22 Colo. 71 | Colo. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the court.
The record fails to disclose that any exception to the judgment was. properly preserved. The--statement in the order allowing the appeal, that an exception was taken to the final judgment, is not sufficient. It constitutes no part of the record. Burnell v. Wachtel, 4 Colo. App. 556. Under the uniform decisions of this court and the court of appeals, an exception to the final judgment, properly preserved and brought into the record by a bill of exceptions, is essential to obtain a review of the judgment upon the facts, or the law as applied to the facts. Jerome v. Bohm, 21 Colo. 322, and cases there cited. Upon this record, therefore, we are limited to the consideration of those assignments based upon exceptions, duly preserved, to the rulings of the trial court, upon the admission and rejection of testimony.
Among-these are objections to the admission in evidence of the patent from the government to Beaubien and Miranda, and various mesne conveyances through which The Maxwell Land Grant Company deraigns title. Counsel for appellant in his argument challenges the sufficiency of this evidence to sustain plaintiff’s title, but assigns no reason why it was inadmissible'. An examination of these various instruments satisfies us that they were properly admitted. What weight they were entitled to as evidence, in support of plaintiff’s title, is not for us to determine upon this record. The objection to the introduction of the articles of incorporation of The Maxwell Land Grant and Railway Company,upon the ground-stated was also, we think, properly overruled. The certificate is prima facie evidence of the officer’s authority to take the acknowledgment. Keichline v. Keichline, 54 Pa. St. 75.
Without noticing in detail the numerous errors assigned upon the admission of testimony on the part of plaintiff, it is sufficient to say that in our opinion they are without merit, and that the court below committed no error in the rulings complained of. On cross-examination of the witness Archibald, and by witnesses introduced in its behalf, appellant.
“ In regard to the questions concerning the surveys, as to their conformity to the original Mexican grant, and the frauds which are asserted to have had some influence in the making of those surveys, so far from their being established by that satisfactory and conclusive evidence which the rule we have here laid down requires, we are of opinion that if it were an open question, unaffected by the respect due, to the official acts of the government upon such a subject, depending upon the bare preponderance of evidence, there is an utter failure to establish either mistake or fraud.”
In the case of Beard v. Federy, 3 Wall. 478, it was said by the court, in discussing this question, on page 492:
“ By it [the patent] the government declares that the claim asserted was valid under the laws of Mexico; that it was entitled to recognition and protection by the stipulations of the treaty, and might have been located under the former government, and is correctly located now, so as to embrace the premises as they are surveyed and described. As against the government this record, so long as it remains unvacated, is conclusive. And it is equally conclusive against parties claiming under the government by title subsequent. * * * The term ‘ third persons,’ as there used, does not embrace all persons other than the United States and the claimants, but only those who hold superior titles, such as will enable them to resist successfully any action of the government in disposing of the property.”
“The accuracj'-of the survey is, therefore, so far as the government is concerned, no longer'open to inquiry. If in a direct proceeding in equity brought by the United States to set aside the patent on the ground of error in the survey the matter has become res judicata, it would seem that the patentee could not be compelled in every action at law between itself and its neighbors to submit the question of the accuracy of the survey as a matter of fact to determination by a jury. Nor is the matter open to such inquiry. A survey made by the proper officers of the United States, and confirmed by the land department, is not open to challenge by any collateral attack in the courts.”
And after quoting at some length from the foregoing cases, he continues:
“These authorities are decisive upon this question. And in the nature of things a survey made by the government must be held conclusive against any collateral attack in controversies between individuals. There must be some tribunal to which final jurisdiction is given in respect to the matter of surveys, and no other tribunal is so competent to deal with the matter as the land department. * * * Take the particular case at bar; if the survey is not conclusive in favor of the plaintiff, it is not conclusive against it. So we might have the Land Grant Company bringing suit against parties all along its borders, claiming that, the survey being inaccurate, it was entitled to a portion .of their lands, and, as in every case the question of fact would rest upon the testimony therein presented, we should doubtless have a series of contradictory verdicts.”
We think, therefore, that the rulings of the court below upon this matter were in conformity to the doctrine announced in the foregoing cases, and the testimony offered
Affirmed.