Ely's Administrator v. United States

171 U.S. 220, 18 S. Ct. 840, 43 L. Ed. 142, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1599
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 31, 1898
Docket27
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 171 U.S. 220 (Ely's Administrator v. United States) 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.

Bluebook
Ely's Administrator v. United States, 171 U.S. 220, 18 S. Ct. 840, 43 L. Ed. 142, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1599 (1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brewer,

after making the above statement, delivered the opinion of the court:

The controversy in this case does not turn upon any defect in the form of the papers. The contentions of the Government are that the officers who assumed to make the grant and to execute title papers had no authority to do so, and upon this ground it was held by the Court of Private Lánd Claims that the grant was in its inception invalid. Secondly, that if a valid grant was made it was one of quantity, and should be sustained for only that amount of land which was named in the granting papers and paid for by the grantee.

It appears that the proceedings to acquire title were initi *223 ated by a petition to the intendant, or intendente, as he is called in the opinion of the court below, of the provinces of Sonora and Sinaloa, on May 29, 1821; that, so far as that officer was concerned, they were concluded and the sale completed on November 12, 1821. Nothing seems to have been done after this date until May 15,1825, when the commissary general of the Republic of Mexico for the State of the West on application' issueda title in the usual form. So the’question is as to the po.wer of these officers to bind the government of Mexicp.

New cases presented to this court are moré' perplexing than those involving Mexican grants. . The changes in the governing power as well as in the form of government ’were so frequent, there is so much.indefiniteness and lack of precision in the language of the statutes and' ordinances, and the modes of procedure were in so many respects essentially different from those to which we are accustomed, that it is often, quite difficult to determine whether an alleged grant wa's -,made by officers who, at the time, were authorized to act fon the government, . and. was consummated according to the forms of procedure then recognized • as essential. It was undoubtedly the duty of Congress, as ,it was its purpose in the various statutory enactments it ha¡) made in respect to Mexican titles, to recognize and establish every title and right which before the cession Mexico recognized as good and valid. In otter words, in harmony with the rules of international law, as well as with the terms of the treaties of cession, the change .of sovereignty should -work no change in respect to rights and titles; that which was good before should be good after; that which the law would enforce before should be enforcible after the cession. As a rule, Congress has not specifically determined the validity of any right or title, but has committed to some judicial tribunal the duty of ascertaining what were good and valid before cession, and provided that when so determined they should be recognized and enforced.

Of course, in proceeding under any particular statute the limitations prescribed by that statute must control, and what *224 ever may be the obligations resting upon the nation by virtue of the rules of international law or the terms of a treaty, the courts cannot pass beyond such. limitations.. In the case of Hayes v. United States, just decided, 170 U. S. 637, we called attention to the fact that in "the act creating the Court of Private Land Claims there was a prohibition upon the allowance of any claim “ that shall not appear to be upon a title lawfully and regularly derived from the government of Spain or Mexico, or from any of the states of the Eepublic of Mexico having lawful authority to make grants of land,” and pointed ouf^ the difference between this statute and! 1 those construed in the Arredondo case, 6 Pet. 691, and thq act of March 3, 1851, c. 41, 9 Stat. 631, considered in the Peralta case, 19 How. 343. We held that under the act of 1891 the court must be satisfied, not merely of the regularity in the form of the proceedings, but also that the official body or person assuming to make the grant was vested with authority, or that the exercise of power, if unwarranted, was subsequently lawfully ratified. We are not to presume that, because certain officials made a grant, therefore it was the act of the Mexican government and to be sustained. It must appear that the officials did have the power, and we are not justified in resting upon any legal presumption of the existence of ppwer from the fact of its exercise.

While this is true, yet when the statutes and ordinances defining the powers and duties of an officer are somewhat indefinite and general in their terms, and that officer was in the habit of exercising the same power as was exercised in the case presented, and such exercise of power was not questioned by the authorities of Mexico, and grants purporting to have been made by him were never challenged, there is reason to believe that the true construction of the statutes or ordinances supports the existence of the power. Cases now before us disclose that about the time the intendant acted in this case similar action was taken by him in respect to other applications for the purchase of - land; that through a series of Nears, from 1824 downward, the commissary general, the officer created by the act of September 21, 1824, recognized his acts *225 as creating equitable obligations on the part-of the government, and attempted to consummate the sales by papers passing the legal title; that the title papers'thus executed were duly placed of record in the proper office, and fail to show that subsequently thereto the Mexican government took any steps to question the title or disturb the possession. While this may not be conclusive as to the validity of the grants and. the existence of.the power exercised by the intendant, it certainly is persuasive, and we should not be justified in lightly concluding that he did hot possess the power which he was in the habit of exercising.

■ What powers did the ijntendant possess at the time this sale is alleged to have taken place % It is conceded by the government that by the ordinance of December 4, 1786, (at which time Mexico was a province of Spain,) the intendants had full authority in reference to the sale of lands. Article 81 of that, ordinance. (Reynolds’ Spanish and Mexican Land Laws, p. 60): is as follows:

“ Art. 81. The intendants shall also be judges, with exclusive jurisdiction over all matters and questions that arise in the provinces of- their districts in relation to the sale, composition and distribution of crown and seignioral lands. The holders thereof, and those who seek new grants of the same, shall set up their rights and make their applications to said intendants, who, after the matter has been duly examined into by an attorney of my royal treasury, appointed by themselves, shall take action thereon, in accordance with law, and in conjunction with their ordinary legal advisers. They shall admit appeals to the superior board of the treasury, or, should the parties in interest fail to employ that recourse, submit a report thereto, together with the original proceedings, when they consider them in condition to issue the title. The board shall, after examination thereof, return them, either for issue of title, if no correction is necessary, or, before doing so, for such other proceedings as in the opinion of the board are required, with the necessary-instructions.

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Bluebook (online)
171 U.S. 220, 18 S. Ct. 840, 43 L. Ed. 142, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elys-administrator-v-united-states-scotus-1898.