United States v. Sutter

62 U.S. 170, 16 L. Ed. 119, 21 How. 170, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 631
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 14, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 62 U.S. 170 (United States v. Sutter) 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. Sutter, 62 U.S. 170, 16 L. Ed. 119, 21 How. 170, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 631 (1859).

Opinions

Mr. Justice CAMPBELL

delivered.the opinion of the ctourt.

This cause Comes to this court by appeal from a decree of the District Court of the United States for the northern district of [172]*172Ca ifornia, which affirms a sentence of the board of coramis* sioners to settle pi'ivate land claims in that State, in favor of the appellee, upon-a claim to -thirty-three square leagues of land in the valley of the Sacramento river. ' The record shows that the claimant, a native of Switzerland, immigrated to the. Department of California about the-year 1839, was' naturalized as á citizen of Mexico, and with the leave of the Government formed a settlement near the junction of the Sacramento and American rivers, which he designated New Helvetia. The country at the time was uninhabited, except by bands of warlike Indians, who made frequent depredatory incursions upon the tíndefended settlements to the south and east of this place. In two or tbnjee years after his arrival, the claimant was commissioned by the'Governor of California to guard the northern frontier and to represent' the Government in affording security and protection to its inhabitants against the .invasion of the Indians' and marauding bands of hunters and trappers, who occasionally visited the valley for plunder. In the year 1841 he commenced the erection of a fort at New Helvetia, .at lais own expense. It was surrounded by a high wall, and was defended by cannon. Within this fort there were dwelling-houses for his- servants and workmen, and workshops for the manufacture of various articles of necessity.. There was a gristmill, tannery, and distillery, attached to the establishment. A number of Indians were domesticated by him, and contributed to cultivate his fields of grain, and to defend the settlement from móre» savage tribes. He was possessed of several thousands df. horses and neat cattle, which were .under the care of his servants.'' There were collected at different times from twenty to fifty families, and theré were in the course of yearp some hundreds of persons connected with this settlement. He is described as having been'hospitable and generous to strangers, and 'the Governors of California bear testimony to the vigor, with which he performed the duties of his civil and military commission.

. In March, 1852, he placed before the bostrd of commissioners a claim for eleven leagues of land* to include his place at New Helvetia, and extending thence north, which were granted [173]*173to him by Juan B. Alvarado, Governor of California, 18th of June, 1841.

In March, 1853, he amended his petition and claimed an additional quantity of twenty-two .leagues, which were granted to him and his. son, John A. Sutter* the 5th of February, 1845, by Micheltorena, the Governor of California; this being the surplus {sobrante) contained within the limits from which his .first grant was to be fulfilled. . The espediente submitted tp the board, with the grant Of Alvarado, and as a part of it, -represents that he'is in possession of New Helvetia, and that his-enterprise there had the sanction of.the Govérnment, and had' been prosperous-; that he had associated with him .industrious families; and that, besides/ the advantage- to himself, he had awakened industry, in others, and had also, by the strength of his company, formed" a strong, barrier against the savage Indians.. He asks to enlarge his establishment, by introducing twelve families, and for this purpose .solicits a grant of eleven leagues at his establishment of New Helvetia, from the Governor, together with his powerful influence before the supreme Government of the nation, that its approbation might be given. The Governor recognises the truth of the statements in the espediente, and declares that he has been sufficiently informed that the land is vacant and suitable for the purpose of the grantee. . He grantsJ;o the applicant, “ for him and his settlers, the said land, called New Helvetia, subject to the approbation of the supreme. Government and of the Departmental Assembly,” and subject to four conditions. The 'third and fourth relate to the boundaries of the land 'and the consummation of the title, and are as follows: ‘‘ 3d. The land of which donation is mad é to him is of the extent of eleven sitios de ganado mayors as exhibited in the sketch annexed to the proceedings, without including, the lands Overflown by the swelling and current of the rivers. It is bounded on the north by los Tres Picas (three summits) and the 39° 41' 45" north latitude; on the- east by the borders of the Rio.de las Plumas; on the south by the parallel 38° 49' 32"of north latitude; and on the west by the river Sacramento. 4th. '"When this property shall be confirmed unto, him, he shall petition'the proper judge.to give him pos[174]*174session of the land, in order that it may be measured, agreeably to ordinance, the surplus thereof remaining for the benefit of the nation, for convenient purposes. Therefore, I order that this title being held as firm and valid, thát the same be entered in the proper book, and that these proceedings be transmitted to.the excellent Departmental Assembly.”

The first inquiry in cases like this is, has the authenticity of the grant been established? This was not questioned in the District Court, but in'this courtthe appellants have denounced, with much force, the evidence as insufficient to support it. , The original ■ issued to the donee was not produced either to !tha board of commissioners or the District Court. To account for its non-production, two witnesses were examined, who say that a paper, purporting to be an original, and which had the appearance of authenticity, was in the possession of one of •them, as the agent and attorney in fact of the claimant; that this paper was destroyed by fire with the office in which both lived in the fall of 1851. An affidavit of the claimant in another case is in the record, in which' he says that the original is lost. Some months before this fire, this paper was recorded in the county registry of deeds, and the recording clerk affords .some evidence to the genuineness of the paper. It is shown that, it had been exhibited in controversies before courts of justice, and had been examined by adverse claimants and their' counsel, and at other times by interested and inquiring par.-ties.

A grant of the same date, for the same quántity of land, in the sarnie locality, and issued by the same officer, was reported to the United States by William Carey Jones, Esq., their agent, as existing in the archives of California in 185.0. In his intercourse with the officers of the California Government, the claimant asserted his title to New Helvetia, and his assertion was admitted; and accurate accounts of his location and settlement, and the.terms on which they were made, aré to be found in historical and descriptive works published under the authority of foreign States, upon the testimony of their agents, who visited California prior to 1845. (Fremont’s Rep., 246; 1 Duflot de Moufras Explor. de l’Oregon and des Cal’as, 457.) Be[175]*175sides this consistent testimony, there is produced from the archives a draught of a grant corresponding to that produced from the county records, except in respect to the signatures.

The Governor, Alvatado, testifies that this draught was prepared byhim, and from it the original that issued to Sutter was prepared by the secretary, and that the draught was deposited by his directions, and is now there. The fact that his name is not attached to this draught does not impair its authority under the circumstances of this case. (Spencer v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 U.S. 170, 16 L. Ed. 119, 21 How. 170, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-sutter-scotus-1859.