Tyler v. Magwire

84 U.S. 253, 21 L. Ed. 576, 17 Wall. 253, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1327
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 17, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 84 U.S. 253 (Tyler v. Magwire) 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
Tyler v. Magwire, 84 U.S. 253, 21 L. Ed. 576, 17 Wall. 253, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1327 (1873).

Opinion

''Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Power to re-examine, in a certain class of cases, final judgments and decrees in the highest court of law or equity of a *273 State, and to reverse or affirm the same upon a writ of error, was conferred upon the Supreme Court by the twenty-fifth section of the Judiciary Act, and the same section provides that the writ’of error shall have the same effect as if the judgment or decree had been rendered or passed in the Circuit Court, and that the proceeding upon the íeversal shall also-be the same, except that the Supreme Court, instead of remanding the cause for a final decision, may, at their discretion, if the cause shall have been ouce before remanded, proceed to a final decisiou of the same, and award execution. * Where the reversal is in favor of the original plaintiff, and the damages to be assessed or matters to be decreed are uncertain, the Supreme Court will remand, the cause for a final decision, unless the same shall have been ouce before remanded, in which case the court may, at their discretion, proceed to a final decision of the cause. Execution in that event may be awarded here, but the court, in all other appellate cases, will send a special mandate to the subordinate court for all further necessary proceedings.

Such were the directions of the Judiciary Act, but the Congress, on the 5th of February, 1867, amended that section in several particulars, and provided that the writ of error, in such a case, shall have the same effect as if the judgment or decree had been rendered or passed in a Federal court, and that the proceeding upon the reversal shall also be the same, except that the Supreme Court may, at their discretion, proceed to a final decision of the same and award execution or remand the same to the inferior court.

Titles to lands claimed by individuals in Louisiana, at the time the province was ceded to the United States, were, in many eases, incomplete, as the governor of the province never possessed the power to issue a patent. All he could do was to issue to a donee an instrument called a concession or order of survey, and as the claimants had never obtained patents from the supreme government it became necessary for a plaintiff, in a suit to recover the land, to prove that his *274 claim bad been confirmed under some act of Congress. Complete titles, of which there were a few at the date of the cession, required no such confirmation, as they were protected by the third article of the treaty of cession. * It was stipulated by the treaty that’ the inhabitants of the ceded territory should be admitted into the Union as soon as possible, and that in the meantime they should be maintained and protected in the free enjoyment of their property. Congress- accordingly passed the act of the 2d of March, 1805, to ascertain and adjust the titles and claims to land in the ceded territory. Prior to the passage of that act, however,' the province ceded by the treaty had been organized by Congress into two Territories, and the fifth section of the act to ascertain and adjust such titles and claims made provision for the appointment of commissioners in each of those Territories to ascertain aud adjudicate the rights-of persons presenting such claims. Such commissioners were required by that act to lay their decisions before Congress, but a subsequent act provided that the decision of the commissioners when in favor of the claimant should be final against the United States.

Both parties in this ease claim under the same concession, which was issued by the governor to Joseph Brazeau. On the 1st of June, 1794, he presented his petition to the governor, asking for a tract of land,situate in the western part of the town of St. Louis, beyond the foot of the-mound called La Qrange de Terre, of four arpeuts in width, to extend from the bank of the Mississippi in the west quarter, southwest, by about twenty arpeuts in depth, beginning at the foot of the hill on which stauds the mound and ascending in a northwest course to the environs of Rocky Branch, so that the 'tract shall be bounded on the east side by the bank of the river, and on-the other sides in part by the public domain, and in part by the lands reunited to that do *275 main. Ten days later the governor executed an instrument in which he declared that the tract belonged to the public domain, and certified that he had put the petitioner in possession of the same, specifying in a general way'the boundaries of the tract, and describing it as four arpents front by tweuty arpents in depth. On the 25th of June, in the same year, the governor issued a concession to the petitioner, in which he formally granted to the donee in fee simple, for him, his heirs or assigns, or whosoever may represent his rights, a tract of laud ... of four arpents front by twenty arpents in depth, situate north of the town; ... to begin beyond the mound, extending north-northwest to the environs* of Rocky Branch ; bounded on one side by the bank of the river, and on the opposite by lands reunited to the public domain through 'which the concession passes, of which one end is to be bounded by the concession to one Esther, a free mulatto woman. Five years before the treat} of cession, on the 9th of May, the donee, by a deed of that date, duly executed before the governor, sold, ceded, relinquished, and transferred to Louis Labeaume, “ a concession of .land to him given,” as aforesaid, consisting of four arpents of land, to be taken from the foot of the hill called La Grange de Terre, by twenty arpents in depth; bounded by the Rocky Branch at the extremity opposite the hillock, east by the river, and west by the land belonging to the royal domain, the said Brazeau reserving to himself four arpents of land to be taken at the foot of the hillock in the southern part of said land, . . . selling only sixteen arpents in depth to said Labeaume, who accepts the sale on those terms aud conditions; and the record shows that the instrument was signed by both parties. Four by sixteen arpents were vested in the purchaser by that deed, but he desired to enlarge his possession and he asked the governor to grant him an additional tract of throe hundred and sixty arpents, including the tract he acquired by that conveyance, and the governor, on the 15th of February following, made the concession and directed in the same instrument that the surveyor should make out the survey in continuation of his antecedent pur *276 chase, and that he should put the interested party in possession of the described premises. Pursuant to those directions the surveyor made the requisite survey, but he included the whole of the former concession in the certificate, overlooking the undisputed fact that the grantor of the deed reserved to himself 4x4 arpents of the same, “ to be taken at the foot of the hillock in the southern part, of said land,” which shows the origin of this long-protracted controversy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 U.S. 253, 21 L. Ed. 576, 17 Wall. 253, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyler-v-magwire-scotus-1873.