The Act of Congress passed on the 3d of March, 1807, 2 Stat.
442, appointing commissioners to adjudicate land claims against the
United States, required that where titles to tracts of land which
had not been previously surveyed were confirmed by the board, they
should be surveyed under the directions of the Surveyor General.
When a certificate and plat should be filed in the proper office, a
patent certificate was to issue which should entitle the claimant
to a patent from the United States.
Therefore, where conflicting locations were claimed of two
concessions granted by the Lieutenant Governor of Upper Louisiana,
and no survey satisfactory to the public officers was made until
1852, when a patent was issued in conformity with a survey directed
by the Secretary of the Interior, this patent was conclusive, in a
court of law, of the location to which the party was entitled.
He could not, in an action of ejectment, sustain a claim that
his patent ought to have had a different location upon the ground
that the confirmation by the commissioners conferred a perfect
title to different land from that covered by the patent.
This was an action of ejectment brought by West, a citizen of
the State of Illinois, against Cochran, a citizen of Missouri, for
all that tract or parcel of land situated in the City and County of
St. Louis in said district, and which tract or parcel of land is
described as follows:
"Lot number one hundred and three, 103, in block number three
hundred and twenty-one, as the said lot is laid down and numbered
on the map of the said city, and is bounded on the east by
Second-street, beginning at the southwest
Page 58 U. S. 404
corner of Chambers and Second Street, thence along the west side
of Second Street eighty feet, more or less, from Chambers Street;
thence westwardly on a line parallel with Chambers Street, one
hundred and fifty feet to an alley; thence northwardly eighty feet
to Chambers Street; thence eastwardly along the south side of
Chambers Street one hundred and fifty feet, to the place of
beginning."
West claimed under the reservation made by Brazeau in his deed
to Labeaume, and under the confirmation of Brazeau's title by the
board of commissioners on the 22d of September, 1810.
Cochran claimed under a similar confirmation of the same date to
Labeaume. The patent for Brazeau's claim did not include the land
in dispute, whilst the patent for Labeaume's claim did include it,
and the question was whether West, claiming under Brazeau's title,
could show that the patent had been erroneously located, and could
claim under the confirmation.
The circuit court decided against West, and he brought the case
up to this Court by a writ of error. The case is particularly
stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 58 U. S. 408
MR. JUSTICE CATRON delivered the opinion of the Court.
To understand the application of the instruction given to the
jury which controlled the verdict in this case, a minute statement
of the facts is necessary.
On the 1st June, 1794, Joseph Brazeau, by petition, requested
the Lt. Governor of Upper Louisiana to grant to him a tract of land
near to the then Village of St. Louis,
"situated beyond the foot of the mound called the Grange de
Terre, four arpens in width, which are to extend from the steep
bank or beach of the Mississippi in the W. 1/4 S.W. by about twenty
arpens of depth, that shall begin at the foot of the hill where
stands the Grange de Terre, ascending in a N.N.W. course to the
vicinity of the Stony Creek, so that the said tract hereby asked
for be bounded on the east by the bank of the Mississippi, on the
other side in part by the King's domain, and in part by land
reunited to the said domain."
The grant was made by the governor in the following terms:
"We do certify to have put Joseph Brazeau in possession of
Page 58 U. S. 409
the parcel of land designated in his petition, of four arpens by
twenty deep, which shall extend in a N.N.W. course from the foot of
the hill where stands the Grange de Terre, ascending to the
vicinity of the Stony Creek, bounded on one side by the bank of the
Mississippi, and on the opposite side by lands not conceded or
reunited to his Majesty's domain, and at the two ends bounded on
the N.N.W. by the vicinity of the Rocky Creek, and at the other, in
the S.S.E., shall be bounded by the land granted to the free
mulattress Esther."
This concession was made June 10, 1794.
On the 25th of the same month, the governor amended his former
concession, in which he declares that the four arpens front by
twenty deep,
"shall begin beyond the mound called La Grange de Terre,
extending N.N.W. to the vicinity of the Rocky Branch, bounded on
one side by the banks of the Mississippi River, and on the opposite
side by lands reunited to the King's domain, through which lands
passes this present concession, of which one end is to be bounded
by the concession of the free mulattress Esther."
