De Arguello v. Greer

26 Cal. 615
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 26 Cal. 615 (De Arguello v. Greer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Arguello v. Greer, 26 Cal. 615 (Cal. 1864).

Opinion

By the Court, Currey, J.

The plaintiffs being in possession of certain real property described in the complaint, brought an action as authorized by the two hundred and fifty-fourth section of the Practice Act, against the defendants as persons claiming some estate or interest therein adverse to the plaintiffs, for the purpose of determining such adverse claim, estate or interest.

The premises in controversy are situated in San Mateo [621]*621County, and constitute as claimed by the plaintiffs a part of the “ Rancho de las Pulgas, or the Pulgas Rancho,” as the same has been surveyed and patented under the authority of the United States Government.

The answer of the defendants admits that at the time the action was commenced, and when the answer was filed, the plaintiffs were in possession of the premises, and interposes as an equitable defense and as ground for affirmative relief the following facts:

First—That the plaintiffs’ title is founded on a Mexican grant, confirmed by a decree of the Supreme Court, and that the same has been surveyed and patented.

Second—That the decree of confirmation does not embrace the land in controversy, but that by a mistake of the Surveyor-General and the Commissioner of the General Land Office an erroneous survey was made, which improperly includes the disputed premises, in violation of the decree of confirmation, and that the patent follows the erroneous survey, including the premises therein.

Third—That the defendants are the true owners of the same lands, under a grant from the Mexican Government to Juan Coppinger, which grant has been finally confirmed by metes and bounds embracing such lands. In conclusion the defendants pray that their titles may be adjudged to be superior to that of plaintiffs, and that the plaintiffs be decreed to release the legal title which they acquired under their erroneous survey and patent.

The plaintiffs by replication controvert the material allegations of the affirmative matter contained in the answer, besides pleading affirmatively matters in bar and estoppel to the facts on which the defendants rely for a judgment and decree in their favor.

When the cause came on for trial the parties stipulated as to certain facts, upon which and the pleadings the plaintiffs moved for judgment. The Court granted this motion, and rendered judgment for plaintiffs against the defendants in [622]*622accordance with the prayer of their complaint, from which the defendants have appealed.

The defendants maintain that they are in equity the owners of the lands in controversy, and that at most the plaintiffs are but the trustees of the defendants, holding for their use the legal title of the premises, and they insist that the pleadings, stipulation and proofs in the case authorized and required a judgment and decree in their favor as prayed for in their answer, which was in the nature of a cross bill in equity.

In order to avoid prolixity we shall in the course of this opinion refer only to such facts appearing in the record as may be necessary to a clear understanding of the case as connected with the legal questions to be determined.

In 1835 there was granted by the Mexican Government to José Ramon Arguello, Luis Arguello, Maria Concepcion Arguello and Maria Josefa Arguello, children of Luis Arguello, then deceased, a tract of land called “ Las Pulgas,” situate within the present County of San Mateo, the boundaries of which were specified in the grant in the following words: “ On the south the Creek of San Francisquito, on the north that of San Mateo, on the east the estuaries, and on the west the Cañada de Raimundo.” In a subsequent part of the grant are the words: “ The tract of which mention is made is of four leagues of latitude and one of longitude.” The grant contains no reservation of any excess of four square leagues that might be within the locative calls of the description, to the nation for its uses, as was generally the case when it was "intended to grant a particular quantity of land lying within limits of larger extent. In due time after the organization of the Board of Commissioners appointed under the Act of the Congress of the United States, passed in March, 1851, entitled “An Act to ascertain and settle the private land claims in the State of California,” the claimants of the Las Pulgas presented their petition to the Board for the confirmation of their alleged title thereto. The Board confirmed the claim, describing the land substantially as in the grant, and adding the words, “ said land being of the extent of four [623]*623leagues in length and one in breadth, be the same more or less.” From this decree the case was removed by appeal to the proper District Court, where the claim was again confirmed, and then an appeal was taken by the parties respectively from the decree of the District Court to the Supreme Court. That Court, upon the final hearing of the cause, after expressing the opinion that the judgment of the District Court "was correct, pronounced judgment as follows: “It is adjudged that the said claim of the petitioners is valid as to that-portion of the land described in the petition which is bounded as follows, to wit: On the south by the arroyo or Creek of San Francisquito ; on the north by the Creek of San Mateo ; on the east by the esteros or waters of the Bay of San Francisco; and on the west by the eastern borders of the valley known as the ‘ Cañada de Raimundo,’ said land being of the extent of four-leagues in length and one in breadth, be the same more or less; and it is therefore hereby decreed that the said land be and the same is hereby confirmed to them and then follows a designation of the proportions of the premises which each confirmee should have and hold under the confirmation; and then it is further decreed that “ as to the portion of the jrremises described in said petition which is not included within the boundaries above mentioned, the claim of the petitioners is adjudged not to be valid.” (Arguello et al. v. United States, 18 How. 549.)

It should be observed here that the confirmees, in their petition, presented to the Board of Land Commissioners asking for the confirmation of Las Pulgas, claimed that the tract of land granted contained twelve square leagues, including the valley called the Cañada de Raimundo; and hence that part of the decree declaring that “ as to the portion of the premises described in said petition which is not included within the boundaries above mentioned, the claim of the petitioners is adjudged not to be valid,” is to be understood as applying to the portion of the tract of land described in the petition lying without the boundaries specified by the decree.

After the final confirmation the land was surveyed by the [624]*624Government Surveyor.' This survey was approved, and in October, 18-57, a patent in the usual form was issued to the confirmees describing the land as surveyed, and as described in the final decree of confirmation on the north, east and south side; and on the west side the line is at the western base of the range of hills which bounds the Cañada de Raimundo or -Valley of Raimundo on the east. The area comprehended by the description of the survey and patent is about thirty-five thousand acres.

The defendants' claim the western portion of the lands embraced in the Las Pulgas patent, under a grant made in August, 1840, by the Mexican Government to Juan Coppinger, of the place known as the “Canada de Raimundo,” adjoining to and west of the Las Pulgas.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Cal. 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-arguello-v-greer-cal-1864.