Connoyer v. Schaeffer
This text of 89 U.S. 254 (Connoyer v. Schaeffer) 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.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
The substantial point of inquiry presented in this case is, to whom did the confirmation inure?
[261]*261The question which we are thus called on to answer, is not a new one. If it were, it would certainly not he free from difficulty. It has, however, been settled so long that it has become a rule of property, and it would produce infinite mischief to disturb it.
Two classes of claims were presented to the commissioners — one where the claimant exhibited with his claim evidence of a derivative title from the concedee, the other where he only produced the original concession without attempting to show his connection with it.
In the latter class of cases the claim, if confirmed, has been held to have the effect of a confirmation to the legal representatives of the person to whom the original concession was made. This ruling proceeds upon the theory that the commissioners passed upon nothing but the merits of the original concession, having no opportunity to pass upon the validity of anything else. Of this class, where no evidences of derivative title at all were filed with the concession is the case of Hogan v. Page.
But where the claimant presented before the board, besides the original title, evidences of derivative title, it has been held that the commissioners decided upon both, and that the confirmation operated as a grant to the claimant, although his name was omitted in the form of confirmation. This was expressly ruled in Bissell v. Penrose.
Shortly after the decision in Bissell v. Penrose, the case of Boone v. Moore
The case of Carpenter v. Rannells
It would seem that these eases should be decisive of the qnestiou at issue. Instead of this the plaintiffs seek to overturn the authority of Bisseil v. Penrose, on which all the cases rest. It is too late to question the soundness of that decision. To permit it to be done now would not only unsettle titles to which this decision is applicable, but weaken confidence in all titles in Missouri growing out of Spanish [263]*263concessions. There can be no hardship in applying the doctrine, of Bissell v. Penrose to the facts of this case. After the lapse of more than sixty years Labeaume’s title is disputed in behalf of persons who never appeared before the commissioners with any claim of their own. In that early day there must have been great ignorance among the people of the forms of legal papers. And this fact was, doubtless, considered by the commissioners in reaching the conclusion which they did.- They treated the papers of Labeaume as a transfer to him of all the interest that the heirs of Dodier had in the premises, and having the power to adjudicate the title to the claimant on such papers as he presented, their decision, having been confirmed by Congress, whether right or wrong, is final.
An attempt was made in this case to show that the persons from whom the plaintiffs seek to deduce their title were claimants before the board of commissioners, but this attempt wholly failed.
Judgment affirmed.
22 Missouri, 55; Same Case, 32 Id. 68, and on error, 2 Wallace, 605.
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89 U.S. 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connoyer-v-schaeffer-scotus-1874.