The bill of complaint in this cause was filed by complainants, T. B. Catron and Nicolas Pino against Saron N. Laughlin, C. H. Gildersleeve, and the unknown heirs of certain deceased persons, praying for the establishment of their estate in a grant of land now known as the Eaton grant, against the adverse claims of the defendants known and unknown. It further prays that complainants’ title be quieted; that a conveyance from defendant Gildersleeve and wife to the defendant Laughlin be declared void and inoperative as against complainants’' estate and undivided interest; that the interest of all the parties to the suit in said grant be ascertained and declared for a partition thereof and for general relief. The bill alleges that in the year 1827 the Republic of Mexico granted and delivered in actual possession unto Domingo Fernandez and twenty-sis other persons, naming them, a certain tract of land now wholly situate in Santa Fe county, and gives the boundaries of the grant. The bill also alleges that the surveyor-general of New Mesico examined and approved said grant, and in his decision and report to the Congress thereon, which is known as Report No. 16, recommended to Congress the confirmation of the said grant to E. W. Eaton as the assignee and legal representative of Domingo Fernandez, and to the remaining original grantees who bad not forfeited their right to the said land by a non-compliance with the conditions of the grant.
The hill further alleges that on the twenty-first day of August, A. D. 1827, certain of the arable land included within the said granted lands was distributed and allotted to the said Domingo Fernandez, the arable bottom lands from the Mesita of Lagunitas upwards, as far as the spring of La Vaca, and the remainder of said arable lands in the said bottom and adjoining the said Mesita were distributed in strips measuring one hundred varas each from east to west to and among twenty-five persons in severalty, giving their names. The bill then alleges that said lands so distributed in severalty form a narrow strip not exceeding in any part one half mile in width and are not hereby sought to be affected by this suit, except for the purpose of ascertaining and locating the same by metes and bounds so far as the same are susceptible of ascertainment and location, and except for the further purpose of declaring the distribution and allotments invalid and of no effect so far as they cannot be so ascertained and located. It further alleges that by an act of Congress approved June 21, 1860, the said grant' as recommended by the surveyor-general in his said report, was confirmed; that thereafter, on the eighth day of December, 1880, patent for the same was duly issued reciting the said report and confirmation, whereby the United States granted the said land as the same had been completed and surveyed under its authority unto the said E. W. Eaton, and the remaining original grantees who had not forfeited their right to the land by non-compliance with the conditions of the grant, his and their heirs and assigns. It further alleges that at the time of the said report, confirmation and patent the said Eaton had acquired by purchase the undivided share or interest of the said Fernandez in said grant, and alleges said undivided interest to be one twenty-sixth, part of said grant, and that the remainder thereof-belonged to the other grantees named therein, being the only remaining original grantees of said grant who had not forfeited their right to said land by non-compliance with the conditions of said grant. The bill then alleges that the complainants are seized and possessed of thirty-seven undivided fifty:second parts of all of said grant in equal shares, and that the said complainants acquired their shares and interest in said premises by purchase,, and that they so acquired all the original shares of nineteen of said alleged original grantees, and that they own the said undivided interest so acquired as tenants in common with the defendants. It further alleges that, the defendant Charles H. Gildersleeve on the ninth day of .April, 1890, conveyed to the defendant Laughlin by recorded general warranty deed dated on said date, for the consideration of 81,000 all of said tract of land,, except the portion thereof conveyed by E. W. Eaton and wife to said Laughlin on May 7, 1874, which deed they allege was in fact a security and mortgage for a loan; that the same is a cloud upon complainants’ title. It then further alleges that the defendants both known and unknown make some claim adverse to the estate of the complainant as set forth in the bill, to said grant.
