United States v. Samuel Davenport's Heirs

56 U.S. 1, 14 L. Ed. 575, 15 How. 1, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 266
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 28, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 56 U.S. 1 (United States v. Samuel Davenport's Heirs) 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. Samuel Davenport's Heirs, 56 U.S. 1, 14 L. Ed. 575, 15 How. 1, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 266 (1853).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CAMPBELL

delivered the opinion of the court.

This cause comes before this court by an. appeal from a decree of the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Louisiana.

The appellees filed their petition in that court to establish their claim to a share in two grants of land, sitúale on the western border of Louisiana, in the country known as the *5 neutral territory, lying between the Sabine river and the Arroyo Hondo.

One of these grants was issued by the commandant of the Spanish post at Nacogdoches to Edward Murphy, the 1st day of July, 1798, for a tract of land called La Nana, containing 92,160 acres. The grantee, in the month of November following, conveyed it to the trading firm of William Barr & Co., of which Murphy and Samuel Davenport, the ancestor of the appellees, were respectively members.

The evidence of the grant consists in copies of the petition of Edward Murphy to the commandant,, dated in February, 1798, for a donation of the tract La Nana, situate to the east of the Sabine river, on the road leading from the town of Natchitoches. The tract asked for forms a square of four leagues upon that road, the centre of which is the prairie adjoining the bayou La Nana. The motive of the application was, that the petitioner might have summer pasturage for his cattle and other animals.' The petition was granted by the commandant, and the procurator was ordered to-place the grantee in possession. The procurator fulfilled this order the first of August, 1798, by going upon the land with the grantee and in the presence of witnesses, “ took him by the right hand, walked with him a number of paces from -north to south, and the same from east to west, and he, letting go his hand, (the grantee,) walked about at pleasure on the said territory of La Nana, pulling up weeds and made holes in the ground, planted posts, cut down bushes, took up clods of earth and threw them on the ground, and did many other things in,token of the possession in which he had been placed in the name of His Majesty, of said land with the boundaries and extension as prayed for.”

The act of possession was returned to the commandant, who directed “ that it should be placed in the protocol of the post to serve as evidence of the same, and that a certified copy should be given to the person interested.” The conveyance of Murphy to his firm bears date in the month' of November after; was executed 'in the presence of the same commandant, and at that time the certified • copies offered in evidence, purport to have been made.

The other grant"is for a tract of land called Los Ormegas, containing 207,860 acres. It is founded on .a petition of Jacinta Mora to the commandant of the same post, in November, 1795, who asked for the concession, that he might establish a stock farm for' the raising, of mules, hbrses, horned cattle, &c., and to cultivate' the soil. .The tract described in the petition contains six leagues square on the river Sabine, the centre of the Western line being opposite -to the Indian crossing place of that river. *6 The prayer of the petition was allowed the same day, and orders given to the procurator to place the petitioner in possession, “ with all the usual formalities of style, and that he should report his proceedings for the more effectual confirmation of the property.”

This order was executed in December, 1795, with the same ceremonial that was employed about the order upon the La Nana grant, and the act recording the transaction was placed in the protocol of the post.

The paper in evidence is a certified copy made by the commandant of the post in 1806, shortly before the conveyance of the grantee to the firm of William Barr & Co., and in the certificate the copy is declared to have been compared and corrected, and that it is true and genuine.

Besides these papers, the plaintiffs procured certified copies from the officers of the land-office in Texas, from copies of the protocol, made in 1810, which were submitted by the firm of Barr & Co. to the governor (Salcedo) of one of the internal provinces of New Spain, of which this post was at the time a dependency, apparently for the purpose of obtaining his sanction, either to the authenticity of the document, or to the grant it evinced. This copy of the La Nana 'papers does not correspond with that of 1798, but that’of the Ormegas grant is substantially the same as that made'in 1806.

The plaintiffs, farther to support their claim, offered evidence satisfactorily explaining why these papers came to be deposited in the archives of Texas and for the fact of their discovery there. .

These claims were presented in 1812, to the commissioners appointed to ascertain and adjust claims to lands in the Western District of Louisiana, and have been before the several boards which have been since constituted to effect the same object. The genuineness of the signatures which appear on these copies of the grant; that they have come,-from a proper depository; that the parties who now hold them have claimed them since the date of their titles; that the lands are fitted for the objects for which they were sought,and have been used for that purpose; that surveys and possession defined their limits, contemporaneously, or nearly so, with the grants, are facts sufficiently established by the evidence submitted to the District Court. No imputation upon the authenticity of the grants occurs in any of the reports or acts of the government, but in the various reports of the Boards of Inquiry they have been-treated as genuine, resting upon just considerations, and entitled to confirmation from.the equity of the government.

The. questions now arise, have these grants been legally .esta *7 Wished? Were they within the competency of the persons making them ? Are they binding upon the faith of the government of the United States ? Does it lie within the jurisdiction of this court to render a decree favorable to the petitioners ?

The copies made by the Spanish commandant from the protocol, and certified by him to be true and genuine, though dated long after the protocol, would be received in evidence in the courts of Spain, as possessing equal claims to credit as the primordial or originals.. For the reason, that those like these are certified by the same officer whose attestation gives authenticity to the protocol, and who is*charged to preserve it. 2-Escriche, Die. de leg. 185. And this court for the same reason has uniformly received them, as having the same authority. United States v. Percheman, 7 Peters, 51; United States v. Delespine, 15 Peters, 319, and cases cited.

In this, case the evidence of the loss or destruction of the protocol is satisfactory, and the copies would be admitted as secondary evidence upon well settled principles.

The power of the commandants Of posts, in the Spanish colonies to make inchoate titles to lands within their jurisdicv tions has been repeatedly acknowledged by this court.

Under the laws and regulations of the Spanish Crown, it is a question of some doubt, whether grants for the purpose of grazing cattle, were any thing more than licenses to use the lands, and whether they were designed to operate upon the dominion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 U.S. 1, 14 L. Ed. 575, 15 How. 1, 1853 U.S. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-samuel-davenports-heirs-scotus-1853.