Under the laws of 1824 and 1844 relating to the confirmation of
land titles, where a claimant filed his petition alleging a patent
under the French government of Louisiana, confirmed by Congress,
and claiming floats for land which had been sold, within his grant,
by the United States to other persons, the mere circumstance that
the court had jurisdiction to decree floats in cases of incomplete
titles did not give it jurisdiction to decree floats in cases of
complete titles.
This title having been confirmed by Congress without any
allowance for the sales of lands included within it, the
confirmation must be considered as a compromise accepted by the
other party, who thereby relinquished his claim to floats.
If the title be considered as a perfect title, this Court has
already adjudged,
50 U. S. 9 How.
143, that the district court had no jurisdiction over such
titles.
The claimant in this case prayed that the sidelines of his tract
might be widened by diverging instead of parallel lines, but this
Court, in this same case, formerly
44 U. S. 3 How.
693, recognized the validity of a decree of the Supreme Court of
Louisiana, which decided that the lines should be parallel and not
divergent. The district court of the United States ought to have
conformed its judgment to this opinion.
Moreover the claimant in this case did not state in his petition
what lands had been granted by the United States, nor to whom, nor
did he make the grantees parties, all of which ought to have been
done before he could have been entitled to floats.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 56 U. S. 32
MR. JUSTICE CATRON delivered the opinion of the Court.
John McDonogh claimed to be confirmed in a tract of land bounded
in part by the River Mississippi, the front being 40 arpens more or
less, bounded on the upper side by a line running back from said
river a distance of seventeen miles, and two hundred and
twenty-seven perches, more or less, until it strikes the River
Amitie, on a course by compass of north 35� west, on the
lower side by a line running back from said River Mississippi a
distance of eighteen miles and twenty-two perches, more or less,
until it strikes Lake Maurepas on a course by the compass of north
nine degrees fifty minutes east, and bounded on the rear line by
the River Amitie and Lake Maurepas.
Page 56 U. S. 33
The petitioner represents that in the year 1739, Duport
purchased the land from the Collopissa nation of Indians, and that
said purchase was confirmed in the year 1769 by the French
government by a regular and formal patent, and secondly that the
claim was duly presented to and approved by the Board of Land
Commissioners of the United States, who confirmed it for the whole
quantity claimed, according to a plan of survey. And that said
titles were also recognized and confirmed by an Act of Congress of
11 May, 1820. But the petitioner avers that a large portion of said
tract of land has been sold by the United States or confirmed to
actual settlers.
The district court found that McDonogh held under Duport by
regular mesne conveyances, and showed a title to the land by patent
which was granted by the highest authorities in the province, that
it was a complete and full title, and furthermore
"that the land claimed as per plan of survey on file herein was
confirmed by the report of the Land Commissioners of the United
States on the 20th of November, 1816."
The court below then proceeded to pronounce the grant of 1769 to
be valid, and that the survey thereof, filed as an exhibit in the
cause, indicates the metes and bounds, and the land is ordered to
be located according to said survey, and to that extent the claim
is confirmed. And then the decree proceeds to adjudge that for all
lands within these bounds which have been sold or otherwise
disposed of by the United States, the petitioner shall be
authorized to enter other lands by floating warrants.
Assuming the foregoing facts to be true, the question presented
is whether jurisdiction existed to make the decree.
The mere fact, standing alone, that the United States had sold
or otherwise disposed of any part of the land here claimed and that
compensation could be made as provided by the 11th section of the
act of 1824 does not give jurisdiction, as the power to award
floating warrants is an incident to a case where jurisdiction
exists to decree the lands claimed and to order that a patent
therefor shall issue, and if the power to divest title out of the
United States is wanting, none exists to decree the floating
warrants, because it must be first found and adjudged that the
petitioner has the better equity to the land of which the United
States have deprived him by their grant to another. But there is
another consideration why this petitioner could not claim floating
warrants. He sought a confirmation of his title from the United
States for the obvious reason that his grant from the French
government, made in 1769, was invalid, as that government had no
interest in the country in 1769, it having been ceded to Spain in
1763. And if McDonogh was
Page 56 U. S. 34
forced to go behind his French grant and rely on his Indian
pretension to claim, the probability was that he could establish
nothing to support his assumption of title, and must fail
altogether. Under these circumstances, the United States confirmed
McDonogh's claim without allowing him any compensation for such
land as had been previously sold or disposed to others within the
boundaries confirmed. He accepted the confirmation on these terms,
and as we are substituted by the acts of 1824 and 1844 for the
political power, and required to adjudge these claims as Congress
adjudged them before the act of 1844 was passed, we are bound to
hold that when our predecessors decided McDonogh's claim favorably,
they awarded him all that he had a right to demand, and which he
sanctioned by accepting the confirmation on the terms it was
offered.
