Nunez v. United States

18 F. Cas. 487
CourtDistrict Court, D. California
DecidedDecember 15, 1856
StatusPublished

This text of 18 F. Cas. 487 (Nunez 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
Nunez v. United States, 18 F. Cas. 487 (californiad 1856).

Opinion

OFINION OF THE COURT. The claim in this case was rejected by the board. The grant was issued on the twenty-second of February, 1844; but no approval of the departmental assembly was obtained, nor was juridical possession given. The authenticity of the grant seems sufficiently established. The original document is produced, and the expediente is found in the archives of the former government. The confirmation of the claim is, however, opposed by the United States on the ground that the claimant, from the date of his grant until long after the acquisition of the country, neglected to comply with any of the conditions. The grant was issued, as has been stated, in 1844. It clearly appears that from that time until about the year 1850, two years after the acquisition of the country, the claimant neither occupied, cultivated* or took possession of the land conceded. No effort whatsoever on his part to perform the conditions appears to have been made, and the only explanation of the delay to be found in the evidence submitted to the board, is contained in a single sentence of the deposition of Francisco Perez Pacheco, to the effect that there was no security in putting cattle on the rancho for several years after the grant

The testimony of Jacinto Rodriguez and Benito Diaz has been taken in this court, and is chiefly relied on as affording the necessary explanation of the omission of the claimant to fulfill the conditions. But then-evidence is not very satisfactory. The first of these witnesses states that he cannot tell certainly when the first settlement was made, but the land was taken possession of as soon as it was safe to do so on account of the savage state of the wild Indians. In reply to an inquiry as to his means of knowing these facts, he states that he used to go there to catch wild horses, and also as a soldier to pursue the Indians. Benito Diaz testifies in nearly the same terms, that he does not know exactly when the first settlement was made, but that he knows possession was taken as soon as the wild state of the savage Indians permitted, and that the hostility of the Indians prevented possession from being taken. He adds that he knows these facts, because he was mining in the neighborhood, and frequently passed there; that he is forty-one years of age, and has lived in that neighborhood many years. If by mining the witness means gold mining, then his knowledge of the country derived from that occupation could not have been extended further back than 1848 or 1S40. But if he means some other kind of mining carried on before the conquest of the country, it is not explained why .the claimant could not have cultivated his rancho w-ith as much- security as the witness carried on his own business of mining. If he has, as he states, resided many years in the vicinity, that fact would seem to show that the claimant might have done the like.

But another witness was produced before the board whose testimony, however, is nor alluded to in their opinion; probably for the reason that it was considered unworthy of credit, l^ncisco Perez Pacheco testifies that the laÜid has been occupied by the present claimant “for about two years.” The deposition bears date May 4th, 1852. He also says that a house and corral have been on the land between two and three years. This witness is a colindante, and one to whom the governor referred for information, and on whose report the grant was made. His means of knowledge must therefore have been as good as those of any other person. José Abrego, however, ignorant apparently of the previous testimony of Pacheco, and with a zeal somewhat outstripping, his discretion, does not hesitate to swear (March 3d, 1853) that “during the last eight years the land has been in the possession and occupation of the claimant; ' that he has used it principally for grazing purposes; constructed and occupied several small houses by himself and those in his employment; has constructed several large corrals for the herding of cattle, and has cultivated portions of the land during all that time.” This witness does not seem to have been aware that the theory of the case on the part of the claimant was, not that he had shortly after his grant occupied, cultivated and stocked his rancho, and fully performed all the conditions, but that he had been prevented from doing so by Indian hostilities. Nor does he appear to have considered that the court would be slow to believe that such extensive improvements could have been made, and the rancho stocked with cattle, rendering necessary the construction of “several large corrals,” and the fact remain entirely unknown to the nearest neighbor of so enterprising a ranchero. The testimony of this witness suggests a painful doubt as to the reliability of much of the evidence taken in this class of cases, and perhaps justifies a regret that we are not authorized to exact in every instance evidence of occupation and cultivation under the former government as the best, if not the only check upon forgeries and frauds, in cases where the archives contain no evidence of the grant. Rejecting then the testimony of this witness as wholly unworthy of credit, the question recurs — has the claim been forfeited by neglect to perform the conditions?

Under the view formerly taken by this court, the grant of the governor, issued before the approbation of the assembly was-obtained, was regarded as inchoate or imperfect, and as conveying of itself no title-[489]*489to tlie land. It was considered, however, that while the grantee had, on the faith of this imperfect title, fuliilled the conditions, and thus rendered to the government the only consideration for the grant exacted by their laws or policies, he had, on showing that fact or a performance cy-prés, or perhaps even an effort to perform, which had been frustrated by unforeseen obstacles, an equitable right, to a confirmation. It was not supposed by this court that if by the grant an estate vested in the grantee, that that estate could be divested unless by a proceeding by way of denouncement under the former government. It was considered, as observed by the supreme court in U. S. v. Fremont [18 How. (39 U. S.) 30], “that the grant subjects the lands to be denounced by another, but that the conditions do not declare the land forfeited to the state on the failure of the grantee to perform them.” When, therefore, no denouncement had taken place, it was not deemed competent for this court to inquire into and declare forfeitures which might have accrued under the Mexican government.

It was also considered by this court that, inasmuch as the assembly and supreme government had the right, at their discretion, to annul the grant, our government had succeeded to that right; and was at liberty to exercise it unless under circumstances which would have made it inequitable in the former government to have done so. If then, so radical a change as that which has since occurred had taken place in the value of the land, the condition of the country, and the policy and even duty of the government, the Mexican authorities would clearly have been justified in withholding their approval, unless by the settlement and occupation of tlie land, on the faith of the grant, they had already received the consideration for it.. The equitable obligations which were binding on them, are binding on us, but none others, and the substantial equity of the claimant was supposed to consist in the fact that he had received an imperfect or inchoate title, and had performed the conditions during the existence of the former government.

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Bluebook (online)
18 F. Cas. 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nunez-v-united-states-californiad-1856.