Judges: Baldwin
Filed Date: 1/15/1836
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/15/2024
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Pursuant to the provisions of the act of 1824, for the adjustment of land claims in the state of Missouri, John Smith, T. filed his petition in the district court on the 3d of October 1827, claiming a confirmation of his title to ten thousand arpents of land in that state, in virtue of a Spanish concession to James St Vrain, a resident of
His claim is founded on a petition of James St Vrain to the governor-general of Louisiana, in November 1795, praying for a grant in full property to him and his heirs of ten thousand' superficial arpents of land; with the special permission to locate in separate pieces, upon different mines, of what nature they may be, salines, mill seats, and any other place that shall appear suitable to his interest, without obliging him to make a settlement; which grant as prayed for was granted by the said governor-general' the 10th of February 1796. He alleges that he became owner of the grant by p arch ase from St Vrain and wife before the act of 1824, and has caused several parts thereof to be located in Missouri, which he specifies in the petition ; and prays that the validity of his claim may be examined by the court.
On the face of:the petition, the petitioner shows a'case within the provisions of the first section of the law of 1824; which directs the court to .take jurisdiction to hear and determine it.
■The petition of St Vrain to the governor-general of Louisiana states, that misfortunes-bad induced him to settle in Louisiana at St Genevieve, where he had rendered himself useful in repressing a certain party; that his knowledge of mineralogy had induced his father to make over to him the contract which he had with the government for the supply of a certain quantity of lead. To enable him to comply with this contract, and to insure him an honourable existence, he prays for a grant as specified in the petition of the appellant. At the foot of this petition there-was the following writing.
“New Orleans, 10th of February 1796. Granted.
“The Baron De Carondelet.”
The original petition, with this entry upon it, was produced before the land commissioners in Missouri'in 1806: the signature, of the baron was proved to be in hi? handwriting, and the residue to be that of the secretary of the government. The original was lost in 1807 or 1808, but a copy certified'from the land records, was produced at the heaving in the court below, and competent evidence
In 1811 the petitioner caused a survey of two hundred and ninety-four arpents of land to be made by a private surveyor, pursuant to the concession to St Vrain ; other surveys were afterwards made in like manner of several tracts specified in the record, varying in quantity from one thousand, two hundred to fifcy arpents, several of them including lead mines ; the one for fifty acres being on a mill seat. The claim was acted on by the United States hoard of land commit sioners in Missouri; who, in December 1811, gave their opinion that it ought not to be confirmed. The district court of Missouri have also rejected it . by their final decree; from which the petitioner has taken an appeal to this court, in the manner directed by the act of 1824.
At the January term in 1830, this cause, with that of Soulard, was very ably and elaborately argued by the counsel on both sides : they were the first cases which came before us since the law giving jurisdiction to the district court of Missouri-to decide on claims to land in that state, subject to an appeal to this court. The subject was a new one both to the court and the bar: the titles and tenures of land in Louisiana had never undergone a jddicial investigation, which could give the court such information as could lead them to any satisfactory conclusion. Hence, and notwithstanding the full argument in these cases; there seemed to be much matter for consideration in the developments to be made of the laws, usages and customs of Spain, in relation to grants of land in Louisiana. These cases were held under advisement.
At the next term, finding that appeals had been made in cases from Florida, arising under a law authorizing a judicial decision on claims to land in that territory, on the consideration of which the whole subject of Spanish titles would be thoroughly examined, these causes were further postponed till the ensuing term. One of the Florida cases was then decided on principles which did not apply to them; and it was thought that still further information must be presented in some of the numerous cases before us for final adjudication,
It was also made the duty of the court to conduct the proceedings on all petitions according to the rules of a court of equity; and to decide upon them according to the principles of justice, and the laws and ordinances of the government under which the claim originated. In thus consenting to be made defendants in equity at the suit of every claimant for land' in Missouri, the United States waived all rights which the treaty could give them as purchasers for a.valuable consideration without notice. They bound themselves tó carry into specific execution by patent every grant, concession, warrant or order of survey which, before the 4th of Maich 1804, had created any legal or equitable right of property in the land so claimed ; so that in every case arising under the law one general question was presented for the consideration of the court:. Whether in the given
In all our adjudications on either class of cases, we have considered the term lawful authorities to refer to the local governors, intendants, or their deputies ; the laws and ordinances of Spain, as composed royal orders, of those of the local authorities, and the usage and custom of the provinces, respectively, under Spain ; that any inchoate or perfect title, so made, granted or issued, is legally made by the proper authorities. We have as uniformly held, that in ascertaining what titles would have been perfected if no cession had been made to' the United States, we must refer to the general course of the law of Spain, to local usage and custom; and not to what might have been, or would have been done by the special favour, or arbitrary power of the king or his officers. It has also been distinctly decided, in the Florida cases, that the land claimed must have been" severed from the general domain of the king, by some grant which gives it locality by its' terms, by a reference to some description, or by a vague general grant, with an authority to locate afterwards by survey making it definite ; 'which grant or. authority to locate must have been.made before the 24th of January 1818. That where the grant is descriptive, a survey.in any other place is unauthorized: and that where a survey was made of part of a descriptive grant before that time, an order or permission to survey the residue elsewhere, made afterwards, is void, in contravention of the terms of the treaty and the act of congress; it being in effect and substance a new grant, made after the power of the governor to make grants had ceased. That where the grant was specific, a survey might be made after the time fixed by the treaty ; and where the grant was vague, or contained an authority to locate, which was executed by a survey made before, it was valid. United States v. Clarke, 8 Peters 466, 467.
