A concession, having no defined boundaries, made by the
Lieutenant governor of Upper Louisiana in 1799, but not surveyed,
cannot be considered as "property," and as such protected by the
courts of justice, without a sanction by the political power, under
the third article of the Treaty with France made in 1803.
The Lieutenant Governor of Upper Louisiana had the authority, as
a subdelegate, to grant concessions, direct surveys, and place
grantees in possession, but no perfect title to the land passed
until the concession and a copy of the survey were delivered to the
Intendant General at New Orleans, and also a
proces verbal
attesting the fact that the survey was made in the presence of the
commandant or in that of a syndic and two neighbors. On these the
legal title was founded and then perfected and recorded.
The mere circumstance that another plat, containing different
land, was upon the same sheet of paper which contained the genuine
plat, and which was filed in the recorder's office, was not
sufficient to invalidate the claim, because the name of the
claimant was written upon the face of the one describing the tract
claimed, and that was the only one before the commissioners.
This was one of those land cases which arose from a conflict of
title between an old Spanish concession, confirmed under the
various acts of Congress upon the subject, and a title derived
under a New Madrid grant. All these acts of Congress bearing upon
both titles are set forth in the case of
Stoddard
v. Chambers, 2 How. 284, and the substance of them
need not be repeated here. The following is a list of them:
image:a
Page 49 U. S. 318
This was an action of ejectment brought in the circuit court by
Mary B. Penrose, the defendant in error, who claimed under the
Spanish concession, against Bissell, who claimed under the New
Madrid certificate which was located upon the land in controversy
in March, 1818. We will first state the title of the plaintiff
below, and then that of the defendant.
The petition and concession were as follows,
viz.:
"
The sons of Vasquez, claiming 800 arpens
each"
"
To Don Carlos Dehault Delassus, Lieutenant Governor of
Upper Louisiana"
"SIR -- Benito, Antoine, Hypolite, Joseph, and Pierre Vasquez,
all of them sons of Don Benito Vasquez, captain of militia of this
town, brevetted by his Catholic Majesty, full of confidence in the
generosity and benevolence of the government under which they are
born, hope that you will be pleased to take into consideration the
unfortunate situation in which they find themselves by the want of
means of their family, which has been living for some time in
distressing circumstances, and unable to give them the necessary
education; therefore, wishing to procure to themselves, in the
course of time, an independent existence, they think of forming an
establishment which may one day insure their welfare. They flatter
themselves, sir, that the services of their father will assure to
them your protection, and the goodness of your heart will lead you
to grant their demand; consequently they supplicate you to grant to
each of them eight hundred arpens of land, in superficie, making
altogether the quantity of four thousand arpens, which they wish to
take in one or several places of the vacant lands of the King's
domain. Favor which your petitioners presume to hope from your
justice."
"BENITO VASQUEZ"
"ANTOINE VASQUEZ"
"HYPOLITE VASQUEZ"
"JOSEPH VASQUEZ"
"PIERRE VASQUEZ"
"St. Louis, February 16, 1800"
"
St. Louis of Illinois, February 17, 1800"
"After seeing the precedent statement, and the laudable motives
which animate the petitioners, and considering that their family is
one of the most ancient in this country, and worthy of all the
benevolence of government, as much for their personal merit as on
account of the services [of the] father of the petitioners, I do
grant to said petitioners, for them and their heirs, the land which
they solicit, if it [is] not prejudicial to
Page 49 U. S. 319
anybody; and the surveyor, Don Antonio Soulard, shall put the
interested party in possession of the quantity of land asked for,
in one or two vacant places of the royal domain, after which he
shall draw a plat, which he shall deliver to the interested
parties, with his certificate, to serve them in obtaining the
concession and title in form from the Intendant General, to whom
alone corresponds, by royal order, the distributing and granting
all classes of lands of the royal domain."
"CARLOS DEHAULT DELASSUS"
"A true translation."
"JULIUS DE MUN"
"
St. Louis, October 27, 1832"
On 11 February, 1806, Benito Vasquez, the eldest son, assigned
his 800 arpens to Rudolph Tillier.
On 27 February, 1806, a survey and plat of the land was made by
James Mackay, locating it about two miles northwest of St. Louis,
as appeared by the following certificate:
"I do certify, that the above plat represents 800 arpens of
land, French measure, situated in the district of St. Louis,
Louisiana territory, and surveyed by me at the request of the
proprietor, who claims the same by virtue of a Spanish grant."
"Given under my hand at St. Louis, this 27 February, in the year
of our Lord 1806."
"JAMES MACKAY"
"Received for record, St. Louis, February 27, 1806"
"ANTOINE SOULARD"
"
Surveyor General Territory Louisiana"
On 25 August, 1806, Tillier filed his claim before the First
Board of Commissioners. There were two plats filed, covering
different tracts of land, both of which plats were upon the same
sheet of paper; but upon the face of one of them was written the
name of the claimant at full length. This one included the land in
controversy, and was the only one considered by the
commissioners.
On 22 September, 1810, the board decided that this claim "ought
not to be confirmed."
