1. The history of the title of San Francisco to her municipal
lands stated.
2. The act entitled "An Act to quiet the title to certain lands
within the corporate limits of the City of San Francisco," approved
March 8, 1866, 14 Stat. 4, confirmed her claim, in trust that
certain lands should be disposed of and conveyed to parties in the
bona fide actual possession thereof, by themselves or
tenants, on the passage of the act.
Held that trespassers
then in possession of the lands, who were afterwards ejected
therefrom at the suit of those upon whose prior possession they had
intruded, are not beneficiaries under the act, but that the parties
who so recovered the possession are entitled to a conveyance from
the city.
3. A party cannot initiate a preemption right to public land by
intrusion upon the actual possession of another, nor by settling
upon land in California, a claim to which, under a foreign title,
is at the time pending before the tribunals of the United States
for confirmation.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a suit to charge the defendants as trustees of certain
land in the City of San Francisco, and to compel a conveyance of
the legal title to the plaintiff. The case is free from difficulty,
but to understand the positions of the plaintiff, it will be
necessary to state briefly the history of the titles to lands in
that city.
At the time of the conquest of California by the forces of the
United States, on the 7th of July, 1846, there was a Mexican pueblo
at the site of the present City of San Francisco. This term
"pueblo," in its original signification, means people or
population, but is used in the sense of the English word "town." It
has the indefiniteness of that term, and, like it, is sometimes
applied to a mere collection of individuals residing at a
particular place, a settlement or village, as well as to a
regularly organized municipality.
Grisar v.
McDowell, 6 Wall. 363. The pueblo at San Francisco
was a small settlement, but it was of sufficient importance, as
early as
Page 100 U. S. 252
1835, to have an ayuntamiento, composed of alcaldes and other
officers, and it was under their government for some years. At the
time of the conquest and for some time afterwards, it was under the
government of justices of the peace, or alcaldes.
By the laws of Mexico in force in California on the acquisition
of the country, pueblos or towns, when once recognized by public
authority, became entitled, for their benefit and that of their
inhabitants, to the use of the lands embracing the site of such
pueblos or towns and adjoining territory within the limits of four
square leagues, to be measured and assigned to them by the officers
of the government. Under those laws the pueblo of San Francisco
asserted a claim to four square leagues, to be measured off from
the northern portion of the peninsula upon which the present city
is situated.
The alcaldes of a pueblo exercised the power of distributing the
lands of the town in small parcels to its inhabitants for building,
cultivation, or other uses, the remainder being generally retained
for commons or other public purposes.
When the Town of San Francisco was occupied by our forces,
citizens of the United States were appointed by the military or the
naval commanders to act as alcaldes in the place of the Mexican
officers. Upon the sudden increase of population at that place
following the discovery of gold, the alcaldes were called upon for
building lots in great numbers, and those officers distributed them
with a generous liberality usually attending the grant of other
people's property. Numerous persons, however, arriving at the town
were not disposed to recognize the authority in this respect of the
American magistrates, and finding it less troublesome to
appropriate what land they needed than to apply to the magistrates
for it, they asserted that the land on which the pueblo was
situated belonged to the United States, and, as evidence of the
sincerity of their convictions, immediately proceeded to take as
much of it for themselves as they could conveniently enclose and
hold. Thus the town was soon filled with an active and restless
population, making large and expensive improvements upon lands held
in some instances under grants from the alcaldes, and in others by
the right of prior possession. Sometimes the same parcel
Page 100 U. S. 253
was claimed by different parties; by one party as a settler and
by another as the holder of an alcalde grant. Disputes both in and
out of the courts, the natural consequence of this difference in
the origin of the titles of the claimants, were greatly increased
in bitterness by the enormous value which in a short period the
lands acquired.
In April, 1850, soon after the organization of the state
government, San Francisco was incorporated as a city by the
legislature. She at once made claim to the lands of the pueblo as
its successor, and when the board of land commissioners was created
under the act of Congress of March 3, 1851, she presented the claim
for confirmation. In December, 1854, the board confirmed the claim
for only a portion of the four square leagues. Dissatisfied with
the limitation of the claim, the city appealed from the decree of
the commissioners to the district court of the United States. The
government also appealed, though subsequently it withdrew its
appeal. The case remained in the district court undetermined until
September, 1864, a period of nearly ten years, when, under the
authority of an act of Congress, that court transferred the case to
the circuit court, where it was decided in the following October.
The decree, finally settled and entered May 18, 1865, confirmed the
claim to a tract of land embracing so much of the upper portion of
the peninsula upon which the city is situated, above the ordinary
high-water mark of 1846, as would contain an area of four square
leagues -- the tract being bounded on the north and east by the Bay
of San Francisco, on the west by the Pacific Ocean, and on the
south by a due east and west line drawn so as to include the area
designated, subject to certain deductions which it is unnecessary
to mention here. The lands were confirmed to San Francisco in trust
for the benefit of lot holders under grants from the pueblo, town,
or city, or other competent authority, and as to any residue, in
trust for the use and benefit of the inhabitants of the city. As
already stated, the city was incorporated in April, 1850. The
charter she then received was repealed, and a new charter granted
in April, 1851. The limits of the city, as defined by this latter
charter, embraced an area of over two miles square. The lands lying
outside of these charter limits
Page 100 U. S. 254
are designated in the subsequent legislation of the city and
state, and frequently in the decisions of the courts, as outside
lands.
Pending the appeal of the pueblo claim in the district court,
the city passed an ordinance, known in its history, from the name
of its author, as the Van Ness Ordinance, the object of which was
to settle and quiet the title of persons holding land in the city.
