Tyler v. Wells

2 Mo. App. 526, 1876 Mo. App. LEXIS 213
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 26, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 Mo. App. 526 (Tyler v. Wells) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyler v. Wells, 2 Mo. App. 526, 1876 Mo. App. LEXIS 213 (Mo. Ct. App. 1876).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action of ejectment commenced in 1857. 'The plaintiff deduced title from a confirmation, in 1810, by the old board of commissioners, to Labeaume. The location of this confirmation was the subject of much controversy. A survey made in 1851 was approved in that year, and a patent was issued in accordance with it in 1852. Immediately on its issue, litigation, which had been commenced before, assumed a new shape as to the rights of the owners of the Brazeau reservation of four by four arpents. These •owners claimed that this reservation lay within the survey for Labeaume.

The owners of the latter contended that the reservation lay to the south of Labeaume’s survey. This contest was finally •determined, 1873, by the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States. Tyler v. Maguire, 17 Wall. 253, and following. The survey approved in 1851 embraced much more land than had been included in any previous survey of this confirmation. This came to pass by reason of its being at last made to conform to the lines of the original survey made to Labeaume under the government of Spain. . The grant made by the lieutenant-governor to Labeaume was •declared, on its face, to contain 374 arpents of land, and it was for this area that Labeaume had filed his petition. It was surveyed for him by the agrimensor (surveyor) of that day, and the grant, with the survey, were laid before the board of commissioners as the foundation of Labeaume’s [528]*528title to a confirmation. The board confirmed to him 356-arpents, and four arpents to Brazeau, and ordered the confirmation to Labeaume to be survej'ed “ agreeably to the concession from Zenon Trudeau to Labeaume, and, as-respects the four arpents, agreeably to a reserve made in a sale from Joseph Brazeau to Louis Labeaume.” Loolcingback to the concession made by Trudeau, we find it designated by the Spanish survey made April 10, 1799. It. included both the land belonging to Labeaume and the-reservation, not of four arpents, but of four arpents square, or sixteen arpents, reserved to himself by Brazeau when he made a sale to Labeaume, on May 9, 1798, of the residue of a grant of four by twenty arpents made to Brazeau on June 25, 1794.

It must be borne in mind that in the days of the Spanish government the order of events in obtaining a_grant of land was, (1) a petition to the lieutenant-governor for a tract, of land with a more or less definite description; (2) an order by the lieutenant-governor to the surveyor to put the-petitioner in possession of the land claimed, if it were part, of the royal domain; (3) a certificate made by the surveyor or agrimensor that the land asked for was unappropriated, with a figurative plat of it, very seldom with accurate or detailed field notes ; (4) a reference of the whole-matter to the governor-general, at that time residing in New Orleans; and (5) a complete grant by him to thn ’petitioner.

In the immense majority of cases the complete grant-from the governor-general was not obtained, and, what has-always been familiarly known in Missouri as “ a French or Spanish grant” was nothing more than this preliminary order of the lieutenant-governor to the surveyor, followed up, as it almost invariably was, by the surveyor’s return, giving definiteness to the sometimes vague grant or permission to occupy in anticipation of the complete grant from the governor-general. This last officer had vice-regal pow[529]*529ers, and a grant by him, before the change of government* was as effectual as a patent from the United States after that event. But the permission to occupy given by the lieutenant-governors, or military commandants of the various posts did not convey title to the petitioners. They contained, for the most part, a declaration that these proliminary measures AVere intended to facilitate the grant of a. complete title by the governor-general. The instances in which a complete title was thus obtained were very few. Within the old limits of the toAvn of St. Louis there was not a single case of such a title, perhaps not one within the present limits. North of the St. Louis common field was-one such grant to Cerré (S. 2042), and Avest of what is still called ‘ ‘ King’s Highway ” ( Chemin du Roi, or El Camino del Rey) were two such grants to Charles Gratiot. There were a few others, but only a very few.

Almost without exception the figurative plat returned by the surveyor, and ascertainable on the ground by stones or other fixed monuments at the corners, contained a larger area than was pra}md for by the petitioner. This was the case with the survey of Labeaume. It contained more than 374 arpents. If it had contained 374 arpents, and no more, there Avould still have been, after satisfying the reservation to Brazeau of sixteen arpents, 358 for Labeaume. As we have seen, the board confirmed to him 356 arpents only, speaking by quantity, but referred, for ascertainment of the land confirmed, to the concession and survey executed under the Spanish government, and at the same time declared (we interpret this document by the light of the decision of the ' Supreme Court of the United States above quoted) that Brazeau’s reservation, part of this concession, was also confirmed to him, amounting to four arpents square, or sixteen arpents. The earlier surveys of this confirmation were mistakenly confined to 372 arpents (or 356 plus 16), and the western line of these earlier surveys was made parallel with the western line of the old Spanish survey.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Mo. App. 526, 1876 Mo. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyler-v-wells-moctapp-1876.