Luco v. United States

15 F. Cas. 1080
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedJune 15, 1858
StatusPublished

This text of 15 F. Cas. 1080 (Luco v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luco v. United States, 15 F. Cas. 1080 (N.D. Cal. 1858).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

The claim in this case is for a tract of laud of from thirty to fifty square leagues in extent, constituting a sobrante, or surplus, between various [1081]*1081ranchos mentioned in the title. It- was rejected by the board as spurious. The testimony is very voluminous. I have considered it with the attention due to its importance. The claimants have offered in evidence a paper purporting to be the original petition of José de la Rosa to the governor, dated October 18th, 1845, with a marginal decree of the latter, dated November 8th, 1845. Also the original grant, signed by Pió Pico, José Ma. Covarrubias, secretary, dated December 4th, 1845, with a certificate of approval by the assembly, signed by the same persons, and dated December 18th, 1845. These papers are not produced from the archives of the former government, but were deposited in the surveyor general’s office on the twenty-fifth of October, 1853, by the claimants. No claim was presented to the board within the time limited by the act of 1851. An application was therefore made to congress, and a special act was passed July 17th, 1854, authorizing the presentation of the claim. This application was based upon the affidavits of Pió Pico and José Maria Covarrubias, which will hereafter be noticed. It is contended, on the part of the United States, that all the papers in the case are spurious, and were fabricated long after the conquest of the country. In deciding upon the genuineness of any title alleged to have been derived from the former government, the most satisfactory evidence which can be offered to the court is that derived from the archives, and that afforded by a notorious occupation, and a claim of ownership recognized and acquiesced in, if not’ by the' public authorities, at least by the neighbors and adjoining proprietors of the alleged grantee.

In the case at .bar, the archives show no trace whatever of the existence of the grant The petition and marginal decree are presented by the claimants from their own custody. No proofs are offered to explain why the claim was not sooner presented to the board, nor where or in whose custody the documents have been since their alleged delivery to the grantee. The affidavits on which the application to congress was founded were made in May and June, 1853. It is clear that neither to Pico nor Covarrubias was the original petition presented. In his deposition, taken before the board, Covarrubias states that all the documents presented to him, when he made his affidavit, are, he believes, referred to in the affidavit; and that as well as he can recollect, all the documents about which he was then testifying were presented to him. He is not very positive, however. He remembers that the expediente was shown to him. Had the witness before testifying adverted to the affidavit itself, he would have seen that he therein swears that, “he (De la Rosa) presented a written petition for said grant of land, but the affiant does not know where said petition now is. The practice with the office was to return the petition with the grant.” It will hardly be contended that the petition was before' Covar-rubias when he made this affidavit. The affidavit of Pico refers exclusively to the “original document hereunto annexed, bearing' date December 4th, 1845” — which was the grant. Mr. Haight, who was consulted by the claimants as counsel, testifies that he saw, in 1853, the original document, that is, the grant; but is not positive as to the others, and that “the claimants represented to-him that there were other papers in Mexico, which they would endeavor to get.” It is-evident, therefore, that so late as the beginning of 1853 the petition had not been brought to light It is also obvious, from the tenor of the affidavits of Pico and Covar-rubias, that the certificate of approval by the-assembly was not exhibited to them when their affidavits were taken. The affidavit of Covarrubias refers exclusively to the grant Neither Mr. Haight nor Mr. Hawes pretend to have seen the certificate. It is produced1 for the first time in October, 1853, when It was deposited in the surveyor general’s office. No explanation whatever of these circumstances is offered by the claimants, nor has any attempt been made to show how it happened that the petition and certificate became-separated from the grant; how they, or at least the former, found its way to Mexico; in whose custody they were found, and when, and from whom and under what circumstances the person in possession of them procured them.

M. G. Vallejo, one of the principal witnesses relied on by the claimants, testifies that in the month of December, 1845, he received’ from the governor, by a courier, the' grant, which he delivered to Rosa. It was in an envelope which the latter opened, and the witness saw and read it. In reply to the sixth cross-interrogatory, he states that the grant was the only paper received by him, and that he did not see the others. He also states that he never saw the certificate of approval, until he saw it in the surveyor general’s office; that he saw the petition when Rosa drew it, but that he does not know that Rosa had the petition after he received the grant. To the twenty-second cross-interrogatory, he replies that he never saw the petition and approval attached together until he-saw them in the surveyor general’s office. José de la Rosa, the grantee, testifies that he-drew the petition in 1845, and that in the latter part of that year he received it back again with the title. That the title was delivered to him by M. G. Vallejo in December, 1845, and that the certificate of approval was delivered to him by Vallejo subsequently, in the year 1846 — in January or February of that year. The credibility of the testimony of either of these witnesses will be considered-hereafter. It is sufficient at present to say that neither pretends to account for the papers after their alleged reception by Rosa in 1845 and 1846. No inquiry was made of the latter as to whether he retained them in his [1082]*1082custody; why he did not while the property remained his — that is, up to March ISth, 1833 —present his claim to the board; whether at the time of the transfer he delivered the papers to the present claimants, or if not— whether as stated by them to their counsel, Mr. Haight, about the same time — they were then in Mexico, and if so in whose custody, and for what reason sent. In a ease where the chief inquiry is whether the papers be genuine, information on these points ought not to be withheld. We have seen that José Maria Covarrubias, in his affidavit in 1S33, states it to have been “the practice with the office to return the petition with the grant.” This extraordinary statement is not only disproved by the notorious fact that the expe-dientes containing the petition, informes, orders and concession, were usually retained in the archives where they are now found — the grant or titulo being the only document delivered to the party — but it is contradicted by the evidence of M. G. Vallejo, and by the testimony of Covarrubias himself. In his answer to the sixty-second cross-interrogator y he says: “The petitions and the balance of the expedientes were archived in the archives of the government. This was the general practice before, while, and after I was secretary.”

It is to be regretted that the sense of the necessity of accounting for the absence of the petition from the archives, which may have suggested the statement of Covarrubias in his affidavit, did not lead the claimants then or since to oífer a more satisfactory explanation of the circumstance.

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15 F. Cas. 1080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luco-v-united-states-cand-1858.