treaty was concluded . . .
consisting of sixteen articles which had for their object the
arrangement of differences and of limits between both governments
and their respective territories, which are of the following form
and literal tenor."
Here follows the treaty.
"Therefore, having seen and examined the sixteen articles
aforesaid and having first obtained the consent and authority of
the general Cortes of the nation with respect to the cession
mentioned and stipulated in the second and third articles, I
approve and ratify all and everyone of the articles referred to,
and the clauses which are contained in them, . . . promising on the
faith and word of a King to execute and observe them and to cause
them to be executed and observed entirely as if I myself had signed
them. . . . "
Page 39 U. S. 387
In pursuance of the advice and consent of the Senate, the
President declared:
"I, . . . having seen and considered the treaty above recited,
together with the ratification of his Catholic Majesty thereof, do
. . . by these presents accept, ratify, and confirm the said treaty
and every clause and article thereof as the same are herein set
forth,"
and after the exchange of ratifications, declared:
"Now therefore, to the end that the said treaty may be observed
and performed with good faith on the part of the United States, . .
. I do hereby enjoin and require all persons bearing office . . .
and all others within the United States faithfully to observe and
fulfill the said treaty and every clause and article thereof."
6 Laws U.States 628, 631.
I cannot deem it necessary to reason on language like this, used
in an act so solemn, by which two nations closed an inveterate
controversy which had subsisted for seventeen years on terms
satisfactory to both in order to show what they intended as a
mutual object, or whether they effected what they intended. An
inspection of the treaty from its title to the ratification affords
more conclusive evidence of its intention and effect than human
ingenuity or reasoning can elicit by a commentary or any effort to
illustrate its provisions. It is what it purports, an amicable
settlement of all past differences, without exception of persons or
places, by a cession by one party of its rights to sovereignty and
the vacant land in the whole territory east of the Sabine River,
which is not private property; what is private property is excepted
from the cession by the terms of the second and third articles, and
one of the conditions of the cession is the confirmation and
ratification of all grants made before ascertain time for lands in
the ceded territories excepting three. Compensation is made for
mutual claims; all past complaints are redressed, and the United
States holds the disputed territory freed from all past pledges by
the consent of Spain, and the stipulated confirmation of grants
made by the King or his lawful authorities saves his honor and
faith pledged to the grantees. Peculiar force is to be given to
this stipulation in the eighth article when it is considered that
two full years elapsed between the signature and final ratification
of the treaty and that the sole cause of the delay arose from those
grants, one of which was for land west of the Perdido.
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
312. Those having been annulled by the King were excepted from
confirmation, leaving all other fair grants within the stipulations
of the eighth article according to the declared intention of both
negotiators of the treaty, of the parties thereto, and its true
construction. Another decisive consideration of the effect of this
treaty is presented by taking it in connection with the Treaty of
1803 and the various acts of the political departments of this
government before referred to; it applied to a territory which
formed part of the states of this Union, and to its inhabitants,
and other proprietors of land, who hold their property by the most
sacred guarantee, and were already in the full fruition of
Page 39 U. S. 388
all the rights of citizens of the United States, and the states
to which the territory had been annexed.
It must be remembered that as the United States claimed the
territory west of the Perdido in virtue of the Treaty of 1803, they
must hold it subject to its obligations and the terms of the
cession, and that by first governing it as a portion of the
Territory of the United States and afterwards annexing it to the
adjacent states, the rights of property were protected by the
ordinance of 1787, the constitution of the states, and of the
United States. No new guarantee was given to the grantees of Spain
in the disputed territory by the treaty of 1819, but it was a
renewal of all former pledges of the United States by the Treaty of
1803, their acts, and the Constitution, to neither of which Spain
was a party, but as Spain would neither cede nor abandon her claim
without a renewed pledge of nation to nation in the most solemn of
all international acts, the pledge was renewed both to the King,
his subjects, and grantees, which was additional to all the
previous promises and obligations of the United States to protect
property, fairly and lawfully acquired, and maintain its free
enjoyment.
There is another view in which the treaty of 1819 must be
considered in order to give it its constitutional and intended
effect by operating directly on all the subjects to which it
relates, where no future act is stipulated to be done by either
party or the thing stipulated is in its nature to be performed in
future, as the incorporation of the territory and its inhabitants
into the Union, which is necessarily a prospective act. But the
cession by the King and the confirmation of grants must be taken to
be acts done and perfected by force of the treaty itself, and by
the terms of the ratification by both parties, for it is difficult
to conceive how every article and clause of the treaty can be
ratified and confirmed "by these presents," or how it can be
observed and performed by civil officers and others if any future
act of legislation is necessary to give it validity or effect by
the King as to the cession or by the United States as to the clause
of confirmation. If the question was new, it would seem to be
settled by the Constitution, for if a treaty made under its
authority is a supreme law of the land, it would be a bold
proposition that an act of Congress must be first passed in order
to give it effect as such, and equally bold to assert, as the
American view of the faith of treaties by the law of nations, that
its stipulations may be performed or not at the discretion of
Congress. If, on the principles of the law of nations or national
faith, one treaty should be held more sacred than another, that of
1819 stands in bold relief as a settlement of past controversies,
on mutual considerations and stipulations, so dependent on each
other, that the nonperformance by either party of any part would
necessarily defeat the whole object and effect of the treaty and
renew old disputes. Thus, if the disputed territory and its
inhabitants and proprietors "are excepted places" and "persons,"
then there has been no cession to the United States by the King and
no confirmation
Page 39 U. S. 389
of his grants stipulated for by the treaty; both nations stand
towards each other on their original right, and the rights of
individuals to property remain as if no treaty had been made, and
negotiation still continued, whereas if the territory west of the
Perdido is ceded by the treaty, every clause has full effect.
There is a most marked distinction between the two treaties in
one respect: by that of 1803, there was an out and out purchase of
territory, to which the United States had no claim or pretension;
both parties dealt at arms' length; there was nothing to
compromise, no previous differences to settle; the subject of the
cession was a province owned by France, in the plenitude of
sovereignty, in propriety and dominion, in her actual possession as
a government
de facto and
de jure, which she
ceded to the United States for a specified money consideration.
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
303.
Another distinction is equally marked and prominent. In the
Louisiana Treaty, there is no stipulation by the United States for
the confirmation of grants of any description previously made by
France or Spain, or any other security promised for private
property, than the terms of the cession by the second article
imply, by ceding "vacant lands, . . . which are not private
property," and the stipulation in the third article, to incorporate
the inhabitants in the Union as soon as possible, &c., and
admitted to the enjoyment of the rights of citizens of the United
States, and in the meantime be protected and maintained in the free
enjoyment of their property 1 Laws of the United States 136. The
reason of this distinction is obvious.
Though the Treaty of 1803 made no provision for a change of
government, it was in the first instance to be temporary and
territorial, under the sole power of Congress, in virtue of the
third section, Fourth Article of the Constitution, and afterwards a
state government, subject only to the same powers which Congress
could exercise in the old states.
26 U. S. 1 Pet.
542;
34 U. S. 9 Pet.
234-236.
No change of government was contemplated or could be made by the
treaty of 1819 except as to the territory east of the State of
Alabama, as all westward to the Mississippi then formed a part of
three states, and the incorporation thereof and the inhabitants
into the Union was completely effected (in virtue of the Treaty of
1803) two years before the ratification of the Florida treaty.
Vide 27 U. S. 2 Pet.
308-309,
27 U. S.
311-312. Hence arose the difference between the
corresponding articles of the two treaties; that of 1819, in the
sixth article, stipulating only for the incorporation of the
inhabitants, &c., and their admission to the rights, &c.,
of citizens of the United States; omitting any stipulation as to
property save by the eighth article, which was coextensive with the
whole ceded territory east of the Mississippi, and superseded the
necessity of any further stipulation to protect property, and the
Constitution placed the government of the territory east of the
Perdido in Congress, under the general powers conferred by the
third section of the fourth article.
From the course of the political departments of the
government
Page 39 U. S. 390
I now proceed to that of the judicial department on this and
kindred subjects.
1. As to the Treaty of 1803, its construction, and effect on
private property in Louisiana.
2. The decisions of this Court on claims to land east of the
Perdido, under the treaty of 1819.
3. Decisions on claims to land in disputed territory under that
and previous treaties.
4. The decisions on articles of capitulation, and treaties
between the United States and foreign powers.
5. The decisions on compacts of boundary between state and
state, and states with the United States.
6. How far questions of titles to land in a disputed territory
are judicial.
On this as on the former branch of the subject, my object is to
show
1. A perfect coincidence of opinion between all the departments
of the government, on the subject of Spanish titles under the two
treaties.
2. That if my opinion is at variance with that of this Court in
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 515, it arises from my entire concurrence with their
declaration in that case that the treaty of 1819 finally settled
the long subsisting controversy between the United States and Spain
about the territory between the Perdido and the Mississippi.
3. That every principle of the case of
Foster
and Elam v. Neilson in
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
299,
27 U. S. 317
adverse to grants in the disputed territory has been since
overruled.
4. That the principles of that case, which stand affirmed in all
subsequent cases, give full validity to such grants.
5. That the case of
Poole v. Fleeger has no bearing on
the treaty of 1819, and
6. That any decision of this Court adverse to such grant,
founded solely on the supposed authority of those two cases and at
variance with a uniform course of adjudication before and after,
may be deemed worthy of reconsideration.
1. In
Soulard v. United States, this Court declared
that the United States, as a just nation, regarded the stipulation
of the third article of the Louisiana Treaty for the protection of
the property of the inhabitants "as the avowal of a principle which
would have been held equally sacred though it had not been inserted
in the contract."
29 U. S. 4 Pet.
515,
35 U. S. 10
Pet. 330.
"That the term
property,' as applied to lands, comprehends
every species of title, inchoate or complete;" those rights which
lie in contract, executory or executed. "In this respect the
relation of the inhabitants to their government is not changed. The
new government takes the place of that which has passed away."
29 U. S. 4 Pet.
512.
"This is the sentiment by which the government of the United
States is animated, and which it has infused into its legislation."
29 U. S. 4 Pet.
512.
In alluding to this stipulation, the Court said in
Delassus
v. United States "that the perfect inviolability of property
among these rights all will assert and maintain."
"The right of property then is protected and secure by this
Page 39 U. S. 391
treaty, and no principle is better settled in this country than
that an inchoate title to lands is property."
34 U. S. 9 Pet.
133.
"Independent of treaty stipulation, this right would be held
sacred."
"The language of the treaty excludes every idea of interfering
with private property, of transferring lands which had been severed
from the royal domain. The people change their sovereign. Their
right to property remains unaffected by the change."
34 U. S. 9 Pet.
133.
In
City of New Orleans v. De Armas, it was held that a
patent from the United States pursuant to an act of Congress could
not
"operate to destroy any previous existing title, vested under
the preexisting government, as a principle applicable to every
grant that it cannot affect preexisting titles."
34 U. S. 9 Pet.
236.
In
United States v. Smith it is laid down as a settled
principle by the Court that if the King had by his own or the acts
of his lawful authorities become a trustee for the claimant of
lands, it amounted to the severance thereof from the royal domains,
35 U. S. 10
Pet. 331, and that the United States has put itself in the place of
Spain.
35 U. S. 10
Pet. 335.
In
New Orleans v. United States, the effect of the
Louisiana Treaty was most fully and ably considered by the Court in
an unanimous opinion. The property in controversy was the quay in
front of the city, which was claimed by the city by a dedication
thereof to its use by France and by Spain. The United States
claimed it as part of the royal domain, and as such ceded to them
by the treaty, on which the Court thus spoke:
"If the common in contest, under the Spanish Crown formed a part
of the public domain or the Crown lands, and the King had power to
alien it as other lands, there can be no doubt that it passed under
the treaty to the United States, and it has a right to dispose of
it the same as other public lands. But if the King of Spain held
the land in trust for the use of the city, or only possessed a
limited jurisdiction over it, principally if not exclusively for
police purposes, was the right passed to the United States under
the treaty?"
35 U. S. 10
Pet. 736.
This question is answered in the decision of the Court "that, in
its opinion, neither the fee of the land in controversy nor the
right to regulate its use is vested in the United States."
35 U. S. 10
Pet. 737.
2. As this opinion can neither require or receive any weight by
any remarks of mine, I now proceed to notice the adjudications of
this Court in cases arising under the Florida treaty in relation to
the territory east of the Perdido, including East Florida.
The first was
American Insurance Company v. Canter, in
which the opinion of the Court is too important to be referred to
otherwise than in its words:
"The course which the argument has taken will require that in
deciding this question, the Court should take into view the
relation in which Florida stands to the United States."
26 U. S. 1 Pet.
542.
"The Constitution confers absolutely on the government of
the
Page 39 U. S. 392
Union the powers of making war and of making treaties;
consequently that government possesses the power of acquiring
territory either by conquest or by treaty."