The application of Esther above referred to was made October 2,
1793. She petitioned for a piece of land lying on the borders of
the Mississippi, the northern portion of the concession to be
situate between the small mound called the Grange de Terre and the
beach of the Mississippi, having at its two extremities four arpens
front, that shall bear about from E.N.E. to W.S.W., by twenty
arpens in extent or depth, that shall run from about N.N.W. to
S.S.E.
On the 3d October, 1793, the governor granted the land to
Esther, in the terms of her petition, with this addition: that the
land should descend the river and be limited on three sides by the
King's domain, and on the other side by the bank of the
Mississippi, as shown by the plat on the back of the concession.
This plat was a rude sketch, affording no material aid in locating
the land.
On the 5th of October, 1793, the governor certifies that he had
in person put Esther in possession of the land granted, the
locality of which he again describes, in the terms as above set
forth, except that he declares that the eastern boundary on the
river shall be limited by the edge of the beach.
Esther's concession was not surveyed by the Spanish
authorities.
On the 9th of May, 1798, Joseph Brazeau sold to Louis Labeaume
part of the land granted to Brazeau in June, 1794, reserving for
himself four arpens to be taken at the foot of the mound on the
south part of the concession, Brazeau selling only sixteen arpens
in depth to Labeaume, who accepted the
Page 58 U. S. 410
sale with this reservation. In 1799, Labeaume applied to the
governor to enlarge his tract acquired from Brazeau.
"He asks that you will be pleased to grant him 360 arpens of
land, including the land which he the petitioner bought of M.
Brazeau; that is, twenty arpens in depth from the Mississippi in
ascending the Rocky Branch, West 1/4 S. by sixteen arpens in front
along the Mississippi, to be taken from the descending road into
the creek, which is the same front of the petitioner's land, the
angle triangle formed by the perpendicular from the road to the
river by the creek, and by the river shall complete, or about, the
tract asked for."
In February, 1799, the governor granted the land to Labeaume
with the boundaries asked for, and ordered that Soulard, the
surveyor, should put Labeaume into possession, and execute a survey
to serve the interested party, to obtain a complete the from the
governor general, which was wished for by the petitioner.
On the 20th March, 1799, Soulard proceeded to survey the land
granted to Labeaume, from which the larger quantity of 374 arpens
was found to be within the boundaries described in Labeaume's
petition. The survey was regularly certified, April 10, 1799, and
accompanied by a figurative plat.
The line marks of this survey have been retraced in the survey
recently made by the United States, and the patent to Labeaume or
his legal representatives, of the 25th of March, 1852, is founded
on it. But it is insisted that the survey includes the sixteen
arpens reserved by Brazeau in his deed of May, 1798, to Labeaume,
and on the existence of this fact the title of the plaintiff in the
present controversy depends, as the land demanded lies within the
bounds of the patent. Labeaume filed his title papers with the
recorder of land titles, to be registered in February, 1806, and in
his notice of claim, the tract partly in dispute is thus
described:
"Louis Labeaume, 374 arpens of land, conceded in part to Joseph
Brazeau, the 20th June, 1794, and the other part to Louis Labeaume,
the 15th February, 1779, settled and cultivated since both these
dates."
On the 3d of September, 1806, the board of commissioners
appointed to adjudicate claims to lands under the act of 1805,
passed on Labeaume's claim. The clerk of the board gives a
description of it in these terms:
"Louis Labeaume claiming 374 arpens of land situate on the
Mississippi, a distance of about two miles from the Town of St.
Louis, produces a concession duly registered from Zenon Trudeau,
for four by twenty arpens, dated the 20th June, 1798, 25th June,
1794, granted to one Joseph Brazeau, and another concession from
said Zenon Trudeau to claimant, for the said 374 arpens, including
the said
Page 58 U. S. 411
four by twenty arpens, dated the 15th February, 1799; a survey
of the same taken the 2d March, and certified the 10th April, 1799,
together with a certificate by Zenon Trudeau of the sale of the
said four by twenty arpens by said Joseph Brazeau, reserving to
himself four arpens in superficies; said certificate dated the 12th
May, 1798."
