United States v. Enwright

25 F. Cas. 1015, 1862 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 33
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedSeptember 13, 1862
StatusPublished

This text of 25 F. Cas. 1015 (United States v. Enwright) 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. Enwright, 25 F. Cas. 1015, 1862 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 33 (N.D. Cal. 1862).

Opinion

OFINION OF THE COURT. The official surrey in this case has been returned into court under the provisions of the act of 1860. The objections are filed on the part of the United States. By tile final decree of confirmation, the land is described as follows: “The land, of which confirmation is made, is situated in the county of Santa Clara, and now occupied by said James Enwright; the said land being in a square of two thousand varas, on each side, and lying adjoining lands known as the ‘Mission Bands of the Mission of Santa Clara,’ and having, for the side of said premises next to said mission, a line drawn from the first live oak before the place known as ‘San Pedro y San Pablo,’ and running thence to the south-southeast 2,000 varas, unless the same shall sooner strike the limits of the land known, in 1846, as ‘Mariano Castro’s land,’ and terminatixig the same at said Castro’s limits, if the said line should strike said limits with less than 2,000 varas. The land hereby confirmed being the square having the line above mentioned for the side of the same on the part towards said mission.” This description is founded on the record of judicial possession- produced in the cause, and to which the decree of the board refers for greater certainty. That record, after stating that a cor-del fifty Castillian varas in length was measured, proceeds as follows: “The measurement was commenced by drawing a line of twenty eordels from the first encino (.live oak) in front of the place known as ‘San Pedro y San Pablo’ towards the south-southeast; which tree remained as a dividing boundary to form the square of the extension of the land; and aft-erwards there were measured 8,000 varas, drawing the first measured line as far as the limits of Mariano Castro’s land.” The official survey has been made by drawing a line in a direction nearly south-southeast from a tree, adopted as that referred to in the record of possession, to the distance of 2,000 varas, and, on this line, as a base, erecting the square confirmed to the claimant.

It is objected, on the part of the United States: (1) That on applying the description of the grant and the decree to the land and natural objects found upon it, it is so uncertain and incapable of definite application as to make it impracticable to survey any lands whatever. (2) That the tree adopted in the official survey as the point of beginning is not the one intended by the decree. (3) That the survey (Joes not locate the land as described in the decree.

It is unnecessary to consider the first point separately. The examination of the other objections will necessarily involve the question whether or not the description in the act of possession, and in the decree of the lands granted and confirmed to Garcia, is so uncertain, and incapable of application to any ascertainable tract, as to compel us to deprive the claimant of any land whatever.

2. It appears that the tree adopted as the initial point of the survey is a “roble,” and not an “encino,” as mentioned in the act of possession. The difference between the “roble,” or white oak, and the “encino,” or live oak, is, undoubtedly, marked and unmistakable. But any one acquainted with the looseness and inaccuracy with which the former inhabitants of this country conducted almost all their business, even official, will have little difficulty in supposing that the act of possession might have mentioned one tree, when the other was, in fact, meant. The record was not drawn up on the ground, and possibly not until some days after the possession was given. The clerk or secretary might easily have forgotten whether the tree from which the measurement was made was a white oak or a live oak. Nor would, in those days, great accuracy on such a point be required, for the measurement was made in the presence of witnesses, and the tree marked as a visible monument. There are in the neighborhood several “enci-nos,” which would satisfy the call of the record. But most of these appear to be in, and to form a part of, the grove known as “San Pedro and San Pablo,” whereas the tree mentioned in the record is described as the first tree in front of (“antes”) the- place called “San Pedro y San Pablo.” The encino of the survey is a lone tree of large size and considerable antiquity, standing out in the plain at the distance of about a mile from the grove referred to. But the question is entirely set at rest by the testimony of Salvio Pacheco, if his evidence can be relied on. He positively identifies the “roble” at which the survey begins as the tree mentioned in the record. It is testified by Mr. Beale, United States surveyor general, that Pacheco accompanied him, when viewing the land, to point out the boundaries. That, when at some distance, Pacheco pointed to the oak in question, stating his belief that it was the tree at which the measurement was begun, and that, if so, there was a small arroyo or sanjou at its foot, and that its trunk had marks upon it. On arriving at the tree, it was found to be on the banks of a small “sanjou,” and marks, evidently made by an axe, and of considerable antiquity, were found upon it, as described by Pacheco. Mr. Beale adds that he has long known Pacheco, by reputation, as a very honest and worthy man, and that he believes no native Californian has a higher reputation for integrity. Pacheco himself testifies that the tree pointed out by him on this occasion was the identical tree adopted and marked by his brother, Dolores Pacheco, when giving possession. The latter and the other assisting witnesses are dead. Salvio Pacheco himself is seventy years of age. No witness identifies any other tree as that claimed by Garcia, or recognized as his boundary; nor is any other found bearing ancient marks, which might have been made at the time of the judicial possession. The ob[1017]*1017jection rests entirely on the fact that the tree in question is a white, and not a live, oak. I think it clear that this slight discrepancy is not sufficient to counterbalance the other proofs which identify this tree of the survey with that referred to in the act of possession.

It may be added that the claimant submitted to the board several diagrams of the lands, including more or less of the adjacent country. In all of these the tract was laid down precisely as it has since been surveyed, and in all the oak tree of the survey- is represented as the point -of beginning. When, therefore, the board, in its description of the land confirmed, mentioned an oak tree as the starting point of the first line, .none other than the tree represented on all the maps filed in the case could have been intended, for no other had, up to that time, been by any one referred to. So far, then, as the location adopted by the board can be considered as final and res adjudicata, it is evident that the tree in question must be taken to have been, by the final decree in the case, adopted as the initial point of the eastern boundary of the lands confirmed.

3. The next objection is that the lands are not located in accordance with the decree of confirmation. The record of judicial measurement states, as we have seen, that a line twenty cordels or 1,000 varas in length was fun from the oak tree in a south-southeast direction, in order to form the square to be assigned to Garcia. It then states, in substance, that 8,000 varas of land were measured, drawing the first-measured line to the limits of Castro’s land. But the land of Castro lies to the west of the point of beginning. A line drawn southeast from that point would never reach it. The board seems not to have been informed as to the situation of Castro’s land, for the decree directs the first line to be run in a south-southeast direction 2,000 varas, unless the boundary of Castro be sooner reached.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F. Cas. 1015, 1862 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-enwright-cand-1862.