On 3 October, 1832, this claim was brought before another board
of commissioners, which, on 2 November, 1833, passed the following
order:
"
Saturday, November 2, 1833"
"The board met pursuant to adjournment. Present, Lewis F. Linn,
A. G. Harrison, F. R. Conway, Commissioners. "
Page 49 U. S. 320
"The sons of Vasquez, each claiming 800 arpens of land under a
concession from Charles Dehault Delassus.
See page 17. The
board remark that they can see no cause for entertaining the idea
that the said concession was not issued at the time it bears date,
as intimated in the minutes of the former commissioners."
"The board are unanimously of opinion, that this claim ought to
be confirmed to the said Benito, Antoine, Hypolite, Joseph, and
Pierre Vasquez, or their legal representatives, according to the
concession."
"The board adjourned until tomorrow, at 9 o'clock A.M."
"L. F. LINN,"
"F. R. CONWAY"
"A. G. HARRISON"
This claim was confirmed by the Act of Congress of 4 July, 1836,
and again surveyed by the United States surveyor on 29 March, 1842,
according to the original survey of Mackay, filed with the claim in
1806. The claim was assigned by Tillier to C. B. Penrose, who
conveyed it to Mary B. (the plaintiff below) and Anna H. W.
Penrose, on 20 February, 1823.
The title of Bissell, the defendant below, was as follows.
The defendant produced and read in evidence:
1. A certificate issued by the recorder of land titles, No. 164,
dated 4 November, 1816, whereby it is certified, that, in
conformity to the provisions of an act of Congress of 17 February,
1815, John Brooks, or his legal representatives, is entitled to
locate 709 arpens on any of the public lands of the Territory of
Missouri, the sale of which is authorized by law.
2. The location and survey thereof, No. 2541, made in March,
1818, which includes the land in controversy.
3. A patent certificate, No. 308, issued by the recorder of land
titles, 17 November, 1822, whereby it is certified, that, in
pursuance of an Act of Congress passed 17 February, 1815, a
location certificate, No. 164, issued from the office of the
recorder, in favor of John Brooks, or his legal representatives,
for 709 arpens of land, that a location had been made by the plat
of survey, No. 2541, and that the said John Brooks, or his legal
representatives, is entitled to a patent for the said tract,
containing, according to the location, 603 14/100 acres, in
township 45 north, range 7 east.
It was admitted that the title of John Brooks was vested in the
defendant below, by mesne conveyances, on 14 February, 1824, and it
was proved that one Brady, under whom the defendant below acquired
title, had his mansion house
Page 49 U. S. 321
adjacent to the land in controversy, and occupied a part thereof
before the year 1824, and that the same has been ever since
occupied; that the defendant Bissell extended his improvements over
the whole fifty-five acres as early as 1829 or 1830.
The defendant then asked the following instructions, which the
court refused to give, and each of them; to which refusal the
defendant by his counsel excepted, which instructions are in the
words and figures following:
"
Instructions refused"
"1. That the land sued for in this action was not reserved from
sale by the Act of Congress of 3 March, 1811, in consequence of the
filing of the claim of Rudolph Tillier, with the concession to
Benito, Antoine, Hypolite, Joseph, and Pierre Vasquez, and other
documents, with the recorder of land titles, as given in evidence
in this case."
"2. That the confirmation by the Board of commissioners to
Benito, Antoine, Hypolite, Joseph, and Pierre Vasquez, given in
evidence in this case, ratified by act of Congress of 4 July, 1836,
did not vest any title in the land sued for in this action in the
plaintiff."
"3. That the plaintiff has shown no title on which she can
recover of the defendant the land sued for in this action, or any
part thereof."
"4. That the plaintiff, if entitled to recover in this action,
can recover only the undivided tenth of so much of the land sued
for as the defendant was in possession of at the commencement of
this suit."
"5. If the jury find from the evidence that Rudolph Tillier,
under whom the plaintiff in this case claims the land in question,
filed his claim with the recorder of land titles, and, as a part of
the evidence of his claim, filed two plats of the land claimed, one
of which plats would embrace the land now in the defendant's
possession, and the other would not embrace that land, then there
is no reservation of the land in defendant's possession from sale,
which would prevent the location of the land in question, under the
certificate in favor of John Brooks, or his legal
representatives."
"6. That the confirmation of the claim of Benito Vasquez and
others, given in evidence by the plaintiff, being according to the
concession, is in itself a rejection of the survey made by Mackay,
which has been given in evidence; and under that confirmation there
is no authority for a survey upon the land located under the
certificate in favor of John Brooks, or his legal representatives.
"
Page 49 U. S. 322
"7. That the survey given in evidence by plaintiff, of 800
arpens, made by Mackay in 1806, being a mere private survey made of
a part of the public domain, in violation of an act of Congress
prohibiting such surveys at that time under severe penalties, is
not in law any part of the claim filed before the recorder of land
titles, and cannot come in aid thereof, so as to work a reservation
from sale, under the Act of Congress of 3 March, 1811, of said 800
arpens."
The plaintiff then asked the following instruction, which the
court gave; to the giving which the defendant, by his counsel,
excepted. Which instruction is as follows:
"
Instruction given"
"That the land included in the survey given in evidence, and
which was made for Rudolph Tillier, assignee of Benito Vasquez, on
the 27 of February, 1806, by James Mackay, and which was officially
resurveyed in conformity to the Act of Congress of 4 July, 1836,
and which resurvey is numbered 3,061, and was approved by Jos. C.
