Hayes v. United States

170 U.S. 637, 18 S. Ct. 735, 42 L. Ed. 1174, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1573
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 23, 1898
Docket29
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 170 U.S. 637 (Hayes v. United States) 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
Hayes v. United States, 170 U.S. 637, 18 S. Ct. 735, 42 L. Ed. 1174, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1573 (1898).

Opinion

*643 ¥r„ Justice White,

after making the foregoing statement, . delivered the opinion of the court.

The main question presented by the contention of the parties is as to the power of the territorial deputation of New Mexico, in the spring of 1825, to make grants of public lands situated within the boundaries of that territory. We therefore pretermit an examination of the controverted issues as to possession in order to first address ourselves to the fundamental legal question upon which the decision of the cause substantially depends. To understand the issue to be considered it is necessary to recall a few facts connected with the overthrow of the dominion of Spain in Mexico 'and the establishment in the latter country of an independent government.

After the successful revolution by , which Mexico was severed from the control of the crown of Spain, and following the deposition of the Emperor Itúrbide, a representative body •was assembled,- which was known as the constituent Congress of Mexico, and this body adopted, on January 31, 1824, what is termed the constitutive act. In that instrument New Mexico was recognized as a state of'the federation, and in article 7 it was provided that the territories of the federation should be directly subject to the supreme power which, in article 9, was divided into legislative, executive and'judicial. 1 White New Rocopilacion, p-. 375; .Reynolds’ Spanish and Mexican Laws,‘p. 33. ■

Under the provisions of the constitutive act whát has been styled the general constituent Congress, ivas elected, and on July 6, 1824, it was decreed that “the province of New Mexico remains a territory of the federation.” Reynolds, p; 117. Subsequently, on August 18, 1824, the same Congress adopted a general colonization law which, in articles 11 and 16, vested ■ the supreme executive power with sole authority to regulate and control the disposition of public lands' in the territories. On October 24, 1824, the general-' constituent Congress adopted a permanent constitution, which, in article 5, enumerated, as one of the parts of the federation, t'he “ territory of Santa Fé of New Mexico.” Reynolds, p. 124.

*644 It is manifest that the necessary effect of the decree of July 6, 1824, the colonization law of 1824, and of the constitution of October 24, 1824, was to deprive the officials of a territory of the power to dispose' of the public lands, even though it be arguendo conceded that such power had theretofore been possessed by the officials who exercised authority within the area which was made a territory by the constitutibn.

But it is earnestly and elaborately argued that, as by the constitutive act New Mexico was recognized as a state of •the federation, the Congress could not subsequently constitutionally reduce New Mexico to the rank of a mere territory, and that this court, in disposing of this case, must therefore disregard the Mexican constitution and hold .that, as a state, New Mexico succeeded to the sovereignty and dominion of all the lands within its borders which formerly belonged to the king or crown of Spain, and, further, that we must in substance assume the acts of the officials who made the grant in question to have been those of state officials. The position thus taken, however, is so utterly in conflict with the facts and is so inconsistent with the case made by the petition as hardly to be entitled to serious notice.

Not only, as we have stated, had New Mexico been declared a territory prior to the passage of the colonization law of August 18, 1824, but sjich status has been reiterated in'the fifth article of the Constitution of October, 24, 1824. Moreover, it is. averred in the petition that.the grant for which confirmation is sought was made by the “ Republic of Mexico,” through the territorial deputation of New Mexico, and-it is specifically alleged that the land granted was prior to the making of the grant part of the public domain of the republic. And the muniments, of title' to the original grantee, put in evidence on behalf of the’ petitioner, support these averments, and clearly show a recognition of and execution by New. Mexico of its status as a. territory imposed by the decree of July 6, .1824, and the constitution of the following October. Thus, in the preamble of the testimonio, it is re-' cited that the official who certifies to it,.his. certificate being *645 dated March 5, 1825, is “secretary of the most excellent provincial deputation of the territory of Santa Fé of New Mexico,” and it will be remembered that this was the exact designation of the territory employed in the Constitution of October 4, 1824. On February 16, 1825, in referring the petition to the political chief for report, the territorial deputation alluded to that official as the political chief of the “territory.” Again, in thp extract from the journal of March 3, 1825, the record is referred to as “ book two of the journal of the most excellent territorial deputation of New Mexico;” and in the juridical act the deputation' is styled the “ provincial deputation of this territory of New Mexico.”

In this condition of the record there can be no reason suggested for our. entering upon an inquiry as to whether New Mexico might, in 1825, have rightfully insisted that it was a state and not a territory of the federation, nor are we at all concerned with the question as to what, if any, rights in publip lands were vested in a Mexican state in the year mentioned. The grant upon which, if at all, petitioner was entitled to relief in the court below • was not made by state officials, did not purport to be a grant from á state, and was manifestly intended not to be such.

The lands covered by the grant being public lands of the nation, and not being subject to grant by the authorities of the territory of New Mexico, it follows that tlie title upon which the claimant relies vested no right in him and was clearly not within the purview of the act of Congress conferring jurisdiction on the Court of Private- Land Claims, for obviously it cannot be in reason held that a title to land derived from a territory which the territorial authorities did not own, over which they had no power of disposition, was regularly derived from either Spain or Mexico or a state of the Mexican nation.

Thg; contentions by which the plaintiff in error seeks to avoid" the controlling effect of the foregoing considerations are as follows: 1st. That the territorial government of New Mexico had power to dispose of the public lands of. the nation because it is not affirmatively shown that the colonization law *646 of the 18th of August, 1824, had been promulgated in New Mexico at the time the grant in question was made. 2d. Because even if it be conceded that the authorities of the territory were without inherent legal power to have made the grant, nevertheless there is a presumption that they were authorized to make it by the chief executive power of the Mexican nation, or that their action in making it was subsequently ratified b}r the- like authority. 3d. That any defect in the title of the plaintiff in error is barred by prescription. 4th.

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Bluebook (online)
170 U.S. 637, 18 S. Ct. 735, 42 L. Ed. 1174, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-united-states-scotus-1898.