United States of America, in Its Own Right, and for and on Behalf of the Taos Indian Pueblo v. Henry T. Trujillo and Magdalena T. Duran

853 F.2d 800, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 10236, 1988 WL 79735
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 3, 1988
Docket85-1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 853 F.2d 800 (United States of America, in Its Own Right, and for and on Behalf of the Taos Indian Pueblo v. Henry T. Trujillo and Magdalena T. Duran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States of America, in Its Own Right, and for and on Behalf of the Taos Indian Pueblo v. Henry T. Trujillo and Magdalena T. Duran, 853 F.2d 800, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 10236, 1988 WL 79735 (10th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

STEPHEN H. ANDERSON, Circuit Judge.

Henry T. Trujillo and Magdalena T. Duran (Trujillo and Duran), the son and daughter of Sabino Trujillo, appeal a judgment of the district court requiring them to vacate property belonging to the Taos Pueblo and assessing nominal trespass damages against them because of their innocent trespass. This consolidated action was brought in the district court by the United States on its own behalf, and on behalf of the Taos Pueblo Indians. In an amended answer to the complaint, Trujillo and Duran requested that title be quieted in them as the rightful owners of the small strips of contested property. Although they acknowledged at trial that the disputed land was at one time granted to the Taos Pueblo, Trujillo and Duran assert that their predecessors in title met all of the qualifications of the Pueblo Lands Act entitling them to a patent to the property from *801 the United States. As a result, this appeal, as did the trial below, centers on the disposition by the Pueblo Lands Board of the title claim to Pueblo lands made by Trujillo and Duran’s predecessors in interest.

I.

In 1864, the Taos Pueblo were given a land patent by the United States Government which included the strips of land contested here. For reasons not relevant to our disposition of this appeal, title to parts of the land grants made to the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico, including the Taos Pueblo, became clouded after the 1864 patent. As a result, Congress passed the Pueblo Lands Act of June 7, 1924, 43 Stat. 636, as amended by Act May 31, 1933, 48 Stat. Ill, (25 U.S.C. § 331, note). The Act was a legislative attempt “to provide for the final adjudication and settlement of a very complicated and difficult series of conflicting titles affecting lands claimed by the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico.” Mountain States Tel. and Tel. v. Pueblo of Santa Ana, 472 U.S. 237, 240, 105 S.Ct. 2587, 2589, 86 L.Ed.2d 168 (1985) (quoting S.Rep. No. 492, 68th Cong., 1st Sess., 3 (1924)).

The statute established the Pueblo Lands Board to examine non-Indian claims to Pueblo lands. The duty of the Board was to make a report determining which lands within the original Pueblo land grants still belonged to the Pueblo. Where the three-member Board unanimously determined that Indian title had been extinguished according to the conditions described in the act, it did not include the property in the report, and effectively authorized the issuance of a patent granting the non-Indian claimant a quit-claim deed against the Indians and the United States Government. The act specified that title to Pueblo lands could be extinguished either by proof of adverse possession with color of title from 1902 or without color of title from 1889.

After the Board’s report was completed, it became the basis of a quiet title action brought by the United States to quiet title to the remaining property in the Pueblo. If the Board had not unanimously accepted part or all of a claimant’s claim against Indian property, he could intervene in the action (if he was not named as a defendant), and was authorized by the statute to raise as a defense to the action either of the two types of adverse possession previously listed.

Trujillo and Duran’s predecessors in interest, their father Sabino Trujillo and their uncle Julian Jaramillo, made a claim for property to the Pueblo Lands Board based on a chain of title and possession extending back to 1888. The Board unanimously granted a land exception to Trujillo and Jaramillo consistent with the Joy Survey line. The Joy Survey had been conducted twelve years before the Board hearings and showed no overlap between the deeds on which Trujillo and Jaramillo made their claims and the parcels of land to the north and northeast which are contested here. Thus, when the United States subsequently brought an action to quiet title in the remaining portion of the land grants, Trujillo and Jaramillo were not made defendants in the quiet title action. In 1934, Trujillo and Jaramillo accepted a land patent from the government for their approved exception whose boundaries did not encroach on the land at issue here.

Testimony was admitted at trial that sometime between 1936 and the 1950’s, the Pueblos erected a fence close to the property patented to Trujillo and Duran. This fence, however, was not constructed on the Pueblo property line; thus it did not encompass the tracts of land disputed here which were to the north of the Trujillo-Jaramillo patent, and title to which had been quieted in the Pueblos. Further testimony showed that Sabino Trujillo believed that his property ran to this fence, and that in the late 1940’s and in 1951, his wife made out two deeds, one to her son Henry Trujillo, the other to her daughter Magdalena Duran, that granted them parts of the property contested here.

Both Trujillo and Duran built homes and other improvements either partially or totally on this disputed property. After a number of years, they were informed by *802 the Pueblo that they were trespassers and this ejectment action was brought.

At trial, Trujillo and Duran asserted that their predecessors in title had made a claim to the contested tracts before the Pueblo Lands Board, but that the Board, while granting most of their claim, inexplicably denied their claim as to the tracts now contested and subsequently neglected to include their father and uncle as defendants in the quiet title action brought to determine title to the tracts at issue here. They thus argued that they were not bound by the quiet title action, and that because their predecessors otherwise met the requirements for a patent under the Pueblo Lands Act, they are the rightful possessors of the property in question.

The district court rejected those claims finding that no claims were made by Sabino Trujillo or Julian Jaramillo to the contested lands before the Pueblo Lands Board. See R.Vol. I at 67. Accordingly, the district court found that the Taos Pueblo owned the property and ordered the defendants to vacate and restore the property as nearly as was practicable and to pay to the Pueblo nominal trespass damages of ten dollars each. 1 See R.Vol. I at 75-78. Trujillo and Duran now challenge this outcome on appeal. They argue that the district court’s finding that the contested property was never claimed by their predecessor is not supported by substantial evidence and that it was error for the district court to determine that the Taos Pueblo held title to the contested parcels of land. 2 After reviewing the trial record and carefully considering the arguments made on appeal, we affirm the judgment of the district court.

II.

We can only set aside a factual conclusion of the district court on appeal if we determine that it is clearly erroneous. Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a); see Anderson v. City of Bessemer, 470 U.S. 564, 573, 105 S.Ct.

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853 F.2d 800, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 10236, 1988 WL 79735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-of-america-in-its-own-right-and-for-and-on-behalf-of-the-ca10-1988.