United States v. Parrott

27 F. Cas. 416, 1 McAll. 271
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California
DecidedJuly 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 27 F. Cas. 416 (United States v. Parrott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern 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. Parrott, 27 F. Cas. 416, 1 McAll. 271 (circtndca 1858).

Opinion

McALLISTER. District Judge.

The magnitude of the interests involved, the novelty of this case in some of its features, the fact that the documentary title on which the defendants to a certain extent rely, was obtained from Mexico pending the war between that country and this, a few weeks prior to the occupation of this country by the American forces, the allegation that such documentary title was procured by a conspiracy to defraud the United States and was forged and ante-dated,—are circumstances which have invested this case with no ordinary interest outside these walls. That interest has been reflected upon those who have appeared in court as the representatives of the respective parties, as evidenced by the strenuous and zealous efforts which have been made by the respective counsel. This court is reminded by this condition of things, of the remarks of Chief Justice Marshall, in Mitchel v. U. S., 9 Pet. [34 U. S.] 723. “Though the hope of deciding causes to the mutual satisfaction of parties would be chimerical, that of convincing them that the case has been fully and fairly considered, that due attention has been given to the arguments of counsel, and that the best judgment of the court has been exercised on the case, may be sometimes indulged. Even this is not always attainable. In the excitement produced by ardent controversies, gentlemen view the same object . through such different media that minds not unfrequently receive therefrom precisely opposite impressions. The court, however, must see with its own eyes, and exercise its own judgment, guided by its own reason.” The present proceeding may be viewed as in the nature of an. information on the part of the government through its law officer. It is a bill filed by the district attorney of the United States in their behalf. It sets out the title of the United States to certain premises: that defendants are in possession of said premises, which consists of a mine of vast value, and are extracting its minerals to an amount in value of $1.000,000 per annum, and have abstracted already minerals to the amount of $8,000,000. It charges their possession to-be tortious, and that the title under which defendants hold such possession was forged, false, antedated, and fabricated in pursuance of a conspiracy formed to cheat and defraud the United States of their rights to the said property; that defendants have filed a petition in the name of one Andres Castil-lero to the board of land-commissioners under the act of congress passed March 3, 1851 [9 Stat. 631], which is pending on appeal before the district court of the United States, for the Northern district of California, the object of which petition is to obtain from the United States a confirmation of the title which they pretend to hold from the Mexican government. It further alleges that defendants are destroying the substance of the mine, that they are unable to respond for the damages which have already accrued and still may accrue, and prays that an injunction may issue to stay the waste they are committing and threaten to commit, until the determination of the title by the tribunals to which the adjudication of it is confided by law shall take place, and that a receiver be appointed to take charge of the property intermediately.

This bill has been met by a demurrer and an answer. Double pleading in a court of equity is not allowable; and the answer in this case being a general one, overrules the demurrer upon the settled doctrine of the court. Taylor v. Luther [Case No. 13,796], So that the demurrer may be dismissed with out further observation, and the case stand on the bill and answer. Id. When the motion for injunction was made, the solicitors for defendants objected to any affidavit offered by complainants as to title. It was agreed that such affidavit might be read, and its ad missibility argued on the discussion by counsel of the merits, and decided by the court in its opinion. Affidavits for defendant responsive to those on the part of complainants as to title, were admitted to be read, subject to the decision which should be made by the court on the admissibility of the complainants’ affidavits to title. This motion for an injunction could be disposed of in a comparatively brief time; but the objections urged against the jurisdiction of the court, and to the character and form of this proceeding, have been numerous, and urged with so much zeal and apparent conviction in their correctness, that it is proper that special notice should be taken of them, in the hope of convincing parties that the court has “fairly considered the case, that due attention has been given to the arguments of counsel, and that the best judgment of the court has been exercised in the case.”

The first question, then, is the admissibility of affidavits as to title, presented by defendants. The right of the plaintiff to read affidavits on a motion for injunction is declared to be a well-settled rule. It is his unquestionable right, say the court in Ken-[418]*418sler v. Clarke, 1 Rich. 620 [2 Hill (S. C.) 620], to read affidavits on an application for an injunction in the support of the allegations in his bill before the coming in of the answer; and as constituting a part of his case, they may be read on any subsequent motion to perpetuate or dissolve the injunction. But the court lays down the rule that no affidavits filed subsequently to the coming in of the answer can be read, for the reason it was calculated to surprise the defendant. The only exception to this rule of the right of plaintiff is to be found in the cases of waste and such as are analogous, for the purpose of preventing irreparable mischief; and that exception limits the affidavits to waste, insolvency, or other collateral fact, and does not permit them to extend to the question of title. This exception as to affidavits as to title was asserted by Lord Eldon in Morphett v. Jones, 19 Ves. 350, and in Norway v. Rowe, Id. 157; and seems to be recognized by the text-writers, by the case cited above from South Carolina, and by other decisions. Mr. Justice Story, in the case of Poor v. Carleton [Case No. 11,272], has intimated his doubts as to the existence of a good reason for the rule which denies the right of a complainant to read affidavits as to title, in a case of irreparable mischief; and the remarks of the learned judge upon the point are entitled to much consideration, and may lead hereafter to a qualification of the rule. The proposition for which he contends is, that affidavits to title should upon general principles be looked to, not for the purpose of establishing title, but to enable the court to see if probable foundation existed to believe that the complainant may establish his title and be liable intermediately to irreparable injury. In the case of Tobin v. Walkinshaw [Id. 14,068], decided by this court, it went into a full consideration of the case of Poor v. Carleton [supra]; and inasmuch as the point was not directly before the court in that ease, and the learned judge in that case admitted that affidavits to title were only to be looked to for a qualified purpose, considering too, as well settled, that on a motion for an injunction a court of equity is not to look into title, this court came to the conclusion it would be better to adhere to the ancient rule until qualified by some authoritative decision directly on the point. The court, therefore, decided that affidavits to title could not be read. The law announced in that case must be applied to the present, and so much of the affidavits of plaintiff in this case as goes to title must be discarded by the court in the adjudication of this motion. The affidavits of the defendants, which were admitted to be read as responsive to plaintiffs affidavits, must be also rejected.

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Ford v. Taylor
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 F. Cas. 416, 1 McAll. 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-parrott-circtndca-1858.