Ham v. Missouri

59 U.S. 126, 15 L. Ed. 334, 18 How. 126, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 674
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 29, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 59 U.S. 126 (Ham v. Missouri) 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
Ham v. Missouri, 59 U.S. 126, 15 L. Ed. 334, 18 How. 126, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 674 (1856).

Opinions

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

[128]*128Upon a writ of error to the supreme court of the State, under the authority of the 25th section of the judiciary act.

The. proceedings now under review were founded upon an indictment in the circuit court of the county of St. Francis, against the plaintiff in error, for having committed waste and trespass on the sixteenth section of lands situated in congressional township number thirty-four, range seven east, as being school lands belonging to the inhabitants of the township aforesaid.

Upon this indictment the plaintiff was convicted, and condemned to pay a fine assessed by the jury, of four hundred dollars, together with the costs of the prosecution. From the judgment of the circuit court, the plaintiff in error having taken an appeal to'the supreme court of Missouri, by the latter tribunal that judgment was in all things affirmed; the same plaintiff now seeks its reversal here, in virtue of several acts of congress alleged to be applicable- to this case.

'.. Upon the trial in the circuit court, the following facts were either established in proof or admitted by the parties:—

■ 1. A’ joint petition on the part of Jean Batiste Vallé, and the heirs of Frangois Vallé, Jean Batiste Pratte, and St. Geunne Beauvais, presented on the 15th of October, 1800, to Delassus, the lieutenant-governor of upper Louisiana, praying for a grant of -‘two leagues square of land on the River St. Frangois, including the. mine, known by the name of Mine á la Motte, and the lands adjacent.

■ 2. An acknowledgment by the lieutenant-governor, dated January 22,1801, of his want of power to grant a concession of the extent prayed for, and the fact of his having transmitted the petition to the intendant-general, with the expression of an opinion favorable to the grant, and to the character of the applicants. '

3. An order by the intendant-general, that the documents presented in behalf of the petitioners should be translated into the Castilian language, and then be laid before the fiscal agent.

. 4. A plat and survey for 28,224 arpens, or 24,142 acres of land, situated on the River St. Francis, certified by Nathaniel Cook, as deputy surveyor of the district of St. Genevieve, said by him to have been made by virtue of a concession by Delassus to ■ J. B.- and Frangois Vallé, Beauvais, and. Pratte, on the 22d of January, 1801.

• 5. The proceedings of the board of commissioners for the examination of land titles, on the 27th of December, 1811, setting forth the claim of Jean Batiste and Frangois Vallé, Jean Batiste Pratte, and St. Geunne Beauvais, for two leagues of land, including the La Motte Mine, founded on the recommendation from Lieutenant-Governor Delassus for a. concession, bearing [129]*129date on the 22d of January, 1801, and the order of theintendantgeneral already mentioned, and the rejection of the claim by the commissioners.

6. The first section of an act of congress, approved May-24, 1828, confirming to Francois Vallé,. Jean Batiste Vallé-, Jean Batiste Pratte, and St. Geunne Beauvais, their heirs or legal-representatives, a tract of land not exceeding two leagues square, situated in the county of Madison in the State of Missouri, commonly known by the name of the Mine la Motte, according to a field-plat and survey made by Nathaniel Cook, deputy surveyor of St. Genevieve, on the 22d day of February, 1806, with a proviso in the said first section, thát the confirmation thus granted shall extend only to a relinquishment of title on the part of the United States, nor prejudice the rights of third per-, sons, nor any title heretofore derived from the United States, either by purchase or donation. ■

7. A plat and survey made by Jenifer Sprigg, deputy-surveyor, in the months of March, 1829, -and August, 1830, of the La Motte Mine tract of land, stated to contain 23,728.02 acres of land, confirmed to Francois Vallé, Jean Batiste Vallé, Jean Batiste Pratte, by an act of congress approved on the 24th of December, 1828.

8. A patent from the President of the United Statés, bearing date on the 25th of March, 1839, granted under the authority, of the act of congress last mentioned, (and in virtue of ,a title derived from the confirmees,) to Lewis F. Linn and Evariste Pratte, for the La Motte Mine, and the- land surrounding the same, containing 23,728.02 acres of land, in conformity with the survey of Sprigg, as certified'from the general land-office; this patent,, containing literally the proviso in the act of congress limiting the grant to the patentees, to a relinquishment of the title of the United States at the date of the'act of congress of 1828.

, 9. An admission on the part of the State, that all the right; title; and claim of the original proprietors of the Mine la Motte tract of land had regularly passed to and was vested in Thomas Fleming, as fully as those proprietors had or could have had the same.

10. Á lease from Thomas Fleming, of the 9th of April, 1849, to Ham, the plaintiff in error, for a portion of the Mine la Motte land.

11. An admission further on the part of the State, that the sixteenth section claimed as School lands, was within the lines of the 1 original survey of the tract made by Nathaniel Cook, and of the other surveys given in evidence.

Upon the trial of the indictment, the circuit court, at the in[130]*130stance of the counsel for the State, instructed the jury, that the act of the 6th of March, 1820, entitled An act to authorize the people of Missouri Territory to form a constitution and state government, &c.,’ taken in connection with an ordinance declaring the assent thereto by the people of Missouri, by their representatives assembled in convention on the 19th of July, 1820, operated as a grant by congress to the State of Missouri for the use of schools, of the 16th section in controversy, unless such 16th section had been previously disposed of by government.

• “ That, although the land claimed by the proprietors of Mine la Mótte was, by the several acts of congress, reserved from sale, and that the survey of said claim includes the 16th section in controversy, yet such reservation is not such disposition of said section by the government, as is within the saving clause of the 6th section of the act of 1820, and cannot operate to prevent the title from vesting in the State, by virtue of said grant.”

The defendant in the prosecution prayed of the court the following instructions, which were refused:—

“ That if the jury believe the land in question is included within the original grant by the Spanish government, and within the lines of the survey made by N. Cook, in 1806, and within the lines of the lands confirmed by the act of congress to the original grantees and those claiming under them, then this land never was public land, subject or liable to be donated by congress to the State for the use of schools.

“ That the several acts of congress reserving section 16 for the support of schools, could only refer to the public lands proper, and- could not attach to private claims, which had previous to such donation been claimed by individuals, and reserved by congress to satisfy those claims.

■“ That the. confirmation of the claim by the act of congress , of. 1828, conferred and gave a superior title to the lands in question, over the title of the State for the use of schools.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 U.S. 126, 15 L. Ed. 334, 18 How. 126, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ham-v-missouri-scotus-1856.