21 F. Cas. 365 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California | 1864
This case comes before this court upon a transfer from the district court under the act of congress of July 1,1864, “to expedite the settlement of titles to lands in the state of California.” It was in the district court on appeal from the decree of the board of land commissioners, created by the act of March 3, 1851. It involves the consideration of the validity of the claim asserted by the city of San Francisco, to a tract of land situated in the city and county of San Francisco, and embracing so much of the peninsula, upon which the city is located, as will contain an area of four square leagues.
The city presented her petition to the boai’d of land commissioners in July, 1852, asserting in substance, among other things, that in pursuance of the laws, usages and customs of the government of Mexico, and the act • of the departmental assembly of California, of No
In December, 1854, the board of commissioners confirmed the claim of the city to a portion of the four square leagues, and rejected the claim for the residue. The land to which the claim was confirmed, was bounded by a line running near the Mission Dolores, and known as the “Vallejo Line.” That line was adopted principally in reliance upon the genuineness and authenticity of the document described in the proceedings as the Zamorano document. The spuriousness of that document is now admitted by all parties. From the decree of the board an appeal was taken by the filing of a transcript of the proceedings and decision with the clerk of the district court. The appeal was by statute for the benefit of the party against whom the decision was rendered, in this case of both parties, of the United States, which controverted the entire claim, and of the city, which asserted a claim to a larger quantity of land; and both parties gave notice of their intention to prosecute the appeal. Afterward, in February, 1857, the attorney-general withdrew the appeal on the part of the United States, and in March following, upon the stipulation of the district attorney, the district court ordered that appeal to be dismissed, and gave leave to the city to proceed upon the decree of the commission as upon a final -decree. The case therefore remained in the district court upon the appeal of the city alone, and that is its position here. But the proceeding in the district court, being in the nature of an original suit, the prosecution of the appeal by either party keeps the whole issue open. “The suit in the district court,” said Mr. Justice Kelson in U. S. v. Ritchie, 17 How. [58 U. S.] 534, “is to be regarded as an original proceeding, the removal of the transcript, papers, and evidence into it from the board of commissioners, being but a mode of providing for the institution of the suit in that court. The transfer, it is true, is called an appeal; we must not, however, be misled by a name, but look to the substance and intent of the proceeding. The district court is not confined to a mere re-examination of the case, as heard and decided by the board of commissioners, but hears the case'de novo, upon the papers and testimony which had been used before the board, they being made evidence in the district court; and also upon such further evidence as either party may see fit to produce.”
But though the whole issue is thus open, 'the dismissal of the appeal-on the part of the United States may very properly be regarded as an assent by the government to the main facts upon which the claim of the city rests, namely: The existence of an organized pueblo at the site of the present city upon the acquisition of the country by the United States on the seventh of July, 1846; the possession by that pueblo of proprietary rights in certain lands, and the succession to such proprietary rights by the city of San Francisco. The district attorney does not, therefore, deem it within the line of his duty to controvert these positions, but on the contrary admits them as facts in the case, contending only that the lands appertaining to the pueblo were subject, until by grant from the proper authorities they were vested in private proprietorship, to appropriation to public uses by the former government and. since the acquisition of the country, by tne United States. He therefore insists upon an exception from the confirmation to the city, of land heretofore reserved or occupied by the government for public uses; and X do not understand that the counsel of the city objects to an exception of this character. It is unnecessary, therefore, to recite- the historical evidence of the existence of a pueblo previous to, and at the date of, the acquisition of the country at the present site of the city of San Francisco, which is very fully presented in the elaborate opinion filed by the commission on the rendition of its decision. Since that decision was made, the question has been considered by the supreme court of the state; and in an opinion in which the whole subject is examined a similar conclusion is reached; and if anything were wanting in addition to the arguments thus furnished, it is found in the able and exhaustive brief of the counsel of the city.
The action of the officers of the United
The material question, therefore, for determination, as the case stands before this court, relates to the extent of the lands in which the pueblo was interested. It is not pretended that such lands were ever marked off and surveyed by competent authority. It is admitted, as already stated, that the so-called Zamorano document given in evidence is spurious. The question presented must therefore be determined by reference to the laws of Mexico at the date of the conquest.
As stated by the commissioners in their opinion, there can be no doubt that by those laws, pueblos or towns, and their residents, were entitled to the use and enjoyment of certain lands within prescribed limits immediately contiguous to and adjoining the town proper; that this right was common to the cities and towns of Spain from their first organization, and was incorporated by her colonies into their municipal system on this continent; and that the same continued in Mexico, with but little variation, after her separation from the mother country. And there is as little doubt that by those laws a pueblo or town, when once established and officially recognized, became entitled, for its own use and the use of its inhabitants, to four square leagues of land. The compilation known as the Recopilación de Leyes de las Indies contains several laws relating to this subject. The sixth law of title 5 of book 4 provides for the establishment of towns by contract with individuals, and upon compliance with the conditions of the contract, for the grant of four square leagues of land, to be laid off in a square or. prolonged form, according to the character of the country.
