4 Mo. 577 | Mo. | 1837
Lead Opinion
Statement of the case, and opinion delivered by
Thomas Wright, the intestate, brought an action of trespass against Thomas, for breaking and entering a certain close in the county of St. Louis, near the city of St. Louis, and not guilty was pleaded to it. The cause was tried, and the defendant had judgment. On the trial the plaintiffs gave in evidence a translation of a concession to one Joseph Brazeau, dated 20th June, 1794, which is as follows: “To Don Zenon Trudeau, captain in the fixed regiment of Louisiana, Lieutenant Governor, com-
The defendant claims, under a concession made to one Labuxiere, in the year 1769, by one St. Ange; which concession, covers the land on which the supposed trespasses were committed. The defendant derives a title by a deed from the heirs of Labuxiere.
The evidence accompanying this concession is a certified copy, made by the recorder of land titles for the State of Missouri, from a paper book called Livre Tevrien, No. 1, pages 28 and 29; by which it appears, that on the 18th day of July, 1769, St. Ange and Labuxiere granted or conceded on the demand of the widow Hebert, a title to her and her heirs of a tract of land, two arpens broad, by the ordinary depth of forty arpens, its width fronting on the Mississippi, bounded on the N. by Labuxiere, &c., on certain conditions therein mentioned; also a copy of a concession, taken from Livre Temen, No. 1, p. 30, read by Consent, which is as follows:-— Sr. Labuxiere, on the 18thdayof July, 1769, on demand
It was proved by F. R. Conway, recorder of land titles, that in his office of recorder of land titles, the Livre Terrien No. 1 and 2 were found, and that he considered them as authentic records of the grants or concessions of land made by the former governments of the country.— M. P. Leduc testified, that he came to St. Louis of the -Illinois, in 1799 — that he is conversant with land affairs, and with the five books called Livres Terriens — that No. 1 of them contains grants of lands made by St. Ange and Labuxiere — that all the grants in it are signed by both St. Ange and Labuxiere — that Labuxiere signed on the right of each grant, and St. Ange on the left — that No. 2 contains surveys of grants of St. Ange, principally in the St. Louis praii ie. It contains the surveys of the common field lots, going northwardly and including the two forty arpen lots of the widow Hebert; but that these two lots are the last on the north — that these surveys were made by one Duralde, between the years 1770 and 72. Here the witness gives a translation of the survey, and filed notes of the survey made for widow Hebert.— The witness further says, that St. Ange was called by the old inhabitants of St. Louis, the commandant from 1766 to 1770 — that the books called Livres Terriens were in possession of the Spanish government till the «year 1801, when they were delivered officially to the surveyor Soulard. The witness then has reference to several surveys found in No. 2, and explains the meaning of the books, and also refers to a certain marginal note made by the Lt. Governor,'!. Trudeau, in 1793; whereby it is declared that certain pieces of land before granted were reunited to the King’s domain, because abandoned. Witness says he does not know-the mode of re
Mr. P. Chouteau testified, that in 1764, he came to St. Louis — “that St. Ange was the first commandant of St.' £,ouis; that he continued such commandant ten or twelve years, and died in 1775 — that among the old inhabitants,, no one doubted that St. Ange was commandant — that he could not write well, but, that he could sign his name, and that ihe signature at the close of L. T. No. 2 is his hand writing — and that the signature purporting to be that of l)on Pedro Piernas is Piernas’ signature — that Saint Ange came to St. Louis eighteen months or two years after witness did, and after Port Chartres had been delivered to the British — that St. Ange had been previously military commandant at Yincennes; and when the country east of the Mississippi was to be delivered to the British, St. Ange went to,Fort Chartres and surrendered it to the British, and then came to St. Louis — that there', was no commandant at St. Louis before St. Ange — he acted as French commandant, and afterwards as civil commandant under the Spanish government until he died; that he was the Spanish civil commandant about 6 years before he died — that he was appointed civil commandant by the Governor at New Orleans, whose name the witness thinks was Unzaga.
Julius De Mun says, he was employed sometime in the office of the recorder of land titles, and that he considered the books Livres Temens public records, and that ho believes the government so considered them.
The defendant then gave in evidence the translation of the preface and commencement of the Livre Temen No. 2, which proceeds thus: “Register made by vie, Martin Duralde, surveyor, appointed, by Don Pedro Piernas, captain of infantry, and Lieutenant Governor of the settlements and other dependencies of the Spanish settlements of Illinois, and deposited in ihe archivee of the said government, in ihe form of process verbal, in order to serve to designate the different tracts of land granted in the name of ihe King to the inhabitants of this part of St. Louis, as well by titles as by the verbal consent of the chiefs, who have governed them since the foundation of said post to the present day, which tracts I have surveyed, and which after exchanges, concessions or sales, which the convenience or advantage of each individual may have occasioned, are actually in possession of those hereafter named, according to their own attestation and avowal, and situate in the prairie adjoining said post,
ST. ANGE. PEDRO PIERNAS.”
