West v. Cochran

58 U.S. 403, 15 L. Ed. 110, 17 How. 403, 1854 U.S. LEXIS 526
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 58 U.S. 403 (West v. Cochran) 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
West v. Cochran, 58 U.S. 403, 15 L. Ed. 110, 17 How. 403, 1854 U.S. LEXIS 526 (1855).

Opinion

Mr.-Justice CATRON

delivered the opinion of the court.

To understand the application of the instruction given to the jury which controlled the verdict in this case, a minute statement of the facts is necessary.

On the 1st June, 1794, Joseph Brazeau,. by petition, requested the Lt. Governor of Upper Louisiana to grant to him a tract of land near to the then village of St. Louis, “situated beyond the foot of the mound called the Grange de Terre, four arpens in width, which are to extend from the steep bank or beach of the Mississippi in the W.' {- S. W. by about twenty arpens in depth, that shall begin at the foot of the hill where stands the Grange de Terre, ascending in a N. N. W. course to the vicinity of the Stony Creek, so that the said tract hereby asked for be bounded on the east by the bank of the Mississippi, on the other side in part by the king’s domain, and in part by land reunited to the said domain.”

The grant was made by the' governor in the following terms: “We do certify to have put Joseph Brazeau in possession of *409 the parcel of land designated in his petition, of four arpens by twenty deep, which shall extend in a N. N. W. course from the foot of the hill where stands the Grange de Terre, ascending to the vicinity of the Stony Creek, bounded on one side by the bank of the Mississippi, and on the opposite side by lands not conceded or reunited to his Majesty’s domain, and at the two ends bounded on the N. N. W. by the vicinity of the Rocky Creek, and at the other, in the S. S. E., shall be bounded by the land granted to the free mulattress Esther.” This concession was made June 10, 1794.

On the 25th of the same month, the governor amended his former concession, in which he declares that the four arpens front by twenty deep, “ shah begin beyond the mound called La Grange de Terre, extending N. N. W. to the vicinity of the Rocky Branch, bounded on one side by the banks of the Mississippi River, and on the opposite side by lands reunited to the king’s domain, through which lands passes this present concession, of which one end is to be bounded by the concession of the free mulattress Esther.”

The application of Esther above referred to, was made October 2,1793. She petitioned for a piece of land lying on the borders of the Mississippi; the northern- portion of the concession to be situate between the small mound called the Grange de Terre and the beach of the Mississippi, having at its two extremities four arpens front, that shall bear about from E. N. E. to W. S. W., by twenty arpens in extent or depth, that shall run from about N. N. W. to S. S. E.

On the 3d October, 1793, the governor granted the land to Esther, in the terms of her petition, with this addition: That the land should descend the river, and be limited on three sides by the king’s domain, and on the other side by the bank of the Mississippi, as shown by the plat on the back of the concession. This plat was a rude sketch, affording no material aid in locating the land.

On the 5th of October, 1793, the governor certifies that he had in person put Esther in possession of the land granted, the locality of which he again describes, in the terms as above set forth, except that he declares that the eastern boundary on the river shall be limited by the edge of the beach.

Esther’s concession was not surveyed by the Spanish authorities.

On the 9th of May, 1798, Joseph Brazeau sold to Louis Labeaume part of the land granted to Brazeau in June, 1794, reserving for himself four arpens to be taken at the foot of the mound on the south part of the concession; Brazeau selling only sixteen arpens in depth to Labeaume, who accepted the *410 sale with this reservation.' In 1799, Labeaume applied to the governor to enlarge his tract acquired from'Brazeau. “ He asks that you will be pleased to grant him 360 arpens of land, including the land which he the petitioner bought of M. Brazeau; thatis, twenty arpens in depth bom the Mississippi in ascending the Rocky Branch, West i S. by sixteen arpens in front along the Mississippi, to be taken from the descending road into the creek; which is the same front, of the petitioner’s land, the angle (triangle) formed by the perpendicular from the road to the river by the creek, and by the river shall complete, or about, the tract asked for.”

■ In February, 1799, the governor granted the land to Labeaume, ■with the boundaries asked for, and ordered ’that Soulard, the surveyor, should ’ put Labeaume into possession, and execute a survey to serve'the interested party, to’obtain q. complete title from the governor-general, which was wished1 for by the petitioner.

On the 20th March, 1799,-Soulard proceeded to survey the land granted to Labeaume, from which the larger quantity of 374 arpens was found to be within the'boundaries described in ' Labeaume’s petition. The survey was regularly certified, April 10,1799, and accompanied by a figurative plat.

The line marks of this survey have been retraced in'the survey recently made by the United States, and the patent to Labeaume or his legal representatives, of the 25th of March, 1852, is founded on it. But it is insisted that the survey includes the sixteen arpens reserved by Brazeau in his deed of May, 1798, to Labeaume ; and on the existence of this fact the title of the plaintiff in the present controversy depends, as the' land demanded lies within the . bounds of the patent. Labeaume filed his title papers with the recorder of land titles, to be registered in February,, 1806; and in his notice of claim, the tract partly in dispute .is thus described: “ Louis Labeaume, 374 arpens of land,- conceded in part to Joseph Brazeau, the-20th - June, 1794, and the other part -to Louis Labeaume, the 15th February, 1779, settled and cultivated since both these dates.”

On the 3d of September, 1806, the board of commissioners appointed to adjudicate claims to lands under the act of 1805, • passed on Labeaume’s claim. The clerk of the board gives a description oí""it in these terms: “Louis Labeaume claiming 374 arpens of land situate on'the Mississippi, a distance of about two miles from the towm of St. Louis, produces a concession (duly, registered) from Zenon Trudeau, for four by twenty arpens, dated the 20th June, 1798, (25th June, 1794,) granted topne Joseph Brazeau, and .another concession from said Zenon Trudeau to claimant, for the said 374 arpens, including the said *411 four by twenty arpens, dated the 15th February, 1799 ; a survey of the same taken the 2d March, and certified the 10th April, 1799, together with a certificate by Zenón Trudeau of the sale cf the said four by twenty arpens by said Joseph Brazeau, reserving to himself four arpens in superficies; said certificate ■ dated the 12th May, 1798.”

This entry is so confused as to be unmeaning without reference to the title papers of record. The board at that time rejected the claim because the concession had not been duly registered.

On the 22d September, 1810, the board confirmed the claim in the following terms: “ Louis Labeaume claims three hundred and seventy-four arpens of land. See book No. 1, page ,517.

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Bluebook (online)
58 U.S. 403, 15 L. Ed. 110, 17 How. 403, 1854 U.S. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-cochran-scotus-1855.