1. On Dec. 17, 1798, A. applied to the Spanish governor general
for a grant of six hundred and ten arpents of land, for a
plantation and settlement, in the District of Baton Rouge, three
miles from the Mississippi. To the application was annexed a
certificate of the local surveyor that in the District of St.
Helena, on the west bank of the Tangipahoa River, beginning at the
thirty first parallel of latitude, the boundary line of the United
States, and about fifty miles east of the Mississippi, there were
vacant lands in which could be found the arpents front which the
petitioner asked for, excluding whatever might be in the possession
of actual settlers. To this application the surveyor of the
district added a further certificate, dated Dec. 22, 1798, and
addressed to the governor, by which he stated that four hundred and
ten arpents might be conceded in the place indicated by the local
surveyor. Thereupon De Lemos, then governor, issued a warrant or
order of survey, as follows:
"NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 2, 1799"
"The surveyor of this province, Don Carlos Trudeau, shall locate
this interested party on four hundred and ten arpents of land,
front, in the place indicated in the foregoing certificate, they
being vacant, and thereby not causing injury to anyone, with the
express condition to make the high road and do the usual clearing
of timber in the absolutely fixed limit in one year, and that this
concession is to remain null and void if at the expiration of the
precise space of three years the land shall not be found settled
upon, and to not be able to alienate it within the same three
years, under which supposition there shall be carried out
uninterruptedly the proceedings of the survey, which he (the
surveyor) shall transmit to me, so as to provide the interested
party with the corresponding title papers in due form."
Neither survey, settlement, nor improvement of any kind was ever
made by A. or by anyone claiming under him. On Feb. 20, 1806, after
the cession of Louisiana to the United States but before this part
of it was surrendered by Spain, he procured from the local Spanish
surveyor at Baton Rouge an authority to a deputy surveyor to survey
the tract according to certain general instructions which do not
appear, specifying, however, that it was understood that the
warrant was for a certain number of arpents in front, and that the
depth ought to be forty arpents, or four hundred perches of Paris.
Nothing was ever done by the deputy surveyor, and the prosecution
of the grant was abandoned by A. and his assigns until long
afterwards. Grandpre, having in 1806 become governor, issued a
warrant for a thousand arpents, on a portion of the tract to one
Yarr, whose title was subsequently confirmed by the United States.
Before the country was occupied by the United States, actual
settlers had become possessed of the whole tract, and they were,
upon the report of the commission appointed to investigate the
titles to land in that region, subsequently confirmed in their
holdings by the Act of March 3, 1819. A., Sept. 16, 1814, assigned
his right to the land to B., who, Dec. 26, 1824, presented his
claim to the lands to the commissioners under the Act passed May
26, 1824, 4 Stat. 59, by whom it was rejected. B. having died, C.,
claiming as his devisee, brought this suit under the Act of June
22, 1860, entitled "An Act for the final adjustment
Page 97 U. S. 205
of land claims in the States of Florida, Louisiana, and
Missouri, and for other purposes," 12
id. 85, but showed
no derivation of title to himself.
Held, l. that the
lands, by reason of the non performance within the specified time
of the conditions mentioned in the warrant of survey, were
forfeited and became subject to the disposing power of the United
States; 2. that if the legal representatives of B. had a valid
claim, C., being a stranger thereto, and showing no interest
therein, would not be entitled to a decree confirming it in their
favor.
2. The said Act of June 22, 1860,
supra, although it
contains sundry remedial provisions and removes the objection
arising from the want of title in the government which was in
possession of the territory at the time of making the grants, if
they were otherwise sustainable on the principles of justice and
equity, does not aid claims which from intrinsic defects were
invalid in 1815 or 1825.