The opinion of the assessor or legal adviser of the vice royalty of New Spain given to the commandante general in October, 17S5, upon the petition of certain settlers in Cali- i fornia, for grants of tracts of land situated within the limits claimed by pueblos, recognizes this right of pueblos to have four square leagues assigned to them. His language is that the grants “cannot and ought not to be made to them within the boundaries assigned to each pueblo, which in conformity with the law six. title 5, liber 4, of the Recopilación, must be four leagues of land in a square or oblong body according to the nature of the ground; because the petition of the new settlers would tend to make them private owners of the forests, pastures, water, timber, wood, and other advantages of the lands which may be assigned, granted, and distributed to them, and to deprive their neighbors of these benefits. It is seen at once that their claim is entirely contrary to the directions of the forementioned laws, and the express provision in article S of the instructions for settlements (poblaciones) in the Californias, according to which all the waters, pastures, wood, and timber, within the limits which in conformity to law may be allowed to each pueblo, must be for the common advantage — so that all the new settlers may enjoy and partake of them, maintaining thereon their cattle, and participating of the other benefits that may be produced.”
But the royal instructions of November, 1789, for the establishment of the town of Pitic, in the province of Sonora, is conclusive as to the right of pueblos in California under the laws of Spain. These instructions were made applicable to all new towns that should be subsequently established within the general comandancia, which included the province of California. They gave minute directions for the formation and government of the new pueblos, and referring to the laws of the Indies already cited, declared that there should be granted to the towns four leagues of land in a square or prolonged form. They also provided for the distribution of building and farming lots to settlers, the laying out of pasture lands and lands for the propios, the residue to constitute the egidos or commons for the use of the inhabitants.
The general provisions of the laws of the Indies, to which these instructions and the opinion of the assessor refer, continued in force in Mexico after her separation from Spain. They were recognized in the regulations of November, 1828, which were adopted toearryinto effect the colonization law of 1824. and in the regulation of the departmental assembly of August, 1834, providing funds for towns and cities. They were referred to in numerous documents in the archives of the former government in the custody of the surveyor-general. The report of Jimeno, for many years secretary of the government of California, found in the expediente of Doña-Castro made in February, 1844, is cited by the commissioners in their opinion as removing all doubt on this point. The report is as follows:
“Most Excellent Governor: The title given to Doña Castro is drawn, subject to the conditions that were inserted in many other titles during the time of General Figueroa, in which they subjected the parties to pay censas (taxes) if the land proved to belong to the egidos of the town. I understand that the town of Branciforte is to have for egidos of its population four square leagues, in conformity to the existing law of the Recopila-ción of the Indies, in volume the second, folios 8S to 149. in which it mentions that to the new town that extent may be marked, to which effect it would be convenient that your excellency should commission two persons deserving your confidence, in order that, accompanied by the judge of the town, the measurement indicated may be made, and it
The documents to which reference has been ma(le are sufficient to establish the position that pueblos once formed and officially recognized as such, became by operation of the general laws entitled to have four square leagues of land assigned to them, for their use and the use of the inhabitants. It does not appear that formal grants were made to the new pueblos, though in some instances an officer was appointed to mark off the boundaries of the four square leagues, and to designate the uses to which particular tracts should be applied. But the right of the pueblos and their inhabitants to the use and enjoyment of the lands was not made dependent upon such measurement and designation.
It follows from these views that the pueblo, which is admitted to have been regularly established at the site of San Francisco on the seventh of July, 1846, was, as sticli pueblo, vested with the right to four square leagues of land, to be measured either in a square or prolonged form, according to the nature of the country, excepting from such tract such portions as had been previously-dedicated to or reserved for public uses, or had become private property by grant from lawful authority.