The same principles apply to the cases in Missouri.; between which and those from Florida, there is (generally speaking) no other differ
In his petition to the governor-general, St Vrain asks for a grant in-full property, of ten thousand arpents, to be located at his pleasure as to place, time or quantity: it was considered by him as authorizing locations throughout Louisiana, not only while under the government of Spain, but after its cession to the United States, and its division into the two territories of Orleans and Missouri. So it was considered by the petitioner Smith, after he purchased from and held under St Vrain; and such appears tobé the true construction of the petition. The grant is contained in the one word granted, which must be referred to every thing prayed for in the petition; its object was not to obtain.^, grant merely in the upper province, or it would have been addressed to ,the local governor: it must have been intended to extend to both provinces, as it was addressed to the governor-general, whose power was general over both. He, by his grant, without qualification or restriction, has acted in the.plenitude of his authority, which authorizes no construction that could limit it to the upper province more than to the lower: a limitation to either would be by an arbitrary decision, without rule; so would any construction cutting down the concession, by striking from it any right or privilege prayed for.
This, then, was the nature and effect of the grant, to vest in the petitioner a title in full property to all the lands, in either province containing saline, mineral, or where there were mill seats; which he might at any timé locate in quantities to suit his own pleasure, or at any other place that might suit his interest.
When the cession of Louisiana was completed by the surrender to the United States, the title of St Vrain remained precisely as it was at the date of the grant in 1796: there is no evidence that he had done, or offered to do any act, or made any claim, or demand, asserting or affirming any right under the grant. With all the ungranted salt springs, lead mines, mill seats and valuable spots in Louisiana at his command; he held his grant dormant in his pocket for eight
On the 4th of March 1804, then, no land had been granted to St Vrain; there was not an ai pent on which his right had any local habitation : until a location was made, it was a mere authority to locate, which he might have exercised at his pleasure, both as to time and place, by the agency of a public surveyor, authorized to separate lands from the royal domain by a. survey pursuant to a grant, warrant, or order of survey. At the time of the cession nothing had been so severed, either by a public or private surveyor, or any act done by which the king could be in any way considered asa trustee for St Vrain for any portion of the ten thousand arpents; and there was no spot in the whole ceded territory in which he had, or could claim an existing right of property. An indispensable prerequisite to such right was some act by which his grant would acquire such locality as to attach to some spot: until this was done, the grant could by no possibility have been perfected into a complete title. It is clear, therefore, that the integrity of the public domain had in no way been affected by this grant in March 1804. The only pretence of any right was one which extended to every vacant spot in Louisiana, to be located in future, at the option of the grantee: it so continued till 1811, when the first location was made by the petitioner Smith, by a private survey, on part of the lands he claims. It is evident that he had no other right to this tract of land in March 1804, than he had to all the vacant lands in Louisiana. Had his claim been presented to the district court while it remained thus indefinite and incapable of definition; there would have been no case for its jurisdiction, under the act of 1824, to confirm or reject the claim. The sixth section provides,, that on the confirmation of any claim, the surveyor should cause the land specified in the decree to be surveyed, a plot thereof to be made, delivered to the party, and a patent to issue therefor; if rejected, the seventh section directs, “the land specified in such claim shall.forth with be held and taken as a part of the public lands of the United States.” By the eleventh section, if the lands decreed to any claimant have, been sold or disposed of by the United States, or have not been located, the party interested may, after the land has been offered at public sale, enter the like quantity of land in any land office of the state. These provisions show clearly that congress did not contemplate the submission of any claims to the court, except such as, on confirmation, could be ,sur
We are therefore clearly of opinion, that no claim to land in Missouri can be confirmed under the acts of 1824 or 1828, unless by a grant, concession, warrant or order of survey for some tract of land described therein, to make it capable of some definite location, consistently with its terms, made, granted or issued before the 10th of March 1804, or by an order to survey any given quantity, without any description or limitation as to. place, which shall have been located by a survey, made by a proper officer before that time, as was Soulard’s case. Spain never permitted individuals to locate théir grants by mere private survey. The grants were an authority to the public surveyor or his deputy to make the survey as a public trust, to protect the royal domain from being cut up at the pleasure
We have then to inquire, whether a private survey, made in 1811, could be so connected with the grant of 1796, as to operate by relation to make out a title to the land claimed in March 1804.
