United States v. First Trust Company Of Saint Paul

251 F.2d 686
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 23, 1958
Docket15744_1
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 251 F.2d 686 (United States v. First Trust Company Of Saint Paul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. First Trust Company Of Saint Paul, 251 F.2d 686 (1st Cir. 1958).

Opinion

251 F.2d 686

116 U.S.P.Q. 172

UNITED STATES of America, Appellant,
v.
FIRST TRUST COMPANY OF SAINT PAUL, a Minnesota corporation,
as Executor of the Last Will and Testament of Sophia V. H.
Foster, Appellee, and Minnesota Historical Society, a
Minnesota corporation; Ogden H. Hammond, as Executor of the
Last Will and Testament of Sophia W. Hammond, deceased;
Ogden H. Hammond and Clarence V. S. Mitchell, as trustees of
a testamentary trust under said will for the benefit of
Margaret Van S. H. Starr; Starr; Harriet K. Hammond; and
John Doe and Mary Roe, whose true names are to plaintiff
unknown, Appellees, and Elizabeth F. Vytlacil, Harriet F.
Bunn and Roger Sherman Foster, Appellees.

No. 15744.

United States Court of Appeals Eighth Circuit.

Jan. 23, 1958.

George Cochran Doub, Asst. Atty. Gen. (George E. MacKinnon, U.S. Melvin Richter, Samuel D. Slade and Marcus A. Rowden, Attys., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., were with him on the brief), for appellant.

W. Dermot H. Stanley, New York City (McNeil V. Seymour, St. Paul, Minn., Donald F. Hyde and Frederic H. Poor, Jr., New York City, were with him on the brief), for appellees Ogden H. Hammond, as executor of the last will and testament of Sophia W. Hammond, deceased, and others.

David W. Raudenbush and Morgan, Raudenbush, Morgan, Oehler & Davis, St. Paul, Minn., submitted brief for appellee First Trust Co. of St. Paul, as executor of the last will and testament of Sophia V. H. Foster.

Before GARDNER, Chief Judge, and WOODROUGH and VOGEL, Circuit Judges.

VOGEL, Circuit Judge.

This action was commenced in Minnesota State District Court to quiet title to certain historical documents written in the main by William Clark, of the famed Lewis and Clark Expedition. The documents, herein refered to as the res, and whose whereabouts were unknown for approximately 150 years, were found in the attic of the St. Paul, Minnesota, home of a Mrs. Sophia V. H. Foster after her death in 1952. They were discovered in a desk formerly owned by General John Henry Hammond, Mrs. Foster's father, who died in 1890. The First Trust Company of St. Paul brought the action originally as executor of the last will and testament of Mrs. Foster, naming the Minnesota Historical Society, the then custodian of the papers, and certain descendant and collateral relatives of Mrs. Foster as defendants. Some of the individual defendants claimed interests in the res through the estate of Mrs. Foster's mother, Mrs. Sophia W. Hammond. The remaining individual defendants claim interests in the res directly through Mrs. Foster's estate. The Minnesota Historical Society was named a defendant because it could claim a lien on the res for labor expended by it in collating and transcribing the contents of the 67 documents comprising the res. This claim of lien was duly asserted in the Society's answer to the original complaint.

After due notice, the United States intervened in the action, claiming paramount title to the res as being a part of the work product of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. All of the parties agree that the res is a series of original writings on miscellaneous scraps of paper of various sizes and that they describe the Expedition's winter encampment at Camp Dubois, near the mouth of the Missouri River, within territorial United States in 1803-4 and a part of the Expedition's subsequent exploratory journey upon the Missouri River in 1804-5. The documents are almost entirely in the handwriting of Captain william Clark, second in command to Captain Meriwether Lewis.

The case was removed from the state court to the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota on motion of the United States. By order of the District Court, a separate trial was first had on the sole issue of the government's claim of paramount title to the res. In an erudite opinion and order, Chief Judge Nordbye, before whom the case was tried without a jury, held that the documents in question were rough notes of Captain Clark, made by him for his personal use in subsequently preparing his own private diary and hence were not an official work product of the Lewis and Clark Expedition to which the United States could claim paramount title. First Trust Co. of St. Paul v. Minnesota Historical Society, D.C.Minn., 1956, 146 F.Supp. 652. The United States has appealed to this court from the findings and judgment, making all of the original parties to this action appellees herein.

If Clark's notes are the written records of a government officer executed in the discharge of his official duties, they are public documents and ownership is in the United States. The government concedes that possession of the res by General Hammond and his heirs affords a presumption of ownership and that the burden of proof is upon the government to establish a superior title. Accordingly, if the government established that these were the written records of a public official made in the discharge of the duties of his office, the government should have prevailed. The court held that the government failed to carry its burden. Whether the District Court was clearly erroneous in so concluding is the only issue presented on this appeal. Other issues in the case await the outcome hereof.

The exact nature and historical significance of the documents involved and the probable circumstances by which they came into the possession of the original parties to this action are fully explained in Judge Nordbye's opinion. First Trust Co. of St. Paul v. Minnesota Historical Society, supra. It would be a needless duplication to attempt a complete redelineation of these numerous facts. They therefore will be referred to only to the extent necessary to reach a determination of this appeal.

On June 20, 1803, President Thomas Jefferson appointed Meriwether Lewis, an army captain on detached service, who was serving as Jefferson's secretary, to command an expedition, the object of which was '* * * to explore the Missouri river, & such principal stream of it, as, by it's course & communication with the waters of the Pacific Ocean, may offer the most direct & practicable water communication across this continent, for the purposes of commerce.' Jefferson's letter to Lewis set forth in minute detail further objects of the mission and directed the making and preserving of a record of observations and notes covering numerous subjects set forth therein. He instructed, among other things:

'Your observations are to be taken with great pains & accuracy, to be entered distinstly, & intelligibly for others as well as yourself, to comprehend all the elements necessary, with the aid of the usual tables, to fix the latitude and longitude of the places at which they were taken, & are to be rendered to the war office, for the purpose of having the calculations made concurrently by proper persons within the U.S. several copies of these, as well as your other notes, should be made at leisure times & put into the care of the most trustworthy of your attendants, to guard by multiplying them, against the accidental losses to which they will be exposed. a further guard would be that one of these copies be written on the paper of the birch, as less liable to injury from damp than common paper.' (7 Thwaites 248.)

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