"The usage of the world is, if a nation be not entirely subdued,
to consider the holding of conquered territory as a mere military
occupation until its fate shall be determined at the treaty of
peace. If it be ceded by the treaty, the acquisition is confirmed
and the ceded territory becomes a part of the nation to which it is
annexed, either on the terms stipulated in the treaty of cession or
on such as its new master shall impose. On such transfer of
territory, it has never been held that the relations of the
inhabitants with each other undergo any change. Their relations
with their former sovereign are dissolved, and new relations are
created between them and the government which has acquired their
territory. The same act which transfers their country transfers the
allegiance of those who remain in it, and the law, which may be
denominated political, is necessarily changed, although that which
regulates the intercourse and general conduct of individuals
remains in force until altered by the newly created power of the
state."
"On 2 February, 1819, Spain ceded Florida to the United States.
The sixth article of the treaty of cession contains the following
provision:"
"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, and admitted to the
enjoyment of the privileges, rights, and immunities of the citizens
of the United States."
"This treaty is the law of the land, and admits the inhabitants
of Florida to the enjoyment of the privileges, rights, and
immunities of the citizens of the United States. It is unnecessary
to inquire whether this is not their condition independent of
stipulation. They do not, however, participate in political power
-- they do not share in the government till Florida shall become a
state. In the meantime, Florida continues to be territory of the
United States, governed by virtue of that clause of the
Constitution which empowers Congress to make all needful
regulations respecting the territory or other property belonging to
the United States."
"It has been already stated that all the laws which were in
force in Florida while a province of Spain, those excepted which
were political in their character, which concerned the relations
between the people and their sovereign, remained in force until
altered by the government of the United States. Congress recognizes
this principle by using the words 'laws of the territory now in
force therein.' No laws could then be in force but those enacted by
the Spanish government."
Id., 27 U. S.
544.
These principles apply to all parts of Florida, as ceded by
Spain under either treaty, and to the disputed territory, as well
as other parts of either cession; the local laws in force at the
time the treaties respectively took effect were the rules of
property and right
Page 39 U. S. 393
under both, and if the treaty of 1819 was the law of the land in
1828, and under the sixth article, the effect of the stipulations
was to admit the inhabitants to the enjoyment of the rights,
&c., which were promised, by its own force, operating
in
praesenti upon the subject, ingenuity will be pushed to its
utmost stretch to give a different effect to the eighth article. As
the words of the Court admit of no exception or qualification, that
article must operate in like manner to ratify and confirm all the
grants to which it relates, in all parts of the ceded territories,
whether within the states to which it had been annexed or that
which was east of the Perdido.
The principles of this opinion also apply with full force to the
law of nations, as it bears on the relations between the United
States and the people and proprietors of the disputed territory
consequent upon the Treaty of 1803, the military occupation in
virtue of the right of the United States, by that cession, from
1810 to 1821; as a conquest by the right of war, or as a new
acquisition by the cession of Spain in 1821, subject to the
stipulation it contained. Take it in any way, the law of nations
protected all rights of property, from whatever power those rights
arose, and it is not a little remarkable that every principle of
this case was overlooked at the next term, and this treaty declared
not to be the law of the land.
Next came the case of
Foster and Elam v. Neilson, in
1829, wherein the majority of the Court, against the opinion of the
Chief Justice and Justice _____, held that in relation to the
grants referred to in the eighth article of the treaty, it was only
a contract on the part of the United States to ratify and confirm
them by an act of Congress, which was necessary to execute that
part of the treaty, the opinion of the Court taking no notice of
the law or usage of nations or of any former decisions. But the
Court was unanimous in its opinion that if the eighth article had
declared that all grants, &c., shall be valid to the same
extent as if the ceded territories had remained under the dominion
of the King, or
"that these grants are hereby confirmed, the treaty would have
acted directly on the subject, and would have repealed those acts
of Congress which were repugnant to it."
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
314. That if the second article had omitted the words "which belong
to him," the
"United States, by accepting the cession, might have sanctioned
the right to make the cession, and have been bound to consider the
eighth article as coextensive with the second. The stipulation of
the eighth article might have been construed to be an admission
that West Florida, to its full extent, was ceded by this
treaty."
Id., 27 U. S.
311.
"That if the ratification by the King was an exception to the
stipulation of the eighth article for confirming grants, the
excepted grants would have been withdrawn from the eighth article
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."
Id., 27 U. S.
313.
It is evident therefore that so far as this case depended on the
construction of the treaty, it turned on three positions: 1.
whether the
Page 39 U. S. 394
second article ceded the whole Territory of West Florida; 2.
whether the words of the eighth article operated directly on the
grants, so as to confirm them by its own force; 3. whether the
ratification by the King operated as an exception to the eighth
article by excluding the three grants. Now had the Court noticed
the third article in connection with the second, as was done by the
King in his ratification, all difficulty respecting the words,
"which belong to him" would have been removed, for the King
declares that the cession was by both articles. 6 Laws U.S.
628.
By the first clause of the third article, "the boundary line
between the two countries west of the Mississippi" is the Sabine,
to the 32� north latitude, thence north to Red River,
&c. By the second clause, the parties agree to cede and
renounce all their rights, &c., to the territory described by
that line; the United States to all west and south of it, and
"in like manner, his Catholic Majesty cedes to the United States
all his rights, claims, and pretensions, to any territories east
and north of said line, and for himself, his heirs, and successors,
renounces all claim to the said territories forever."
6 Laws U.S. 616.
The words of this clause are broad enough to embrace the whole
territory east of the Mississippi; the words "claims" and
"pretensions" are peculiarly appropriate to that part which lies
west of the Perdido, and when taken in connection with the second
article divest it of all the doubts by the use of the words "which
belong to him." So that their combined effect is a cession by one
party and an acceptance by the other of all the rights, claims, and
pretensions of Spain to all the territory east of the Sabine,
including what was known as East and West Florida, and to which the
stipulation of the eighth article would apply by the opinion of the
Court.
The second point was decided in
United States v.
Arredondo in 1832, in which the Court held
"that the United States never seem to have claimed any part of
what could be shown by legal evidence and local law, to have been
severed from the royal domain before their right attached,"
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
717, whether the severance was by
"patent, grant, concession, warrant, order of survey, or any
other act which might have been perfected into a complete title, by
the laws, usages, and customs of Spain."
Id., 31 U. S.
721.
"If a question arises what lands were ceded [to the United
States], the answer is found in the second article, vacant lands,
not those which had been individually appropriated and were not the
subjects of a hostile and adversary grant. The renunciation by the
third article by both parties was only of their respective rights,
claims, and pretensions to the territory renounced; neither
government had any right to renounce over lands to which a title
had been conveyed to their citizens or subjects respectively. Thus
deciding on those articles of the treaty, and in conformity to the
rules and principles before established, we should be of opinion
that the land embraced in the grant was no longer a part of the
royal domain at the date of the treaty, but private property, land
not vacant,
Page 39 U. S. 395
but appropriated by a prior and valid deed."
Id., 31 U. S.
735-736.
"The eighth article was evidently intended for the benefit of
those who held grants and were considered as proprietors of land in
Florida, and to give it a construction which would remove and limit
rights thus intended to be secured would deprive them of the
benefit of the fair construction of the second and third articles
of the treaty, and leave them in a worse situation than if the
eighth had been omitted altogether. . . . The honor of the King was
concerned most deeply in not doing an act which would deprive his
subjects of what he had granted to them, . . . and to not leave the
confirmation of grants by lawful authority, at the pleasure of the
United States."
Before the execution of the treaty, there was inserted a
stipulation in
"Spanish, by which the ceded territory should pass into the
hands of the United States, with the declared instruction by the
King of Spain that the grants referred to operated
in
praesenti as an exception and reservation of lands granted in
his name and by his authority, using words which expressed his
intention in his own language; that the grants were ratified and
confirmed in the very act of cession, subject to no future
contingency."
Id., 31 U. S.
737.
Such was declared to be its effect according to the stipulations
of the treaty, the law of nations, the acts of Congress, and the
laws of Spain.
"If the title was confirmed presently, the King had within the
bounds of the grant no right or title to convey, and the United
States, could receive none. If no future act of theirs was
necessary for their confirmation and ratification, the legal title,
much less the beneficial interest never passed to it [the United
States]."
Id., 31 U. S. 738.
On a deliberate construction of that article, the words "shall be
ratified and confirmed" were held to mean, "shall remain ratified
and confirmed, and that the United States, in accepting the
cession, could assert no claim to lands thus expressly excepted,"
and the Court declared explicitly that the grants included in the
eighth article and those referred to in the ratification by the
King
"were confirmed and annulled respectively, simultaneously with
the ratification and confirmation of the treaty, and that when the
territory was ceded, the United States had no right in any of the
lands embraced in the confirmed grants."
Id., 31 U. S.
741-742.
The same principles were adopted in
United States v.
Percheman, and in language most emphatic and unequivocal
throughout the opinion delivered by the Chief Justice. After
reciting the first clause of the second article, which ceded the
territory in general terms, the Court observed: "A cession of
territory is never understood to be a cession of the property of
the inhabitants."
32 U. S. 7 Pet.
87.
"The King cedes that only 'which belonged to him;' lands he had
previously granted were not his to cede. Neither party could so
understand the cession; neither party could consider itself as
attempting a wrong to individuals, condemned by the practice of the
whole civilized world."
The second clause of the second article is thus referred to:
"The special enumeration could not have been made had the first
clause of the article been supposed to pass
Page 39 U. S. 396
the objects thus enumerated, but private property also."
32 U. S. 7 Pet.
87. The grant of buildings could not have been limited by the words
"which are not private property" had private property been included
in the cession of the territory.
"This state of things ought to be kept in view when we construe
the eighth article of the treaty and the acts of Congress relating
to Spanish titles. This [the eighth] article is apparently
introduced on the part of Spain, and must be intended to stipulate
expressly, for that security to private property, which the laws
and usages of nations would, without express stipulation, have
conferred. No construction which would impair that security for
them that its positive words require would seem to be admissible.
Without it, the titles of individuals would be as valid under the
new government as under the old,"
&c.
The Court then declared that this article means that the
grants
"shall remain ratified and confirmed to the persons in
possession of them, to the same extent . . . [that the same grants
would be valid if the territories had remained under the dominion
of his Catholic Majesty], thus conforming exactly to the
universally received doctrine of the law of nations. If, as we
think must be admitted, the security of private property was
intended by the parties, if this security would have been complete
without the article, the United States could have no motive for
insisting on the interposition of government in order to give
validity to titles, which, according to the usages of the civilized
world were already valid."
Id., 32 U. S. 88-89.
The grants are then declared to be ratified and confirmed by the
force of the treaty itself, as the proper if not unavoidable
construction of its words, and the Court also declares that this
construction would have been given in
Foster v. Elam if
the Spanish part of the treaty had been brought to their view, and
that "this understanding of the article must enter into our
construction of the acts of Congress on the subject."
Id.,
32 U. S. 89.
These cases finally settled the construction of the second,
third, and eighth articles of the treaty of 1819; they overruled
the construction given in
Foster and Elam v. Neilson, and
have remained unquestioned till this time.
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 519, and
"on the fullest consideration [it has been] held that the treaty
operated as a present, perfect, and absolute confirmation of all
the grants which come within its provisions. That no act of the
political department remained to be done; that it was an executed
treaty, the law of the land, and a rule for the court; a rule of
title and property,"
&c.
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 747.
In
United States v. Kingsley, decided in 1838, the
Court took broader ground in favor of Spanish titles than had been
assumed in any former case in relation to the construction of the
treaty, and expressed its opinion in language of peculiar force,
and with a more appropriate reference to its spirit, meaning, and
words, than is to be found in any other opinion.
"Under the treaty, it is true that grants of land made before 24
January, 1818, by his Catholic
Page 39 U. S. 397
Majesty or by his lawful authority stand ratified and confirmed
to the same extent that the same grants would be valid if Florida
had remained under the dominion of Spain,"
&c.
"It is admitted, that in the construction of this article of the
treaty [the eighth], the United States succeeds to all those
equitable obligations which we are to suppose would have influenced
his Catholic Majesty to secure to his subjects their property, and
which would have been applied by him in the construction of a
conditional grant to make it absolute. And further, in the
construction of this article of the treaty it must be conceded that
the United States must maintain the rights of property under it by
applying the laws and customs by which those rights were secured
before Florida was ceded or by which an inchoate right of property
would, by laws and customs, have been adjudicated by Spanish
authority to have become a perfect right, by applying in the first
instance in such cases, as was said in
Arredondo's Case,
the principles of justice according to the rules of equity, and in
the second all those laws and customs decisive of a right of
property, while the party claiming the right was a subject of
Spain."
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 484-485.
This final result of the adjudications of this Court settles all
doubts as to the extent and effect of the cession and the
construction of the treaty which were expressed by the Court in
Foster and Elam v. Neilson, and is decisive of the two
first points. Their opinion in the case of
United States v.