It is difficult to determine with precision the exact character of the right or title held by pueblos to the lands assigned to them. The government undoubtedly retained a right to control their use and disposition; and to appropriate them to public uses until they had been vested in private proprietorship. Numerous laws have been cited to show that the title remained absolutely in the government. The same laws were cited to the supreme court of this state when the subject was before that tribunal, and in relation to them the court said: “We see nothing in these laws opposed to the views we have already expressed, that the towns had such a right, title and interest in these lands as to enable them to use and dispose of them in the manner authorized by law or by special orders, and consonant with the object of the endowment and trust. Undoubtedly the right of control remained in the sovereign, who might authorize or forbid any municipal or other officer to grant or dispose of such lands, even for the purposes of the endowment or trust. Such general right, with respect to a public corporation, exists in any sovereign state, and must, of course, have existed in the absolute monarchy of Spain, where the property of private corporations and individuals was to a great degree subject to the royal will and pleasure.” Hart v. Burnett, 15 Cal. 560. And referring to objections to the theory of absolute title in the pueblo, and the questions which upon that view might be suggested, the court said: “There is but one sensible answer to these questions, and we think that answer is given-in the laws themselves, and in the recorded proceedings of the officers who administered them, and who must be presumed to have interpreted them correctly. It is, that the lands assigned to pueblos, whether by general law regulating their limits to four square leagues, or by special designation of boundaries, were not given to them in absolute property, with full right of disposition and alienation, but to be held by them in trust for the benefit of the entire community, with such powers of use, disposition and alienation, as had been already or might afterward be conferred for the due execution of such trusts, upon such pueblos, or upon their officers.” Id. 573. And this view, the court adds, fully reconciles the apparently conflicting disposition of the laws and the commentaries of publicists respecting the relative rights of the crown and the municipalities to which counsel had referred.
In this view of the nature of the title of the pueblo and of the city, its successor, I fully concur; and I am of opinion that under the provisions of the act of March 3, 1851, the city is entitled to a confirmation of her claim. I regret that the recent transfer of the case to the circuit court, and the great pressure of other engagements since, have prevented me from considering at greater length the interesting questions presented. To those who desire to extend their inquiries, the elaborate opinions to which I have made frequent reference, and the able brief of counsel will furnish ample materials.
A decree will be entered confirming the claim of the city of San Francisco to a tract of land, situated in the county of San Francisco, and embracing so much of the peninsula upon which the city is located, as will contain an area equal to four square leagues as described in the petition. From the confirmation will be excepted such parcels of land within said tract as have been heretofore reserved or dedicated to public use by the United States, or have been by grant from lawful authority vested in private proprietorship. The confirmation will be in trust for the benefit of lot-holders under grants from the pueblo, town, or city; and as to any residue, in trust for the use and benefit of all the inhabitants. A decree will be prepared by counsel in conformity with this opinion, and submitted to the court.
In accordance with the foregoing opinion, a decree was entered on November 2, 1804, confirming the claim of the city, and on the same day an order was entered allowing an appeal in behalf of the United States to the United States supreme court. Soon afterward, one John B. Williams, an attorney,
FIELD, Circuit Justice. This case was submitted to the court for its consideration on the fourth of October last, and was decided on the thirty-first of the same month. The decree confirming the claim of the city was settled and entered on the second of November, and on the same day an appeal was allowed at the instance of the United States to the supreme court.
On the fourteenth of November, John B. Williams, styling himself “special counsel” for the United States, gave notice that he would move the court on the twenty-first of the same month, to vacate the order allowing the appeal, to open the decree confirming the claim of the city, and to grant a rehearing of the case, upon the ground that the decision of the circuit court “was rendered under a misapprehension of the facts, and without considering the brief of the United States, which was suppressed by the clerk of this court.” In support of the motion, the notice was accompanied with an affidavit of Mr. Williams, in which he states that he is “informed and believes” that the clerk of the court “unwarrantably and in derogation of” his (said Williams) rights “as a member of this bar, and of the rights of the United States as litigants in their own courts, suppressed” his briefs in the case, and “withheld them from the circuit judge, and that the arguments submitted in behalf of the United States were in consequence of such usurpation of power by the clerk, not considered by the circuit judge in his determination of the case, but that said cause was decided under a misapprehension of the positions taken by, and the proofs offered in behalf of the United States.”
The affidavit contains other allegations based upon the assumption that the brief had been suppressed and withheld from the circuit judge. It also refers to certain concessions alleged to have been made by the district attorney, which will be particularly considered hereafter. .
In this proceeding the district attorney was not consulted, and that officer upon hearing of it, addressed a note to the “special counsel,” refusing his assent to the motion, and stating that all motions and other proceedings in the conduct' of the cause must be made by him. Mr. Williams, however, persisted in the motion, and endeavored to have the same heard by the district judge, who did not sit in the ease or participate in its decision.
The position of the district attorney in claiming the control of the cause was entirely correct. He is the regular officer of the government, having charge of all its legal proceedings within his district, subject only to the general direction and supervision of the attorney-general. When other counsel are employed in these proceedings, it is to aid him in their management, not to assume his authority or direct his conduct. The position of Mr. Williams was solely that of assistant counsel. He could not control the proceedings in the case, or bind the government by his admissions or action.