Brown on 29 March, 1842, was reserved from location and sale at the
time McNight and Brady's location, under a New Madrid claim, was
made, and therefore the location under said claim is invalid as
against the title of said Vasquez, or those claiming through him,
to the extent that the two claims cover the same land, and that the
land included by both the surveys aforesaid is the land confirmed
to Benito Vasquez, or his legal representatives, by the Act of
Congress of 4 July, 1836, and that the confirmation operated as a
grant to said Vasquez, or his legal representatives, such being the
legal effect of the acts of Congress, records, and title-deeds
given in evidence."
"And the defendant prays the court to sign and seal this his
bill of exceptions, which is done accordingly."
"J. CATRON [L.S.]"
Upon this exception the case came up to this Court.
Page 49 U. S. 330
MR. JUSTICE NELSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The case below was an action of ejectment by the plaintiff (the
defendant here) to recover against the defendant a moiety of a
tract of land in the Township of St. Louis, and in which she
obtained a verdict and judgment.
Page 49 U. S. 331
The title of the plaintiff was derived from a confirmed Spanish
concession under the Act of June 30, 1836, of the defendant from a
location of a New Madrid certificate under the Act of February 17,
1815. Both rest upon acts of Congress, and the question is which
has the elder or better title.
We shall therefore lay out of view, in proceeding to the
examination of the case, a class of cases referred to on the
argument, founded on these Spanish claims, which were prosecuted
under the Act of May 26, 1824, and which underwent very elaborate
discussion, both at the bar and by the court.
United
States v. Arredondo, 6 Pet. 691;
Soulard v.
United States, 4 Pet. 511;
Smith v.
Same, 10 Pet. 326;
United
States v. Clarke, 8 Pet. 436.
That act empowered the district court, upon which original
jurisdiction was conferred, to hear and determine these claims
according to the stipulations of the treaty of 1803, the law of
nations, and the laws and ordinances of the Spanish government, and
in conformity with the principles of justice.
The inquiry there was not into the legal title; but into the
equitable right under the treaty, with a view to a confirmation of
these imperfect grants, if entitled to confirmation according to
Spanish law, so that the grantee might be clothed with the legal
estate.
The inquiry was difficult and embarrassing, on account of the
scanty and imperfect materials within the reach of the courts from
which to collect Spanish laws and ordinances, as they consisted of
royal orders, orders of the local governors, and also of the usages
and customs of the provinces, which were not readily accessible to
the profession or the courts in this country.
The case before us depends upon the construction of our own acts
of Congress, disembarrassed from any inquiries into the origin of
these grants, or into the rights and principles upon which they
were founded, or which made it the duty of the government under the
treaty to acknowledge them. Inquiries of this kind were closed on
the confirmation of the grant by the act of 1836. The title then
became complete. It became an American, not a Spanish title.
One of the principal questions arising under these acts of
Congress, and, indeed, in our judgment, every material question
presented here, was either directly or by necessary implication
involved in the decision of the case of
Stoddard
v. Chambers, heretofore decided by this Court and
reported in 2 How. 284.
The plaintiff there claimed under a Spanish concession,
confirmed by the act of 1836; the defendant, under a location
by
Page 49 U. S. 332
virtue of a New Madrid certificate, in pursuance of the act of
1815. The defendant and those under whom he claimed had been in
possession since 1819. The Spanish concession was, like the one
before us, general and unlocated, except by a private survey in
January, 1806.
The court decided that the plaintiff, deriving title under the
confirmed claim, held the better title, on the ground, that in
1816, when the New Madrid certificate was located upon the premises
in question, the tract was reserved from sale or private entry by
virtue of the tenth section of the act of 1811, and being thus
reserved, the location was void; and further that it was not within
the protection of the second section of the act of 1836, confirming
Spanish grants, as the locations there referred to were locations
made in pursuance of some law of the United States; that in the
case before the court, it was made against law.
In the case before us, the Spanish concession was made to the
five sons of Benito Vasquez for eight hundred arpens each, to be
laid off in one or two places of the vacant domain.
The grant was made February 16, 1800.
The eldest son (Benito) conveyed his interest in the concession
to Rodolph Tillier, 11 February, 1806. The latter located it by
procuring a private survey, the 27th of the same month.
The time when the claim was filed in the recorder's office at
St. Louis, under the act of 1805, does not appear; but it must have
been before 25 August, 1806, as we find the evidence of the claim
presented to the Board of commissioners on that day, including the
grant, the survey, and other proof going to establish it.
The tenth section of the Act of 1811, 2 Stat. 665, provided that
till after the decision of Congress thereon, no tract of land shall
be offered for sale, the claim to which has been in due time, and
according to law, presented to the recorder of land titles in
Louisiana, and filed in his office, for the purpose of being
investigated by the commissioners &c.
The argument against the application of the clause to the claim
before us is that the concession to Vasquez, being general and
unlocated, giving a right to the eight hundred arpens in no
particular part or parcel of land in the public domain, but in any
and every part, and the private survey designating and locating the
tract being a nullity, and to be disregarded, the premises in
question were not, and could not have been, reserved from sale by
the filing of this vagrant claim, and hence were open to location
under the New Madrid certificate in 1816, at the date of the
entry.
