United States v. Candelaria

16 F.2d 559, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3912
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 13, 1926
DocketNo. 6594
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 16 F.2d 559 (United States v. Candelaria) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Candelaria, 16 F.2d 559, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3912 (8th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

STONE, Circuit Judge.

The United States District Court for the District of New Mexico entered a decree upon the pleadings, dismissing an action brought by the United States, as guardian of the Indians of the pueblo of Laguna, against Jose Candelaria and other claimants to certain lands in that state. The pleadings consisted of the petition, answer and replication. The allegations of each of these pleadings was as follows:

Bill of Complaint.

The suit was brought by authority of the Attorney General of the United States, at the request of 'the Secretary of the Interior, in furtherance of the Indian policy of the government, which is functioning as the guardian of the pueblo of Laguna; a tribe of Pueblo Indians, wards of the United States, incompetent to manage their own affairs, and from a period prior to the year A. D. 1769, the owner of, residing on, cultivating and using for agricultural and pastoral purposes a grant or tract of land situated in the county of Valencia, state of New Mexico, known as the “Paguate Purchase,” confirmed to the pueblo of Laguna by Act of Congress, March 3, 1869 (15 Stat. 342), and patented by the United States of America pursuant to said confirmation,' September 22, 1884. The action of the government officials in bringing the suit was in the general line of official duty in defense of and seeking a judicial determination of the title of the pueblo of Laguna to the tract or grant of land set out and described in the bill of complaint.

The tract of land in question was originally granted by the government of Spain to certain individuals, whose heirs and assigns, prior to A. D. 1769, sold and conveyed the same to the pueblo of Laguna by deed, in the execution of which the Spanish authorities participated, and which conveyance was subsequently, by deed, June 1, A. D. 1820, executed by a Spanish official known as the “Protector General of the Indians,” recognized and confirmed as a conveyance of the said tract to the said pueblo, and again, on August 26, 1826, the last mentioned deed was approved by the then governor of the province of New Mexico.

At the time of the acquisition of New Mexico by the United States of America, February 7, 1848, the said pueblo of Laguna was in the possession, and claiming absolute ownership and title under the foregoing conveyances, of the said tract of land known as the “Paguate Purchase,” and under the provisions of the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, by virtue of which New Mexico became a portion of the territory embraced within the limits of the United States of America, the said pueblo of Laguna, and the [560]*560Indians thereof, became and were entitled to its protection and all the benefits accruing to them thereunder.

Within the areas contained in the said “Paguate Purchase” there are certain tracts known locally as the Valle Lindero, Piedra Lumbre, and Chupadero, upon which some of the Indians of the pueblo, individually, have cultivated lands for many years, and on which said locally known tracts some of the defendants were permitted by the Indians of said pueblo to cultivate certain areas without interference or molestation. But during the years 1906, 1907, 1908 and 1909, these defendants commenced the fencing of other lands in said locally known tracts, belonging to the said pueblo, by which the Indians were excluded from lands which they had cultivated and irrigated for many years, and, by threats, trespasses and in other ways, endeavored to expel the Indians from the choice lands lying in said locally known places.

The pueblo of Laguna was established by the Spaniards in the year 1698, under royal authority and pursuant to the rules and regulations of the crown of Spain made and provided for the establishment of Indian pueblos in New Spain, of which the province of New Mexico was a part, the Indians constituting said pueblo being made up of the members of several tribes who had abandoned their habitat in other pueblo villages in New, Mexico during the wars of the reconquest of the province of New Mexico in the years 1692-1696; during all the years subsequent thereto the Indians of the pueblo of Laguna have lived in villages located at various places upon their lands, among which is the village of Paguate, which is situated within the lands constituting the said “Paguate Purchase” and located about half a mile south of the said locally known tract of Valle Lindero.

The defendants live and have their homes at villages located a short distance north of the north boundary of the “Paguate Purchase,” known as Cebolleta and Moquino; they and their predecessors “squatted” upon divers and sundry small tracts in the said Valle Lindero, Piedra Lumbre and Chupadero, and are now claiming all of said tracts adverse to the title of the said pueblo of Laguna, and have also attempted to monopolize, to the exclusion of the Indians, large and valuable tracts of land suitable for grazing purposes within the exterior boundaries of the said “Paguate Purchase,” and the said defendants are claiming title to these tracts within the “Paguate Purchase” under a grant, deed or some other instrument in writing, purporting to convey the title to the particular lands so claimed by them.

Answer.

The defendants in their answer denied the wardship of appellant. They admitted that the pueblo of Laguna was the owner of the tract of land known as the “Paguate Purchase”; that such ownership had existed since the passagei of the Act of Congress of March 3, 1869; that the northern boundary of said “Paguate Purchase” was a place known as the Mesa del Gabilan; admitting also the. issue by the United States of America of a patent to said pueblo, but declaring that the description in said patent included land far to the north of the said Mesa del Gabilan. Defendants further answering declared that the Indian claim to such land north of the said Mesa del Gabilan had been, prior to the filing of this suit, adjudicated adversely to the pueblo of Laguna by the district court of the county of Valencia, in the territory of New Mexico, in a suit instituted by said pueblo in February, 1910, for the purpose of quieting the Indian title to the tract of land in the bill of complaint described, and in which suit many of the defendants herein had been named as defendants ; and that by said adjudication, the territorial court had found as matter of fact that the said “Mesa del Gabilan lies to a considerable distance southeast of the Indian town called Paguate, and that the junction of the Canada del Pedro Padilla, which is the other call for said southeast boundary for said Cebolleta grant, lies directly east from said Mesa del Gabilan, the line from said Mesa and the point of junction of the said Canadas being the true boundary line of said Cebolleta grant, the said true boundary line and the surveyed southeast boundary line of the Cebolleta grant being a part of the land described and set forth in the complaint,” and that “the defendants and their ancestors and predecessors in title had been, from a time beyond the memory of any living man, in the open, notorious and exclusive possession of portions of the land lying between said true boundary line and said surveyed line of the Cebolleta grant,” which is set up in the case at balas the northeast boundary of the land claimed by said pueblo; and that by the survey of' the Cebolleta grant' the southern line of said grant was established far to the north of its actual location on the earth’s surface; [561]

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Bluebook (online)
16 F.2d 559, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-candelaria-ca8-1926.