Swat v. United States

23 F. Cas. 521
CourtDistrict Court, D. California
DecidedJune 15, 1857
StatusPublished

This text of 23 F. Cas. 521 (Swat v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swat v. United States, 23 F. Cas. 521 (californiad 1857).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

The petition

in this case was presented to the board February 28th, 1853. No evidence whatever, either oral or documentary, was introduced by the claimant before the board, and the claim was accordingly rejected, March 27th, 1855. The original documents on which the claim is founded, as well as the oral testimony in support of them, are for the first time submitted to this court, under its general rules authorizing “further testimony” to be tafeen in this class of eases. It may well be doubted whether the claimant has not, according to the letter as well as the spirit of the act of 1851, forfeited whatever rights he had to the land now claimed by him. The eighth section of that act requires “all persons claiming lands by virtue of aDy right or title derived from the Mexican or Spanish governments, to present the same to the commissioners, together with such documentary evidence and testimony of witnesses as the claimant relies on to support his claim.” When the decision of the board comes up for review in this court, the tenth section requires a decree to be rendered “on the pleadings and evidence, and on such further evidence as may be tafeen by order of this court.” The thirteenth section provides that all lands the claims to which shall not have been presented to the board within two years after the date of the act, shall be considered public lands, etc.

The first question to be considered is— was this claim “presented” to the commissioners within the provisions of the eighth and thirteenth sections? If not, it is barred, and the land must be deemed to be part of the public domain. The eighth section requires, as we have seen, that a party claiming land under any right or title derived from the Mexican or Spanish governments shall present the “same.” This would, in strict .grammatical construction, be taken to mean the “right or title” previously mentioned. But it cannot mean the grant itself, for the statute proceeds to say “together with the documentary evidence and testimony of witnesses” on which he relies. He is thus required to present both his title or right and also the documentary evidence of it. If then he has presented a petition, claiming the land, he. would seem to have complied with one of the requirements of the law. The thirteenth section in effect [522]*522bars all claims which shall not have been presented within the two years prescribed. But as section eight evidently discriminates between the claim and the documentary evidence in support of it, it would seem that the omission to present the latter would not, within the thirteenth section, constitute an omission to present the former. I think, therefore, that the “claim” was presented within the period limited by the statute, and that the board would have been authorized to receive evidence in support of it, though offered after the expiration of the two years.

The second and more difficult question is— can this court proceed to decide this claim upon the evidence taken in this court, none whatever having been submitted to the board? If this evidence is properly before the court, the case must be determined upon it. The inquiry then is — does the law or the rule of court in pursuance of it authorize evidence to be taken in this court where none has been taken by the board? The language of the tenth section is “the court shall proceed to render judgment upon the pleadings and evidence in the ease, and upon such further evidence as may be taken by its order,” The term “further” seems to indicate that the evidence ordered to be taken shall be additional evidence, and that some evidence shall already have been taken. The rule of court provides, not that the party shall be allowed to produce testimony in the case, but that he may take additional testimony; and certainly both congress and the court contemplated that such additional testimony should be taken to supply defects and omissions, to corroborate or rebut, and not that it should constitute the whole proofs in the case. It is clear from all the provisions of the act, that the jurisdiction intended to be conferred on this court was in its nature an appellate jurisdiction, or a power to review the decisions of the board. The case as presented to the board is to be reviewed in this court, and the decision is to be rendered upon the evidence submitted to the board, and such further testimony as the court may order. But if the claimant, disregarding the positive requirements of the eighth section, is permitted to withhold all his • evidence, both oral and documentary, until he reaches this court, the functions of this court become in effect original and not appellate.

In cases of appeal from the district to the circuit courts in admiralty, additional testimony may be taken in the latter court. But if a libel were filed in the district court, no testimony whatever offered in support of it, and thereupon dismissed, the libellant would hardly be allowed in the circuit court, for the first time, to enter upon his proofs. If such a proceeding were permitted, it would be easy to evade the provisions of law which give to the district court exclusive original cognizance of admiralty suits, and to the circuit courts only an appellate jurisdiction. But the jurisdiction of this court in land cases, though called an appellate jurisdiction, and though the proceeding by which the decision of the board is reviewed is spoken of as “an appeal,” and though bearing a close analogy to an appeal in admiralty or equity suits, has yet been decided to be an original proceeding; the removal of the transcript of the papers and evidence into this court “being but a mode of providing for the institution of suit in this court.” U. S. v. Ritchie, 17 How. [58 U. S.] 534. It is to be remembered, however, that this view of the nature of the proceeding in this court was taken by the supreme court to meet the objection that the law authorizing an “appeal” from the-decision of the board was unconstitutional. The latter not being “a court” under the constitution, the case when presented to the district court becomes for the first time a suit or case before a “court,” and in this sense-the jurisdiction of the court was said to be original. But the mode of exercising that jurisdiction is exactly analogous to the mode of exercising an appellate jurisdiction, and the proceeding is practically, though not technically, an appeal. When, therefore, congress has directed that this case shall be determined upon evidence taken before another tribunal,, not a court, but certified up to this court to be used as evidence, and also on further-evidence to be taken by order of this court, the question still recurs whether this, court can, where no testimony has been certified to it, permit all the testimony on which its decision is to be founded to be taken as “further testimony.”

The answer to this question depends on the force we attach to the word “further.” If the construction contended for by the United States be adopted, the court would still be at liberty to order further testimony to be taken in all cases where any testimony whatever had been taken by either side before the board. Suppose then, that the testimony so taken by a claimant is wholly irrelevant, or immaterial, or even-adverse to him, shall he be in a better position in this court than one who by accident or neglect of agents or counsel has been unable or has omitted to produce any testimony? It would hardly occur to the claimant under such circumstances that he could save his rights in this court by examining before the board a witness who knew nothing about his claim, or who would testify that he had no title.

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23 F. Cas. 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swat-v-united-states-californiad-1857.