Mayor of Mobile v. Eslava

41 U.S. 234, 10 L. Ed. 948, 16 Pet. 234, 1842 U.S. LEXIS 366
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 15, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 41 U.S. 234 (Mayor of Mobile v. Eslava) 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
Mayor of Mobile v. Eslava, 41 U.S. 234, 10 L. Ed. 948, 16 Pet. 234, 1842 U.S. LEXIS 366 (1842).

Opinion

Mr. Justice M'Lean

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This -case comes beforé this Court on a writ of error to the Supreme Court of Alabama.

The plaintiffs brought an action to recover certain lots in the city of Mobile, bounded east by Commerce street, south by Church street, on the west by Water street, and extending on the east side of Commerce street to the channel of the river. They claim title under the act of Congress of the 26th.May, 1824; and the Circuit Court of the state, in which the action was first brought, decided against .their title. That decision wa^s removed to the Supreme Court of the state by writ of error, where the. judgment of the Circuit Court was affirmed. Under the twenty-fifth section of the judiciary act' of 1789, the case is brought before this Court.

The first section of the above act declares, That all the right and claim of the United States to the lots known "as the Hospital and Bakehouse lots, containing about three-fourths of an acre of *243 land b the state of Alabama; and also,.all the right and claim of the United States to all the lots not sold of confirmed to individuals, .either by this or. any former act, and to which no equitable title .exists, in favour of any individual under this or any other act,, between high-water mark and the channel of the river, and between Church street and' North Boundary street, in front of the said city, be, and the same are hereby vested in the mayor and aldermen-of the said city of Mobile, for the'time being, and their successors in office, for the solé use and benefit of the ■ said city forever.”

TW defendant’s title was aéquired by purchase from 'the United States* at a- public sale, in 1820. This sale was-made under the act of Congress of the 20th April, 1818, which gave power to the President to sell the ground on which Fort Charlotte, at Mobile, stood. The ground was required to be laid off into lots, with suitable streets and avenues, conforming; as neat as practicable, to the plan of the city.- Ten sqqarés and parts of squares were surveyed "and divided into lots, streets, &c. By the original plan of the city, a street-known as Water-street, was run on the. margin of the Mobile river, and this street,-by ; the said- survey, was extended over-a part of.-the site of Fort Charlotte- along the margin of the river'.- No lots were sold-'east of this street. Lots 1, 11, 12, and 13, in square 1, lie immediately . west of Water street, and are bounded by it. The iotsin dispute lie 'east of Water street, and directly opposite- the lots above numbered.

In 1822,-Water street and the property now in dispute, were between high and low water mark. . -The corporation of the city, in .1823, expended four hundred dollars infilling up Water street; and by the- improvement confined the water at high tide to the eastern side of Water street.

It was proved on the t-ial, that in .order to reclaim one of the lots in square 2, east of Water street, the owner , had to fill up seven feet; and that he could not pass along Water street at that time except with the aid of logs and other timbers. Another witness stated that he - purchased the lot west of the lots in dispute, and that he had to fill up his lot before it could be occupied. And.other evidence was given by defendant conducing' to prove that the eastern line of the lots, at the date of the sale, was *244 below high-water mark-; and that the company who purchased the lots, at the sale of. the government, expended about three thousand, dollars for the common benefit of their property, and to keep the water from' it; It was also proved that after the purchase of one of the lots in controversy,. by Addin Lewis; under whom the defendant- claims, he caused dirt to be hauled upon.it, and timbers were laid to* force out the water and fit the lot for a timber yard. Charles Matthews; who owñed one of the lots, bounded by the water, expended-one thousand dollars- in filling up hfs lot.- •

And to show improvements on the lots in dispute before-1824, the defendant read'from the book of the corporation, the, following entry, dated, in 1823: “Charles S. Matthews having improved his lot -by filling it up, and a stagnant pond being occasioned thereby at the end of Church street, &c.” In 1824,- about one-half, of the space between Water - street' and Commerce street,was" subject to be covered by water at the ordinary tides: Water street- was- not opened as low as Church street until .1824. It appeared that' the defendant and those under whom he claims, had paid taxes on the property to the corporation. That in 1824 or 1-825, the defendant was required to pay for side walks around his lots, upon the assessment of the corporation; and in 1833, he was required by the mayor of the city.; to fill up two places upon one of the lots with earth or shells. About this time, the. lot was advertised-for sale, as the -property of-Matthews, the defendant’s tenant, for taxes due the corporation; which were afterwards paid, with the costs of advertising, &c. -

. Upon these facts, the. Circuit' Judge charged the-jury, “ That,, if ,the lots-specified'in the patents 10, 11, 12, &c;, were proved to Rave-been bounded by high-water'mark at the time purchased, .theh- they-came within the terms of ‘ lOtsknown under .the. Spanish government as water lots,’ as'used in-the act of Congress; and if proved that the lots claimed were east > of 'Wafer street, and ip front of the .lo.ts covered by the patents,, and, that they had been, improved before the passage of the act of 1824, they were vested in the proprietors and occupants-of the lots held under the patents; and .this, although Water street did intervene between the lots ■claimed and. those held under-the patents,” And the Court further charged’the jury, that “if the proof showed the property > *245 tó have been, assessed in 1823, by the city authorities, at four thousand dollars, and recently at eighty-eight thousand dollars, and that the improved value resulted from the labour of Charles Matthews; that if in August, 1823, the mayor and alderpien, in reference to one of the lots in dispute, had on their minutes used this language, viz.: Whereas Charles Matthews has commenced to improve his lot by filling up, &c., and that a committee was organized to inquire into a nuisance connected with the lot;’ that in 1824 or 1825 of the years between that and the commencement of the suit, the city taxes had been assessed on the property and collected from Matthews; and that he had been required by an ordinance of the mayor and aldermen to make side walks along this lot, and had so done; that Matthews had by a Avritten notice issued by the mayor, been required to fill up some low places on said lot, to abate a nuisance thereon, -and that this property was advertised for sale as the property of Matthews, in one of the city papers, for the non-payment of city taxes assessed thereon; and that subsequently Matthews had paid such taxes into the city treasury: that the f-cts estopped the plaintiff from asserting any pre-existing title under the act of Congress.”

The plaintiffs’ counsel requested the judge to charge the jury, “ that if they believed the facts were proved as contended for by them, that the plaintiffs were entitled to a verdict 11 their favour; which.the judge refused to do.”

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Bluebook (online)
41 U.S. 234, 10 L. Ed. 948, 16 Pet. 234, 1842 U.S. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-mobile-v-eslava-scotus-1842.