United States v. Santa Fe

165 U.S. 675, 17 S. Ct. 472, 41 L. Ed. 874, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 2005
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 1, 1897
Docket208
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 165 U.S. 675 (United States v. Santa Fe) 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. Santa Fe, 165 U.S. 675, 17 S. Ct. 472, 41 L. Ed. 874, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 2005 (1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

*676 This case comes on appeal taken by the United States from a decree of the Court of Private Land Claims confirming to the lot holders in privity with the city of Santa Fé the lots held by them in severalty in that city, and confirming to the. city itself in trust for the use of its inhabitants a tract of four square leagues claimed by the city, except mines of gold, silver and quicksilver, and property appropriated, used, occupied, possessed or owned by the United States:

.It is conceded or shown that prior to 1680 there existed a-Spanish town known' ás La Villa de Santa Fé, which was the seat of government of the Spanish province of New Mexico, and that there was also prior to that date the official mechanism required by the Spanish law to direct the affairs of a Spanish villa or town. The origin of the town or villa is obscure, but the record indicates that as early as 1543 the settlement was-made by deserters from the Spanish military force under Coronado, who refused to accompany their commander on his return to Mexico* and settled at Santa. Fé. In 1680 the Spaniards were driven out by an Indian insurrection and Santa Fé was destroyed, the Spaniards retreating to Paso del Norte, where they remained until 1692, when Diego de Vargas reconquered the country. In 1698 de Vargas reestablished Santa Fé. From that time to the American occupation — although the record does not- fix the precise character of the municipal government — there is no doubt that there was a settlement on-the site of the old villa of Santa Fé, and that it was also the capital of the province. In 1851 Santa Fé was incorporated and its boundaries defined by act of the territorial legislature of New Mexico. Laws of New Mexico, 1851-52, Kearney’s Code, 112. The municipal charter granted in 1851 was shortly thereafter repealed, and the probate judge of the county became, by operation of law, the custodian of the records of the corporation and was a trustee to wind up its affairs. Laws of New Mexico, 1851-52, Kearney’s Code,- 272. No municipal body existed from this time until the year 1891, when Santa Fé was again organized pursuant to the laws of New Mexico.

Under the eighth section of the act approved .July 22, 1854, *677 c. 103,10 Stat. 308, the probate judge of the county of Santa Fé presented to the surveyor general o'f .New Mexico a claim on behalf of the city for four square leagues of land. This' claim was substantially based upon the averment that as the city of Santa Fé was in existence during the whole period of Spanish .sovereignty over New Mexico, it was certain that Sunder the Spanish laws, usages and customs the inhabitants thereof were, as a community, entitled to receive, and your’ petitioners believe and claim did in fact receive, .a grant from the crown for at least four square leagues of land and commons which they now claim.” As the legal authority fob this asserted right'of-the city^ reference was made to specified provisions of the law of Spain, and the.prayer-of the petition was.“that said land be surveyed, and that' a patent therefor be issued by the United States, to the probate judge for the time being of said county of Santa Fé, in trust for the use and benefit of the -landholders and inhabitants within said tract, and for the city of Santa Fé until the same be by law incor-' porated under charter, and thereby become the rightful custo-dian of the patent for said tract of land,” The surveyor general reported to Congress for confirmation • the claim thus made (H. of R. Ex. Doc. 239, 43d Congress, 1st session), and • the recommendation not having been apted upon, this suit was commenced,,by the city of Santa Fé, under the provisions of the act of March 3, 1891, creating the Court of Private Land Claims. - .26 Stat. 854, c. 539.

The petition originally filed on behalf of the- city, after setting out the existence of the Spanish villa- known as La Villa de Santa Fé, substantially averred that the municipality of Santa Fé occupied the situs of the Spanish villa and possessed jurisdiction over the same territory, and, therefore, was, in law, the successor to all the rights enjoyed by the Spanish villa., It alleged that, prior to the Indian insurrection in 1680, the villa had receifed a pueblo grant of four square leagues of land, the central point of which was in the centre of the plaza of the city of Santa Fé; that the grant was made by the King of Spain; that juridical possession was given thereunder, and that such facts were evidenced by a valid testimonio ; that *678 the.archives and records of the villa were destroyed in the Indian insurrection of 1680, and, therefore, the title could not be produced. The fact was also averred that the claim had been submitted to the surveyor general, and had, been by him recommended favorably to Congress. The prayer was for a confirmation of the grant to the city “in trust for the use and benefit of the inhabitants thereof, and of such grantees and assignees of parts of the said lands as have derived, or may hereafter acquire by due assignments, allotments .and titles in severalty to said parts respectively.” The defendant demurred on the ground that the petition stated ho cause of action, and also because it failed to disclose the fact that there were many adverse claimants, under Spanish grants, to the land sued for, and that such claimants were necessary parties defendant.

Appearances vyere thereafter filed by. seventeen persons, alleging that they were the holders of Spanish titlés to land within the area claimed, and that their interests were, therefore, adverse to those of the city. Thereupon an.amended petition was filed by the' city, which in its caption mentions as defendants not only, the original defendant, the United States, but the seventeen persons who had made appearance as having adverse interests. This amended petition substantially reiterated the averments of the original petition as to the foundation and existence of the villa of Santa Fé, but omitted the allegations on the subject of an express grant to La Tilla de Santa Fé, the delivery of juridical possession thereunder and the issuance of a testimonio. The allegation on these, subjects was that prior to the insurrection in 1680, “ La Tilla ,de Santa Fé was entitled to, and had under the laws of the kingdom of Spain in force in that territory at-ihat time, a municipal or pueblo grant, conceding to and vesting in said Spanish town or villa a certain tract of land containing four square Spanish leagues.” The positive averment in the original- petition as to the destruction during, the insurrection of 1680 of the evidence showing the existence of an express grant was replaced by a qualified averment that “ all the muniments of title of such municipal grant, if any suoh existed, were utterly destroyed by the hostile Indians engaged in such insurrection.”

*679 The amended petition also averred that within the boundaries of the grant claimed there

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165 U.S. 675, 17 S. Ct. 472, 41 L. Ed. 874, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 2005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-santa-fe-scotus-1897.