To the bill the said defendants Laughlin and Gil-dersleeve filed pleas of the statute of limitations, alleging that they had been in sole, exclusive, continuous, actual and visible possession of said land for more than ten years prior to the bringing of said suit, and that said lands had been granted in 1827, by the Republic of Mexico to Domingo Fernandez, through whom they claimed title and tracing their title from said Fernandez through A. W. Reynolds and E. W. Eaton, and alleging further that the said complainants and those under whom they claim had failed to bring suit for the recovery of said land for more than thirty years. The defendants also filed an answer in which they deny that the said lands were delivered into the actual, possession or otherwise ■of the twenty-seven persons named in said bill, or any of them other than the said Domingo Fernandez and that at the time of the delivery of the possession of said lands to Fernandez with his consent twenty-fonr of the persons naming them mentioned in the bill were each pnt in possession of small strips of land as alleged in said bill and that said persons were by the consent of said Fernandez so pnt in possession npon the express condition that they should actually occupy and cultivate the lands delivered severally to them and that upon failure to do so, their rights and claims should be regarded as abandoned and forfeited, and that such persons were not granted or pnt in possession of any other portions of said lands than said small portions as aforesaid, and further alleging that the said persons so pnt in possession, abandoned the possession of said parcels of land, set off to them, and refused to occupy and cultivate the same in the year 1829; and that each and all of them after said abandonment were ordered and directed in 1829 by the constitutional justice of the city of Santa Fe to proceed to occupy and cultivate said lands so set off to them. The answer further alleged upon information and belief that none of said persons complied with said order but that each and all of them refused to occupy and cultivate said lands or any part thereof, and thereupon said Fernandez, being in possession of all of said parcels of land, and also in possession of the lands contained within the boundaries of the grant, continued so in the sole and'exclusive possession until the twenty-eighth of January 1851, Avhen he sold said grant by good and sufficient deed to said Reynold's and Eaton; and proceeds to allege title through said Eaton by mesne conveyance to the whole thereof; and the answer further alleges that by the act of confirmation and the survey the said Eaton acquired title to the whole of said grant, and denies that the act of confirmation and the patent issued in pursuance thereof had the force and effect to convey any right, or title to the persons named in the bill of complaint under and through whom said complainants claim to have an interest in said land; and allege that all persons put in possession of any portion of said lands except Fernandez abandoned and forfeited all their rights and claims to said lands and every part thereof, and set up the same defense of the statute of limitations and failure to bring suit as alleged in the pleas.
Replications were filed and upon the issues thus raised the proofs were taken.
The court below rendered final judgment against •complainants and dismissed the bill with costs, and thereafter overruled motion for rehearing. Whereupon, appellants (complainants below) brought the case into this court, assigning error as to every material finding of fact and of law made by the court below.
In order to decide the many questions involved in this controversy, we must review the steps taken in the grant from its inception. We .therefore advert to the fact that on August 9, 1827, the Mexican government, by its certain authorities, made,the following order:
“Santa Pe, August 9, 1827: In session of yesterday the most excellent deputation of this Territory has ■disposed that the grant herein solicited be granted, holding the petitioners to what they offer, which is, that no other use will be made , of the land but for cultivation, on condition that if, at any time, they make any other use of it, it shall be considered as abandoned, and the grantees without any right to its possession and that these have the same right as the rest of the public to pasture their animals in the vicinity thereof ...”
