Mott v. Villa De Reyes

45 Cal. 379
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1873
DocketNo. 2,131
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 45 Cal. 379 (Mott v. Villa De Reyes) 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
Mott v. Villa De Reyes, 45 Cal. 379 (Cal. 1873).

Opinions

By the Court, Crockett, J.:

The action is ejectment for a tract of land situate in the County of Los Angeles, and which is described in the complaint as the tract known as the “Bancho Santa Monica,” or “Boca de Santa Monica,” containing two square leagues, more or less. The plaintiffs claim under a Mexican grant to Francisco Sepulveda, which has been confirmed by a final decree of the United States District Court; whilst the defendants claim under a similar grant to Marquez and Beyes, which has also been confirmed by a final decree of the . same Court. But there has been no final approved survey in either case, and, consequently, no patent has issued in either.

The plaintiffs claim that the title of Sepulveda had its inception in a provisional grant, or concession, made to him in the year 1828 by Governor Echeandia, followed in the same year by an act of juridical measurement, by the Alcalde of Los Angeles, by which Sepulveda was let into possession, and his boundaries established, and which, it is claimed, included the premises in controversy.

On the other hand, the defendants claim that the title of Marquez and Beyes originated in a provisional concession, made in the year 1827, by the Ayuntamiento of the Pueblo of Los Angeles, to Alvarado and Machado, who immediately entered into possession; that Machado soon after abandoned the possession, and surrendered his right in the land to Alvarado, who continued in possession until his death, whereupon his sons succeeded to the possession and right of their father, and continued in possession until the year 1838, when they removed from the premises, and, with the consent of the Ayuntamiento, transferred their rights and surrendered their possession to Marquez and Beyes, who have ever since continued in possession; that in the year 1838 Malquez and Beyes petitioned the Governor for a [383]*383grant of the land, and that in July, 1839, after due proceedings had, the acting Governor, Jimeno, made a grant to them in due form, and in full property, in accordance with the colonization laws; that in August, 1839, the juridical possession was duly delivered to them by the proper officer, in accordance with the grant.

It is this title which has been finally confirmed by the United States District Court to Marquez and Reyes, or their successors in interest. It appears from the record, that soon after the grant was made to Marquez and Reyes, Sepulveda remonstrated against it, and took steps to vacate it, if practicable. On August 13th, 1839, he applied to the Alcalde of the proper district, requesting a copy of the original act of juridical measurement, by which he was placed in possession, in 1828, and if the document could not be found, that he take the deposition of Carillo, the former Alcalde, who had placed him in possession. In reply to this request, the Alcalde stated that the document could not be found in his office, and thereupon proceeded to take the testimony of Carillo, in writing, who testified in substance, that in the' year 1828, in accordance with a provisional concession by the Governor, he had placed Sepulveda in possession of the land. This testimony appears to have been taken ex parte, and without notice .to Marquez and Reyes. On presenting this testimony to Jimeno, the acting Governor, the latter, on October 31st, 1839, made upon it a marginal order, in the following words: “ Ordered, that this expediente be transmitted to the Prefect of the Second District, who will see that Francisco Sepulveda is not molested in the occupation which, since the year 1828, he has of the land known by the name of San Vicente and Santa Monica, and shall compel the said Sepulveda to transmit the exact map of the land in question." On the eighteenth of December of the same year Sepulveda presented the same document to Alvarado, tvho in the meantime had become Governor, and who there[384]*384upon indorsed upon it the following marginal order: “Let notice be given to the Prefect, to the effect that in obedience to the last disposition of this ’Government, in regard to the place called Santa Monica, this may be restored to Francisco Sepulveda, because he has sufficiently justified the right of occupation under which he has been in possession. The Prefect shall also give notice of this resolution to the individuals Marquez and Reyes, in whose favor a title of concession of said Santa Monica was issued by this Government. That the Government, in making said concession, was taken advantage of by captious information, given by the Ayuntamiento of the City of Los Angeles; that the Ayuntamiento ought to have been well informed in regard to this affair, and should not have withheld from the Government the proper information. Also, a title of concession shall be issued to the party interested, Francisco Sepulveda, reserving this expediente to be examined in due course of law, in case that the land therein granted should result not to belong to the common lands appertaining to said city, when "the fundo legal of the same shall be determined.” This order or decree was signed only with a rubric, and there was no direct evidence that it was the rubric of Alvarado; but enough appears in the record, and from the stipulation of the parties, to remove all reasonable doubt on this point. Two days later, to wit: on the twentieth December, Governor Alvarado indorsed on the expediente of Marquez and Reyes an order or decree, as follows: “Let the present expediente be added to the other one, presented by Francisco Sepulveda, by which he justifies that he has in his favor the right of occupation in the hereinbefore mentioned land, and for said reason it has been disposed that the parties interested shall dispossess themselves of the foregoing grant.” The plaintiffs contend that these several orders or decrees had the effect to vacate and annul the grant by Jimeno to Marquez and Reyes, and operated as a concession

1 [385]*385of the land to Sepulveda. On the other hand, the defendants claim that the Governor had no power to annul the grant, and particularly by an ex parte proceeding, and without notice to Marquez and Eeyes, who had no opportunity to be heard in defense of their rights. The general rule is, that when the acts of the officers of a foreign Government are brought in question in our Courts, the acts performed by them will be presumed to have been within the scope of their lawful authority, unless the contrary appears. But in 1839 the authority of the Governor of California to grant lands was derived wholly from the colonization law of 1824, and the regulations of 1828; and there is nothing in either the law or the regulations to justify the inference that the Governor had the authority, at his mere arbitrary discretion, and without notice, or hearing the parties in interest, to divest a person of his estate in lands, previously granted to him in due form of law, We have been referred to no law or regulations of the Mexican Government which conferred upon the Governor an arbitrary power of this character, so repugnant to the principles of justice and to the usages of civilized nations.

It is unnecessary for the purposes of this decision to inquire whether or not the Governor might have annulled and set aside a grant improvidently issued or fraudulently obtained, after hearing the proofs and allegations of the parties in interest. That question ¿loes not arise in this case, as there is nothing in the record to show that Marquez and Eeyes had an opportunity to be heard before the decree was entered annulling their grant; and in the absence of such a showing, I think it clear that the Governor, by a purely ex parte proceeding, had no power to annul it.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Cal. 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mott-v-villa-de-reyes-cal-1873.