Thompson v. Maxwell

95 U.S. 391, 24 L. Ed. 481, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 2186
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 18, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 95 U.S. 391 (Thompson v. Maxwell) 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
Thompson v. Maxwell, 95 U.S. 391, 24 L. Ed. 481, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 2186 (1877).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bradley

delivered the opinion of the court..

In 1859, Alfred Bent and his two sisters, Estefana and Teresina, with their husbands, filed a bill in chancery in the District Court of the Territory of New Mexico for the County of Taos, against Charles Beaubien, Guadalupe Miranda, Lucien B. Maxwell, and José Pley, claiming and alleging that Charles Bent, deceased, the father of Alfred and .his sisters, at the time of his death, was jointly interested with said Beaubien and Miranda, to the extent of one-third part, in a certain specified tract of ■ land in said territory, amounting to two millions of acres, which had been granted to said Beaubien and Miranda by the New Mexican government in 1841, and stood in their names; and that as to said third part' they were trustees for said Charles up to the time of his death, and from thenceforward trustees for the said Alfred and his sisters as heirs-at-law of said Charles. The bill- further stated that Maxwell and Pley pretended to have become interested in said land; and *392 prayed as against all the defendants that the title of. said Charles Bent to the third part thereof might be established, and for a partition. Such proceedings were had in that suit, that, on the -29th of May, 1865, a decree was made, establishing Bent’s title to one undivided fourth part of the land, the right of succession of the complainants, and adjudging that "a partition be made according to the prayer of the bill. . Commissioners for making partition were appointed by the decree, and ordered to report at the next term, the court reserving its decree as to the partition and the costs of the cause.

After this decree was made, certain negotiations took place between Maxwell (who had acquired the principal interest in the property) and the complainants, looking to a settlement of the controversy, and a purchase by Maxwell of the complainants’ interest. Whether these negotiations were concluded in Alfred Bent’s lifetime, or not until after his death, subsequently became a matter of controversy between the parties. He was accidentally killed on the 15th of December, 1865, leaving a widow, Guadalupe Bent (who afterwards married George W. Thompson), and three infant children, Charles, Julian, and Alberto, his heirs-at-law..

The commissioners for..making partition never reported; and the ir ext .proceeding in the cause, so far as appears by the record, was an order made in April,-1866, making the infant children and heirs of -Alfred parties complainant, and continuing .the cause. A few days afterwards, in the same term, the following order was entered in the cause: —

“By agreement of the parties, the continuance' of this cause, made on a former day of this term of this court, is set aside; and, on motion pf solicitors for the complainantsj Guadalupe Bent is hereby appointed guardian ad litem and commissioner in chancery for the minors of Alfred Bent in this cause, with full power to execute deeds- or carry into execution all sales or transfers made of her [their?] interests in and to the real estate therein described to Lucien B. Maxwell, one of the defendants in said cause, and that this cause stand continued until the next term'.of this court.”

On the third day of May, 1866, Guadalupe Bent, as guardian ad litem of Charles, Julian, and Alberto, and commissioner under the foregoing order, executed a deed of conveyance in *393 fee to the said Maxwell for the one undivided twelfth part of the property in question, belonging to the said Charles, Julian, and Alberto, as heirs of their father. The sisters of Alfred, with their husbands, executed deeds for their interest' in the lands about the same time.

In September Term, 1866, another decree (probably intended as a substitute for 'the order made in April) was made in the said cause, in the words following, to wit: —

“ Whereas an interlocutory decree was rendered at a former term of this court in the above cause, decreeing one-fourth of the land mentioned in the petition herein to the complainants in this, cause, and appointing commissioners to divide and set apart the portion so decreed; and whereas said interlocutory decree was never carried into effect; and whereas, since the time of the rendition of said decree, a mutual agreement has been made between the parties to this cause, settling and determining all the equities in the same: .
“It is, therefore, hereby ordered, adjudged, and decreed, by the mutual consent and agreement of the said complainants as well as of the said defendants in this cause, that the interlocutory decree above mentioned, together with all'orders made under and by virtue of the. same, be set aside; and, by the mutual consent, and agreement of the said parties, it is hereby further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the said Lucien B.-Maxwell, one of the defendants, in this cause, pay to the said complainants the sum of $18,000, to be divided among them per stirpes; that is, to the said Aloys Scheuriek and-Teresina .'Bent, his wife, one-third part, and to AlexanderHicklin and Estefana Bent, his wife, another third part, and to Charles Bent, Julian Bent, and Alberto"' Silas Bent, ¿he- children and heirs of Alfred Bent, deceased* the remaining third part, to be equally divided among the said last named, and to be paid in.to the hands of Guadalupe Bent, widow of the [said] Alfred Bent, deceased, and guardian ad litem• for said children, for the purposes of the said division.
“ And, upon the further consent and agreement of the said parties, it is hereby further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the said Alexander Hicklin and Estefana Bent, his wife, the said'Aloys Scheurick and Teresina Bent, his wife, and the said Guadalupe Bent, guardian ad litem for Charles Bent, Julian Bent, and Alberto Silas Bent, children and minor heirs of the said Alfred Bent, deceased, within ten days from the date of .this decree, make, execute, and deliver to the said Lucien B. Maxwell good and sufficient *394 deeds of conveyance of all their right, title, interest, estate, claim, and demand of, in, and to the lands in controversy in this cause, the said Guadalupe Bent, guardian ad litem, as aforesaid, in the name of Charles Bent, Julian Bent, and Alberto Silas Bent, minor heirs as aforesaid, and the said Alexander Hieklin and Estefana Bent, his wife, and the said Aloys Scheurick and Teresina Bent, his wife, •in their own names. And, by further consent and agreement between the said parties, it is hereby further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the costs of this suit shall be paid, each of the said parties to pay the separate costs in the same made by themselves.”

This last decree seems to have been the termination of proceedings in the cause. No further conveyances were executed, and nothing else was done to carry the decree into effect.

On the first day of August, 1870, nearly four years after the entry of the last decree, the proceedings were instituted which are now brought here on this appeal. On that day, the present appellees, The Maxwell Land-Grant and Railway Company (to whom by mesne conveyances a large portion of the land had, in the mean time, been assigned), together with Lucien B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 U.S. 391, 24 L. Ed. 481, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 2186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-maxwell-scotus-1877.