Semple v. Hagar

27 Cal. 163
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 27 Cal. 163 (Semple v. Hagar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Semple v. Hagar, 27 Cal. 163 (Cal. 1865).

Opinion

By the Court, Rhodes, J.

The appellant denominates this action “a bill in equity, brought to repeal and vacate a patent issued by the United States, to Thomas 0. Larkin and John S. Missroon for the Jimeno grant,” or, as he states in another portion of his brief, and which amounts to the same thing in substance, a bill “to quiet the title to the Colus grant by vacating the Jimeno grant.”

He states in his complaint that the Colus grant was granted to John Bidwell; that Bidwell conveyed the grant to the appellant; that in 1855 the title was finally confirmed to him; that the survey of the grant was approved by the United States District Court in January, 1860; that he has sold divers lots and tracts of the grant, and that he now is in possession of the unsold part of the grant. He further states that prior to November, 1844, certain Governors of the Californias granted to Manuel Jimeno Casarin two ranchos—called “ Sal si Puedes ” and “ Santa Paula y Saticoy ”—containing in the aggregate twelve Spanish leagues of land; that the said Manuel Jimeno Casarin, well knowing that he had actually received, as donations from the Mexican nation, twelve square leagues of land within the Californias, and, well knowing that [166]*166it was in violation of the laws of Mexico for any one individual to own or hold more than eléven square leagues of land, yet contriving to deceive and defraud the Mexican nation, did fraudulently and unlawfully, on the 4th of November, 1844 petition for, and Mqnuel Micheltorena, then Governor of the Californias, did fraudulently and unlawfully and upon false suggestions grant to the said Manuel Jimeno Casarin another rancho, commonly called ‘Jimeno Rancho,’ containing eleven leagues- of land,” etc.; that Manuel Jimeno Casarin then-held the two ranchos formerly granted to Mm; that he transferred the Jimeno grant to Larkin and Missroon; that “ some proceedings in some suit or controversy” were had between them and the United States; that in 1868 a patent founded on the grant was issued to them for the Jimeno Rancho, and that they procured the patent to be issued “ by false suggestions, fraudulent concealments and misrepresentations.” He further states that the Jimeno grant overlaps a portion of the Colus grant—that it is a cloud upon his title in the Colus grant, and that Hagar, one of the respondents, claims that portion of the Jimeno -grant that overlaps the Colus' grant.

The respondents demurred to the complaint on several grounds, two of which were that the Court had no jurisdiction of the subject of the action, and that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action,- and the demurrers were sustained, and the plaintiff failing to amend, judgment was rendered dismissing the action.-

The object of the action is to impeach and set aside the patent for the Jimeno grant, or to avoid so much of it as covers lands within the Colus grant, and the ground of invalidity alleged against the patent is, that Larkin and Missroon procured it to be issued by “ false suggestions, fraudulent concealments and by misrepresentations but the acts of fraud and misrepresentation on which the general charge is based, are not specified, and for that reason the complaint is defective in not stating the requisite facts; But we do not intend to ’ rest our decision on that ground. It is charged that Jimeno committed a fraud upon the Mexican Government in procuring [167]*167the Jimeno grant, while he was the grantee and the owner of two other grants containing over eleven leagues of land, and that is the fraud upon which the appellant relies, and which he claims tainted all the subsequent proceedings down to and including the patent. It may be admitted, for the purposes of the case, that Larkin and Missroon had a knowledge of this fraud—though it is not so stated in the complaint—and that they not only did not inform the Courts before which the proceedings were had for final confirmation, or the executive officers who issued the patent, of the facts constituting the fraud, but that they studiously misrepresented the facts to those tribunals and officers. We deem it unnecessary in the present aspect of the case to determine the points argued by counsel, whether the United States are proper parties, or whether the appellant, not having received a patent for his lands, occupies such a position, as the assignee or grantee of the Government, that he can sue either in the name of the United States or in his own name. But conceding that he is the proper party, the inquiry arises whether the facts as stated, and as we have admitted for the purposes of the case, constitute such a cause of action as would authorize the Court to order the patent vacated.

The Court will take judicial notice that, according to the provisions of the Act of Congress of March 3, 1851, every person claiming lands in California, by virtue of any right or title derived from the Spanish or Mexican Government, should present his petition for the confirmation of his title to the Board of Land Commissioners, and that such proceedings must be had thereupon, before said Board or the District or Supreme Court of the United States, that a final decree confirming the title of the claimant to the land must be entered before the patent fdr the land could'be issued. A patent could not be issued,for the land claimed under a Mexican grant, unless such proceedings were first had for the confirmation; and it is not pretended that they were not had in respect to the Jimeno grant. The patent was issued only in pursuance of the decree of confirmation, and for the purpose of carrying it into effect. [168]*168In the language of Mr. Chief Justice Field, in speaking of the operation and effect of such a patent: “ It is the last act of a series of proceedings taken for the recognition and confirmation of the claim of the patentees to the land it embraces, the first of which was the petition to the Board of Land Commissioners.” (Leese v. Clark, 18 Cal. 535.) The decree of final confirmation was as essential to the patent as a judgment to an execution. The appellant says that “ some proceedings were had in some suit or controversy between said Larkin and Missroon and the United States, and that, on the-day of -, 1862, the United States Government issued a patent founded on said fraudulent grant to said Larkin and Missroon,” and, as before remarked, it is not pretended that the proceedings required by the Act of Congress were not had.

The Board or the Court, in passing upon the claim and confirming it, must of necessity have found as a fact, not only that Jimeno was the grantee of the Mexican Government, but also that he was competent to take the grant. True, this may not have been done in direct terms, as in the case of United States v. Beading, 18 How. 1, and United States v. Hartnell's Executors, 22 How. 286, and other cases; but the fact must have been ascertained, at least by implication. The fact is as necessary to the confirmation of the grant as the fact that the land granted was situated within California, and must have been and was judicially determined by the Court that pronounced the decree ; otherwise, we would have the case of a grant without a grantee. The only forum in which this fact can be found, or the questions relating to it investigated, during the series of proceedings that end with the patent, is the Board of Land Commissioners or the United States District or Supreme Court. Their jurisdiction of all the matters touching the claim of the petitioner to the land and of proceedidgs for final confirmation is plenary and exclusive.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

(PC) Powell v. Albrecht
E.D. California, 2025
Barker v. McFerran
N.D. California, 2023
Bacon v. Soule
126 P. 384 (California Court of Appeal, 1912)
Spring Valley Water Works v. City & County of San Francisco
22 P. 910 (California Supreme Court, 1890)
Botiller v. Dominguez
130 U.S. 238 (Supreme Court, 1889)
United States v. Williams
6 Mont. 379 (Montana Supreme Court, 1887)
Green v. Hayes
11 P. 716 (California Supreme Court, 1886)
Parley's Park S. M. Co. v. Kerr
3 Utah 235 (Utah Supreme Court, 1883)
United States v. Tichenor
12 F. 415 (U.S. Circuit Court, 1882)
De Bernal v. Lynch
36 Cal. 135 (California Supreme Court, 1868)
Kent v. Snyder
30 Cal. 666 (California Supreme Court, 1866)
Hagar v. Lucas
29 Cal. 309 (California Supreme Court, 1865)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 Cal. 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/semple-v-hagar-cal-1865.