This order is signed by Armijo, who was president of the territorial deputation (and at the same time governor of the territory) and by Ramon Abreau, its Secretary. While appellants base their title upon this order, the appellees contend that the grant, if supporting appellants’ title at all, was the foundation of their claim to only those portions of the grant as were specifically allotted to appellants’ grantors, tbe original grantees,, and not as supporting any title to an interest in tbe undivided lands in tbe grant. Tbe meaning of tbe grant can be best interpreted in tbe light of tbe proceedings-wbicb begot it. Tbe initial step was tbe petition of Domingo Fernandez, dated April 26, 1822, in wbicb he-applied to, tbe then governor of tbe Territory of New Mexico for tbe grant of lands for bimself, bis son and. other persons, according to tbe boundaries mentioned in-bis petition; stating that what be asked was limited and was without injury, as land remained in tbe four directions for most extensive commons. (We refer to tbe original Spanish, which seems to be fuller in certain places than tbe English translation.) Tbe land was not then granted by tbe governor, but be referred tbe petition to tbe town council to report, on April 27,1822. On June 18, 1822, tbe town council requested Domingo> Fernandez to make a full report, wbicb be did on June-25, 1822. On June 27, 1822, tbe town council appointed' a committee to examine tbe land and report in regard to tbe statements set out by Fernandez in bis report.. On July 8, 1822, tbe committee reported, as Fernandez-bad represented and stated that they found no obstacle to granting tbe lands solicited by Fernandez and the-others with him to tbe amount that each one could cultivate without injury to tbe pastures or watering-places. Nothing further was done until June 16? 1827, when Domingo Fernandez petitioned tbe Territorial deputation,, or tbe governor (it is doubtful wbicb), referring to bis. former petition, and made further'statements of fact,, and thereby asked that tbe land be granted to him and thirty others who accompanied him, and stated that tbe boundaries were tbe same as be bad given in bis former-petition. On June 25, 1827, this last petition was referred, by tbe Territorial deputation, to tbe ayuntam-iento, of Santa Fe, for report. On July 26 following, tbe ayuntamiento, by tbe alcalde, who was tbe president thereof, made a report recommending tbe grant and that. the waters and pastures be caramon. Shortly after the making of the order or grant, by Armijo, and in pursuance thereto, on August 21, 1827, Jose Maria Martinez, first constitutional alcalde at Santa Fe, also president •of the ayuntamiento at Santa Fe, at the request of Domingo Fernandez to' place him and those who accompanied him in possession, gave juridical possession of the land included in the grant, in which he recited that its excellency had granted the land known as the old pueblo of San Cristobal, to Domingo Fernandez and thirty men who accompanied him to the said place, and that they should enjoy the same for themselves, their heirs and successors, with the understanding that if they should want .to sell they should do so to the persons possessing, and for the current price of land, and that if anyone should wish to cause damage by selling to any other person than the grantees in consideration of his being a person of influence, from which might result damage to the poor people possessing it, etc. To this they agreed and said that they would always guard that circumstance, and that he who should fail in that regard should be declared without any right. The alcalde then at the request of Fernandez to place in possession himself and his companions, took him by the hand and conducted said Fernandez (the original grant document is here torn, the words missing probably being ■“y sus”), and his companions or those who accompanied him, over said tract. He pulled up grass, scattered handfuls of earth, broke off branches from trees, and they from great jov and satisfaction, uttered expressions saying, “Long live our actual president, Don G-uadalupe Victoria, long live the Mexican nation,” and they used other ceremonies and acts of possession in evidence of that they said they took possession of the tract of land, quietly, pacifically and without any opposition, for themselves, their heirs and successors. To this the alcalde certifies, and says: “I then, showed them the boundaries, on the east the Ojo de la Vaca, on the west tbe front of the middle Crestón, on the south, the Bajada de los Comanches, and on the north, the brow of the Crestón, which are the boundaries enclosing the tract, the said Domingo- Fernandez receiving" the Canon de la Cueva, to the Spring of la Vaca, partitioning for cultivation the rest of the plan and place of the Canada de la Casita, the pasturage remaining free in the other directions up to said boundaries.” The alcalde then divided out the cultivable lands, giving to Domingo Fernandez from the Mesita de la Lagunita upwards to the Ojo de la Yaca under the boundaries of the grant, and in continuation he measured from the said Mesita west and designated one hundred varas to each of twenty-five persons, in addition to Fernández, making in all twenty-six persons, all of whom he says received quite and peaceable possession. It will be seen that there are two documents of possession, one which gives the possession of the entire grant and specifies a certain portion set apart to Domingo Fernandez and other certain portions set apart to all the other parties. The second act of possession is the one giving out the specific pieces of land to all the persons, including Fernandez, for cultivation. These tracts designated in both the first and second documents of. possession, which seem to have been consummated on the same day, gave out the cultivable lands which Fernandez received for himself and those received by the other parties for themselves, it being specified, that the pastures remained free, free to all the grantees without being divided or separated between them specifically. In the second specification of possession, made by Alcalde Martinez he says that all the parties agreed to build a house and work on the church, acequias and tanks. But he does not express any damage which would result, or any penalty which would be imposed in case of noncompliance, nor did he express that they should do so-within any given time, nor that they were required to-do so1. It is not a condition. The only condition placed upon this grant by the granting authority was that of cultivation. The alcalde pretended to make a condition in Ms acts of possession that if they sold to anyone else than the other parties at the current price, it should not be lawful and they should lose their rights; but viewing the grant as unaffected by any act of confirmation by Congress, it is clear that the alcalde had no right to impose any condition which was not imposed by the authorities malting the grant in the grant itself. If he did have such right, there is furthermore no pretense that these parties ever sold while the country was under the Mexican government, so that the condition never could operate as a forfeiture. Freemont v. U. S., 17 How. 561. While he and the deputation specified, the one that no other use should be made of the land than cultivation, and the other that it should not be sold— and in case it was used for other purposes or sold, contrary thereto', that it should be declared forfeited or abandoned — yet there is no such a condition attached to the failure to work on the church, or to build a house or work on the acequias or tanks, and it is a' rule of law that where a condition is attached for failure to do one thing, and no condition is attached for failure to do another, the failure to do the thing to' which no condition is attached is not to be considered as embraced in- the penalty attached to the other, but the expression of the one idea excludes the other.