The following facts were admitted, and not in dispute on the trial:
That Joseph Labuxiere, aforesaid, died at Cahokia in Illinois, April 29th, 1791; that he left heirs, now living in Missouri and Illinois, and that the defendants have acquired, by purchase of said heirs, all the right and title which Labuxiere had in the lands in question, at his death, which may not have been forfeited or abandoned.
The defendant offered, in evidence, a general notice, by several citizens of St. Louis, for the benefit of all parties concerned, given to the register of land claims, to be recorded, contained in “Livre Terrien,” No. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6; signed by several citizens, dated November 28th, 1812.
This suit was commenced in 1831, and tried on the 27th July, 1836. The foregoing statement contains t)he principal part of the evidence of any importance in the cause, on which the parties had a trial by jury. A verdict and judgment were given for defendant.-
The defendant, by his counsel, asked the court for the following instructions to the jury:
2d. That the books, numbered one and two, called vres Terriens, or provincial land books', in the office of the recorder of land titles, are public records.
3d. That there is no evidence that the grant to Labux-iere has been annulled, which were given to the jury.— The court, then, without the requisition^ either party, instructed the jury.
1st. If the jury shall be of opinion that the date of the grant to Brazeau on the_day of_, 1794, Labuxiere had abandoned the land they shall find for the plaintiff, provided, they shall find that the land in question is included- in the grant to Brazeau.
2d. If the jury shall be of opinion that the date of the grant to Labeaume, viz: 15 th day of February, 1799, La-buxiere had abandoned the land granted to him, they shall find for the plaintiff, provided the jury shall find that the land in question is included in the grant to Labeaume.
3d. The grant to Labuxiere, given in evidence, is not a complete grant, or title properly so called, but only gives an estate in fee to Labuxiere subject to the action of the supreme power, which, at the date of said grant, was vested in the King of Spain, or the Governor General of Louisiana, to the giving of which the plaintiff excepts. The plaintiff’s counsel then prayed the court to give the following instructions:
1st. That if the jury believe from the evidence that Labuxiere abandoned the land on wnich the said alleged-trespasses, were committed with an intention of never reclaiming it, then, the title to it has been acquired by the defendant in this action.
2d. That if the jury believe from the evidence that Louis Labeaume and those claiming under him were in possession of the locus in quo for twenty years previous to the 17th of December, 1818, that then any title under the grant to Labuxiere has been lost by his representatives, and cannot be a bar to this action, provided that they are of opinion that the locus in quo is embraced in the grant to Labeaume.
3d. That if Labeaume and those claiming under him were in actual possession of a part of the grant to him by T-rudéau, claiming the whole all the time aforesaid, this is such possession as can be a basis of prescription as to the whole grant, and gave to Labeaume and those claiming under him, a title as against those claiming under Labuxiere.
4th. That if the jury believe from the evidence that Louis Labeaume and those claiming under him were in actual possession of a part of the grant to him by Trudeau, claiming the whole for, add during, twenty years, and subsequent to the date of said grant. This is such possession as can be a basis of prescription as to the whole grant as against Labuxiere and those claiming under him. The first was given, and the others refused and excepted to.
A motion was made for a new trial for the following reasons: 1. The court refused to give instructions as asked. 2. The court instructed the jury impropeily and illegally. 3. Because the instructions of the court had a tendency to confuse and mislead them. 4. Because the verdict is against law and evidence. 5. Because the verdict is against the weight of evidence. 6. Because the verdict is against the instructions of the court. 7. Because the court permitted improper evidence to go to the jury — which motion was overruled.
The counsel for the plaintiffs in error, have assigned for error, that the court erred in giving the instructions which it did give. 2. The court erred in giving the instructions asked by the defendant. 3. The court erred in refusing to give the instructions as asked by the plaintiff. 4. The court erred in refusing a new trial.
The counsel on both sides have made several points, but both parties appear to consider the point raised by the first instruction given by the court for the defendant as the chief point to be considered. The instruction is, that St. Ange had power to make the grant which was given in evidence. In the case of Hill and Thomas vs. Wright, decided by this conrt, 3 vol. Missouri Rep. 243, it was liolden by the court that as the record then stood, there was no evidence to satisfy the codrt whether the Livre Terrien was a public record or not, and some proof ought to be given to show, and satisfy, the court, whether the Livre Terrien is itself a record or not.