This entry is so confused as to be unmeaning without reference
to the title papers of record. The board at that time rejected the
claim because the concession had not been duly registered.
On the 22d September, 1810, the board confirmed the claim in the
following terms
"Louis Labeaume claims three hundred and seventy-four arpens of
land. See book No. 1, page 517. The board confirm to Louis Labeaume
three hundred and fifty-six arpens, and four arpens to Joseph
Brazeau, and order that the same be surveyed agreeably to a
concession from Zenon Trudeau to Louis Labeaume, and, as respects
the four arpens, agreeably to a reserve made in a sale from Joseph
Brazeau to said Louis Labeaume, recorded in book C., page 339, in
the recorder's office."
On the 14th of June, 1811, the board ordered both tracts to be
surveyed at the expense of the United States, and to this end gave
the following certificates to the parties respectively:
"
Commissioners' Certificate No. 982, June 14,
1811"
"We, the undersigned commissioners for adjusting the titles to
lands in the Territory of Louisiana, have decided that Louis
Labeaume, original claimant, is entitled to a patent under the
provisions of the fourth section of an Act of Congress of the
United States entitled 'An act respecting claims to lands in the
territories of Orleans and Louisiana,' passed the third day of
March, one thousand eight hundred and seven, for three hundred and
fifty-six arpens of land situate in the District of St. Louis, on
the Mississippi, and order that the same be surveyed agreeably to a
concession from Zenon Trudeau to Louis Labeaume, recorded in book
C., page three hundred and thirty-nine of the recorder's office, by
virtue of a concession or order of survey from Zenon Trudeau,
Lieutenant Governor."
"[Signed by the commissioners.]"
"
Commissioners' Certificate No. 983, June 14,
1811"
"We, the undersigned commissioners for ascertaining and
adjusting the titles and claims to lands in the Territory of
Louisiana, have decided that Joseph Brazeau, original claimant, is
entitled to a patent under the provisions of the 4th section of an
Act of the Congress of the United States entitled 'An act
Page 58 U. S. 412
respecting claims to land in the territories of Orleans and
Louisiana,' passed the third day of March, one thousand eight
hundred and seven, for four arpens of land situate in the District
of St. Louis on the Mississippi, and order that the same be
surveyed agreeably to a reserve made in a sale from Joseph Brazeau
to Louis Labeaume, recorded in book C., page three hundred and
thirty-nine of the recorder's office."
"By virtue of a concession, or order of survey, from Zenon
Trudeau, lieutenant-governor."
"[Signed by the commissioners.]"
Owing partly to a contest between the parties in this cause
before the department of public lands, the surveys were not
executed and finally settled so that patents could be issued
thereon till the 26th of February, 1852, and the patents for both
tracts were issued on the 26th of March following, that to Labeaume
or his legal representatives embracing the land in Soulard's
survey, and the survey and patent made for Joseph Brazeau or his
legal representatives are located on the southern boundary of
Labeaume's tract. This suit had been brought in the circuit court
before the surveys were approved, or a patent issued to either
party.
The representatives of Brazeau have refused to receive the
patent issued to them, and protest against the binding force of the
survey, insisting that the confirmation by the commissioners
conferred a perfect title for different land from that covered by
the patent. On this state of facts the circuit court instructed the
jury as follows:
"We have been engaged in this cause for the last fifteen days,
endeavoring to ascertain the fact whether the tract of land
confirmed to Louis Labeaume, according to Soulard's survey of 1799,
embraces the sixteen arpens confirmed to Joseph Brazeau. Brazeau
got a concession for twenty arpens in front on the Mississippi by
four arpens back, and sold the northern sixteen arpens front to
Labeaume, reserving four by four, or sixteen arpens, at the
southern end of the tract granted by the concession. In 1799,
Labeaume got his tract enlarged by an additional concession,
including the sixteen arpens front purchased from Brazeau. This
latter concession was surveyed by Soulard, the proper Spanish
surveyor, in 1799, and the survey was recorded."
