Harvey v. Barker

58 P. 692, 126 Cal. 262, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 712
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1899
DocketL.A. No. 490.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 58 P. 692 (Harvey v. Barker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harvey v. Barker, 58 P. 692, 126 Cal. 262, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 712 (Cal. 1899).

Opinions

VAN DYKE, J.

—Plaintiffs claim title to the property in controversy through a" patent of the United States issued to J. J.. Warner, January 16, 1880, pursuant to the provisions of the act of Congress of March 3, 1851, entitled “An act to ascertain and settle the private land claims in the state of California.” Defendants claim a possessory right as mission or pueblo Indians, and by their answers form three groups, describing severalty the tracts of land alleged to be occupied by them, the first consisting of nineteen hundred and seven acres; the second, two hundred and sixty-six and forty-three one-hundredths; and the third, one hundred and twenty acres. They base their right of possession to such tracts of land upon the claim that their ancestors were mission Indians, and that they have been in continuous occupancy, use, and possession of said premises from time immemorial, and were in such possession at the time the rights of the plaintiffs’ grantor accrued under the Mexican government. At the trial the plaintiffs introduced in evidence the United States patent to Warner, and it was thereupon stipulated that the lands described in said patent included the premises in controversy, and that plaintiffs had succeeded to all the rights of thepatentee, and had paid all taxes levied or assessed upon said premises since the patent issued. Thereupon, in support of the-claim on behalf of the defendants, there was offered in evidence-the expediente of two grants of the" Mexican government, tire first, being made June 8, 1840, to Jose Antonio Pico by Juan B„ Alvarado, governor of California, and the second made November 28, 1844, to Juan Jose Warner by Manuel Micheltorena, governor general of California. The grant to Pico was of the-“land known by the name of ‘Agua Caliente,’ bounded by the-ranch of ‘San Jose Valle,’ .... subjecting himself to pay for the place of worship and other improvements that be there belonging to the San Luis Bey Mission, and not molest (prejudicor) the Indians that thereon may be established, and with the approbation of the most excellent assembly of the department, and" *264 the conditions following: 1. He is allowed to fence it in, without interfering with the roads, cross-roads, and other usages (servidumbres); he will possess it fully and exclusively, turning it to agricultural or any other use he may see fit, but within a year he shall construct a house thereon and live in it; 2. When the property shall have been confirmed to him, he 'shall petition the respective judge to give him possession thereof by virtue of this order, and shall mark out the boundaries on whose limits he shall fix the landmarks, some fruit and wild trees that may be of some utility; 3. The land of which donation is hereby made is of the extent mentioned in the plan which goes with the ‘expedients.’ The judge who should give possession thereof shall have it surveyed according to law, leaving the residue that may result to the nation for their purposes; 4. If he should fail to comply with these conditions he shall forfeit his title to the land, and it will be denounced by another.”

Accompanying the grant to Warner of 1844, offered on behalf of the defendants, are the following papers:

The petition of Warner for the place known by the name as “Valle San Jose,” which he alleges is vacant and situated east of the pueblo of San Diego, distant about twenty leagues, and surrounded by mountains.

“To the most R. P. Vincent Olivas:

“With the object of soliciting in property the place known by the name Walle de San Jose’ (formerly occupied by the mission under your charge), I beg of you to be so kind as to inform me if, at the present day, the mission of San Diego does occupy the said land, and, if not, how long since it has been abandoned.
“JUAN J. WARNER.”
“The ‘Valley of San Jose’ can be granted to the party who petitions for it, inasmuch as the mission of San Diego;, to whom it belonged, has no means sufficient to cultivate and occupy it, and it is not so necessary for the mission.
“FR. VINCENT P. OLIVAS.
“Mission of San Diego, August 5, 1844.”
“Office of the First Justice of the Peace, San Diego. “In view of the petition which the party interested remits to this office, I beg to state that the said ‘Valle San Jose’ is, and has for the past two years, been vacant and abandoned, without *265 any goods nor cultivation on the part of San Diego; but said place belongs at the present time to the said mission, and at petitioner’s request I sign this, in San Diego.
“August 6, 1844. JUAN MA MAKE ON.”

The secretary forwarded the papers to the governor, as follows:

“Governor: The land which is petitioned for, it seems that there is no objection to its being granted according to the information which I enclose from the Eev. P. F. Vincent Olivas, and from the judge of San Diego, Juan Marrón. The petitioner is a naturalized citizen and is a person of good qualities, so that if your excellency does not dispose otherwise, you can accede to his petition. MANUEL JIMENO.
“Monterey, September 3, 1844.”
(Same date.)
“Extend to him the title, and I order that he be obliged to procure the plan thereof within four months from this date, and should he fail to comply with such obligation within said term,” this title will be null and of no value.
“So it is ordered and decreed. MICHELTOEENA.”

The deseno, or sketch, accompanying the petition describing the property includes the entire San Jose valley. The grant of Governor Micheltorena recites that, whereas one Jose Warner had petitioned for the land known by the name of “Valley de San Jose,” giving the boundaries thereof, and “having previously complied with the notices and investigations on such matters, as prescribed by the laws and regulations, exercising the powers conferred on me, in the name of the Mexican nation, I have resolved to grant him the said land, declaring it by these presents his property, subject to the approbation of the most excellent assembly of the department, and to the conditions following, to wit.”

The conditions are similar to those contained in the grant to Pico, with the exception that it omits entirely the clause “not to molest (prejudicor) the Indians .that thereon may be established.”

Thereupon Warner addressed the governor, stating that he would proceed under the grant, and subsequently commissioners were appointed to make an examination and report. In their *266 report they say: “And it appearing from the said examination that the said concession in favor of Juan J. Warner was made in perfect conformity with what the laws prescribe in this particular, .... the concession is hereby approved in favor of Juan J. Warner of the place named ‘Valle de San Jose/ adjudicated in property by the government of this department.” This report was subsequently approved by the departmental assembly.

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Bluebook (online)
58 P. 692, 126 Cal. 262, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvey-v-barker-cal-1899.