By the Acts of Congress passed on the 15th of May, 1820, and
March 3, 1823, provision was made, that each of the settlers in
Peoria, Illinois, should be, entitled to a village lot, and the
surveyor of public lands was directed to designate upon a plat the
lot confirmed to each claimant.
The act of 1823 conferred on the grantee an incipient title, and
when the survey was made and approved by which the limits of the
lot were designated, the title then became capable of sustaining an
action of ejectment, even before a patent was issued.
In the interval between 1823 and the survey, a patent was taken
out, which was issued subject to all the rights of persons claiming
under the act of 1823. This patent was controlled by the subsequent
survey.
But although it was controlled by the subsequent survey, yet the
patent was a fee simple title upon its face, and sufficient to
sustain a plea of the statute of limitations in Illinois, which
requires that possession should be by actual residence on the land,
under a connected title in law or equity, deducible of record from
the United States &c.
The American State Papers, published by order of Congress, may
be read in evidence, in the investigation of claims to land.
The facts of the case are stated in the opinion of the
Court.
MR. JUSTICE CATRON delivered the opinion of the Court.
Forsyth sued Bryan and Rouse in ejectment for part of lot No. 7,
in the Town of Peoria, in the State of Illinois. The action was
founded on a patent to Forsyth from the United States dated the
16th day of December, 1845, which patent was given in evidence on
the trial in the circuit court. It was admitted that the defendants
were in possession when they were sued, and that they held
possession within the bounds of the patent. To overcome this
prima facie title, the defendants gave in evidence a
patent from the United States to John L. Bogardus, containing
twenty-three acres, dated January 5, 1838, which included lot No.
7. To overreach this elder patent, the plaintiff relied on an Act
of Congress passed May 15,
Page 60 U. S. 335
1820, for the relief of the inhabitants of the Village of Peoria
providing that every person who claims a lot in said village shall,
on or before the first day of October next, deliver to the register
of the land office for the District of Edwardsville a notice in
writing of his or her claim, and it was made the duty of the
register to make a report to the Secretary of the Treasury of all
claims filed, with the substance of the evidence in support
thereof, and also his opinion and such remarks respecting the
claims as he might think proper to make, which report, together
with a list of the claims which in the opinion of the register
ought to be confirmed shall be laid by the Secretary before
Congress for its determination.
The report was made and laid before Congress in January, 1821.
As respected lot No. 7, a part of which is in dispute, the register
reported that Thomas Forsyth claimed it; that it was three hundred
feet square, French measure, situate in the Village of Peoria, and
bounded eastwardly by a street, separating it from the Illinois
River; northwardly by a cross street, westwardly by a back street,
and southwardly by a lot claimed by Jacques Mette. The remark of
the register is: "A part of this lot must have been embraced by the
lot claimed by Augustine Rogue." Rogue's claim No. 2 was for a lot
of about an arpent, and bounded, says the register, northwardly by
a lot occupied by Maillette, eastwardly by a road separating it
from Illinois River, and southwardly and westwardly by the
prairie.
The register reported on seventy lots in all. A survey to
designate boundaries among the claimants was indispensable, as they
were in considerable confusion. Congress again legislated on the
subject by Act of March 3, 1823, and provided that each of the
settlers, whose names were contained in the report, who had settled
a village lot prior to the first of January, 1813, should be
entitled thereto; the lot so settled on and improved not to exceed
two acres, and where it exceeded two acres, such claimant should be
confirmed in a quantity not exceeding ten acres. It was made the
duty of the surveyor of public lands for the district to cause a
survey to be made of the several lots and to designate on a plat
thereof the lot confirmed and set apart to each claimant, and
forward the same to the Secretary of the Treasury, who shall says
the act cause patents to be issued in favor of each claimant, as in
other cases.
The survey was made in 1840 by order of the Surveyor General of
Illinois and Missouri, which was duly returned, approved, and
recorded. We are of opinion that the act of 1823 conferred on the
grantee an incipient title, and reserved to the
Page 60 U. S. 336
executive department administering the public lands the
authority to settle the boundaries by actual survey among the
claimants, and until this was done, the courts of justice could not
interfere and establish boundaries. It was competent for Congress
to provide that before a title should be given to a confirmee, the
exact limits of his confirmation should be ascertained by a survey
executed by authority of the United States.
West
v. Cochran, 17 How. 415
When the surveys were made and the plats returned and approved
and recorded by the Surveyor General of Illinois and Missouri and
recognized as valid at the General Land Office, as the patent to
Forsyth shows it was, it bound the parties to it, the confirmee and
the United States; nor can either side be heard to deny that the
land granted by the act of 1823 is the precise lot Forsyth was
entitled to, such being the settled doctrine of this Court.
Menard's Heirs v.
