Hogan v. Page

22 Mo. 55
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 22 Mo. 55 (Hogan v. Page) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hogan v. Page, 22 Mo. 55 (Mo. 1855).

Opinion

Ryland, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The following is the statement of the case agreed to by the council of both parties, before this court:

[57]*57This was an action of ejectment, brought in the Common Pleas Court, on the 27th July, 1852, by appellee against appellant, for a portion of a common field lot in the Grand prairie common field of St. Louis, which lot is oüe arpent in front by forty arpens in depth, being U. S. survey No. 1276, confirmed by the old board on the 13th November, 1811. The defendant had possession of the premises at the commencement of the suit, and the damages and monthly value, as found by the jury, were supported by the evidence in the cause.
On the trial, the plaintiff gave in evidence duly certified copy of the minutes of the confirmation by the old board. This was objectedjo as not being properly certified; thereupon the court excluded so much of said certificate as follows, to-wit: Assignee of Auguste Condé,’ and allowed the paper to be read, except the last certificate therein. As a part of said confirmation papers, the concession of said.two by forty arpens to Auguste Oondé, dated 10th January, 1770, recorded in livre terrain, No. 1, p. 31, was also read in evidence.
The notice for the confirmation of the said claim by the old board, was given to the recorder of land titles, on the 23d May, 1808, by Louis Lemonde, for himself, claiming it as his own, and describing it as ‘a tract of land situate Big prairie, district of St. Louis, formerly the property of Mr. Condé, containing one arpent by forty, as appears, by the concession remaining in your office, book No. 1, p. 31.’
“ The confirmation which was of the date of 13th November, 1811, was as follows : ‘ Cert. 1276. Louis Lemonde, assignee of Auguste Condé, claiming one by forty arpens of land, situate Big prairie, district of St. Louis, produces a concession from St. Ange and Labuxiere, L. G., dated 10th January, 1770. The board grant to the representatives of Auguste Condé forty arpens of land under the provisions of the second section of the act of congress entitled An act -respecting claims to land, and passed 3d March, 1807,’ and order that the same be surveyed conformably to possession, (survey at ex[58]*58pense of United States,) as ascertained by report of survey dated as above, January 10th, 1770.
“Plaintiff also gave in evidence a certified copy of the said U. S. survey No. 1276, which was objected to as not being properly certified. Said certificate was' as follows :
4 Office of Surveyor General for Illinois and Missouri,
4 St. Louis, September 3d, 1851.
41 hereby certify that the foregoing plat and description of survey No. 1276, in the name of the ‘legal representatives of Auguste Condé,5 and also the statement of interferences, are correctly copied from pages 291 and 292, of book Ej of records, on file in this office.
4 M. Lewis Clark, Surveyor Gen’l.5
44 The plaintiff then gave evidence showing that the title of Louis Lemonde had passed by descent to Angelique Reymond, wife of Abraham Reymond, Ann Fontaine and Baptiste Lemonde ; that said Abraham was the husband of said Angelique, by whom he had had several children, who are still living.
44 Plaintiff then gave in evidence a quit claim deed from Abraham Reymond and Angelique his wife, formerly Reymond, Ann Fontaine, formerly Lemonde, and Baptiste Lemonde, to himself, dated the 2d March, 1850, having proved by said Abraham that said deed had been signed, acknowledged and delivered by himself and wife and the other grantors therein named. The said deed contained the following description of the property conveyed : 44 All the right,' title, interest and estate which we or either of us have or may have to a certain tract of land which the said Louis Lemonde, now deceased, but formerly resident of said city and county and state, acquired or claimed to have acquired of Auguste Condé, formerly of St. Louis, now deceased, and which land was supposed to have been situated in the Grand prairie, in said county and state, but for which land said parties of the first part have never seen any deed from said Auguste Oondé to said Louis Lemon'de.
44 The plaintiff having closed his case, the defendant asked the court to give the following instruction to the jury : 4 Upon the [59]*59case, as made out by the plaintiff, he is not entitled to recover ;’ which the court refused.
“ The defendant below, appellant here, then gave in evidence title papers tending to show that he was claiming said land under the New Madrid location, made upon certificate No. 145, in the name of Martin Coontz or his legal representatives, for which a patent certificate had issued, dated 17th November, 1822. Defendant then offered in evidence various documents and oral proof, tending to show that the land sued for was improperly and incorrectly located under the confirmation of 1811, by survey No. 1276. Among the documents were, 1st, field notes of Brown’s survey of the outboundary of the Grand prairie fields, made in 1817 ; 2d, township plat.
“Defendants also introduced evidence tending to show that the survey 1276, as well as those north it, up to and including that of Mainville dit Deschene, were extended too far east by nine arpens and thirty-six feet.
“ And having closed his case, the plaintiff introduced documentary and other proof, tending to show that the. land was correctly located by survey No. 1276, and that there was no error .in the extension of the survey of Mainville dit Deschene and those south of it, of nine arpens and thirty-six feet further east than those north of it; also that the said Brown’s outboundary was erroneous south of survey No. 1253, of Antoine Morin, under Alexis Picart.”

Upon this statement arises the main question in the case: does the confirmation by the old board of commissioners enure to Louis Lemonde, putting in him the title to the land confirmed? If it does, then the plaintiff must recover ; if it does not, then the plaintiff’s claim of title is incomplete and he can not recover in this action.

Let us examine this question. This was a confirmation by the old hoard, dated November 13,1811. Among the papers of the confirmation appears the concession of two by forty arpens of land to Auguste Conde, dated 10th January, 1770, recorded [60]*60in livre, terrein, No. 1, p. 81. The notice o£ the claim filed with the recorder of land titles, on the 23d of May, 1808, by Louis Lemonde, is as follows: “To Frederick Bates, Esq., recorder of land titles for the territory of Louisiana : Sir — Take notice that I claim a tract of land situate Big prairie, district of St. Louis, formerly the property of Mr. Uondé, containing one arpent by forty, as appears by the concession remaining in your office, book No. l,.p. 31. St. Louis, 23d May, 1808.

kis “ Louis X Lemonde, mark.

“Witness: M. P. Leduc.”

.The confirmation is as follows: “Louis Lemonde, assignee' of Auguste Conde, claiming one by forty arpens of land, situate Big prairie, district of St. Louis, produces a concession from St. Ange and Labúxiere, L.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Mo. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogan-v-page-mo-1855.