Town v. De Haven

24 F. Cas. 88, 5 Sawy. 146, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1578
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedApril 22, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 24 F. Cas. 88 (Town v. De Haven) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town v. De Haven, 24 F. Cas. 88, 5 Sawy. 146, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1578 (circtdor 1878).

Opinion

DEADY. District Judge.

The material facts aud allegations contained in the bill are briefly these: That David Gervais. a British subject, who was born in Oregon territory, in the year 1816, and died therein on August 22, 1853, settled upon the premises in controversy in November, 1845. while said territory was still in the joint occupation of Great Britain and the United States, and occupied and cultivated the same until his death; that said David died intestate, leaving Mary Ann Ger-vais to whom he was married in 1841, as his widow, and two children, Margaret Gay and Prank Gervais as his sole heirs at law; that said Mary Ann was duly appointed adminis-tratrix of the estate of the deceased', and as such administratrix, on behalf of herself and said children, did on November 10, 1853, notify the surveyor-general of Oregon of the claim of said estate to the premises, and that she claimed the same “as the possessory light” of the deceased by virtue of the treaty with Great Britain of June 15, 1846, in regard to limits westward of the Boeky Mountains, and at the same time filed with said surveyor “the necessary proofs” of these facts; that said widow and children thereupon “became the owners of said premises and entitled to a patent therefor, and to full protection of their possessory rights under the laws of the United States and the treaty aforesaid;” that no patent has ever issued to said widow or children, nor have their possessory rights been otherwise respected, but the same has been denied and a patent to the premies issued by the United States on September 6, 1866, to the defendants, Andrew De Haven,- and Polly his wife, who, with the defendants, William De Haven and Michael Pahy, to whom said Andrew and Polly have conveyed an interest therein, claim the whole of said lands as their own, excepting one hundred acres, claimed in his own right by the defendant Earle; and that said widow and children inherited the premises from said David Gervais and have since conveyed the same to the complainant, who is now the owner thereof.

The defendant demurs to the bill for sundry causes. The fifth and last cause is a want of equity. In support of this, it is maintained that the possessory right guaranteed to David Gervais by the third article of the Oregon treaty of June 15. 1846 (U. S. Pub. Treat. 321), terminated with his death in 1853, citing Cowenia v. Hannah, 3 Or. 468. This article of the treaty reads as follows: “In the future appropriation of the territory south of the forty-ninth parallel of north latitude, as provided in the first article of this treaty, the possessory rights of the Hudson’s Bay Company, and of all British subjects who may be already in the occupation of land or other property lawfully acquired within the said territory, shall be respected.”

At the date of this treaty there were some thousands of American citizens and British subjects settled in the Oregon territory south of the forty-ninth parallel under and by virtue of the third article of the convention of October 20, 1818, commonly and properly called the treaty of “joint occupation,” which in effect provided that the country should be free and open to the “citizens and subjects” of the two governments until otherwise provided. U. S. Pub. Treat. 299; McKay v. Campbell [Case No. 8.840], The occupation of the territory by these citizens and subjects was regulated by the provisional government, an authority created and sustained by both, during [89]*89this period. As a rule, each male adult citizen and subject was allowed to occupy and possess six hundred and forty acres of land so long as he improved and cultivated the same. The settler might abandon or dispose of his location and take up another; but in case of his death his possession did not descend or pass to his children or relatives, but the “claim” together, with the improvements thereon was disposed of by the administrator as personal property.

This was the “possessory right” which the United States in the future appropriation or disposition of the soil undertook to respect. As a just nation, the obligation to do this was binding upon her independent of the treaty stipulation. Soulard v. U. S., 4 Pet. [29 U. S.] 512; Delassus v. U. S., 9 Pet. [34 U. S.] 133; Mitchel v. U. S.. Id. 734; U. S. v. Moreno, 1 Wall. [68 U. S.] 404.

Under the provisional government the pos-sessory right of Gervais would have terminated with his death, and his widow and children would not have succeeded him therein, for there was no transmission of possession or right from one occupant to another, but each settler “took up” his “claim.” so to speak, de novo. If a settler came lawfully into the occupation of land once possessed by another he did not do so as the successor in interest of such other, but the one for a consideration or any cause abandoned the location, and the other took it up “as though the foot of man had never been upon it.” Lownsdale v. Portland [Case No. 8,578]. And if this were otherwise the widow and children of Gervais could not have succeeded to his possession, for they, because of the sex of the one and the nonage of the others, were incapable of “holding a claim;” but the value of the “claim” and improvements would have been distributed among them by the intervention of an administrator and sale of the same.

Did the third article of the treaty of 1840 enhance this possessory right or increase the quantity of the occupant’s interest or the duration or time of its enjoyment? Does it contain a grant of some interest in or right to the possession of the soil, or is it merely a promise by the United States to respect an existing right, whatever that might be? On the one hand it is hardly probable that Great Britain, while conceding so much as she did to the United States by that treaty, would also surrender her subjects, who had settled here upon the faith of her claim to the country, without taking some sufficient security •or stipulation as to their possessions, upon which many of them had spent years of labor and care to make permanent homes for themselves and families. The possessory rights of the Hudson’s Bay Company provided for in the same article were of no higher character and hardly as meritorious as those of these British subjects. Yet the two governments, by the convention of July 1, 18G3 (U. S. Pub. Treat. 340). declared that it was desirable that all questions concerning “the possessory rights” of said company should be settled by the transfer of the same to the government of the United States for an adequate money consideration, and provided for an arbitration to ascertain the value thereof, upon which four hundred and fifty thousand dollars was awarded to the company.

Yet the language used in the treaty — pos-sessory rights shall be respected — does not of itself indicate that any new or additional right was intended to be conferred thereby, but only that the existing right of possession, as defined by the local law should be respected, regarded, not infringed or denied without due process of law. Upon its face the stipulation appears to be a mere promise, which of itself confers no right to or in the soil, and for the neglect or violation of which the British subject would only have a just claim against the United States for compensation in money or kind. The legal power of the government to dispose of the territory south of the forty-ninth parallel as it saw proper was not limited by the treaty, and belonged to it thereafter as an incident of its sovereignty. The possessory right that it bound itself to respect was probably only that which the British subject then enjoyed under the local law, which practically terminated with his life. In Cowenia v. Hannah, supra, Mr.

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Related

Cowenia v. Hannah
3 Or. 465 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1869)

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 88, 5 Sawy. 146, 1878 U.S. App. LEXIS 1578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-v-de-haven-circtdor-1878.