Page 49 U. S. 333
Now the Spanish concession to Mordecai Bell, in
Stoddard v.
Chambers, under which the plaintiff derived title, was of a
similar character; the private survey, therefore, must have been
regarded as having designated and located the tract so far as to
give effect and operation to the reservation of it from sale.
It is only upon this ground that the case can be upheld.
Otherwise the location of the New Madrid certificate was made in
pursuance of law, and the defendant in under it held the better
title. The tract was not covered by any claim within the
contemplation of the act of 1811. To give effect to it, the claim
must designate the particular tract.
But if this question were an open one, and to be decided the
first time by the court, we should feel ourselves obliged to
reaffirm the same conclusion which we have supposed necessarily
involved in the case already mentioned.
The Act of 1805, § 4, 2 Stat. 326, provided that a plat of
the tracts claimed should accompany the written notice of the claim
directed to be filed in the office of the recorder.
The Act of 20 February, 1806, 2 Stat. 352, repealed this clause,
and extended the powers of the Surveyor General over the public
lands in Louisiana, making it his duty to appoint deputy surveyors
&c., and the commissioners were authorized to direct such
surveys of the claims presented, as they might deem necessary for
the purpose of their decision -- the survey to be at the expense of
the claimant.
The act also declared that every such survey, as well as every
other survey, by whatever authority theretofore made, should be
held and considered a private survey only, and that all the tracts
of land, the titles to which might be ultimately confirmed by
Congress, should, prior to the issuing of the patents, be
resurveyed, if judged necessary, under the authority of the
Surveyor General, at the expense of the parties. Sec. 3.
The act of March 26, 1804, 2 Stat. 283, forbade settlements on
the public lands within the Territory of Louisiana, and also
surveys, or any and every attempt to survey, or designate
boundaries, by marking trees or otherwise, declaring, at the same
time, the act an offense punishable by fine or imprisonment. Sec.
14.
The act of 1805, as we have seen, required the claimant to
accompany the claim filed with a plat of the tract.
It is apparent, therefore, unless this act operated as a
modification, by implication, of the restriction in the act of 1804
in respect to surveys, the benefits under it would be limited to
the
Page 49 U. S. 334
single class of claimants, who had happened to procure surveys
of their tracts by a Spanish officer prior to the cession under the
treaty. Whether it had this effect or not is at this day a matter
of no particular importance; it is certain that such was the
practical construction given to the act at the time; as we find
that numerous surveys of the tracts claimed were made after the
passage of the act of 1805, and before that of 1806 dispensing with
the plat. This construction was also recognized by the government,
and the surveys directed to be regarded by the commissioners in
their proceedings, as affording a sufficient designation of the
tract claimed under the concession.
In the instructions of the Secretary of the Treasury to the
board, under date of March 25, 1806, one month after the passage of
the act, he observed (speaking of the authority conferred on the
board to order surveys) that, as the authority was discretionary,
it was presumed they would exercise it only in cases where it would
be actually necessary, as it was not intended to vex the claimants
with repeated surveys; and that, where they were satisfied that
those surveys which had been executed before the receipt of his
communication were sufficient to enable them to form a correct
decision, they need not order new ones, and the observation, he
said, would apply whether the previous surveys had been executed
under the authority of Soulard or by any other person whatever.
Part 2, Public Land Laws 672.
Nothing can be more direct and express than these instructions,
and the records of the proceedings of the several Boards of
commissioners under the act of 1805, and the acts succeeding it
down to that of July 9, 1832, show, that they uniformly acted upon
them. These private surveys constitute a part of the evidence of
the claim upon which their decision was founded.
They were necessary to give description and locality to two
important classes of these Spanish concessions:
1. A grant or order of survey for a given number of arpens,
conferring upon the grantee the right to locate it upon any part of
the royal domain, at his election.
2. A grant designating some natural object only, such as the
head or sources of a river, as the place where the tract should be
located. These two classes constituted no inconsiderable portion of
the claims filed in the offices of the register and recorder, and
afterwards presented before the commissioners. Among the incomplete
grants, they probably constituted at least one-half of the number.
Of the first fifty in the report of 27 November, 1833,
twenty-eight
Page 49 U. S. 335
are of this description; it is fair to presume the same
proportion exists throughout.
The effect claimed upon the above view for these private surveys
was denied on the argument, on the authority of the cases decided
under the act of 1824, to which we have already referred, but the
distinction will be apparent on an examination of those cases, and
a slight attention to the difference in the two modes of proceeding
upon these claims.
Under that act it was held by the court that in order to enable
the claimant to recover, the land must have been severed from the
general domain of the King of Spain prior to the cession of the
territory by a grant which gives, either in its terms or by a
reference to some description, locality to the tract, or if the
grant was vague, and gave only an authority to locate, the location
must have been made by the official surveyor -- that a private
survey could have no such effect as to sever the tract from the
public domain under either the Spanish or American government, and
that no government ever admitted such effect to be given to private
surveys of its warrants or orders of survey.
