United States v. Bolton

64 U.S. 341, 16 L. Ed. 569, 23 How. 341, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 777
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 18, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 64 U.S. 341 (United States v. Bolton) 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. Bolton, 64 U.S. 341, 16 L. Ed. 569, 23 How. 341, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 777 (1860).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CATRON

delivered the opinion of the court.

In March, 1852, the appellee presented his claim to the commissioners for settling land claims in California for a parcel of land situated in the county of San Francisco, and bounded north by what was formerly known as Yerba Buena; northwest by lands of the presidio of San Francisco; west by the lands of Francisco Haro; south by the lands of Sanchez; and east by the bay of San Francisco, with a reservation of the curate’s house, the church of Dolores, and other previously granted lands within the external boundaries of the tract, which include 29,717 acres; and the claims previously granted within those boundaries are 19,531 acres; leaving, as the unquestioned claim of Bolton, 10,186 acres. The original claimant is Jose Prudencia Santillan, a secular priest, who, together with his general agent, Manuel Antonio Rodriguez de Poli, in April, 1850, upon the recited consideration of two hundred thousand' dollars, conveyed it to Bolton, the appellee. An interested party testifies that, in 1851 and in 1854, it was worth, at a low estimate, more than two million of dollars. The claim was confirmed in 1855 by the' board of land commissioners, and in 1857 their decree was affirmed in the District Court. The grant to Santillan bears date the 10th February, 1846. It pui’ports to have been made by Pio Pico, “ first member of the Assembly of the Department of the Californias, and. charged with the administration of the law in the same,” and to be signed by Covarrubias, as secretary. ' It recites that the priest Santillan has'petitioned for ¿grant, for his own benefit, of all the common lands known as belonging to the mission of Dolores, as well as the houses of the rancherías of the *344 mission, which were in a state of abandonment; and that thereupon the Governor had proceeded to grant them, subject . to conditions: -

1. He shall pay, as a compensation for said grant, all the debts that exist against the mission.
. 2. He shall petition the proper judge for the judicial possession, in virtue of the grant, of all the lands and houses conveyed ; and in the mean time, the possession which he has of ;the houses and lands, in his capacity of administrator, appointed as such by the prelate of the missions of the college . of Our Lady of Guadalupe, in Zacatecas, for the temporalities of the mission of Dolores, shall serve as legal.
' 3. The judge who shall give the possession shall have it measured and marked with the customary landmarks, thé -cotítents being three square leagues, more or less.
4 and 5. That the houses of the curate, and the church of Dolores, and the property which some' persons hold under good titles, shall be respected, and that the title be recorded.

The claimant exhibits a .letter from Covarrubias to Santillan, dated 15th January, 1846, which informs him of an order made by the Governor to the administrator of the mission to make formal delivery of all the appurtenances of the mission Dolores to. Santillan, that he (Santillan) may administer the temporalities of the mission.

In March, 1850, Santillan published a notice in a newspaper in San Francisco, which stated that the Governor, Pio Pico, on the. 10th February, 1846, had .granted to him all the uncultivated lands and all the unoccupied houses appertaining to the mission; that the grant was made and is recorded in the city of Los Angeles, and that it was written by Covarrubias, then secretary of the Governor; that in the month of January, 1846, an' order had issued to the administrator of the mission, to put Jose Prudencia Santillan in possession of the temporalities of the mission, which was done; and-that the grant, being made one month after, recognises and refers to this order of the Government, and provides that the possession under the order was for the purposes of the grant. This notice was'designed to warn persons from trespassing on the land *345 or purchasing titles from the justice of the peace, acting in the capacity of alcalde in San Francisco. The grant itself was recorded shortly after in the county records of San Francisco; and in May, 1852, the claim was filed, with a petition demanding its confirmation, before the board of land commissioners, sitting at San Francisco.

In its support, four principal witnesses were relied on, namely: Jose Maria Covarrubias, Cayetano Arenas, Jose Matías Moreno, and Narcisco Botello. Covarrubias’s deposition was filed with the petition. He was secretary of the Government when the grant bears date, and deposes that he wrote the document; that Governor Pio Pico signed it, and that he, Covarrubias, countersigned it as secretary; all of which was done in the secretary’s office at Los Angeles, at the time the grant bears date. He says.the paper there exhibited was one of those delivered to the party, and that he believes it is a substantial copy, if not a literal one, of an order of the Governor for the purposes therein stated.

Arenas states that he was employed as an officer in the office of the secretary of the Government; that he saw the grant now filed before- the board of land commissioners, produced at the office of the secretary of the‘Government in the month of February, 1846, about the time it bears date. “It is-a document given out by the Government to-padre Santillan.” He’ declares the signature of the Governor and secretary to be genuine; that he saw the document made; also, that had the grant remained in the secretary’s office, it is probable he should have seen it. Being asked whether a note of the grant was ever made in any book of titles, he answers that there were then only loose sheets of paper kept on which to note titles at Los Angeles, the regular book being at Monterey; and that a note of this title was made on said loose sheets of paper. “ I wrote the note of this title myself.” The sheets of paper were stitched together.

Moreno proves that he was appointed Government secretary as successor of Covan-ubias, and came into office on the 1st day of May, 1846, and continued to act as secretary until the country was conquered in July following. He is asked on *346 behalf of the claimant, “ "Whilst acting as secretary, did yon ever see a paper purporting to be a petition of Jose Prudencia Santillan for a grant of the land of the ex-mission of Dolores, or any other paper in relation to said grant ? ” and answers, “I never did.”

He further, states, that he had never seen any such grant, or any papers relating thereto. “ All I recollect is, that I saw the name of padre Santillan in the book in which the note of titles was taken; it was on the last page, but I do not know whether it was in relation to a grant or not. The book contained nothing but the notes which were taken of titles.

Narcisco Botello deposes, that he was a deputy of the Departmental Assembly during the first four months of 1846, and served as one of the committee on public lands; and during that time the original expediente and grant made to Santillan, of the mission of Dolores and its lands, came up for action before the Assembly; that the title was duly submitted and approved. He swears to its confirmation in the most precise terms.

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Bluebook (online)
64 U.S. 341, 16 L. Ed. 569, 23 How. 341, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-bolton-scotus-1860.