Clarke, in 1834, is equally decisive of the question whether
the ratification by the King, in annulling the three grants to
Alagon, Punon Rostro, and De Vargas, is an exception or proviso to
the eighth article; on which subject this is the language of the
Court, in
33 U. S. 8 Pet.
463:
"While Florida remained a province of Spain, the right of his
Catholic Majesty, acting in person or by his officers, to
distribute lands according to his pleasure was unquestioned. That
he was in the constant exercise of this power was well known. If
the United States were not content to receive the territory charged
with titles thus created, it ought to have made and it would have
made such exceptions as it deemed necessary. It has made these
exceptions. It has stipulated that all grants made since 24
January, 1818, shall be null and void. It is understood that this
stipulation was intended to embrace three large grants made by the
King, which comprehended nearly all the Crown lands in East
Florida. However this may be, it shows that the subject was in the
mind of the negotiator, and the apprehended mischief was guarded
against so far as the parties could agree. The American government
was content with the security which this stipulation afforded, and
cannot now demand further and additional grounds. The acquisition
of the Floridas was an object of immense importance to the United
States. It was urged by other considerations of a still more
powerful operation, in addition to vacant lands. It will be
regarded, while our Union lasts, as the highest praise of the
administration which made it and of the negotiator who accomplished
it. It cannot be doubted
Page 39 U. S. 398
that the terms were highly advantageous and that they were so
considered by all. The United States was satisfied, and had reason
to be satisfied, with the provision excluding grants made
subsequent to 24 January, 1818, when the fraud on that provision
was prevented by the terms of the ratification of the treaty. All
other concessions made by his Catholic Majesty or his lawful
authorities in the ceded territories (in the ratification by the
King of Spain, 'competent authorities') are as valid as if the
cession had not been made."
33 U. S. 8 Pet.
464.
The same principle is recognized and declared in
United States v.
Mitchell, 9 Pet. 735, and
Strother v.
Lucas, 12 Pet. 439, in both of which there is a
summary review of all the previous decisions of this Court on the
subject, which are declared in
34 U. S. 9 Pet.
734 "to be definitively settled so far as the power of this Court
can do it, and must be taken to be the rules of its judgment."
I content myself with this general reference to these summaries
of past decisions, with the exception of the settled meaning of the
words "lawful authorities" in the eighth article, and "competent
authorities" in the ratification by the King -- that is, by those
persons who exercised the granting power by authority of the Crown.
This is the generally received meaning of the words. The treaty
recognizes the existence of those "lawful authorities" in the ceded
territories.
33 U. S. 8 Pet.
449. The King "might therefore stipulate for that full credence
[evidence] to the instrument itself which is usually allowed to
instruments issued by the proper officer." In the sense in which
the words "are uniformly used and understood, they mean persons
authorized by the Crown to grant lands,"
33 U. S. 8 Pet.
450,
33 U. S. 464,
the governor or intendant, as the case may be,
34 U. S. 9 Pet.
735, "or their deputies."
35 U. S. 10
Pet. 331, S.P.
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 438-439.
Had these principles, thus settled in the cases of
Canter, 1
Pet. 542; in
Soulard, 4
Pet. 512;
Arredondo,
6 Pet. 717;
Percheman, 7
Pet. 87;
Clark, 8
Pet. 449,
33 U. S. 463;
Delassus,
9 Pet. 133;
Mitchell,
9 Pet. 734;
New
Orleans, 9 Pet. 234, and
35 U. S. 10
Pet. 736;
Strother,
12 Pet. 435-441;
Kingsley,
12 Pet. 484; and
Rhode
Island, 12 Pet. 747, been recognized in
Foster
and Elam, the decision of the Court in that case, on their
declared principles, must have been in favor of the plaintiff if he
had filed and recorded his claim according to the requisitions of
the acts of Congress. As the Court decided that case solely on its
construction of the treaty, the since-established construction, if
then adopted, would have made the treaty a rule of decision for the
Court, have confirmed the grant by its own force, and repealed the
fourteenth section of the act of 1804 and all repugnant laws, and
made all grants before January, 1818, as obligatory on the United
States as they were on Spain, excepting only the three which were
cancelled by the ratification of the King.
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
311-315.
3. I now proceed to the cases which have arisen in this Court
under the treaty of 1819 in relation to grants of land within the
disputed territory made after 1803 and under the kindred treaty
Page 39 U. S. 399
between Georgia and the United States on grants made by Great
Britain and Spain while those governments occupied the territory in
dispute between them (Georgia and the United States).
Harcourt v. Gaillard arose on a grant made by the
British Governor of West Florida for land north of the 31�
N. lat., and within the charter limits of Georgia, but which was
then under the government and in the possession of Great Britain.
The grant was held void because it was made during the war of the
Revolution, and the treaty of peace contained no stipulation in
favor of grants previously made or any cession of territory to the
United States, but was an acknowledgment and recognition of their
preexisting rights. But the Court also held that if the grant had
been made before the war, "it might have had the benefit of those
principles of public law which are applied to territories acquired
by conquest;" but the question
"is one of disputed boundaries within which the power which
succeeds in war is not obliged to recognize as valid any acts of
ownership exercised by his adversary."
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 525. The Court then refers to the eighth article of the
Treaty of Ghent as an illustration of this doctrine, which is
this:
"It is agreed . . . that in case any of the islands . . . which
were in the possession of one of the parties prior to the
commencement of the present war between the two countries, should .
. . fall within the dominions of the other party, all grants of
land made previous to the commencement of the war by the party
having had such possession shall be as valid as if such island . .
. had been adjudged to be within the dominions of the party having
had such possession. . . ."
1 Laws U.S. 699. Whereupon the Court use this language:
"And such is unquestionably the law of nations. War is a suit
prosecuted by the sword, and when the question to be decided is one
of original claim to territory, grants of soil made
flagrante
bello by the party that fails can only derive validity by
treaty stipulation."
Laws U.S. 528.
The next case arose on a grant made by the Spanish government of
West Florida in 1795, before the treaty of limits between Spain and
the United States, for land north of the 31� north latitude,
of which Spain was in possession at the time of the grant; the
Court decided this case on the same principles as were adopted in
Poole v. Fleeger, and applied to the compact between
Kentucky and Tennessee. These were the principles laid down in
their opinion:
"It is the usage of all the civilized nations of the world, when
territory is ceded, to stipulate for the property of its
inhabitants. . . . Had Spain considered herself as ceding
territory, she would not have neglected a stipulation which every
sentiment of justice and national honor would have demanded and
which the United States would not have refused. But instead of
requiring an article to that effect, she has expressly stipulated
for the withdrawal of the settlements made within what the treaty
admits to be the territory of the United States and for permission
to the settlers to bring their property with them. We think this an
unequivocal acknowledgment that the occupation of that territory by
Spain was wrongful, and
Page 39 U. S. 400
we think the opinion thus clearly indicated was supported by the
state of facts. It follows that Spanish grants made after the
treaty of peace can have no intrinsic validity, and the holders
must depend for their titles on the laws of the United States."
Henderson v.
Poindexter, 12 Wheat. 535-536.
Vide
36 U. S. 11
Pet. 209-210.
The statement of this case by the Court in a preceding part of
its opinion gives a most lucid illustration of the principles above
referred to. After alluding to the treaties of peace between Great
Britain and the United States, France and Spain, in 1783, the Court
said
"In the treaty with Spain, the Floridas were ceded to that power
without any description of boundary. . . . The United States
continued to assert a claim to the 31� of north latitude,
while Spain maintained perseveringly her pretensions further north.
This was the subject of long and fruitless discussion between the
two governments, which was terminated by the treaty . . . of 27
October, 1795. . . . This treaty declares and agrees that the line
which was described in the treaty of peace between Great Britain
and the United States as their south boundary shall be the line
which divides their territory from East and West Florida."
"This article does not import to be a cession of territory, but
the adjustment of a controversy between the two nations. It is
understood as an admission that the right was originally in the
United States."
25 U. S.
534.
This opinion is confirmed by a subsequent part of the same
article. That
"the settlements of either party in the territory of the other
according to the above mentioned boundaries shall be withdrawn
within six months after the ratification of this treaty, or sooner
if it be possible, and that they shall be permitted to take with
them all the goods and effects which they possess."
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 534-535,
25 U. S.
544.
This state of facts in
Harcourt v. Gaillard and
Henderson v. Poindexter shows the grounds on which the
British grant, made before the treaty of peace with Great Britain,
and the Spanish grant, made before the treaty of 1795, with Spain,
for lands within the disputed territory, while in the possession of
those powers, as governments
de facto, were held not to be
valid under those treaties or the law of nations, to have been
exclusively these. The British grant was made
flagrante
bello, the treaty of peace neither ceded or relinquished any
territory to the United States or to particular states; it was a
solemn recognition and acknowledgment of their preexisting
rights.
The Spanish grant, though made during peace, became void by the
admission of Spain, in the treaty of 1795, of the original right of
the United States to the territory in which the land was situated,
by the express stipulation that the settlers within the boundary
established should remove, with their effects, within a stipulated
time, and that there was no stipulation in the treaty for the
protection of the inhabitants in the enjoyment of property held
under Spanish grants previously made.
Page 39 U. S. 401
There was another feature, common to both cases, which was
noticed by the Court, growing out of the compact with Georgia and
consequent acts of Congress. This compact was made by "article of
agreement and cession," entered into 24 April, 1802, "between the
United States and the State of Georgia," in virtue of an act of
Congress, "for an amicable settlement of limits with that state,"
and a law thereof.
By art. 1,
"Georgia cedes to the United States all the right, title, and
claim to the jurisdiction and soil of the lands within her
boundary, west of the River Chatahouchee, upon the following
express conditions, and subject thereto, that is to say. . . ."
Secondly,
"That all persons who on 27 October, 1795 [the date of the
treaty with Spain] were actual settlers within the territory thus
ceded, 'shall be confirmed' in all the grants legally and fully
executed prior to that day by the former British government of West
Florida or by the government of Spain, and in the claims which may
be derived from any actual survey or settlement made under the act
of the State of Georgia, . . ."
passed 7 February, 1785.
By art. 2, "The United States accepted" this cession, on the
conditions therein expressed, and ceded all their right, title, and
claim to soil and jurisdiction, of any land east of the line of
cession, by Georgia to the United States.
By art. 3,
"The present act of cession and agreement shall be in full force
as soon as the Legislature of Georgia shall have given its assent
to the boundaries of this cession. . . ."
No law or other act of assent was therefore necessary by the
United States to give it full effect.
In April, 1802, Georgia passed an act to ratify and confirm the
agreement, which enacted
"That the said deed or articles of agreement and cession be and
the same hereby is and are fully, absolutely, and amply ratified
and confirmed in all its parts, and hereby is and are declared to
be binding and conclusive on the said state, her government, and
citizens forever."
1 Laws U.S. 488.
The act of Congress under which this compact was made authorized
the commissioners appointed by the United States
"to adjust and determine . . . all interfering claims of the
United States and Georgia to territory west of the Chatahouchee,
north of 31� north latitude, and south of the cession made
by South Carolina,"
&c. 1 Story 494. A subsequent act gave them power
"finally to settle by compromise . . . any claims mentioned in
the former act, and on behalf of the United States, to receive a
cession of any lands therein mentioned, or of the jurisdiction
thereof on such terms as to them shall seem reasonable."
Id., 779.
Subsequent laws provided for carrying this compact into effect.
2 Story 893, 952, 955.
By now comparing the treaty of 1819 with the treaty of peace
with Great Britain in 1783, it is palpable that it contains no
recognition or acknowledgment of the preexisting right of the
United States to the disputed territory; it therefore does not come
within
Page 39 U. S. 402
the principles which the Court applied to the British grant
arising from the nature of that treaty, nor does the principle of
the law of nations, in relation to grants made during a war, apply
to grants made by Spain between 1804 and 1810, while in peaceful
possession of the territory. A comparison of the two treaties with
Spain places them in more striking contrast in their titles and the
stipulations of their respective articles. That of 1795 was
declared to be a "Treaty of Friendship, Limits, and Navigation;"
that of 1819 was declared to be a "Treaty of Amity, Settlement, and
Limits."
The declared object of the first was "to establish several
points, the settlement whereof will be productive of general
advantage and reciprocal utility to both nations."
Vide 1
Laws U.S. 262. Its stipulations have been noticed. The declared
object of the second was to "settle, terminate, and put an end to
all their differences and pretensions," so as "to consolidate on a
permanent basis," &c.
"Art. 5. The inhabitants of the ceded territories shall be
secured in the free exercise of their religion without any
restriction, and all those who may desire to remove to the Spanish
dominions shall be permitted to sell or export their effects at any
time without being subject in either case to duties."
"Art. 6. They shall be incorporated into the Union . . . and
admitted to the enjoyment of all the rights, privileges, and
immunities of citizens of the United States."
"Art. 7. The officers and troops of his Catholic Majesty . . .
shall be withdrawn, and possession of the places occupied by them
shall be given within six months after the exchange,"
&c.
"Art. 8. All grants of lands . . . 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,"
&c.
This treaty, it must be remembered, had been preceded by the
same mutual claims and pretensions of both parties, perseveringly
maintained, during long and fruitless discussions between the two
governments, as had been the case before the treaty of 1795, and
that the possession of the territory was held by the United States
under the most solemn pledges by the President and Congress that it
was in their hands subject to future negotiation, and that the
inhabitants should be protected in the enjoyment of their liberty,
property, and religion.
