de la O v. Pueblo of Acoma

1 N.M. 226
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 N.M. 226 (de la O v. Pueblo of Acoma) 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
de la O v. Pueblo of Acoma, 1 N.M. 226 (N.M. 1857).

Opinion

By Court,

Benedict, J.:

This cause comes by appeal from tbe chancery side of tbe United States district court for tbe county of Socorro, third district. An enactment of the territory authorizes the inhabitants known by tbe name of pueblo Indians, and living on lands granted to such Indians by the laws of Spain or Mexico, to sue and defend as an incorporation. By virtue of this authority the pueblo of Acorn a, by their governor, Juan Jose Lovato, filed their petition in the district court, alleging that the pueblo was the owner of a certain tract of land and possessed of the same situated in the county-of Yalencia, and known as the lands upon which tbe pneblo is built; that the same was granted to them by the king of Spain or his viceroy; that the titles thereto were made out in due form and deposited with the archives at Santa Fe; that, by some means unknown to the petitioners, said titles had come to the hands and possession of one Yicente Ariluead, "Victor de la O, and Ramon Sanchez; that neither had any right to detain or withhold them from the possession of the pueblo; that said persons were made defendants, and were of the county of Socorro; that they fraudulently refused to deliver up said titles to the pueblo ■unless they would pay the sum of six hundred dollars; that without the possession and without access to said-titles the pueblo could not defend their rights to their lands in controversy with the pueblo of Laguna, and that defendants threatened to put the titles beyond the reach of the pueblo unless they would shortly pay the -said sum of six hundred dollars. The pueblo prayed' immediate relief and a final decree of the titles to them.

The judge at chambers enjoined the defendants from destroying or in any wise disposing of the documents to the prejudice of the pueblo. At the November term, 1854, the defendants filed their separate.answers, and after some intermediate steps having been taken, and some points which were made having been decided by the court, the cause, by the agreement of the parties, was set down for hearing on the bill, answers, and exhibits. Upon the hearing the court dismissed the bill as to Ariluead and Sanchez, and as to De la O, decreed that the documents be surrendered to the pueblo of Acoma, their authorities or agents, and that a copy of the same be spread upon the records of the court, and that it also be recorded in the .county of Valencia, where the lands of Acoma are situated. From this decree, which taxed the cost against De la O, he appealed to this court. In his answer he admitted that he had possession of the documents, and made exhibits of the same.

Its antiquity, and its connection with the history of the pueblo and their rights to their lands, will justify a more particular reference t<\its contents. It is entitled, “ Privilege o( tlie pueblo 'of Acoma and of Guadalupe of tbe Paso del Norte, on the twenty-eighth day of September, one thousand six hundred and sixty-nine.” ' It then proceeded to narrate, that the governor and captain-general, D Domingo Jerouse Petrez de Conzatesaid, that, “whereas by the victory obtained in New Mexico, Quentonese nations ■and apostates of that kingdom, and over the Lagunas, and all the other pueblos in which I directed that with much particularity they should make known the boundaries which the Indians of the pueblo of Acoma were subject, which at the time of this rebellion they showed and made known, with all the pueblos of that kingdom,.and in the first place with the pueblo of Tia, and that of Moqui, and with the pueblo of Zuni, and these are of the Queres nations, and are at war with all the other pueblos, which was all placed in my knowledge concerning this pueblo ’of Acoma of the province of New Mexico;” The document then states that an Indian of Acoma, and whose name was Bartoleme de Ojedas, was wounded with a ball and arrow; was intelligent and could read and write; that he understood the Castilian language; that he was one of the most distinguished in the war, and had great influence among all the Indians, and particularly among the apostates, and was obeyed by all the pueblos, though only about twenty-two years of age; that being wounded and disabled, he surrendered, and was then put under oath by order of the captain-general, and disclosed the situation of Acoma, and the boundaries, their wars with the Lagunas, their moving to the Peñol Pock, where they now are, and other parts of interest to their history. The captain-general then, in comformity with the authority in him vested, granted to Acoma the boundaries which Ojedashad described. The document was'then signed by the governor and captain-general, by the Indian and by the civil and military secretary, as affirming and making the grant perfect. Its importance to Acoma is apparent.

Having embodied so much of the nature of the subject-matter claimed by the pueblo, it becomes necessary to turn our examination to De la O’s answer, to enlighten ourselves as to the equity, justice, and legality of the decree below. Many things are contained in this answer, wbicb, though curious in themselves, when regarded as true, yet can not weigh with great force in favor of the respondent, when taken in connection with the entire response. We will examine the most important averment. De la O,claims not only the right to detain said original papers from said pueblo, but also to refuse them a copy of the same, by virtue of a contract made with said pueblo of Acoma, under and by virtue of which contract, the said pueblo promised and agreed to pay the sum of six hundred dollars in money, or property at prices then agreed upon between the said pueblo and this defendant, and which said contract was made in 1850. He declares as his opinion that a copy of the document was given to the pueblo when the grant, was made, and then, with much complacency, asserts, that if they, by negligence and want of care, have lost the copy, it now affords to the pueblo no valid right to take from him, without compensation, the original document, which by the care and diligence of himself and ancestors has been preserved from loss and destruction until one húndred and sixty-six years after its execution.

This was placed in the answer with a view to suggest, doubtless, or show some consideration upon which to justify the claim of six hundred dollars from the Indians, for putting into their hands-that which was their own property and of fight had been theirs for over a century and a half of time, let the possession have been where it may. He evidently intended to inform the chancellor that through a long series of years his ancestors had done highly meritorious deeds in favor of the pueblo in relation to the document; that a debt had ensued in their favor against the pueblo, and that by some peculiar process the legal and equitable claims of this long line of ancestry against Acoma had concentrated in his person, as their.only living representative, and that he had become the self-appointed executor to collect their interest and wind up their estate so far as the Acoma Indians were concerned.

It has been a graphic and expressive figure, not infrequently used to denote chancery powers, that the “arm of the chancellor is long.” The expression is imposingly true in its meaning, if his arm can stretch itself through the long line of ancestral ranks of this defendant, and.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.M. 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-la-o-v-pueblo-of-acoma-nm-1857.