Miller v. Dale

44 Cal. 562
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1872
DocketNo. 2,346
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 44 Cal. 562 (Miller v. Dale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Dale, 44 Cal. 562 (Cal. 1872).

Opinion

By the Court, Belcher, J.:

This is an action of ejectment for a tract of land in Santa Clara County. By their pleadings both the plaintiff's and the defendants claim to be owners of the land in fee. From the record it appears that on the 5th day of July, 1802, by petition of that date, addressed to the Viceroy of Mexico, Mariano Castro, who was then in Mexico, requested permission to settle on a tract of land in the jurisdiction of Monterey, in the Californias, known as La Brea. The Viceroy referred the petition to the Royal Tribunal of Accounts and the Fiscal of the Royal Treasury, who reported favorably, and on the seventeenth of August the Viceroy granted the permission. On his arrival in California Castro solicited possession of the tract from the Commandant at, Monterey, and then from the Governor, Arrillaga. The priests of the [571]*571Mission of San Juan Bautista opposed his settlement, and so far as appears he never acquired possession of the tract. At some time prior to the 30th of July, 1804, as appears by a letter from Castro, the Viceroy revoked his license for La Brea, and directed him to select another tract of land instead of it. On the 3d of July, 1808, he solicited from the Commandant of Monterey the tract of land known as El Carneadero, and since known as Las Animas. The priests of the mission opposed his settlement upon this tract also, claiming that it, as well as La Brea, was necessary for the support of the mission. Whether this petition was granted or not does not appear from the record. Castro died prior to 1829. On the 21st of June, 1833, his widow, Maria Josefa Homero, in a petition to the Governor, represented that her late husband had taken possession of the tract called Las Animas in 1806, but that she had not the title papers, and she therefore asked that a patent be issued to her to establish her right. On the 20th of June, 1835, Carlos Castro, as attorney for the widow, again petitioned the Governor on her behalf for a revalidation of the title to her, representing that the tract Las Animas had been granted by the Vieeroy to Mariano Castro in 1801, that he took possession in 1809, but that his ranch house had been burned up and he had lost all his title deeds. Upon the receipt of this petition the Governor ordered search to be made for the record of the concession. An examination of the records disclosed the existence of seventeen documents relating to the matter, among which were found the petition of Castro to the Viceroy, the reports of the officers to whom it was referred, the order of the Viceroy, and the reports of parties to whom the matter of possession was referred by the Governor, all of which documents are set out in full in the transcript. On the 7th of August, 1835, the Governor made an order of which the following is a copy:

[572]*572“ Monterey, August 7th, 1835.
“ In accordance with the petition of Carlos Castro, attorney for the widow Josefa Romero, as the representative of the will and estate of her departed husband, Mariano Castro, soliciting the revalidation of the titles of fee (títulos de propriedad) to the Rancho Las Animas, which they possess in public notoriety further back than twenty years, in view of the evidence which this expediente affords, by which is accredited the right of Mariano Castro to the tract of Las Animas, granted to him by the Vice Royal Government under the name of Sitios, called de la Brea, according to the patent of the 17th of August, 1802, let a testimonial be issued of this expediente for the protection of the parties. And whereas, the boundaries to which they must confine themselves (the parties in interest) are not expressly defined, those set forth in the plot presented by the attorney, Carlos Castro, shall in future be known as such, leaving uninjured the right of any third party who may consider himself aggrieved by this proceeding.”

On the 5th of April, 1852, one Sanchez, who had suc- ' eeeded to the rights of the widow Romero and her children, presented his petition to the Board of Land Commissioners for the confirmation to him of Las Animas. On the 14tli of February, 1854, the Board confirmed his claim, and on the 26th of January, 1859, the claim was finally confirmed by the District Court. A survey of the rancho was made in 1859, which did not include the land in controversy. This survey was returned into the District Court, and in December of that year objections to the survey were filed by the confirmee. In October, 1860, that Court issued its monition requiring all parties in interest to intervene for the protection of their rights, and on the 26th of January, 1864, made an order setting aside the survey and directing a new one to be made. Among the parties who intervened was [573]*573John II. Moore, the grantor of defendants, who intervened as a part owner of the Rancho San Ysidro, part of which was embraced in the survey of Las Animas. A new survey was made by the Surveyor General, which was ap¡u’oved by the District Court in June, 1865, and by the Circuit Court, on appeal, in September, 1866. Yo patent appears yet to have been issued for this claim.

On the part of the defendants, it appears that on the 27th of February, 1831, Macario Castro petitioned the then Governor of California for the privilege of occupying the tract of land called El Solis, and that the Governor on the same day granted his petition. Under this license he entered into the possession of the tract, and the possession was maintained by himself and family till the acquisition of the country by the United States. On the 2d of March, 1853, the widow and children of Macario Castro filed their petition for the confirmation of their claim to the Rancho El Solis, alleging continued occupancy for more than twenty years. On the 4th of December, 1855, the Board of Land Commissioners confirmed the claim, and on the 24th of March, 1857, in was finally confirmed by the District Court. On the 18tli of January, 1859, the United States issued its patent for the land to the claimants.

The land in controversy is embraced within the calls of the El Solis patent and of the La£ Animas approved survey.

The plaintiffs own the Las Animas title, and the defendants the El Solis title.

Upon these facts we do not think the plaintiffs can maintain their action.

1. It is' not claimed that there was a perfect title to the tract known as Las Animas under the Mexican Government, and if such a claim were made, it is manifest that it could not be maintained. Mariano Castro obtained from the Viceroy, in 1802, a license to occupy La Brea, but failing to obtain possession of that tract, he presented a petition to the [574]*574Commandant of Monterey for leave to occupy El Carneadero, afterwards called Las Animas. He entered into possession of the last named tract, but the record fails to show that he ever received any grant or license therefor. The order of the Governor of August 7th, 1835, purports only to be a revalidation of former titles, and not a new grant. The titles revalidated which are set out as part of that expediente show only the license to occupy La Brea, and the petition for license to occupy El Carneadero and the fact of actual occupancy of the last named tract. It is doubtful, therefore, if that order had any other or greater effect than to give to the widow and children of Mariano Castro the license which he sought from the Commandant, but, so far as appears, failed to obtain. But if that order is to be treated as a grant of the land, still it had none of the characteristics of a perfect grant.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Cal. 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-dale-cal-1872.