O'Hara v. United States

40 U.S. 275, 10 L. Ed. 737, 15 Pet. 275, 1841 U.S. LEXIS 269
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 23, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 40 U.S. 275 (O'Hara v. United States) 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
O'Hara v. United States, 40 U.S. 275, 10 L. Ed. 737, 15 Pet. 275, 1841 U.S. LEXIS 269 (1841).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wayne

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appeal from the Superior Court of East Florida.

The appellants are the heirs of Daniel O’Hara, and they claim the lánd in controversy, in virtue of an alleged grant, dated the 5th of September, 1803.

The grant was adjudged in the Court below, not valid.

The memorial for the grant; order of Governor White, to the commandant of engineers, to report upon it; the report of that oSicer; and the decree of the Governor; are as follow:

His Excellency the Governor:

...Don Daniel O’Hara, lately admitted, an inhabitant of this province, under the protection of his Catholic Majesty, with due respect, represents. to your excellency, that intending to settle in this province with a considerable property and his large family, after having ascertained that all, or the greatest-number of all those who had petitioned for lands, have solicited to have, them located in the southern district, in the vicinity of Musquito river, and. after haying consulted many neighbours in reference to vacant lands, as has no wish to enter into disagreeable litigation with.other petitioners, or to injure them in any way, he begs of your excellency, be pleased'to grant him fifteen thousand acres of land out of those lands which are vacant between the' rivers ■St. John and St. Marys, in the place called Nassau, and in case the .said vacant lands do not comprehend the number of acres he solicits, he begs your excellency to have the goodness, when the survey will take place, to grant him the deficiency on the river St. Marys, and he obligates himself .to take possession of the said lands within the term of six months; which favour, he doubts not, he will receive from the noble munificence of your excellency'

Daniel O’Hara.

Si. Augustine of Florida, third of September, one thousand •eight hundred and three.

*280 DECREE.

St. Jlugustine, 3d September, 1803. Let the commandant engineer inform on the subject. . White.

Having taken cognisance of the petition, and in obedience to ■the preceding decree, I represent to your excellency, that the culture of the lands solicited by the petitioner'does not interfere with the defence of the province, therefore, as far as the department of fortifications is concerned, your excellency- may grant to him the number of acres you see fit. This is all I have to represent to your excellency, who will determine according to your pleasure. Nicolas Barcelo.

St. Jlugustine of Florida, 5th September, 1803.

DECREE.

St. Jlugustine, of Florida, 5th September, one thousand eight hundred and three.

The lands solicited by the petitioner are hereby, granted to him in the place indicated, without prejudice to a third party, and until the time whey, in conformity to the number-¿f workers whom he may have to cultivate. them, the corresponding number of acres may be surveyed to him; it being well understood that he shall not claim indemnity for damages or losses in the case; that under the apprehension of an invasion, or other motives relating to the royal service, he be ordered to retire in the interior of the province; and that he will take posséssion of the said land within the term of six months from this date. White.

It will be perceived that the memorialist asks for fifteen thousand acres, as it-is his intention, with his vast property and numerous family, to settlé in the province. He asks'for it at the place called Nassau, and if it cannot be found vacant there, when, the survey is made, tha.t the. deficiency may be granted on the river St. Marys; and he obliges himself to take possession within six months. The decree of the Governor is, the lands “ solicited by the petitioner, are hereby granted to him in the place indicated “ in conformity to the number of workers which he may have to cultivate them, the corresponding number of acres may ' be surveyed to him;” “ and that he will take possession of said land within the .term of six months from this date.”

*281 It is á decree,'then, not gránting fifteen thousand acres as asked for, but so much in the place where it is asked for, as-shall be surveyed, in conformity to the number of workers he may have to cultivate the land; and as to what that quantity should be,there is no úncertainty, for we have the regulation of ^Governor 'White, promulgated by him, the month after the dáte of the’ decree; which states, to each head, of a family of a new settler, there shall be granted fifty acres of land, and an equal quantity to a single person, widow or widower, and to. the children or slaves of sixteen years of age,, twenty-five acres each. This regulation, then, determines, in that respect, what the Governor intended to grant; and the conclusion that thé grant was to be in conformity with the regulation, cannot • be ■ shaken by the suggestion that the decree-was made before the date of the regulation, as it might be, if the grarit had been for fifteen thousand acres in terms. There is no grant for any quantity; when it is found that the decree is restrained to' a right to be determined by the number of workers which the memorialist shall have, that the Governor had ’the" -power to. make a grant with siich a restriction, and that so shortly after the decree-was made, as the folio wingmonth, he promulgated a general rulé for grants to-hew settlers; the inference is good, until it is contradicted by some other fact, or other regulation applying to new settlers, that the memorialist was to take under the decree in his favour, as contemporary new settlers would have to take. The mernorialist never made a settlement. The witness, Marien, says, he did attempt-8 settlement; that, a house was 'bui}t; an'd that O’Hara informed him hé had employed a carpenter to build it; but the memorialist never took his family, nor negroes to the land. The construction of á house was no compliance with the condition of tire grant. That act itself,- could not, under the regulation, give á right to any number of acres. The right vested -upon thé persons, black and white, who might be carried to make a settlement. The house is good evidence of an intention to settle with persons; hijt if the evidence discloses the fact, that no persons or workers were ever taken to it; that cultivation was not begun, the inference is made the stronger, that the rights of the memorialist under the decree were abandoned.

•The record discloses an attempt by the memorialist, immediately *282 after the decree of the Governor, to get negroes from Tamaica for a settlement; and that the vessel in which they were embarked, was taken into Savannah and libelled in admiralty: but the proceedings in admiralty dó not show that the memorialist .was deprived j ultimately, of the negroes; and if he was not, and the negroes were restored, ño cause is shown why they were not taken to Florida. But if they were not restored, it will scarcely be contended that an unfortunate attempt to carry negroes to take possession of the land, fulfils the intention of a grant, the quantity of which is to depend upon the number .of workers actually employed in cultivation. But there was not only a failure to settle in this case, there was an actuar abandonment.

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Bluebook (online)
40 U.S. 275, 10 L. Ed. 737, 15 Pet. 275, 1841 U.S. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohara-v-united-states-scotus-1841.