United States v. King

48 U.S. 833, 12 L. Ed. 934, 7 How. 833, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 378
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 13, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 48 U.S. 833 (United States v. King) 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. King, 48 U.S. 833, 12 L. Ed. 934, 7 How. 833, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 378 (1849).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice TANEY

delivered the -opinion of the court.

This case is one of much interest to the parties concerned, and to the public.

The. peculiar practice of Louisiana, which has been adopted in the Circuit Court for that District, has produced some embarrassment in this case. According to the laws of that State, unless one of the parties demurs on trial by jury, the court decides the fact as well as the law; and if the judgment is removed to a higher court for revision, the decision upon the fact as well as the law is open for examination in the appellate court. The record transmitted to the Superior Court, therefore, in the. State practice, necessarily contains all the evidence offered in the inferior court. And as there is no distinction between courts of law and courts of equity, the legal and equitable rights of the parties are tried and decided in the same proceeding.

In the courts of the United States, however, the distinction between courts of law and of equity is preserved in Louisiana as well as in the other States. And the removal of the case from the Circuit Court to this court is regulated by act of Congress, and not by the practice of Louisiana; and the writ of error, by which alone a case can be removed from a Circuit Court when sitting as a court of law, brings up for revision here nothing but questions of law; and if the case has been tried according to the Louisiana practice, without the intervention of a jury, the decisions of the Circuit Court upon questions of fact are as conclusive as if they had been found by the jury.

When this case was tried in the Circuit Court, neither party demanded a jury, and- the questions of fact which arose-in. it were .decided by the court. The record transmitted on. the writ of error set forth all the evidence, as is usual in appeals in the State 'courts; and it appeared that the authenticity of one ' of the instruments, under which the defendants in error claimed title, was disputed, and the conflicting evidence upon that subject stated in the record. The Circuit Court decided that the paper was authentic, and executed at the time it bore date. This question was fully .argued here, as will appear by the re *845 port of the case in 3 Howard, 773; and the attention of the court not haying been drawn to the difference between an appeal in the State practice and the writ of error from this court, it did not, in considering the case, advert to' that distinction. And being of opinion that the weight of evidence was against the - authority of that instrument, it rejected it as not legally admissible, and, proceeding to decide the case as if it were’not before the court, it reversed the judgment which the court below had given in favor of the defendants. Upon reconsideration, however, we were unanimously of opinion, that the decision of the Circuit Court upon this question of fact must, like the finding of- a jury, be regarded as conclusive ; that the writ of error can bring up nothing but questions of law; and that, in deciding the question of title in this court, the paper referred to must be treated and considered as authentic, and sufficiently proved. And in order that the defendants might have the benefit of the decision ip the Circuit Court, the case was reinstated in this court at the last term, to be heard and decided upon the questions of law presented by the record, as it was originally brought up, without prejudice from the former decision of this court.

It has been again argued at the present term ; and the case as it appears upon the record is this.

It. is a petitory action, brought and proceeded in in the Circuit Court, according to the Louisiana State practice. The suit is brought by the United States against Richard King, one of the defendants in error, for a parcel of land lying in that State, and described in the petition. King answered, admitting that he was in possession of the .land, and claiming title to it under a conveyance with warranty from Daniel W. Coxe, the othe’r defendant; and prayed that he might be cited to appear ■ and defend the suit.. On the same -day, Coxe appeared and answered, and alleged' in his defence, that the land sued for was part of a large tract of land which had been granted'by the ■Baron deCarondelet to the Marquis de Maison Rouge, by an instrument of writing, dated June 20th, 1797, which he sets out at large in his answer; and by sundry intermediate conveyances, be deduces a title from Maison Rouge to himself for three fourths of the entire tract. He insists that the instrument of writing executed- by the Baron de Carondelet was a complete grant conveying to the Marquis de Maison Rouge an indéfeasi- - ble title to the land therein mentioned, and -that, from the date of the said instrument, it ceased to be a part óf the royal domain, and became the private property of. the said Maison Rouge. He also avers that this grant was made in-consideration of services rendered by Maison Rouge in settling thirty *846 emigrant families on the Washita River, in Louisiana, under a contract made by him with the Baron de Carondelet, dated March ' 17, 1795, and approved by the king of Spain on the 14th of July in the same year. And he then proceeds, in his answer, to assume, the character of plaintiff in reconvention, and prays that the grant of the 20th of June, 1797, to the Marquis ode Maison Rouge may be declared valid, and ,that lie and King maybe recognized to be the lawful owners of the'parts of the said grant held by them, as described in the answer of King, and in a schedule annexed to his (Coxe’s) answer, and that they may be quieted in the ownership and possession of the same, and that the United States may be ordered to desist from treating and considering any part of said grant, as designated in a certain survey by John Dinsffiore, referred to particularly in his answér, as public property.

Upon this issue the partiés proceeded to take testimony, which is set out in full in the record. A great part of it is immaterial, an'd much of it relates to questions of fact which were disputed in the Circuit Court. This mode of making up the record, which is borrowed from the State practicej is irregular, and unnecessarily enhances the costs when a case comes up on writ of error. In cases where there is no jury, the facts, as decided by the court, ought regularly to be stated, and inserted in the record, ,provided the parties cannot agree on a statement. This is most usually done by the court in pronouncing its judgment. In this case, there is a statement by the judge who decided- the case, containing his opinion both on the facts and the law, and which is -attached to the record, and has been sent up with it. But this opinion appears to have been filed, not only after the suit had been ended by a final judgment, "but after a writ of error had been served removing the case to this court. This' statement-of the judge cannot, therefore,' b$ regarded as part of the record of the proceedings in the Circuit Court, which the writ of error brings up, and cannot therefore be resorted to as a statement of the case. And as there is'no. case stated by consent, it is necessary to examine whether the facts upon which the question^ of law, arise sufficiently appear in the record to enable this court to take cognizance of the case.

As we have already said, the action brought by the -United States is what, in the practice -in Louisiana, is called a petitory action, and is in the nature of an ejectment in a court of common law.

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Bluebook (online)
48 U.S. 833, 12 L. Ed. 934, 7 How. 833, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-king-scotus-1849.