Stewart v. Trenier

49 Ala. 492
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 Ala. 492 (Stewart v. Trenier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Trenier, 49 Ala. 492 (Ala. 1873).

Opinion

B. F. SAFFOLD, J.

— The action was ejectment, brought by the appellants against the appellee, and decided in favor of the defendant, under charges of the court. The land in controversy is a portion of Mon Louis Island, which is formed by Fowl River and Mobile Bay. The plaintiffs deduced their title from Nicholas Baudin, and the defendant from Henry Francois. The question is, which of the two had the better title. The following is an abstract of their respective titles. [The material facts, as above set forth, were here stated at length.]

On the 10th February, 1763, by a treaty signed at Paris, France, by virtue of her original acquisition, ceded to Great Britain the bay and port of Mobile, and all her possessions on the east side of the Mississippi River, except the town of New Orleans and the island on which it is situated. By the same treaty Spain ceded Florida to Great Britain. By a separate secret treaty, France ceded the remainder of what she called Louisiana to Spain. Great Britain, having previously consolidated her acquisition from France with that from Spain, obtained in 1763, into two provinces, under the name of East and West Florida, ceded them to Spain, by a treaty signed at Versailles on the 3d of September, 1783. On the 1st of October, [503]*5031800, by tbe treaty of St. Ildefonso, Spain ceded Louisiana to France, with the boundaries as they were when France possessed it before. On the 30th of April, 1803, France ceded it to the United States, with the same boundaries, by a treaty signed at Paris. The land in controversy is contained within that cession, and governed by that treaty as to the rights of property of individuals.

The third article of the treaty of Paris, of 1803, is in these words: “ The inhabitants of the ceded territory shall be incorporated in the Union of the United States, and admitted, as soon as possible, according to the principles of the federal Constitution, to the enjoyment of all the rights, advantages, and immunities of citizens of the United States; and, in the mean time, they shall be maintained and protected in the free enjoyment of their liberty, property, and the religion which they profess.” Justice Daniel, in the United States v. Reynes (9 How. 127), says: “ The term property, in this article, will embrace rights, either in possession or in action; property to which the title was completed, or that to which the title was not yet completed; but, in either acceptation, it could be applied only to rights founded in justice and good faith, and based upon authority competent to their creation.” The article declares only what the international law requires when there is no stipulation — that the United States shall perform to the acquired citizens the duties which were incumbent on France. In all of the legislation of Congress intended to adjust the claims of persons to land under title derived from any of the preceding governments, the authority on which a grant, purporting to have emanated under all the official forms and sanctions of the local governments, has never been required to be filed, recorded, or its validity adjudicated. The inquiry, in this respect, has been confined to the validity and good faith of the grant itself. United States v. Arredondo, 6 Pet. 691-722.

The contract of cession made to Nicholas Baudin in 1710-13 was reported to Congress in 1816. The commissioners made no recommendation, and no action was taken. This report establishes the presentation and record of the claim, as required by an Act of Congress of 1812, and another of April 18, 1814, together with the inhabitation and cultivation of the land. But it says there was no survey. In O'Hara v. The United States (15 Pet. 275), it is said a survey would be presumed from a settlement made by the grantee. A further act of Congress for adjusting the claims to land in the district east of the island of New Orleans, approved March 3, 1819, made additional provision for ascertaining the titles complete or inchoate. An Act of March 3,1827, supplementary to this and others, extended the time for presentation of titles and claims, as pro[504]*504vided by the Act of 1819, to the 1st of September, 1827. Under this act the claim of Baudin was renewed, reported on favorably by the commissioners, Hazard and Owen, and confirmed by Act of March 2, 1829.

But by an act of May 8, 1822, the claim of Henry Francois to a donation of six hundred and forty acres of the same land, as an actual settler, without claim derived from either the French, British, or Spanish government, was confirmed. A government survey of the island Mon Louis was made in 1831, by James Dowell, deputy surveyor, at the instance of the register and receiver of the land office at St. Stephens, Ala., and was approved on the 4th of July, 1843, by James H. Weakley, surveyor general of the public lands in Alabama. On the 5th of May, 1870, the patent was issued to the heirs of Henry Francois.

In Burgess v. Gray (16 How. 48) it is held that, under the treaty with France of 1803, no court of justice has jurisdiction to maintain or establish an inchoate and imperfect title to land derived from the French authorities, unless such jurisdiction to try and decide it has first been given by an act of Congress, and that such jurisdiction has certainly not been given to any state court. But if a title so derived was complete, or, being imperfect, has been confirmed, its validity and merits may be determined by the courts under their general jurisdiction* when contested against other titles. The patent to the heirs of Francois mentions the Baudin claim as interfering, by junior confirmation, with the rights of the patentees, and expressly subjects the patent to any just claim derived from either the British, French, or Spanish authorities, or from the United States. The confirmation of Baudin’s claim, in 1829, also amounted only to a relinquishment forever, on the part of the United States, of any claim whatever, and was not to affect the claim or claims of any individual or body politic or corporate.

Two propositions are conceded in this case. 1st. If both of these claims depend for their validity on title derived solely from the United States, that of Francois must prevail. He who first obtains the title, and not he who first applies for it, must hold it. McCabe v. Worthington, 16 How. 86. 2d. If Baudin’s title was complete at the time the United States acquired the territory, it is the superior right, by virtue of the tr'eaty. Congress having confirmed the grant or concession to Baudin, as one derived from the French authorities, its genuineness and authority is established. United States v. Arredondo, supra. Did it sever the land claimed from the public domain ? The •evidence seems to establish, clearly, that Grosse Pointe was the appellation given to land embraced in the island now called Mon Louis. The contract of cession describes it as “ beginning [505]*505at and running along Fowl River, till it reaches the Oysters (Oyster Pass), which separates Massacre Island from the mainland.” The purpose of the gift was “ to raise cattle thereon.” From the subsequent survey, we see that Fowl River separates the island Mon Louis from the mainland, the other boundaries being the Bay of Mobile and the Gulf of Mexico. “ Grosse Pointe ” must have referred primarily to some point of land formed by the larger waters, especially as we find two points to which it may have been applied, to wit, Cedar Point and another.

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Related

Trenier v. Stewart
101 U.S. 797 (Supreme Court, 1880)
Trenier v. Stewart
55 Ala. 458 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1876)

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Bluebook (online)
49 Ala. 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-trenier-ala-1873.