United States v. Armijo

5 U.S. 444
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 15, 1866
StatusPublished

This text of 5 U.S. 444 (United States v. Armijo) 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
United States v. Armijo, 5 U.S. 444 (1866).

Opinion

Mr. Justice FIELD,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court, as follows:

The motives which may actuate the interveners appealing, or the fact that an inconsiderable interest in the grant is represented by them, can have no influence upon the decision of the matter presented. The holder of the slightest interest, if properly before the court, has the right to insist upon a fair location of the quantity granted, however much such location may clash with the wishes of his co-owners.

The intervenors appealing rest their claim principally upon two grounds:

1st. Upon the alleged priority of the grant to Armijo; and

2d. Upon the alleged priority of occupation and settlement.

The priority of the grant consists only in the date of the former title-papers. The grant to Armijo bears date on the 4th day of March, 1840; that to Solano on the 20th of January, 1842. But the rights of Solano are recognized by Armijo in his petition, and in the order of concession by the commanding general, and are specially referred to in the formal grant issued by the governor. The concession to Armijo assumes, and correctly assumes, that the land known as Tolenas was vacant aud unappropriated. It is clear, therefore, that the political authorities intended that Armijo should take his grant in subordination to the previously existing, or, at least, previously asserted, rights of the Indian chief.

There can be no doubt, as observes the district judge, that, under those circumstances, the rights of Solano, according [449]*449to Mexican usages, would have been-recognized as superior to those of Armijo in any contest, notwithstanding the formal title issued first to Armijo. And, as he justly adds, “the archives abound in instances where not only the equity created by a prior occupation and cultivation under a provisional license to occupy, but even that created by a-prior solicitation, has been recognized and enforced.”

This is not all. Where a grant was of a specific quantity within exterior limits embracing a much larger quantity, there was no obligation on the part of the former government, nor is there any obligation on the'part, of the present government, to allow the quantity to be selected in accordance with the wishes of the grantee. The duty of the government is discharged when the right conferred by the grant to the quantity designated is attached to a specific and defined tract.

Under our system the right'of the grantee to direct a selection of the quantity granted is admitted, subject only to the restriction that the selection be made in one body, and in a compact form. This right, we say, is admitted, though strictly it is not a right; it is only a privilege given by the generosity of the government.

,The law of Mexico; as stated by G-alvan, was otherwise. It was as follows: “No person, though his grant be older than others, can take possession for himself, or measure, or set limits to his landed property, unless it is done by judicial authority, with the citation of all those who bound upon him; for whatever is done contrary to this will be null, of no validity or effect:”

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5 U.S. 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-armijo-scotus-1866.