Luco v. United States

64 U.S. 515, 16 L. Ed. 545, 23 How. 515, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 805
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 30, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 64 U.S. 515 (Luco 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
Luco v. United States, 64 U.S. 515, 16 L. Ed. 545, 23 How. 515, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 805 (1860).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GRIER

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants, Juan Manuel Luco and Jose Leandro Luco, filed their petition with the board of commissioners for ascertaining and settling land claims in California, on the 13th of September, 1854. This was after the time limited by the act of Congress of 1851. Rut, on their application, Congress passed a special act (July 17, 1854) authorizing the presentation of their claim.

They claim uuder a grant made to one Jose de ia Rosa, dated 4th of December, 1845, and purporting to be signed by Pio Pico, as acting Governor, and countersigned by Jose Maria Covarrubias, secretary. This document was deposited in the surveyor general’s office on the 25th of October, 1853, and had attached to it a paper, purporting to be a petition, by Jose de la Rosa7 to the Governor, setting forth that the Gov- ' ernment was indebted to him iu the sum of $4,650 for services as printer, and praying for the sobrante, or lands remaining between certain ranches of Yallejo and others. ,

The boundaries of the land prayed for are set forth very dis *533 fcinctly, but-without any limitation as to the quantity of land contained therein. On the margin of this petition is the usual order f$r title, purporting to be signed by Pio Pico on 8th of November, 1845.

There is also attached a paper, purporting to be a certificate of approval by the Departmental Assembly, certiiied by the signatures óf Pio Pico and Jose M. Covarrubias, and dated 18th of December, 1845.

This grant is for land within certain boundaries, and unrestricted as to quantity. Its confirmation was vigorously opposed by the counsel for the Government. They alleged that the documents produced to support the claim were forgeries, supported by perjuries of persons who had conspired to defraud the Government of an immense body of valuable land. Upon this issue the parties went to trial before the commissioners, who found in favor of the United States. The case went by appeal to the District Court, where much additional testimony wás taken, a thorough investigation made, and these documents were again adjudged to be forgeries.

•The appeal to this court compels us, however'unpleasant the task may be,_to pass upon this issue of fact, in which the character and conduct of others, besides the parties, will necessarily be made the subjects of discussion.

This claim first made its public -appearance in 1853, after ■ the lands had been surveyed by the United States. Government as vacant. Previous to such survey, the public officers had used every diligence to discover whether any person possessed any title or claim to these lands, but the inhabitants of the district, and the owners of adjoining lands, were all ignorant of any claim, by possession, grant, or otherwise.

• The lands within the boundaries of this alleged granbamount, to 270,000 acres, or thereabouts.

The person to whom the grant purports to be made was almost a pauper, and though not actually a servant, yet' a dependant of General Vallejo, residing in Sonoma, gaining a precárious livelihood by making and mending clothes and tin ware, acting as alcalde, printer, gardener, surveyor, music • teacher, and attending to a grocery and billiard table for Val *534 lejo; and during all this time, from the date till the public ■appearance of this title, wholly unaware of his wealth and immense possessions, and always representing himself a& a poor man, while he had in his possession a title to 270,000 acres of valuable land.

The archives of the Mexican Government furnish not the slightest trace of any such grant; although all the other grants made in the same year and month, and on the same day, are carefully recorded and registered, and the expedientes found on file. - ,

These facts might well justify the Government officers in . questioning the authenticity of this grant, whatever the character and standing of the parties might be, who pretend to establish it by their testimony.'

The claimants, in order to establish their title, examined Jose M. Covarrubias, who was secretary of the Governor, Pio-Pico, at "the time the grant purports to have been signedr He testifies that “ it is in his handwriting, and the attestation is - his -signature that he does not remember to have seen Pio Pico sign it; but that his signature appears to be genuine, and he believes he signed it.”

We shall have occasion to notice the testimony of this witness .more particularly hereafter. At present we only say, that there- is -no reason to doubt the truth of his statement, so far as he attests his own acts; but that be wrote and signed it on the day .it /bears date, needs confirmation; for, if it was. sowrittej/and signed by him on that day, he should be able to givq some reason why it does not appear on the register with the .'other grants .made on the same day. It is true, he attempts 'to.do'dhis by alleging that he registered it in some other book not found in the archives, but he cannot give a reason why all other grants were on the book found, and this one alone in somh .unknown .register. If it was so written' and signed by him on the 4th of December, 1845, it is incumbent on the claimants'to,. give some'account‘of it — to show why it was kept secret*till 1858> If in possession of the grantee, why it, was,.not produced and-laid before the commissioners; why the petition and .marginal order forming part of the expediente, if *535 there was one, is found in the possession of the grantee; and where and when the certificate of approval was' found and kept.

These and many other questions, which demand a solution, the claimants have not endeavored to answer.. But they endeavor to prove — 1st, that this grant was seen about the time-it bears date ; and 2d, that Rosa had a ranch on this tract, of land, with a stock of cattle and horses, and resided on it, for a time at least, with his wife and family,, up to 1849, claiming it as his own. •

The chief witnesses-to establish these facts, besides numerous others, called'to prove the possession, are Jose de .la Rosa; Mariano Gh Yallejo, and his brother,. Salvador Yallejo. More than twenty witnesses have been called to prove .that the character for veracity of these persons is so bad that they should not be believed on their oaths. As many testify to their good character,, and especially to that Mariano GL Yallejo. " ■

There is proof also of declarations of Rosa that Yallejo wás indebted to him or his false swearing for the property -he possesses : That the only right way of swearing was -by the priest, with the Catholic cross,” and that “he was not afraid ?f the laws from the way the Americans swore witnesses.”

Such testimony of admissions is of very little value, and is generally not worthy of regard-; and the testimony as to character is so equally balanced, that we do not feel at liberty to reject any portion of it for that reason. • There are many more satisfactory tests of the truth of .parol testimony than that of character of the witnesses. Where the facts sworn to are capable of contradiction/ they may be proved by others not to be true; and when they are not, the- internal evidence. is often more convincing than any other.

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Bluebook (online)
64 U.S. 515, 16 L. Ed. 545, 23 How. 515, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luco-v-united-states-scotus-1860.