1 From the foregoing, we can see no justification for the contention of the appellees that the grant as originally made was made solely to Domingo Fernandez. The order of-the governor of August 9, 1827, shows that the grant was made to all the petitioners; the petition therefore shows that it was asked for Fernandez and thirty others who accompanied him and the act of juridical possession shows that the alcalde took Fernandez and twenty-five others of the original petitioners over the grant, all of whom accepted the possession for themselves, their children and successors and expressed joy and satisfaction at.the same. But that the grant made by the Mexican government was in itself, unaided by the sanction of Congress, a valid grant of all the land within the boundary' specified in the act of juridical possession, we need not and do not assert. The courts of justice are concluded by the action of the political department, and the political department of the government having acted upon this grant, that action must be regarded as a complete adjudication of the law as affecting this grant. The final action of Congress herein, is to be found in the act confirming the grant, which is as follows:
2 “That the private land claims in the Territory of New Mexico, as recommended for confirmation, by the surveyor-general of that Territory, and in his letter to the commissioner of the general land office, of the twelfth of January, eighteen hundred and fifty-eight, designated as numbers one, three, four, six, eight, nine, ten, twelve, fourteen, fifteen, sixteen, seventeen and eighteen, and the claim of E. W. Eaton, not entered on the corrected list of numbers,, but standing on the original docket and abstract returns of the surveyor-general as number sixteen, be and they are hereby confirmed
It is contended by appellees that it was not the intention of Congress to confirm by this act, the claim of E. W. Eaton “as recommended by the surveyor-general,” but as expressing its intention to absolutely confirm the grant to Eaton alone. We think however, that the grammatical sense of the phrase “as recommended for confirmation” applies to the claim of E. W. Eaton, which is here designated objectively and that this grant was confirmed in the same manner as those grants designated by numbers in the act were confirmed.
Having determined that the grant was confirmed as recommended Ave are guided by the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Tameling v. Freehold Co., 98 U. S. 644, involving a grant confirmed by tbe same act of Congress, as to tbe effect to be given to tbe recommendation of tbe surveyor-general. That court there say:
“Tbe surveyor-general in tbe exercise of tbe authority in which be is vested, decides then in tbe first instance. Tbe final action on each claim reserved to Congress is, of course conclusive. It is obviously not tbe duty of this court to sit in judgment upon either tbe recital of matters of fact by tbe surveyor-general, or bis decision declaring tbe validity of tbe grant. They are embodied in bis report which was laid before Congress for its consideration and action. Congress acted upon tbe claim as recommended for confirmation by tbe surveyor-general. ”
Therefore whether this confirmation was a grant de novo as appellees contend, or was a recognition of a pre--existing right and title and related back to tbe inception of that right or title, as appellants contend, depends entirely upon tbe declaration of Congress in tbe premises. If Congress has expressed its intention within tbe law itself with certainty, it is not admissible to depart from that intention on any extraneous consideration or theory of construction. Sutherland on Stat. Cons., sec. 236. Without resorting to implication or presumption, therefore, we must give full force and effect to all that Congress has expressly declared. We think it indisputable that Congress in approving tbe recommendations of tbe surveyor-general has thereby adjudicated that all which he recommended is law so far as this case is concerned. The language of tbe section of tbe act of July 22, 1854, 10 Stat. 308, under which tbe report of tbe surveyor-general in this case was made in regard to these claims is as follows:
“That it shall be tbe duty of tbe surveyor-general, under such instruction as may be given by tbe secretary of tbe Interior to ascertain, tbe origin, nature, character and extent of all claims to lands under tbe laws and usages and customs of Spain and Mexico' ... be shall make a full report on all such clams as originated before the cession of the Territory to the United States by the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, denoting- the various grades of title, with Ms decision as to> the validity or invalidity of each of the same under the laws, usages and customs of the country - before its cession to the United States.”
