Soulard v. Allen

18 Mo. 590
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 18 Mo. 590 (Soulard v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soulard v. Allen, 18 Mo. 590 (Mo. 1853).

Opinion

Scott, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action of ejectment, commenced in 1848, by the plaintiffs, Soulards, against Allen, to recover posses[594]*594sion of a tract of land in tbe city of St. Louis, containing fifty acres.

'The plaintiffs claim as the legal representatives of their father and mother, Antoine and Julia C. Soulard. The plaintiffs claim under a concession made to their ancestor, Antoine Soulard, by Zeno Trudeau, lieutenant governor of Upper Louisiana in 1798, for 204 arpens and a fraction, which was surveyed by the then surveyor of the province in 1800. This concession, together with notice of claim, was filed 15th December, 1813, with the recorder of land titles, and 56 arpens and a fraction thereof were reported for confirmation, and were confirmed by the act of 29th April, 1816. The rest of the claim was then abandoned as interfering with the St. Louis commons ; it was afterwards reported for confirmation by the last board of commissioners, and was confirmed by the act of 4th July, 1836. The entire claim wras surveyed under the authority of the United States in 1818, and was again surveyed in 1838. Most of the land claimed by the parties to this suit is within the boundaries of the survey of the St. Louis commons. We will first only speak of such portion of it as is without those boundaries. The defendant claimed under a concession made by the French lieutenant governor in 1767, to Madame Chou-teau, for 4 by 40 arpens; a report of the recorder of land titles in favor of confirmation, upon cultivation and possession prior to the 20th day of December, 1803, to be surveyed, which report was confirmed by act of 29th April, 1816, and the land was surveyed in April, 1818; a concession of two by forty arpens to Gervais, and a grant of the same quantity to Cambas and Ortiz, both made by the French' authorities in 1767; a certificate of confirmation, issued by the recorder of land titles, under the act of 26th May, 1824, by which it is certified that, under the act of 13th June, 1812, there was confirmed to Gervais’ legal representatives a tract of two by forty arpens, and to Ortiz’s legal representatives a tract of one by forty arpens, which two tracts were surveyed together and included in one survey made in 1834. This is certified as [595]*595correctly copied from the book containing the record of the original confirmation certificates, and is dated the 12th April, 1834, signed, Fred. Conway, recorder.

1. Thus it will be seen, that this case presents a conflict of titles between a confirmation under the act of the 13th June, 1812, and a confirmation under the act of 29th April, 1816. If both titles cover the same land, it is clear that the title under the act of 1812, being prior in point of time, must prevail over one posterior in date. No part of the confirmation under Madame Chouteau’s claim conflicts with the claim of the plaintiffs ; that claim being used only to show the locality of the concessions to Grervais and Ortiz, whose claims were confirmed by the act of 1812, and conflict with the plaintiffs’. The point, whether Soulard’s claim was confirmed under the act of 1812, is not raised by any of the instructions.

The abstract from the recorder’s book, under the act of 26th May, 1824, and recorder Conway’s certificate, showing that the claims of Grervais and Ortiz were confirmed under its provisions, were read in evidence by the defendant and excepted to by the plaintiffs. It is not pretended, that the recorder, in 1834, had any authority to receive proof of inhabitation, cultivation or or possession under the act of 1824. Indeed, all the claimants were limited to eighteen months from the passage of the act, within which time they were required to designate their lots by making the necessary proof. The recorder does not assume the exercise of any such power. His certificate purports to be a copy of what appears upon the books of his predecessor, who was authorized to receive proofs. This court has held that the abstract of the confirmations made by recorder Hunt, who was in office at the passage of the act, was evidence, equal in character to the certificate of the recorder himself. The act of recorder Conway is nothing more in effect than the giving a certified copy of the records of his office, and it is an established principle, that all officers entrusted with the custody of an official document, may give copies thereof, which will be admissible evidence. But there was also in evidence a copy of the abstracts [596]*596of the confirmations made by recorder Hunt, and even if the certificate of recorder Conway was informal, yet, under the decisions of this court, that abstract is as good evidence as a certificate formally made and delivered by recorder Hunt himself, .who received the evidence of the facts entitling claimants to lots under the act of 1812.

In order to be entitled to a confirmation under the act of 1812, it is not necessary that notice of a claim should have been filed with the recorder under the acts of congress for adjusting land claims, within the time prescribed by those acts. The objections, that the concessions were void by the terms of them, because they were not occupied within a year and a day; that one of the concessions was to Cambas and Ortiz, and only half of it was acted on by the recorder, that the land confirmed was no lot, cannot now be entertained in this court.

Under repeated decisions made here, the certificate of the recorder is prima facie evidence ; it is evidence that the claimant inhabited, cultivated or possessed the land claimed, prior to the 20th December, 1803, which entitles him to be confirmed. It is prima facie evidence that the land confirmed is a lot. Ortiz based his claim on a joint concession to him and another ; he claims one half of it, and shows possession; it is for that he is confirmed; it is that which identifies the land conceded. As possession is the motive to the grant, and as he showed his possession, which was confined to so much as he was entitled to, there seems to be no valid objection to his claim on that score. Had he shown possession of the whole concession, notwithstanding it was a joint one, he would have been entitled to the whole. Surely he is not in a worse condition for only claiming half. He could renounce or abandon part of his claim. These matters have all been passed upon by the jury, under suitable instructions from the court. The certificate or abstract was only prima facie evidence. The plaintiffs have had an opportunity to overthrow it; they have failed to do so, and nowT the objections which were urged against it, to the jury who tried the cause, cannot be renewed in this court.

[597]*5972. The survey of the Gervais and Ortiz confirmation is presumed to be correct; it is under a grant prior to that under which the plaintiffs claim. The survey annexes itself to the confirmation, and prima facie shows the land granted. If the survey was wrong, that was a matter to be demonstrated to the jury; no objections can now be taken to it. The objection that the lines of the survey did not run due north and south, according to the terms of the concession, can have no weight. The concessions to Gervais and Ortiz were made in reference to other concessions; they conformed to those calls and the survey does the same thing. The survey is evidence of the locality of the land confirmed by the act of 1812 ; that act granted what was inhabited, cultivated or possessed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Mo. 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soulard-v-allen-mo-1853.