1. Under the Mexican law, when a grant of land is made by the
government, a formal delivery of possession to the grantee by a
magistrate of the vicinage is essential to the complete investiture
of title. This proceeding, called, in the language of the country,
the delivery of juridical possession, involves the establishment of
the boundaries of the land granted, when there is any uncertainty
with respect to them. A record of the proceeding is preserved by
the magistrate, and a copy delivered to the grantee.
2. Unless the decree of the tribunals of the United States,
confirming a claim under such a grant, otherwise limits the extent
or the form of the tract, the boundaries thus established should
control the officers of the United States in surveying the
land.
3. A survey, by a Surveyor General of the United States, of a
claim thus confirmed, is inoperative until finally approved by the
Land Department at Washington.
4. Where a quantity of land in California was granted by the
Mexican government within a tract embracing a larger amount, in the
possession of which tract the grantee was placed, he is entitled to
retain such possession until that quantity is segregated from the
tract by the officers of the government and set apart to him, and
he may maintain ejectment for the whole tract or any portion of it
against parties in possession claiming under the preemption laws of
the United States.
5. Lands claimed under Mexican grants in California are excluded
from settlement under the preemption laws, so long as the claims of
the grantees remain undetermined by the tribunals and officers of
the United States.
Page 95 U. S. 34
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action of ejectment for the possession of a tract of
land situated in the County of Marin, in the State of California.
The plaintiff traces title to the demanded premises from the
Mexican government through a grant made to one John Reed in 1834,
and confirmed by the tribunals of the United States. The
defendants, against whom judgment was recovered, held separate
parcels of the premises, claiming to be rightfully in possession
under the preemption laws of the United States.
It appears from the findings of the court that in 1834, the
Mexican governor of California, Jose Figueroa, granted to Reed a
tract of land known as Corte Madera del Presidio, bounded by the
mission of San Rafael and the port of San Francisco, the quantity
being specified in the grant as "one square league, a little more
or less, as explained by the map attached to the proceedings"
(expediente). In the following year, possession of the tract was
delivered to the grantee by the proper Mexican officials, and from
that time he continued in its possession and enjoyment until his
death. The demanded premises are a parcel of this tract. In 1852,
the heirs of Reed presented their claim under the grant for
confirmation to the board of land commissioners for the settlement
of land titles in California, created by the Act of March 3, 1851,
and in 1854, by a decree of the board, the claim was confirmed. On
appeal to the district court this decree was affirmed. No further
proceedings appear to have been prosecuted by the government, and
the confirmation thus became final.
The grant is not set forth in the record, but we must presume
that it was in the ordinary form of grants made by former governors
of California, under the Mexican colonization law of 1824, as under
no other law were those governors empowered to make grants of the
public domain. Those grants were sometimes
Page 95 U. S. 35
of tracts designated by well defined boundaries, sometimes of a
specified quantity of land lying within exterior boundaries
embracing a greater amount, and sometimes of places by name where
these were well known, and thus capable of ready identification.
All of them were made subject to the approval of the assembly of
the department, and until they received such approval, the estate
granted was liable to be defeated. And when the approval was
obtained, there was another proceeding to be taken, which was
essential to the complete investiture of title, and that was a
formal delivery of possession of the property by a magistrate of
the vicinage, called, in the language of the country, the delivery
of juridical possession. This proceeding involved the establishment
of the boundaries of the tract, when there was any uncertainty
respecting them. If these were designated in the grant, it required
their ascertainment and identification; if they were not thus
designated, it required the measurement of the quantity granted and
its segregation from the public domain. The regulations prescribed
by law for the guidance of the magistrate in these matters made it
his duty to preserve a record of the various steps taken in the
proceeding, to have the same attested by the assisting witnesses,
and to deliver an authentic copy to the grantee.
Ordinarily, the boundaries thus established would be accepted as
conclusive by our government. Unless there is something in the
decree of confirmation otherwise limiting the extent or the form of
the tract, they should control the officers of the United States in
making their surveys. It was so held by this court in
Graham v. United
States, 4 Wall. 259, and in
Pico v.
United States, 5 Wall. 536.
In the case at bar, the surveyor general for California
disregarded the boundaries established upon the juridical
possession delivered to the grantee. He proceeded upon the
conclusion that the confirmees were restricted by the decree to one
square league, to be measured out of the tract within those
boundaries, which exceeded that amount by about fifteen hundred
acres. Whether the terms of the decree justified his conclusion is
a question upon which it is unnecessary for us to express an
opinion. That is a question which must, in the first instance, be
determined by the Land Department in carrying the decree
Page 95 U. S. 36
into execution by a survey and patent. It is sufficient for the
present case that the survey made was contested by the confirmees,
and the contest was undetermined when this action was tried. Until
finally approved, the survey could not impair their right to the
possession of the entire tract as delivered by the former
government to the grantee under whom they claim. Until then, it was
inoperative for any purpose. Even if the limitation to one square
league should ultimately be held correct, that square league might
be located in a different portion of the tract by direction of the
Land Department, to which the supervision and correction of surveys
of private land claims are entrusted. The confirmees could not
measure off the quantity for themselves, and thus legally segregate
it from the balance of the tract. The right to make the segregation
rested exclusively with the government, and could only be exercised
by its officers. Until they acted and effected the segregation, the
confirmees were interested in preserving the entire tract from
waste and injury, and in improving it, for until then they could
not know what part might be assigned to them. Until then, no third
person could interfere with their right to the possession of the
whole. No third person could be permitted to determine, in advance
of such segregation, that any particular locality would fall within
the surplus, and thereby justify his intrusion upon it and its
detention from them. If one person could in this way appropriate a
particular parcel to himself, all persons could do so, and thus the
confirmees would soon be stripped of the land which was intended by
the government as a donation to its grantee, whose interests they
have acquired, for the benefit of parties who were never in its
contemplation. If the law were otherwise than as stated, the
confirmees would find their possessions limited, first in one
direction and then in another, each intruder asserting that the
parcel occupied by him fell within the surplus, until in the end
they would be excluded from the entire tract.
Cornwell v.
Culver, 16 Cal. 429;
Riley v. Heisch, 18
id.
198;
Mahoney v. Van Winkle, 21
id. 552.
The defendants acquired no rights as preemptioners under the
laws of the United States. Lands claimed under Mexican grants in
California are restricted from settlement so long as
Page 95 U. S. 37
the claims of the grantees remain undetermined. 10 Stat. 246.
Their possession, therefore, was that of simple intruders and
trespassers without color of right.
*
Judgment affirmed.
* For the final decision of the Land Department upon the survey
made,
see Copp's Public Land Laws 534-540.