The surveyor-general found that all the documents acted upon were original and duly authenticated; that the grant was legally made and the parties placed in possession and that it was therefore deemed a good and valid grant and confirmed to E. W. Eaton, as the assignee and legal representative of Domingo Fernandez, and to the remaining original grantees who had not forfeited their right to the land by a non-compliance with the conditions of the grant. From one of the papers so duly authenticated we find that “legal, personal and loyal possession,” was given of the entire grant, and that Fernandez and his companions took possession of it quietly and peacefully, for themselves, their children and successors. The operative words of this grant are those of a present grant in fee simple, with a condition subsequent annexed, and in the absence of any expression to the contrary by Congress, they must be held to have been sufficient to accomplish the purpose the parties had in view* and which Congress has declared was accomplished. We conclude therefore that the grade of the title denoted by the surveyor-general was of the highest kind, that no further steps were required to complete the grant and that the grantee put in possession acquired vested rights thereunder. All of which Congress has made res judicata by the confirmatory act. Kennedy v. Hunt’s Lessee, 7 How. 586-592; Palmer v. Low, 98 U. S. 1-19; Tameling v. Freehold Co., supra; U. S. v. Joseph, 94 U. S. 114.
In support of their position, the appellees cite Tameling v. Freehold Co., supra. In this case, the Supreme Court of the United States was dealing with a Spanish land grant in New Mexico, recommended for confirmation and confirmed by the same act of Congress which confirmed the grant here involved, and they quote therefrom the following: “I hold therefore that the act of Congress operated as a grant' tie novo' for all the land within the boundaries, as given in the report of the surveyor-general,” and appellees argue on the theory that under the laws of Mexico the grant was legally a grant to the associates of Domingo Fernandez of the one hundred vara strips allotted to them for cultivation, and therefore, if the claim had been presented to the court of private land claims, that court would have been obliged to reject the unallotted portion of the grant, and that the political department of the government alone could have confirmed that portion to anybody, and therefore insist that Congress in confirming the grant, made a grant de novo.
In the Tameling case, supra, we think the court decided in effect that although it might be true that a correct interpretation of the laws of Mexico as applied to a Mexican land grant, would entitle the claimants thereunder to only a fractional part of the tract confirmed by Congress as such a grant, still Congress having confirmed thé grant so enlarged, did by its confirmatory act, pass the title of the United States to such portion of the tract as had not been theretofore granted by Mexico to its grantees, as effectually as if it contained in terms a grant de novo. The court did not decide that the United States held the legal- title to that portion of the grant in excess of the number of leagues which might have been lawfully- granted under the Mexican government; nor did it decide that the interpretation of the Mexican -laws by Congress could be revised in any manner. Indeed it decided the contrary. It anchored its judgment upon the sole proposition that the action of Congress in confirming the grant as recommended by the surveyor-general without limitation as to quantity, was an unassailable finality. The grantees here being determined to have vested rights in the entire grant, we conclude that appellees’ theory, as herein stated, is inapplicable to this case. They contend further however, . that in any event, the act of confirmation itself amounts to a new grant and fixes the rights of the parties in the case, relying again upon the quotation from the Tameling case, supra. The meaning of this quotation may be best understood by looking further into the case in which it is used, and by considering similar language as applied in other cases by the Supreme Court. That court in the Tameling case further says:
“We have-repeatedly held that individual rights of property, in the Territory acquired by the United States from Mexico, were not affected by the change of sovereignty and jurisdiction. They were entitled to protection, whether the party had the full and absolute ownership of the land, or merely an equitable interest therein, which required some further act of the government to vest in him a perfect title. No jurisdiction over such claims in New Mexico was conferred upon the courts.”
