Where a grant of land in California had this clause,
viz.,
"The tract of which grant is made is of the extent mentioned in
the plan, which goes with the expediente, with its respective
boundaries; the officer giving the possession
Page 64 U. S. 496
shall cause it to be measured, according to the ordinance, to
mark boundaries; the surplus to remain for the nation, for its
uses,"
according to the face of the grant, it must be confined to two
leagues mentioned in the petition. Otherwise there could be no
surplus.
As there was no legal title, but only an equity, this Court
holds, according to previous decisions, that the petition and
concession must be taken together, in which case the result would
be the same,
viz., that the claimant must be confined to
two leagues.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE CATRON delivered the opinion of the Court.
Yontz prosecutes this appeal as administrator of Jose Dolores
Pacheco, who died pending the suit below.
There is no controversy in relation to the validity of the
grant, but only as respects the quantity confirmed by the district
court, being two square leagues. The claimant insists that he is
entitled to a survey and patent from the United States
corresponding to the outboundaries embraced in his diseno, and the
description given of the rancho in the governor's grant, which
recites:
"Whereas citizen Jose Dolores Pacheco has sought to obtain for
his personal benefit and that of his family the place lying between
the 'creek or ravine' of La Tasajera and the place of 'San Ramon,'
bounded by the house of the same place of San Ramon down to the
'dead trees,' palos secos, and from this point, taking by the
'Tular' to the 'high hill' Loma Alta along the creek or ravine of
said Tasajera, and along the range of hills sierra and the land of
citizen Bartolo Pacheco."
After which the conditional clause follows, to-wit:
"The tract of which grant is made is of the extent mentioned in
the plan, which goes with the expediente, with its respective
boundaries. The officer giving the possession shall cause it to be
measured, according to the
Page 64 U. S. 497
ordinance to mark boundaries, the surplus to remain for the
nation for its uses."
Pacheco petitioned Governor Figueroa for two leagues of land, in
June, 1834, lying within the boundaries set forth in the foregoing
description and plan. He then failed to have his petition favorably
considered by the governor, because opposition was made by the
Mission of San Jose.
On the 30th of November, 1837, Pacheco again petitioned Governor
Alvarado to grant him the same land; he says:
"At this time I confine the application for two leagues, more or
less, according to the boundaries of said mission of San Jose to
the south, the plan of which I enclose herein again."
The governor referred this second petition to the council of San
Jose, and they reported the land to be vacant, and that it could be
adjudicated for colonization. On this report the governor made the
grant. It was confirmed by the departmental assembly, May 12th,
1840 with directions, "that the expediente be returned to his
excellency the governor, for the proper ends." No final document in
consummation of a perfect title issued to the grantee, nor was
judicial possession given of the land, and in this unsurveyed
condition the claim stood when the United States acquired the
country.
If we are bound to take the last paper issued by the governor as
concluding all reference to preceding steps in the progress of
obtaining a complete title, then we find the grant inconsistent on
its face. The argument urged on our consideration is that there are
specific boundaries given as to the extent of the land granted, so
that it is clearly a grant of all the land within these prescribed
limits. In contravention of this assumption, the clause above
recited directs that the officer giving judicial possession shall
cause the land to be measured, according to the ordinance, and to
mark boundaries,
"the surplus to remain for the nation, for its
uses." If it be true that the boundaries are conclusively
defined in the grant, then no surplus could be thrown off by the
survey. But if two leagues are to be surveyed within the larger
limits, then the clause is consistent.
In the next place, it is insisted that the clause is a
condition,
Page 64 U. S. 498
usual in all these grants, and amounts to little more than a
mere formality. Ascribing to the clause usually declaring quantity
only this degree of credence, then we are thrown on the recitals of
the grant, and bound to look behind it, to the incipient steps, and
to other title papers referred to, and from all these to ascertain
how much land was intended to be conceded.
The claimants come before us presenting an equity, their title
not being completed because the land has never been surveyed and
severed from the public domain.
Hanson's
Case, 16 Pet. 200;
Rosa Pacheco's Case,
now decided.
We are called on to adjudge what the equities of claimants are,
and to do this, it is proper "to look at all the several parts and
ceremonies necessary to complete the title, and to take them
together as one act."
51 U. S. 10
How. 372.
This Court has uniformly held, in cases coming up by appeal from
the district courts of Missouri and Florida, which adjudicated
Spanish claims under the act of 1824, that the petition to the
governor for land and his concession must be taken as one act, and
the decree usually proceeded on the petition, which described the
land as respected locality and quantity. This was necessarily so,
as the concession was often a mere grant of the request, without
other description than the petition contained.
And this is manifestly one of the rules of decision governing
the tribunals in California, prescribed by the 11th section of the
Act of March 3, 1851. In this case, the grant refers to the
previous steps, including the petition, asking for only two
leagues, and carries them along with the grant.
From all the acts, taken together, it is manifest that the
decree of the district court restricting the quantity to two square
leagues must be affirmed if so much land is found within the
outboundaries of the tract of country set forth in the grant and
diseno; otherwise, the less quantity.