Now let this treaty have the benefit of the principles of the
law of nations which were laid down by the Court in the two cases
in 12 Wheat. as a treaty of cession, settlement, and peace, or as a
relinquishment by Spain and purchase by the United States, or as a
compact, deed, or articles of agreement; let it receive the same
construction and effect as was given to the agreement, or as the
Court called it, the treaty with Georgia, and then it can be
ascertained what would have been the result had the grants in those
cases been protected by any treaty stipulation. Let also the acts
of Congress which related to claims under the treaty with Georgia
be compared with those which related to the country west of the
Page 39 U. S. 403
Perdido especially, passed before 1821, together with those
passed since the treaty was ratified for the adjustment of titles
to land, and the same construction be applied to all as the Court
gave to the former, a satisfactory answer can be given to those
questions.
1. Under such a treaty, would private property be protected by
the law of nations, if the fifth, sixth, and eighth articles had
been omitted?
2. Under the fifth, could the inhabitants who remained in the
province, in the enjoyment of their religion, be deprived of their
property?
3. Could those who chose to remove give a good title to the
property which they might choose to sell, whether it was lands or
chattels?
4. Under the sixth, till their incorporation into the Union, can
the inhabitants enjoy the rights, privileges, and immunities of
American citizens if the United States can confiscate their lands
by declaring their titles void and granting them to others, and
could this be done after their incorporation?
5. Under these and the eighth article, is it optional with the
United States to confirm or confiscate?
6. Had there been no treaty, would not the grants have been
valid under previous pledges by the United States and the laws
annexing the disputed territory to the adjacent states?
7. Without a treaty or specific pledge, would not the
Constitution of the United States protect the inhabitants in their
rights of persons and property, by the very act of such annexation,
accepted by a state?
8. Are they not so protected as the inhabitants of a territory
of the United States under the Ordinance of 1787, which was in
force in this territory?
9. Does not the law of nations give to these grants the same
protection as in the case of conquest or military occupation until
Congress shall, in virtue of the law of a conqueror, declare them
void, and resume the lands? And
10. Can questions arising in cases brought to recover property
embraced by such grants be decided by the courts of the United
States in virtue of the judicial power of the Constitution, and
twenty-fifth section of the Judiciary Act of 1789, or by special
tribunals appointed under the acts of Congress, with power to
decide on the validity of titles acquired under such grants?
So far as the solution of these questions depends on the
stipulations of the treaty of 1819 and the laws of nations
applicable thereto, the principles laid down by the Court in
Harcourt v. Gaillord and
Henderson v. Poindexter,
already quoted, are so full and so completely answer them as to
save the necessity of repeating them. That treaty presents the
reverse of those then under consideration and the grant in the
present case is one which must have been then held valid on every
ground assumed by the Court in favor of the grants then before it
had they come within the
Page 39 U. S. 404
rules and principles on which the Court made the distinctive
line between the different kinds of treaties.
But when we apply them to the grant in the present case, it is a
matter of much surprise that there could exist a doubt of its
validity. Independently of the treaty, it was protected by the law
of conquest, military occupation, cession, or relinquishment;
independently too of any of these considerations, the property of
the plaintiff in the land granted was protected by the acts of the
United States under which their military occupation or acquisition
begun and was continued. And independently of all other
considerations, it was protected by the stipulations of a treaty of
cession, amity, settlement, and limits, every clause whereof was
accepted, ratified, and confirmed by the treatymaking power of the
United States and proclaimed as binding on them by its
constitutional effect.
At the same term in which
Harcourt v. Gaillard and
Henderson v. Poindexter were decided, the case of
Delacroix v. Chamberlain came up. The controversy arose on
a concession of land in the disputed territory, and as the opinion
of the Court, taken in connection with the two preceding cases and
the case of
Canter, 1
Pet. 542, decided at the next term, is of decisive bearing on this
case, it is given at large.
"The concession referred to in the bill of exceptions is upon
its face not a grant nor a survey, but it is, as is expressed in
the bill of exceptions, only a warrant or order of survey,
authorizing the deputy surveyor to make a survey and to report to
the intendant the survey when made, in order to found a grant upon
it. The order of survey bears date the ___ day of _____, 1806. At
that date, the Spanish authorities were in the actual possession of
Mobile, where the land lies, and they claimed it as part of the
Floridas, then belonging to the Spanish Crown. The United States
claimed it as part of Louisiana. But it is not necessary to
investigate these conflicting claims. The United States has since
obtained the Floridas by purchase and cession from Spain without
having previously settled the controverted boundary between the
Floridas as claimed by Spain and Louisiana as claimed by the United
States. A question of disputed boundary between two sovereign,
independent nations is indeed much more properly a subject of
diplomatic discussion and of treaty than of judicial investigation.
If the United States and Spain had settled their dispute by treaty
before the United States extinguished the claim of Spain to the
Floridas, the boundary thus fixed would have concluded all parties.
But as that was not done, the United States has never, as far as we
can discover, distinguished between the concessions of land made by
the Spanish authorities within the disputed territory, while Spain
was in the actual possession of it, from concessions of a similar
character made by Spain within the acknowledged limits. We will
not, therefore, raise any question upon the ground of any want of
authority in the intendant to make the concession. No question of
that sort appears to have been made in the court below.
Page 39 U. S. 405
Assuming, then, the authority of the Spanish intendant to make
the concession and warrant of survey, the question made and decided
in the district court fairly arises was it a sufficient title to
recover upon in an action of ejectment? If the concession had been
made in a country where at the time the principles and practices
known to the common law prevailed, it would not bear a contest. It
would be regarded, at most, as an incipient, inchoate right, but
not a perfect, legal estate. It would not be such title as would
maintain an action of ejectment. Was it a perfect legal estate; was
it a title according to the Spanish law which prevailed at Mobile
at the time it was made? We apprehend not."
"It shows upon its face that other acts of sovereignty remained
to be done to perfect the title, and which the sovereign power
might withhold. A survey was to be made, and according to the laws
and usages of Spain, a formal grant was to be made in such cases,
to complete the title."
"It may be admitted that the United States was bound in good
faith by the terms of the treaty of cession by which it acquired
the Floridas to confirm such concessions as had been made by
warrants of survey; yet it would not follow that the legal title
would be perfected until confirmation. The government of the United
States has throughout acted upon a different principle in relation
to these inchoate rights in all their acquisitions of territory,
whether from Spain or France. Whilst the government has admitted
its obligation to confirm such inchoate rights or concessions as
had been fairly made, it has maintained that the legal title has
remained in the United States until by some act of confirmation it
was passed or relinquished to the claimants. It has maintained its
right to prescribe the forms and the manner of proceeding in order
to obtain a confirmation, and its right to establish tribunals to
investigate and pronounce upon their validity."
Ibid.
"This is demonstrated by the laws which Congress have repeatedly
passed establishing boards of commissioners to investigate these
claims and to reject or confirm them or report them to Congress in
cases of doubt, and by the acts of Congress requiring all such
claims to be recorded within prescribed periods. It does not appear
that this order of survey has ever been recorded or passed upon by
the board of commissioners or register of the land office
established by Congress in the district in which the land lies. It
can therefore derive no aid from the laws of the United
States."
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 600-602.
In conclusion, the Court affirmed the judgment because an
ejectment could not be sustained on the order of survey.
Id., 25 U. S.
603.
But had this been a legal title, complete in form, granting the
legal estate and duly recorded, there could have remained no doubt
that the plaintiff would have recovered, as his case came within
every principle of the preceding cases of
Harcourt v. Gaillard,
Henderson v. Poindexter, of which the leading one is this,
that
"all the acts of Congress on the subject of grants within the
disputed territory under the compact with Georgia presuppose the
validity of
Page 39 U. S. 406
those which were legally and fully executed before 25 October,
1795."
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 528-529,
25 U. S. 536.
The articles with Georgia were in themselves a confirmation of
titles within its provisions,
25 U. S. 539,
protected by them,
25 U. S. 540,
and confirmed by them. And by the acts of 1819 and 1822, perfect
grants were expressly recognized as complete titles.
If these opinions of this Court require additional support to
entitle them to respect, it will be found in
Keene v.
McDonough, in which, by a decree of a Spanish court rendered
in 1804 at Baton Rouge, which is within the disputed territory,
lands were sold and conveyed to the defendant's grantor, who held
them under such decree and sale, and this is the language of this
Court in affirming its validity:
"The adjudication having been made by a Spanish tribunal after
the cession of the country to the United States does not make it
void, for we know historically that the actual possession of the
territory was not surrendered until sometime after these
proceedings took place. It was the judgment, therefore, of a
competent Spanish tribunal, having jurisdiction of the case and
rendered whilst the country, although ceded, was
de facto
in the possession of Spain, and subject to Spanish laws. Such
judgments, so far as they affect the private rights of the parties
thereto, must be deemed valid."
"This view of the case supersedes the necessity of considering
the question of prescription."
33 U. S. 8 Pet.
310.
This Spanish tribunal, it must be remembered, was the governor
of the province, acting in his judicial capacity, in which he had
power by the Spanish law to order a sale of land which passed the
title of the proprietor to the purchaser on the execution of a
deed, which was deemed the strongest and safest conveyance known to
the jurisprudence of Spain. In his political capacity, the same
governor had power to dispose of the royal domain and to make valid
grants thereof which conferred a perfect right of property in the
lands so granted. It would therefore be a novel principle in
American jurisprudence if while this governor, by judicial power,
could transfer the property of A. to B., he yet could not by
political power so far dispose of the public domain as to bind the
King, in whose name and by whose authority he acted as his direct
representative or even affect his conscience as a trustee in virtue
of the grant to the grantee. And if the King was so bound by a
perfect grant or became a trustee by a mere concession or order of
survey, the United States succeeded to the obligation of the King
to perfect the title, according to the laws, usages, and customs of
Spain, and the grant or concession stood "ratified and confirmed"
under the treaty to the same extent at least as a judgment did
before it.
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 484.
The two first of these cases establish these principles: that
grants of land in a disputed territory, made by a government in
possession thereof during peace with a nation which is entitled to
its dominion and propriety, are valid by the law of nations without
any treaty stipulation; if made during war, they are not valid
unless protected by
Page 39 U. S. 407
the treaty; that when territory is acquired by a cession or
relinquishment of one nation to another or by conquest, the rights
of private property are protected by the law of nations according
to the law of the territory, though no stipulation is contained in
the act of cession or relinquishment, and even in case of conquest,
no other change is effected except as to government; and that when
a stipulation for property is required, it is never refused, and
when made is sacredly observed. But when, by a treaty or compact,
one nation or state admits the original right of the other to the
disputed territory without any stipulation in favor of the
inhabitants as to lands held by grant under the party which admits
the right of the other, the treaty binds their rights, and the
grants are not valid against the party whose original right is
acknowledged. S.P.
36 U. S. 11
Pet. 209-210.
Delacroix v. Chamberlain established the application of
the treaty of 1819 to the disputed territory as a cession thereof
by Spain, a purchase by the United States, and a settlement of
former controversies concerning it, S.P.
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 515; that the grants and concessions made by Spain while in
possession are on the same footing as in other parts of Florida;
that the United States is bound in good faith to confirm imperfect
titles, and has admitted its obligation to do so when the inchoate
title has been fairly made. And when, in the case of
Canter, this Court declared that this treaty is the "law
of the land,"
26 U. S. 1 Pet.
542, the omission of any reference to either of these cases in the
opinion in
Foster and Elam shows most clearly that they
were not considered by the Court, and when the principles they
established are properly considered, it cannot be doubted that had
they been noticed by the majority, the judgment would have been
different, for they covered every point in the case.
In
Percheman's Case, the Court unanimously asserted
that if the Spanish part of the treaty had been within its view in
Foster and Elam, it would have given it the same
construction as it afterwards did, and it is not disrespectful in
me to say that a similar result must have followed if the four last
decisions of the Court had been under its consideration.
The silence in the opinion in
Foster and Elam can by no
just rule be taken to overrule either of those cases; it lays down
no antagonist principle except that the treaty remained a mere
contract till Congress executed it by a law; it was as silent on
the law of nations as on former adjudications; yet it will not be
pretended that it was meant to controvert or abrogate those
principles which are consecrated by "the usage of the civilized
world."
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 535.
That opinion admits of no such interpretation, when carefully
examined, from
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
299-317, it will be found to turn entirely on the since overruled
construction of the treaty, and the nonfiling of the plaintiff's
claim; nor, with that exception, is there a single principle laid
down which militates with former decisions in any
Page 39 U. S. 408
respect. And if the since-exploded construction of the treaty is
stricken from the opinion and the principles of
Arredondo,
Percheman, Clarke, and all subsequent cases are inserted in
its place, it will be found that there is not a stronger case in
favor of the validity of grants in the disputed territory. The case
arose on one of that description; the Court tested its validity by
the treaty, which it construed in reference to its language alone,
as applicable to the whole ceded territory, without adverting to
any distinction in its construction between grants within or
without the disputed territory; on the contrary, it was expressly
held that the treaty would apply to a grant west of the Perdido if
it was construed as it has been ever since, and that the eighth
article would have confirmed even the rejected grants had they not
been excepted by the ratification.