The decision then recites the authority of the surveyor-general and the binding character of his findings of fact, and then proceeds :
“We need only say that he distinctly sets forth, that they were put in possession, vesting in them, their children and successors a title in fee to said land, and that he reached the conclusion that the grant is a good and valid one, and that a legal title vests in Beaubien to the land embraced within the limits contained in the petition . . . Congress acted upon the claim as recommended for confirmation by the surveyor-general. The' confirmation being absolute and unconditional, we must regard it as effectual and operative for the entire tract. The phraseology of the confirmatory act is, in our opinion, explicit and unequivocal. In Ryan v. Carter et al., we recognized and enforced as the settled doctrine of this court, that such an act passes the title of the United States as effectually as if it contained in terms a grant de novo, and that a grant may be made by law as well as a patent pursuant to law.”
Does this language mean all that it is claimed to mean by the appellee and more than on its fact it purports to declare? • A brief examination of the authorities will show that we are not justified in expanding its meaning beyond the literal import. The case of Ryan v. Carter, from which this language is adopted into the Tameling case, was a case in which the Supreme Court considered the effect of the act of June 13, 1812, which act it held “confirmed, proprio vigore, the rights, title and claims to the lands embraced by it, and operated as a grant to all intents and purposes. Repeated decisions of this court have declared that such a statute passes the title of the United States as effectually as if it contained in terms a grant de novo.”
3 Numerous cases decided by the Supreme Court of the United States involving the construction of this act of June 13,1812, reveal the fact that in every case the confirmatory act has been construed either “to' operate as a grant of” or to be a grant of the fee from the United States to the claimant. In Glasgow v. Baker, 125 U. S. 560, the court held it to be a grant in praesenti, of all the title of the United States. The expressions, “operate as.a grant,” “be as effectual as a grant,” and the like, are in no case used by the Supreme Court in any different sense than that in which they are used in the cases cited. It is simply a judicial construction to the effect that Congress intends by an act of confirmation, Avhen there is a confirmee or class of confirmees to take thereunder, that the same shall operate to vest in the confirmee any legal title which may be in the United States. A clear statement of the doctrine laid down by the United States Supreme Court in the construction of these acts of confirmation, is to be found in the case of Langdeau v. Haynes, 88 U. S. 521. We quote therefrom as follows:
“In the legislation of Congress, a patent- has a double operation. It is a conveyance by. the government when the government has any interest to convey; but where it is issued upon the confirmation of a claim of a pre-existing title it is documentary evidence, having the dignity of a record, of the existence of that title, or of such equities representing the claim as justify its recognition and confirmation. The instrument is not the less efficacious as evidence of previously existing right because it also embodies words of release or transfer from the government. The whole error of the plaintiff arises from his theory that the fee to the land in controversy passed to the United States by the cession from Virginia, and that a patent was essential for its transfer to the claimant; whereas, with respect to the possession of the inhabitants and settlers mentioned in the deed of cession, the fee never passed to the United States; and if it had passed and a mere equitable title had remained in the complainants the confirmation by the act of 1807 would have operated as a release to them of the interest of the United States. ... A legislative confirmation of a claim to land is a recognition of the validity of such claim and operates as effectually as a grant or quitclaim from the government. ... It was for the confirmation of existing possessions and titles that the deed of cession stipulated, not the transfer of any new title. Virginia recognized the general rule of public law that by the cession of Territory from one State to another public property and sovereignty alone pass. Even in cases of conquest, Mr. Chief Justice Marshall observes, in U. S. v. Percheman, 7 Pet. 51, 87: Tt is unusual for the conqueror to do more than displace the sovereign and assume dominion over the country, and the sense of justice and right which is felt by the whole civilized world would be outraged if private property should be generally confiscated and private rights annulled.’ Had Florida changed its sovereign by an act containing no stipulation respecting the property or individuals the right of property in all those who- became subjects or citizens of the new government would have been unaffected by tbe change. It would have remained the same as under the ancient sovereign. . . . This confirmation was the fulfillment of the condition stipulated in the deed of cession so far as the complainants are concerned. It was an authoritative recognition by record of the ancient possession and title of their ancestor, and gave to them such assurance of the validity of that possession and title as would be always respected by the courts of the country.”
