Dutillet v. Blanchard

14 La. Ann. 97
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 La. Ann. 97 (Dutillet v. Blanchard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dutillet v. Blanchard, 14 La. Ann. 97 (La. 1859).

Opinion

Cole, J.

The plaintiffs, as heirs and representatives of Thomas de Villanueva and Constance Breaux, his wife, claim a certain tract of land in the possessiou of defendant, which was confirmed to said Villanueva.

There was judgment for plaintiffs and defendant has appealed.

The points of contestation are the title of plaintiff, the identity of his title with the land in possession of defendant, and the effect of a purchase of the land made at Sheriff’s sale.

1. The title of plaintiffs is established ; their claim is based upon an Act of Congress, passed the 28th of February, 1823, confirming said land to Thomas dt Villaneuva, under No. 134, as stated in the American State Papers, vol. 3d, p. 516, and under No. 135, as appears from the certificate of L. Palms, the Register.

The Act of Congress of 11th of May, 1820, directs the Register to make a report to the Secretary of the Treasury upon certain claims of land. 1 Land Laws, p. 330.

The Act of Congress, dated 28th of February, 1823, confirms the claims described by the Register in his report of the 6th of January, 1821.

The Register, in that report, (American State Papers, vol. 3, p. 523,) says:

“ The preceding claims comprehended in class third are not founded on either Spanish grants, concessions or orders of survey exhibited to me, and are not, therefore, embraced in the literal meaning of the Act of 11th of May, 1820, but ' as I believe they are within the spirit of that Act, I have thought it proper to report them ; I infer this from analogy to former laws on the subject. By previous Acts of Congress, claims in Louisiana have been recognized as valid, which were founded on settlement rights, provided the habitation and cultivation were shown to be on the 20th of December, 1803, or anterior to that period; all the cases reported in this class are proved to have been in peaceable possession either by the claimants or those under whom they claim, before, and some of them long [98]*98previously to tlie 20th of December, 1803, and, therefore, would have been valid under former laws, to which I have alluded,” &c.

He then proceeds to recommend them as claims worthy of confirmation.

It is objected, that.the second and fourth sections of the Act oí Congress of the 11th of May, 1820, provided only for the confirmation of claims “ founded upon any Spanish grant, concession, or order of survey,” whereas this claim of Villaneuva, No. 135, is not founded either on a Spanish grant, concession or order of survey, but only, as appears from the certificate of claim, on actual inhabitancy and cultivation by claimant’s author, under permission of proper Spanish officers, previous to the 20th of December, 1803. Public Land Laws, Berchard’s edition, vol. 1, pp. 330, 360.

This might have been a proper objection to have urged in Congress against the confirmation of the claims, in class third, but it is inoperative in the tribunals of the country.

If the Register reported upon classes of claims which were not comprehended in the instructions of Congress, it was in the power of Congress to have rejected the part of the report which embraced claims not contemplated by their Act of 11th of May, 1820 ; but Congress accepted the report and confirmed the claims.

The defendants cannot offer any valid objection to the confirmation, for they had no title in the lands confirmed, and they cannot control the disposition made of the public domain by the national legislature.

The confirmation of the claim of Villaneuva is established, independently of the certificates of the Register, which were objected to on several grounds. Plaintiff offered in evidence the American State Papers, vol. 3, from p. 506 to p. 523, inclusively, for the purpose of showing the different classes of claims therein contained, and the report of Samuel II. Harper, Register, on the 3d class, and to show that the claim of Thnmas de Villaneuva is numbered in said State Papers 134, and that said claim was confirmed by Act of Congress of 1823, upon the report of said Harper.

The District Judge rejected the evidence, except as to the notice of the claim, for the purpose of proving rem ipsam.

The court erred. The American State Papers are published by order of Congress, and are good evidence in land suits ; such is the doctrine of the Supreme Court of the United States.

In Bryan et al. v. Forsyth, 19 Howard, p. 339, they say that the American State Papers, published by order of Congress, maybe read in evidence in the investigations of claims to lands, “ they contain copies of legislative and executive documents and are as valid evidence as the originals are from which they are copied.” See Watkins v. Holman, 16 Peters, p. 56.

These State Papers” show that the claim of Villaneuva was confirmed by Act of Congress of 28th February, 1823, upon the report of S. H. Harper, Register:

There is a discrepancy between the certificate of the Register and the American State Papers, in the statement of the number of the claim ; in the former, it is No. 135, in the latter, No. 134: this variance cannot benefit defendants.

Plaintiffs in their pleadings allege this discrepancy; they describe the land fully, and annex the plat of survey made by the United States Government. If this variance were not a mere clerical error, and there were two claims confirmed to Villaneuva, defendants could easily have shown, inasmuch as they were put on their guard as to the variance, that there existed another claim besides that [99]*99sued for, either under No. 135 or 134, in favor of Villaneuva, located elsewhere, on the Attakapas Canal.

2. The identity of the land claimed with that in possession of defendant is satisfactorily established, even if it should be considered not to have been admitted by the answer.

3. But, notwithstanding the title to the land in possession of defendant be established to have formerly been in the ancestor of plaintiff, the latter cannot recover it, because they have been divested of title in the same by its adjudication to Edward Blanchard, from whom the title passed by several mesne conveyances to the defendant.

The adjudication was made in a suit to recover payment of work done upon the roads and levees of the land in contestation, under the provisions of the Act of February 7th, 1829.

Plaintiffs urge that this adjudication could not affect their rights, because “ the heirs of Villaneuva were not notified that their land was about to be sold, but they were put off their guard by the advertisement, which stated that it was the land of McDonogh, Bringier and Hall, and by the proceedings being carried on against these parties.”

There are two forms of action under the Act of 1829, the one is personal, or against the owner personally; the other is in rem, or against the property. Act 1829, §§27, 28, 29 ; B. & 0. Dig. p. 755.

When the action is in rem, or against the land, the plaintiff presents his petition to the Judge, and prays that the property be seized and sold to pay the amount of his claim.

To the petition is annexed the claim of plaintiff, duly certified by the inspector.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
14 La. Ann. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dutillet-v-blanchard-la-1859.