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
312- 313.
When the true construction of the treaty is infused into that
opinion, it supports every position on which the plaintiff's title
rests, and the doubts which have arisen upon it can be attributed
to no other cause than by misapprehending its principle or by
viewing the overruled construction as restored without a reference
to the ground on which the decision was placed or appreciating the
principles which would have followed; by considering the treaty as
self-executed by its own intrinsic force. In which case the Court
declares that the grant would have been valid within the disputed
territory.
It has been supposed that the opinion in that case went on the
ground that questions of title to lands arising on Spanish grants
in the disputed territory between 1803 and 1810 were of a
political, and not judicial, character, depending on the
construction of the Louisiana Treaty as to its eastern boundary.
But no such principle is to be found in the opinion; the question
of boundary is taken to be settled, and not open to judicial
inquiry; yet all other questions affecting the validity of the
grant are throughout considered as open and of judicial cognizance;
had boundary and title been considered to be identical, the Court
would have been saved from the labor which it took to show that the
title was invalid on other grounds, for when the Perdido was taken
as the true boundary, all grants west of it were consequently void
if title depended on boundary.
This is another source of misapprehension of this opinion which
has of late given to it an importance after it had remained
unnoticed in any opinion of the Court after
Percheman's
Case till 1838.
After the opinion in that case was promulgated, the turning
principle of
Foster and Elam was universally understood to
be overruled, and its authority ceased to be relied on, and it was
not even quoted by the counsel of the United States in the argument
of
Percheman's Case, though the aid of
Arredondo
was invoked.
Vide
32 U. S. 7 Pet. 59, 62 [argument of counsel --
omitted].
It is not a little strange that it should now be taken to be a
leading case on Spanish titles when its vital principle is
extinguished
Page 39 U. S. 409
by an unquestioned series of decisions to the contrary, and all
the principles which remain unshaken are decidedly in favor of a
conclusion directly the reverse of that to which the Court arrived
on its then erroneous construction of the eighth article and the
ratification of the King. If, then, the case of
Foster and
Elam is yet to be considered as a leading or authoritative
one, it can be only as to the boundary of Louisiana, which is a
concessum; on every other principle of that case, which is
not now admitted to be overruled and to stand overruled, I rely as
supporting the plaintiff's title, and by now infusing into it the
universally received and admitted construction of the treaty,
consider it as decisive of this case, without the aid of the acts
of 1824 or 1836.
It is somewhat remarkable that there is no one opinion of this
Court or any of its members which even questions any one principle
of the law of nations as laid down in the cases of
Harcourt v.
Gaillard, Henderson v. Poindexter, Insurance Company v. Canter,
United States v. Soulard, Arredondo, Percheman, Delassus, Mitchell,
Strother v. Lucas, and
Rhode Island v. Massachusetts,
in the latter of which these principles are reiterated.
"There are two principles of the law of nations which would
protect them [the inhabitants of a disputed territory] in their
property. 1. That grants by a government
de facto of parts
of a disputed territory in its possession are valid against the
state which had the right. 2. That when a territory is acquired by
treaty, cession, or even conquest, the rights of the inhabitants to
property are respected and sacred."
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 748-749.
If the reference to
Poole v.
Fleeger, 12 Pet. 521, is to be considered as
questioning any principle of the law of nations to which the above
named cases refer, it must have arisen from relying in two passages
of the opinion in
Poole v. Fleeger detached from the
context immediately preceding and succeeding them.
When the whole opinion in
36 U. S. 11
Pet. 209-211 is taken in connection with the terms of the compact
between Kentucky and Tennessee, it will be found that the case
turned on the precise principles of
Harcourt v. Gaillard
and
Henderson v. Poindexter, as is abundantly manifest
from the turning and decisive point in the case.
The circuit court instructed the jury
"That the State of Tennessee, by sanctioning the compact,
admitted in the most solemn form that the lands in dispute were not
within her jurisdiction nor within the jurisdiction of North
Carolina at the time they were granted, and that consequently the
titles were subject to the conditions of the compact,"
which was the ground of the exception and writ of error to this
Court. After referring to the law of nations and the Constitution,
the learned judge who delivered the opinion of the Court proceeded
to assign their reasons.
"The compact, then, has full validity, and all the terms and
conditions of it must be equally obligatory upon the citizens of
both states. "
Page 39 U. S. 410
"Independently of this broad and general ground, there are other
ingredients in the present case equally decisive of the
merits."
"Although in the compact, Walker's Line is agreed to be in
future the boundary between the two states, it is not so
established as having been for the past the true and rightful
boundary; on the contrary, the compact admits the fact to be the
other way. While the compact cedes to Tennessee the jurisdiction up
to Walker's Line, it cedes to Kentucky all the unappropriated lands
north of latitude 36�30' north. It thus admits what is in
truth undeniable, that the true and legitimate boundary of North
Carolina is in that parallel of latitude. . . . It goes further and
admits that all claims under Virginia to lands north of that
boundary shall not be prejudiced by the establishment of Walker's
Line, but such claims shall be considered as rightfully entered or
granted. The compact then does by necessary implication admit, that
the boundary between Kentucky and Tennessee is the latitude
36�30' north, and that Walker's Line is to be the true line
only for the purpose of future jurisdiction."
"In this view of the matter, it is perfectly clear that the
grants made by North Carolina and Tennessee were not rightfully
made, because they were originally beyond her territorial boundary,
and that the grant under which the claimants claim was rightfully
made because it was within the territorial boundary of Virginia. So
that upon this narrower ground, if it were necessary, as we think
it is not, to prove the case, it is clear that the instruction of
the court was correct."
Vide 16 U. S.
Campbell, 3 Wheat 218-220. In that case, the compact between
Virginia and Tennessee, made in 1802, contained a stipulation in
favor of grants by the latter which were held to be valid, so that,
taking the two compacts and the decisions upon them, they fully
illustrate and affirm the principles of the two cessions.
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 525,
25 U. S.
535.
It is thus apparent that an erroneous view has been taken of the
principles on which
Poole v. Fleeger was decided, and that
when the whole opinion is considered, it does not impugn, but
affirms, an established rule which is an exception to the general
principle that grants of land in a disputed territory by a
government
de facto in possession are valid.
The same error appears to have occurred in the view which is
taken of the opinion in
Foster and Elam in the passages
extracted from it in
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 517-519, and in the same manner -- by not carefully and
closely examining the immediate context. Thus the long extract from
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
309, when referred to the preceding sentence, relates solely to
"acts of sovereign power" by the United States before the
ratification of the treaty and to acts done in virtue of the Treaty
of 1803 alone, and to boundary as the only political question
involved in that case. So as to the passages extracted in
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 518-519, from
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
311-313. The first, when connected with the context preceding and
following it, refers to the second, and not the eighth, article of
the treaty of 1819; the other,
Page 39 U. S. 411
when referred in the same manner to the preceding context, will
be found to be only the conclusion which resulted from the since
overruled construction of the eighth article and ratification of
the King.
I trust it will not be deemed improper or disrespectful to have
made these remarks in relation to this view of the two cases of
Poole v. Fleeger and
Foster and Elam, which have
been thus noticed after the most thorough examination; the view
seems to me to have been a mistaken one which may well be accounted
for by the late period of the term and the broad field of
investigation which became opened by the course of the argument,
and the nature of the case in
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 515.
On a comparison of the compact between Tennessee and Kentucky
with the treaty of 1819, the contrast between them is striking. By
the former, Tennessee admitted in the most solemn form the original
right of Kentucky, while in the latter neither party admitted the
previous right of the other, but, as held in
Foster
and Elam, 2 Pet. 310, each had uniformly and
perseveringly insisted on their respective rights. The Court also
held that
"It is then a fair inference from the language of the treaty
that he [the King] did not mean to retrace his steps and relinquish
his pretensions, but to cede, on a sufficient consideration, all
that he claimed as his, and consequently, by the eighth article, to
stipulate for the confirmation of all the grants which he had made
while the title remained in him."
This language requires no comment.
The Court also held that the United States did not admit the
right of Spain, and added
"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."
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
311.
Thus it appears that
Foster and Elam presents a
decisive answer to any argument founded on
Poole v.
Fleeger which tends to controvert any one principle of the law
of nations laid down in any opinion of this Court in relation to
treaties or compacts between nations or states, and in the whole
course of adjudication on these subjects, the Court has decided
with perfect uniformity and consistency from 1827 till 1838 on all
titles in the various territories acquired by the United States in
1802, 1803, and 1821.
In doing so, the Court has taken no new ground, but has followed
in the old and beaten path trodden first by the federal court of
appeals in 1781 and pursued by this tribunal from its first
organization.
4. In
Miller v. Miller, the case arose on articles of
capitulation, and the Court held that the case must be decided by
the resolves and ordinances of Congress, when they applied; when
they were silent, by the laws, usages, and practice of nations; and
that a stipulation that the inhabitants shall enjoy all the rights
and privileges of subjects of the conquering nation is a compact
which puts them on the same footing as if they had been native
subjects, and secures their property from confiscation even by the
rights of war.
2 U. S. 2 Dall.
Page 39 U. S. 412
1-11. So, in
Johnson v. McIntosh, "the rights of the
conquered to property should remain unimpaired, and the new
subjects should be governed as equitably as the old."
21 U. S. 8
Wheat. 589.
"When the conquest is complete and the conquered inhabitants can
be blended with the conquerors or be safely governed as a distinct
people, public opinion, which not even the conqueror can disregard,
imposes those restraints upon him, and he cannot neglect them
without injury to his fame and hazard to his power."
21 U. S. 8
Wheat. 590.
"The Constitution of the United States declares a treaty to be
the supreme law of the land. Of consequence, its obligation on the
courts of the United States must be admitted."
"It is certainly true that the execution of a contract between
nations is to be demanded from and generally superintended by the
executive of each nation. . . . But where a treaty is the law of
the land, and as such affects the rights of parties litigant in
court, that treaty as much binds their rights, and is as much to be
regarded by the court, as an act of Congress, and on this principle
it was held that a stipulation in a treaty that property 'shall be'
restored, operated as an immediate restoration, and annulled a
judgment of condemnation previously made."
United States v. The
Peggy, 1 Cranch 109-110.
The fourth article of the treaty of peace with Great Britain in
1783 stipulated that creditors shall meet with no lawful impediment
to the recovery of debts. The sixth article stipulated that there
"shall be" no future confiscations, and that persons in confinement
"shall be" immediately set at liberty and prosecutions commenced be
discontinued. The ninth article of the treaty of 1794 stipulated
that British subjects, &c., "shall continue to hold lands,"
&c.
In
Ware v. Hylton, it was held that the treaty of peace
repealed and nullified all state laws by its own operation, revived
the debt, removed all lawful impediments, and was a supreme law
which overruled all state laws on the subject to all intents and
purposes, and was of equal force and effect as the Constitution
itself.
3 U. S. 3 Dall.
235,
3 U. S. 239-240,
3 U. S. 281,
3 U. S. 284.
In
Hopkins v. Bell, the treaty was held to repeal the
Virginia statute of limitations. 3 Cranch 453, 457 [not found].
In
Hunter v. Martin, the treaty of 1794 was held to be
the supreme law of the land; that it completely protected and
confirmed the title of Fairfax, even admitting that the treaty of
peace had left him wholly unprovided for; that as a public law it
was a part of every case before the Court, and so completely
governed it that in a case where a treaty was ratified after the
rendition of a judgment in the circuit court which was impeachable
on no other ground than the effect of a treaty, the judgment was
reversed on that ground. 7 Cranch 727. S.C. and S.P.
14 U. S. 1
Wheat. 336,
14 U. S. 370.
S.P.
16 U. S. 3
Wheat. 599;
17 U. S. 4
Wheat. 462-463,
17 U. S.
490.
The treaty of 1778 with France stipulated that the subjects of
France shall not be reputed aliens;, and it was held that it
gave
Page 39 U. S. 413
them the right to purchase and hold lands in the United States,
and in that respect put them on the precise footing as if they had
become citizens.
15 U. S. 2
Wheat. 270,
15 U. S. 277.
S.P.
17 U. S. 4
Wheat. 464.
20 U. S. 7
Wheat. 544.
21 U. S. 8
Wheat. 493-494.
23 U. S. 10
Wheat. 189;
22 U. S. 9
Wheat. 496.
So in
The Pizarro it was held that the stipulation in
the fifteenth article of the treaty of 1795 with Spain that free
ships "shall make free goods" protected enemies' property as fully
as that of a neutral.
15 U. S. 2
Wheat. 242.
5. The decisions of this Court on compacts of boundary between
states are most peculiarly appropriate to the treaty of 1819, and
will now be noticed.
Sims v. Irvine arose on a compact between Pennsylvania
and Virginia in 1779, which stipulated
"That the private property and rights of all persons acquired
under, founded on, or recognized by the laws of either country,
previous to the date hereof be saved and confirmed to them although
they should be found to fall within the other, and that in the
decisions of disputes thereon, preference shall be given to the
elder or prior right, whichever of the said states the prior right
shall have been acquired under, . . ."