There can be no misunderstanding of the reasoning of Justice Field in Langdeau v. Haynes, supra; nor the effect to be given the phrase “operate as effectually as a grant or quitclaim from the government,” as used by him. Similar language in Ryan v. Carter, supra, is used in precisely the same sense. Nor in the Tameling case, have we seen that it had any other signification. The samé construction is put upon similar language used by the Supreme Court in the case of U. S. v. Maxwell Land Grant Company, 121 U. S. 366. Any other construction would be antagonistic to many decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States as well as contrary to reason, and we find no case in which that court has departed from this long settled doctrine. As a judicial interpretation of the intention of Congress to recognize and confirm appellants’ ancient title, they have cited the case of U. S. v. Joseph, 94 U. S. 114, involving the confirmation of the claim of the Pueblo of Taos, by a similar act of Congress. The Supreme Court there say:
“The Pueblo Indians, on the contrary,' hold their lands by a right superior to that of the United States. Their title dates back to grants made by the government ■of Spain, before the Mexican revolution, a title which was fully recognized by the Mexican government and protected by it in the treaty, by which this country and the allegiance of its inhabitants were transferred to the United States. ... It is unnecessary to waste words to prove that this was a recognition of the title previously held by those people, and a disclaimer by the government of any right of present or future interference, except such as would be exercised in the case of any individual holding by competent and perfect title in his individual right.”
In Palmer v. Low, 98 U. S. 1-19, the Supreme Court say, referring to an act of Congress in confirming an alcalde grant, “Clearly therefore the act of Congress could not have been intended for the grant of a new right,, but simply for the confirmation of the old one.”
And in Colorado Company v. Commissioners, referring to a grant held by the Supreme Court to have been an imperfect one, the Supreme Court of Colorado said: “Whatever may he said of the title given by the Mexican government,'we think the effect of this act of confirmation is to establish the title from the date of the grant by the Mexican government.”
The Supreme Court of the United States in affirming the above doctrine say: “We agree with what he has said (referring to Supreme Court of Colorado) that the title when perfected, relates back to and is founded on the grant by Mexico.”
Colorado Company v. Commissioners, 95 U. S. 266; Tripp v. Spring, 5 Sawy. 215; Wright v. Roseberry, 121 U. S. 488; Slidell v. Grandjeau, 111 U. S. 439; Langdeau v. Haynes, 21 Wall. 521; Knight v. United Land Assn., 142 U. S. 161. And this doctrine is again clearly announced by the Supreme Court in the recent case of United States v. Valdez, decided October 30, 1899 (U. S. Sup. Ct. Rep.).
4 We conclude from an examination of these authorities that the Supreme Court of the United States considers these acts of confirmation as operating in two ways: First, as a legislative recognition of the existence and validity of the original grants, and, second, as a quitclaim and transfer of any possible interest which our government might have in and to the lands alleged to be within the grants. It is also very clear that the United States Supreme Court have so regarded the effect of an act of confirmation and patent thereunder by Congress in its numerous decisions in those cases in which both parties claimed the premises in controversy under conflicting confirmations. Willot v. Sanford, 19 How. 79, Lesois v. Bramlel, 4 How. 464; Henshaw v. Bissell, 18 Wall. 255; Miller v. Dale, 92 U. S. 474; Trenier v. Stewart, 101 U. S. 797.
We must decide, therefore, that when the fee is not vested in the United States, the confirmatory act is the fulfillment of the treaty obligation of the government and an authoritative recognition by record of the ancient possessions and title of the confirmees and gives to them such assurance of the validity of that possession and title as would always be respected by the courts of the country.