In the proceedings before the Board of commissioners, the object
of the private survey is not a severance of the tract from the
public domain; nor is this the effect of it; that is done by the
confirmation of the grant by the act of Congress, and not before.
The object is the selection of the tract by the claimant that he is
entitled to locate by virtue of his general grant, by means whereof
he is enabled to present his claim in full to the board for their
decision. A general grant or order of survey is not simply a
vagrant right to the given number of arpens in some part of the
public domain, but carries along with it the right, and without
which it is valueless, to have it located with metes and bounds,
that it may be occupied and enjoyed. In the absence of this
description and location, the claimant would be disabled from
presenting his full claim under the Spanish concession for
adjudication by the board. The act of 1806 providing for private
surveys, and the instructions of the Secretary founded thereon,
removed every embarrassment of the kind, and were doubtless so
intended at the time.
The acts of 1832 and of 1836 confirm the above view. The former
organized a new Board of commissioners, and made it their duty to
examine all unconfirmed claims to land theretofore filed in the
office of the recorder, according to law, founded upon any
incomplete grant, concession, warrant, or order of survey, and also
that, in examining them, they should take into consideration as
well the testimony taken before the former
Page 49 U. S. 336
boards upon the claims, as such other testimony as might be
admissible under the rules adopted for taking testimony before the
previous commissioners.
It should be recollected that the reports of the previous
commissioners upon these unconfirmed claims were before Congress at
the time of the passage of this act, and that those reports
contained the substance of the evidence in support of each claim,
including these private surveys, and with this knowledge, it will
be seen, they have made it the duty of the board to take that
testimony into their consideration in passing upon them.
Congress have thus virtually recognized these private surveys as
competent and proper evidence of the particular tract of land
claimed under the grant or concession, carrying out thereby the
construction previously given to the act of 1806 and the
instructions of the Secretary.
The board are directed to examine all the unconfirmed claims
remaining in the office of the recorder, founded upon these
incomplete grants, and orders of survey, and to examine them upon
the evidence already furnished by the claimants, and in the
possession of the government, and to show that the examinations
were conducted in conformity with these directions, we need only
turn to the reports of the board, at different times, to the
Commissioner of the Land Office, and which were also laid before
Congress. It will there be seen that these private surveys are
invariably used as a part of the evidence, in each case, where one
has been made, for the purpose of giving description and locality
to the claim.
The concession before us is embraced in the report of 27
November, 1833, as No. 19. It contains the original grant, the
private survey of February 27, 1806, together with the evidence of
several witnesses produced by Tillier, the assignee and claimant,
and among others a witness was called to prove the handwriting of
the governor to the concession, and of Mackay to the plat of the
survey.
We have said that the act of 1836 also confirms this view of the
case.
The second section of that act provides that if it shall be
found that any tract confirmed, or part thereof, had been
previously located by any other person under any law of the United
States, or had been surveyed and sold by the United States, the
confirmation shall confer no title to such lands in opposition to
rights acquired by such location and purchase; but the individual
whose claim is confirmed shall be permitted to locate so much
thereof as interferes with such location or
Page 49 U. S. 337
purchase on any unappropriated land of the government within the
state.
It will be perceived that the right to re-locate by the Spanish
claimant is confined to the case of an interfering location or
purchase of the whole or a part of the tract of land confirmed,
omitting altogether to make provision for the case of a
confirmation of an unlocated concession or order of survey. If the
argument, therefore, is well founded, that these surveys are a
nullity, and incapable of giving description and locality to the
claim, Congress have not yet provided for one-half of them under
the act of 1836, and further legislation will be necessary to carry
into effect their clear intention, as declared in the act of 1832.
We cannot think they are chargeable with any such omission or
oversight or that a proper interpretation of their acts leads to
such a conclusion, but the contrary.
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the private survey by Mackay
in 1806, of the 800 arpens granted to Benito Vasquez by the Spanish
governor, February 17, 1800, of which Tillier was the assignee, and
which was filed in the recorder's office under the act of 1805,
designated and located the grant so as to give effect and operation
to the act of 1811, reserving the premises from sale, which
reservation was continued down by subsequent acts to 1829.
It has been argued, that the act of 1836 confirms only the
Spanish concession in the abstract, without regard to the plat of
survey or claimant, if an assignee of the grant. The act provides,
that the decisions in favor of land claimants made by the recorder
and the commissioners, under the act of 1832 and the supplemental
act of 1833, as entered in the transcript of decisions transmitted
by the commissioners to the Commissioner of the Land Office, and by
him laid before Congress, be, and the same are hereby,
confirmed.
Now the transcript of these decisions embraced, as required by
the act of 1832, the date and quantity of each claim, and the
evidence upon which each depended, together with the authority
under which it was granted. The claimant was the party who had
filed the claim in the office of the recorder, and had prosecuted
it before the Board of commissioners. His name, of course, appeared
-- Rudolph Tillier in the case before us. He represented the
interest of one of the sons of Benito Vasquez, in quantity eight
hundred arpens. There were four other sons, each of whom was
entitled to the same quantity. Tillier procured the private survey
of his share, and filed his separate claim for that amount,
together with the conveyance from the original grantee, and under
these circumstances it is insisted
Page 49 U. S. 338
that, upon the true construction of the act, the confirmation
was in favor of the son, and not of the assignee.
