Steinbach v. Stewart

78 U.S. 566, 20 L. Ed. 56, 11 Wall. 566, 1870 U.S. LEXIS 1503
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 20, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 78 U.S. 566 (Steinbach v. Stewart) 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
Steinbach v. Stewart, 78 U.S. 566, 20 L. Ed. 56, 11 Wall. 566, 1870 U.S. LEXIS 1503 (1871).

Opinion

Mr. Justice STRONG

delivered the opinion of the court.

The record exhibits five assignments of error, all founded upon exceptions taken in the court below to the admission *573 or rejection of evidence. Of these the first is, in substance, that the court permitted the defendants to give in evidence what it is contended constituted at most only an equitable right, and what was, therefore, no defence against the legal title asserted by the plaintiff. The.exception cannot be understood without a brief examination of the titles under which each of the parties claimed the lands .in controversy.

The title of the plaintiff had its origin in a provisional concession made by the Mexican government to Lazaro Peña on the 14th day of October, 1839. Peña was then in ■possession of the land, and the concession was made to him with the reservation that he should petition for the usual title from the political government. On the 13th day of October, 1840, he obtained a grant in the usual form from Don Juan B. Alvarado, then governor of the department of California, for the land then known by the name of “ Agua Caliente,” embracing the land now in dispute, and on the 8th of October, 1845, the grant was approved by the Departmental Assembly. Before it was made, however, though after the provisional concession, Peña conveyed all his interest in the land to Mariano G. Vallejo. In 1853 Vallejo instituted proceedings, under the act of Congress of March 3d, 1851, for a confirmation of the land to him, and it was confirmed by the District Court in 1859. The decree of confirmation contained the following proviso: “ Provided that this confirmation of the above land to the1 said M. GL Vallejo shall be without prejudice to the rights of the legal representatives of Lazaro Peña, the oi’iginal grantee, or whoever may be entitled to said lands under him; and said confirmation to said Vallejo shall enure to the benefit of any person, or persons, who may own or be entitled to the said land by any title, either, at law or in equity, derived from the original grantee by deed, devise, descent, or otherwise.” The record of the confirmation was subsequently brought into this court by appeal, and here it was adjudged that the decree of the District Court, in so far as it confirmed the original grant, be affirmed. It was under this decree of confirmation that the plaintiff claimed, both through *574 a deed of Anna Hoeppener, sole heir of Andres Hoeppener, an alleged grantee of Vallejo, dated December 21st, 1858, and secondly, by a deed dated January 17th, 1863, from Vallejo himself.

The defendants asserted ownership of the parcels of the rancho “ Agua Caliente,” now in controversy, under an alleged grant made by Vallejo to Andres Hoeppener, dated August 12th, 1846, about ten months after the grant to Peña had been approved by the Departmental Assembly.

It thus appears that both parties claimed under Peña and Vallejo, and a brief examination will show that the nature of their titles was the same. If that of the plaintiff* was a legal estate (which it is not necessary to this case to decide), that of the defendants was equally so. That the right of Vallejo on the 12th of August, 1846, when he conveyed the property to Hoeppener, was not perfect, must be conceded; His claim had not been confirmed, and he had no patent. He had nothing but the Mexican espediente. Of course the right which he conveyed was also imperfect. But when afterwards the District Court confirmed the land to him, the confirmation enured to the benefit of his prior grantee. It was not the acquisition of a new title, but the establishment of his original right. And this was expressly decreed by the proviso already quoted. By that it was adjudged that the confirmation should enure to the benefit of any person or persons who owned, or were entitled to the land by any title in law or in equity, derived from the original grantee by deed, devise, descent, or otherwise. If, therefore, Hoeppener or his grantee's held any such title, it was confirmed to them as truly as if he or they had been petitioners for such confirmation. Now, it is in virtue of this decree of the Dis. triet Court that the plaintiff* claims. He has no standing without it. _ Asserting his rights through it, the law will not permit him to repudiate any part'of its provisions.

It is argued, however, that the proviso to the decree of confirmation was aunulled by the action of this court. To this we do not assent. The judgment upon the appeal was that the origiual grant to Lazaro Peña was a good and valid *575 grant, and that the decree of the District Court, in so far as it confirmed the original grant, be itself affirmed. This was no reversal of any portion of the decree of the District Court. On the contrary it left that decree in full force to all its extent. And by relation it was carried back to the inception of the title confirmed. It is a well-settled rule that where several acts concur to make a complete conveyance the original act is preferred, and all others relate to it. * Mr. Cruise, in his work on Neal Property, says, “ There is no rule better founded in law, reason, and convenience than this, that all the several parts and ceremonies necessary to complete a conveyance shall be taken together as one act, and operate from the substantial part by relation.” The proviso was, therefore, nothing more than a declaration of what would have been the legal effect'of the decree without it. If, therefore, as is insisted by the plaintiff", the confirmation vested in Vallejo the legal title, it at the same time vested a legal estate in the grantees of Vallejo, or Peña, who held portions of the land under conveyances from the confirmees.

The second exception taken in the court below is, that the court received in evidence an instrument of writing, dated August 12th, 1846, claimed by the defendants to be a grant of the land by Vallejo to Andres Hoeppener, and this is the basis of the second assignment of error. The bill of exceptions shows that the execution of the instrument was duly proved, that it was indorsed upon the espediente to Peña, that at the time when the deed was made Hoeppener received full possession of .the land from Vallejo, and that he continued thereafter in such possession until the land was sold by him. It is argued'that the deed was only a license to occupy, and not a grant of the land, hence that it was revocable at will, conferring a mere tenancy-at-will and not a legal estate. Certainly it is a very informal instrument, and were the rules of the common law to be applied to it there would be difficulty in maintaining that it was a grant of the fee. *576 It is to be noted, however, that its character and effect are to be determined by Mexican law. It was made before California had been ceded to the United States. In inquiring what was the intention arid effect of the instrument we are not, then, to be guided by the rules of the common law or by the British statute of uses. That it was more than a license to occupy is plain. Its language is, “I grant and transfer (cedo y transparo)

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Bluebook (online)
78 U.S. 566, 20 L. Ed. 56, 11 Wall. 566, 1870 U.S. LEXIS 1503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steinbach-v-stewart-scotus-1871.