Thompson v. Maxwell Land Grant & Ry. Co.

3 N.M. 269
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 3 N.M. 269 (Thompson v. Maxwell Land Grant & Ry. Co.) 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
Thompson v. Maxwell Land Grant & Ry. Co., 3 N.M. 269 (N.M. 1885).

Opinion

Bell, J.

The facts in this case are substantially as follows:

On the first day of August, 1870, the Maxwell Land Grant & Railway Company, Lucien B. Maxwell, and Luz B. Maxwell, his wife, filed in the district court of Colfax county their bill in equity against Guadalupe Thompson and George W. Thompson, her husband, and Charles Bent, Juliano Bent, and Alberto Silas Bent, three infant children of the said Guadalupe Thompson, by Alfred Bent, her former husband.
An amended bill was filed on the eleventh day of January, 1873. This amended bill states that in 1841 the republic of Mexico granted certain lands to Charles Beaubien and Guadalupe Miranda,—the same now commonly known as the Maxwell land grant; that in 1860 the grant was confirmed by act of congress; that afterwards Maxwell and his wife became the sole owners of the said premises, and, in 1870, conveyed them to the Maxwell Land Grant & Railway Company. With certain exceptions, the bill then sets forth that in September, 1859, Alfred Bent, since deceased, Estefana Hicklin, and Alexander Hicklin, her husband, Teresina Bent, and Aloys Scheurick, her husband, instituted their bill in the district court for Taos county against the-said Maxwell and wife, and sundry other persons, claiming an undivided one-fourth part of this grant, as heirs at law of Charles Bent, their father and ancestor ; alleging, in substance, that, by parol agreement between the original grantees and the said Charles Bent, the said Charles Bent was equitably entitled to such undivided interest; and praying that the defendants in that bill might be declared to hold the premises, in respect to the undivided one-fourth, in trust for the said complainants.
The bill further sets forth that at the May term, 1865, of the Taos district court a decree was entered, which in this bill is termed interlocutory in substance, establishing the rights of the plaintiffs, and declaring that in the lifetime of the said Charles Bent, Beaubien and Miranda held the legal title and estate in and to one undivided one-fourth part of the grant in trust for Charles-Bent; that, upon the decease of the said Charles Bent, the complainants in this suit succeeded to this equitable interest; and decreeing partition; that ■commissioners were appointed, etc.
The bill further sets forth that afterwards, and in the life-time, of the said Alfred Bent, the plaintiffs in the said suit being all sui juris, before any steps had been taken to execute the decree, entered .into an agreement of -compromise with Maxwell, whereby, in consideration of $18,000 to be paid them by Maxwell, they agreed to release Maxwell and wife of the said trust in equity; that afterwards, and about the fifteenth of December, 1865, Alfred Bent died, leaving as his sole heirs at law three minor children, to-wit: -Charles Bent, Juliano Bent, and Alberto Silas Bent; that at the April term •of the Taos district court, in 1866, the death of the said Alfred Bent was suggested, and the said three minors were made parties plaintiff, and their mother, ■Guadalupe Bent, was appointed their guardian ad litem; and it was after-wards made to appear to the court that the aforesaid agreement had been entered into for the extinguishment of the said claim and trust, and thereupon, ■at the request and with the consent of the solicitors of the parties, it was •ordered that interlocutory decree, declaring said'trust and equity, and all orders made in virtue thereof, be vacated; that Maxwell should pay to the plaintiffs $18,000, one-third to Scheurick and wife, one-third to Iiicklin and wife, and one-third to and among the children of Alfred Bent, to be paid to their guardian ad litem; and that the said Hicklin and wife, Scheurick and wife, and Guadalupe Bent, guardian ad litem of the infant defendants, should, within 10 days from the date of that decree, execute and deliver to Maxwell -a good and sufficient conveyance of their right.
The bill further sets forth that on the third day of May, 1866, Maxwell paid said sum of $18,000, as directed by the said court, except that the said •sum of $6,000 was paid to the said Guadalupe Bent, as administratrix of the -estate of Alfred Bent, and not as guardian ad litem of the infants; that on the third day of May, 1866, Hicklin and wife executed a like conveyance; and that on the third day of May, 1866, the said Guadalupe Bent undertook to -convey to the said Maxwell all right and interest of the said children of Alfred Bent in the premises.
The bill further alleges that by reason of certain errors and irregularities in said proceedings, it is doubtful whether, as against the minor heirs of the said Alfred Bent, it sufficiently appears that they have no equitable or other interests in the said premises; and that such doubt creates a cloud upon the title to the premises, which can only be removed by the interposition and decree of the court; that among other irregularities are the following: That it •does not appear, as the fact is, that the agreement for the sale of the equitable interest of the said Alfred Bent was made between the said Maxwell and the ■said Alfred Bent in the life-time of the latter; that the interlocutory decree should not have been set aside, but should have been modified; that the money payable for the equitable interest of the said Alfred Bent should have been directed to have been paid to the personal representatives of the said Alfred Bent, and not to the guardian ad litem of the minor children; that the court ought, by a proper decree, to have adjudged the trust, or the equitable claim, ■extinguished; and that the court had no jurisdiction to order a conveyance by the guardian ad litem of the infants.
The bill further alleged that in fact the share of the said Alfred Bent in said $18,000 had passed into the hands of the personal representatives of the said Alfred Bent, namely, said Guadalupe Thompson, (late the said Guadalupe Bent, widow of the said Alfred Bent, but now the wife of the said George W. Thompson,) who, on the twelfth of April, 1866, was appointed, administratrix of the estate of Alfred Bent by the judge of the probate court of the county of Taos; and the bill thereupon prayed that for the errors at law appearing upon the face of the decree of September 10, 1866, the same may be reviewed and reversed in tlie points complained of; that the trust aforesaid might be decreed to be extinguished and terminated as against the defendants; and-that plaintiffs might be decreed to hold the premises free of all trust in favor of the defendants, and all persons claiming under them, etc.
To this bill the infant defendants filed their answer by their guardian ad litem, asserting their infancy, and submitting their rights to the protection ■of the court. The adult defendants, having previously answered the original bill, filed their answer to the amended bill, responding only to the amendments, and denying that Guadalupe Bent undertook to convey to the said Maxwell the right, title, and interest of the minor children.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Thompson v. Maxwell
95 U.S. 391 (Supreme Court, 1877)
Harris v. Youman
1 Hoff. Ch. 178 (New York Court of Chancery, 1839)
Mills v. Dennis
3 Johns. Ch. 367 (New York Court of Chancery, 1818)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 N.M. 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-maxwell-land-grant-ry-co-nm-1885.