It is certainly difficult to perceive what right or claim the
son had, either before the commissioners or Congress, to be
confirmed. Having parted with all his interest, he had neither
land, nor claim, nor was he a claimant; as that term is regarded as
applicable to those only in whose name the claim was filed with the
recorder, under the act of 1805. By that act, every person claiming
lands &c., by virtue of any incomplete grant &c., shall
deliver to the recorder a notice &c., of the nature and extent
of his claim; and also the grant, order of survey, deed,
conveyance, or other written evidence of his claim, to be recorded;
providing at the same time, in the case of a complete grant, that
the claimant need only record the original grant, together with the
order of survey and plat; all other conveyances and deeds to be
deposited with the recorder; thereby making a distinction between
the two cases, as it respects the derivative title, and, in both,
clearly contemplating that the assignee might be a claimant.
This is the view taken of the question in the case of
Strother v. Lucas, on each occasion when it was before
this Court.
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
772;
37 U. S. 12
Pet. 458. It was there held that the confirmation was to be deemed
to be in favor of the person claiming it. The construction has
entered into the usage and practice of the land office, as may be
seen by the instructions from that office and the opinion of the
Attorney General on the subject. 2 Land Laws 747, 752, and
1043.
As it respects the branch of the argument, that the confirmation
was irrespective of the location of the tract by the private survey
of Mackay, we refer to the view we have already taken of that
question, without any further remark.
It has also been argued, that Tillier put on file in the
recorder's office, at the time of giving notice of his claim, two
plats of the tract of land he claimed, each embracing different
parcels, and that the uncertainty as it respects the parcel claimed
under the concession takes the case out of the reservation from
sale under the act of 1811.
The case shows that there were two plats protracted upon the
same sheet of paper on the files of the office, covering different
parcels, and that the name of the claimant was written at full
length on the face of one of them; that but one was before the
commissioners, and that corresponding to the one on file with his
name upon it; that this one includes the premises in question; the
other does not.
When this second plat was protracted upon the same sheet
Page 49 U. S. 339
of paper, or how it came on the files of the office, or whether
Tillier was in any way connected with it, are matters unexplained
at the trial, and left altogether to conjecture. The connection is
but an inference from the fact, that it has been found on the same
piece of paper on which his was protracted; but as his was marked,
and identified with his name, and that too in connection with his
claim to the tract, also on file, we do not perceive that anyone
could be misled who might resort to the office for the purpose of
ascertaining the land thus intended to be appropriated, and as it
respects the proceedings before the commissioners, also on the
files of the office, none of the objections taken existed in point
of fact.
It has been supposed that this case is distinguishable from the
case of
Stoddard v. Chambers, on the ground that there the
concession was confirmed, in terms, according to the survey. If the
view we have taken of these private surveys be correct, the
difference at once disappears. But with reference more particularly
to the objection, it is to be observed, that in the report of the
commissioners under date of 27 November, 1833, which included one
hundred and forty-two claims, of which the present case is one, the
form of their decision as expressed, in respect to these imperfect
grants, is uniformly in the words here used.
In the report of the board in 1835, in which the confirmation of
the claim in
Stoddard v. Chambers is included, a change of
persons having taken place in the commission, a different and more
particular form of expression was adopted. They usually confirmed
according to the survey, or according to the possession, or a given
number of arpens, as the case might be.
In cases where the report recommends the confirmation of the
claim according to the survey, the effect of the confirmation under
the act of 1836 is, probably, to conclude the government; so that
an error in the private survey cannot be corrected on a resurvey of
the tract. When recommended in the general form of the present
case, any such error may be corrected, agreeably to the intention
of Congress in declaring, as they did, in the act of 1806, that
these surveys should be regarded only as private surveys. This is
the distinction made at the land office, founded upon the opinion
of the Attorney General, and is, we think, the only one between the
two cases.
It was also suggested on the argument, that the cases of
Mackay v.
Dillon and
Les Bois v.
Bramell, 4 How. 421, 449, contained principles in
support of the defense in this case. We have examined them
attentively, and find nothing decided there in conflict with the
views expressed in this case.
Page 49 U. S. 340
In the former, the question was between a confirmed Spanish
grant and the commons of the City of St. Louis, under which the
defendant held, and which had been also confirmed by the act of
1812. There had been a private survey of the commons by Mackay in
1806, and in which he had at the same time marked the boundaries of
his own lot. His claim was confirmed under the act of 1836; the
claim to the commons, as we have seen, in 1812; the latter,
therefore, holding the elder title. But the confirmation of the
commons was very special, the act declaring that all the rights,
titles, and claims to town or village lots, outlots, common field
lots, and commons, in, adjoining, and belonging to the several
towns or villages, including St. Louis, which lots have been
inhabited, cultivated, or possessed prior to 20 December, 1803,
shall be, and the same are hereby, confirmed to the inhabitants of
the respective towns or villages &c.; and making it the duty of
the principal deputy surveyor, as soon as may be, to survey and
mark, where the same had not already been done according to law,
the outboundary lines of the several towns and villages, so as to
include the outlots, common field lots, and commons thereto
respectively belonging.