It relinquished and granted all the right and claim of the city to
land within the corporate limits as defined by the charter of 1851,
with certain exceptions, to parties in the actual possession
thereof, by themselves or tenants, on or before the 1st of January,
1855, provided such possession was continued up to the time of the
introduction of the ordinance into the common council, or if
interrupted by an intruder or trespasser, had been or might be
recovered by legal process, and it declared that for all the
purposes contemplated by the ordinance, persons should be deemed
possessors who held titles to lands within those limits by virtue
of a grant made by any ayuntamiento, town council, alcalde, or
justice of the peace of the former pueblo, before the 7th of July,
1846, or by virtue of a grant subsequently made by those
authorities, within certain limits of the city, previous to its
incorporation by the state, provided the grant, or a material
portion of it, had been recorded in a proper book of records in the
control of the recorder of the county previous to April 3, 1851. In
March, 1858, the legislature ratified and confirmed this ordinance,
and on the 1st of July, 1864, Congress relinquished and granted to
the city all the interest of the United States to the lands within
the corporate limits of 1851 in trust for the uses and purposes of
the ordinance. Thus, the contention of the different claimants to
land within those limits was settled, their titles secured, and the
usual result of quieting titles, progress and prosperity,
followed.
But appeals were prosecuted to the Supreme Court both by the
United States and by the city -- by the United States from the
whole decree and by the city from so much of it as included the
reservations in the estimate of the quantity of land confirmed.
Whilst these appeals were pending, and on the 8th of March, 1866,
Congress passed an act to quiet the title to
Page 100 U. S. 255
certain lands within the corporate limits of the city. At this
time, the limits had been extended so as to be coincident with
those of the county, and embraced the whole of the four square
leagues confirmed. By this act, all the right and title of the
United States to the land covered by the decree of the circuit
court were relinquished and granted to the city, and the claim to
the land was confirmed; subject, however, to certain reservations
and exceptions, and upon trust that all the land not previously
granted to the city should be disposed of and conveyed by the city
to the parties in the
bona fide actual possession thereof,
by themselves or tenants, on the passage of the act, in such
quantities and upon such terms and conditions as the Legislature of
the State of California might prescribe, except such parcels
thereof as might be reserved and set apart by ordinance of the city
for public uses. The appeals to the Supreme Court were accordingly
dismissed.
Townsend v.
Greeley, 5 Wall. 326. The title of the city to the
land within the four square leagues rests, therefore, upon the
decree of the circuit court, as entered on the 18th of May, 1865,
and this confirmatory act of Congress. By this act, the government
expressed its will respect to the claim of the city and the
conditions upon which it should be recognized and confirmed. As was
said by this Court in
Grisar v. McDowell,
"in the execution of its treaty obligations with respect to
property claimed under Mexican laws, the government may adopt such
modes of procedure as it may deem expedient. It may act by
legislation directly upon the claims preferred, or it may provide a
special board for their determination, or it may require their
submission to the ordinary tribunals. It is the sole judge of the
propriety of the mode, and, having the plenary power of
confirmation, it may annex any conditions to the confirmation of a
claim resting upon an imperfect right which it may choose. It may
declare the action of the special board final; it may make it
subject to appeal; it may require the appeal to go through one or
more courts; and it may arrest the action of board or courts at any
stage. 6 Wall.
73 U. S. 379."
The title of the city being thus settled, its authorities
proceeded under the provisions of the confirmatory act, and
reserved and set apart grounds for parks and other public
Page 100 U. S. 256
purposes. But, as these grounds were in many instances occupied,
the city passed an ordinance known as No. 800, subsequently
ratified by the legislature, by which a general assessment was
levied upon all the lands conveyed to occupants as a condition of
receiving deeds from the city, the money thus raised to be applied
towards compensating those whose lands were thus taken for public
purposes.
Some of the defendants, and parties though whom the others
claim, had been in the actual possession of the land in controversy
here before the passage of the act of 1866, but their possession
had been intruded upon by violence, and they driven from the land
by parties through whom the plaintiff claims. One of the intruding
parties afterwards set up a claim that he entered as a preemptioner
under the laws of the United States. Subsequently the excluded
parties recovered possession by suit, and the judgment in their
favor was affirmed on appeal by the supreme court of the state.
They then transferred the property, for the sake of convenience and
expedition in securing the title, to one of their number, who
applied to the city authorities and obtained a deed of the
premises, first paying the assessment levied upon it and the taxes
due. Under this deed the defendants hold the property. The
plaintiff, representing the claims of the intruding and
subsequently ejected parties and insisting that they were
beneficiaries under the act of Congress, because upon its passage
they were in the actual possession of the property, brought the
present suit to charge the defendants as trustees of the legal
title for his benefit. The district court and the supreme court of
the state were of opinion that, upon his own showing, his grantors,
the intruders mentioned, were never in the
bona fide
possession of the property within the meaning of the act of
Congress, and we agree with them in this respect. The claim of one
of the intruders as a preemptioner was equally unfounded -- 1st
because the right of preemption, under the laws of the United
States, cannot be acquired by intrusion and trespass upon lands in
the actual possession of others; 2d because the lands were claimed
under a foreign title -- that of the pueblo from Mexico -- the
claim to which was then pending before the tribunals of the United
States.
Page 100 U. S. 257
The possession obtained by the intrusion and trespass of the
plaintiff's grantors constitutes no ground for equitable relief
against the holders of the city title, and the assertion of a
possession thus obtained has as little merit as the lawless and
unjustifiable conduct of the intruders in seizing the property.
Judgment affirmed.