3. The laws and the proceedings thereunder, touching French and
Spanish grants, mentioned, and the decisions as to the effect
thereon of a breach of the conditions annexed thereto cited and
examined.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The claim to lands in this case originated as follows: On the
17th of December, 1798, William Coleman, an inhabitant of New
Feliciana, within the bounds of the present State of Louisiana,
east of the Mississippi River, applied to the Spanish governor
general for a grant of six hundred and ten arpents of land, for a
plantation and settlement, in the District of Baton Rouge, three
miles from the Mississippi. A certificate of the local surveyor was
annexed to the application, certifying that there were vacant lands
in the District of St. Helena, on the west bank of the Tangipahoa
River, beginning at the thirty first parallel of latitude (the
boundary line of the United States), in which could be found the
arpents front which the petitioner asked for, excluding whatever
might be in the possession of actual settlers. The place thus
indicated was about fifty miles east of the Mississippi. To this
application Grandpre, the surveyor of the district, added a further
certificate, dated Dec.
Page 97 U. S. 206
22, 1798, and addressed to the governor, by which he stated that
four hundred and ten arpents might be conceded in the place
indicated by the local surveyor. Thereupon the governor, De Lemos,
on the 2d of January, 1799, issued a warrant or order of survey, in
the following terms (as translated):
"NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 2, 1799"
"The surveyor of this province, Don Carlos Trudeau, shall locate
this interested party on four hundred and ten arpents of land,
front, in the place indicated in the foregoing certificate, they
being vacant, and thereby not causing injury to any one, with the
express condition to make the high road and do the usual clearing
of timber in the absolutely fixed limit in one year; and that this
concession is to remain null and void if at the expiration of the
precise space of three years the land shall not be found settled
upon, and to not be able to alienate it within the same three
years, under which supposition there shall be carried out
uninterruptedly the proceedings of the survey, which he (the
surveyor) shall transmit to me, so as to provide the interested
party with the corresponding title papers in due form."
"(Signed) MANUEL GAYOSO DE LEMOS"
This is the only title presented, and neither survey nor
settlement, nor improvement of any kind, appears ever to have been
made on the part of the petitioner or any one claiming under him.
The only thing done by him in that direction was to procure from
Pintado, the local Spanish surveyor at Baton Rouge, on the 26th of
February, 1806, after the country had been ceded to the United
States, but before this part had been surrendered by Spain, an
authority to one Ira C. Kneeland, a deputy surveyor, to survey the
tract according to certain general instructions (which do not
appear), specifying, however, that it was understood that the
warrant was for a certain number of arpents in front, and that the
depth ought to be forty arpents, or four hundred perches of Paris;
which would make the tract contain sixteen thousand four hundred
arpents, the quantity now sought to be recovered of the United
States. But nothing was ever done by Kneeland, and the prosecution
of the grant seems to have been abandoned by Coleman and his
assigns until long afterwards. Grandpre himself, in 1806
(having
Page 97 U. S. 207
become governor), issued a warrant for a thousand arpents, on a
portion of the tract, to one Robert Yarr, who entered upon and
settled the same, and his title was subsequently confirmed by the
United States. And before the country was occupied by our
government, actual settlers had become possessed of the whole
tract, who were subsequently confirmed in their holdings by the act
of March 3, 1819, upon the report of the commissioners who had been
appointed to investigate the title to lands in that region. Most of
the claims of these settlers were presented to Commissioner Cosby
in 1812, 1813, and 1814, he being then engaged in ascertaining all
claims to lands in the district west of Pearl River. His report was
made in the early part of 1815 (Amer.State Papers, Public Lands,
vol. iii. pp. 39 76); but no claim seems to have been presented by
Coleman for the lands in question.
On the 16th of September, 1814, he assigned his right to the
land to one Charles McMicken, under whom the appellant claims as
devisee. But neither did McMicken present any claim to the
commissioner.
Under the various laws extending the time for presenting claims
several other reports were subsequently made by the commissioners
for the St. Helena district west of Pearl River; and finally, under
an Act passed May 26, 1824, 4 Stat. 59, additional claims were
received in that year, and a report was made in the January
following, in which the claim in question first comes to notice.
