Doe ex dem. Kennedy's Ex'rs v. Jones

11 Ala. 63
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 11 Ala. 63 (Doe ex dem. Kennedy's Ex'rs v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe ex dem. Kennedy's Ex'rs v. Jones, 11 Ala. 63 (Ala. 1847).

Opinion

COLLIER, C. J.

On the 19th April, 1798, Thomas Price, the English interpreter residing at Mobile, petitioned Manuel Gayoso de Lemos, the Spanish Governor of Louisiana, for a tract of land having twenty arpens in front, by thirty in depth, bounded on the north by lands anciently the property of Terry and Mazurie ; on the east by the granted lots in the town of Mobile, and by the river, and on the west and south by vacant lands. In aid of Price’s petition, Manuel de Lanzos, the then commandant of Mobile, informed the Governor that the land thus applied for was vacant, the petitioner was a useful person, had been for several years English interpreter, and that there was no obstacle to his having a grant of the land. Thereupon the Governor, by a decree dated at New Orleans, the 18th November, 1798, directed the commandant to put the petitioner in possession of the tract, and to forward the proceedings of survey, for the purpose of procuring the petitioner a title in due form.

It is not shown that any further proceedings were had on [78]*78the petition. In 1806, Price, through his agent, Joshua Kennedy, presented to Morales, the Intendant of Pensacola, a petition for five hundred arpens of land, in and contiguous to and within the then town of Mobile. Sometime afterwards, Price discovering his agent was mistaken as to the particular land desired, as well as to the terms on which he wished a grant of it, addressed a memorial to the commandant at Mobile, stating in what the mistake consisted: Further, that the Intendancy had granted out of the six hundred arpens conceded to him by De Lemos, a tract of twenty arpens to Wm. McBoy, and had also granted to F. Collell part of another tract belonging to the memorialist. Thereupon Price prayed a confirmation of the concession of 1798, and that* five hundred arpens, lying to the south and west thereof, might be granted to him in payment of three years salary, due him as interpreter, and as compensation for the injury he had sustained by the grants to McBoy and Collell. The prayer of the petitioner was granted, on condition that he should never claim the lands held by McBoy and Collell, and his claim upon the treasury for his salary should be considered as extinguished. The Spanish surveyor general, Pin-tado, in his directions to the deputy at Mobile, recapitulates this latter concession to Price, approved the same, and ordered him to have a survey made, that a formal title might issue. [Am. State Pap. 5 Public Lands, 128.]

These facts, with others not necessary to be noticed, are set forth in “ Special report No. 1,” of the register and receiver of the land office for the district of St. Stephens, to the secretary of the treasury, on the 23d February, 1828. By an act of Congress of the 2d March, 1830, all claims to lands and town lots contained in certain abstracts reported to the treasury department by that register and receiver, under the provisions of the act of Congress of 1827, are confirmed to the extent therein recommended: Further, “that all the claims contained in special reports, numbered one to four inclusive, and in a supplementary report of the said register and receiver, made as aforesaid, be, and the same are hereby confirmed.” The fourth section enacts, “that the confirmation of all claims provided for by this act, shall amount only to a relinquishment forever on the part of the United [79]*79States, of any claim whatever to the tracts of land and town lots so confirmed, and that nothing herein contained shall be construed to.affect the claim or claims of any individual, or body politic or corporate, if any such there be.” It is provided by the fifth section, that the register and receiver at St. Stephens shall direct the manner in which all claims to lands and town lots in their district confirmed by this and former acts of Congress, shall be located and surveyed, having regard to the laws, usages and customs of the Spanish government on that subject, and also the mode adopted by the government of the United States, in surveying the claims confirmed by virtue of the second and third sections of an act of Congress, entitled an act regulating the grant of lands, and providing for the disposal of the lands of the United States, south of the State of Tennessee,” approved the -3d of March, 1803; and that so much of the fourth section of the “ act supplementary to the several acts for adjusting the claims to land, and establishing land offices in the district east of the island of New Orleans,” approved the 8th of May,. 1822, as interferes with the power here granted to the register and receiver of the land office at St. Stephens, is hereby repealed. [Public Lands, ed. 1838, Part 1, p. 455.]

The proceedings upon Price’s petition, in 1798, merely direct the commandant of Mobile to put the petitioner into possession and to forward the survey, that the title may be’, consummated. It does not appear that the survey was ever made, or that any further steps were ever taken to perfect his title until 1806. These proceedings then, were wholly ineffectual in 1800, when Spain relinquished her claim to the country west of the Perdido, and when it was subsequently acquired by the United States, under the treaty of Paris. It may be added that the concession by the Governor of Louisiana, was a mere gratuitous assent to the prayer of the petition, and gave nothing more than a permission, to occupy the lands — the fee remaining in Spain, until the survey was made in due form, the fact communicated to the Governor, and the evidence of title furnished.

Previous to 1806, the United States had become the proprietor of Mobile, when the concession of 1798 was professedly confirmed. But even this latter act, though founded). [80]*80avowedly upon a consideration, did not complete the title— it contemplated a survey as a prerequisite to its consummation, and it does not appear to have been made, or that the Spanish authorities acted further in the matter. In this condition of things, the United States become the owner of the fee in the lands in question, under the treaty of Paris charged with a political obligation to validate the inchoate acts of the Spanish government, so far as they were binding in conscience. Price had no rights which an American court could recognize, but was dependent upon the bounty and justice of Congress for the establishment of his claim. These principles have been so often asserted both by this and other courts, that it cannot be necessary now to sustain them by a reference to authority.

If, in the interim, when Price’s petition was acted on by the'Governor of Louisiana, and the negotiation of the treaty of St. Ildefonso, in 1800, Spain had made a complete grant of the same land, it cannot be questioned but the grantee would have acquired a- title paramount to the concession to Price. The bounty which the representatives of his Catholic Majesty, had undertaken to bestow, could have been withdrawn before his purpose was consummated. This being the case, conceding that the evidence does not show a dedication of the soil of St. Louis street to the use of the city, prior to 1798, or that the circuit court did not refer that question to the jury, and it may be asked whether it was not competent, subsequent to that period, for the Spanish authorities to dedicate to public purposes any part of the land embraced by Price’s claim ? This question, we think, must receive an affirmative answer.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ala. 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-ex-dem-kennedys-exrs-v-jones-ala-1847.