3 U. S. 3 Dall.
426, on which the Court laid down these principles: the terms
therein of reserve and confirmation
"of the rights which had been previously acquired under Virginia
in the territory thereby relinquished to Pennsylvania must, from
the nature of the transaction, be expounded favorably for those
rights, and so that titles substantially good should not, after a
change of jurisdiction, be disputed or questioned for formal
defects."
3 U. S. 3 Dall.
456-457. The case of
Marlatt v. Silk arose under the same
compact, in which the Court decided that a right recognized by
Virginia previous to the date of the compact was secured and
confirmed by it,
36 U. S. 11 Pet.
21, and that questions arising under the compact were not to be
decided according to the adjudications of either state, but were
"of an international character."
Id., 36 U. S.
22-23.
"In
Robinson v. Campbell, the Court construed the
compact between Virginia and North Carolina according to the
intention of the parties as it appeared in the compact and the laws
passed to carry it into effect, and in
Burton v. Williams
construed the same compact and an act of Congress to give it
effect, by the events which led thereto and the motives of the
parties to the compact which influenced them in making it and gave
the utmost latitude to the act of Congress, so as to give effect to
the compact, its provisions and objects."
16 U. S. 3
Wheat. 218-220.
Handlin v. Anthony arose on the cession from Virginia
to the United States as to the boundary on the Ohio. The Court
decided on it as it was intended by Virginia when she made the
cession, what Virginia had in view in making the deed according to
the great object intended to be effected, and declared that those
principles and considerations which produced the boundary ought to
preserve it.
18 U. S. 5
Wheat. 377-379,
18 U. S.
383-384.
Green v. Biddle arose on the compact between Virginia
and
Page 39 U. S. 414
Kentucky, the seventh article of which stipulated that all
private rights and interests of lands derived from the laws of
Virginia "shall remain valid and secure" under the laws of
Kentucky, and "shall be determined" by the laws then existing in
Virginia, &c. The Court held that such rights must be
exclusively determined by the law of Virginia, and that their
security and validity could not be impaired by a law of Kentucky.
That the compact intended to preserve all private rights derived
from Virginia, as valid under the laws of Kentucky as they were
under the then existing laws of Virginia, so as to preserve the
beneficial proprietary interest of the rightful owner in the same
state in which they were by the laws of Virginia at the time of the
separation, and to use all existing remedies which would prevent
those rights from being impaired.
21 U. S. 8 Wheat.
13,
21 U. S. 16,
21 U. S. 89-90,
21 U. S. 92.
The same principles were reaffirmed in
Hawkins v.
Barney on the same compact.
30 U. S. 5 Pet.
464-465.
In
New Orleans v. The United States, before noticed,
the Court, in giving effect to the Treaty of 1803, decided directly
in contradiction to several acts of Congress, which were
unequivocal in their character, asserting the right of the United
States to the land in controversy and granting parts thereof in fee
notwithstanding the admission of the city authorities of the right
of the United States,
35 U. S. 10
Pet. 735, thus practically adopting the principles laid down in
New Orleans v. De
Armas, in 9 Pet. 234-236, and deciding according to
Spanish law.
In
Green v. Biddle it was held that by the principles
of general law, independent of a compact, the titles to real estate
can be determined only by the laws of the state under which they
were acquired. Every government has, and from the nature of
sovereignty must have, the exclusive right of distribution and
grants of the public domain within its boundaries until it yields
it up by compact or conquest. The validity of a title can be judged
of by no other rule than those laws in which it had its origin, and
a title good by those laws cannot be disregarded but by a departure
from the first principles of justice.
"If the article, therefore, meant only to provide for the
affirmation of that which is the universal rule in the courts of
civilized nations professing to be governed by the dictates of
law,"
it was a mere nullity.
21 U. S. 8 Wheat.
11-12. The common law was a part of the law of Virginia, and the
claimant of land under Virginia had a right to appear in the courts
of Kentucky as he might in a Virginia court if a separation had not
taken place, and to demand a trial of his right by the same
principles of law which would have governed his case in the courts
of the latter state.
Id., 21 U. S. 74-75,
21 U. S. 83. S.P.
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 484.
26 U. S. 1 Pet.
542-544.
In
Robinson v. Campbell, the Court decided that under
the compact settling the boundary between Virginia and Tennessee
made in 1802, which contained a clause similar to that in the
Treaty of Ghent, before recited,
"that all claims and titles to land, derived from Virginia,
North Carolina, or Tennessee which have fallen into
Page 39 U. S. 415
the respective states shall remain as secure to the owners
thereof as if derived from the government within whose lines they
have fallen, and shall not be prejudiced or affected in consequence
of the establishment of said line."
It gave the same effect and validity to the titles acquired in
the disputed territory as they had or would have had in the state
by which they were granted, leaving the remedies to enforce such
rights to be regulated by the
lex fori. 16 U. S. 3
Wheat. 319-320.
By the terms of this compact, it appears that they are directly
the opposite to the compact of 1820 between Tennessee and Kentucky,
for while the latter was an unequivocal admission by Tennessee of
the original right of Virginia and Kentucky, it not only omitted
any stipulation of favor of grants by Tennessee, it admitted the
validity of grants by Virginia in express terms, whereas in the
former there was a stipulation in favor of the grants of Tennessee
which gave them validity.
These two compacts are as distinctive in their character as the
two treaties of 1795 and 1819 between Spain and the United States,
and this marked distinction, when carried into the opinions of the
Court in
Robinson v. Campbell and
Poole v.
Fleeger on the respective compacts, the cases of
Harcourt
v. Gaillard and
Henderson v. Poindexter on the
treaties of 1783, and 1795, the cases before recited on the
treaties of 1803, 1819, and the several compacts between states
will be found to be clear of all collision with each other and most
conclusive on every point involved in this cause. From 1781 to this
time, every treaty of whatever kind, every compact between state
and state, states and the United States, articles of capitulation,
or even articles of agreement have been held to effect by their own
force every stipulation which declares that a thing "shall be" done
or not done; that thenceforth the thing is done, everything that
"shall not" be done, if done previously, is repealed and
nullified.
All treaties, compacts, and articles of agreement in the nature
of treaties to which the United States is party have ever been held
to be the supreme law of the land, executing themselves by their
own fiat, having the same effect as an act of Congress and of equal
force with the Constitution, and if any act is required on the part
of the United States, it is to be performed by the executive and
not the legislative power, as declared in the case of
The
Peggy in 1801, and since affirmed with the exception of only
Foster and Elam. Whether that case, standing solitary and
alone, shall stand in its glory or its ruins, a judicial monument
or a warning beacon, is not dependent on my opinion; my duty is
performed by the preceding review of the law of this case in all
its various branches, which has led my mind to a conclusion
necessarily resulting from the established principles of
constitutional, national, and local law.
6. In ascertaining what are judicial principles and rules of
decision in testing the validity of titles emanating from the
Spanish authorities in the disputed territory from 1804 till 1810,
under the
Page 39 U. S. 416
Treaty of 1803 or 1819, a general reference to the cases before
recited will show that with the single exception of a question of
disputed boundary, every other question affecting title has been
uniformly held to be strictly judicial. In
Hunter v.
Martin, the Court established the general principle that when
a case arises under a treaty, the whole title of the parties must
be examined and decided by the Court as well on the construction of
the treaty and every matter bearing upon it.
14 U. S. 1
Wheat. 352-360.
In New Orleans v. De Armas, it was decided
that under the Louisiana Treaty, the inhabitants had a right to
have their titles decided by the same tribunals which decide
similar rights in other states.
34 U. S. 9 Pet.
235, and in
New Orleans v. United States, an illustrious
instance is found of the action of the courts of the United States
asserting the supremacy of a treaty in protecting private property
against a series of acts of Congress for nearly thirty years.
35 U. S. 10
Pet. 734,
35 U. S.
736.
When the true construction of the Florida treaty was settled in
the case of
Arredondo, the Court declared as a consequence
thereof:
"The proprietors could bring suits to recover them [the lands
embraced in the grants confirmed by the treaty], and any question
arising would be purely a judicial one."
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
741-742.
So in
Percheman's Case.
"Without it [the eighth article], the titles of individuals
would remain as valid under the new government as they were under
the old, and those titles, at least so far as they were consummate,
might be asserted in the courts of the United States independently
of this article."
32 U. S. 7 Pet.
88.
In
Delacroix v. Chamberlain, the question of boundary
was considered to be political in its character, but every other
question was treated as judicial.
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 600-602. So boundary was held in
Foster
and Elam, 2 Pet. 309, to be political. Yet in the
same case the Court declared:
"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 provisions."
Id., 27 U. S.
314.
I presume it is scarcely necessary to inquire whether the
construction of an act of Congress presents a judicial or political
question.
In
Strother v. Lucas, the Court said
"Treaties are the law of the land and a rule of decision in all
courts; their stipulations are binding on the United States; in
that of 1819, there is a present confirmation of all grants made
before January, 1818, with the exception of only three which had
been previously made and were expressly omitted."
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 439.
In
Massachusetts v. Rhode Island it was held that "the
construction of compacts between states" was a judicial question,
and was so considered by this Court in
Sims v. Irvine, Marlatt
v. Silk, and
Burton v. Williams. 37 U. S. 12
Pet. 725. And after a review of
Foster and Elam,
Arredondo, and
Percheman, it is said
Page 39 U. S. 417
"That no act of the political department remained to be done;
that it [the treaty of 1819] was an executed treaty, the law of the
land, and a rule for the court. In the numerous cases which have
arisen since, the treaty has been taken to be an executed one, a
rule of title and property, and all questions arising under it to
be judicial."
Id., 37 U. S.
747.
The opinion of THE CHIEF JUSTICE in this case is full to the
point now considered.
"I do not doubt the power of this Court to hear and determine a
controversy between states, or between individuals, in relation to
the boundaries of the states, when the suit is brought to try a
right of property in the soil, or any other right which is properly
the subject of judicial cognizance and decision, and which depends
on the true boundary line."
Id., 37 U. S.
752.
But I do not rest this point on judicial authority; a higher
power confers inviolable sanctity on the right of the inhabitants,
and proprietors of land in the disputed territory, which this Court
will never question. The Ordinance of 1787 is declared to be a
compact between the original states and the people and states in
the said territory, and "shall forever remain inviolable, unless by
common consent." 1 Laws of the United States 478. 3 Story 2076.
"The inhabitants of the said territory shall always be entitled
to the benefits of," &c., "and of judicial proceedings,
according to the course of the common law."
Id., 479.
"No man shall be deprived of his liberty or property but by the
judgment of his peers or the law of the land," and if the public
emergency requires any person's property to be taken, full
compensation shall be made for the same.
Ibid.
The sixth article of the Constitution declares that
"all debts contracted, and all engagements entered into, before
the adoption of this Constitution, shall be as valid against the
United States under this Constitution as under the
confederation."
Thus this ordinance, the most solemn of all engagements, has
become a part of the Constitution, and is valid to protect and
forever secure the rights of property and judicial proceedings to
the inhabitants of every territory to which it applies.
By the acts of Congress of 1798 and 1800, the ordinance of 1787
was applied to the Territory of Mississippi, 1 Story 494, 778; in
1805, to the Territory of Orleans, 2 Story 963. embracing the whole
of the disputed territory.
This ordinance, then, is in itself a panoply broad enough to
cover every right in controversy in this case, and impenetrable to
any assault which can be made upon them by any subordinate power.
When this most solemn and mutual compact, this engagement of the
old Congress, embodied in the Constitution itself, shall be finally
held to be dependent on an act of the new Congress to give it
efficiency, there can be no security for property. It must be
remembered, too, that in this compact the new states are placed
under concomitant obligations to the United States, to purchasers
from them,
Page 39 U. S. 418
to nonresident proprietors of lands, and the citizens of the
United States, which are worthy of consideration.
"The legislatures of those districts or new states shall never
interfere with the primary disposal of the soil by the United
States in Congress assembled, nor with any regulations Congress may
find necessary for securing the title in such soil to the
bona
fide purchasers. No tax shall be imposed on lands, the
property of the United States, and in no case shall nonresident
proprietors be taxed higher than those residents. The navigable
waters leading into the Mississippi and St. Lawrence, and the
carrying places between the same, shall be common highways, and
forever free as well to the inhabitants of the said territory as to
the citizens of the United States, &c., or those of any other
states that may be admitted into the confederacy, without any tax,
impost, or duty therefor."
1 Laws 479-480.
Congress cannot expect that this compact will be held sacred by
the new states if the reciprocal engagements of the United States
cease to be faithfully performed, and it may be found that the
protection and maintenance of the rights of private property in the
disputed territory, may conduce more to the honor and interest of
the United States than a contrary course, which, in my opinion,
will cause "injury to their fame and hazard to their power."
Other considerations arise on a review of the state of things
preceding the treaty of 1819, and during the military occupation of
this territory by the United States, which deeply concern them in
their foreign relations.
