Gamache v. Piquignot

57 U.S. 451, 14 L. Ed. 1012, 16 How. 451, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1560
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 23, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 57 U.S. 451 (Gamache v. Piquignot) 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
Gamache v. Piquignot, 57 U.S. 451, 14 L. Ed. 1012, 16 How. 451, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1560 (1854).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CATRON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case was brought here by writ of error to the Supreme Court of Missouri, and presents questions alleged to be cognizable in this court under the 25th section of the Judiciary Act. The plaintiffs claimed a tract of land of six arpents in front, and forty back, lying adjoining to the village of Carondelet, in Missouri. It was claimed as “ an out lot ” which had been confirmed by the act'of Congress of June 13th, 1812, to'John B. Gamache, the ancestor of the plaintiffs.

In support of this position there was offered, in evidence, certain documents issued from the office of the recorder of land titles. The first was a paper claimed to be a certificate of confirmation issued by Conway, the recorder of land titles, dated 22d January, 1839, under the act of Congress of the 26th May, 1824. The second was an extract from the registry kept by the recorder of certificates, issued by him under the act of 1824, by which it appears that Conway entered the certificate off Gamache’s representatives on that register on the 12th March, 1839, and furnished on that day to the surveyor-general a description of the land. The third wa's an extract from the additional list of claims furnished by the recorder to the surveyor-general on the 12th March, 1839, which addition was of the Gamache claim alone. There were other documents showing that Hunt, who was the recorder of land titles, who acted under the act of 1824 in taking proof of claims, and who filed with the surveyor the list of claims proved before him, had filed one or two supplemental or explanatory lists after the first.

The court below rejected the evidence offered.

A survey of the claim of Gamache was made by a deputy surveyor under instructions from the surveyor-general, and’ the survey being • returned to the office by the deputy and a plat made, the word “ approved ” was written upon it and signed by the then surveyor-general, but it never was recorded. . It appeared, in evidence, that the practice of the surveyor’s office, *465 when a deputy surveyor made return of a survey which he had been instructed to make, was, to have the survey examined, to see the manner in which the deputy had .followed the instructions given, and if he had followed them, his work was approved, and the approval evidenced by such writing as had been made in this case, which was intended to authorize the payment of the deputy for his work; and that subsequently the survey was more carefully examined, and if found to be a proper survey in all respects it was recorded in the books of the office, which was the evidence that it was finally adopted and approved, and that by the practice of the office certified copies of surveys were not given out until they were thus .finally approved and recorded. Conway, who had been surveyor-general as well as recorder, testified that he would regard the survey of the Gamache claim as an approved survey, and would récord it as such if he were in the office.

It appeared, in evidence, that the present surveyor-general refused to record it as an approved survey, or to certify it to the recorder as a survey of land for which a certificate of confirmation is to issue, and that in that refusal he is sustained by the department at Washington.

After the evidence was closed, the court, by an instruction, declared that the survey was not. evidence of title, nor of the boundaries and extent of Gamache’s claim.

A certified copy of the affidavits made before recorder Hunt, when he was i. king proof under the act of 1824, was in evidence, but an instruction given to the jury substantially excluded them from consideration.

On this state of facts the Supreme Court of Missouri held, among other things, as follows:

In the present cáse we have a recorder of land titles, fourteen years from the passage of this act, attempting to give the evidence of title, by issuing a certificate of confirmation, and certifying the claim to the surveyor-general as one confirmed by the act of 1812. If the government of the United States has confirmed the title set up by the plaintiffs by that act of Congress, then the party, as has been held in this court, does not lose his land by the failure to procure the evidence provided for by the act of 1824; and under these decisions the plaintiffs in this case, after the evidence was rejected, which they claimed was rightly issued under the last-mentioned act, proceeded to prove the cultivation and possession of their ancestor, Gamache, and claimed that the title was confirmed by the act of 1812.”

“ If the evidence of title, purporting to be issued under the act of 1824, appeared undisputed by the United States, and acknowledged and treated by the government as effectual, then it may *466 be that a person who was a mere stranger to the title would not be allowed to dispute the correctness of the conduct' of the officers in their attempt to carry out the law. But when we find that the government itself, in its own officers, arrests-the progress of the title, and the whole reliance of the- party' in this case is upon the acts of the recorder, the correctness of which is denied by the government, we will examine his acts and give them effect only so far as they conform to the law.”

“ That the recorder, finder the act of 1824, was required to act in a quasi judicial character, is perfectly manifest, although there was no mode providéd by the law for the expression of an opinion against the sufficiency of the evidence given before him. If a claim was, in his judgment, confirmed by the act of 1812, he issued to the párty a certificate of confirmation, and included the lot in the descriptive list which he was required to furnish the surveyor-general. If there was a failure to prove the inhabitation, cultivation, or possession to his satisfaction, he simply omitted to include the claim in his list, and he issued no certificate.”

!£ The acts required to be done when a claim was confirmed, were to be done immediately after the expiration of the time limited for taking the proof; and when we see,, from the evidence offered by the plaintiff, that the recorder filed his list of confirmations with the surveyor in October, 1827, near twelve years before Conway, his successor, returned the present clairn to that office, we cannot avoid the conclusion that this latter act was not within the scope allowed for such proceeding by the act of Congress. It is not necessary to'maintain that if Hunt, the recorder who took the proof, had died before he acted upon the claims, his successor could not act upon them ; but when he did act, and made out and furnished to the surveyor the fist required by law, the conclusion is. one which the law draws, that claims not within that list are claims not proved to his satisfaction.”

The claim of Gamache was anxiously prosecuted before- the department of public lands at Washington during the pendency of this suit, and was there decided-by the commissioner in conformity to the decision of the Supreme Court of Missouri; and which decision was confirmed by the Secretary of the Interior in September last. The reasons for this decision are here given in the language of the commissioner in reply to the plaintiffs’ counsel, prosecuting the claim.

“ The surveyor-general at St.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 U.S. 451, 14 L. Ed. 1012, 16 How. 451, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gamache-v-piquignot-scotus-1854.