The petition in this case states that it was presented to the
commissioners on the 26th of December, 1824. With various others,
it was rejected by them on the ground that "the claimants had not
complied with the requisitions of the law as regards either
habitation or cultivation." Amer.State Papers, Public Lands, vol.
iv. pp. 438, 443. This report was confirmed by Congress by the Act
of May 4, 1826, 4 Stat. 159. In 1846, McMicken instituted suit in
the United States District Court of Louisiana, against the United
States, under the provisions of the Act of June 17, 1844, for the
confirmation of the grant; but this suit was not prosecuted when
called up for trial, and was dismissed, and judgment entered for
the United States. In March, 1873, the present suit was brought
under the Act of June 22, 1860, entitled "An Act for the final
Page 97 U. S. 208
adjustment of private land claims in the States of Florida,
Louisiana, and Missouri, and for other purposes." 12
id.
85. A decree was rendered in favor of the United States. McMicken
thereupon appealed to this court.
Two questions arise in the case: first, whether the petitioner
has shown any derivation of title to himself, and secondly whether
the claim is a valid one.
The petitioner claims as devisee of Charles McMicken, under his
will, bearing date in 1855, which is set out in full in the record.
An inspection of this will shows that the tract in question was not
named in it, nor devised in any way. It mentions various other
tracts in Louisiana belonging to the testator, but not this one. It
would seem that McMicken had abandoned all idea of establishing the
validity of the claim. As the appellant does not pretend to have
any other title than that of devisee under this will, it is
difficult to see how his petition can be sustained. If this were an
action of ejectment, there could be no question on the subject. But
it is contended on the part of the petitioner that whether his own
title be properly deraigned or not, the court, if satisfied of the
validity of McMicken's title, might make a decree in favor of his
legal representatives, for the benefit of whom it might concern. A
decree in this form is often made against the government in these
land cases, when a title is satisfactorily established, and the
parties prosecuting it connect themselves in some way with it, so
as to show some real interest to be protected.
Castro v.
Hendricks, 23 How. 438;
Brown v.
Brackett, 21 Wall. 387. But a mere stranger to the
title can hardly ask the court to go that length. It is not for
everyone who chooses to take up the prosecution of such claims,
without any connection whatever with the title sought to be
established.
But the more important question in this case is that relating to
the validity of McMicken's title to the land.
We do not understand that the act of 1860 was intended to make
any claims valid which would not have been so before, if the
government making the grant had had the right to make it. The
objection of want of title in the granting power was removed by the
act, as to all grants made by a government in possession which were
otherwise sustainable on the principles of
Page 97 U. S. 209
justice and equity; the time for presenting claims was opened
and extended; and actual surveys were dispensed with where the land
could be otherwise identified. These were the principal remedial
provisions of the act so far as relates to the validity of titles.
Claims invalid from intrinsic defects in 1815 or 1825 are not
helped by the act of 1860. The utmost that our treaty stipulations
ever required was that we should sustain titles which would have
been sustained by the government from which our title to the
territory was derived. Nothing more could be fairly asked, and we
think that nothing more was intended by Congress to be given,
except to make provision (as it did from time to time) in favor of
actual settlers.
The question then arises, whether the decision of the
commissioners in 1824, with regard to this claim, was not correct.
The title was nothing but a warrant or permit to survey, occupy,
and improve the land, with a view to a grant when this should be
done, and with an express condition to be void if not done within
three years. Such warrants or permits have invariably been
respected by our government, whenever there has appeared any
bona fide attempt to perform the conditions, or any
plausible excuse for their non performance. But where no such
attempt has been made, and no excuse is offered for not making it,
the claim has been disallowed. Under such circumstances it would be
simply asking the government for a gratuity, a donation without the
slightest consideration, to seek a grant of the land. The
government does not stand upon formal conditions. It does not
demand that there should have been an actual survey, if the land
can be otherwise identified. The act of 1860 expressly gives relief
not only in case of "orders of survey duly executed," but where
there has been
"any other mode of investiture of title, by separation of the
land from the mass of the public domain, either by actual survey,
or definition of fixed natural and ascertainable boundaries, or
initial points, courses, and distances, by the competent authority
prior to the cession to the United States."