And it appears also from the statement of the district attorney, that Mr. Williams at the time had been retained and paid as counsel by claimants of what are known as “outside lands;” that is, of lands within the asserted limits of the pueblo, but outside of the tract confirmed to the occupants by ordinances of the city, and the legislation of the state and the general government, and that the interests of these third parties, upon the question of excepting from the decree of confirmation the government reserves, were directly in conflict with those of the United States.
But there were other considerations which undoubtedly governed the conduct of the district attorney. Some of the statements made in the affidavit he knew were inaccurate, and the correctness of other statements he had good grounds to distrust. He was also influenced, as we have reason to believe, by a just sense of the impropriety of asking a district judge, though holding the circuit court, to vacate a decree rendered by the circuit judge, in a case of such magnitude and importance, immediately after that officer had left the state, not upon grounds apparent upon the record, but upon statements, the truth of which rested chiefly in the knowledge of the latter.
The district judge did not sit in any of the cases heard at the October term by the circuit judge, and it is a matter of regret that the benefit of his counsel and assistance was not had in the determination of the present case. The familiarity of that officer with the laws and customs and policy of Mexico in the disposition of her public domain, and in the establishment and endowment of her municipal bodies, would have greatly lessened the labor of investigating the case. But as he did not participate in its consideration, the district attorney, as we may suppose, naturally felt the indelicacy of asking any subsequent interference by him. which, under the circumstances, would have been to ask him to do an act of judicial discourtesy.
The attorney-general, in subsequently directing the district attorney to unite in the motion, was under the impression that it was the ordinary case of an application for a rehearing before the same judge who rendered the decision. When made acquainted with the circumstances, he directed the postpone
These several briefs were received by the circuit judge without any indorsement by the clerk, and are still in his possession. The briefs of Mr. Williams were returned to the office of the clerk. But as it was generally understood at the time that he was retained by the occupants of “outside lands,” and the district attorney knew of no other authority for his appearance as counsel, the clerk indorsed upon one of them the reason for not marking it filed, and upon the other brief that it was marked filed by mistake, and left them both in that condition among the papers of the case to be given to the author when called for. His action in this respect was at that time approved by the circuit judge. No such injurious suggestion was made, or if made, entertained for a moment, that Mr. Williams was also retained by the United States, and thus had a “divided duty” between the settlers and the government.
From these indorsements alone the special counsel drew his conclusion that his briefs were suppressed. Upon these indorsements alone, as he stated on the argument of this motion, he made the affidavit that he was “informed and believes” his briefs were suppressed and withheld from the circuit judge. His conclusion in this respect was illogical; there is no necessary connection between the indorsements made and the suppression alleged. The indorsements gave no such information as represented.
The subject provokes further comment, but we refrain, and will only observe that it is the first time within our judicial experience that any counsel has had the hardihood to make oath to what must necessarily have been with him only a matter of inference, and assuming his inference to be a fact has proceeded to cast imputations of misconduct upon officers of the court.
In the opinion rendered in this case, after stating that by the appeal on the part of the city the whole issue was open, the court said: “But though the whole issue is thus open, the dismissal of the appeal on the part of the United States may very properly be regarded as an assent by the government to the main facts upon which the claim of the city rests, namely: the existence of an organized pueblo, at the site of the present city, upon the acquisition of the country by the United States, on the seventh of July, 1846, the possession by that pueblo of proprietary rights in certain lands, and the succession to such proprietary rights by the city of San Francisco. The district attorney does-not, therefore, deem it within the line of his duty to controvert these positions, but on the contrary, admits them as facts in the case, contending only that the lands appertaining to the pueblo were subject, until by grant from the proper authorities they were vested in private proprietorship, to appropriation to public uses by the former government, and since the acquisition of the country by the United States. He, therefore, insists upon an exception from the confirmation to the city of land heretofore reserved or occupied by the government for public use, and I do not understand that the counsel of the city objects to an exception of this character.”
The views thus expressed of the effect which may justly be given to the dismissal of the appeal of the United States, the special counsel finds inconsistent with the views-expressed in the case of Le Roy v. Wright [Case No. 8,273], and the concessions alleged to have been made by the district attorney he asserts are denied by that officer.