Massey, 8 How. 313. Neither can Bogardus or his
assignee deny that he was concluded by the survey. His patent
grants the land to him in fee,
"subject, however, to all the rights of any and all persons
claiming under the Act of Congress of 3 March, 1823, entitled 'An
act to confirm certain claims to lots in the Village of Peoria, in
the State of Illinois.'"
This patent is the only title set up by the defendants below; by
its terms, all power to perfect the title of Forsyth, according to
the act of 1823, was reserved to and retained by the department of
public lands as effectually after the Bogardus patent was issued as
before.
The survey having bound the United States, and concluded
Bogardus, Forsyth had a title by virtue of the acts of 1820 and
1823, and the survey, which was of a legal character, and he could
maintain an action of ejectment on it even had no patent issued.
This is true beyond controversy if the action had been prosecuted
in a state court, where the state laws authorized suits in
ejectment on imperfect titles.
Ross v.
Borland, 1 Pet. 655;
Chouteau v.
Eckhard, 2 How. 372.
But it is insisted that in the courts of the United States a
different rule applies, and that, as a patent carries the fee, it
is the better title. The case of
Robinson v.
Campbell, 3 Wheat. 212, is supposed to be to this
effect. There, the conflicting patents were made by the
Commonwealth of Virginia, and the defendant attempted to prove that
a settlement had been made on the land in dispute by one
Fitzgerald, and which preference right had been assigned to Martin
who obtained a certificate from the commissioners for adjusting
titles to unpatented lands, which certificate was of anterior date
to the junior patent, and was the source of title. It was nothing
more than evidence that Martin had a preference to purchase the
land if
Page 60 U. S. 337
he saw proper to do so, and was not competent evidence in an
action of ejectment, according to the laws of Virginia or even of
Tennessee. It was not an entry founded on consideration, but a
right of abating an equity at the discretion of the settler.
Neither in Virginia nor Kentucky, where the Virginia land laws
prevail, is the defendant allowed to go behind the patent in a
court of law in order to give the patent a date from that of the
entry on which the patent was founded.
The question here is on the effects of acts of Congress
confirming claims to lands as valid, by which legislation the
government is concluded; and as respects these it is settled that
after a survey is duly made, approved, and recorded at the Surveyor
General's office, an action of ejectment may be maintained on such
titles in the courts of the United States. It is a good
prima
facie title.
Stoddard v.
Chambers, 2 How. 313;
Le
Bois v. Bramell, 4 How. 456;
Bissell v.
Penrose, 8 How. 317. In
Stoddard v.
Chambers, this Court held "that a confirmation by act of
Congress vests in the confirmee the right of the United States, and
a patent, if issued, could only be evidence of this." Other cases
followed this decision. By the third section of the Act of July 4,
1836, it is provided that a patent shall issue to the confirmee in
cases confirmed by that act. In this respect, the provisions of the
acts of 1823 and 1836 are alike.
Of course the patent in this instance can relate to a title
which is valid against another title unaided by the younger
patent.
This disposes of the exception taken by the defendants below to
the ruling of the court that Forsyth's title was superior to that
of Bogardus.
They next ask the court to instruct the jury that by the laws of
Illinois they had such title as would bar an action of ejectment
after seven years, accompanied by actual residence on the land sued
for, and if the jury believe from the evidence that the defendants
have so long had said possession, the plaintiff cannot succeed in
this suit. There were two other instructions asked requiring the
court to instruct the jury that the plaintiff's action was barred
by the act of limitations of twenty years.
The court refused to instruct as requested,
"but, on the contrary, instructed the jury that the patent to
Bogardus did not grant or convey the ground in controversy, and it
being conceded that it was the only title the defendant had, there
is no such title as under the statute of limitations protects the
possession of the defendants."
This instruction was founded on an exception in the patent to
Bogardus. It grants to him,
Page 60 U. S. 338
and to his heirs and assigns forever,
"subject, however, to all the rights of any and all persons
under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1823, entitled 'An act to
confirm certain claims to lots in the Village of Peoria, in the
State of Illinois.'"
When this patent was made in 1838, the village lots had not been
surveyed, and those that interfered with the land granted to
Bogardus might never be claimed. Subject to this contingency he
took his patent, and had a title in fee till 1840, when the village
title of Forsyth was ripened into the better right. After that,
those claiming under Bogardus held the position of one who claims
protection by the act of limitations under a younger patent against
an elder one. He has only the appearance of title. The patent to
Bogardus was a fee simple title on its face, and is such title as
will afford protection to those claiming under it, either directly,
or, having a title connected with it, with possession for seven
years, as required by the statute of Illinois. The court below
erred in cutting off this defense.
