1. A sale of lands in Texas, made before her separation from
Mexico by a citizen to a nonresident alien, passed the title to the
latter, who thereby acquired a defeasible estate in them which he
could hold until deprived thereof by the supreme authority upon the
official ascertainment of the fact of his nonresidence and alienage
or upon the denouncement of a private citizen.
2. The court below properly allowed the plaintiff to file in the
case a new petition, not differing in any substantial particular
from the original, which was lost, without his fault.
3. The concluding clause of the third section of the act
entitled
"An Act to determine the jurisdiction of circuit courts of the
United States, and to regulate the removal of causes from state
courts, and for other purposes,"
approved March 3, 1875, 18 Stat., part 3, 470, does not repeal
the provision of the Revised Statutes authorizing the court to try,
upon the stipulation of parties, issues of fact without the
intervention of a jury.
This was an action by Moore against Phillips and Hancock to
recover possession of a tract of land in Texas. There was a finding
and judgment against the defendants, who thereupon sued out this
writ of error.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action to recover the possession of one-fourth of a
league of land situated in the County of Wharton in the State of
Texas. The plaintiff claims the land under a grant of the State of
Coahuila and Texas, made in April, 1833, to one John Dinsmore, a
colonist, under the contract with the
Page 100 U. S. 209
Empresario Stephen Austin. The defendants assert title to it
under a previous grant from that state made in August, 1824, to one
Bartlett Sims, a similar colonist. No question is raised as to the
genuineness or validity of this grant to Sims, which was for one
league, but in May, 1828, he sold one-fourth of it, constituting
the property in controversy, to one Kinchen Holliman, a resident
and citizen of Mississippi, who never became a resident or citizen
of Mexico or Texas. In 1833, Dinsmore presented a petition to the
commissioner of the state appointed to distribute lands to the
colonists and to issue titles to them, in which he denounced the
tract thus sold as vacant land by reason of the nonresidence and
alienage of Holliman and prayed a grant of it to himself. Upon
reference of the petition to the agent of the impresario and to the
alcalde of the place, the sale of the premises to Holliman and his
alienage and nonresidence were officially established, and their
opinion obtained that he could not, under the laws, retain a right
to the tract. The commissioner thereupon declared the land to be
vacant and conceded it to the petitioner, and directed that a
survey be made of it, preparatory to the issue of the title. Such
survey having been made, a formal document, as evidence of the
transfer of the title, was issued to the petitioner, by which the
commissioner, in the name of the State of Coahuila and Texas,
granted to him the property in question. The validity of this grant
is the principal question presented for our determination.
The contention of the defendants is that the sale of Sims to
Holliman was invalid by reason of the latter's alienage and
nonresidence, and as a consequence that the title did not pass to
him, but remained in Sims, and the tract sold was not subject to be
regranted as vacant land.
There is some conflict of opinion in the decisions of the
Supreme Court of Texas as to the effect upon the title of a sale of
real property to a nonresident alien. Language properly applicable
to grants to aliens under the colonization laws, and the
instructions to the commissioner under the contract with the
Empresario Austin, has sometimes been used with reference to sales
to them by private parties. Such grants to nonresident aliens were
inhibited by positive statutory
Page 100 U. S. 210
provisions, and for the obvious reason that the object of the
colonization laws was to induce a settlement of the country by the
introduction of persons who would cultivate the lands and become
permanent residents, and this object would have been defeated if
such residence and cultivation had not been essential conditions
upon which the bounty of the government was bestowed. For a similar
reason, an abandonment of the country by the settler after
receiving his grant, without previous alienation of it, worked a
forfeiture of the property, which immediately reverted to the mass
of the public domain. The settler, after the performance of certain
conditions, could, however, alienate his land, subject to some
restrictions. In the early cases, particularly in
The Heirs of
Holliman v. Peebles, 1 Tex. 673, an opinion was expressed that
under the laws of Spain, which remained in force in Mexico after
her independence, and those subsequently enacted by her, an alien
could not acquire real property in that republic. And in
Clay
v. Clay, in the 26th of Texas, the invalidity of a sale of
land to a nonresident alien was expressly adjudged. But in the
later case of
Barrett v. Kelly, in the 31st of Texas,
where land had been sold in 1833 to citizens of the United States,
then nonresident aliens, it was held that unless there was an
adjudication by some court or political authority upon their
alienage while it existed, their rights were not devested. The
decision proceeded upon the ground that the title had passed to the
grantees notwithstanding their alienage, though subject to be
devested upon an official determination of that fact.