"In 1810, the board of commissioners confirmed the grant to
Labeaume according to Soulard's survey. This being the effect of
the confirmation, at the same time that the board confirmed
Labeaume's claim, including the sixteen arpens front, the claim of
Brazeau was also confirmed, and a survey in each case was ordered
by the board."
"Recently the surveys of these tracts were made according to
Page 58 U. S. 413
the precise instructions as to their boundaries, coming from the
General Land Office at Washington, and pursuant to the order of the
Secretary of the Interior, and on these surveys patents have
issued, one to the legal representatives of Labeaume and the other
to the legal representatives of Brazeau, which tracts adjoin each
other on the southern boundary of Labeaume's tract, as described in
the patent, and one question is whether the plaintiff to this suit
can claim land elsewhere than that described in his patent -- in
other words, whether he can abandon the land surveyed for him and
granted by patent and go further north and recover land there which
never had been surveyed in conformity to the concession. We are of
opinion that the United States reserved the power to locate, by
survey, the land confirmed to Brazeau, and by such survey to
separate it from the public lands and from the lands claimed by
others and to issue a patent therefor, as was done in this
instance; that this reserved power was vested in the executive
department, whose acts in this instance bound Brazeau, and those
claiming under him; nor can they extend their claim and recover
land beyond the boundaries described in the patent to Brazeau or
his legal representatives. The jury are further informed that all
instructions heretofore given inconsistent with the foregoing are
withdrawn from their consideration, this instruction having been
given at the request of the jury because they could not agree
according to the instructions heretofore given them by the
court."
To the giving of which instruction to the jury the plaintiff by
his counsel at the time duly excepted. A verdict was, of course,
returned for the defendant.
To comprehend the scope of the foregoing instruction to the
jury, we must consider the condition of claims to land derived from
France and Spain before the United States acquired Louisiana; with
but few exceptions they were possessed and cultivated in the upper
province, at the date of the treaty, by virtue of concessions from
lieutenant-governors and commandants of posts, in which no definite
boundaries were prescribed by the concessions themselves, but the
surveyor general of the province was instructed to measure the land
and mark out the boundaries, and to put the interested party into
possession. As a general rule, a survey was required before
possession was given. Often, however, and probably in most
instances, no survey had in fact been made when the United States
acquired the country in 1803, and of this unsurveyed class was the
concession to Joseph Brazeau. As these unlocated claims were
usually surrounded in part by public lands and in other part by the
vague and unlocated claims of others, it became necessary that
definite boundaries should be established by legal surveys,
Page 58 U. S. 414
so that the limits of the public domain might be known and
private adjoining owners be exempt from disturbance and
litigation.
It has often been held by this Court that the judicial
tribunals, in the ordinary administration of justice, had no
jurisdiction or power to deal with these incipient claims, either
as to fixing boundaries by survey or for any other purpose, but
that claimants were compelled to rely upon Congress, on which power
was conferred by the Constitution to dispose of and make all
needful rules and regulations respecting the territory and property
of the United States. Among these needful regulations was that of
providing that these unlocated claims should be surveyed by lawful
authority -- a consideration that has occupied a prominent place in
the legislation of Congress from an early day.
The Act of March 3, 1807, § 4, was the first that gave a
board of commissioners power to adjudicate claims against the
United States and conclude the government as to the question of
right in the claimant. The judgments of the board on all claims for
less than a league square were to a large degree judicial, but as
their powers and duties depended on the acts of 1805, 1806, and
more especially on that of 1807, when they confirmed Brazeau's
claim, we must ascertain from these laws whether more was to be
done to conclude the United States as to any definite and distinct
tract of land.
By the 6th section of the act of 1807, the commissioners were
bound to transmit to the Secretary of the Treasury and to the
surveyor general of the district where the land lay transcripts of
their final decisions made in favor of each claimant, and were
required to deliver to him a certificate stating the circumstances
of the case and that he was entitled to a patent for the tract
therein designated, which certificate was to be filed with the
recorder, if the land lay in the district of Louisiana, and with
the register of the land office, when the land lay in the Orleans
Territory.
