Waterman v. Smith

13 Cal. 373
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 13 Cal. 373 (Waterman v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waterman v. Smith, 13 Cal. 373 (Cal. 1859).

Opinion

Field, J. delivered the opinion of the Court

Terry, C. J. and Baldwin, J. concurring.

This is an action of ejectment, for the recovery of a tract of land situated in the valley of Suisun, in the county of Solano. Both parties claim title under grants of the Mexican Governor of California, Juan B. Alvarado — the plaintiff under a grant issued to the Indian Chief, Francisco Solano, on the twenty-first of January, 1842, and the defendant under a grant issued to José Francisco Armijo, on the fourth of March, 1840. The grant to Solano is of land known by the name of Suisun, and covers four square leagues, within exterior limits embracing about eight leagues. The grant to Armijo is of land known as Tolenas, and covers three leagues, within limits embracing from twelve to twenty leagues. The maps referred to in both grants cover the land in controversy. The grant to Solano was presented to the Board of Land Commissioners for confirmation by Archibald A. Ritchie, who had become, by purchase, interested in the land granted; and the same was confirmed to him by the Boai’d in January, 1853, and subsequently by the United States District Court, in Eovember, 1853, and the decree of confirmation was affirmed on appeal by the Supremo Court of the United States, at its December Term, 1854. In July of the following [408]*408year (1855) the four leagues specified in the grant were laid off and surveyed, under the directions of the Surveyor-General of the United States for California, and the survey was approved and authenticated by that officer. In conformity with this survey, a patent on behalf of the United States was issued to Ritchie, bearing date on the seventeenth of January, 1857, for four leagues of land, with the specific description of the official survey. This patent covers the land in suit. The grant to Armijo was likewise presented to the Board of Land Commissioners, and was rejected. On appeal to the District Court of the United States, the decision of the Board was reversed, and the claim under the grant confirmed. Prom the decision of the District Court the case is now pending, on appeal, in the Supreme Court of the United States.

Both grantees resided within the limits of their respective grants, and it is insisted bv the counsel of the defendant that the evidence establishes the fact that Armijo occupied and claimed three leagues of his tract, marked by metes and bounds, and that such occupation and claim ojierated as a segregation of that specific quantity, and the grantee’s right thereto could not be impaired by the subsequent grant to Solano, and the patent thereon to Ritchie.

We shall pass over any consideration of the question as to the application of the doctrine of relation, in virtue of which the plaintiffs contend that the grant to Solano, though subsequent in date to that to Armijo, relates back to the provisional decree of Vallejo, made in January, 1837, as immaterial to the determination of the case. ' We shall assume, also, for the purposes of the appeal, that Armijo occupied and claimed from the entire quantity comprehended within the map referred to in his grant, three specific leagues, and that these covered the land for the recoveiy of which the present suit is brought. We propose to place our decision upon grounds which will settle the controversy in the present case, and serve as a rule in controversies of a similar character; and for that purpose we shall disregard the minor points presented by the record, and confine ourselves principally to the questions which properly and necessarily arise from the claim asserted by the defendant, that the occupation and possession by Armijo, under his grant'of three leagues, by designa[409]*409ted metes and bounds, was a location of that specific quantity within the exterior limits described in the grant, effectuating its segregation from the public domain, and attaching thereto the grant, and making the title of the grantee perfect against even a subsequent patent of the United States. Those questions relate to the nature of the titles conferred by the grants; to the authority by which location can be given to the specific quantity granted where that is less than the quantity contained within the exterior limits of the grants; to the effect of a patent of the United States in such cases, and who constitute the third persons mentioned in the 15th Section of the Act of Congress of March 8d, 1851, against whom the confirmation and patent are not conclusive.

The grants to Solano and Armijo both purport to convey the land designated therein—limiting its extent in the first case to four, in the other to three, leagues. Both are subject to similar conditions, with the exception of one peculiar to the grant to Armijo, against the molestation of the Indians there located and his immediate neighbors. Both provide for the free and exclusive enjoyment of the land by the grantees, and for such use and cultivation of it as they may think proper. Both require juridical possession to be given by a public officer of the vicinity, by whom the boundaries are to be designated. Both reserve any surplus over the quantity specified to the uses of the nation. Both are made liable to denouncement for failure to comply with their conditions, and both are subject to the approval of the .Departmental Assembly. The grant to Solano received such approval—the one to Armijo did not; but this fact does not impair the title which passed to the latter. The effect of the approval was only to discharge the grant to Solano from liability to defeasance by the Mexican Government, except for breach of its conditions subsequent. Both of the grantees acquired rights of property, which were not impaired at the date of the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, and were protected by the guaranties of that instrument, and there is no law which authorized a forfeiture for any act or omission since. (Opinion of U. S. Supreme Court in the Sutter Case.)

The grants in question are similar in the title they convey to the one issued to Sutter, which was the subject of consideration in [410]*410the case of Ferris v. Coover, (10 Cal. 589,) and, like that, passed an estate in the land embraced within their exterior boundaries, to the extent of the specified quantity, to be subsequently laid off by the government. They were issued in pursuance of the laws and regulations of Mexico for the colonization of’the territories, the object of which was the settlement of the vacant lands of the Republic; and for that purpose were made subject to the usual condition in such cases, of cultivation and occupancy. The first condition in the grant to Solano provides for his inclosure of the land with a reservation of the crossings, roads, and servitudes, and for his free and exclusive enjoyment of the same, with such use and cultivation as he may think proper, and requires the construction of a house and its inhabitation within one year. Its language is:

“ That he may inclose it without prejudice to the crossings, roads, and servitudes, and enjoy it freely and exclusively; making such use and cultivation of it as he may see fit, but within one year he shall build a house, and it shall be inhabited/'’ The second condition in the grant to Armijo is substantially the same; so were the second condition in the grant to Alvarado, (Fremont v. United States, 17 How. 545); the third condition in the grant to Reading, (Reading v. United States, 18 How. 2); and the first condition in the grant to Jimeno, (United States v. Larkin, 18 How. 559).

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Bluebook (online)
13 Cal. 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waterman-v-smith-cal-1859.