In the progress of the trial in the circuit court, the plaintiff
offered in evidence the printed report of Edward Coles, the
register of the land office at Edwardsville, as found in the
American State Papers, vol. 3, from pages 421 to 431, inclusive, to
which the defendant objected, because it was not, without proof of
its authenticity, legal evidence. But the court overruled the
objection, and the report was given in evidence to the jury, to
which ruling the defendants excepted.
These State Papers were published by order of Congress, and
selected and edited by the Secretary of the Senate and Clerk of the
House. They contain copies of legislative and executive documents,
and are as valid evidence as the originals are from which they were
copied, and it cannot be denied that a record of the report of
Edward Coles, as found in the printed journals of Congress, could
be read on mere inspection as evidence that it was the report sent
in by the Secretary of the Treasury. The competency of these
documents as evidence in the investigation of claims to lands in
the courts of justice has not been controverted for twenty years,
and is not open to controversy.
It is ordered that the judgment be reversed, and the cause
remanded for another trial.
MR. JUSTICE McLEAN dissenting.
Sometime during the late war with England, a company of militia
in the service of the United States at Peoria, in Illinois, taking
offense at the inhabitants of the village, burnt it.
Congress, with the view of ascertaining the extent of the injury
and the names of the sufferers, on the 15th May, 1820,
Page 60 U. S. 339
passed an act
"That every person, or the legal representatives of every
person, who claims a lot or lots in the Village of Peoria, in the
State of Illinois, shall, on or before the first day of October
next, deliver to the Register of the Land Office for the District
of Edwardsville a notice in writing of his or her claim, and it
shall be the duty of the said register to make to the Secretary of
the Treasury a report of all claims filed with the said register,
with the substance of the evidence thereof, and also his opinion,
and such remarks respecting the claims as he may think proper to
make, which report, together with a list of the claims which in the
opinion of the said register ought to be confirmed shall be laid by
the Secretary of the Treasury before Congress, for their
determination."
The report was made, as required in the above act, by E. Coles,
Esq., Register, on the 10th of November, 1820. By that report, No.
7, Thomas Forsyth claims
"a lot of three hundred feet in front by three hundred feet in
the depth, French measure, in the Village of Peoria, and bounded
eastwardly by a street separating it from the Illinois River,
northwardly by a cross street, westwardly by a back street, and
southwardly by a lot claimed by Jacques Mette."
On the 3d of March, 1823, Congress passed an act which
declares
"That there is hereby granted to each of the French and Canadian
inhabitants and other settlers in the Village of Peoria, in the
State of Illinois, whose claims are contained in a report made by
the register of the land office at Edwardsville, in pursuance of
the Act of Congress approved May the 15th, 1820, and who had
settled a lot in the village aforesaid prior to the 1st day of
January, 1813, and who had not heretofore received a confirmation
of claims or donation of any tract of land or village lot from the
United States, the lot so settled on and improved, where the same
shall not exceed two acres."
The second section made it the duty of the surveyor of the
public lands of the United States for that district to cause a
survey to be made of the several lots, and to designate on a plat
thereof the lot confirmed and set apart to each claimant, and
forward the same to the Secretary of the Treasury, who shall cause
patents to be issued in favor of such claimants, as in other
cases.
In the action of ejectment brought by Forsyth, as above stated,
to recover possession of lot No. 7, described, it was agreed that
upon the trial it shall be admitted that the plaintiff has the
title of Thomas Forsyth in and to the land sued for, by descent,
and purchase, and conveyance, and also that the defendants have had
the actual possession of the land for which they are respectively
sued by residence thereon for ten
Page 60 U. S. 340
years next preceding the commencement of the suit, and that John
L. Bogardus, under whom they claim, had possession of the southeast
fractional quarter of section nine, in township eight north, of
range eight east, upon which the land sued for is situated,
claiming the same under preemption right more than twenty years
before the commencement of these suits, but he never had the actual
possession of that part of said fractional quarter section sued
for; and that said "defendants respectively had vested in them,
before the commencement of this suit, all the right of
Bogardus."
A patent was issued to Bogardus for the southern fractional
quarter of section nine in township eight north, of range east,
containing twenty-three acres and ninety-three hundredths of an
acre &c.,
"subject, however, to all the rights of any and all persons
claiming under the Act of Congress of 3 March, 1823, entitled 'An
act to confirm certain claims to lots in the Village of Peoria, in
the State of Illinois.'"
The defendants rely on the statute of limitations of 1827, which
requires that the possession should be by actual residence on the
land, under a connected title in law or equity, deducible of record
from the United States.
The court instructed the jury that the title claimed under
Bogardus did not protect them under the statute.
This is held by this Court to be an error, for which the
judgment is reversed.