The laws of the United States give no authority to an individual to survey his grant or claiin to lands; he may mark lines to designate the extent and bounds of his claim, but he can acquire no rights thereby. The only effect which we can give to this private survey, is to consider it as a selection by the petitioner of that piece of land, as a part of what he was entitled to locate in virtue of his general grant.
As the United States have put themselves in the place of Spain, we must view this selection, thus made, as if Louisiana had never been ceded to them. Rut neither in this, or the record of any of the cases which have been before us, have we seen any evidence of any law of Spain, local regulation, law or usage, which makes a private survey operate to sever any land from the royal domain. On the. contrary, all the surveys which have been exhibited in the cases decided, were made by the surveyor-general of the province, his deputies, the special order of the governor or intendant, or those who represented them. No government, gives any validity to private surveys, of its warrants or orders of survey; and’we have no reason to-think that Spain was a solitaiy exception, even as to the general domain, by grants in the ordinary mode, for a specific quantity, to-be located in one place. A fortiori, where a grant, sui generis, might by its terms be so split up as to cover every saline, mineral and waterpower site, in the whole territory. Of all others, the survey of such a grant ought to be made by an authorized officer. If the grant was a lawful authority for such- selections, its execution by survey ought to be so supervised that the selections should be made in a reasonable time, quantity of land and number of spots selected.
We cannot believe that Spain would have ever consented to the exercise of such a right, by an individual, over all the most valuable portions of her domain, when she did not permit the appropriation of her ordinary lands to be so made; still less, that a claim of this description would have been perfected into a complete title had she femained in possession of Louisiana, or that it ought so to have been.
The negative evidence in the record is also powerful to lead to the same conclusion. The unprecedented privilege granted to St Vrain was of immense value, if asserted in time, before other appropriations were made of the places of which he had the right of selection, without limit; but it would become less valuable by waiting till-others had obtained grants for them. Neither he or the petitioner Smith have in any way accounted for the delay. They have shown no selection made, no application to a public or even private surveyor to make any survey during the eight years which elapsed, from the date of the grant till the cession. The grant does not appear to have been recorded or entered in any Spanish office, exhibited to any Spanish officer, or any notoriety given to it by any assertion of right under it. With such powerful reasons for action, it is not a harsh construction of this conduct of St Vrain, to attribute it to the conviction that the Spanisu authorities would not have sanctioned his claim. The power of the governor-general being supreme, his power would not have been invoked in vain if the grant was good ; and no officer in the province would have disobeyed his order to survey on the selections being made.
It is not for us to say what, it any, acts would have given St Vrain an equity in any definite piece of ground; it suffices for this case .that he had rtone while the country- was under the government of Spain, and that the petitioner Smith has acquired none since the cession by ány acts which he has done, or caused to be done in mdking the location specified in his petition.
It is for another branch of the government to decide on the claims of the petitioner, under the third section of- the act of 1828. With that we have nothing to do : our duty terminates by a decision on the validity of his title by any law, treaty or proceedings under them, according to those principles of justice which govern courts of equity. Being clearly of opinion that the, claim of the petitioner to any of the
The decree of the district court is affirmed.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record from the district court of ihe United States for the district of Missouri, and was argued by counsel; on consideration whereof, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed by this court, that the decree of the said district court in this cause be, and the same is hereby affirmed.