Chaves v. Whitney

4 N.M. 178
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 4 N.M. 178 (Chaves v. Whitney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chaves v. Whitney, 4 N.M. 178 (N.M. 1888).

Opinion

Henderson, J.

Defendants in error brought ejectment in the court below against the plaintiff in error to recover a large body of land lying in Yaleneia county. The plea was the general issue. Whitney and Story relied for title upon a Mexican grant embracing the lands sued for, made to Antonio Sandoval, called the “Estancia Grant,” which had been submitted to the surveyor general of New Mexico, and approved by him; it had also been surveyed and recommended to congress for confirmation. The defendant, Chaves, had possession of the locus in quo, claiming under the heirs of Manuel A. Otero, deceased, who in his life-time, about the year 1874, acquired possession of the property from squatters. Otero, in the years 1878 and 1879, acquired from the heirs of Bartolomé Baca title to an alleged Spanish grant, made to the latter in the year 1819, covering all, or a portion at least, of the premises in controversy. Plaintiffs connect themselves through mesne conveyances with the grantee Sandoval, and the defendants with Baca. The Baca grant was not presented to the surveyor general for his approval and recommendation to congress for confirmation until 1878. It was not acted upon by that officer until 1881, when it was disapproved. The grant under which plaintiffs claim title was made by the governor of New Mexico in 1845, and was presented by Holán, the grantee of Sandoval, to the surveyor general of the territory, for approval and recommendation, in 1855, but it was not approved until 1873. It also appears that a short time before the grant of the premises in question to Sandoval the same governor made another grant of a similar kind, exceeding eleven square leagues in extent, which has been confirmed and patented. Baca occupied, claimed, and enjoyed the lands until his •death, in the year 1834, and for many years since one of his sons has been occupying a portion of the lands embraced within the grant, claiming through him.

By agreement of counsel the court permitted each party to put in any and all documentary evidence touching the respective grants, subject to the action of the court, when such evidence should be concluded, to rule out or exclude ■such portions or all of such evidence as might not be relevant or competent in the trial of the issues joined in the case. Several witnesses were examined orally, for the purpose of showing possession, when commenced, and by whom; what improvements, their nature, and by whom made; the situation of the Estancia, Berrenda, and Salt springs, the waters of the Mestanas, and other boundaries named in the grants. The defendant was in possession, and claimed the premises in every direction around the Estancia spring, when the .suit was brought.

At the conclusion of the evidence the plaintiffs moved the court to take from the jury the evidence offered on the part of the defendant tending to ■show a grant from the Spanish governor, Melgares, to Bartolomé Baca, and .all intermediate conveyances to him; and also all evidence tending to show •adverse possession for any length of time since July 4,1848;- also all evidence in reference to an alleged grant from the Mexican government to Antonio Bandoval to a tract of land called the “Bosque del Apache.” Counsel for plaintiffs, also, at the same time, submitted in writing the following motion: “The counsel for the plaintiffs request the court to instruct the jury to render a verdict of guilty.” Counsel for the defendant opposed the said motion, and also submitted to the court in writing a request to instruct the jury to find the defendant not guilty. The court granted the motion of the plaintiffs ■to take from the consideration of the jury all the evidence indicated in the motion, and thereupon granted the request of the plaintiffs to instruct the jury to find the defendant guilty. The court also expressly held that it had no jurisdiction to determine the validity or invalidity of the said respective ■grants. To the rulings and decisions of the court in the several matters .above mentioned defendant at the time excepted, moved for a new trial, and, upon the overruling thereof, excepted, took a bill of exceptions, and brought ■error.

The argument of counsel in the ease has taken very wide range, and, as no exactly similar case has ever been before this court in every particular, it becomes our duty to inquire into the soundness of the positions assumed by defendants in error, as the consequences flowing from such a position will necessarily be far-reaching, and damaging to many people of the territory. That position is, in substance, as follows; That the duty of providing protection •and security to the rights of citizens arising under or recognized by the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo of 1848, with Mexico, when the territory in question was ceded to the United States, belongs exclusively to congress in the exercise of its political power, and not to the courts; and that inasmuch as the ■act of July 22, 1854, creating the office of surveyor general of this territory, and conferring upon that officer power to ascertain the number, extent, and validity of all Spanish or Mexican grants of lands lying within this and other territories, made prior to the act of cession, and to report thereon for final .action by congress, lie is the only tribunal or authority vested with any power whatever to pass upon such claims; and that his jurisdiction is exclusive, and Ms decision final until acted upon by congress, or until congress provides, some other or different mode of establishing or rejecting such grants. On the other hand, it is claimed that by the terms of the treaty of 1848 both the Mexican and his property were incorporated into and become a part of the United States, and were thereby entitled to all the privileges and immunities of an American citizen, and that the constitution of the Union is alike his-shield of protection and weapon of offense in asserting his recognized property rights under the treaty; that the treaty has the force and effect of an act of congress, and affords to the courts of the country, not only the privilege of entertaining his cause when his rights are assailed in a judicial tribunal,, but that it is the absolute and imperative duty of the courts to protect such legal and clearly defined rights under the treaty when they are invaded.

Whether the one or the other of these two positions shall be adopted in. whole or in part, as the correct exposition of the law arising in this ease, must, depend, at least somewhat, upon the true intent and purpose of congress in passing the act in question, and to determine from a fair consideration of the scope of the whole act whether the main object was to establish a tribunal or officer, and clothe such tribunal or officer with full power to decide, not only as between a claimant and the United States, but also between adverse or conflicting claimants under the Spanish crown and the republic of Mexico, and to finally determine such controversies in such manner as to preclude the-defeated parties from again litigating the same matters in the courts of the country.

Plaintiff in error assigns 13 grounds of error, as follows: (1) The failure-of the court to instruct the jury as to the law of the ease. (2) The granting, of the motion to exclude from the jury the evidence respecting the title under which the defendant below claimed. (3) The ruling that the statute of limitations was not available to the defense. (4) The ruling that the court has-no jurisdiction to inquire into the validity of the Sandoval and Baca grants, respectively.

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.M. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaves-v-whitney-nm-1888.