Jones v. McMasters Ex Rel. Ybarba

61 U.S. 8, 15 L. Ed. 805, 20 How. 8, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 424
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 11, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 61 U.S. 8 (Jones v. McMasters Ex Rel. Ybarba) 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
Jones v. McMasters Ex Rel. Ybarba, 61 U.S. 8, 15 L. Ed. 805, 20 How. 8, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 424 (1858).

Opinion

Mr. Justice NELSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to the District'Court of the United States, possessing Circuit Court powers, held, in and for the district of Texas. ....

This suit was brought in the court below by Catherine Mcr Masters, to recoyer the possession of a tract of land in the *18 county of Goliad, in the forks of the San Antonio river and the Cabaza creek, containing four leagues of land. Four of the defendants put in a plea of not guilty. At a subsequent day, John R. Tally was allowed to come in and defend as landlord of Lott, one of the defendants. Whereupon, he put in a plea to the jurisdiction of the court, upon the ground the plaintiff was a citizen of the State of Texas. The plea states that she was born at Goliad, then in the State of Coahuila and Texas, when it was a part of the Republic of Mexico; that the domicil of her father and mother were at this place at the time of her. birth, and continued there till their deaths. That the plaintiff was removed from the Territory of Texas to Matamoras, west of the Rio Grande,-in Mexico, when she was about four years of age, during the revolutionary movements in' Texas, and before the declaration of independence, which was on the 2d March, 1886. That she was removed in the family of M. Sabriego, in which she had lived in Texas, and with whom she has continued to reside since, in-Mexico. There was a demurrer to this plea, which was' allowed, and the defendant required to answer over. The defendant then put in á plea of not guilty, and also a special plea in bar of alienage, and limitation of nine years before suit brought, founded upon a statute of the State of Texas.

There was a demurrer to this plea, but undisposed of for aught that appears on the record, when the parties went down to the trial of the issues .of fact.

On the trial, the plaintiff proved a title in due form, under . date of th'e 16th July, 1833, to the land in controversy, in her grandmother, Maria de Jesus Ybarba Trejo, followed by the official survey and judicial possession; also, that her grandmother died in possession of the premises, leaving the plaintiff’s mother, her'only child, at the death of her’'mother and father. Her grandmother and mother died about the year 1834. Her, father was killed in the same year.

The defendants'claimed- under patents from the -State of Texas, one dated 15th September, 1849, for three hundred and twenty acres; the other, the-20th of Februaiy, 1847, for like number;. which covered the possessions on the tract in dispute of fwo of the defendants.

When the evidence closed, the counsel for the defendants prayed the court to charge the jury, that if the plaintiff, as a Mexicanf citizen, had. continued to reside opt of Texas from a period before the declaration of Texan independence, the-action could not be sustained; whichwas refused, and a charge’given, that her right, remainéd as it was before the revolution, both according to general principles and by, force of the treaty of *19 Guadalupe Hidalgo; and that if she had a right of property, that gave her the right to sue here.

The counsel also prayed the court to charge, that if the jury should believe,.from the evidence, that the survey and grant under which the plaintiff claims title extends so as to include a large area out of the limits prescribed by law, as dated in the decree No. 190, of the laws of Coahuila and Texas, and that the error did not arise from mistake of quantity, but from intention to depart from the legal mode of survey, then the jury, might consider the grant void as to such area as might be out of the limits prescribed by law, and also that the grant itself would be void in such cases for want of legal survey. Which, prayer was refused.

The counsel also requested the court to charge, that if the jury should believe, from -the evidence, that the survey and grant under which the plaintiff claimed extended so as to include a large area-as aforesaid, ánd -that the grant and survey were so made by fraudulent procurement on the part of the grantee, by an agent in that behalf, then the jury might consider the grant as entirely void.

The court so instructed the jury; but with the addition, that unless the alcalde commissioner was informed, at the time he gave possession and issued the title, of the fact that the survey had been extended so as to include a large area, &c., the grant would not- be void; that the fraudulent procurement of the survey alone Would not vitiate the grant. ■

The counsel'also requested the court to charge, that the grant .under which the plaintiff claimed is one of the class that might be forfeited for non-performance of conditions. That ordinarily a law of the Legislature, and judicial action under it, would be necessary tt> avoid such a grant. Yet that claimant might act so as to supersede the necessity of such a judicial determination; and if conduct of plaintiff amounted to an admission of the forfeiture, she. could not afterwards set up the right, especially against a person who had, in the mean time, acquired. á grant from the State; and that it was a question for the jury to determine, whether the conduct of the plaintiff amounted to an admission of forfeiture.

The court gave the instruction, with the addition, that it was a question as to the actual intention of the plaintiff; and the jury should be satisfied, considering the infancy and all other circumstances, that such was in fact her intention, or they should find- for the plaintiff.

The jury- found a verdict for the plaintiff.

As th,e practice in the court below permits pleas of.whatever nature or description to be put in as a defence to the suit at *20 the same time, and without regard to the order of pleas, as known to the system of the common law, it will be necessary in the first place to examine the question raised on thé demurrer to the’ plea to the jurisdiction. It is insisted that the plaintiff is a citizen of the State of Texas, according to the facts as stated in the plea and admitted by the demurrer; and if sO, as she is not a citizen and resident of a different State, but a resident of Texas,i the suit , cannot be maintained within the 11th section of the judiciary act. "We think the objection not well founded.

: The plaintiff was born under .the dominion of the Mexican Republic, and has-liyed under it ever since her birth, and beyond all question, therefore, is a citizen of that Government, owing it allegiance, which has. never been interrupted or changed. There has been no act of hers, or of any one competent to‘ represent her, or to determine her election, indicating an intention to throw off this allegiance, and to attach herself to the -new sovereignty of Texas. Having been born and having always lived under the old Government, the burden rested upon the defendants; who claimed that she was a citizen of the new one, to establish, the fact of the change of her allegiance. (2 Cranch, 280; 4 ib., 209; 1 Dallas, 53; 20 Johns. R., 313; 3 Peters R., 99, 122, 123; 2 Kent C., 40, 41.) The facts set up in the plea prove the contrary. According to these, the plaintiff was nineteen years old when this suit was commenced, and -between twenty-two and twenty-three years when the .plea was put;in to the jurisdiction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 U.S. 8, 15 L. Ed. 805, 20 How. 8, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-mcmasters-ex-rel-ybarba-scotus-1858.