Hardy v. Harbin

154 U.S. 598, 14 S. Ct. 1172, 22 L. Ed. 378, 1874 U.S. LEXIS 1422
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 16, 1874
Docket14
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 154 U.S. 598 (Hardy v. Harbin) 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
Hardy v. Harbin, 154 U.S. 598, 14 S. Ct. 1172, 22 L. Ed. 378, 1874 U.S. LEXIS 1422 (1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hunt

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants are the children of John Hardy. They allege that to their ancestor, under the assumed name of Thomas M. Hardy, the Mexican government issued a grant, October 23, 1843, for tlie premises in controversy; that the appellees, purchasers under a void sale of Hardy’s interest, procured the commission, under the act of the 3d of March, 1851, to confirm to them the lands so granted as aforesaid to Hardy. The bill prays that the appellees may be compelled to convey to the appellants. .

A demurrer to the bill was interposed upon the ground that the defendants were innocent purchasers, having no knowledge of the fraudulent character of the administrator’s sale under which the confirmees purchased. The Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, who heard and decided the demurrer, overruled it, on the ground that under the allegations of the bill the sale at which the appellees purchased was absolutely void.

*599 The demurrer having been overruled, an answer was put in which denies that the complainants (the appellants here) are the legal representatives of the Hardy to whom, the grant was made; denies the alleged frauds; denies all knowledge or notice on the part of the defendants of such frauds if they were committed, and all knowledge or notice of the invalidity of the proceedings in the Probate Court, under whose order of sale they became purchasers.

This answer raised issues of fact and of law — of fact as to the identification of the Hardy to whom the grant was made with the Hardy whose heirs the complainants are admitted to be; of law, whether purchasers at a sale made by a court having no jurisdicr tion of the person or subject matter, can shield themselves under a plea of purchase in good faith, without notice of the invalidity of the decree under which the sale was made.

The district judge, sitting as circuit judge, entered a decree dismissing the bill upon the ground that the defendants were purchasers of parties holding the legal title — that is, the patent of the United States — and that they had no notice of the invalidity of the title of their vendors upon which the confirmation was made.

From this decree the complainants appeal to this court.

The points of law raised are —

First, That the complainants (children of John Hardy) at the date of the death of Hardy in California, in 1848, were aliens, and incapable of taking his real property by descent, and this both by the common law and the Mexican law.

Second, That the defendants are innocent bona fide purchasers for value without notice from the patentees, and are therefore protected in their possession. Upon this point the district judge, sitting as circuit judge, held with the defendants and dismissed the bill.

The question of fact is the identity of the two Hardys described in the evidence, or rather the union of the names of John Hardy and Tomas M. Hardy in one man, and that man, John Hardy, the father of the complainants.

The question of fact lies at the bottom of the ease. If it should be held that aliens may inherit, that would be of no influence should it be decided that the complainants are not the children of the man who called himself Tomas M. Hardy.

Should it be held that the defendants are not innocent purchasers without notice, or that if such, that fact does not constitute a defence to the action, we should make no step towards a conclu *600 sion, unless we also decided tliat the complainants were the children of the man entitled to the grant.

If it is found that the complainants are such children, the other questions arise. If it is found that they are not, the case is ended. In any aspect the question of identity arises and must be decided, and it is manifest from the suggestions already made that it is the point that should be first determined. We proceed to its consideration.

A person describing himself as Tomas M. Hardy died in California, in 1848, having received a land grant as a soldier in the Mexican service.

The children of John Hardy, of Canada, undertake to show that this person was their father.

John Hardy was a mechanic, born in the year 1801, who left Canada in the year 1831 and never returned. His wife had died not long before, leaving three young children, of whom the plaintiffs are survivors.

In seeking a solution of the question before us the inquiries at once present themselves,—

Why did he leave Canada? Was there any reason for changing his name?

He left Canada, in the language of the old tales, to seek his' fortune. His wife, the daughter of a respectable clergyman, had died. Although not in want or destitution, he was not as successful in business as he wished to be. The disposition of her property by his mother did not please him. He had sought to interfere with it more officiously than pleased the mother, and she had given it to her other children, omitting to give him any portion. It was rumored also that he desired to marry the sister of his deceased wife, and that his offers in this respect were declined. These, we believe, are the only reasons shown for his leaving Canada.

These circumstances furnish the answer to the other inquiry suggested, and show that no reason existed for a change of name. He had committed no crime which compelled him to conceal his departure. There was no case of affection betrayed of which he desired to escape the consequences. He left openly, without concealment, with the knowledge of his friends, and with no attendance of crime, disgrace or dishonor. He had some conversation, as witnesses state, in which he declared that his friends would not hear from him until he was in better circumstances, and that he would change his Christian name, retaining the name of Hardy. *601 We place little value on tlie evidence of these trivial circum. stances, given thirty or forty years after the occurrence, there being nothing at the time, or occurring since, to impress the conversation on the mind of the witness. That a man from any cause, desirous of concealing himself from his relatives, should retain his family name and seek to effect that object by changing his Christian name only, we think is hardly credible.

If we correctly understand the evidence no witness who ever knew or saw John Hardy in Canada also saw Thomas M. Hardy, who died in Benicia in 1848, and identified them as the same person. There is, however, evidence that John Hardy was in the Southern States and in Mexico at periods several years after leaving Canada. A number of witnesses testify to meeting a Mr. Hardy in various parts of Mexico, at different times from 1839 to 1846. Mr. Galbraith Lindsay testifies that in the winter of 1836-7, in Natchez, Mississippi, he frequently saw a man calling himself John Hardy, with whom he talked about persons and affairs in Canada, and was satisfied that he knew the persons and places of which he spoke, and that he was John Hardy. Lindsay was in Hatchez four months on this occasion, and saw Hardy at different times during a period of four weeks. Two observations suggest themselves in relation to his evidence. 1st.

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Bluebook (online)
154 U.S. 598, 14 S. Ct. 1172, 22 L. Ed. 378, 1874 U.S. LEXIS 1422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardy-v-harbin-scotus-1874.