The present case may perhaps come within this category. The
description in the warrant, aided by the usages of the Spanish
government with regard to surveys in Louisiana, may admit of
definite identification on
Page 97 U. S. 210
the ground both as to location and quantity. But the main defect
still remains -- the absence of any attempt at settlement and
cultivation. These conditions have always been regarded as material
by the various commissioners appointed to investigate these titles,
and their decisions on the subject have been uniformly confirmed by
Congress. They seem to be in accord with the laws and usages of the
Spanish government, which laws and usages, from the first, were
adopted as the proper criterion for determining the validity of
titles emanating from that government.
These propositions will be corroborated by a reference to the
laws which have been passed and the proceedings which have been
taken in relation to French and Spanish titles in Louisiana.
That province was acquired by the Treaty with France of April
30, 1803. Spain had ceded it to France by the Treaty of St.
Ildefonso, on the 1st of October, 1800; but did not deliver
possession of it until after it was ceded to the United States.
That portion of the territory west of the Mississippi, including
New Orleans, was surrendered to our government on the 20th of
December, 1803; but Spain retained possession of the remainder,
east of the Mississippi, for several years longer, under the
pretense that it belonged to West Florida, and made many grants of
land in that time. The United States did not acquire entire
possession of the country till 1813, though portions of it were
occupied in 1810. Amer.State Papers, For.Relations, vol. ii. pp.
582, 575; vol. iii. p. 397; and Act of Congress, Feb. 12, 1813, 3
Stat. 472. The treaty with France required that the inhabitants
should be protected in their liberty, property, and religion. In
carrying out this stipulation the United States repudiated the
grants of land made by the Spanish government subsequent to the
Treaty of St. Ildefonso, except when made in accordance with the
known laws, usages, and customs of that government; which laws,
usages, and customs had special reference to the colonization and
settlement of the lands, and not to a sale of them for the purposes
of revenue or speculation. Whilst repudiating the grants referred
to, as of no binding obligation upon the United States, a liberal
policy was adopted towards the grantees wherever they had actually
settled
Page 97 U. S. 211
upon and cultivated their lands, and had thus in good faith
complied, or attempted to comply, with the conditions upon which
they were made. In carrying out this policy, it will be seen that
all imperfect titles, such as orders of survey, permissions to
settle, and the like, which had annexed to them the condition of
settlement and cultivation of the lands as a prerequisite to a
complete title, were rejected, if no attempt was made by the
claimants to perform those conditions.
By the Act of March 26, 1804, by which the ceded territory was
organized into the Territories of Orleans and Louisiana, whilst it
was expressly declared that all grants made by the Spanish
government, and all proceedings looking to a grant, made or taken
after Oct. 1, 1800, should be deemed absolutely void, a provision
was inserted for the confirmation, to the extent of one square
mile, of all regular grants made to actual settlers, and of all
bona fide acts and proceedings done by them to obtain
grants, if the settlements were actually made prior to Dec. 20,
1803.
By the act of March 2, 1805, actual settlers who had only
incomplete titles from the French and Spanish governments, issued
prior to Oct. 1, 1800, and who actually inhabited and cultivated
their lands on that day, were confirmed in their titles thereto,
provided that they were heads of families or of age, and had
fulfilled the conditions and terms on which the completion of the
grants was made to depend. The act went further, and declared that
all who, prior to Dec. 20, 1803, with the permission of the proper
Spanish officers, and in conformity with the laws and usages of the
Spanish government, had made an actual settlement of any tract, and
did then actually inhabit and cultivate the same, should have such
lands to the extent of one mile square to each person, with the
customary addition for a wife and family. By the Act of April 21,
1806, permission to settle was to be presumed, if the party had
commenced an actual settlement prior to Oct. 1, 1800, and had
continued actually to inhabit and cultivate the land for three
years prior to Dec. 20, 1803.
