United States v. Sutter

27 F. Cas. 1368, 1861 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedJune 10, 1861
StatusPublished

This text of 27 F. Cas. 1368 (United States v. Sutter) 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. Sutter, 27 F. Cas. 1368, 1861 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28 (N.D. Cal. 1861).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

This cause comes up on objections to survey filed on the part of the United States and of various purchasers under [John A.] Sutter, who have intervened in the proceeding, under the act of 1860. The boundaries of the land confirmed to the claimant are described in the decree of the board as follows: “On the south by a line drawn due east from the Sacramento river, so as to touch the most southerly point of a pond or laguna, situated near said river, and about five miles south of the American river, as represented on the map filed in the case, marked B. and B. P. L., exhibit to the deposition of Juan B. Alvarado, March 15, 1855, which line is also marked on said map Lindero, labeled Norte 38° 49' 32", on the north by a line drawn due east from the Sacramento river to the southern base of the mountains known as the Buttes, and represented on the said map as Los Tres Picos, and from thence until it intersects the eastern boundary of the tract as represented on said map and described in the grant and in the depositions of said Vioget; on the west by the said river Sacramento, and on the east by the margins of Feather river inclusive. For more particular description, reference to be had to the copies of the grants filed and proved in the case, marked A and C., to the map marked B., and to the depositions of John J. Vioget and Juan B. Alvarado, all of which are filed among the papers in the case.”

This decree was affirmed by the district court, but on appeal to the supreme court it was reversed, so far as it confirmed the claim for twenty-two leagues under the Sobrante grant, but affirmed with respect to the eleven league grant. Eleven leagues have thus far been surveyed and located, and the survey has been returned into court under the provisions of the act of 1860. In the opinion of the supreme court it is stated that “the cause is remitted to the district court for further proceedings in respect to the location of the grant of Alvarado within the limits set forth in the grant and the accompanying map on file in the case.” [21 How. (62 U. S.) 170.] It will be observed that the decree of the board and of this court, which was thus in part reversed and in part ’affirmed, did not attempt to make any discrimination between the right to eleven leagues acquired under the Alvarado grant and that to twenty-two leagues supposed to have been acquired under the Micheltorena or Sobrante grant It confirmed to the claimant all the land “within his rancho as laid down on the map which accompanied the grant for eleven leagues.” But the claim under the Sobrante grant having been rejected by the supreme court and the cause remitted that the eleven league grant might be located within the limits set forth in the grant and accompaning diseño, it is evident that the smaller quantity must now be located within the limits decided by the board and this court to be the boundaries of the original map; the only effect of the partial reversal of the decree by the supreme court being to reserve to the nation, i. e., to the United States, the excess beyond the eleven leagues, instead of considering it as conveyed to the claimant under the. Sobrante grant. If the limits of the tract out of which the eleven leagues are to be taken had not been so explicitly determined by the decree of the board, and adopted by the supreme court, there might be much room to doubt whether the southern boundaiy line marked “Lindero latitud norte 38 deg. 49 min. 32 sec.,” on the map B. P. L., was in fact intended by the governor to be the southern limit of the tract, out of which the eleven leagues just granted were to be taken. It has unfortunately happened that neither the original grant nor the map which accompanied the petition are before us.

The grant has been burnt and the map lost. The contents of the former we learn from the borrador draft in the archives and from a copy of the original of record in the county clerk’s office; but the precise indications of the map, according to which the governor granted, cannot now be ascertained with any certainty. The grant describes the northern boundary as Los Tres Picos, and the parallel of latitude 39 deg. 41 min. 45 sec.; and the southern boundary as the parallel 38 deg. 49 min. 32 sec. In fixing these boundaries it might reasonably be inferred that the governor adopted some lines drawn on the map [1369]*1369"before him, and supposed to be, and marked as, the parallels of latitude mentioned in the grant. But on one of the maps presented as copies of the one which accompanied the petition are the two lines found marked as mentioned in the grant. The map “B. P. L.” first appears as an exhibit to the deposition of Governor Alvarado. He states that it seems an exact copy of the diseño, except that on the Feather river were marked localities which Sutter thought would be suitable for the settlement of families under him. “I named the degrees of latitude as Sutter had them marked on his diseño. I told him I did not know the latitude; but, as he insisted on having them so, I described them accordingly.” The evidence is silent as to the origin of the map B. P. L., thus introduced to our notice. We are not informed when, by whom, from what origin, or for what purpose it was made. But, if the testimony of Alvarado be accurate, it is not a copy of the map attached to the petition, for the northern line of latitude is not 39 deg. 41 min. 45 sec., as mentioned in the grant, and which Alvarado declares he adopted from the diseño, but 39 deg. 32 min. 45 sec. The southern line marked on the map corresponds with the call of the grant, but the map is in this respect inconsistent with itself as will presently be shown. There was also produced by the claimant a map marked A. P. L. This map Yioget states to have been made by him for Captain Sutter in 1843, and to be a true copy of the original, except that some dotted lines are. omitted which were intended to mark swampy lands. As Vioget, at the time of Sutter’s application for a grant, made two maps of the tract solicited, one of which was sent with the petition, and was the diseño before the governor when the concession was made, and the other was retained by Sutter, it is reasonable to conclude that the copy A. P. L. was made from the latter and not from the former, which remained in the archives at Monterey. The supreme court seem to have supposed that this copy by Vioget was the map filed by the claimant with his petition. But such was not the fact. The map B. P. L., already referred to, was that filed with the petition, while the Vioget copy marked A. P. L. was not produced until some years aft-erwards. On this latter map the southern parallel of latitude is laid down precisely as in the map B. P. L., but it is marked “latitud norte 38 deg. 41 min. 32 sec.” The position of the northern line is in like manner identical with that of the northern line on B. P. L., hut it is marked “latitud norte 39 deg. 33 min. -45 sec.” If, then, the original of this map was before the governor, it is evident that he did not adopt either parallel of latitude laid down on the map as the boundary of the tract he intended to concede.

It will be observed that not only do the numbers of the northern and southern boundaries on A. P. L. fail to correspond with those mentioned in the grant, but they also differ from those marked on the same lines on B. P. L. For the southern boundary on the latter is numbered 38 deg. 49 min. 32 sec., while on the former it is numbered 38 deg. 41 min. 32 sec.; and the northern parallel on the map B. P. L. is marked 39 deg. 32 min. 45 sec., while on A. P. L. it is 39 deg. 33 min. 45 sec., neither of which latter corresponds with the call of the grant for latitude 39 deg. 41 min. 45 sec.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 F. Cas. 1368, 1861 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-sutter-cand-1861.