In 18__, the minister of Great Britain, in behalf of her ally,
called upon this government to explain the reason why the United
States had incorporated the territory west of the Perdido into the
Union, after it had been declared in the President's proclamation
that it was still held by the United States as "a subject of fair,
friendly negotiation and adjustment," 3 State Papers, For.Aff. 400
-- a question of sufficient difficulty to answer when applied to
the proclamation alone. But this difficulty would have become the
greater had the confidential message of the President, and the
consequent and simultaneous secret resolution and acts of 1811 and
1813 then been publicly disclosed; whereby the lawmaking, warmaking
power of the United States, in authorizing the forcible occupation
of the territory, by an act of war, had solemnly renewed the
pledges of the President, as well in relation to the territorial
rights of Spain, as the private property of her grantees.
And if, when this fair and friendly negotiation and adjustment
was finally closed by the ratification of the treaty in 1821, the
United States had announced to Spain that it did not relate to the
territory west of the Perdido; that it belonged to them by the
Treaty of 1803, and was held solely in virtue thereof; that any
cession by the treaty of 1819 was disclaimed, and that the United
States disavowed any obligation to confirm any grants of land made
by Spain after 1800;
Page 39 U. S. 419
that they remained null and void under the act of 1804,
notwithstanding the treaty, till Congress should please to give
them validity; that the pledges given by the three departments of
the government did not apply to that territory or its private
proprietors; that the ordinance of 1789, the Constitution of the
United States, the Treaty of 1803, or the constitution of the
states to which it was annexed, still left private property
dependent on the mere will of Congress. Such declarations would
have been met with a new remonstrance, which might have made the
United States desirous that it highest judicial tribunal should
give to the treaty such a construction as would better comport with
the law of nations, the faith of treaties, the injunctions of the
Constitution, and those principles which had been the standard
rules of federal jurisprudence under the confederation, and thence
to the present time.
Whatever the acquisition of the Floridas may have cost in
dollars or acres, it was, as this Court justly remarked in
28 U. S. 3 Pet.
463, richly repaid by its beneficial consequences, "in addition to
vacant lands," of which the United States already possessed some
hundreds of millions of acres. Nothing can tend so much to their
interest, to preserve their high position at home and abroad, as
for the United States to consider this treaty to have consummated
all the great objects which it was intended to effect; to
extinguish the claim of Spain by accepting the cession of the
territory, charged with all the titles ceded or recognized under
Spain, and in all respects redeeming to their full measure every
previous pledge given by any department of its government whereby,
in the words of the first article,
"there shall be a firm and inviolable peace, and sincere
friendship, between the United States and their citizens and his
Catholic Majesty, his successors and subjects, without exception of
persons and places,"
and in the preamble to the ninth
"with the object of putting an end to all the differences which
have existed between them, and of confirming the good understanding
which they wish to be forever maintained between them,"
&c.
Such is the effect of a Treaty of Amity, Settlement, and Limits,
by the universally received principles of the law of nations; such
too is the effect of this treaty, according to the most solemn and
often repeated adjudications of this Court, and such would be its
effects if it had been only an ordinary treaty of cession or
compact of boundary with similar stipulations for the protection of
private property.
It requires the application of no new principle or the liberal
expansion of old ones to take this treaty to so operate that all
land which by the lawfully recognized authorities of Spain in the
province had been severed from the royal domain before January,
1818, was excepted from the cession to the United States by the
second and third articles, and that all grants, &c., remain and
stand, under the eighth article, ratified and confirmed, as valid
to the same extent as they would have been if the territory had
remained under the dominion of Spain.
Page 39 U. S. 420
The ground in controversy was so severed in 1809 by a grant or
concession which, though it may not amount to a complete legal
title, yet the United States "were bound in good faith by the terms
of the treaty," to confirm such concessions, and has admitted its
obligation to confirm such as had been fairly made, as was declared
in the first case which arose under the treaty, under a concession
for land in the disputed territory,
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 601, which principle was followed in every subsequent case
until 1838, save one, and was fully recognized in
Kingsley's
Case in the clearest terms:
"It is admitted that in the construction of this article (the
eighth) of the treaty, the United States succeeds to all the
equitable obligations which we are to suppose would have influenced
his Catholic Majesty to secure his subjects their property, and
which would have been applied by him in the construction of a
conditional grant to make it absolute."
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 484.
These cases alone are full and decisive authority to rule the
present, and when taken in connection with all previous decisions,
on treaties and compacts of every description, between the United
States and foreign nations, or with the states of this Union, or
between state and state, making cessions of territory, or adjusting
contested boundaries, from 1781 to 1838, their result, when brought
to bear on the treaty of 1819, and the plaintiff's title is
decisive.
It has been seen that
Foster and Elam is a solitary
exception from the uniform course of adjudication for fifty-seven
years; that the turning point of that case has been, and is yet
admitted to remain and stand overruled,
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 519, and that it can be no authority against the plaintiffs,
unless by restoring the overruled construction of the eighth
article connected with the ratification, but is conclusive in its
favor when the settled and true construction is infused into that
case and the opinion of the Court.
It has also been seen that the bearing of the decision in
Poole v. Fleeger on the treaty of 1819, has been entirely
misapprehended by overlooking the obvious and settled distinction
between treaties and compacts of cession or boundary, which admit
the original right of the nation or state to territory, which had
before been possessed by another, without any stipulation for the
protection of private property and those treaties or compacts which
contain no such admission and do contain such stipulations. That
distinction cannot be more strongly marked than will be found on a
comparison of the compact of 1820, between Kentucky and Tennessee,
and the treaty of 1819, and when it is carried into all the cases
which have ever been before this Court, it will be most manifest
that their decisions have been uniformly influenced and governed by
it, except in the one case of
Garcia v. Lee, which admits
the application of the treaty to the disputed territory.
If the plaintiffs' case stood alone on this treaty, and it
continues to be held to execute its own stipulations, without the
aid of a law, it overthrows all intervening obstacles to the
confirmation of the grant, though the land was within the
established boundary of
Page 39 U. S. 421
Louisiana, even admitting that up to 1821 it had remained
annulled, under the act of 1804, or any other subsequent law. By
the construction now given to that act, it has no bearing on this
case, but independent of this construction and the conclusive
reasons assigned by the Court, other considerations deprive it of
all effect, for every subsequent act of Congress which protects
private property
pro tanto repeals it; so does every other
act which places the territory, its inhabitants and proprietors,
under the government of the Constitution of the United States or
the states which embrace it, and from whatever source the rights of
property arise, they are as sacred under the judicial wing of the
Union or the state as those of its other citizens.
In addition to this protection, the law of nations, without any
treaty, stipulation, or constitutional provision, makes private
property inviolable in the cession, relinquishment, conquest, or
military occupation of the territory, by some of which means the
United States acquired it, and it matters not by which; the laws,
usages, and customs of Spain and the province remained in force as
the only rules of title and property, the only test of the validity
of grants.
In putting themselves in the place of Spain, whether by her
consent or force, the United States took on themselves all the
obligations imposed by their position, and the state of the
disputed territory under the Treaty of 1803 and subsequent laws,
and anew recognized those obligations by the President's
proclamation, and the acts of 1811 and 1813; the stipulations of
the treaty were only an affirmance and renewal of these
obligations, in the more solemn form of a national compact most
solemnly ratified, but which bound the United States to nothing to
which they were not previously bound, by every guarantee which a
government could give to its citizens.
For these reasons, I am clearly of opinion that without the acts
of 1824 or 1836, the plaintiffs' title was as valid as with their
aid; those laws only fulfill previous pledges, and I am unwilling
to put my opinion on any grounds which may impair their effect or
which leave it open to the inference that a right of property under
this, or any other grant of land west of the Perdido, requires for
its confirmation an act which the United States may do or not do,
at their pleasure, or that any proprietor, who claims by virtue of
such grant, has not the same constitutional rights to judicial
proceedings as any other citizen of the United States.
With these settled convictions, arising from a full and often
renewed consideration of the course of the executive, legislative,
and judicial departments of this government; I must adhere to the
opinion thus expressed, till its errors have been made to appear,
by a more correct exposition of the law of nations, the obligations
of treaties, and the decisions of this Court. I look in vain to the
opinion in
Foster and Elam, for light on these subjects,
there is a profound silence as to the law of nations, or former
adjudications; the same silence is observed in
Garcia v.
Lee, which rests exclusively on
Foster and Elam, and
Poole v. Fleeger, unless it was intended
Page 39 U. S. 422
to invoke the principles of
Arredondo and
Percheman, in support of the judgment then given, which
were the only other cases referred to in the opinion, and so far
from supporting it, are in the most direct hostility to it.
The opinion in
Arredondo was delivered after the appeal
by the Spanish minister from the decision in
Foster and
Elam; the opinion in
Percheman was an answer to the
appeal by the Secretary of State, from some misapprehensions of the
opinion in
Arredondo. This double appeal was most fully
met by the opinion in
Percheman, in language which
vindicated the honor and interest of the United States, and left
this Court no longer exposed to the imputation of being the only
department of the government which presented any obstacle to the
execution of the treaty as mutually understood.
To these opinions I must adhere till their principles have been
most deliberately reconsidered, and their fallacy exposed; if the
laws of nations, as there declared, are not correctly stated, there
must be some future adjudication by this Court, defining them with
more accuracy, illustrating them with more truth, and more
correctly applying their principles to the treaties of 1803 and
1819.
MR. JUSTICE BARBOUR, dissenting.
I dissent from the opinion just delivered in this case, and will
very briefly state the reasons. It is a writ of error to the
Supreme Court of Alabama, affirming the judgment of the Circuit
Court of Baldwin County of that state, in favor of the defendant in
error.
The error alleged is that the circuit court, whose judgment was
affirmed by the supreme court, misconstrued the act of Congress,
entitled "an act granting certain lots of ground to the corporation
of the City of Mobile, and to certain individuals of said city,"
passed 26 May, 1824, in the charge which it gave to the jury, at
the trial, as stated in the bill of exceptions in the record.
Before I state the charge, it will be necessary with a view to
understand its bearing, to state the material facts appearing in
the bill of exceptions to have been proven, and upon which the
charge was founded.
Pollard's heirs, at the trial, to maintain the issue on their
part, gave in evidence a concession for the lot in question from
the Spanish authorities, dated 12 December, 1809, but which had
been reported against, and rejected by the commissioners of the
United States, appointed to investigate and report upon such
claims, because of the want of improvement and occupancy. They then
gave in evidence a patent dated 14 March, 1837, issued by virtue of
an Act of Congress passed 2 July, 1836, entitled an act for the
relief of William Pollard's heirs; the patent embraced the lot in
question.
The defendant then gave in evidence a Spanish grant, dated 9
June, 1802, to John Forbes & Company, for a lot of ground,
eighty feet front, on Royal Street, with a depth of three hundred
and four feet to the east, and bounded on the south by
government
Page 39 U. S. 423
Street, which grant was recognized and confirmed by an act of
Congress.
It was proven that the lot in question is east of Water Street,
and immediately in front of the lot conveyed by the above-mentioned
grant, to John Forbes & Company, and only separated from it by
Water Street. It was proven that previously to the year 1819, and
until filled up, as hereafter stated, the lot in question was, at
ordinary high tide, covered with water, and mainly so, at all
stages of the water; that the ordinary high water flowed from the
east to about the middle of what is now Water Street, between the
lot in question, and that embraced in the grant to John Forbes
& Company. John Forbes & Company had been in possession of
the lot contained in their grant since the year 1802, and it was
known under the Spanish government as a water lot, no lots at that
time existing between it and the water.
In the year 1823, no one being in possession and the lot in
question being under water, a certain Curtis Lewis, without any
title or claim, took possession of it and filled it up east of
Water Street, filling up north of Government Street, and at the
corner of same and Water Street; that Lewis remained a few months
in possession, when he was ousted by one of the firm of John Forbes
& Company, who erected a smith's shop thereon, and they were
then turned out by said Lewis, by legal process, who then retained
possession until he conveyed it. When Lewis took possession, Water
Street at that place could be passed by carts, and was common.
The defendant connected himself in title to the lot in question
by means of conveyances, with John Forbes & Company, with
Curtis Lewis, and the Mayor and Aldermen of Mobile. It was admitted
that the lot in question lies between Church Street and North
Boundary Street.
On this state of facts, the court charged the jury that if the
lot conveyed as above to John Forbes & Company by the deed
aforesaid was known as a water lot under the Spanish government,
and if the lot in question had been improved at and previous to 26
May, 1824, and was east of Water Street and immediately in front of
the lot so conveyed to John Forbes & Company; then the lot in
question, passed by the Act of Congress of 26 May, 1824, to those
at that time owning and occupying, so as above conveyed to John
Forbes & Company, and that it was immaterial who made the
improvements on the lot on the east side of Water Street, being the
one in question; that by the aforesaid act of Congress, the
proprietor of the lot on the west side of Water Street, known as
above -- that is, as a water lot under the Spanish government --
was entitled to the lot on the east side of it.
