United States v. De Rodriguez

25 F. Cas. 821, 7 Sawy. 617, 1864 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedNovember 26, 1864
StatusPublished

This text of 25 F. Cas. 821 (United States v. De Rodriguez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. De Rodriguez, 25 F. Cas. 821, 7 Sawy. 617, 1864 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12 (N.D. Cal. 1864).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

This case comes upon exceptions to the official survey filed on the part of the United States and on the part of the neighboring rancheros. To understand correctly the question raised, a brief review of the proceedings to obtain the grant, and those which resulted in the confirmation, is necessary.

The original petition of Buelna ashed for the- place called San Francisquito, “to the extent of eight suertes of two hundred varas square each, making sixteen hundred, according to the reglamento of colonization.” The language of the decree of concession, and of the grant, is somewhat involved; but the land is clearly enough described as eight suertes of two hundred varas each, including the land lying between the Chemisal and the San Francisquito creek, and extending from the upper crossing of the road leading to the sierra to the road leading from Santa Clara to San Francisco, known as the “Middle Road.”

The . third condition describes the land granted as of the extent of two-thirds of a league,, a little more or less. On the diseño attached to the expediente, the boundaries mentioned in the grant are clearly exhibited. On the north is the brook; running parallel with it, and at a short distance to the south, is the Chemisai. On the west is- the road to the sierra, which crosses the brook, and on the east is the middle road. It would seem, however, that the grant was not intended to extend as far as this road, for a little to the west of it a line is drawn from the Chemisal to the brook marked “raya,” indicating that it is the eastern boundary of the tract. On the corner of the diseño is a note, stating that the land is of the extent of eight suertes.

I have been unable to understand the meaning of the clause in the third condition, stating the land to be of the extent of two-thirds of a league. If the eight suertes asked for were to be each two hundred varas square, the total area of the tract would be three hundred and twenty thousand square varas. A square league is five thousand varas square, and its area is twenty-five million of varas.

Parol testimony was taken before the board of land commissioners to show that a juridical possession was given of the land by metes and bounds. No record of the act of possession was produced, but the board confirmed the claim according to the juridical possession, as sworn to by the witnesses. Its decree sets forth particularly the boundaries of the tract; and states the extent of land confirmed to be “two-thirds of a league, a little more or less.” This decree was affirmed on'appeal to this court, the United States offering no opposition. The tract thus described extends to a considerable distance to the south of the Chemisal, between which and the San Francisquito creek both the decree of concession and the grant describe the land'as situated. It also extends to the eastward beyond the line marked “raya,” which the diseño designates as a boundary in that direction. In the official survey, the calls of the decree seem to have been wholly disregarded, as also the indication of the map, which the claimants themselves, presented to the board as a correct survey of the tract of which judicial possession was given. The most that the claimants can ask for is that the boundaries called for in the decree be followed. I cannot perceive, therefore, how the official survey can be sustained.

It is objected, however, on the part of the owners of the adjoining rancho, confirmed to the heirs of Mesa, that the dividing line between the ranchos has already been fixed in a proceeding to which the present claimant was a party, and that that line must be adopted in fixing the boundaries of the claimant's land, notwithstanding that it is a different line from that described in his decree of confirmation. It appears that when the Mesa Rancho was surveyed, objections to the survey were filed, and the proceedings required by the act of 1860 [12 Stat. 33] were taken. The owners of the Rodriguez Rancho intervened, and were heard, and the court, after due deliberation, located the Mesa Rancho as appeared to be just.under the decree of confirmation and the evidence in the case.

On the part of the owners of the Mesa Rancho, it is contended that the location of the common boundary between the ranchos has thus become res adjudicata, not only as against the United States, but as against the owners of the Rodriguez Rancho, who were parties to the proceeding, and who might have appealed if dissatisfied with the decree; that the object and effect of the proceedings under the law of 1860 were to settle disputes of this nature between contiguous proprietors; and that, inasmuch as the Mesa Rancho has been finally located, the Rodriguez Rancho cannot be made to include a part of the same land, unless overlapping patents be issued, which is never done by the United States.

On the part of the present claimants, it is urged that the final decree obtained by them gives a definite location to their land; that it describes the boundaries clearly and specifically; that it in terms adopts the judicial measurement testified to In the cause; that their rights are thus fixed and determined by the decree; and that the power of the court, under the act of 1860, is limited to an inquiry, whether the survey is in accordance with the terms of the decree.

It is also urged that the intervention in the case of Mesa had for its object to prevent the boundaries of that rancho from being so fixed as to include any portion of the land [823]*823already confirmed to the claimants, and thus to avoid future dispute and litigation; that although this object was not attained, yet that their own rights under their decree were not waived by them; that the adjudication in that suit only fixed the boundaries of the Mesa Rancho—it aid not, and could not, affect the boundaries of the Rodriguez Rancho, already established by the decree of confirmation, and which was not then before the court; and that they are now entitled to have their land surveyed as described in their final decree of confirmation, notwithstanding that they include lands already embraced in the Mesa survey.

It will be perceived that tlfe question thus presented is difficult and important.

Since the argument of this cause, the opinion of the supreme court in the Case of Fossat [2 Wall. (69 U. S.) 649] has been received. Before proceeding to inquire how far the decision in that case disposes of the questions raised in the case at bar, I deem it due to myself to correct some misapprehensions, as to matters of fact, into which both the counsel who argued the cause and the supreme court appear to have fallen.

The opinion, after detailing the previous history of the cause up to the time when the survey was ordered into this court, under the provisions of the act of 1S60, states that the district court entered an order reforming the survey as to the eastern line. “This direction,” the court observes, “not only reformed the survey of the tract, as made by the surveyor general, but reformed the decree itself of the court, entered on the eighteenth of October, 1858, in pursuance of which the survey had been made. The court assumed that the survey and location of the tract were not to be governed by the decree, but on the contrary, that it was open to the court to revise, alter, and change it at discretion, and to require the surveyor general to conform his survey and location to any new or amended decree—for certainly if it was competent to change the eastern line from that settled in the decree, it was equally competent for it to change every other line or boundary as there described and fixed.”

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Bluebook (online)
25 F. Cas. 821, 7 Sawy. 617, 1864 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-de-rodriguez-cand-1864.