Stoneroad v. Stoneroad

4 N.M. 59
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 4 N.M. 59 (Stoneroad v. Stoneroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stoneroad v. Stoneroad, 4 N.M. 59 (N.M. 1887).

Opinion

Henderson, J.

The defendant in error, George W. Stoneroad, brought an action of ejectment against the plaintiff in error, James P. Stoneroad, to recover possession of two pieces or tracts of land, alleged to be within and constituting a portion of a larger tract known as the “Preston Beck Grant, ” situated in San Miguel county. The two pieces of land occupied by defendant at the date of the commencement of this suit, and held adversely by him, lie within the boundary calls of the Preston Beck grant, but without the limits of a survey thereof, made by the government without notice to the owners, and in which the claimants have never acquiesced. The cause was tried at the August term, 1885, which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, under direction from the court.

Upon the trial the defendant in error introduced in evidence a true copy of the original and official translation of the original expediente of said grant, and of all proceedings had, and papers and documents filed, before and with the United States surveyor general for New Mexico, and the decision of the surveyor general approving the grant; a map (Exhibit B) showing the location of the objects given as boundary calls, and the location thereon of the two pieces so held by the plaintiff in error. He also introduced oral evidence, showing that the land sued for was within the boundary calls of said grant. The plaintiff in error admitted that he was in possession. He also admitted and stipulated to the correctness of the location of the “Pecos river,” a boundary call in the grant, and of the pieces of land held adversely by him, as shown by Exhibit B; and that defendant in error had an undivided one-third of all the right and title ofthe original grantee in said grant; that said grant was duly confirmed by congress under the act of June 21,1860; and that the same had been surveyed without notice to the claimants, and at the time of such survey some of the said claimants were minors and married women, and had not acquiesced in the same. Plaintiff in error offered nothing in evidence.

On the sixth of December, 1823, Juan Este van Pino petitioned the governor of the province of New Mexico for a grant of lands in this territory, now a portion of San Miguel county, bounded as follows: On the north by the landmarks of the farm or land of Don Antonio Ortiz, and the table-land of the Aguage de la Yequa; on the south by the Pecos river; on the east by the table-land of Pajarito; and on the west by the point of the table-land of the Chupaines; and on the twenty-third of the same month and year the political chief or acting governor, by direction of the most excellent deputation, made the grant, reciting in the granting decree the same boundaries as set out in the petition of Pino, and directing that the said Pino, as the grantee, be put into possession by the alcalde, which was accordingly in due form done. Pino occupied the land until his death, and subsequently thereto his heirs sold to Preston Beck, who presented the claim to the surveyor general of the territory on May 10, 1855, for investigation and decision, as required by the eighth section of the act of congress of July 22, 1854.

After taking testim ony, and after a due consideration of th e case, the surveyor general recommended that congress confirm the grant to Preston Beck, Jr.; and by act of congress, approved June 21, 1860, the same was confirmed according to the report of the surveyor general as Ho. 1. The surveyor general had the grant surveyed, and the said survey approved by him, Hovember, 1860. Ho notice, however, of this survey was given to the claimants, so far as the records show. The act of congress of June 21, 1860, confirmed the grant as reported.

Plaintiff in error assigns the following: (1) That the verdict of the jury in said cause was against the evidence, and the weight of the evidence, in said cause; (2) that the court erred in instructing the jury to find a verdict for the plaintiff below in said cause; (3) that the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury in said cause to find a verdict for the defendants; (4) that the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury as asked by the defendant below.

The single question, under the facts stipulated and proven in this case, is, does the survey, made after the grant was confirmed, conclude the court from determining the extent and validity of the grant made by the Mexican government by specific boundary calls, and afterwards, under the act of congress of 1854, duly examined into and approved by the surveyor general, approved by the land department of the United States, and confirmed by act of congress? That the plaintiff in error was in possession and holding two parcels of land embraced within the limits of the Preston Beck grant, as confirmed by congress, if the boundary calls are to govern as to extent, is admitted. It is also admitted that these lands so held by him are without the limits of the survey, but near the line. It is further shown that the pieces so held, as shown by the map, lie some 10 or 12 miles within the limits of the grant, provided the grant is to be upheld as petitioned for and granted by the Mexican government, and of which he was put into judicial possession by the duly-authorized officer of the Mexican government. The surveyor general pursued the same description in his report, and the act of congress confirmed it as reported.

. It is conceded by both parties that, where lands are to be surveyed by our government, the rules adopted by the interior department in surveys of grants like the one in question, where boundary calls are given, is to draw a straight line north and south, or east and west, through such point, on the side of the tract of which it constitutes such boundary, to the intersection of the boundaries on the other sides; and where the call is a meanderableobject, such as a river, mesa, mountain, or arroyo, it should be meandered, to the extent that it constitutes such boundary, within the projected lines of the other sides. See Ortez Mine Grant, 2 Copp, Pub. Land Laws, 1276; U. S. v. Soto, 1 Hoff. L. Cas. 68; Tyler, L. Bound. 29, 187, 188.

It is not showm in the record that Preston Beck, or any person holding under him, ever applied to the government to have a survey made, or for a patent. It has not been urged that there is any act of congress making it obligatory upon the confirmance of a grantor, or those holding under him, to have the grant surveyed, or to call for a patent; nor is it insisted that there was any regulation of the executive department, having the force of law, making it obligatory on the surveyor general to survey such grants after confirmation, in operation at the date of the survey, in 1860.

If we apply the rule above stated, governing the survey of a Mexican or Spanish grant, it is obvious that the plaintiff in error was in possession of lands belonging in part to the defendant in error at the date of the institution of this suit.

The contention on behalf of plaintiff in error is that, after the survey, the defendant in error, and all other claimants under the grant, are concluded by the survey; and that, in an action of ejectment, the survey estops the plaintiff from asserting title to a greater quantity of land than is included in it. In support of this position the case of Gallagher v. Riley, 49 Cal. 473, and Boyle v. Hinds, 2 Sawy. 527, are cited.

In Boyle v. Hinds the Mexican government, in 1839, granted a raneho, called “Estero Americano,” to Edward Manuel McIntosh.

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.M. 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stoneroad-v-stoneroad-nm-1887.