Palmer v. Low

98 U.S. 1, 25 L. Ed. 60, 8 Otto 1, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1357
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 11, 1878
Docket38
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 98 U.S. 1 (Palmer v. Low) 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
Palmer v. Low, 98 U.S. 1, 25 L. Ed. 60, 8 Otto 1, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1357 (1878).

Opinion

*11 Mr. Chief Justice Waite,

after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.

The questions presented for decision in this case may be. stated as follows: —

1. Was the entry in original “ Book A” of alcalde grants admissible as primary evidence to prove a grant to Donner ?

2. Did the record show a grant sufficient in form ?

3. Was the grant void because made to an infant?

4. Was the action barred by the Statute of Limitations ?

These questions will be considered in their order.

1. As to the admissibility of the evidence.

The point of the inquiry is whether the record of alcalde grants of the pueblo lands of San Francisco, kept by the alcalde in accordance with the requirements of Mexican laws before the incorporation of the city of San Francisco by the State of California, in the custody of the city and county recorder, and known as one of the books of the former alcalde’s office turned over to the county recorder’s office, pursuant to the statutes of California, can be used as primary evidence of the recorded grants, or only as secondary evidence, after sufficiently accounting for the absence of the original certificate of grant issued to the grantee.

The rank in the scale of evidence which the Mexican archives occupy has been oftentimes the subject of consideration in the courts of California. As early as 1859, in the case of Gregory v. McPherson (13 Cal. 562), the question arose in reference to the admissibility of an expediente filed in the archives of the Mexican government, to prove a grant under the colonization' laws, a copy of which grant, signed by the governor and -countersigned by the secretary of state, was annexed to and formed a part of the expediente. The expediente itself consisted of the petition, plat, reference, report, act of concession, approval, grant, &c. It was rejected in the court below on the ground that it was secondary evidence only, and the absence of the copy of the grant which had been issued and delivered to the grantee had not been satisfactorily accounted for; but the Supreme Court said (p. 572): “We are at a loss to know upon what grounds such a document can be denied the weight of original evidence. It was made, and signed, and authenticated *12 as a record by public officers in the discharge of public duties. The papers were retained in the custody of the appropriate public officer for the purposes of proof, and the highest and most authentic proof, of their own action. The documents receive the stamp, and the most satisfactory stamp, of official authenticity. The signatures are made on this as on the papers sent out by the department. We cannot see why such papers should be called copies, or why, in the scale of proofs, they should stand in any subordinate relation to the paper handed to the grantee. If not counterparts, or duplicates, it would seem that the original paper is the record retained by the department as part of its public records. ... We cannot presume that any governmental system of granting land could be so loose as that no records were preserved by the granting power. And it follows, we apprehend, as a universal rule, that wherever the acts of public officers are authenticated by their records, these records are evidence, in all courts of justice, of those acts. If by law, or usage having the force of law, a California grant was matter of record, then it would seem to follow that the record is proof of the grant, especially where, as in this case, the record is itself an exemplification of the grant, and contemporaneously signed by the same officers issuing the grant.”

Following this, in 1864, was the case of Downer v. Smith (24 Cal. 114), where the question arose upon the admissibility of an entry of a grant of land in the pueblo of San José made in the book of alcalde grants; and although it was held that a statute of the State applicable to the county in which the lands were located made the entry admissible, it was said (p. 122), “ We think the court was warranted in finding that the book was one of original entries, and therefore entitled to be admitted as evidence upon that ground.” In Rice v. Cunningham (29 id. 492), decided in 1866, it best suited the purposes of one of the parties to use the same “ Book A ” which is now under consideration, as secondary evidence to prove an alleged lost grant, and thus avoid the effect of an apparent cancellation of the grant which appeared upon the face of the record; but the court said (p. 497), “ The argument of counsel for the appellant, in support of their exception, is grounded upon a false assumption. They lower ‘ Book A ’ to the level of a chance copy-book, and *13 strip it of all its character and dignity as a public record of the transactions of a government official vested with the exercise of most important functions, and then seek to use it on a question not then before the court.”

But in Donner v. Palmer (31 id. 500), decided in 1867, the precise question we are now considering was presented in reference to the identical grant under which the defendants in error claim, and it was held, after full argument, and with due regard to both the written and unwritten law of Mexico, including the “ Plan of Pitic,” so often alluded to in the argument here, that the entry was to be received as primary evidence. In the opinion, after copying the seventeenth section of the “ Plan of Pitic,” the court proceeds as follows (p. 508): “ In view of this language, there can be no doubt as to the mode in which grants of town lots were to be made. The entire proceedings were to be first entered in the official book required to be kept for that purpose, signed and attested in due form by the proper officer. A copy or summary statement of the proceedings as contained in the official book, also duly signed and attested by the proper officer, was then to be givén to the grantee as evidence of his title; and in the event of its loss, the officer in whose official custody the book might be at the time was authorized and required to give him another ‘ like copy ’ of the original proceedings. The record so kept became an official and public record of the transactions of the alcaldes in the matter of granting town lots; and, as such, primary evidence of the acts they recited, under any system of law with which we are acquainted. Entries in such a book, if made in conformity with the regulations of the 14th of November, 1789, became, under the Mexican law, what is denominated an authentic instrument, that is to say, an instrument which proves itself, and, under the common law, an official record. Under both systems such entries have always been esteemed the highest and most satisfactory evidence of the facts which they recite, because they are made by the direction of the law, and are of public concern, and because they are made under the sanction of an oath, or, at least, of official duty, and made at or about the time the acts which they recite transpired. They are retained in the custody of the functionary or department by which they are required *14

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 U.S. 1, 25 L. Ed. 60, 8 Otto 1, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-low-scotus-1878.