City of Carondelet v. McPherson

20 Mo. 192
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 20 Mo. 192 (City of Carondelet v. McPherson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Carondelet v. McPherson, 20 Mo. 192 (Mo. 1854).

Opinion

Gtamble, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff claims the land in controversy as a part of the commons of the village of Carondelet, confirmed by act of congress of June 13th, 1812. At the trial, no grant of commons was produced by the plaintiff, and no survey, Spanish or American. The reliance was upon the proof by witnesses, that, at a period before the change of government, the authorities of the village of St. Louis and Carondelet met together to mark the line between their respective commons, and that this meeting was by the direction, or with the knowledge and approbation of the lieutenant governor, and was attended by the surveyor general; that, at the meeting, it was agreed to run the line from a noted mound called the Sugar Loaf,” on the bluff of 'the Mississippi river, to the line of the common fields of Ca-rondelet, or, as some of the witnesses say, to the north-east corner of those fields ; that the line was accordingly run by the surveyor general and cut out and marked by monuments ; that [197]*197a fence was made upon that line, and tbe inhabitants of the two villages used the land on the different sides as their respective commons. The claim of the plaintiff was entirely rested upon this parol evidence.

On the part of the defence, documentary evidence was given of the claim of Carondelet to commons, as exhibited before the first board of commissioners. The notice of the claim was in these words : Take notice, that we, the inhabitants and settlers of the village of Vide Poche, in the district of St. Louis, claim, title to 6,000 arpens of land, situate adjoining said village, by virtue of a concession from Don Zenon Trudeau, lieutenant governor of Upper Louisiana, dated the 7th December, 1796.” This notice was addressed to the recorder of land titles, and was accompanied with the documents which are set out in the case of Dent v. Bingham, 8 Mo. Rep. 585. It may be necessary to say that there are no boundaries given either in the supposed grant, or in any survey filed with the claim, which apply to land north of the village. The document which is called a grant, is simply a refusal of the lieutenant governor to grant to an individual certain land he applied for, upon the ground that the land demanded was within the limits of land reserved for the purpose of furnishing wood necessary for the use of the village of Carondelet, and declaring that no other concession could be granted in the direction of a line taken from the end of the lands of the village, and running parallel with the Mississippi one hundred and fifty arpens further down said river. The defendant gave in evidence two surveys under the authority of the United States, one made in 1817, and the other in 1884, both professing to be surveys of the common of Carondelet, neither of which included the land now in controversy. The second was but a retracing of the lines of the first survey. The plaintiff, when giving rebutting evidence, produced a decision of the Secretary of the Interior, made in January, 1853, which was probably designed to set aside the surveys of the common, although it does not explicitly declare such purpose. The defendant gave evidence to show [198]*198that tbe corporate authorities o£ Carondelet bad always xecog-nized tbe survey made in 1834 as tbe' correct survey of tbe common ; bad divided tbe property contained within it into lots, and disposed of tbe same ; bad, in different actions at law involving the title to tbe common, relied upon and used that survey as a correct survey of the claim, and, in other modes, bad acted upon it as a satisfactory survey.

The Court of Common Pleas, at the trial of the case, gave a single instruction, which, under the evidence, was a denial of the plaintiff’s right to recover. It is in these words : " If the premises sued for are north of the town or village of Caronde-let, as the said town or village existed up to the 13th June, 1812, and said premises are not included within any United States survey.of the common of Carondelet, or of the out-boundary of said town or village, officially run so as to include the town or village .and out-lots, common field lots, and common of said town or village, then the jury should find for the defendant.” There was no disputing the fact that the property was north of the village, and there certainly was no survey in evidence, wbicb was made under the authority of the United States and included the premises in controversy.

1. It will be seen, on a careful examination of he instruction, that it was intended to avoid any decision of the question whether there was a subsisting and conclusive survey of he common by the authority of he United States, notwithstanding the act of the Secretary of he Interior in setting it aside, and which would prevent he assertion of any claim by he plaintiff to land not included in such survey. The meaning of he instruction is, that he claim of he plaintiff cannot be sustained without a survey which includes he property in dispute. Whether he instruction was given upon he idea that the claim to common was so indefinite as to require a survey, before the rights under it could attach to any particular tract, or upon a construction of he documents which were filed with he recorder in support of he claim, by which the court regarded he claim to common as south of he village, it is not easy to de[199]*199termine. But if, in either or any view of its meaning, it can be sustained as correct in law, it is proper so to regard it.

The Supreme Court of the United States, in Mackay v. Dillon, 4 Howard, 421, says : "By the first section of the act of 1812, congress confirmed the claim to commons adjoining and belonging to St. Louis, with similar claims made by other towns. But no extent or boundaries were given to show what land was granted; nor is there anything in the act of 1812 from which a court of justice can legally declare that the land set forth in the survey, and proved as commons by. witnesses, in 1806, is the precise land congress granted ; in other words, the act did not adopt the evidence laid before the board for any purpose ; and the boundaries of the claims thus confirmed were designedly, (as we suppose,) left open to the settlement of the respective claimants by litigation in courts of justice or otherwise.” The survey filed with that claim was a private survey, made in 1806. The court declares that the act confirming claims of this description did not adopt any of the evidence of the claims laid before the board, but designedly left open the question of boundaries to be settled by litigation. If the question of boundary arose, and no survey by the United States authority was produced, the extent and locality of the claim confirmed could only be determined by evidence to be given on the trial of a cause, showing either a Spanish concession or other document, as a survey, giving boundaries ; or the user of a particular tract, as common, under the Spanish government.

Since the decision of this case in the court below, the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Guitard et al., v. Stoddard, not yet reported, has had under consideration the effect of this act of 1812, in relation to a private claim, and the opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Campbell, after reviewing the previous decisions, states as the result, " that the questions settled by the court are, that the act of 1812 is a present operative grant of all the interest of the United States in the property comprised in the act; and that the right of the [200]

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20 Mo. 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-carondelet-v-mcpherson-mo-1854.