The United States v. Andres Pico

63 U.S. 406, 16 L. Ed. 357, 22 How. 406, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 738
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 12, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 63 U.S. 406 (The United States v. Andres Pico) 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
The United States v. Andres Pico, 63 U.S. 406, 16 L. Ed. 357, 22 How. 406, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 738 (1860).

Opinion

63 U.S. 406

22 How. 406

16 L.Ed. 357

THE UNITED STATES, APPELLANTS,
v.
ANDRES PICO.

December Term, 1859

THIS was an appeal from the District Court of the United States for the northern district of California.

The state of Pico's title is mentioned in the opinion of the court, and need not be repeated.

The case was argued by the Attorney General and Mr. Stanton for the United States, and by Mr. Gillet for the appellee. It was very similar to the preceding case of Teschmaker.

The Attorney General's statement of the evidence and argument upon it was as follows:

This is a claim for eleven leagues of land called Moquelemos, which the claimant alleges, in his petition to the board of commissioners, was granted to him by his brother, Pio Pico, in the month of May, 1844, and confirmed to him in June, 1846. The land lies on the Moquelemos river, in what is now the county of Calaveras.

The documentary evidence of title produced by the claim is:1. A grant signed by Pio Pico, and countersigned by Jos e Matias Moreno, describing the land in question, dated at the city of Los Angeles, on the 6th day of June, 1846.

2. A paper headed 'Departmental Assembly of California,' and signed Narciso Botello, deputy secretary, addressed to Secretary Moreno, in which the fact is stated, that this grant, and others which are named, were approved by the Departmental Assembly in that day's session.

NOTE.—The date of this paper (July 15, 1846) is certainly the date which it truly bears. It is so in all the records, the original Spanish as well as the translations.

3. A paper signed by Pio Pico and Jos e Matias Moreno, dated June 15, 1846, setting forth that the most excellent Departmental Assembly, 'in session of to-day,' decreed the approval of the grant in question.

This is all the documentary evidence in the case. There is no petition, order of reference, information, decree of concession, map, or copy of the grant, found among the archives. No map or diseno of the land was exhibited to the court below, or is to be found upon the record sent here. There is no registry nor any kind of entry upon any book. The grant was produced from the private custody of the grantee himself. So, it appears, was the certificate of Pico and Moreno, that it had been approved by the Departmental Assembly. Judge Hoffman distinctly declares that the only paper found in the archives is the communication of Botello, transmitting the title deed, and asserting its approval. Who placed that paper upon the record, and how or when it came there, are questions not easily solved. That it did not get there honestly, will be very apparent to the court, long before this examination is finished.

No proof was offered of the genuineness of the paper with Botello's name to it, and found among the archives. But, to show that the other two papers, which were produced from the private custody of the claimant, were not forgeries——

Nicholas H. Den was called, who testified that he knew the handwriting of Pico and Moreno, ant that their signatures to these two papers were genuine.

On this evidence, the board rejected the claim, declaring that, in its opinion, the proofs and exhibits were insufficient to establish its validity. An appeal was taken by the claimant to the District Court, where the claimant called——

Charles M. Weber, who states that the boundaries of the land described in the grant can be identified. In the fall of 1848, he learned, for the first time, that Pico had a claim to this land, which adjoins that of the witness. He made a gift to Pico of some small improvements that he had made on the land. He knows of no stock that Pico ever had on the land.

Daniel Murphy says that, in 1848, he saw Pico on the land, with some twenty men and some horses. The witness himself afterwards had about 1,000 head of cattle upon it, and Pico allowed him to occupy it with about 1,500 more; was on the ranch, with Pico's consent, about eighteen months.

This was absolutely all the evidence in the case. No proof of the documents was made by the testimony of the persons whose names were signed to them. Neither the Governor himself nor the countersigning secretary was called. Nobody swore even to their handwriting, except Nicholas H. Den. There was no evidence that the claimant ever had any possession; and his nearest neighbor, the owner and occupant of the adjoining tract, not only knew of no possession, but never even heard of the claim until after the discovery of the gold mines, and the commencement of the city of Stockton in the neighborhood. With this illegal and insufficient evidence of the documents, which the claimant had kept in his pocket without any evidence of possession or even claim, and without producing from the record a single entry to corroborate the allegation of the grant, he had boldness enough to demand a decree confirming his title and allowing his claim. The judge manifestly did not believe that the grant was a genuine one. He felt that the whole thing was a fabrication, but, in his opinion, he was bound to treat it as genuine, because Nicholas H. Den was unimpeached and uncontradicted, and he had declared it to be his opinion that the signatures of Pico and Moreno were written by themselves. But he adds, that any one acquainted with the facility and unscrupulousness with which, in this class of cases, frauds have been committed, and sustained by testimony apparently conclusive, a grant, unsupported either by evidence from the archives or by proof of occupation of the land, must appear suspicious. He then adds what seems to have finally determined him in favor of allowing the claim. He says, in the case at bar, a document is found in the archives, which affords the best, if not the only, moral evidence of the genuineness of the grant.

The objections which the Government now makes to the affirmance of this decree are those which follow:

1. The grant is made by the Governor to his own brother, and is therefore void.

2. It is void, because Pio Pico, at the time of making it, had no authority, jurisdiction, or power, to make any grant in this case, for want of a petition, investigation, and map, such as the laws of 1824 and 1828 require in all such cases.

3. There is no record evidence of the grant, nor any explanation furnished of its absence, and therefore it is, to all intents and purposes, the same as if no evidence at all of it had been given.

4. It is a forgery. The proof of this is powerful and overwhelming. It is not possible to furnish any reason why the grant was not entered upon the record, if it was really made at the time it bears date. In addition to that, the journals of the Departmental Assembly furnish very strong circumstantial evidence against the genuineness of this title.

It will be observed that the letter of Botello to Moreno is dated on the 15th of July, and it accompanies the title deeds of this and two other claims.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 U.S. 406, 16 L. Ed. 357, 22 How. 406, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-united-states-v-andres-pico-scotus-1860.