The certificate of a private surveyor that he had permission
from the governor of the territory to make a survey of the land
granted is no evidence of the fact. There is a marked and wide
difference in the effect of the certificate of the Surveyor General
and of a private individual who assumes to certify without
authority.
Instructions of 1811 as to the duties of the Surveyor General in
making surveys under grants by the governors of the public lands of
Spain.
A grant by a Spanish governor of Florida meant not, as in the
states of the United States, a perfect title, but an incipient
right which, when surveyed, required confirmation by the governor.
The duty of confirmation by the acts of Congress is deputed to the
courts of justice of the United States in execution of the treaty
with Spain.
The same credence that was accorded to the return of the
Surveyor General by the Spanish government is due to it by the
courts of the United States. Plats and certificates, because of the
official character of the Surveyor General, have accorded to them
the force and character of a deposition.
Page 41 U. S. 197
Samuel Miles, a new settler, admitted under the protection of
King of Spain on 18 July 1813, presented a petition to Governor
Kindelan, the Spanish Governor of East Florida, setting forth great
services performed by him for the supply of the troops of Spain in
the province, and severe sufferings and losses sustained by him in
the service of the Crown, and considering himself entitled to some
favor, asked for a grant of five miles square of land, for the
construction of a water saw mill at a place fit for the purpose and
which is vacant, situated at the mouth of the River Santa Lucia.
The governor gave the following decree on the petition:
"St. Augustine, Florida, 19 July 1813"
"Taking into consideration the benefit and utility that will
redound to the province from a machine for sawing lumber which the
party proposes to construct in the place which he points out, and
also paying attention to the services and other matters which he
sets forth, let there be granted to him the five miles square of
land which he solicits, without injury to a better right, and in
order to prove this grant, let there be delivered to him from the
secretary's office, the necessary certified copy."
"KINDELAN"
On 7 May 1815, a survey and plat of the land, was returned, with
the following certificate:
"I, Don Roberto McHardy, an inhabitant of this province, and
private surveyor, do certify that in consequence of a permission
from this government, I have surveyed and delineated a square of
five miles, containing 16,000 acres of land, which this government
has granted to Don Samuel Miles, on 19 July 1813, which plat is
represented in the preceding plot. St. Augustine of Florida, on 7
May 1815."
"ROB. McHARDY"
On 23 May 1829, John M. Hanson and others, the grantees of
Samuel Miles, brought their petition before the Superior Court of
East Florida setting forth the grant to Samuel Miles and their
title under the same and praying that the land, as surveyed by
Robert McHardy, might be confirmed to them. After various
proceedings in the court, at July term 1840, a
Page 41 U. S. 198
decree was made by the Honorable Isaac H. Bronson, judge of the
superior court, in favor of the claim, in conformity with the
survey of Robert McHardy. From this decree the United States
prosecuted an appeal.
CATRON, JUSTICE, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a grant to Samuel Miles dated 18 July, 1813, for five
miles square of land, or 16,000 acres, at the mouth of the River
Santa Lucia. The first question is was the grant made in property
and dominion, or was it made on condition that a water saw mill
should be erected? The petitioner sets forth various merits and
losses and asks the governor to be pleased to grant to him, in
virtue of these, the possession of five miles square for the
construction of a water saw mill, fit for the purpose, at a place
that is vacant at the mouth of the River Santa Lucia. The grant to
be in lawful property and dominion. The grant was made to the
petitioner for the purpose of constructing the mill in the place
pointed out,
"and also [says the governor] paying attention to the services
and other matters which he sets forth, that there be granted to him
the five miles square of land which he solicits, without injury to
a better right."
We have often held that the authorities of Spain were authorized
to grant the public domain in accordance with their own ideas of
the merits and considerations presented by the grantee,
Page 41 U. S. 199
and that our powers extended only to the inquiry whether in fact
the grant had been made and its legal effect when made, in cases
where the law by implication introduced a condition or it was
peculiar in its provisions.
Wiggins'
Case, 14 Pet. 346. As no special ordinance
introduces conditions into mill grants, we must construe the one
before us by its own terms. The party desired the grant for the
purpose of building a saw mill, so he represents, and we must take
his statement to be true, as the concession in effect adopts it,
and to this end, 16,000 acres were granted, it being the usual
quantity in such cases. The grant, however, is not founded on that
consideration, although intended for that purpose. Meritorious
services and losses are relied on, and the land was asked and
granted in lawful property and dominion, without any condition
annexed to build the mill.
2. The second objection is to the survey. Its validity is put in
issue by the answer, and its introduction was objected to, when
offered to be read on the hearing, because it had been made by a
mere private surveyor and because it did not follow the calls of
the grant. The court received the survey and decreed the land laid
off.
There was no proof that it was at the place granted further than
appears by the face of the plat and certificate, and we must
inquire what credit ought to have been accorded to them by the
court. Mr. McHardy certifies, that he was a private surveyor and
that he had permission from the government, whether general or
special, does not appear. His own statement is no evidence of the
fact. And so it is in regard to his description of the land
surveyed, which he certifies as lying at the place granted. There
is a marked and wide difference in the effect of the certificate of
the surveyor general and a private individual who assumes to
certify without authority. What the duties of the former are is
well known from the proofs in many cases presented to this Court.