But now we think that defect of testimony has been abundantly supplied, and that it now appears that the book No. 2 is in truth the record of the surveys of the Spanish government in regard to lands, but that the book called No. 1 does not'appear to stand on the same favorable tooting. 1 he instruction given asserts that St. Ange had power to make the grant given in evidence by the defen-dant. It appears from various histories regarding the po-condition of the French possessions of the Missis-sippi, that prior to the year 1762, the French authority
Mr. Chouteau says that St. Ange was the first commandant. He could not have brought any authority with him from the dominions of Great Britain. When he surrendered the French garrison of Fort Chartres to the British, his authority then ceased, and he could have none any where as a French officer, except in countries where the French authority still subsisted. But instead of placing himself in such country, he chose to follow hi§ friends, countrymen and acquaintances into the dominions of a foreign government. It was natural for the inhabitants at this newly established post of St. Louis to look to St. Ange as the most suitable man among them, as the head of their infant colony. They had seen him before exercising the government of the country on the other side of the River, and would be easily persuaded to submit to his will. St. Ange assumed the reins of government here by consent of the people, in the patriarchical form, and not as the representative of the sovereign of Spain, to whom the country belonged. It is difficult to perceive how St. Ange could have any authority from Spain — -he had never been an officer of that government; when he came to St. Louis he was not an officer at St. Louis left in command of that post, when the French authority ceased to exist in the country. When St. Ange made the grant to Labuxiere in July, 1769, he had no other character than that of a private citizen of some in* fluance and distinction, by reason of his former condition under the French government. Indeed, he assumes to himself no title, — does not assume to act in the name, nor by the authority of any government whatever. It is im* possible for me to suppose that this stranger from a foreign government, had any confidence reposed in him at this distant point to dispose of the King’s domain. When the King's authority had as yet been contemned and de
When the Spanish authority and government reached the post of St. Louis under Don Pedro Piernas, we find that officer and the inhabitants of opinion that the acts of St. Ange were of no legal value. It appears by the commencement and_conclusion of the book of land surveys, called Livre Terrien, No. 2, as given in evidence by the defendant, that the inhabitants solicited that the then Spanish Governor would appoint some competent pei-son to mark out their lands that were granted, and had been and should be granted in the name of the King.— This application was made sometime in the year 1770— one Duralde .was appointed to make the surveys, and he did so. The book of these surveys constitutes what is here called Livre Terrien No. 2, and in the conclusion of that book, it is expressly stated, that the surveyor authenticates the same with his signature and with the unanimous voice of all the proprietors assembled at present, with the approbation of Don Pedro Piernas, in the government house — in order to serve mutually as witnesses, and affirm the facts done with their signatures, and in-presence of Don Pedro Piernas, the aforesaid Governor, and Don Louis St. Ange, formerly a captain, and lately commandant of this said post, both serving (to wit:)
I consider this as evidence, thatSt. Ange acknowledged that whatever he did before the arrival of the Governor, was done in the name of the Spanish King, and not inf the name of the King of France. It was in fact giving in his adhesion; and the Governor, so far from thinking that St. Ange’s grants were legal and done with lawful authority, must have had a contrary opinion, or why would he ratify, approve and confirm the same. Whatever may be .the effect of this ratification on all the surveys contained in this book of 68 pages, it can have no effect on the grant to Labuxiere, for that grant is not one contained in the book. Why it was not surveyed and registered we cannot know. It is very probable that Labux-iere did not desire it, and cared nothing about it; and the claim has been entirely neglected until about the time of bringing the action in ejectment, by Hill & Thomas vs. Wright, in 1831. I have shewn that Labuxiere’s supposed grant could not have been made by St.’Ange, even if the French government had subsisted in the country at the time it was made. By the Royal ordinance above referred to, that power under the French government was vested in the Governor and Commissary; whereas, to make the most of St. Ange’s power, he was only, as the evidence discloses, formerly a captain, and lately a commandant of the post of St. Louis, and as such commandant of the post, he had in my opinion, no’power to grant lands under any government. I therefore, am of opinion, that this claim is of no avail against Labeaume’s subsequent grant of the same land, made by the proper officer, and duly confirmed by the American government.
This opinion is further strengthened by the fact, that in 1798, Zenon Trudeau granted the same land to Lab-eaume. This shews that the Spanish government and the Spanish Governor considered the grant to Labuxiere of no value. The book No. 1, was in his office, — he must have known of the grant, and the book No. 2, was also
For these reasons, I am of opinion that the first instruction given by the court, on the prayer of the defendant in the court below, was wrong.
There are lrjpny other points made by the record, but I consider it entirely unnecessary to investigate them un- ' til it can be established that Labuxiere’s grant had some effect in creating or passing to him the original title of the King of Spain to the land.
Judge Tompkins concurring in this opinion, the judgment of the circuit .court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the above written opinion.