Huff v. Doyle

93 U.S. 558, 23 L. Ed. 975, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1407
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 15, 1877
Docket661
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 93 U.S. 558 (Huff v. Doyle) 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
Huff v. Doyle, 93 U.S. 558, 23 L. Ed. 975, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1407 (1877).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the co,urt.

This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the State of California, which brings here for review a judgment of that cour^ concerning a title to'land dependent on the act of Congress granting lands to that State for school purposes, of March 3, 1853, and the act of July 23, 1866, on the same subject. 10 Stat. 244; 14 id. 218.

By the sixth section of the first-mentioned act, the State was granted every sixteenth and thirty-sixth section of the public laüd, for school purposes, with an exception of lands which for various reasons ought not to be so granted; and by the seventh section, the State was authorized to select other lands, in lieu of any section or part of section sixteen or thirty-six which fell within any of these exceptions. The act which made these grants was the first which provided for the extension to California of the system of surveys, sales, and pre-emptidn of public lands so long established in other States and Territories. No surveys had then been made; and it was obvious, that, until they were made, and the precise locality of each township and of the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections of the township was thus ascertained, it could not be known whether they came within any of the exceptions to the grant, or whether any right of selection in lieu of them had accrued. The State of California, impatient of the delay of the United States authorities in making these surveys, undertook to perform that duty herself; and, assuming from data furnished by her own surveys that a great many acres of the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections were within one or the other of the exceptions of the granting clause, for which the' State was to select other lands, the legislature authorized selections and locations to be made in lieu thereof, *560 according to State surveys. The land in controversy was so selécted by. the State and sold to plaintiff, who settled on it in 1865, and received from the State, a certificate of sale.

The officers of the Land Department, when the matter was brought to their attention, refused to recognize the surveys made by the State, or to acknowledge the validity of selections and locations made under the' State laws; and as many such selections and actual settlements under them' had been made, the hardships 'and embarrassments growing out of. the action of the State government caused the passage of the act of July 23, 1866.

By the first section of that act, it was declared “ that in all Cases where the State of California has heretofore made selections of any portion of the public domain, in part satisfaction of any grant made to said State by act of Congress, and has disposed of the same to purchasers in good faith under her laws, the lands so selected shall be, and are hereby, confirmed to said State.”

A proviso excepted out of this confirmation land of varioús .classes, among which is “any land held or claimed under a •valid Mexican or Spanish grant.” Sect. 2 of the act required the proper land officers, where the land had been surveyed by the United States at the. date of the act, to examine into these selections, and, if found to be right, to. certify them to the State; and by the third section, provision was made for the perfection of these titles in lands not yet surveyed, after the surveys should have been extended over them.

The'-land claimed by plaintiff belonged to the latter class; and the. official plat of the survey of the township embracing, it was *not filed in the proper land-office of the United States until June 28, 1871, nearly five years after the passage of the' act, and six years after its selection and location by plaintiff. As soqn as this was done; — to wit,. July 10,1871, — plaintiff proved Up his claim, and' the land-office certified thé land to the State of California,, as provided by the third, section of the act, and the State thereupon issued, to him his patent. It is Upon this title that plaintiff recovered a judgment for the possession of the land in the inferior court of the State of California against defendants, whose claim consisted in tjbe facts found by the *561 court, that, having the qualifications of pre-emptors of the public landj they had, in November, 1870, intruded upon the possession of plaintiff, had made a declaration of their intention to pre-empt it, and had offered to pay the money, and demanded a certificate of sale, the land officers refusing both to accept their money and to give them a certificate.

The Supreme Court of California réversed this judgment, and ordered a judgment for defendants, on the ground that, at the’ time of plaintiff’s selection of this land, and of the passage of the act of 1866, it was claimed under a valid Mexican grant.

To determine the correctness of this ruling, it will be necessary to look into the history of that claim.

It appears that at some time prior to 1860 there was,confirmed to Robert Livermore a grant of two leagues of land, called Los Pocitas, the out-boundaries of which were given in the decree of confirmation, and which included the land now.in controversy. In 1865 a survey of this grant was made, which contained nine leagues, and which was rejécted for that reason by the Commissioner of the General Land-Office in 1868. In March, 1869, another' survey was made, which contained two square leagues, and did not include the land in suit; and this survey was confirmed by the commissioner June 6, 1871. It will be remembered, that, on the 28th- of the same month, the plat of the government surveys was filed in the local land-office, and that, twelve days thereafter, plaintiff presented himself at that office and proved up his' claim. '

The" question for our decision under the facts as found by the court below, and thus more briefly stated, is, whether the action of the officers of. the Land Department in certifying these lands to the State as a valid selection of indemnity lands under the act of 1866 was without authority of law, and therefore void. There can be no doubt that they .were' authorizéd to inquire into the validity of any claim set up under sect. 1 of that act,' • and, in the language of the closing paragraph of sect. 3, “ if found in accordance, with sect. 1,” to' certify the land to the State. And it may admit of grave doubt, whether in a suit at law the validity of their action can be impeached. It certainly cannot be impeached on any other ground found in this record than that,'being part of a valid Mexican claim, the, *562 land was expressly excepted from confirmation, and could not be subjected to it by tbe act of tbe land officers in tbe premises.

It is not to be denied that the facts found show, that, at the date of the act of 1866, the land claimed by defendant was part of a tract claimed. under a Mexican grant, and that the grant itself Was.then, and. is still- conceded to be, a valid grant. It was, therefore, “ claimed under a valid Mexican grant,” within the literal terms of the statute. And if this literal construction is to prevail, and the fact of its being claimed under a Mexican grant'is to have reference solely to the date of the statute, the Supreme .Court of California was right in its decision.

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Bluebook (online)
93 U.S. 558, 23 L. Ed. 975, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huff-v-doyle-scotus-1877.