United States v. San Pedro & Canon del Agua Co.

4 N.M. 225
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 4 N.M. 225 (United States v. San Pedro & Canon del Agua Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. San Pedro & Canon del Agua Co., 4 N.M. 225 (N.M. 1888).

Opinions

Long, C. J.

The complainants, the United States, by Wayne MaeYeagh, then attorney general, and Sidney M. Barnes, at the time United States attorney for the territory of New Mexico, on the fifteenth day of September, A. D. 1881, filed in the First judicial district court of said territory a bill of complaint. Later, Francis Downs, Fiske & Warren, and Thomas Smith, United States attorney, appeared as ■ solicitors for the complainant. The San Pedro & Canon del Agua Company, a corporation, was made defendant, and appeared by William Breeden, Henry L. Waldo, Catron, Thornton & Clancy as solicitors.

It was charged in the bill of complaint that the United States, by virtue of the treaty with the republic of Mexico of 1848, known as the “ Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo,” and the cession thereunder, acquired the title and ownership of a certain tract of land in the territory of New Mexico commonly known as the “Hew Placers,” or “Puerto Mountains,” situated in Santa Fe county, and of certain mineral lands and mining regions in that locality, and also other lands in the vicinity adapted to stock-raising and agriculture; that as early as 1842 there was upon said lands, while the same were subject to the republic of Mexico, a large and flourishing town of many thousand inhabitants, known as “Real de San Francisco,” which had for many years prior to that time existed as a Mexican town, with the rights and privileges under that government pertaining to such places, and, among other, with the right to the lands so occupied for such purpose, and the common grounds immediately adjacent thereto for pasturage,, all of which rights are conceded by the bill; that such town has continued to exist ever since to the filing of the bill of complaint, with the rights aforesaid, and, among them, the right to the commons for a league distant from the town; that upon the said lands for many years there had been mining camps, and many rich and valuable mines of gold, silver, iron, copper, and lead, both near the town and distant therefrom, and that such mines had been, prior to the date of said treaty, occupied and worked by citizens and subjects of the Mexican republic, who thereby acquired rights which they held at the time of said treaty, and who after the cession became citizens of the United States, and with rights to protection in their said property under the treaty; that among such mires is one discovered and located by Mariano Barela in the year 1844, which it is now averred is now claimed and owned by Antonio Jacquez, Mariano Barela, and the heirs of Jose Antonio Otero. It is averred that Jacquez and Barela worked and operated said mine until the occupation of the territory of New Mexico by the American forces during the war with the republic of Mexico, and by the Oteros after that period for a long time; and that this particular mine, among others, is within the limits of the survey sought to be vacated by this proceeding. It is further averred that within the limits of said survey, long before the same was made, citizens of said town, and also other citizens of the United States, had, by virtue of continuous work upon and development therein, acquired rights to valuable mines of ore, both as to old mines, and new ones alleged to have been discovered, opened, and continuously occupied. It is alleged that the lands within the lines of said survey, since the said treaty, have been generally and publicly understood to be a part of the public domain of the United States, and not private property; and that, so understanding, many persons have entered thereon, and opened mines, and developed mineral veins, and occupied the same, intending to acquire legal title thereto under the mining laws of the United States, and under the mining laws, usages, and customs relating to mineral lands in said territory. It is alleged, further, that in February, A. D. 1844, one Jose Serafín Bamirez petitioned the then governor of the department of New Mexico for a certain tract of land described in his petition, and also described in the bill in this case; that said land was vacant land, and did not include any part of said town, but was over a league distant therefrom; that on the thirteenth day of February, A. D. 1844, the said governor granted said petition of the said Bamirez, and that the departmental assembly ratified and approved the same, and he was afterwards given actual juridical possession of the same; -that the grant so asked for and so given was afterwards presented to the surveyor general of New Mexico; that it received his approval, and afterwards was confirmed by the congress of the United States; that a survey thereof was made, and a patent thereon was issued by the president of the United States. It is averred the present defendant claims title under and through mesne conveyances from the said Bamirez, by virtue thereof, and by virtue of the confirmation, survey, patent, and mesne conveyances. It is further averred that in the petition by Bamirez to the governor, in the grant by the departmental assembly, in the petition by Bamirez to the surveyor general for confirmation, that the land was described by terms slightly different in phraseology, but to the same legal effect; that, as so described, the said land could be easily found, and marked out on tlje earth’s surface; that all the monuments and landmarks named in said description were well known, and easily ascertainable, and entirely consistent with the courses and directions named in said descriptions; that the words of description used in the petition filed before the surveyor general asking confirmation of the grant gave its description, with the following boundary lines: “ Bounded as follows: On the north, by the Placer road that goes down to the yellow timber; on the south, the northern boundary of the Ban Pedro grant;, on the east, the spring of the Canon del Agua; on the west, the summit of the mountain of the mine known as the property of your petitioner.” It is further averred that the Canon del Agua spring is and always was a well-known point, and that the true east boundary of said tract of land would be a line drawn directly north and south through said spring. It is averred further, in effect, that the whole of the land is west of such line drawn through the said spring; that there is a road leading from the town of San Francisco nearly south, which at a point about one league below said town turns to the west, and goes thence nearly west to the Palo Amarillo, or yellow timber; that this road existed there at the time of the original grant, and that it is the one described in the grant boundary; and that at the point where said road turns to the west a line should be drawn east and west for the north boundary of the Bamirez grant. It is contended by complainant that these points are easily found; that both the Tuerto mountain and mine lie west of the spring; that, by making the lines named boundaries, the whole of the land described in the grant will lie west of the spring, and its northern line be at least a league south of the town, and exclude, as outside of its boundaries, both the town and the league for commons. It is averred that such is the true and honest location of the land, and the one which should have been made in the survey complained of.

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.M. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-san-pedro-canon-del-agua-co-nm-1888.