They, however, are set forth by the instructions of 1811. Land Laws
1003-1004. First, the grant must be presented; then the persons
having adjoining lands to the place designated must be notified,
that they may be present at the making of the survey, with their
titles, so that there be no interference; the lands must be bounded
by rectangular parallelograms, and fronts on rivers, navigable
creeks, and public roads shall not exceed one-third of the
Page 41 U. S. 200
depth back; to each person whose lands have been measured a plat
will be given, with the lines drawn in black ink, and when bounded
by a river, creek or swamp (which is permitted), a quantity will be
added or be deducted maintaining the rectangular form on the other
lines; the number of acres will be on the center of the plot, and
the scale one inch to four chains. The plat will be delivered to
the grantee with the following inscription:
"Plat of the number of acres of land, of A. B., in such a place,
measured and bounded by the public surveyor of this province, Don
George Clarke, East Florida; the day of the year and month, on the
same tracts. George Clarke."
"The surveyor will keep a book of large paper, and copy therein
the plats he gives out; these plats will be numbered; the book will
be indexed. At the end of the book, he will have a sheet of
sufficient size for a general plan, containing the surveys for
individuals, with the number of each. The book will serve to show
government what lands are vacant or not measured, and he shall keep
a journal to satisfy the persons having lands adjoining. The
corners are to be marked with stakes three inches diameter at the
head, and the owners shall encircle them with oyster shells two
feet deep and two feet diameter."
A grant delivered out for survey, meant not, as with us, a
perfect title, but an incipient right, which, when surveyed,
required confirmation by the governor. The duty of confirmation, by
the acts of Congress, is deputed to the courts of justice of the
United States, in execution of the treaty with Spain. It follows
the same evidence that was accorded to the return of the surveyor
general by the Spanish governor, before the cession, is due to it
by the courts of this country. The acts of the officer and the
governor were both on behalf of the government; each by his duty
was bound to protect the public domain and to guard the law from
violation; if the surveyor, therefore, by his plat and certificate,
returned that he had surveyed the land at the place granted, not by
the assertion only that it was at the place, but by a description
in legal form, that it was so; then the return was
prima
facie competent evidence, without further proof, on which the
governor could found the confirmation. Plats and certificates,
because of the official character of the
Page 41 U. S. 201
surveyor general, have accorded to them the force and character
of a deposition, the same as Aguilar's certificate to a copy of the
grant, as we held in the case of
Wiggins,
14 Pet. 346.
In contrast to the official survey and return, how does this
private one of Mr. McHardy stand? No proof was made that it was on
the land granted; the certificate does not even so assert, and
there is no plat in the record; did it however appear in the
clearest manner, on the face of the paper, it would be of no value.
The private surveyor acted not for and with the interests of the
government, but at the instance of the grantee and for his interest
and against the government. The survey was a private act, the plat
and certificate private papers delivered to the grantee, of which
no record was made in the surveyor-general's office and of which
the governor could take no notice unless it was presented to him,
and extrinsic proof made that it was for the land granted and that
it had been lawfully made in regard to navigable waters, roads,
adjoining granted lands, and line marks. Then he could have ordered
a perfect title to issue, founded on the survey, as he did do in
may instances on surveys of Mr. McHardy, and as this Court has done
and would do on similar proof.
The decree of the superior court gives the line and description
of the survey, to-wit,
"five miles square of land situated at the mouth of the River
Santa Lucia; the lines of the said survey thereof are as follows,
to-wit, the first line commences at a cedar tree, marked M, on the
bank of Indian River, and runs south 60� west, 400 chains to
a pine, marked M; the second line commences at said pine, and runs
north 30� west, 400 chains to another pine, marked M; the
third line runs from said pine, north 60� east, 400 chains
to a live oak marked M, on the banks of Indian River, and the
fourth line is formed and bounded by said river."
It is laid down in a square, with one side of 400 chains on the
Indian River. By the fourth instruction to the surveyor general
(declaratory of the standing law of the province), the front on the
river could not exceed one-third of the longitudinal extension
back. Land Laws 1004. Nor does the description in the concession
"of five miles square" alter the rule prescribed by the general
law. It had reference more to
Page 41 U. S. 202
quantity than form of survey (
Sibbald's
Case, 10 Pet. 323), and was made on the assumption
that no controlling objects such as rivers would be either included
or bounded upon, and if they were, that the general law would
govern the survey. The grant is for five miles square at the mouth
of the River Santa Lucia; this is represented to be a fit place for
a saw mill, to supply timber for which the grant was made. We take
it the place is on the side of the Indian River, to which the Santa
Lucia is a tributary, and that the Santa Lucia is not navigable, or
a mill would not have been permitted to obstruct it; of this,
however, the governor had the right to judge; but we cannot suppose
the survey was intended to include the Indian River or to front on
it one-third part. We therefore hold the concession carried with it
the condition imposed by law in regard to the form of the
survey.
The decree is reversed and the cause remanded to the court
below to be further proceeded in. That court will order the 16,000
acres to be properly surveyed according to the principles above
stated and found its decree of confirmation on the new
survey.