There is no inconsistency in the views expressed in the two cases. In Le Roy v. Wright [supra], certain officers of the army of the United States, acting under orders of the secretary of war, had taken possession of a tract of land adjoining the premises claimed by the complainant at Black Point, within the city limits, and commenced the erection of fortifications for the protection of the harbor of San Francisco, and had declared their intention to take like possession of the premises in controversy, and to-appropriate them for the erection of barracks and other buildings required in connection with the fortifications. The complainant, by his suit, sought to restrain such appropriation until compensation to him for the property was previously made. He derived his title under the city of San Francisco, and, as evidence that the ownership of the property had been adjudged to the city as the successor of the former pueblo, he produced the decree of the board of - land commissioners confirming her claim. As the appeal from this decree on the part of the United States had been dismissed by consent of the attorney-general, he regarded the decree as closing the controversy between.
But the court held that in this view of the case the counsel was mistaken; that, had the city withdrawn her appeal, such result would have followed; but as she continued to prosecute it for an additional quantity beyond that confirmed, the whole issue was opened. The counsel of the United States was therefore allowed to introduce certain documents on file in the office of the survey- or-general of the United States for California, tending to show that a tract embracing the premises in question had been excepted and reserved from sale for public purposes, by order of the president, as early as November, 1850; evidence which had been in-' advertently omitted when the case was pending before the board of land commissioners. It was not then pretended by counsel or held by the court, nor has it ever been pretended or held since, that the dismissal of the appeal by the United States was an act without any significance. On the contrary, the dismissal has always been regarded as an admission by the government of the main facts upon which the claim of the city rests. The land commissioners had adjudged that there was an organized pueblo at the site of the present city of San Francisco; that such pueblo held certain proprietary rights to land, and that the city had succeeded to those rights. The United States said in substance, through their highest legal officer, we admit the correctness of this adjudication; we acknowledge the law and the facts to be as there declared; and we consent that this recognition of the validity of the claim of the city to some lands shall be carried into the decree of the court. And it was so carried into the decree, and that decree still remains of record in full force. Although on appeal the whole issue be opened. this recognition of the rights of the city does not lose all efficacy as evidence on the new hearing. Admissions once made in a cause are not necessarily excluded from consideration because a second trial of the same issue is had.
The consent of the government thus remaining on the files of the court, and being embodied in its decree, the only questions of difficulty in the case necessarily related to the extent and boundaries of the claim of the city, and of the reservations of the government for public purposes.
In the statement filed by the district attorney, he mentions that, after the ease had been submitted, one or more meetings were had at chambers before the circuit judge, and additional testimony put in and discussion had relative to the government reserves; and that “free conversations took place touching the law and the facts;” that he conceded that by repeated decisions of the supreme court of the state, the existence of a pueblo was the settled law; and that in view of this state of the law, in connection with the fact that the appeal on behalf of the United States had been dismissed by the attorney-general, he neither asked nor desired a re-examination of the question in this court.
To this statement, we will only add that the understanding of the circuit judge of the concessions made by the district attorney, and of the assent made by the counsel of the city with respect to lands reserved or occupied by the government for public purposes, was expressed in the paragraph cited above from his opinion. That paragraph was written after the “free conversations” of counsel before him, “touching the law and the facts,” and it was read to the district attorney and to the counsel of the city before the opinion was delivered in court. Neither of these gentlemen expressed at the time any dissent from its language, or any intimation that the circuit judge had misapprehended the concessions, nor was any suggestion made by the- district attorney, until after the opinion was published, that the statement of the concession was in any particular too broad and comprehensive.
These concessions, however, did not determine the ease. They only obviated the necessity of setting forth a detailed statement of the evidence upon which the claim of the city rested. Referring to them, the opinion says: “It is unnecessary, therefore, : to recite the historical evidence of the ex- ! istence of a pueblo previous to and at the date of the acquisition of the country at the present site of the city of San Francisco, which is very fully presented in the elaborate opinion filed by the commission on the rendition of its decision. Since that decision was made the question has been considered by the supreme court of the state, and, in an opinion in which the whole subject is examined, a similar conclusion is reached: and if anything were wanting, in addition to the arguments thus furnished, it is found in the able and exhaustive brief of the counsel of the city.”
The decision was based upon the documentary evidence found in the record, and the action of the officers of the government after the conquest.
“The documents,” says the opinion, “of undoubted authenticity, to which the opinions and brief of counsel refer, establish beyond controversy the fact that a pueblo of some kind, having an ayuntamiento composed of alcaldes, regidores, and other municipal officers, existed as early as 1S34, and that the pueblo continued in existence until and subsequent to the cession of the country. The action of the officers of the United States in the government of the city, and the appointment or election of its magistrates after the conquest, both preceding and subsequent to the treaty of peace, proceeded upon the recognition of this fact; and the titles to prop*374 erty within the limits of the present city, to the value of many millions, rest upon a like recognition.”