The Act of 1831, 4 Stat. 435, has no bearing upon the question
of boundary.
The question of boundary being left at large by the very special
terms of the act of confirmation, a great deal of evidence was
given on the trial for the purpose of ascertaining the limits of
these lots, out lots, common field lots, and commons in and
adjoining the town. But the court, in submitting the case to the
jury, instructed them virtually that the boundary and extent of the
commons were to be determined by the private survey of Mackay in
1806, an error that was obvious, whether we regard the terms of the
act of confirmation, or the nature and effect of the survey, and
for which the new trial was granted.
There is nothing in the other case bearing upon the question
except that the second instruction given and approved favors the
views expressed in the case before us.
The case of
Jourdan v.
Barrett, 4 How. 169, was also referred to as
bearing upon the question. The case involved the right to back
lands on the Mississippi River between front proprietors, and an
attempt was made by the defendant to conclude the right by the
effect of a private survey, which was properly denied by the court.
The case has no application to the present one. No such effect is
claimed for the survey, and all that is contended for in respect to
it is derived from acts of
Page 49 U. S. 341
Congress, and applies only to the class of cases in question.
The effect depends upon the construction of these acts.
Upon the whole, after the most careful consideration that we
have been able to bestow upon the case, the conclusions at which we
have arrived are:
1. That the private survey by Mackay, on 27 February, 1806, of
the 800 arpens granted to Benito Vasquez, of whom Tillier was the
assignee, and which was filed in the recorder's office with his
claim, under the act of 2 March, 1805, designated and located the
grant, so as to give effect and operation to the act of 1811,
reserving the premises in question from sale.
2. That the title was confirmed to Tillier, the assignee, as
claimant, under the act of 1836.
3. That the location of the New Madrid certificate in 1816,
under which the defendant holds, was inoperative and void, as has
already been decided in the case of
Stoddard v. Chambers,
heretofore referred to.
It follows, therefore, that the plaintiff, deriving title under
Tillier, the confirmee, has an elder and better title, as was
decided by the court below.
For these reasons, we are of opinion that the judgment of the
court should be
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McLEAN dissented.
In my judgment, this case is not within the decision of the case
of
Stoddard v. Chambers. In that case, the claim was
confirmed "to the said Mordecai Bell or his legal representatives,
according to the survey." But in this case, the claim was confirmed
"according to the concession." Now until a concession is located,
it can give no claim to any specific tract of land, and
consequently cannot come within the reservation of any of the acts
of Congress. And the main question in the case was, whether there
was such a survey or designation of this concession as to bring it
within the above acts.
The first Board of commissioners, who acted on this claim in
1806 and in 1810, rejected it. As appears from their record, the
concession only was before the board when they finally acted upon
the subject. But a new and more favorable board was constituted in
1832, and it appears from their record that on 9 October in that
year,
"the sons of Vasquez, Benito, Antoine, Hypolite, Joseph, and
Pierre Vasquez, claiming 800 arpens each under a concession dated
17 February, 1800, was presented. Also a plat of survey dated 7
February, 1806, of 800 arpens. . . . Pascal Cerre, being duly
sworn,
Page 49 U. S. 342
saith, that the signature to the concession is in the
handwriting of Delassus; that the signatures to the survey are in
the handwritings of Mackay and Antoine Soulard."
On 2 November, 1833, the board again met, and their record
states that "the sons of Vasquez, each claiming 800 arpens of land
under a concession from Charles Dehault Delassus," and that
"they can see no cause for entertaining the idea that the said
concession was not issued at the time it bears date, as intimated
in the minutes of the former commissioners."
And they
"are unanimously of opinion, that this claim ought to be
confirmed to the said Benito, Antoine, Hypolite, Joseph and Pierre
Vasquez, or their legal representatives, according to the
concession."
On 11 February, 1806, Benito conveyed to Rudolph Tillier his
"right, title, and interest, claim and pretension and demand, in
and to a certain tract of land not yet located or surveyed." And
Tillier says,
"I do hereby assign, transfer, sell, and set over, unto Clement
B. Penrose, all my right, title, interest, property, claim, and
demand of, in, and to a certain concession purchased of Benito
Vasquez and assigned to me on 11 February, 1806, and plat of survey
made for me, and dated 27 February, 1806, for value received."
This assignment bears no date, but it was acknowledged 31
October, 1818.
Frederic R. Conway, a witness for plaintiff, testified that he
was one of the late Board of commissioners that confirmed this
claim; that the said original survey of Mackay, given in evidence
by plaintiff, was the plat that Tillier claimed by, as he
understood it; and that no other survey was exhibited to the
commissioners, so far as he remembered, connected with this claim;
that the survey was not noted in the tabular statement contained in
the proceedings of said board, which omission, he thought, was by
the mistake of the clerk.
The following certificates of surveys were given in evidence,
one by the plaintiff and the other by the defendant:
"I do certify that the above plat represents 800 arpens of land,
French measure, situated in the district of St. Louis, Louisiana
Territory, and surveyed by me at the request of the proprietor, who
claims the same by virtue of a Spanish grant. Given under my hand
at St. Louis, 27 February, 1806. Signed, James Mackay. Received for
record, St. Louis, 27 February, 1806. Signed, Antoine Soulard,
Surveyor General of Louisiana."
