Noe v. United States

18 F. Cas. 287
CourtDistrict Court, D. California
DecidedJune 15, 1856
StatusPublished

This text of 18 F. Cas. 287 (Noe v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noe v. United States, 18 F. Cas. 287 (californiad 1856).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

It appears by the title papers produced in this case, that on the tenth of May, 1841, Robert Elwell presented a petition to Governor Alvarado for a tract of land on the Sacramento river. The petitioner set forth that for sixteen years he had been a resident of the country, and had a numerous family. He also stated that the various political changes in the country had impaired his capital, part of which had been furnished to the different governors, as his excellency was aware. The petitioner further alludes to his services in the militia, for which he never received any pay, owing to the scarcity of funds in the national exchequer. He therefore begs that his excellency, not forgetting the duty of generously recompensing the services of faithful subordinates, and also “the necessity of giving an impulse to the progress of agriculture in the country,” and supported as he was by the colonization laws which so fully authorized him to make concessions of land, might grant him the tract solicited. On the margin of this petition the governor writes: “In consideration of the services and merits herein mentioned, I grant him (the petitioner) the land he requests, with the understanding that he shall abide by the reports that must be asked for as to whether the land has been granted for the benefit bf some private individual, pueblo or corporation, with all the rest that may be deemed convenient, so soon as he shall accompany the plan which will head the formation of the expediente.” This petition and marginal decree appear to have remained in the possession of the petitioner, nor were any further steps taken by him to obtain a more formal title. He states, however, in his deposition, that a plan was furnished to the governor such as was deemed sufficient, but the ex-pediente which it was to “head” is not produced from the archives. No efforts of any kind appear to have been made by the petitioner to settle upon or occupy his land, and the title papers seom to have remained in [288]*288his possession until 1852, when he sold to the present claimant. In, explanation of his failure to occupy the land, the grantee states that he was prevented from doing so at the time of the grant by the danger from the Indians, and afterwards by the disturbances in the country. José Castro, a native Californian of .some distinction, and who has held the offices of governor, prefect and commandant general of the territory, deposes that from 1841 until the change of government the whole region of country above Sut-ter’s Fort, or New Helvetia, was not in a situation to be settled upon by individual grantees, owing to the hostility of the Indians. The government rarely sent any troops to maintain settlements, and only for short times and few in number, during the period from 1841 to the change of government. Nathan Coombs, whose deposition was taken in this court, and who has resided in the country since 1843, testifies that from that year, when he first knew the land, the Indians in the neighborhood were hostile to the whites. That near the head of the island there was a ranchería, and the Indians were very numerous. That a company from Oregon, of which he was a member, had a fight with a large body of them, from five hundred to one thousand strong, and that during the same season Captain Sutter with a party of men also had an engagement with them. The above comprises all the evidence offered in excuse or explanation of the omission of the grantee to fulfill the conditions of his grant.

The first question that arises under this state of facts is, did the marginal decree of the governor convey to the petitioner “a present and immediate interest, either legal or equitable, in the land?” The form of the grant is entirely unusual. The marginal decrees of the governors were in ordinary cases but references for information, and the expedientes usually contain the petition, tlie diseño, the marginal order of reference, the reports of the officers, and the order or decree of concession by the governor — the latter generally commencing with the words “Vista la petición.” The documento or final title was then made out in conformity with the order of concession. In this were expressed the conditions of the grant, its extent, etc., and it was delivered to the party interested as his title deed. A copy, however, was usually attached to the other documents above enumerated, forming the expediente on file in the archives; but the copy was frequently not signed, it being thought sufficient if the title paper delivered to the party was properly authenticated. The title paper was usually signed by the governor and secretary. The expediente, when thus completed, was transmitted to the assembly for their action, and if the grant was approved, a certificate of the fact was given to the grantee. I have met with no case where these forms were not substantially complied with when grants under the colonization laws were made. In the case at bar, the only document relied on as a grant is the order or decree written on the margin of the petition. Undoubtedly the governor uses words of grant — “I grant him the land which he requests” — but the condition or qualification annexed, that the petitioner should abide by the reports, etc., clearly shows that the governor did not intend his marginal decree to operate as a definitive concession of the land. In the case of Arguello v. U. S. [(18 How. (59 U. S.) 539], decided at the last term of the supreme court, the court, in speaking of the order of concession in that case, (which was the decree already alluded to, beginning with the words — “Vista la peti-ción,” and which was certainly a more formal decree than the marginal order in the present case) say: “By the fourth section, the governor, being thus informed, may ‘accede or not’ to the petition. This was done in two ways; sometimes he expressed his consent by merely writing the word concedido at the bottom of the expediente; at other times with more formality. * * * It is intended merely to show that the governor has ac-céded to the request of the applicant, and as an order for the patent or definitive title to be drawn out for execution. * * ' * It has none of the characteristics of a definitive grant.” But the marginal decree in this case cannot even be regarded as an order for the definitive grant to be made out. For the governor clearly intimates that reports are to be received, the diseño to be furnished, and the expediente to be formed, before the final title issued. The marginal order must, I think, be taken merely as showing that the governor has acceded to the petitioner’s request, and agrees to grant him the land if the reports, etc., should be favorable. But it is to be observed that the information required by the governor was only as to whether the land was the property of any one else, and the absolute terms of the order itself, as well as the language of the qualification added to it, perhaps justify us in considering it as a positive promise to grant the land to the petitioner in consideration of his just claims upon the government, provided it should turn out that the land was vacant. The rtght thus acquired by the petitioner was an equitable claim upon the government to have his title perfected, and had he gone on to occupy and improve his land, and had he been found at the acquisition of the country in the possession and enjoyment of it, the United States would have been clearly bound to respect his rights. But so far as the evidence discloses, the petitioner never went upon the land during the existence of the former government. The causes of his omission to do so, as shown by the evidence, were the usual ones of Indian hostilities and political disturbances.

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Bluebook (online)
18 F. Cas. 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noe-v-united-states-californiad-1856.