Smith v. Reynolds

9 App. D.C. 261, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 3112
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 1896
DocketNo. 536
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 App. D.C. 261 (Smith v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Reynolds, 9 App. D.C. 261, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 3112 (D.C. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Alvey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The bill in this case was filed in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, on the 15th of February, 1895, by Jefferson Reynolds, for himself and the other inhabitants of [272]*272the town of Las Vegas in the Territory of New Mexico, and of Las Vegas grant, and the town of Las Vegas, against Hoke Smith, Secretary of the Department of the Interior, and Silas W. Lamoreaux, Commissioner of the General Land Office of the United States, to obtain an injunction to restrain the defendants from directing the execution of an order for the survey of Las Vegas grant, or from in any manner treating the land included therein as part of the public domain.

The bill states the history of the grant from the Republic of Mexico in 1835 to Juan Dios Maese, Miguel Archurletta, Manual Duran and José Antonio Casaos, for themselves and in the name of twenty-five men, for the cultivation of crops and for pasture and watering places, etc., and which grant was made with definite boundaries, and by subsequent survey, made under the authority of the United States, in 1860, was ascertained to contain 496,446.96 acres of land.

The bill was demurred to by the defendants, and the demurrer having been overruled, and the defendants electing to stand upon their demurrer, the court proceeded to declare and decree that the defendants, as Secretary of the Depart- ' ment of the Interior, and as Commissioner of the General Land Office, respectively, had no jurisdiction over the lands embraced in Las Vegas grant; and that the survey then in progress, not being for the purpose of ascertaining the amount of land contained in said grant, or determining its boundaries, or for correcting any errors in the former survey, but for the purpose of taking from the grant a large part of the lands contained therein, and subjecting it to the control of the Land Department of the Government as part of the public domain, they were, therefore, enjoined and restrained from the further execution of the survey of the grant, as being wholly unauthorized by law. It is from this decree that the present appeal is taken, on the part of the Government of the United States.

All facts properly alleged are admitted by the demurrer, [273]*273but not all the legal conclusions that the pleader may have drawn therefrom. The legal construction of the matters of fact alleged is exclusively for the court. And so the construction and effect of all acts of Congress involved is for the court and also the official acts of Government agents and officers acting thereunder.

It appears from the allegations of the bill that in 1821, the Mexican authorities granted to Luis Maria de Baca, and his seventeen male children, the tract of land that was subsequently granted to the parties named in the grant of Las Vegas. This original grant to Baca was described by the same boundaries that were named in the subsequent Las Vegas grant; and Baca entered into possession and was in the enjoyment of his grant when he was disturbed by hostile Indians, and was compelled to vacate his possession at great loss. After this grant to Luis Baca, the Mexican Congress, after an act of 1824, passed what has been known (and often recognized in our courts) as the colonization law, providing for the colonization of the territories of the Republic; and that, at the time of the passage of that law, New Mexico was a territory of the Republic, and so continued until December 30, 1836, when it became a department. By virtue of the act of 1824, a code of colonization was adopted in 1828, which contained regulations for the colonization of the territories of the Republic, whereby the political chiefs or governors of the territories were authorized to grant the public lands of their respective territories to contractors, families, or private persons, Mexicans or foreigners, who might apply for them, and were directed, when a grant was definitely made, to sign and give a document to serve as a title to the party in interest, it being stated therein that the grant was made in entire conformity with the provisions of the law, in virtue of which the possession should be given. United States v. Chaves, 159 U. S. 452, 458. It appears that it was by virtue of this coloniza[274]*274tion act and the regulations made thereunder that the grant to Juan Dios Maese and others was made in March, 1835, with certain defined boundaries, and that the grantees were duly and formally placed in possession of the land granted, as required by law. It is alleged that the settlement thus established in 1835, has grown and increased until at the present time more than 3,000 families are located upon the grant, and that there is a population of about 20,000 inhabitants thereon; and that these people are the original settlers or their descendants, and others who came upon the lands under the grant, and all hold under the terms thereof; and that they have made those lands their homes, and have cultivated them, and erected valuable improvements thereon.

No particular form of patent or grant appears to have been prescribed either by the Act of 1824 or the regulations of 1828, and no formal grants seem to have been required to convey and vest title under the Mexican law. United States v. Larkin et al., 18 How. 558, 563. The chief objects of these grants, or cessions, as said by the Supreme Court in reference to the Mariposa grant of land in the Territory of California (Freemont v. United States, 17 How. 561), “ was to colonize and settle the vacant lands. The grants were usually made for that purpose, without any other consideration, and without any claim of the grantee on the bounty or justice of the government. But the public had no interest in forfeiting them even in these cases, unless some other person desired, and was ready to occupy them, and thus carry out the policy of extending its settlements.” The grant of Las Yegas, made in 1835, was found by the surveyor general of Néw Mexico, in 1858, and subsequently by Congress, in 1860, to have been in all respects regular and formal, according to the laws and customs of Mexico at the time the grant was made. And such being the case, we must assume that, if the Territory of New Mexico had not been ceded to the United States by the treaty of 1848, the [275]*275Republic of Mexico would have observed and maintained the validity of the grant to Maese and others in good faith. The United States have assumed the obligation, by treaty stipulation, to observe and maintain the validity of the grant in good faith, as Mexico would have maintained it.

By article 8 of the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo between the United States and the Republic of Mexico, made in 1848, it was expressly stipulated that Mexicans then established in territories eeded by Mexico to the United States, as defined by the treaty, should be free to continue where they then resided, or to remove at any time to the Mexican Republic, retaining the property which they possessed in the said territories, etc.; and those who should prefer to remain in the said territories might either retain the title and rights of Mexican citizens or acquire those of citizens of the United States, etc. And in the said territories, property of every kind, then belonging to Mexicans not established there, should be inviolably respected.

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Related

Maese v. Hermann
17 D.C. App. 52 (D.C. Circuit, 1900)

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Bluebook (online)
9 App. D.C. 261, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 3112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-reynolds-dc-1896.