Cessna v. United States

169 U.S. 165, 18 S. Ct. 314, 42 L. Ed. 702, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1481
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 21, 1898
Docket78
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 169 U.S. 165 (Cessna v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cessna v. United States, 169 U.S. 165, 18 S. Ct. 314, 42 L. Ed. 702, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1481 (1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brewer,

after stating the ease, delivered the opinion of the court.

The Court of Private Land Claims was of the opinion that the ayuntamiento or town council had no power to make a grant such as this of a tract entirely outside the four square leagues supposed to belong to the town; and, secondly, that even if it had such power the conditions of the alleged grant were never performed by Heath, and therefore he acquired no title to the property.

The colonization law of January 4,1823, was in forcé only a short time, having been suspended by the decree of April 11, 1823, and superseded by the law of August 18,1824. New proceedings were had under it, and therefore its true meaning cannot be considered as determined by any settled usage of the Mexican authorities. Indeed, counsel for appellants, with all their industry, have been able to find but one other grant made or attempted to be made under its authority. It is, to say the least, difficult to discern in this law any warrant for an original grant by the ayuntamiento. Article 2 provides that “ the executive will distribute lands.” This is in accord with the settled policy of the old Spanish law, which reserved to the king the power of granting lands. Doubtless this power was often exercised under the directions of the king by subordinate officials, but full control was retained by him. So here the executive retains the control of the distribution of lands. It is true the article provides that such distribution shall be “ under the conditions and terms herein expressed,” but that simply means the conditions and terms under which the executive will act. Article 3 refers to grants to empresarios, and that specifically declares that they “shall previously contract with the executive,” who will “ designate the province to which they must direct themselves; the lands which they can occupy.” It is said that Heath does not come *178 within the terms of this article because he did not propose to introduce at least two hundred families, and this contention is doubtless correct. Article 4, upon which the plaintiffs specially rely, makes provision for families who emigrate “ not included in a contract,” evidently referring thereby to the empresario contracts specified in the preceding section. Such families are directed to “present themselves to the ayuntamiento of the place where they , wish to settle, in order that this body, in conformity with the instructions of the executive; may designate the lands corresponding to them, agreeably to the industry which they may establish.” Accepting the contention of plaintiffs that Heath comes within the scope of this article, we note these limitations: The emigrating families are to present themselves to the ayuntamiento of the “ place where they wish to settle,” not .the ayuntamiento of the town nearest to the land upon which they wish to settle. The natural meaning of this is that when families desire to settle within the limits of a town they shall present themselves to the ayuntamiento of that town for a designation of the lands they may occupy. It would be strange to find that a town council was empowered to grant lands outside the limits of the town and anywhere within the territory or department in which it was situated, while it is not strange to find that council authorized to locate emigrants upon those vacant lands not exceeding fou.r leagues square which, according to Spanish and Mexican custom, were ordinarily appurtenant and subject to the jurisdiction of the town. We do not mean to intimate that El Paso in fact possessed a territory of four square leagues over which it had jurisdiction, although that seems to have been the opinion of the Court of Private Land Claims, for it said: “ El Paso, like other Spanish towns, is presumed to have had a grant of four square leagues of land, and the ayuntamiento had the power to make allotments of land within the four leagues so granted.”

This matter was considered in United States v. Santa Fe, 165 U. S. 675, 699, and the conclusion was reached after full examination that it was not true under the Spanish law that every town was entitled to a grant of four leagues square,' the *179 court saying: The inference to be deduced from all these documents supports the theory that under the Spanish laws, as found in the recopilación, all towns were not entitled by operation of law to four square leagues, but that at a late date the Spanish officials had adopted the theory that four square leagues was the normal quantity which might be designated as the limits of the new pueblos to he thereafter created.”

Still it was undoubtedly true that by special grant or contract many towns did have such an area of contiguous and dependent territory, and it would seem that this article gave the ayuntamiento authority to designate such portion of those lands as it deemed suitable to the industry which the emigrating families proposed to undertake.

We notice another limitation in this article, and that is that the designation by the ayuntamiento is to be made “ in conformity with the instructions of the executive.” This contemplates, as preliminary to the action of the ayuntamiento, some instructions from the executive, either general or special. Within the letter of this provision the executive might, in a given case, authorize the ayuntamiento of a particular town, to designate lands outside of the town lands proper for emigrating families; but surely in this article there is no general grant of power to every town council to give away lands anywhere within the territory or department without any previous instructions or directions from the executive. Neither is the power contended for to be found in article 23, which simply authorizes the ayuntamiento, in case any colonist shall fail to cultivate the land which lias been given him, to regrant the same tract to another. It might well be that the ayuntamiento should have power after the lapse of a grant to regrant the same tract to another party. But it does not follow therefrom that the power to regrant lapsed lands implies a power to make an original grant.

Neither is the plaintiffs’ case helped by the assertion that the fact of a grant presumes the power to make it. Counsel quote from United States v. Peralta, 19 How. 343, 347: “ The presumption arising from the grant itself makes it prima facie *180 evidence of the power of the officer making it, and throws the-burden of proof on the party denying it.”

Whatever may be the scope of this proposition, we find in these proceedings a distinct declaration that the town council regarded its action as only preliminary, and requiring for finality the approval of the government. In the first resolution passed by the ayuntamiento on the petition of Dr. Heath it is recited:

“ 1.

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Bluebook (online)
169 U.S. 165, 18 S. Ct. 314, 42 L. Ed. 702, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cessna-v-united-states-scotus-1898.