We have thus disposed of the main positions upon which the motion rests. The affidavit, it is true, contains several other matters; it details at some length the connection of the special counsel with the case, and it gives an account of communications made to the public journals of the city in relation to the decision of the court and the brief of counsel, but it is not perceived that these particulars, however interesting in themselves, have any pertinency to the motion presented. The affidavit also attempts to state what the special counsel contended for in his brief, but as this appeared by the brief itself, which was considered by the court previous to the decision, no information is imparted by the statement
It follows that the motion to open the decree and to grant a rehearing must be denied. It only remains to dispose of that part of the motion which asks that the order granting the appeal be vacated. We are disposed to think that a vacation of the order was only desired as a preliminary to the opening of the decree. Of course, if the United States desire the appeal to be withdrawn, their wishes in this respect will be carried out. The order denying the motion generally will therefore be subject to their right to renew the motion in this particular. Motion denied.
When the judgment of the court was announced that the motion would be denied, it was suggested by counsel for parties claiming lands within the four square leagues confirmed, that the decree of the court, entered on the second of November last, did not embody with entire precision the decision expressed by the opinion of the court delivered at the time, and that said decree should be modified in some respects in its language, in order to avoid any uncertainty or doubt as to its purport and meaning. It was therefore ordered, the attorneys of the city consenting thereto, that the entry of the order denying said motion be stayed until counsel could be heard for a modification of the decree, so that a modification, if allowed, might be made at the same time as the entry of the order denying the motion.
Subsequently, on the eighteenth of May, 1865, counsel having been heard on the suggestion, the order denying the rehearing was entered, and with it an order vacating the previous decree, and directing that in lieu thereof the following decree be entered as the final decree in the cause, which was accordingly done:
‘‘The City of San Francisco v. The United States.
“The appeal in this case taken by the petitioner, the city of San Francisco, from the decree of the board of land commissioners to ascertain and settle private land claims in the state of California, entered on the twenty-first day of December, 1834, by which the claim of the petitioner was adjudged to be valid, and confirmed to lands within certain described limits, coming on to be heard upon the transcript of proceedings and decision of said board, and the papers and evidence upon which said decision was founded, and further evidence taken in the district court of the United States for the Northern district of California pending said appeal — the said case having been transferred to this court by order of the said district court, under the provisions of section four of the act entitled ‘An act to expedite the settlement of titles to lands in the state of California,’ approved July 1, 1SG4— and counsel of the United States and for the petitioner having been heard, and due deliberation had, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the claim of the petitioner, the city of San Francisco, to the land hereinafter described, is valid, and that the same be confirmed.
“The land of which confirmation is made is a tract situated within the county of San Francisco, and embracing so much of the extreme upper portion of the peninsula above ordinary high-water mark (as the same existed at the date of the conquest of the country, namely: the seventh of July, A. D. 184G), on which the city of San Francisco is situated, as will contain an area of four square leagues — said 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 aforesaid, subject to the following deductions, namely: Such parcels of land as have been heretofore reserved or dedicated to public uses by the United States; and also such parcels of land as have been by grants from lawful authority vested in private proprietorship, and have been finally confirmed to parties claiming under said grant, by the tribunals of the United States, or shall hereafter be finally confirmed to parties claiming thereunder by said tribunals, in proceedings now pending therein for that purpose; all of which said excepted parcels of land are included within the area of four square leagues above-mentioned, but are excluded from the confirmation to the city. The confirmation is in trust, for the benefit of the lot-holders under grants from the pueblo, town, or city of San Francisco, or other competent authority, and as to any residue, in trust for the use and benefit of the inhabitants of the city.
“FIELD. Circuit Justice.
“San Francisco, May 18, 1805.”
From this decree and directly after its entry, both parties moved for an appeal to the United States supreme court. The motions were denied, the court filing the following opinion, giving its reasons for the denial:
FIELD, Circuit Justice. Both parties to this case desire to appeal from the final decree entered on the eighteenth instant — the United States from the whole of the decree,
When the appeal from the decree as originally entered on the second of November last was allowed, it was supposed, without examination, that an appeal would lie to the supreme court. Since then our attention has been called to the act of July X, 1804 [13 Stat. 333], under which the circuit court acquired its jurisdiction, and to the fact that it makes no provision for a review of the decisions of the court.
The jurisdiction of the supreme court, under previous acts of congress, over the judgments and decrees of the circuit court, is limited to a review of final judgments and decrees in cases originally instituted in that court, or transferred to it from the courts of the several states, or removed to it by appeal or writ of error from the district courts of the United States. The judiciary act of September 24, 17S9, § 22 (1 Stat. 73); the act of March 3, 1803, § 2, in addition to the judiciary act (2 Stat. 244); the act of July 4, 1830, § 17, to promote the progress of the useful arts (5 Stat 124); the act of July 4, 1S40, § 3, in addition to the acts respecting the judicial system of the United States (5 Stat. 392); the act of May 31, 1S44, amending the judiciary act (5 Stat. 658).
