United States v. Juares

26 F. Cas. 666, 1862 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedNovember 9, 1862
StatusPublished

This text of 26 F. Cas. 666 (United States v. Juares) 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. Juares, 26 F. Cas. 666, 1862 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40 (N.D. Cal. 1862).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

The expedi-ente in this case shows that on the 8th April, 1845. Cayetano Juares petitioned Governor Pio Pico for “eight square leagues, more or less, in the land known as ‘Yokaya.’ to the north-west of Sonoma, distant thirty [667]*667leagues, and bounded by Citizen Fernando Felez on the south, and on the other sides by the unehristianized Indians." The petition was accompanied by a map representing the land solicited, and by a certificate of General Vallejo that the land was vacant, and did not belong to any private person. On the margin of this petition is a decree of the governor, dated May 24, 1S45, which is as follows: ‘‘That which the interested party requires is granted to him, and for that purpose let the-corresponding title be issued.” ‘‘The governor of the department thus decreed, ordered and signed. Pio Pico.” To this petition a note is added, which, however, is not signed, stating that a note of the title has been made in the respective book. To this note succeeds a memorandum, dated May Sth, 184G, stating that the expediente was on that day reported to the most excellent departmental assembly, and ordered to be passed to the committee on vaeant lands. This memorandum is signed by Pio Pico, president, and Augustine Olveira, secretary. The report of the committee follows. It is dated May 26, 1S46, and contains a proposition for the approval of the grant. On the third of June, 1S46, the proposition of the committee is adopted by the assembly. The genuineness of this expediente, and of the signatures to the documents which compose it, is unquestioned. It is found among the records of the former government, duly numbered, and it is entered on the index made by. Messrs. Hartnell and Halleck, in continuation of 'Jimeno’s index. The marginal order directing that a title be issued is in the handwriting of Juan Bandini, who was at that time secretary of state. The signature of Pio Pico to the order is undoubtedly genuine.

The order referring the expediente to the committee on vacant lands is in the handwriting of Cayetano Arenas, who often wrote in the office of the departmental assembly and of the secretary of state, and it is signed with the genuine signatures of Pico, the president of the assembly, of Olveira, the secretary. The report of the committee’is in the handwriting of and signed by Santiago Aguello, its chairman, and the entry of the approval is in the handwriting of Cayetano Arenas. There is also found in the archives, among the borradors, or rough drafts of orders made by the governor in the mouth of May. 1845. an entry in the handwriting of Narciso Botello (who was one of the clerks in the office of the secretary "of state) of the decree made on the petition of Juares. It is a literal copy of the decree in the margin of the petition, and across it a line is drawn as a check, to show that the order had been entered in the proper book. This book, commonly known as the “Book of Toma de Ra-zón.” is also found in the archives. It contains, under date of May 24. 1845. a note, in the usual form, that a title grant was made to Cayetano Juares of the place known as “Yokaya." On recurring to the journals of the departmental assembly, we find the proceedings of that body, with respect to the grant, recorded precisely as in the testi-monio, or certificate of approval, contained in the expediente. There is thus produced, in support of this claim, all the evidence which the records of the Mexican government could in any case afford, with the single exception that the expediente does not contain, as is usual, the unsigned borrador, or copy of the titulo delivered to the party.

. The existence of the expediente in the archives, with its numerous signatures and handwritings of unquestionable genuineness —the note and description of the grant in the continuation of Jimeno’s index—the entry in the Toma de Razón, and the record in the journals of the departmental assembly— prove, beyond all doubt, that a grant was made, on the 24th May, 1845, to' Cayetano Juares for eight leagues in the place called “Yokaya.” There is also produced the titulo alleged to have been delivered to the claimant. But the signatures to this document present a most suspicious appearance. That of Pio Pico is very unlike his genuine signature at the. date of the instrument. The handwriting, too, of the body of the instrument is that of Victor Prudon, by whom the grant produced in the case of G. L. Brown v. The United States was written, and which is undeniably fraudulent. The character of the signatures, and the whole appearance of the document, justifies the conclusion that it is not genuine. But that the grant was made, is, as we have seen clearly proved by evidence the most reliable that is afforded in this class of cases, viz., the official records of the former government.

The fact that the document produced by the party is forged is readily explained, by supposing that the grant issued to him has been lost, and that he has beeu tempted to manufacture another, of the same import, to replace it. Ignorant, and not scrupulous, alarmed lest the absence of his title papers should be fatal to his claim, it is, perhaps, not to be wondered at that he has accepted the offer of Prudon to supply the missing document,-a service which it is well known that person liberally rendered, even in cases where no grant had ever been obtained from the former government. By whom this fraud was procured to be committed cannot now be ascertained. It was certainly not done by those who now- represent the rights of the original grantee—nor is it probable that the original grantee was concerned in it; for it appears that juares had conveyed his entire interest in the grant to M. G. Vallejo before the claim was presented to the board. Rejecting then, the title paper produced by the claimants, as not genuine, there still remains the most clear and indubitable proof that a grant in fact issued to Juares for the land .now claimed, and that this grant was approved by the departmental assembly, and [668]*668thus became ‘-‘definitely valid.” It was, therefore, private and not public land at the date of the acquisition of the country, and, on the principles laid down by the supreme court, in the Case of Heirs of West. 22 How. [63 U. S.] 315, the title must be confirmed to the representatives of the claimant, unless it has been forfeited by abandonment, or neglect to fulfill the conditions. With respect to the occupation and settlement effected by Juares, there is some conflict of testimony. It is proved, however, beyond any reasonable doubt, that at about the time he applied for the grant Juares sent his brother to the land with cattle and horses, to establish a rancho. Vicente Juares remained upon the land about five months, when he left, but, returning after a short absence. continued to reside there until a party under Fremont, in the early part of 184(1, carried off the horses. Vicente Juares states that while he was on the rancho he built two corrals and a small house on the bank of the river. Houses were also put up for the Indians employed on the rancho. When lie first went to establish the rancho, Cayetano Juares accompanied him, and remained about eight days, leaving Vicente in charge. He again visited the rancho towards the end of 1840, and again in 1848. after the horses were carried away by Fremont, he came up to look after the cattle. After remaining a few days, he returned to Napa, leaving two vaquerors and Indians on the rancho. They staid about a month, when they returned to Napa. No more cattle appear to have been placed on the rancho, but it is stated by Vicente that the Indians left there during the years 1847 and 1848. and that he went to the rancho in those years to carry beeves to them.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 666, 1862 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-juares-cand-1862.