United States v. Gomez

64 U.S. 326, 16 L. Ed. 552, 23 How. 326, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 776
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 18, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 64 U.S. 326 (United States v. Gomez) 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. Gomez, 64 U.S. 326, 16 L. Ed. 552, 23 How. 326, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 776 (1860).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

This cause was docketed and dismissed in this court upon the motion of the appellee, and- a mandate sent to the District Court from which the transcript of its record was obtained, for proceedings to be taken by that, court to give to the complainant'the benefit of its confirmation to the land in question.

*331 The Attorney.General now moves for the recision of the order of dismission, and that the mandate may he recalled.

He does so, alleging that no appeal had been granted to the United States in the court below by which the cause could be brought to this court for its revision ; because there was then pending in the court below, when the claimant obtained the transcript, a motion for the review of the decree which had been given confirming the claimant’s title; secondly, that the court had also under its advisement a motion concerning an appeal.

And the Attorney General further alleges,' that the appeal from the decision of the board of land commissioners rejecting the petition, and also that the appeal from the District Court to this court, are fraudulent.

The charges as to the two first rest upon the records which the appellee presented to this court, to have the cause docketed and dismissed.

The Attorney General relies upon depositions and other papers which are on file in the District Court for southern California, and which have been transmitted to this court by Judge Ogier, to establish the ehai’ge of a fraudulent combination between the then district attorney of the United States, Pacificus Ord, Esquire, and the claimant of the land in controversy, and his assignees, to allow them to obtain from the District Court a reversal of the land commissioners’ decree rejecting the claim.

W. C. Sims, the clerk of the District Court for fne southern district of California, deposes that the document on file, giving notice that the claimant intended to prosecute an appeal from the decree of the board of land commissioners, is in the handwriting of Mr. Ord, with the exception of the figures No. 278 and the signature of E. O. Crosby. '

The purpose for which this affidavit was made is, to show the interested connection between Mr. Ord and the claimant of the land, from the beginning of the institution of his suit to establish his right, and its influence upon the official conduct of Mr. Ord afterward, in every proceeding in the cause, after it had been removed from the northern district of California to the southern.

*332 Mr. Ord was originally the attorney .of Gomez before the board of land commissioners, and filed his petition there as such on the 9th February, 1853. He was not then district attorney, but he became so on the first of July, 1854, before the land commissioners decided the ease against- his client. After his appointment, and after an order had been obtained, at his instance, to remove, the cause from the northern district of California to the southern, of which he was the district attorney, and whilst the cause was pending in the latter, he took from Gomez, for the nominal consideration" of one dollar, a transfer to himself for one-half1 of the land in controversy. This Mr. Ord admits in his affidavit presented; to this court by counsel. The conveyance to him bears date on the 24th of November, 1856. It was acknowledged on the same day by Gomez before a notary public of the county of San Francisco, and was, at the request of Mr. Ord, recorded in the .county of Merced on the 26th November, 1857'; was also filed for record in the county of Fresno on March -26th, 1858, and again recorded by Mr. Ord in Monterey county the 3d May, 1858. A copy of that conveyance is now before us. These dates show that no record of the conveyance? to'hiin was made until after the claim had been confirmed by the”district judge, upon his representation that, as district attorney, there was. no objection to its confirmation; in other words, that he thought the claim a valid claim, and was within the rulings of the court in other claims of the same kind.

We shall cite the notice in its’words, for, as it had been in fact the subject of the court’s action, and could not have been so without the knowledge of Mr. Ord, and without his agency, it devolves upon him the task to disprove the declarations of Mr. Hartman of the forgery of the name of the law firm of Hartman & Sloan to the paper. We ought to remark, however, that Mr. Sloan, of the firm, is not shown by any paper to have had any personal agency in the matter. The notice is:' “Now, on this day, came the parties, the appellant by Hartman & Sloan, and the appellee by P. Ord, United States district attorney: Whereupon, on motion of the attorney of the appellant, it is ordered that the transcript and papers *333 transmitted from the northern District Court be filed m this court, and that the petition for a review of the same be entered thereon, and that the claimant have leave to proceed in said cause, the same as if it had been originally filed in this court.” On the same day, a petition was filed for a confirmation of the' claim. ■

After the confirmation of it in the manner as will hereafter be stated, Mr. Sloan, upon being told of the motion, and that it was signed by the firm of Sloan &. Hartman, but, in fact, as if the style of their firm was Hartman Sp Sloan, made his affidavit under a commission instituted by Judge Ogier, that neither as a member of the then firm of ’Sloan & Hartman, nor otherwise, was he ever retained or employed in the case; that .he never wrote nor authorized to be written any petition or, other paper in the case; that he never had seen such a petition ; that he had never authorized any one to use his own name, or that of the firm of Sloan & Hartman, in the, ease; and that, if the paper was signed as it is represented to be, it had been without any consultation with him, or his consent or approbation.

' The notice for a review of the decision of the board of land commissioners by the District Court, signed, as has been said, by E. O. Crosby, and wholly in the handwriting of Mr. Ord, was given after his connection as attorney for Gomez had ceased, and after he had become the half owner of the land. Mr. Crosby does not appear afterwards in the suit as the retained attorney of Gomez, nor does it appear in any other proceeding in the record of the case that he ever was so. It does- not appear that Mr.' Crosby was ever recognised by the land commissioners or by the District Court as the attorney of Gomez, from which we infer,-as the notice was in the. handwriting of Mr. Ord, that Mr. Crosby was his agent for the. purpose of obtaining a review of the case in the District Court. Afterward, upon its being found out that the land in controversy was in the southern district of California, and not in the northern, a petition was filed for its removal to the southern district, which was granted.

At this point began those irregularities which, until ex *334 plained, must leave an unfavorable impression in respect to Mr. Ord’s discharge of his official obligations to the United States.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 U.S. 326, 16 L. Ed. 552, 23 How. 326, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gomez-scotus-1860.