Where a grant of land in California was made in 1841, under the
colonization laws, which looked to the settlement and improvement
of the country, and eleven years elapsed, during which time the
applicant took no step towards
Page 64 U. S. 313
the completion of his title or the fulfillment of the
obligations it imposed, nor is there any expediente in the archives
to show the segregation of the land from the public domain, nor was
there any delivery of judicial possession, nor any other assertion
of right, the claimant must be considered guilty of an unreasonable
delay in fulfilling his part of the engagement, and has slept for a
lengthened period on his rights, coming forward at last, when
circumstances have changed in his favor, to enforce a stale
demand.
The excuse for the laches of the applicant that the Indians were
numerous and hostile is not sufficient. That fact existed at the
date of the decree in 1841.
The claim must be treated as one abandoned prior to the date of
the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, and is not entitled to
confirmation.
This was a claim for an island in the Sacramento River in
California.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 64 U. S. 314
MR. JUSTICE CAMPBELL delivered the opinion of the Court.
Robert Elwell, in a petition to Governor Alvarado that bears
date in 1841, represents that he had resided in the country sixteen
years, was married to one of the natives, and had a numerous
family, and had been employed in commercial business; that his
capital had been impaired, and he had been reduced to enlist as a
private soldier in the militia, and had served in the year 1838,
under the command of the governor, in the south, and had received
no compensation. He solicits of the governor, as a generous
recompense to his subordinate, and also with a view to promote the
progress of agriculture, to confer upon him a concession of a
parcel of land situated in the northern frontier, and forming an
island in the Sacramento River, eighteen leagues from the
establishment of Don Aug. Sutter, containing five square
leagues.
The governor, in March, 1841, "in consideration of the services
and merits specified," grants the land asked for, the claimant to
abide the reports as to whether the land is vacant, with whatever
else that is proper, and that he shall furnish the diseno, in order
to commence the expediente.
Two days before the claim was presented to the board of
commissioners in 1852, Elwell conveyed his claim to the appellee.
He (Elwell) was examined as a witness, and testifies that he had
presented a diseno some three months after he had exhibited his
petition; that there was no information or formal report made to
the governor, and that he had never
Page 64 U. S. 315
occupied the land or had judicial possession delivered to him;
that there was no officer to perform these duties.
There is some testimony to show that Noe had a tenant on the
land in 1851, who inhabited a small house, and that the whole
region of the Sacramento above Sutter's fort was not in a situation
to be occupied, owing to the dangerous character of the
Indians.
The board of commissioners rejected this claim, but, on appeal,
their sentence was reversed by the district court and the claim
confirmed to the entire island, provided it did not contain more
than eleven leagues. From this decree cross-appeals have been
prosecuted to this Court.
As an inducement to the allowance of his petition, the applicant
refers to the services he had rendered to the governor in a
military campaign; but the consideration of the grant is the
proposed improvement of the department by the settlement and
occupation of its waste lands. The authority of the governor to
make the grant is derived from the laws that provide for that
object.
The decree of the governor indicates that the title was to be
perfected in the usual manner, and consequently that it was to be
subject to the conditions of colonization. An interval of eleven
years elapsed from the date of this decree till the presentation of
the claim to the board of commissioners in 1852. During this time,
the applicant took no step towards the completion of his title or
the fulfillment of the obligations it imposed. There is no
expediente in the archives to show the segregation of this island
from the public domain, nor report to the departmental assembly or
the supreme government to testify that a citizen had been enlisted,
"to give impulse to the progress of agriculture in the country."
There was no delivery of judicial possession, nor any other
assertion of right by which the inhabitants could be charged with
notice of this claim. A great change has taken place in the
condition of the country, and other persons have assumed to settle
and improve the land, which the applicant failed to do.
It is a general principle of equity to grant a decree of
specific performance only in cases where there is a mutuality
of
Page 64 U. S. 316
obligation, and when the remedy is mutual, and that it will not
be rendered in favor of one who has been guilty of an unreasonable
delay in fulfilling his part of the engagement or who has slept for
a lengthened period on his rights, and comes forward at last, when
circumstances have changed in his favor, to enforce a stale demand.
And it would be manifestly unjust to revive long antecedent
covenants and dormant engagements in California, since the change
in the condition and circumstances of that country, where it is
evident that they were treated as abandoned, and imposing no
obligation previously to that change.
The only explanation for the laches of the applicant is found in
the testimony of the witnesses Castro and Combs, who say:
"The whole of the region of country of the Sacramento above
Sutter's fort, or New Helvetia, was not in a situation to be
settled upon by individual grantees, owing to the hostilities of
the Indians; . . . that the Indians were numerous and hostile."
But this fact existed at the date of the decree in 1841, and
will account for the abandonment of the purpose that the applicant
seems to have entertained at one time of making a settlement. It is
hardly probable that he could have anticipated the revolution that
took place long afterwards in the condition of the country and was
then preparing to avail himself of the advantage to be derived from
it.
In the
United States v.
Kinsgbury, 12 Pet. 476, the claimant sought to
excuse the nonperformance of the condition because "the country was
in a disturbed and dangerous state, from the date of the grant, and
for a long time previous, till the transfer of the province." The
Court said:
"All the witnesses concur in stating there was no more danger
after the appellee petitioned for the land than there had been
before and at the date of the application. The appellee, then,
cannot be permitted to urge as an excuse in fact or in law for not
complying with his undertaking a danger which applies as forcibly
to repudiate the sincerity of his intention"
to improve the land when he petitioned as it does "his inability
from such danger to execute it afterwards."
Page 64 U. S. 317
The Court said:
"That concessions of land upon condition have been repeatedly
confirmed by the Court, and it will apply the principles of its
adjudications to all cases of a like kind. It will, as it has done,
liberally construe the performance of conditions precedent or
subsequent in such grants. It has not nor will it apply, in the
construction of such conditions in such cases, the rules of the
common law. But this Court cannot say a condition wholly
unperformed, without strong proof of sufficient cause to prevent it
does not defeat all right of property in land under such a decree
as the appellee in this case makes the foundation of his
claim."
In
De Vilemont v. United
States, 13 How. 261, the Court said:
"The only consideration on which such a title could be founded
was inhabitation and cultivation, either by De Vilemont himself or
his tenants, and having done nothing of the kind, he had no right
to a title; nor can the excuse be heard that he was prevented from
a compliance with the conditions by the hostility of the Indians,
as he took his concession subject to that risk."
In the cases of the
United States v.
Fremont, 17 How. 560, and
United
States v. Redding, 18 How. 1, the Court had
considered the effect of the conditions usually accompanying the
grants to land in California, and how far their fulfillment is to
be exacted in determining the validity of those claims. The Court
said in the first case,
"There is nothing in the language of the conditions, taking them
altogether, nor in their evident object and policy, which would
justify the Court in declaring the lands forfeited to the
government where no other person sought to appropriate them and
their performance had not been unreasonably delayed."
In the latter case it is shown that the grantee displayed good
faith and reasonable diligence to perform the conditions annexed to
his grant, and all presumptions of an abandonment of his claim were
repelled by affirmative and satisfactory proof.
But in the present instance, we find nothing to have been done
to place the claim of the applicant upon the records of the
department, and the duty of a colonist was wholly disregarded.
Page 64 U. S. 318
Within the doctrine of the cases we have cited, the claim must
be treated as one abandoned prior to the date of the Treaty of
Guadalupe Hidalgo, and is not entitled to confirmation.
Decree of the district court reversed; cause remanded;
petition to be dismissed.