The error of the court consists in giving a construction not
only to a written instrument, but to a patent. That it is the
province of the court to construe such a paper will not be
controverted. The patent conveyed to Bogardus the land
described,
"subject, however, to all the rights of any and all persons
claiming under the Act of Congress of the 3d March, 1823, entitled
'An act to confirm certain claims to lots in the Village of Peoria,
in the State of Illinois.'"
The lot in controversy was claimed under the act of 1823, which
declared
"That there is hereby granted to each of the French and Canadian
inhabitants, and other settlers in the Village of Peoria, in the
State of Illinois, whose claims are contained in a report made by
the register of the land office at Edwardsville, in pursuance of
the Act of Congress approved May 15, 1820, and who had settled a
lot in the village aforesaid prior to the 1st of January, 1813, and
who have not heretofore received a confirmation of claims or
donation of any tract of land or village lot of the United States,
the lot so settled upon and improved, where the same shall not
exceed two acres,"
&c.
The right made subject to the patent was a legal right; it
Page 60 U. S. 341
was a grant by Congress, which this Court has recognized as the
highest grade of title. A patent is issued by a ministerial
officer, who is subject to error, but the legislative action is not
to be doubted.
The survey of the lot was not made until 1 September, 1840, and
the patent was issued to Forsyth, December 16, 1845.
In the case of
Ballance v.
Forsyth, 13 How. 24, this Court said:
"If the patent to Bogardus be of prior date, the reservation in
the patent, and also in his entry, was sufficient notice that the
title to those lots did not pass, and this exception is
sufficiently shown by the acts of the government."
And again:
"The statute did not protect the possession of the defendant
below. His patent excepted those lots; of course, he had no title
under it for the lots excepted."
Until the case before us was reversed for error by the district
judges who conformed to the above decision, I did not suppose that
anyone could doubt the correctness of the decision. Bogardus, in
1838, took a grant from the United States, subject to Forsyth's
right, thereby recognizing it, and consequently from that time he
held it in subordination to Forsyth's title. If it be admitted that
the fee did not pass to Forsyth until the patent issued in 1845,
the patent had relation back to the act of 1823, and operated from
that time. The report of the register defined the boundaries of the
lot as specifically as the survey, by reason of which the lot was
as well known, it is presumed, to the public before the survey as
afterwards. This may not have been the case with all the lots.
Let anyone read the patent to Bogardus and ask himself the
question whether the United States intended to convey the lots to
which the patent was made subject, and the answer must be that they
did not. By the act of 1823 they granted those lots to the French
settlers who, by the report of the register, were entitled to them
under the act of 1820. It would have been an act of bad faith in
the government after the act of 1823 to convey any one of those
lots, and on reading the patent it is clear they did not intend to
convey any one of them. It is said suppose the French settlers had
not claimed the lots, would not Bogardus have had a right to them?
Such a supposition cannot be raised against the facts proved. The
title of Forsyth was of prior date and of a higher nature than that
of Bogardus. His title was subordinate, as expressed upon its
face.
In the case of
Hawkins v. Barney's Lessee, 9 Curtis
728, the same question was before this Court. Barney conveyed fifty
thousand acres of land in Kentucky to Oliver; sometime afterwards,
Oliver reconveyed the same tract to Barney, in
Page 60 U. S. 342
which deed were recited several conveyances of parcels of the
tract to several individuals, and particularly one of 11,000 acres
to one Berriman. Barney brought an ejectment against Hawkins, and
proved that he had entered on the fifty-thousand-acre tract. This
Court held his action could not be sustained unless he proved the
defendant was not only in possession of the large tract, but he
must show that the possession was not upon any one of the tracts
sold and conveyed.
To apply the principle to the case before us. Had Bogardus
brought an action of ejectment to sustain it, he must have proved
the trespasser was within his patent, and outside of anyone of the
reserved lots. The words "subject to all the rights of any persons
under the act of 1823" showed that those rights were not granted by
the patent, and if Bogardus himself could not have recovered, it is
strange how the defendants could recover, who claim to be in
possession under his patent.
The agreed case admits that the "defendants respectively had
vested in them, before the commencement of this suit, all the right
of Bogardus." But whether this possession under the right of
Bogardus was for a day or a year is nowhere shown by the evidence,
and unless I am mistaken, the statute requires a seven years'
possession under title to protect the trespasser, and in effect
give him the land.
Bogardus was in possession, claiming a preemption, but I do not
understand from the opinion of the Court that such a possession
will run, even against the French claimants. Bogardus himself was a
trespasser on the lands of the United States, and until he received
his patent in 1838, I suppose he could not set up a claim to the
land under title.
I hold, and can maintain, that the instruction of the district
judge was right in saying that the patent of Bogardus did not grant
or convey the ground in controversy. And if it did, there was no
such possession under it which, by the statute of limitations,
protected the right of the defendants.