According to this decision, considered with reference to the
general prohibitory language of the laws of Mexico respecting the
acquisition of real property by aliens, in force in Texas previous
to the latter's independence, the rule which there obtained may be
stated to have been substantially this: that a nonresident alien
could not acquire, under a sale by a citizen, such an interest in
land as to be able to hold it against the government or to prevent
its being denounced and adjudged to be vacant land, subject to be
regranted, but that the title would pass out of the vendor so as to
denude him of all estate in the land and consequent dominion over
it, and the purchaser would take the title and hold it until, in
some official way, the fact of nonresidence
Page 100 U. S. 211
and alienage was authoritatively established, when the general
law would come into operation and restore the property to the
public domain. Certain it is that, by the sale to the alien, the
right of the vendor was deemed to be devested, and, so far as the
present case is concerned, it is immaterial whether the title be
considered as thereupon at once vesting in the government by reason
of the attempted transfer of the property to a person incapable of
taking it or be deemed to pass to the alien, to be held until the
government, upon its own motion or the denouncement of a private
citizen, should determine to claim the property. We are led to the
latter view as the more reasonable one and as being in harmony with
the general doctrine obtaining in other cases that a forfeiture
incurred is inoperative to defeat a title until the party
authorized to enforce it claims its benefit.
This conclusion is strengthened by the act of the Mexican
Congress of March 12, 1828, in relation to passports and the mode
of acquiring property by foreigners. Its sixth article provides
that foreigners, introduced and established in the country in
conformity to prescribed regulations, shall be protected by the
laws and enjoy the same rights conferred upon Mexicans, with the
exception of acquiring landed property which, by existing law,
unnaturalized persons cannot hold. But yet the eleventh article of
the same act declares that property acquired by unnaturalized
foreigners in fraud of the law may be denounced by any Mexican, to
whom it will be adjudged as soon as such fraud is proved. It would
thus seem that notwithstanding the prohibitory language of the
sixth article, title may pass to a foreigner not naturalized,
though it be one which is defeasible upon the denouncement of a
private citizen.
The Supreme Court of California, on the question as to the
validity of a conveyance of land in Mexico by a private citizen to
an alien held, after a full and elaborate consideration, that the
conveyance was not absolutely void, but that the grantor by it was
devested of the property which he had undertaken to convey and the
grantee invested with a defeasible estate therein, which he would
hold until devested by the supreme authority or by an inquisition
had upon its denouncement.
Merle v. Matthews, 26 Cal.
456.
Page 100 U. S. 212
By the common law, an alien cannot acquire real property by
operation of law, but may take it by act of the grantor and hold it
until office found -- that is, until the fact of alienage is
authoritatively established by a public officer upon an inquest
held at the instance of the government. The proceeding which
contains the finding of the fact upon the inquest of the officer is
technically designated in the books of law as "office found." It
removes the fact, upon the existence of which the law devests the
estate and transfers it to the government, from the region of
uncertainty and makes it a matter of record. It was devised,
according to the old law writers, as an authentic means to give the
King his right by solemn matter of record, without which he in
general could neither take nor part with anything, for it was
deemed
"a part of the liberties of England, and greatly for the safety
of the subject, that the King may not enter upon or seize any man's
possessions upon bare surmises, without the intervention of a
jury."
By the civil law, some proceeding, equivalent in its substantive
features, was also essential to take the fact of alienage from
being a matter of mere surmise and conjecture, and to make it a
matter of record. Such a proceeding was usually had before the
local magistrate or council, and might be taken at the instance of
the government or upon the denouncement of a private citizen. The
course pursued in the present case seems to have been in conformity
with common usage. The fact of alienage and nonresidence was thus
officially established; it became matter of record, and the
subsequent declaration of the commissioner, that the land was
vacant, was the judgment which the law prescribed in such cases.
The land was then subject to be regranted by the commissioner as
fully as though no previous grant to Sims had ever been made.
It remains to consider the objections urged to the order of the
court allowing a new petition to be filed in place of the original,
which was lost, and to the trial of the case by the court, without
the intervention of a jury. We do not consider either of these
objections to be well taken. It was not only proper to allow the
filing of a new petition when the original was lost and no copy was
to be had, but it would have been the subject of just complaint had
this allowance been refused.
Page 100 U. S. 213
The affidavit states that the loss was without the fault of the
plaintiff, and there is no pretense that the fact was otherwise.
The original petition was in the ordinary form in use in actions of
trespass to try the title to land, and was for the recovery of
one-fourth of a league, and there is no suggestion that the new
petition differs from it in any substantial particular.
As to the trial by the court, it is sufficient to observe that a
jury was waived by stipulation of the parties filed with the clerk
under the act of Congress. Rev.Stat., sec. 649. The concluding
clause of the third section of the Act of March 3, 1875, "to
determine the jurisdiction of the circuit courts of the United
States, and to regulate the removal of causes from state courts,
and for other purposes," does not repeal the previous law,
authorizing a trial by the court, without the intervention of a
jury, upon such stipulation. It was only intended to conserve to
parties in the cases removed to the circuit courts the same right
of jury trial which parties possess in cases brought originally in
those courts, not to prevent the waiver of a jury by consent. The
provision is similar to the one in the Judiciary Act of 1879. 18
Stat. 471;
Kearney v.
Case, 12 Wall. 281.
Judgment affirmed.