4 Mo. 465 | Mo. | 1836
Opinion of the court delivered by
Gamble brought his action of ejectment in the circuit court of St. Louis county, against Waddingham, and the other defendants were on application, admitted as co-defendants. Judgment being given against them in that court, they appeal to this. — The defendant in error, on the trial of the cause in the circuit court,gavé in evidence an extract from the books of the Recorder of Land Titles for the territory of Missouri: by which it appears, that an out lot of the town of St. Louis, of forty arpens, was
The plaintiff offered in evidence the testimony of several witnesses taken in depositions, which was objected
Evidence was then given on the part of the defendants, of a confirmation by the board of commissioners,, to Mullanphy, under Provenchere, in the year 1809, of a tract of land two arpents in front, by forty arpents deep, situated near the town of St. Louis. From the confirmation, it appears that Mullanphy produced before the board of commissioners, a conveyance from the said John Baptiste Provenchere to himself for the same, and that on the application of Provenchere, testimony to establish his claim was received by the board: and several witnesses produced on the part of the defendants below, proved that Provenchere (under whom the defendants, as heirs &c. of John Mullanphy, claim,) cultivated for many years, a field west of the mound above spoken of, and lying near the said mound. From their evidence, it appears that Provenchere ploughed nearly from north to
It may be proper to remark, that the two persons Do- ' dier and Riviere, called Bacane, mentioned in the testimony of Rene Paul, were two of the witnesses produced by the defendants to prove the locality of Provenchere’s cultivation; and that they refer to the testimony formerly given by them to Mr. Hunt, the recorder, as given at an earlier period of their lives, when their memories were more accurate. A survey made by the county surveyor, was given in evidence: he states that he found no corner stones, and gives it as his opinion, “that Mr. Martin Du-ralde may have located the Joseph Tayon forty arpent lot, one arpent north of where it now stands — its present north boundary becoming'thereby its south boundary,” quoting, apparently as a reason therefor, the language of Duralde’s entry in Livre Temen, viz: “Et immediatement d’ un cote au domaine du Roi, d? un arpent de large et rasant par son extremite h pied de la monticule appellee la Grange.” As the lot of Tayon is located in the survey made by Rene Paul, it is bounded on its eastern extremity by the foot of the mound, which if the true meaning of the phrase “rasant par son extremite le pied de la monticule” — translated, “grazing by its extremity the foot of the mound;” and this is conformable to the survey of Rene Paul above mentioned. If we suppose with the county surveyor, that it may have been located one arpent further north, then it would not be bounded on the east by the mound at all, but the longer sid of the parallelogram being produced, would pass on the north of the mound, as it is represented on each plat. On this evidence the defendants moved the court to instruct the Jury — 1st. That if they believed the confirmation to Mullanphy, assignee of Provenchere, covered the land Ulaimed by the plaintiff, then they must find for the defendants. 2. —That if they believed that the land in dis
- Mr. Provenchere accepted his tract of two arpens in width, by forty in length. It vvás confirmed to him by the board of commissioners, as surveyed by the authority of the Spanish Lieutenant Governor: and now he contends fop land in another place, granted to some other person. The court, as we think, committed no ror in refusing the first instruction. 2nd. The instruction asked, appears most extraordinary.' If the land in question were reunited to the royal domain by the act of the Lieutenant Governor, it became the