The act of March 3, 1851 [9 Stat. 631], to ascertain and settle private land claims in the state of California, does not provide for any consideration by the circuit court of cases of this character. The jurisdiction over these cases is by that act vested, in the first instance, in a board of commissioners, and afterward on appeal from the decision of the board, in the district court. From the decrees of the district court an appeal lies directly to the supreme court.
The act of July 1, 1864 [13 Stat. 333], authorizes a transfer from the district court to the circuit court of cases of this kind, where the district judge is interested in the land, the claim to which is pending before him, and also where the case affects the title to lands within the corporate limits of any city or town; but it does not confer any right of appeal from the action of the circuit court in these cases after they are transferred.
The supreme court, by the constitution, takes its appellate jurisdiction over cases “with such exceptions and under such regulations as the congress shall make.” And the designation, by acts of congress, of the cases to which this jurisdiction shall extend, has been held to be a legislative declaration that all other cases are excepted from it.
“When the first legislature of the Union,” savs Mr. Chief Justice Marshall, “proceeded to carry the third article of the constitution into effect, they must be understood as intending to execute the power they possessed of making exceptions to the appellate jurisdiction of the supreme court. They have not; indeed, made these exceptions in express terms. They have not declared that the appellate power of the court shall not extend to certain cases; but they have, described affirmatively its jurisdiction, and this affirmative description has been understood to imply a negative on the exercise of such appellate power as is not comprehended within it.” Durousseau v. U. S., 6 Cranch [10 U. S.] 307. And, in illustration of this principle, reference is made to the provision of the law which allows a writ of error to a judgment of the circuit court, where the matter in controversy exceeds the value of $2000. “There is no express declaration,” says the chief justice, “that it will not lie where the matter in controversy shall be of less value. But the court considers this affirmative description as manifesting the intent of the legislature to except from its appellate jurisdiction all cases decided in the circuits where the matter in controversy is of less value, and implies negative words.”
It follows, therefore, that the appellate jurisdiction of the supreme court exists only in those cases in which it is expressly granted. In conformity with this principle, it has been held that such jurisdiction does not extend to final judgments in criminal cases, it not having been conferred by congress. A question arising in a criminal ease can only be brought before the supreme court for decision upon a certificate of a division of opinion between the judges of the circuit court. Forsyth v. U. S., 9 How. [50 U. S.] 571. So under the judiciary act of 1789 [1 Stat. 73], jurisdiction to review a judgment or decree of the circuit court, rendered in an aetion brought before it from the district court on writ of error, was denied, as the act only mentioned judgments and decrees brought before the circuit court on appeal from the district court. U. S. v. Goodwin, 7 Cranch [11 U. S.] 108. And in Barry v. Mercein, 5 How. [46 U. S.] 120, it was decided that under the twenty-second section of the judiciary act, which provides for a review by the supreme court of final judgments and decrees of the circuit court, where the matter in dispute exceeds the sum or value of $2000, the appellate power of the court did not exist unless the matter in dispute was money, or some right, the value of which in money could be calculated and ascertained. In that case the controversy was between parents for the custody and care of their child, a matter, as justly observed, rising superior to all money considerations; yet the court refused to entertain jurisdiction, observing that there were no words in the law which, by any just interpretation, could be held to authorize it to take cognizance of eases to which no test of money value could be applied; that a similar limitation upon its appellate power existed with reference to judgments in criminal cases, although the liberty’ or life of the party
Prom these authorities — and others to the same effect might be cited — it is clear that in the absence of any .provision in the act of July 1, 1S04, giving a right of appeal from the decision of the circuit court in the present case, the right does not exist.
Nor is the absence of such provision an oversight on the part of congress. It is evident, we think, from the general language of the act, and the object sought to be accomplished by it, that it was the intention of the legislature to give finality to the, action of the circuit court in the cases transferred to its jurisdiction.