Whether this charge was correct or not depends upon the
construction of the act of 1824, and I now proceed to show that it
is, as I think, precisely in accordance with the true construction
of that act -- nay, that it is almost the very echo of it. The
second section provides
"That all the right and claim of the United States to so
Page 39 U. S. 424
many of the lots of ground east of Water Street, and between
Church Street and North Boundary Street, now known as water lots,
as are situated between the channel of the river, and the front of
the lots known under the Spanish government as water lots, in the
said City of Mobile, whereon improvements have been made, be, and
the same are hereby vested in the several proprietors and occupants
of each of the lots, heretofore fronting on the River Mobile,
except,"
&c. I will at present pause here and examine the meaning of
this section, independently of the exception; I will afterwards
examine the operation of that. Now the questions are who were the
grantees, and what the things granted by this section? And first,
who were the grantees? They were the proprietors and occupants of
the lots, heretofore fronting on the River Mobile. It appears from
the record that the lots on the western side of Water Street were
the lots heretofore fronting on the River Mobile, and that these
were known under the Spanish government as water lots.
There were lots at that time existing between them and the
water. The grantees then contemplated by the act of Congress were
those persons who owned lots known as water lots under the Spanish
government, because those were they which heretofore fronted on the
River Mobile, and the record, as I have said, fixes their locality
on the western side of Water Street.
Next let us inquire what were the things granted? These were the
lots east of Water Street, and between Church and North Boundary
Street, now known as water lots and situated between the channel of
the river and the front of the lots, known under the Spanish
government as water lots, whereon improvements have been made.
It appears that the lot in question answers this description, as
to locality in every particular; that improvements had been made
upon it, and that it was in front of the lot owned by John Forbes
& Company, which lay on the western side of Water Street, and
which originally fronted on Mobile River, reaching to it; and was
known under the Spanish government as a water lot. If we now apply
the charge of the court to this state of facts, we shall see that
it accords with the language of the law, with extraordinary
precision. The jury was told hypothetically that if the lot
conveyed to John Forbes & Company was known as a water lot,
under the Spanish government, which hypothesis is proven to be a
fact by the record, and if the lot in question had been improved,
previously to 26 May, 1824, and this fact also clearly appears from
the record; and was east of Water Street, and immediately in front
of the lot of John Forbes & Company, and this fact, too, as
clearly appears from the record; then that the lot in question
passed by the Act of Congress of May 1824, to those at that time
owning and occupying the lot conveyed to John Forbes &
Company.
I repeat that this charge so fully accords with the law that it
may almost be said to be an echo of its language. I have said
that
Page 39 U. S. 425
all the facts which were put hypothetically to the jury, were
proven by the record; but it was not at all necessary that this
should have been done. When we are examining the correctness of a
charge given to a jury, that if a given state of facts existed, a
particular legal result would follow, we must assume the existence
of the facts, because the charge only instructs the jury that such
is the law if the facts exist, of which they are to judge, and if
the facts do not exist, then the charge, by its very terms, does
not apply.
But the court told the jury that it was immaterial by whom the
improvements were made. I cannot doubt the correctness of this part
of the charge; in this, too, the court echoed the very language of
the act of Congress, "whereon improvements have been made." Now as
the law itself does not say by whom the improvements have been
made, but only that they must have been made; if the court had said
that they must have been made by any particular person, they would
have put another condition into the law, and have required what it
did not require. It is said, however, that the law could not have
contemplated giving to one man the benefit of improvements made by
another. If such could even be supposed to be the proper
construction, the facts in the record would meet it, because it
appears that Forbes & Company did make an improvement on the
lot in question, as also did Curtis Lewis, under whom the defendant
claims. But the law, to my mind, clearly does not contemplate
giving the new water lot to a person, because he made improvements
on it; if it had so intended, it would have been so said; but its
purpose and its plain language is that where the new water lot is
improved, it shall pass to the owner of the old water lot. The
policy of this is obvious. The old water lot originally went to the
water; the new water lot did not then exist, having since come into
existence; the purpose of the statute was to place the owner of the
old water lot in his original position, that of still going to the
water, which would be effected by giving him the new water lot,
without inquiring by whom it was improved.
But it is supposed that the claim of Pollard's heirs comes
within the benefit of the exception, in this section, which, so far
as it respects this case, is in these words,
"Except where the Spanish government has made a new grant or
order of survey for the same, during the time at which they had the
power to grant the same, in which case the right and claim of the
United States shall be, and is hereby, vested in the person to whom
such grant or order of survey was made, or in his legal
representatives."
It will be observed that this exception only extends to such
grants or orders of survey as were made by the Spanish government
when they had power to make the same. The grant from the Spanish
government to Pollard, which is supposed to be within the benefit
of this exception, bears date in 1809; if at that time the Spanish
government had not power to make the grant, then the exception, by
its very terms, does not embrace the case.
Page 39 U. S. 426
Now this Court solemnly decided in
Foster
and Elam v. Neilson, 2 Pet. 254, and again in
Garcia v. Lee,
12 Pet. 511, that in 1809, the date of Pollard's grant, the Spanish
government had not the power to make grants in the territory of
which the lot in question was a part, and that all such as were
made after the Treaty of St. Ildefonso were void.
Consistently with these decisions, I think, that at the date of
Pollard's grant, the Spanish government had not the power to make
it, and it follows, that it is not within the benefit of the
exception.
Some reliance seemed to be placed upon the proviso to this
section, which is in these words:
"Provided that nothing in this act contained shall be construed
to affect the claim or claims, if any such there be, of any
individual or individuals or of any body politic or corporate."
Now it is too clear for argument that this proviso cannot aid
the claim of Pollard's heirs, upon the assumption that they claim
under the exception, because the object of the proviso is to guard
any possible claim of others against being affected by the grant of
Congress, either in the enacting part of the cession or in the
exception. I have not thought it necessary to bring the first
section of the act into the argument because that only gives to the
City of Mobile the right and claim of the United States to such
lots as were not confirmed to individuals, by that or any former
act, and as the second section does confirm the claims to this lot,
either, as I think, to the proprietor of the old water lot in front
of which it lies or, as is argued, to Pollard's heirs, as holding a
Spanish grant, nothing passed to the City of Mobile, whichsoever
construction shall prevail, and I will add that if anything did
pass to the City of Mobile, it appears by the record, that their
title or claim was vested in the defendant.
Finally it was argued that the title of Pollard's heirs was
perfected by the Act of Congress of July, 1836, which confirmed to
them the lot in question by metes and bounds, but the decisive
answer to that is that that act contains a proviso that it should
only operate as a relinquishment, on the part of the United States,
of all their right and claim to the lot, and should not interfere
with or affect the claim or claims of third persons. Now if, as I
clearly think, the right of the United States had passed by the act
of 1824 to the owner of the old water lot in front of which the one
in question lay, then the United States had no right or claim to
relinquish by the act of 1836. And the same consequence precisely
would follow if, as the plaintiffs contend, the right of the United
States passed to them by virtue of the exception in the act of
1824. So that whatsoever may be the construction of the enacting
part of that act, or of the exception, it would equally follow,
that there was no claim or title in the United States, which the
act of 1836 could operate to convey or relinquish.
For these reasons, I am clearly of opinion that the judgment of
the supreme court of Alabama is correct, and ought to be
affirmed.
Page 39 U. S. 427
MR. JUSTICE CATRON, dissenting.
The Town of Mobile was first settled and governed by France, and
by the treaty of 1763, ceded to Great Britain, and attached to
Florida; by the treaty of 1783, Florida was ceded by Great Britain
to Spain. Florida proper, previous to the treaty of 1763, extended
to the River Perdido, and only included the country east of it,
which river was the boundary between France and Spain, from the
first settlement of the country up to 1763.
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
300. After 1783 and up to 1800, Spain owned Florida and Louisiana;
that power then retroceded to France Louisiana to the same extent
it had when France owned it -- that is, all west of the Perdido --
disregarding the fact that Great Britain had attached the country
west of the Perdido to Florida and that for the purposes of
government, Spain, after 1783, had continued to recognize and
govern as Florida, all the country east of the Mississippi, north
of the Iberville and south of our boundary in the 30� of
latitude. But that the country passed to France as far east as the
Perdido by the Treaty of St. Ildefonso of 1800, is the established
doctrine of this government, and which is fully recognized by this
Court. And by the treaty of cession of 1803, the French Republic
ceded Louisiana to the United States in full sovereignty, with "all
public lots and squares, vacant lands, and all public buildings,
fortifications, barracks, and other edifices, which are not private
property."
Owing to the confusion growing out of the circumstance, that
Great Britain, after 1763, had attached the country west of the
Perdido to Florida, and Spain had, after 1783, treated and governed
it as part of Florida; it was assumed by Spain that no part of the
province passed to France by the treaty of 1800, or to the United
States, by the cession of France of 1803. And Spain, for some nine
years after the cession, continued to hold and govern the country,
and until we took forcible possession of it.
All title to the vacant lots and squares in the Town of Mobile,
having been vested in France by the treaty of 1800, and in the
United States, by the cession of 1803, no interest in the soil
afterwards remained in the King and government of Spain, and all
attempts to grant lands by that power were merely void. Such is the
settled doctrine of this Court, as holden in
Foster and Elam v.
Neilson, 2 Peters, and reaffirmed in
Garcia v. Lee,
12 Peters. So Congress has uniformly, from 1804, regarded our
title, and the assumptions of Spain.
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
304.
The rapid growth and extensive commerce of the City of Mobile,
in 1824, rendered it expedient that the city should improve its
facilities in regard to navigation, the bay in its front being
shallow, extensive wharves and other improvements were
indispensable. To accommodate the city, Congress passed an act (ch.
415) of that year, vesting in the mayor and aldermen, and their
successors,
"for the sole use and benefit of the city, forever, the Hospital
and Bakehouse lots, and also all the right and claim of the United
States to all the lots not sold or confirmed to individuals, either
by that act, or
Page 39 U. S. 428
any former act of Congress, and to which no equitable title
existed in favor of any individual, under that act, or any former
act."
The grant to extend to all public lots lying in front of the
city, and between high water mark and the channel of the river, and
between Church and North Boundary Streets. Such is the first
section of the act, and if nothing more was found in it, there can
be no doubt the city took the title to the square, a part of which
is in controversy, as the only exceptions in favor of outstanding
claims are those conferred by acts of Congress.
The plaintiffs' claim is founded on a concession made by the
Spanish governor of Florida in 1809, and was a permit to William
Pollard to use and occupy, for the purpose of depositing lumber
from his sawmill, the space between Forbes & Company's canal
and the King's Wharf. As the concession made in 1809 was wholly
void, it is useless to inquire into its character, or the nature of
the title intended to be conferred.
But it is insisted the claim is excepted from the first section
of the act of 1824 by the second, which provides that in case of
any lot, &c., where the
"Spanish government has made a new grant or order of survey for
the same, during the time at which they had the power to grant the
same, in which case, the right and claim of the United States shall
be and is hereby vested in the person to whom such alienation,
grant, or order of survey was made, or in his legal
representatives."
The concession of 1809 was made in the face of the act of 1804,
ch. 38, sec. 14. 2 Story's Laws 939, pronouncing all grants by the
Spanish authorities after the cession, void; Spain certainly had no
power to make it, and therefore the act of 1824 does not cover the
claim. If it had, a title in fee by force of that act would have
vested in Pollard's heirs; and the special act of 1836, in their
favor, been superfluous. But neither the parties interested, nor
Congress, seem to have supposed the title confirmed by the act of
1824.
The statute also provides that where improvements had been made
on the new water lots east of Water Street, that then the title
should vest in the proprietor of the old water lot opposite, on the
west side of said Street, and on this provision the charge of the
court below turned, that court holding the title to the part of the
premises in controversy to have vested in Forbes & Company,
because it was improved at the date of the act of 1824, and that it
was immaterial by whom the improvement has been made.
That the improvements referred to by the act must have existed
on the new and eastern water lots is, as I think, free from doubt,
but that Forbes & Company could acquire a benefit from the
improvement made by Lewis is somewhat doubtful; as, however, no
critical construction of the act on this point is called for, none
has been made. The act of 1824 passed the title to the property
covered by the patent issued by virtue of the act of 1836, unless
it was excepted from the first act, and this is the only question
in the cause, for as the plaintiff must recover by the strength of
his own title, it
Page 39 U. S. 429
is immaterial whether the City of Mobile, or Forbes &
Company, took by the act of 1824. The charge of the court, in
substance, held the patent on which the lessors rely to be void. On
the admitted facts, I think it clearly was so, and that the reasons
for the judgment, if proper on the whole case, are immaterial.
Such is the uniform rule in actions of ejectment, where a charge
of an inferior court is reexamined on a writ of error.
The defendant, however, shows himself clothed with the titles of
the City of Mobile, of Forbes & Company, and of Lewis, on which
the court pronounced him to have the better right, and for the
reasons above stated, I think, correctly.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Supreme Court of the State of Alabama, and was argued by
counsel. On consideration whereof, if it ordered and adjudged by
this Court, that the judgment of the said supreme court in this
cause be, and the same is hereby, reversed with costs, and that
this cause be, and the same is hereby, remanded to the said supreme
court, that such further proceedings may be had therein as to law
and justice may appertain.
* MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY was prevented sitting in this case by
indisposition.