United States v. Limantour

26 F. Cas. 947
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedJune 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 F. Cas. 947 (United States v. Limantour) 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. Limantour, 26 F. Cas. 947 (N.D. Cal. 1858).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

The claimant in these cases asks a confirmation of his titles, alleged to be derived from two grants made to him by Governor Micheltorena in 1843. The first is for four square leagues of land situated in San Francisco county. The second is for the islands of Los Faral-lones, Alcatraz and Yerba Buena, and for one square league of land, a little more or less, at Point Tiburón, in the strait of the island of Los Angeles. The two cases have been heard together, and the evidence taken has, by agreement, been made applicable to both.

In support of the claim for the four leagues, the following documentary evidence has been produced: (1) A grant of four leagues in the present county of San Francisco, made by Manuel Micheltorena, and dated February 27, 1843. On the margin of this grant is an approval or confirmation, signed Bocanegra, and dated April 18, 1843. (2) A letter, signed by Micheltorena, and dated at Los Angeles, January 8, 1843, addressed to José Y. Limantour, stating the governor’s want of resources, soliciting assistance, and offering to compensate him by grants of land. (3) A certificate, signed by Micheltorena and by Jimeno, secretar}’, dated December 25, 1843, in which is recited a letter received by Micheltorena from Bocane-gra, minister of exterior relations and government of Mexico, and dated Mexico, October 7, 1843. In this communication Bor canegra acknowledges the receipt of an official note by Micheltorena, dated February 24, 1843,. enclosing the memorial of Liman-tour, and he announces to the governor that the supreme government has “been pleased to grant to Limantour sufficient leave to acquire, besides the property which he has already acquired, and which has been recognized by the supreme government, further country, town, or any other kind of property’.” (4) A copy of an expediente, the original of which was found by Vicente P. Gomez, in the office of the recorder of Mon-terey county. This expediente contains a petition of Limantour, dated January 10, 1S43, a marginal order of reference, signed [948]*948by Micheltorena, dated January 11, 1843, and a decree of concession, dated February 25, 1843, two days before the date of the grant produced in evidence. (5) An official communication from Manuel Jimeno, written, as it recites, by order of the governor, and addressed to William A. Richardson, captain of the port of San Francisco, and dated January 14, 1S43. In this communication the boundaries of the land solicited by Limantour are described, and information relative to those lands is required of Richardson, who is also directed to furnish a map. (6) A letter from M. G. Vallejo to Wm. A. Richardson, and dated November 7, 1843. This letter is produced by Richardson, and will hereafter be noticed.

In support of the Islands grant, the claimant has produced the following documents: (1) A grant signed by Micheltorena, and dated December 16, 1843. On the margin of this grant is an approval or confirmation, signed by Bocanegra, and dated Mexico, March 1, 1844. (2) An expediente from the archives, containing the petition of Liman-tour, dated December 12, 1843, with a marginal decree by Governor Micheltorena, dated December 14, 1843,. granting the land asked for, and which is described on the diseño. There has also been produced by Manuel Castañares, a witness examined in this court, a copy of a document purporting to be on file in the archives of the ministry of protection, colonization and industry of the Mexican republic. This document purports to be a minute, or direction in obedience to which the communication to Governor Micheltorena, recited by him in the certificate already alluded to, was written. To this minute is attached the rubric of Bocanegra. Appended to it is a memorandum, or advertencia, also rubricated by Bocanegra, which will hereafter be adverted to. There have also been produced two letters from Mariano Arista, president of Mexico, addressed respectively to the govern- or of this state, and to the land commissioners, in which the claims of Limantour are commended to their favorable consideration. These- letters are dated October 2, 1852.

It is contended on the part of the United States, that all the documents on which the claimant relies are false and forged, and that they were fraudulently fabricated long after their pretended dates, and after the acquisition of California by the United States. The charge is grave. It requires and has received the most careful consideration. The first of the claims now presented for adjudication is for four square leagues of land in the present county of San Francisco. It embraces the greater part of the northern extremity of the peninsula on which this city is situated, and it includes about three-fourtlis of the city, of an assessed value of about -815,000.000. with its wharves, streets, markets, etc. The Islands claim comprises: That island of Yerba Bue-na, which lies opposite to and commands the city and port of San Francisco; the island of Alcatraz, a small and barren rock which commands the entrance to the Golden Gate, and which is the site of important defensive works erected by the United States; the island of the Farallones, which lies opposite the Golden Gate, and at some distance from the mouth of the harbor, and on .which the United States have erected one of the most important light houses on the coast; and, finally, the point of Tiburón, which commands the strait between the island of Los Angeles and the main land, by which vessels avoiding the city of San Francisco are enabled to reach the northern waters of the bay and its tributaries.

In addition to the claims pnder consideration, José Y. Limantour presented to the board of commissioners six other claims, of which he asked confirmation. These claims were: One for eleven square leagues, called “Laguna de Tache.” One for eleven square leagues, called “Lup Yomi.” One for eighty square leagues, near Cape Mendocino. One for the vineyard of San Francisco So-lano. One for six square leagues, called “Cahuenga.” One for eleven square leagues, called “Ciénaga de Gabilan,” alleged to have been granted to one Chaves, and assigned to Limantour. All these last claims were rejected by the board. No appeals have been prosecuted in this court, and they appear to have been abandoned by the claimant.

All these claims, and the two now submitted, are in form separate, but they are in many respects so closely connected, that those before this court cannot be considered without reference to them. The six claims referred to embrace one hundred and thirty-four square leagues of land, or nine hundred and twenty-four and thirty-four one hundredths square miles, or five hundred and ninety-four thousand seven hundred and eigthy-three and thirty-eight one hundredths square acres. They all purport to have been made within a period of about sixteen months, and are, with the exception of the grant for the vineyard of San Francisco Solano, founded on the same consideration, viz., the great services of the grantee to the department in money and goods. If these immense and extraordinary concessions were in fact made by Governor Micheltorena, and if the advances in money and goods, on which they were founded had in fact been furnished by Limantour, it would naturally be expected that the records of the government, and the correspondence of its.officers, would furnish abundant allusions to the transactions. How far that expectation is realized in this case will subsequently appear.

By the decree of March 11, 1842, the jealous and exclusive policy which had prohibited the acquisition of lands by foreigners within the1

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26 F. Cas. 947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-limantour-cand-1858.