United States v. Castro

65 U.S. 346, 16 L. Ed. 659, 24 How. 346, 1860 U.S. LEXIS 409
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 65 U.S. 346 (United States v. Castro) 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. Castro, 65 U.S. 346, 16 L. Ed. 659, 24 How. 346, 1860 U.S. LEXIS 409 (1861).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justicé TANÉY

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellees claim title to eleven leagues of land in California under a Mexican grant.

In March, 1853, they filed a petition before the board of land'commissioners, stating that the land in question was, on the 4th of April, 1846, granted by Pio Pico, then Governor of • California, to Jose Castro, one of the. appellees, under whom the .others claim as purchasers. The petition states that the land was occupied and improved by the grantee soon after the date of the-gránt. \

*347 It appears that the paper purporting to be the original grant-was deposited in the Government archives of the United States, oh the 8th of June, 1849, more than--three years after its date, and two years after the cession of the territory;' It was deposited not by Castro, but by Bernard McKenzie',, whose representatives claim a .portion of the land under a conveyance from Castro; and the deed to him bears date on the same day — that is, June 8, 1849. The following is the translation of the grant as it appears in the record:

Pio Pieo, Constitutional Governor of the Department of thé Californias.

[seal.]

Whereas the lieutenant colonel of cavalry, Don Jose Castro, Mexican citizen, has petitioned, for the benefit of himself and his family, for.a tract of land, for pasturing cattle, on the bank of the river-San Joaquin, consisting of eleven leagues, whose, measurement is to be commenced from the.edge of the Snowy mountains, following down stream — having previously made the necessary investigations, I -have, by a décred of this day, granted to the said. Señor the eleven sitios he' prays for, declaring to him the ownership thereof by these -present letters, in ■ conformity with the law'of August-18,' 1824, and the' regulations of 21st November, 1828, in conformity with the powers with which I find-myself invested by. the Supreme Government, in the name of the Mexican nation, under reservation of the approval of the Departmental Assembly, and under the following conditions:

1st. He may fence it, without injury to the cross-roads, highways, and rights of'way. ’ He may enjoy it freely'and exclusively,-directing it to the best cultivation or use-which may be to his convenience.

2d. He shall request the judge of that district to give him the juridical possession, by virtue of these patents,- who shall mark out the boundaries with the.respective lándmarks,.placing, in addition to them, some fruit trees, or other's of known-utility...

• 3d. The land, of which donation is -made, consists expressly *348 of eleven (sitios) ranges of large cattle', upon the banks of the San Joaquin. Measurement shall, commence from the edge of the Sierra Nevada. The judge who may give the possession shall have it measured with entire observance of the ordinances, and in,view of the sketch or topographical plan which the grantee shall present'.

In consequence whereof, 1 order that the present title, being held as. firm and valid, be recorded in the corresponding book, and delivered to the party in interest for his protection, and • other purposes.

Given in the Governor’s house, at the city of Los Angeles, upon common paper, there being none stamped, on the fourth day'of the month of April, one thousand eight hundred and forty-six. PIO PICO.

Jose Matías Moremo, •

Sec’y pro tem.

Record has been taken of this superior patent in the respective book. MORENO.

The handwriting of Pio Pico and Jose Matías Moreno were proved by a single witness. But no testimony-was offered to show when or where this paper was executed, nor any testimony to show who had the custody of it, until it was deposited in the public archives, as abové mentioned; nor .is any reason given for keeping it out of the public office for so long a time,, nor how McKenzie obtained possession of it, except by the deed from Castro, which he produced at the same’time. And nothing was then produced to support the grant but this paper; no petition from Castro; no informe, or'decree, as required by the laws of Mexico. And,-notwithstanding Moreno’s certificate that á record had been taken of. it in the respective book, no trace of anything in relation .to it- is to be found in the archives of the-Mexican authoritie’s; nor wrs any attempt made to take possession until 1849; for although the appellees state in their petition that Castro took ^possession soon after the grant was made — that is, i'u 1846 — and some of his witnesses swear to the same fact, and some even- carry back- his possession to 1844,' under a promise of Micheltorenc *349 to make him a grant in that place; yet all of this testimony is contradicted by Yinsenhaler, who appears to have been an-"' •active agent in this matter, and directed.the surveyor who made the survey in 1853, where he should begin, and where-he should run the lines. lie says that he was at the place in October, 1849; that Castro took possession in August or September of that year, and built a corral, and had cattle there in the early part of 1850; and that it would have been unsafe, in consequence of the hostility of wild Indians, to have attempted to occupy it earlier. A paper'thus wanting in all the written . proceedings which the Mexican law required before a grant could be issued, which had never been seen by any one of the witnesses until produced. b}r McKenzie, with no evidence of -the time or place of its execution, with no trace of it in.the’ Mexican archives, and the witnesses producedYo prove the possession contradicting each other, can hardly be entitled to confirmation as á valid grant. And even if the witness who proves the handwriting of Pio Pico and of Moreno is entitled to belief, yet the conclusion would seem to be irresistible that the paper was fraudulently ante-dated ■

■ But apárt from these circumstances the grant'is invalid, and not supported by legal proof, even if all-the testimony adduced by the claimants was credible, and the witnesses above suspicion.

The grants of portions of the public domain in Mexico, the mode of obtaining them, and the officers by w-hom they were' to be issued, and the conditions.to be annexed, to theni, were with great precision regulated by law. This law has so often been referredfio and commented on in former opinions.of this court, that it is unnecessary to report here its particular provisions. It is sufficient to say that it was required to be-bn writing, the officers and tribunals before which it was to pass designated,-and every step m the process,-from the. petition, of the party to the final consummation of the title,, was not only required to be in writing, but also to be deposited and recorded in the proper public office among the public, archives of the Republic.

Whenever, therefore, a party claims title to lands in Califor *350 nia under a Mexican grant, the general rule is that the grant must be found in the proper office among the public archives: this is the highest and best evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
65 U.S. 346, 16 L. Ed. 659, 24 How. 346, 1860 U.S. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-castro-scotus-1861.