The Act of March 23, 1807, further provided that any person who,
on the 20th of December, 1803, had for ten consecutive years been
in possession of a tract of land not exceeding two
Page 97 U. S. 212
thousand acres, and not claimed by others, and was on that day
resident in the territory, and had still possession, should be
confirmed in his title thereto. The fourth section of this act gave
the commissioners appointed, or to be appointed, for the purpose of
ascertaining the rights of persons claiming land in the territory
full power to decide, according to the laws and established usages
and customs of the French and Spanish governments, upon all claims
to lands in their respective districts, when made by those who were
inhabitants of Louisiana on the 20th of December, 1803, and for a
tract not exceeding one league square. By the eighth section they
were to arrange the claims presented to them in three classes,
showing: first, claims which, in their opinion, ought to be
confirmed in conformity with the provisions of previous acts;
secondly, claims which, though not embraced by those provisions,
ought nevertheless, in the opinion of the commissioners, to be
confirmed in conformity with the laws, usages, and customs of the
Spanish government; thirdly, claims which neither were embraced in
the provisions of previous acts, nor ought, in the opinion of the
commissioners, to be confirmed in conformity with the laws, usages,
and customs of the Spanish government.
By the Act of April 25, 1812, that part of the ceded territory
lying between the Mississippi and Perdido Rivers was divided into
two land districts, one on the east, the other on the west side of
Pearl River; and all persons claiming lands by virtue of grant,
order of survey, or other evidence of claim derived from the
French, British, or Spanish governments were required to deliver
the same to the commissioner of the proper district, to be examined
and recorded. By the fifth section of this act, the said
commissioners were empowered to inquire into the justice and
validity of the claims presented, and to this end to ascertain in
each case whether the lands claimed had been inhabited and
cultivated; when surveyed, and by whom and what authority; and into
every other matter respecting the claims which might affect the
justice and validity thereof: and all evidence thus obtained was to
be recorded. These claims they were to arrange into classes, and
report them to the Secretary of the Treasury; and they were also to
report a list of all actual settlers on the lands not having any
claims derived from
Page 97 U. S. 213
prior governments, and the time when the settlements were
made.
In pursuance of this act, and others in continuation of it,
reports were made from time to time by commissioners appointed for
the purpose. The first report from the St. Helena District, on the
west of the Pearl River (where the lands in question are situated),
was made in 1815. Amer.State Papers, Public Lands, vol. iii. pp. 39
76. Others were made Dec. 24, 1819, Nov. 18, 1820, July 24, 1821,
Jan. 19, 1825, and Dec. 8, 1825. Id., vol. iii. pp. 436, 465, 505;
vol. iv. pp. 538, 473. These reports presented classified lists or
registers of the claims presented, as required by the act. In the
report for 1815, for example, Register A exhibited a list of claims
founded on complete grants derived from either the French, British,
or Spanish governments, which, in the opinion of the commissioner,
were valid agreeably to the laws, usages, or customs of such
governments. This list embraced not only grants made before Oct. 1,
1800, but also grants made after that date whilst Spain continued
in possession of the country. But the latter were either based on
an order of survey made prior to Oct. 1, 1800, or were followed up
by inhabitation and cultivation according to the laws and usages of
the Spanish government. Register B. exhibited a list of claims
founded on incomplete titles only, such as orders of survey,
permits to settle, &c., derived from either the French,
British, or Spanish authorities, which, in the opinion of the
commissioner, ought to be confirmed. The majority of these claims,
the commissioner says, were originated by the Spanish authorities
prior to the purchase of Louisiana by the United States, and,
agreeably to the laws, usages, and customs of the then existing
government, would have been completed by the same power which
granted them. Some were issued subsequently to the purchase. In
relation to these, the decision in their favor was not predicated
upon the validity of the orders of survey, but simply upon the fact
that the parties had occupied and cultivated their lands, and had
complied with all the requisitions of the government which at that
time exercised ownership over the soil. Amer.State Papers, Public
Lands, vol. iii. p. 66. Registers C and D contained a list of
grants and orders of survey made after the cession to the United
States, and not
Page 97 U. S. 214
in the regular way, according to the laws and usages of the
Spanish government, and, generally, not followed by any habitancy
or cultivation of the lands. These grants and orders of survey were
mostly of a speculative character, many of them being for large
tracts, obtained at a few cents per acre, and evidently made for
the purpose of getting as much as possible out of the precarious
and disputed title by which the Spanish government still held
possession of the country. The reports also contained a list of
actual settlers upon the lands, who had no written title to
show.