The act was designed, as its name purports, to expedite the settlement of titles to land in the state. Great delays and embarrassments were found to exist in determining the location and boundaries of tracts confirmed after the question of title had been adjudicated. The hearing by the district court of exceptions to surveys returned by the surveyor-general, interposed by parties possessing or asserting adverse interests, the taking of depositions, the discussion of counsel, and the modifications or new surveys sometimes ordered, necessarily occupied the time usually taken by an ordinary suit at law. Then followed the right of appeal to the supreme court from the action of the district court, not merely by the original contestants to the proceeding, but by third parties intervening, whether adjoining proprietors, purchasers under the original grantee, or persons claiming by pre-emption, settlement, or other right under the United States. To obviate the delays and expense necessarily attending proceedings of this character, particularly as occasioned by the appeal to the supreme court, and to relieve that tribunal, already burdened by a crowded docket, the act limited its jurisdiction to cases in which appeals were then pending, and vested jurisdiction in the circuit court, over cases in which appeals might be subsequently taken. When from the decree of the district court, approving or correcting the survey, no appeal had been taken, “no appeal,” says the act, “to that court shall be allowed, but an appeal may be taken, within twelve months after this act shall take effect, to the circuit court of thé United States, for California, and said court shall proceed to fully determine the matter.”
Following these provisions is the section which directs that when the district judge is interested in any land, the claim to which, under the act of March 3, 3851 [9 Stat. 631], is pending before him on appeal from the board of commissioners, the case shall be transferred to the circuit court, “which shall thereupon take jurisdiction and determine the same.” The act then proceeds as follows: “The said district courts may also order a transfer to the said circuit court of any other cases arising under said act, pending before them, affecting the title to lands within the corporate limits of any city or town, and in such cases both the district and circuit judges may sit”
At the passage of the act there were only two cases pending in the district courts of California, with reference to which the authority conferred by this last clause could be exercised — the Case of the City of San Francisco, and the Case of the City of Sono-ma, both against the United States. The first case had then been pending in the district court for over eight years. In the meantime the city had extended in all directions, and interests of vast magnitude had grown up which demanded that the title to the land upon which the city rested should be, in some way, speedily and finally settled. The land commissioners had adjudged that the claim of the city was valid within certain described limits. The United States, through their highest legal officer, had assented to this adjudication; and the decree of the district court, declaring its finality as against the government, had been on record for years, and was then in full force. And by the act itself the United States relinquished whatever right and title they possessed to the land within the charter limits of 1851.
The Case of the City of Sonoma had been likewise pending in the district court on appeal for over eight years. In this case the United States had, through the attorney-general, signified their assent to a confirmation of the decree of the board, and the notice of prosecuting the appeal on the part of the city had not been given within the six months prescribed by the act of congress. It was under these circumstances that the law was passed authorizing a transfer of these eases to the circuit court. If an appeal from its action had been intended, no beneficial object would have been accomplished by the transfer for the same delay would follow an appeal from the circuit court as would follow an appeal from the district court. Nor can any reason in that view be assigned for allowing both the district and circuit judges, if they desired, to sit in the hearing of these cases.
If the matter were less clear we might yield to the suggestion of counsel, and allow the appeal pro forma; but as we have no doubt whatever that our decision is final, our duty is plain. We might with equal propriety sign a citation upon an appeal under the twenty-second section of the judiciary act where the matter in dispute is less than the sum or value of two thousand dollars.
The decision not being subject to appeal, the controversy between the city and the government is closed, and the claim of the city stands precisely as if the United States had owned the land and by an act of con
At the December term of the supreme court for I860, the term following the passage of this act, the appeal of the United States, and the appeal of the city were both dismissed by stipulation of the attorney-general and counsel of the city. Townsend v. Greeley, 5 Wall. [72 U. S.] 337.
The title of the city of San Francisco, therefore.' rests upon the above decree of the circuit court, entered on the eighteenth of May, I860, and the above confirmatory act of congress. Upon this subject, and referring to the above act, the supreme court of the United States, in Grisar v. McDowell, said: “By this act the government has expressed its precise will with respect to the claim of the city of San Francisco to her lands, as it was then recognized by the circuit court of the United States. 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. The act of March 3, 1851 [6 Stat. 631], is a general act applying to all cases, but the act of March 8, 1866 [14 Stat. 4], referring specially to the confirmation of the claim to lands in San Francisco, withdrew that claim as it then stood from further consideration of the courts under the provisions of the general act. It disposed of the city claim, and determined the conditions upon which it should be recognized and confirmed. The title of the city, therefore, rests upon the decree of the circuit court as modified by the act of congress.” See. also, Montgomery v. Bevans [Case No. 9,735].
See extracts from opinion of the supreme court of California in note A, annexed to the report of this ease.
In Grisar v. McDowell, 6 Wall. [73 U. S.] 372, the supreme court of the United States said: “It must be conceded that there was a pueblo of some kind at the site of the city of San Francisco, upon the conquest of the country by the United States, on the seventh of July, 1846. We say a pueblo of some kind, for the term which answers generally to the English word town, may designate a collection of individuals residing at a particular place, a settlement or a village, or may be applied to a regular organized municipality.” See note B, annexed to the report