The other certificate is in the same words. These plats and
certificates were recorded by the recorder of land titles on
the
Page 49 U. S. 343
same page. It was proved that one of these surveys covered the
land in controversy, and that the other did not. The name of
Tillier was written on one of the plats, but by whom, at what time,
and under what circumstances, does not appear. From the loose
manner in which the recorder's office and the papers connected with
it seem to have been kept, and the ready access to them by all
parties, it would be a dangerous principle of evidence, to consider
the simple endorsement of a name on a plat as identifying the owner
of the land. And especially where the surveyor nowhere states for
whom the survey was made.
The court instructed the jury,
"That the land included in the survey given in evidence, and
which was made for Rudolph Tillier, assignee of Benito Vasquez, on
27 February, 1806, by James Mackay, and which was officially
resurveyed in conformity to the Act of Congress of 4 July, 1836,
and which resurvey is numbered 3061, and was approved by Joseph C.
Brown on 29 March, 1842, was reserved from location and sale at the
time McNight and Brady's location, under a New Madrid claim, was
made, and therefore the location under said claim is invalid, as
against the title of said Vasquez,"
&c.
Among the instructions prayed for by the defendant, which the
court refused to give, was the following:
"5. If the jury find from the evidence that Rudolph Tillier,
under whom the plaintiff in this case claims the land in question,
filed his claim with the recorder of land titles, and, as a part of
the evidence of his claim, filed two plats of the land claimed, one
of which plats would embrace the land now in the defendant's
possession, and the other would not embrace that land, then there
is no reservation of the land in the defendant's possession from
sale, which would prevent the location of the land in question,
under the certificate in favor of John Brooks or his legal
representatives."
The deposition of Conway, one of the commissioners who confirmed
this concession, was introduced to supply a defect in the record.
He states that the original survey of Mackay, which Tillier claimed
by, was before the commissioners, and no other plat, so far as he
can remember. Now if this evidence was admissible, it was for the
consideration of the jury. It was intended to correct the record
and show that the survey was acted upon by the commissioners,
although no entry was made of it by the clerk in the tabular
statement. It may well be doubted whether parol evidence was
admissible for this purpose, especially after the lapse of some
fourteen years. In a
Page 49 U. S. 344
matter involving title to real estate, parol evidence cannot be
heard to correct the record which the commissioners were required
to keep, of their proceedings.
As the evidence was heard, and does not appear to have been
overruled or withdrawn from the jury, it was their province to act
upon it. But by the instruction given, there was nothing left for
the jury to decide. They were instructed that the claim of the
plaintiff was reserved from location and sale when the New Madrid
location was made, and consequently the latter was void. This ruled
the whole case.
If the statement of Conway were not admissible, there was no
evidence to show that any survey was before the commissioners at
the time they confirmed the concession. And it is certain that no
entry was made upon their record to show a sanction of any survey.
It does appear that a survey of the concession was before the
commissioners who rejected the claim in 1806. And it also appears
that on 9 October, 1832, "a plat of survey dated 7 February, 1806,
of 800 arpens, was before the new commissioners." But on 2
November, 1833, when the concession was confirmed, no survey
appears to have been before them, and they refer to none.
If the two surveys made by Mackay of 800 arpens each, "for the
proprietor," were admitted to have been made at the instance of
Tillier, it leaves the location of the concession uncertain. Both
surveys were executed on the same day, and were recorded on the
same page. Under Tillier's right, he could survey only 800 arpens,
and if he surveyed two tracts each of that quantity it was a fraud
upon the public. Under the acts of Congress no tract of land was
reserved as a Spanish claim, which was not surveyed or so
specifically designated as to show with reasonable certainty its
boundaries. There is nothing on the record or in the parol proof to
show which of the plats, if either, was made as the instance of
Tillier. Both surveys were made "for the proprietor," and as they
bear the same date, it may be presumed they were made for the same
person. But whether this be so or not, they present a state of
uncertainty which is fatal to the Spanish claim. The mere name of
Tillier, on one of the plats, without explanation, is no proof of
its identity. An entry on the record to identify the survey would
have been sufficient. In the absence of such evidence, the survey
made or approved by Joseph C. Brown in 1842 does not supply the
defect. He must have acted arbitrarily or from circumstances which
existed at the time he acted. There was nothing to guide him as to
the true survey at the time the New Madrid location was made. And
that was the
Page 49 U. S. 345
period of time to which the facts must apply, and the
reservation of the Spanish claim be shown to have been made. The
two surveys then existed and were on the record, and if neither
were specially designated as Tillier's claim, there was no location
of it within the reservation act. He could not claim both surveys,
and as there was nothing on record to guide the New Madrid claimant
in his location, he cannot be chargeable with notice.
Under these circumstances, I think the court erred in its
instruction to the jury that the Spanish claim was reserved from
sale and that the New Madrid location was void. I think, for this
error, the judgment should be
Reversed.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Missouri, and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof, it
is now here ordered and adjudged by this Court, that the judgment
of the said circuit court in this cause be, and the same is hereby
affirmed with costs.