This report, with some qualifications, was confirmed by the Act
of March 3, 1819, 3 Stat. 528. The claims founded on complete
grants, and contained in Register A, were all confirmed. As to
those founded on orders of survey, permission to settle, &c.,
which the commissioners reported in favor of, the act confirmed
such of them as were derived from the Spanish government prior to
the 20th of December, 1803, and when the land was claimed to have
been cultivated and inhabited on or before that day; and as to the
remainder, declared that the claimants should be entitled to grants
by way of donation, not to exceed twelve hundred and eighty acres
to any one person. The act also made a donation of six hundred and
forty acres to each actual settler who had no written title. This
provision included most of the persons who had settled on the tract
in question in this case.
Subsequent reports and confirmations were made, but the above is
a fair sample of all, and evinces the principles upon which the
government proceeded in confirming titles derived from the French
and Spanish governments. They are cited for the purpose of showing,
and we think they conclusively show, the fact that the government
of the United States has always regarded the condition of
inhabitancy and cultivation, annexed to imperfect titles derived
from the Spanish government in the Louisiana Territory, as material
and essential, and as having this character by the laws and usages
of that government.
We might have rested for the conclusion thus reached upon a line
of cases decided by this court, and concisely summed up by Mr.
Chief Justice Taney, in the able opinion delivered by
Page 97 U. S. 215
him in the case of
Fremont v. United
States, 17 How. 553,
58 U. S. 556.
But as it seems to be thought that every semblance of title or
concession, however stale, and without regard to conditions of
whatever kind, has been revived and validated by the act of 1860,
we have preferred to review the original grounds upon which the
policy of the United States government, with regard to these
Spanish and other grants, was based, and to show what that policy
really was. Mr. Chief Justice Taney, speaking of these incomplete
titles in Louisiana and Florida, with very accurate knowledge of
the subject, says:
"These grants were almost uniformly made upon condition of
settlement, or some other improvement, by which the interest of the
colony, it was supposed, would be promoted. But until the survey
was made no interest, legal or equitable, passed in the land. The
colonial concession granted on his petition was a naked authority
or permission, and nothing more. But when he had incurred the
expense and trouble of the survey, under the assurances contained
in the concession, he had a just and equitable claim to the land
thus marked out by lines, subject to the conditions upon which he
had originally asked for the grant. But the examination of the
surveyor, the actual survey, and the return of the plat were
conditions precedent, and he had no equity against the government,
and no just claim to a grant until they were performed; for he had
paid nothing, and done nothing, which gave him a claim upon the
conscience and good faith of the government."
We have been referred to some cases decided by this court which
are supposed to treat the conditions contained in these titles as
of no importance, and as not necessary to be performed. But it will
be found that these cases relate to perfected grants, or that they
are otherwise distinguishable from cases like that now under
consideration.
The first is
Chouteau's Heirs v. United
States, 9 Pet. 147. The condition in that case
related to the number of cattle which the grantee ought to have,
according to Governor O'Reilly's regulations, in order to be
entitled to the lands claimed by him. The grant had in fact been
made, and the court rightly held that this was a preliminary
condition, and that the fact that the applicant possessed the
requisite amount
Page 97 U. S. 216
of property to entitle him to the land he solicited was
submitted to the officer who decided on the application, and that
he was not bound to prove it to the court which passed on the
validity of the grant.
The next case is
United States v.
Aredondo, 6 Pet. 691, in which there was a complete
grant of title, with a condition subsequent that the grantee should
establish on the lands granted two hundred Spanish families, and
begin the establishment within three years, no time being fixed for
its completion. It was begun in the prescribed time, but its
completion was prevented by the change of government. The Court
held that, in equity, the doctrine of
cy pres would be
applied to relieve the grantees from that strict performance which
a court of law would require. The performance was held to have
become impossible by the act of the grantor.
The next case is
United States v.
