United States v. Castant

53 U.S. 437, 13 L. Ed. 1056, 12 How. 437, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 673
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 24, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 53 U.S. 437 (United States v. Castant) 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. Castant, 53 U.S. 437, 13 L. Ed. 1056, 12 How. 437, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 673 (1852).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

The claim of the appellees in this case was preferred in virtue of the provisions of the act of Congress of May 26th, 1824, entitled “ An act enabling the claimants to lands within the limits of the State of Missouri, and the Territory of Arkansas, to institute proceedings to try the validity of their claimsvid. 4 Stat. at Large, 52, which provisions were revived by an act of Congress of the 17th of June, 1844, and extended to the States of Louisiana and Arkansas, and to so much of the States of Mississippi and Alabama as is included in the district of country south of the 31st degree of north latitude, and between the Mississippi and Perdido rivers. 5 Stat. at Large, 676.

■ The original petition, presented in the name of Jacob Brandegee, sets forth that in pursuance of an order of Don Manuel Gayoso de Lemo's, Governor-General of Louisiana and West •Florida, Don Carlos Laveau Trudeau the royal Surveyor, did on the 15th of November, 1798, deliver to Donna Maria Manetta' Laveau Trudeau, a tract of land, containing five hundred superficial arpens, situated and bounded as in the petition described, and as contained in a survey or figurative plan accompanying the petition, and as said to have been set forth in a survey alleged to have been previously made by Pintado, Deputy-Surveyor of Louisiana.and West Florida. That afterwards, on or about the 12th day of November, 1798, the Governor-General Gayoso ‘ de Lemos, made a regular concession or grant of this land to Donna 'Maria Manetta Laveau Trudeau; that on the 31st of ''Abgust, 1821, the said Donna Maria conjointly with her husband,Musiah E. Kerr, sold and conveyed the land granted as aforesaid to Brandegee, and the deed to him is made an exhibit in this case. The petition further states, (referring to the metes and bounds of the grant, as described in the survey and evidences of title) .that the claim had been presented to the Board of Land Commissioners, whose decision-had been adverse thereto-; that the whole of said tract of land, or the greater part *439 thereof, had either been sold by the United States, or confirmed to actual settlers. The petition then concludes with the prayer, that the title of the petitioner may be held good, and that he may be entitled to enter an equal quantity of land in lieu of that which had been sold or confirmed to others. The petitioner, Jacob Brandegee, having departed this life after the institution of these proceedings, they were revived in the name of his widow in community, and of his children and heirs.

There is not exhibited with the petition or in any part of the proceedings, an original order from De Lemos to Trudeau, dir recting the latter to deliver to Donna Maria Manetta Trudeau, the land mentioned, but there is a certificate signed by Carlos Laveau Trudeau, as Royal Surveyor, stating that he had delivered possession to Donna Maria Manetta Laveau Trudeau, of the tract of land of five hundred superficial arpens, corresponding with the figurative plan or survey, in which the boundaries are described with great precision. This certificate is followed by an instrument adopting and confirming it, signed by Gayoso De Lemos, styling himself Brigadier of the Royal Armies, Governor-General and Royal Vice-Patron of the Provinces of Louisiana and "West Florida; and this instrument, after reciting the boundaries as contained in the certificate, concludes in the following terms: “ And recognizing the same; approving them as we do hereby approve them, availing ourselves of the faculty which the King has given us, we grant in his royal name, to the aforesaid Donna Maria Manetta Laveau Trudeau, the aforesaid five hundred superficial acres of land; that she may use and dispose of-them as her own property, in conformity with the aforesaid aets.”

Upon the aforegoing petition, and the documents above referred to, constituting all the evidence in this cause, the District Court, on the 8th of June, 1849, ordered and decreed, that the grant made by the Spanish government to Donna Maria Manetta Laveau Trudeau wás a perfect one; "that therefore, the plaintiffs are entitled to the relief granted by the act of Congress, approved on the 17th’of June, 1844, and the act of 1824, to' which it refers; and that it is therefore ordered and decreed, that the grant is valid against the United States, and that the land described in the said grant arid survey thereof, as part of the exhibits, containing five hundred superficial arpens, according to the metes and bounds as described in the said grant and survey, belongs to the petitioners holding under the original grantee.” The same court then proceeds to declare; “ that whereas it is ascertained that a great part of the land is now held by titles emanating from the United States, it is further" ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that for all the land within the limits so *440 held, which has-been sold or otherwise disposed of by the United States, the petitioners shall be, and they are hereby authorized to enter in any land-office of the United States in the State of Louisiana, a like quantity of public land elsewhere, in; conformity with the provision of the 11th section of the act of- Congress, approved on the 26th of May, 1824.”

This decision of the district judge is palpably inconsistent with the repeated adjudications of this court, upon the language and objects of the act of Congress of 1824, and of the reviving act of 1844; and is indééd contradictory and inconsistent with itself, in the different grounds, it assumes for its support. Before proceeding to a more particular examination of the decisión of the District Court, it seems proper to advert to the true position • of the petitioner, or rather of the grantee, from whom his title is deduced, as described in the petition, and to inquire whether that position, as there described, -apart from the question of the completeness or incompleteness of the grant, be. one on which the jurisdiction of the District Court could attach. Thus it must be remembered, that in the enumeration in the act of 1824, of the qualifications requisite for claiming the benefit of that act, is the residence of the grantee within the province of Louisiana, at the date of the grant, or • on or before the 10th day of March, 1804. This requisite of residence at one of the/periods prescribed, can in nowise be received as a matter of form. It is of- the essence of 'the right to invoke the aid of the act of Congress, which, was designed to confer a benefit on actual occupants or settlers. Such being its character, it should, therefore, in every -instance in which that act is appealed to, be both averred and proved-.... In the case before us the petition is wholly silent as to this qualification, and no proof is adduced as to its .existence. For this omission alone, then, to aver a material, nay, the most material ingredient in the right to invoke the aid of the act of 1824, the petition presented no case upon which • the jurisdiction of the District Court could attach. This point has -been ruled in the cases of the United States v. Reynes, in 9th Howard, 127, and of the United States v. D’Auterive, in 10th Howard, 609, and in other cases decided during the present term of this,court.

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Bluebook (online)
53 U.S. 437, 13 L. Ed. 1056, 12 How. 437, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-castant-scotus-1852.