Chavez v. De Sanchez

7 N.M. 58, 7 Gild. 58
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1893
DocketNo. 500
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 7 N.M. 58 (Chavez v. De Sanchez) 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
Chavez v. De Sanchez, 7 N.M. 58, 7 Gild. 58 (N.M. 1893).

Opinion

MoFie, J.

This was an action of ejectment, brought in the district court for Yalencia county by defendant in error, who was plaintiff in the court below, to recover from the plaintiffs in error the possession of a portion of the land described in a homestead patent from the United States dated April 3, 1889, and embracing one hundred and fifty-seven and thirty-six hundreths acres. Defendants below admitted the fact of their being in possession of a portion of the land embraced in the patent, and attempted to defend against the patent by showing, that the land was a part of a perfect grant made to one Nicolas de Chavez in the year 1739, and long prior to the cession of said land by the republic of Mexico to the United States in 1848 by the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. It was also admitted on the trial below that the defendants were heirs or purchasers from heirs of said grantee, and that the land described in the patent was within the exterior boundaries of what was claimed to be the Nicolas de Chavez grant. Trial was had at the September, 1891, term, before the court and a jury, and to maintain the issues for the plaintiff the patent was introduced in evidence, and the defendants admitted that the homestead entry upon which the patent is founded was made by plaintiff December 27, 1882; and that final proof was made thereon August 15, 1883, and the ouster charged, and possession oí defendants as to part of the lands embraced in the patent was also admitted. The defendants having pleaded not guilty, and with the plea filed notice that upon the trial they would prove the improvements made by them upon the land in controversy, and also the value of the same, offered) in evidence a petition of Nicolas de Chavez to the governor and captain general of New Mexico for a grant of land; the grant by said governor to said Nicolas de Chavez; the document showing the act of judicial possession for the land granted; a subsequent order of said governor as to boundaries, and a decision or certificate of Bernardo Antonio Bustamente Tagle, lieutenant governor, as to a disputed boundary, together with translation of the same; and offered to prove the genuineness of the said petition, 'grant, act of possession, order, and decision, by the evidence of William M. Tipton, official translator of the office of the surveyor general; and the plaintiff admitted that Mr. Tipton, if sworn and put on the stand, would be. competent and fully qualified to testify as an expert concerning such papers, and that he would testify that he had made a careful and critical examination of the handwriting and signatures in said documents, of the paper on which they were written, and of their appearance and condition generally, and comparison thereof with many other similar papers admitted and known to be genuine, and that from such examination and comparison he is satisfied that these documents are genuine, and were actually made and signed as they purport to have been, and especially that the official' signatures appearing in said documents are genuine signatures of the officers named; and plaintiff further admitted that she could offer no evidence in rebuttal of said evidence by Tipton, but plaintiff objected to the admission of said documents, or either of them, in evidence, or of any evidence relative to them, as being irrelevant, incompetent, and immaterial, which objection was sustained by the court, and said documents and the evidence relative thereto were excluded by the court; to which rulings of the court exceptions, were properly saved by the defendants. Defendants also offered to prove, by the records of the office of the surveyor general, produced in court, that in April, 1887, a petition was filed in the office of the surveyor general of the territory of New Mexico for an approval of said grant, and that in December of the same year the surveyor general reported upon said grant, and forwarded his report to the department of the interior at Washington, D. C., to be laid before congress, in pursuance of an act of congress of 1854, which was objected to by the plaintiff. The objection was sustained by the court, and the evidence offered was excluded, and the defendant duly excepted. The defendants further offered to prove by Francisco Chavez y Armijo, that at the time of the alleged settlement and occupation by the plaintiff and her deceased husband they knew that the land was claimed under this grant; and, further, that the plaintiff entered into possession of the premises in dispute as one of the heirs of Nicolas de Chavez, and knew at the time of making her homestead entry that the land in question was claimed under said grant. This evidence tendered by the defendant was excluded by the court upon objection of plaintiff’s counsel, to which ruling of the court defendants saved an exception. The defendants further offered to prove the value of the land- in controversy, and also the value of the improvements made thereon by the defendants, and by those from whom they claimed title; but, upon objection by plaintiff’s counsel, this evidence was also excluded, and the defendants duly excepted to the ruling of the court. Thereupon, the defendants having closed their case, and no evidence in rebuttal being offered, the jury, by direction of the court, returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. The defendants moved for a new trial, but the court overruled the motion, and entered judgment for the plaintiff upon the verdict of the jury. The case is in this court upon writ of error, in which the plaintiffs in error assign nine grounds of error, and seek a reversal of the judgment of the court below upon them.

The first assignment of error goes to the merits of this case. The decision of the court upon this assignment practically disposes of all other assignments of error with the exception of the fifth, which is based upon the refusal of the court to permit evidence to be introduced showing the value of the land in controversy and the value of the improvements. Counsel on both sides have with commendable fairness endeavored to present to this court for its determination this question: Can a plaintiff in ejectment, relying upon a patent from the government of the United States, be defeated by the defendants showing that the lands described therein are part of a private land claim deriving its validity from another sovereignty, but never acted upon by the political department of the government of the United States, nor by any tribunal created for that purpose by the political department of our government? The superior right of possession is involved in the decision of this question, and must be awarded to the defendant in error in the event of an affirmance of the validity of the patent title, or to the plaintiffs in error in case the patent shall be held void as against the grant title.

Spanish land pLt?nt:htiS“tevidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 N.M. 58, 7 Gild. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chavez-v-de-sanchez-nm-1893.