Greer v. Mezes

65 U.S. 268, 16 L. Ed. 661, 24 How. 268, 1860 U.S. LEXIS 398
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 11, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 65 U.S. 268 (Greer v. Mezes) 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
Greer v. Mezes, 65 U.S. 268, 16 L. Ed. 661, 24 How. 268, 1860 U.S. LEXIS 398 (1861).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GRIER

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendants in error are the owners of the tract of land called Las Pulgas, the title to which was confirmed to the heirs of Arguello by this court, (18 How., 539.) This action of ejectment was brought by them against- Greer and a number of others, now plaintiffs in error. The defendants plead»'1 *274 severally the general issue, but no one of them took defence specially for any-definite-part of the land claimed in the writ, ,or made a disclaimer as to any portion of it. The plaintiffs gave in evidence the survey and patent of the Las Pulgas tract, and proved the defendants to be in possession within its boundaries. Their Mexican title was dated in-1835, and had the approbation of the Departmental Assembly ¿ preceded and followed by possession.

Their grant, as confirmed by this court, is bounded on the .north by the arroyo of San Francisquito, on the south by that of St. Mateo, on the east by the estuary, and on the west by the cañada or valley of Raymundo, “being four leagues in length and one in .breadth." The plaintiffs having shown a complete legal title to the land in dispute, were entitled to a verdict, unless the defendants could show a better..

They claimed under a grant to Juan Coppinger, dated in ■1840, for the valley of Raymundo, specifying nothing as to quantity, but describing it as bounded on the east by the rancho of Las Pulgas, and on the west by the Sierra Morena, south by rancho of Martinez, and north by the lagune; The. espediente provides, that “the judge who shall deliver possession of the land shall have it measured according to the ordinance, specifying the amount of sitios it contains.”

This grant had never received the sanction of the Departmental Assembly, nor had possession ever been delivered, or any precise boundaries ascertained by survey; and although confirmed as a valid, equitable claim by the District Court of California, it has never been surveyed, nor had a patent 'been issued for .it under the decree of confirmation. The claim of . defendants to the land is therefore not yet completed into a legal title. Its boundaries and quantity still remain uncertain and undefined. The Sierra-Morena'may bo sufficiently definite as the boundary of a State or kingdom, or of a valley, but is certainly a very vague and. uncertain .lino for a survey of '.and. The eastern boundary called also for th^-raneho of Las Pulgas; this was also uncertain till the western line of Las Pulgas was correctly surveyed. Coppinger’s graut, calling, for land outside of the Pulgas grant, and to be bounded by *275 it, could have no possible interference or claim to land within it. Hence, the defendants could resort to no other- defence than to offer proof that the survey and patent of Las Pulgas were erroneous as regarded the location of the western line, because it embraces a portion of the level land in the cañada or valley Raymundo, which is the call of its western boundary.

It is the refusal of the court to admit testimony for that purpose which is now. alleged as error.

The testimony offered might well have been rejected as irrelevant, for it does not follow,, that if the western line of Las Pulgas, as run by the surveyor general, included level land in the valley, that it was at all incorrect. The western boundary line of Las Pulgas, as adjudged by the decree of this court, had two several points of description to fix its location; one uncertain and vague, the other admitting of mathematical certainty. The call of the Cañada Raymundo on the-west is as vague as that for the Sierra Morena, a chain of mountains. But the breadth of one league from the estuary or bay was a certain and definite boundary on the east, and showed conclusively the .precise location of the line. Las. Pulgas could claim to extend but a league west, whether that reached to the hills on the east of the valley or not, and was entitled to have the league in breadth, whether it carried the western line over .the hills or hot. Coppinger’s grant can claim only what is left after satisfying Las Pulgas, which calls for a certain quantity and a certain boundaiy. There was.no offer to prove that the survey of Las Pulgas was extended beyond such limit.

The court below refused to admit the testimony, not for its irrelevancy, but its incompetency; because the defendants, claiming under a merely equitable title, having neither survey nor patent, were not in a condition to dispute in a court of law the correctness of the survey made by the public officer or resist the plaintiff’s perfect legal title.

The fact' and the' conclusion of the court from1 it' are undoubtedly correct. It is well settled that both plaintiff' and defendant must produce a strictly legal title, whether it be in fee or as lessee for years.-

*276 . The plaintiff had shown a complete legal title; the defendant had not, for tbe'reasons already stated.

The act of 3d March, 1851, e. 41, section 13, makes it the duty of the surveyor general to cause all private claims which shall be confirmed to b.e surveyed, and “to decide between the parties with regard to all such confirmed claims as may conflict or in any manner interfere.” It is true this may not preclude a legal investigation of the subject by the proper judicial tribunal. In this case there can be no conflict of title as between Las Pulgas and the later grant to Coppinger, which calls for it as a boundary. The survey^is conclusive' evidence as to the precise location of. the western line of Pulgas, as between these parties in this suit. If' Coppinger and those claiming under him chárge that this line has not been properly established, either- by mistake.or fraud, they might have had a remedy under the thirteenth section of the act, and ihay possibly yet have it by filing a bill in chancery. But in this action of ejectment, the defendants cannot call upon a jury at their discretion to alter a boundary line which has been legally established by the public- officer specially intrusted with this duty.

. The only other exception is, to the following instruction of the court as to the form of the verdict: “That they should find a separate verdict against such of the defendants as were proved to have been in possession, at the commencement of the suit, of separate distinct parcels of the said land held in severalty, and that the jury might find a general verdict against all the other defendants who were proved or admitted to have been, at. the commencement of the suit, in possession of some-portion or portions of the premises in controversy, the limits or boundaries of whose possessions were not defined by the proof; and this, whether such possessions and occupation were joint or several.” . .

Wé -can perceive no'error in this instruction. Although the Circuit Court may have adopted the mode of. instituting the action of ejectment by petition and summons, instead .of the bid fiction of .lease, entry,and ouster, it is stillgoverned- by the principles of pleading, and practice which have been estab* *277 lished by courts of common law. The hybrid, mixture of civil and common-law pleadings and practice introduced by State codes caunot he transplanted into the Courts of the United States.

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Bluebook (online)
65 U.S. 268, 16 L. Ed. 661, 24 How. 268, 1860 U.S. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greer-v-mezes-scotus-1861.