Sampeyreac and Stewart v. United States

32 U.S. 222, 8 L. Ed. 665, 7 Pet. 222, 1833 U.S. LEXIS 345
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 32 U.S. 222 (Sampeyreac and Stewart 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
Sampeyreac and Stewart v. United States, 32 U.S. 222, 8 L. Ed. 665, 7 Pet. 222, 1833 U.S. LEXIS 345 (1833).

Opinion

Mr Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the Court,

This case comes up on appeal from the superior court in the territory of Arkansas.

The decree of the court was founded upon proceedings instituted under an act of congress, entitled an act for further extending the powers of the judges of the superior court of the territory of Arkansas, under the act of the 26th May 1824, and for other purposes,” passed the Sfh of May 1830. Pamph. La ws, ch. 90.

This act declares that the act of 1824. (7 Laws U. S. 300) *235 «hall be continued in force, so far as the said act relates to the claims within the territory of Arkansas, until the 1st day of July 1831, for the purpose df enabling the court in Arkansas, having cognizance of claims under the said act, to proceed by bills of review, filed, or to be filed, in the said court on the part of the United States, for the purpose of revising all or any of the decrees of the said court, in cases wherein it shall appear to the said court, or be alleged in such bills of review, that the jurisdiction of the same was assumed in any case on any forged warrant, concession, grar , order'of survey, or other evidence of title. And in every case wherein it shall appear to the said court, on the prosecution of any such bill of review, that such warrant, concession, grant, order of survey, or other evidence of title is a forgery, it shall be lawful, and the said court is hereby authorized to proceed, by further order and decree, to reverse and annul any prior decree or adjudication upon such claim; and, thereupon, such prior decree or adjudication shall be deemed and held in all places whatever, to be null and void to all intents and purposes.

Upon the proceedings on the bill of review instituted under this act, the court pronounced the following decree: “ it is therefore adjudged, ordered and decreed that the former decree of this court, in favour of the defendant'Bernardo Sampeyreac against the United Spates, for four hundred acres of land, pronounced and recorded at the December term of'this court in the year 1S27, be, and the same .is hereby reversed, annulled and held for naught.” From this decree the present appeal was taken.

To aright understanding of the questions which have been made at the bar, it will be necessary briefly to state the proceedings which took place under die original bill.

That bill or petition was filed on the 21st of November 1827j under the provisions of the act of the 2Gth of May 1S24 (7 Laws U. S. 300), setting forth that the complainant Bernardo Sampeyreac, on the Gth of October 1789, he then being an inhabitant of Louisiana, presented a petition to the then governor of the province, asking a grant for a tract of land in full property, containing ten aipens in from, by the usual depth, on *236 Strawberry river, &c. That afterwards, on the 11 th of October 1789, the governor granted the petition. That at the time the grant was so made, an order of survey was issued to the surveyor general of the province. That by virtue, of such grant and order of survey, the petitioner acquired a claim to the land; which claim is secured to hiin by the treaty between the United States and the French republic, of the 30th of April 1803.

The district attorney put in an answer, denying the several facts and allegations in the bill ; and alleging that grants could only be made, legally, to persons in existence and actually residing in Louisiana. That Sampeyreac, in whose name the bill is filed, is a fictitious person, never havjng had any actual existence; or if such person ever had any existence he was a foreigner; or is now dead, and made no transfer or assignment of the claim in his lifetime. That he has no legal representative in existence; nor is there any one now living who is authorized to file this bill, or prosecute this suit: and prayed that the bill might be dismissed.

. A witness by the name of John Heberard was examined, and sWorn to all the material facts necessary to establish the claim; and the court, thereupon, ordered, adjudged and decreed that the said Bernardo Sampeyreac, recover of the United States the said four hundred arpens of land.

The bill of review is founded upon the allegation that the original decree was obtained by fraud and surprise. That the original petition and order of survey, exhibited in the case, are forged. That Heberard and the other witnesses in the cause, committed the crime of perjury. That the order of survey was never signed by Mero, governor of Louisiana, as the same purports to have been; and that this fact has come to the knowledge of the district attorney since the decree was entered. And the bill further charges that the said Sampeyreac is a fictitious person.

At the October term 1880, this bill was taken, pro confesso, against Sampeyreac: at which term the appellant, Joseph Stewart, appeared in court, and prayed to be made a defendant, and have leave to file an answer to the bill. This was resisted *237 by the district attorney; but an order was made by the court permitting Stewart to be made a defendant, 'with leave to file an answer. To which the district attorney excepted.

The answer of Stewart denies the frauds and forgeries alleged in the bill, but avers that if there was any fraud, corruption or forgery, he is ignorant of it; and that he was a bona fide purchaser of the claim for a valuable consideration from one John J. Bowie, who conveyed to him the claim of the said Bernardo Sampeyreac, by deed bearing date about the 22d of October 1828. Upon the final hearing the court reversed the original decree, as has been already stated.

The objections which have been taken at the bar to this decree, may be considered under the following points:

1. Whether; under the act of 1824, the court had authority to entertain the bill of review; and, if not, then,

2. Whether the act of 1830 is a constitutional law, and confers such authority.

3. Whether the proceedings on this bill of review can be sustained under the act of 1830.

4. Whether, admitting Stewart to be a bona fide purchaser of the claim of Sampeyreac, he is protected against the title set up by the United States.

1. We think it unnecessary to go into an examination of the questions which have been made under the first point. Although the act of 1824 directs that every petition which shall be presented under its provisions, shall be conducted according to the rules of a court of equity, it may admit of doubt whether all the powers of a court of chancery in relation to bills of review, are vested in that court. And as the view taken by this court upon the other points renders a decision upon this unnecessary, we pass it over without expressing any opinion upon it.

2. The ground upon which it has been argued that the act of 1830 is unconstitutional, is, that a right had become vested in Stewart before the apt was passed; and that the effect and operation of the law is to deprive ¡him of a vested right. To determine the force and application of this objection, it becomes necessary to look at the claim, as it now appears, before the court. It is found by the decree Of the court below, and is *238

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Bluebook (online)
32 U.S. 222, 8 L. Ed. 665, 7 Pet. 222, 1833 U.S. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sampeyreac-and-stewart-v-united-states-scotus-1833.