Nothing could be fraught with worse consequences as regards
confirmations by Congress or by commissioners acting by its
authority than to hold that when a doubtful claim was confirmed on
certain terms, and the claimant accepted these terms and took the
full benefit of the confirmation, that still he could come into the
courts of justice and enforce his entire claim for the deductions
made by Congress as if no adjustment had been made. Such cases must
stand on the footing of compromise, and all equities existing when
the compromise was made and not provided for by it must be deemed
to have been abandoned. If it were otherwise, then there would be
no end of these pretensions to compensation, before Congress and
the courts. But to hold that the confirmation was final and
conclusive of the whole claim, as we think it clearly was, then the
country will at last find repose and the cultivator of the soil
will know from whom to buy and take title. McDonogh's claim being
compromised, the government had no duty imposed on it to compensate
him in case of loss.
Jurisdiction is also wanting on other grounds. If the grant of
the French government to Duport was a complete title, then no act
on the part of the American government was required to give it
additional validity, as the treaty of 1803, by which Louisiana was
acquired, sanctioned perfect titles; nor was jurisdiction vested in
the district courts to adjudge the validity of perfect titles. This
is the settled construction of the act of 1824, as was held by this
Court in the case of the
United States v.
Reynes, 9 How. 143,
50 U. S.
144.
In the next place, McDonogh alleges that his title was confirmed
by the United States in 1816 and again in 1920. The act of 1824
conferred jurisdiction on the district courts to adjudge and settle
the validity of imperfect claims against the United States, as
already stated. But where the claim had been
Page 56 U. S. 35
granted by an act of Congress, or by officers acting under the
authority of Congress, and a perfect legal title vested in the
grantee, no power was conferred on the courts to deal with such
title, because it needed no aid. And because such an assumption
would of necessity claim power in the courts to modify the grant
made by Congress in every respect or to set it aside
altogether.
On this assumption, the district courts might have been called
on to readjudge every claim that Congress had confirmed. The
legislature contemplated none of these things when passing the acts
of 1824 and 1844.
McDonogh informs us in his petition that he did not claim a
decree for any land covered by his grant, but that he sought a
decree for land warrants to be located on other lands for such
parts as had been sold or disposed of by the United States within
the bounds of his claim. And as incident to this claim for
compensation, he prayed that his side lines might be widened, so
that the supper line would run north 35� west; and the lower
line, north 9�50' east. These side lines are about eighteen
miles long, and commence on the Mississippi forty arpens apart, but
by widening the tract claimed, as decreed by the district court, is
something like fifteen miles wide where the lines terminate on the
River Amitie, and Lake Maurepas. The boundaries were thus settled
by the court below, according to the power conferred by the second
section of the act of 1824, sweeping over a large tract of country,
and covering many lands granted to others by the United States.
The petition in this case was filed in June, 1846; at the
previous term of the Supreme Court of the United States, the cause
of John McDonogh, against Milaudon, was decided, on which this
Court was asked to revise a decision of the Supreme Court of
Louisiana, which settled the boundaries of McDonogh's grant;
holding that the side lines could not diverge, but that the land
must be of equal width in front and rear, and the side lines
parallel to each other throughout. The question in the state court
being one of boundary, and not involving any consideration that
could give this Court cognizance, under the 25th section of the
Judiciary Act, the writ of error was dismissed for want of
jurisdiction.
As the decision of the Supreme Court of Louisiana had settled
the question of boundary, we think the district court should not
have disregarded that decision, and involved the government in such
serious consequences as that of making compensation for lands not
covered by McDonogh's grant.
If none of these objections existed, however, there is another,
that would preclude the petitioner from having compensation
Page 56 U. S. 36
in land warrants. He does not state what lands the United States
have granted to others, within his claim; nor who the owners are;
neither does he make them parties. These steps were required by the
act of 1824, and not having been taken in this instance no general
decree could be made for floating warrants, as was done by the
district court. We so held in the case of the
United
States v. Moore, 12 How. 223.
For the reasons stated, it is ordered that the decree be
Reversed and the petition dismissed without prejudice to
McDonogh's claim.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record,
from the District Court of the United States for the Eastern
district of Louisiana, and was argued by counsel. On consideration
whereof, it is now here ordered, adjudged, and decreed, by this
Court, that the decree of the said district court in this cause be
and the same is hereby reversed, and that this cause be and the
same is hereby remanded to the said district court with directions
to that court to dismiss the petition in this case, without
prejudice to the rights of the petitioner.