United States v. Coe

170 U.S. 681, 18 S. Ct. 745, 42 L. Ed. 1195, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1577
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 23, 1898
Docket8
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 170 U.S. 681 (United States v. Coe) 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. Coe, 170 U.S. 681, 18 S. Ct. 745, 42 L. Ed. 1195, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1577 (1898).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

We shall assume the genuineness of the title papers. It was sc found by all the judges of the court below and, notwithstanding some irregularities in them, we are disposed to concur in the finding. The question which remains is, did the officers who made the grant have the power to do so ?

Section 4 of the act establishing the •' Court of Private Land Claims' provides that the petition of petitioners “ shall set forth fully the nature of their claims to the lands, and particularly state the date and form of the grant, concession, warrant or order of survey under which they claim, by whom made, . . . and pray in such petition' that the validity of such title or claim may be inquired into and decided.”

In conformity to the act the petition in this case, after alleging ownership of the land, proceeds as follows:

■ “ Tour petitioner further represents that it owns, holds and possesses said land under and by virtue of a certain instrument of writing, now and hereafter designated as a grant title, bearing date the 12th day of April, 1838, duly made and executed by and on behalf of the state of Sonora, in the republic of Mexico, under and by virtue of article two (2) of the sovereign decree, number seventy (70) of the 4th of August, 1S24, therein conceding to the state the revenues *685 (rentas) which by said law are not reserved to the. general government, one of which is the vacant land in the respective districts pertaining to the same; and thereunder the honorable constituent congress of Sonora and- Sinaloa passed a law, being a law numbered thirty (3'0), bearing date 20th of May, 1825, and whereunder there was subsequent legislation passing-other decrees, considering the same matter, and being embodied in sections 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 of chapter ninety of the organic law of the treasury, being law numbered twenty-six (26) of the second of July, 1834.”

The source of the title is therefore alleged to be in the state of Sonora, and the basis of its authority is explicitly given.

(1.) Article two of the sovereign decree number seventy of the 4th of August, 1824.

(2.) A law passed by' the constituent congress of Sonora and Sinaloa, being number thirty and bearing date 20th of May, 1825.

(3.) Other decrees, being embodied in sections 3, 4,-5, 6 and 7 of chapter:ninety of the organic law of the treasury, being law numbered twenty-six of the 2d of July, 1834.

The petition then proceeds to allege, that under and by virtue of said laws and decrees such proceedings were thereunder regularly-' and lawfully had as that the government of the’, state of Sonora, by its officers duly authorized by the laws aforesaid, and of said state, duly and regularly and for a ■good and valuable consideration, to wit, the sum of four hundred dollars, ($400,) in the lawful money of the state, and for other good and valuable considerations, in said grant title set forth and described, did on the 12th day of April, 1838, sell and donvey to one Señor Don Fernando Eodriguez the land herein-before mentioned, and more particularly hereinafter described,

The allegation or claim then- is a grant from the state of Sonora. There is no claim .of a grant from the Mexican government. The grant, however, recites that it is done “ in the name of the free and independent sovereign state of Sonora as well as of the august Mexican nation.”

It is conceded that the ownership of the public lands was in *686 Spain and passed to Mexico upon its independence, and afterwards vested in the Mexican confederation or republic.

In Republic of Texas v. Thorn, 3 Texas, 499, 504, Justice Hemphill said:

“ That the right of eminent domain over the public lands was originally vested in the federal government of Mexico is, perhaps, not. now subject to question. The confederacy of the Mexican states was not formed, originally, by a constitutional compact between the several separate independent states, nor by a grant- of powers originally vested in the several provinces, which afterwards constituted the states of the union. The public lands of the United States of the north, before the acquisition of Louisiana and Florida, .belonged originally to the several States, and became Federal property by purchase, or voluntary cession from the States. But; in the Mexican union, the general government claimed, originally, the; property in the public domain. It is true that under former governments the .provincial authorities had exercised cértain powers of control over the public lands, but this was in subordination to the central or supreme authority of the country, whether vested in the crown, or represented by the vice royalty of New Spain, or in the sovereign provincial governing juntas, in the Emperor Iturbide, or the other authorities which succeeded, before the assemblage of the constituent congress which finally adopted the federal system, and out of the municipal subdivisions of the territory formed the states of the confederation.”

If the title was in the Mexican unión, how did it get into the states % There was no law explicitly conveying it. It is claimed, as alleged in the petition, by virtue of the sovereign, general decree numbered seventy of the 4th of August, 1824, and the recital of the grant is:

“ Whereas article II of the sovereign general decree No. 70, of the fourth of August, 1824, conceded to the states the revenue (rentas) which- by said law are not reserved to the national government, one of which is the. vacant land in the respective districts pértaining to the. same, iin consequence of which the honorable constituent congress of Sonora and Sinaloa passed *687 the law. No. 30, of the twentieth of May, 1825, and also subsequent-legislations passed other decrees concerning the same matter, which dispositions have been embodied in sections 3, 4,, 5, 6 and 7 of chapter 90 of the organic law of - the treasury No. 26, of the 11th of July, 1834.”

The decree of August 4, 1824, seems to be a revenue measure simply. We quote part of it, including sections 9 and 11, upon which special stress is laid:

“Decree of August 4, 1824.
Glassification of general and special revenues.
The sovereign general constituent congress of the United States of Mexico has deemed it proper to decree:
“ 1, That import and export duties already fixed, and those which may be hereafter fixed under any denomination in the ports and on the frontiers of the republic, pertain to the general revenues of the federation.
“ 2. The import duty of fifteen per cent which shall be collected at the said ports and frontiers upon the tariff valuation, augmented by one fourth part upon foreign goods, which, on account of this duty, shall be free from looal tax (alcabala) in the interior.
“3. The duty on tobacco and gunpowder.

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Bluebook (online)
170 U.S. 681, 18 S. Ct. 745, 42 L. Ed. 1195, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-coe-scotus-1898.