In all cases where tracts of land were granted by the board
which had not been previously surveyed, the 7th section of the act
of 1807 declared that they should be surveyed under the directions
of the Surveyor General, and that he should transmit general and
particular plats of the tracts thus surveyed to the proper register
or recorder and also transmit copies to the Secretary of the
Treasury. The certificate and plat being filed with the register or
recorder, he was thereupon required to issue a patent certificate
in favor of the claimant, which, being transmitted to the Secretary
of the Treasury, entitled the party to a patent in like manner as
patents were issued on lands sold by the United States.
Page 58 U. S. 415
By the Act of April 29, 1816, a surveyor general was appointed
for the Territories of Illinois and Missouri, with general powers
to survey the public lands into sections and also to survey all
lands confirmed by acts of Congress and to perform the duties
imposed on his predecessor, the principal deputy for Missouri
Territory, whose duty it was to survey the claims confirmed by
commissioners in all cases where they had not been previously
surveyed according to law.
The commissioners having given Brazeau a certificate that he was
entitled to a patent according to his confirmation, pursuant
thereto several surveys were made by deputy surveyors, under
instructions from the Surveyor General, but they were rejected as
improper and unlawful, either by him, or at the General Land
Office. Finally, in March, 1852, as above stated, the claim was
surveyed according to the instructions of the Secretary of the
Interior, and a patent issued conforming to this survey.
The circuit court charged the jury in substance that in this
case of confirmation by the board sitting at St. Louis, in 1810,
the claim being unlocated and vague, power was reserved to the
United States to locate the tract by survey.
It was competent for Congress to take up these titles or rights
and act on them either by legislating directly that each claimant
should be confirmed, and have a perfect title to his actual
possession lawfully acquired under France or Spain, without
ascertaining, in the act of confirmation or by any special means
provided therein, the bounds of claims confirmed. But it was also
competent for Congress to provide that before a title should be
given to any possessor, the exact limits of his possession and the
title which the United States was to give should be defined, and
that this should be done by such agencies and in such manner as
might be fixed by Congress. This is in entire accordance with the
provisions of the treaty, which guarantees to the inhabitants the
rights of property secured to them, but it was not intended to
provide for the particular modes and instrumentalities by which
such rights should be ascertained and enforced, these being left to
the nation to whose powers they were confided, so that the question
is what has Congress deemed expedient? Now the policy which is so
obvious, and which has been acted on by the United States ever
since they began to exercise power over the public lands -- namely
to give defined limits to grants -- may well be supposed to have
actuated Congress in 1807. The provisions of that act clearly show
that although Congress intended that the commissioners should
adjudge the existence of good titles to lands held under
Page 58 U. S. 416
French and Spanish possessors, yet they did not intend that a
final legal title, as against the United States should be made to
vague grants, until their bounds had been ascertained by the means
there designated and the particular tract defined by survey.
Congress might have said, as was done in case of the St. Louis
town lots and out-lots by the act of 1812, that each man should own
what he had lawfully possessed under the former government, and if
Congress had done so, then the question would have been, in this
instance, a matter of fact, to be tried by a jury, as to what the
plaintiff did formerly possess, and consequently own. But Congress
having said, by the act of 1807, that he shall be confirmed in what
shall be designated by a survey made under the authority of the
United States, according to the direction of the board of
commissioners, and such direction to survey being a condition which
the judgment of confirmation carried along with it until the survey
was made, the plaintiff's title attached to no land, nor could a
court of justice ascertain its boundaries, as this power was
reserved to the executive department of the federal government; it
follows that the legal representative of Brazeau, who brings suit,
had no title at the time it was brought that would support an
action of ejectment.
It is ordered that the judgment of the circuit court be
affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McLEAN.
In this case I do not dissent, as it is the understanding of the
judges that the equity of the case remains open for
investigation.
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 could in this cause be and the same is hereby
affirmed, with costs.
* MR. JUSTICE WAYNE, having been indisposed, did not sit in this
cause.