Ward v. Broadwell

1 N.M. 75
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 N.M. 75 (Ward v. Broadwell) 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
Ward v. Broadwell, 1 N.M. 75 (N.M. 1854).

Opinions

By Court,

Watts, J.:

This was an action of replevin brought by James N. Ward against James M. Broadwell, for one buggy and one set of harness for two horses. Tlie suit was instituted on tlie twentieth day of June, 1853. The replevin act under wbicb tbis suit was brought was passed by the general assembly of tbe territory of New Mexico, at its December session, 1847. Tbe treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo was made on tbe second day of February, 1848. The question wbicb first suggests itself to the consideration of the court is tliis: Was tbe replevin act under which this suit was brought passed by that general assembly after the treaty of peace and before the passage by congress of the organic law, under which a territorial government was organized here, a valid or void act ?

If the law emanated .from a body having no legislative power or legal existence, it is void, and no rights can be asserted under it. The first legislative assembly of the Territory of New Mexico convened under the organic law of the ninth of September, 1850. On the fourteenth day of July, 1851, it passed an act, the first section of which reads as follows: “ That all laws that have previously been of force in this territory that are not repuguaut to or inconsistent with the Constitution of the United Slates, the organic law of this territory, or any act passed at the present session of the legislative assembly, shall be and continue in force, excepting in Kearny’s code, the law concerning registers of land:” See Laws of the Territory, sec. 1, p. 176. If the replevin act ever was in force, that act continued it in existence.

The capacity, then, of the general assembly of New Mexico to enact at its December session, 1847, a valid law, is norv the point for consideration. On the thirteenth of May, 1846, congress acknowledged the existence of a state of war between the United States and the republic of Mexico, and provided for its prosecution. In the prosecution of that war General Kearny marched with forces of the United States against the department of New Mexico, and took possession of it. General Kearny, on the twenty-second day of August, 1846, issues to the people of said department a proclamation, in which he says: “As by the act of the republic of Mexico, a state of war' ex.ists between that government and the United States; and as the undersigned, at the head of his troops, on the eighteenth instant, took possession of Santa Fe, the capital of the department of New Mexico, he now announces his intention to hold the department, with its original boundaries (on both sides of the Del Norte), as a part of the United States and under the name of the territory of New Mexico.” On the twenty-second day of September; 1846, General Kearny enacted an organic law for the government of the territory, and a system of laws for the administration of public justice, and the protection of life, liberty, and property of the people of New Mexico, known generally as the Kearny code. A copy of these laws, and a list of the appointments to civil offices in the territory, was inclosed to the adjutant-general on the twenty-second of September, 1846, and were received at the war department on the twenty-third of November, 1846. Thus the supreme authority and sovereignty of the republic of Mexico ceased to exist in New Mexico, and its assumption and exercise upon the part of the United States as the conqueror of this territory began.

Under what authority did this state of things take place, and what biriding effect has the system of government thus instituted? This was a conquered territory, and in the case of the Canal Appraisers v. The People, 17 Wend. 584, it was decided that there is no doubt of the power of the sovereign to change the laws of a conquered or ceded territory by a mere declaration of his will, without any formal act of legislation, unless restrained by the capitulation or treaty of cession.

No formal act of legislation is necessary to change the law; the mere will of the conqueror is sufficient: 1 Kent, 178, note a. This principle of law that a conqueror has the right to enact laws for the government of his conquest, while in his possession, is illustrated and explained with reference to New Mexico in the message of the president of July 24, 1848, Ex. Doc. No. 70, as follows: “In my message of December 22, 1846, in answer to a resolution of the house of representatives calling for information in ‘relation to the establishment or organization of civil government in any portion of the territory of Mexico which has or might be taken possession of by the army or navy of the United States,’ I communicated the orders which had been given to the officers of our army and navy, and stated the general authority upon which temporary military governments had been established over the conquered portions of Mexico, then in our military occnpation. The temporary governments authorized were instituted by virtue of the rights of war. The power to declare war against a foreign country, and to prosecute it according to the laws of war, as sanctioned by civilized nations, it will not be questioned, exists under our constitution. When congress has declared that war exists with a foreign nation, the laws of war apply to our situation, and it becomes the duty of the president, as the constitutional commander-in-chief of the army and navy of the United States, to prosecute it. In prosecuting a foreign war thus duly declared by congress, we have the right, ‘by conquest and military occupation,’ to acquire possession of the territories of the enemy, and during the war to exercise the fullest rights of sovereignty over it. The sovereignty of the enemy in such cases is suspended, and his laws can no longer be rightfully enforced over the conquered territory, or be obligatory upon the inhabitants who remain and submit to the conqueror. By the surrender the inhabitants pass under a temporary allegiance to the conqueror, and are bound by such laws, and such ouly, as he may choose to recognize and impose. From the nature of the case no other could be obligatory upon them, for when there is no protection, or allegiance, or sovereignty, there can be no claim of obedience. These are well-established principles of the laws of war as recognized and practiced by civilized nations, and they have' been sanctioned by the highest tribunals of our country. The orders and instructions issued to the officers of the army and navy applicable to such portions of the Mexican territory as had been, or might be, conquered by our arms, were in strict conformity to these principles. They were, indeed, in amelioration of the rigors of war upon which we might have insisted. They substituted for the harshness of military rule something of the mildness of civil government, and were not only the exercise of no excess of power, but were a relaxation in favor of the peaceful inhabitants of the conquered territory who had submitted to our authority, and were alike politic and humane.”

The president further says that New Mexico and Upper California were among tbe territories conquered and occupied by our forces, and such temporary goveimments were established over them. “ They were established by the officers of our army and navy in command, in pursuance of the orders and instructions accompanying my message to the house of representatives, December 22, 1846.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.M. 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-broadwell-nm-1854.