Sibbald, 10 Pet. 313. A concession had been made by
the governor of East Florida of a right to build a saw mill, and of
sixteen thousand acres of land to supply the same with timber, with
a condition that the grant for the land should not take effect
until the mill was erected. The land was duly surveyed, and various
attempts were made to complete the mill, which were frustrated by
floods and other accidents. It was not completed until 1827, some
time after the United States had acquired possession of the
country. The Court sustained the grant, holding that there was no
time limited for erecting the mill, that it was completed in
sufficient time, and that, in equity, it would have been sufficient
to show a performance cy pres. Doubts were indeed expressed whether
the court was authorized to give effect to a condition of
forfeiture where the land had been legally granted; but that point
was not necessarily involved in the case.
Hornsby v. United
States, a California case, 10 Wall. 224, is also
referred to. There a decree for a concession had been duly made,
with direction for a grant to issue, and the formal grant had
issued accordingly, containing the usual conditions, that the grant
should be approved by the departmental assembly, and that the
grantees should solicit the proper judge to
Page 97 U. S. 217
give them judicial possession, marking the boundaries with
proper land marks, &c. The quantity granted was nine square
leagues of the surplus of a certain ranch after satisfying two
former grants. Judicial possession had not been obtained when the
United States took possession of the territory, which happened
about sixty days after the grant had been made. This was held a
sufficient excuse for not complying with that condition. The
opinion says:
"The court cannot inquire into any acts or omissions by them
[the grantees] since those authorities [the Mexican authorities]
were displaced. It is not authorized to pronounce a forfeiture for
any thing done or any thing omitted by them since that period."
P.
77 U. S. 239.
As to the condition of obtaining the confirmation of the
departmental assembly, it was held that this was the duty of the
governor, and not of the grantee; and that as the conditions were
all conditions subsequent, the estate could not be defeated by the
governor's neglect. It was further held that the grant, in that
case, being a full and perfect grant for so many leagues in a
certain locality, to be surveyed by the officers of the government,
could not fail for want of the survey being actually made; that
mere neglect to comply with the conditions did not work a
forfeiture, which could only be set up after a denouncement, or
some other formal act indicating an intention on the part of the
sovereign to resume proprietorship of the land.
There is nothing in any of these cases inconsistent with the
assertion of the forfeiture in the case before us. Here no title
was granted; nothing but a permit to inhabit and cultivate as
preliminary to a grant. It might have ripened into an equitable
title had the conditions been fulfilled, or even if a fair effort
had been made to fulfill them, or if any plausible excuse could be
offered for their non fulfillment. But no attempt even appears ever
to have been made to fulfill them; and the government proceeded to
make other dispositions of the land. There is no need of any more
formal assertion by the government of its right to resume the
proprietorship. This court has in several cases maintained the
doctrine that an actual entry or office found is not necessary to
enable the government to take advantage of a condition broken, and
to resume the possession
Page 97 U. S. 218
of lands which have become forfeited. It was so held in
United States v. Repentigny's
Heirs, 5 Wall. 211;
Schulenberg
v. Harriman, 21 Wall. 44; and
Farnsworth v.
Minnesota & Pacific Railroad Co., 92 U. S.
49. In
Repentigny's Case, the Court says:
"The mode of asserting or assuming the forfeited grant is
subject to the legislative authority of the government. It may be
after judicial investigation, or by taking possession directly,
under the authority of the government, without these preliminary
proceedings. In the present instance, we have seen the laws have
been extended over this tract, the lands surveyed and put on sale,
and confirmed to the occupants or purchasers, and, in the meantime,
an opportunity given to all settlers and claimants to come in
before a board of commissioners and exhibit their claims. This is a
legislative equivalent for the reunion by office found."
The same doctrine was applied, in the case of Farnsworth, in
relation to a grant of lands and privileges for the construction of
a railroad.
In the case before us, if any act of the government was
necessary to indicate a resumption of the grant for a non
compliance with its essential conditions, nearly all the volumes of
the Statutes at Large, and of the State Papers relating to public
lands for a period of twenty years, could be cited to show it.
We think that the claim was properly rejected, both by the
commissioners in 1825, and by the court below, and that there is
nothing in the act of 1860 which can be justly relied on for
sustaining it.
Decree affirmed.