5 The fee having passed directly from the Mexican government to the grantee and Congress having perceived the possibility of forfeiture under the Mexican government of one or of all of the interest except that of Eaton as the assignee and legal representative of Domingo Fernandez, out of an abundance of caution and in order that there might be no question as to the confirmation extending to others than those who had rights entitled to protection under the treaty, has merely performed its whole duty in the promises in inviolably respecting vested rights thereunder by confirming the grant to those who had not forfeited. The confirmation operated, therefore, as to those interests under- the Mexican grant which had not been forfeited at the time of the treaty as an authoritative recognition of the record and validity of the ancient possession and title, while it seems to have operated as a grant de novo to the con-firmee or confirmees of any interests which may have been forfeited under the Mexican government; that is, if by reason of any forfeiture under the Mexican government, the legal title to any part of the land became vested in the United States at the time of its acquisition of the country, the confirmation operated to vest such title in Eaton, or in Eaton and those other original grantees whose rights had not been forfeited under the Mexican government. We think that Congress has decided that the interest of Eaton as assignee and ■ legal representative of Fernandez, existed up to the time of confirmation; but that it has not undertaken to decide as to any other interests that they have or have not continued, having left the question of their continued existence just where it found them under the treaty and their ascertainment to the judicial department of the government. The position of appellees therefore that this is a grant de novo is tenable only so far as the confirmation may be operative as a conveyance or quitclaim to Eaton and the grantees who had not forfeited, of the legal title of the United States passed to it from the Mexican government and acquired by the latter government from those original grantees who might have forfeited thereunder. Having reached the conclusion that the effect of the act of Congress was to adjudicate that title had vested in the grantees under the Mexican government, subject to the possibility of forfeiture prior to the acquisition of the country by the United States it logically follows that any change in the condition of that title can not be presumed but must be proved. A status once shown to exist is held to continue until proof of a change is adduced. It is clear therefore that anyone asserting that such a change has taken place must present evidence of the fact.
6 We are thus brought to a consideration of the question as to whether this record contains any evidence'of such a forfeiture as is claimed by the appellees. The Supreme Court of the United States has decided that no forfeiture can happen or be authorized for any act or fault after the treaty. U. S. v. Sutter, 21 How. 178. We are concerned therefore only with the question of forfeiture under the Mexican government, appellees contending that, all interests except that of Domingo Fernandez had been so forfeited. The law is well settled that forfeiture of such right and title may only be shown by denouncement or some official proceeding equivalent thereto. Appellees argue that the petition of Fernandez addressed to the political chief in 1829, and the direction of the governor thereon, constitute such a proceeding. Fernandez complained that his associates (“a list of which;” he says, “I do not accompany for your information on account of its being in the possession of the Justice”) had not worked in cleaning out the Spring, in the construction of ponds and other works, and prayed that they be compelled to do so. Acting thereon, on the same day the governor gave the following direction: “A constitutional justice of this city upon being informed of the claim made by citizen Domingo Fernandez will •cause the individuals of whom he complains to prespnt themselves and in case they do not proceed to cultivate the land they will be immediately excluded from the list and industrious individuals will be substituted in their place who may require lands for cultivation.” Here the record stops; it shows no further action on the part of the government, shows no entry, no dispossession, no reinvestiture of title in anyone else, and no claiming of it on the part of the government for itself or decree whatever. Mere breach of conditions subsequent does not ipso facto effect a reverter of title, until the proper steps are taken to consummate the forfeiture. Ruch v. Rock Island, 97 U. S. 693; Ferris v. Coover, 10 Cal. 589; Hihn v. Peck, 30 Cal. 289. From the evidence in this record it is indisputable that under the Mexican government no forfeiture was ever asserted against those original grantees who went into possession of this grant; and we conclude therefore that their title remained unimpaired at the time of the treaty. Freemont v. U. S., 17 How. 511; Hornsby v. U. S., 10 Wall. 240; Vanderslice v. Hanks, 3 Cal. 43; Merle v. Mathews, 26 Cal. 478. Such is the reasonable conclusion to be derived from the original grant papers which were put in evidence. But if it were possible to put any other construction on them and it were held that the burden was on the appellant to establish the fact that there had been no forfeiture of the interests of those who were placed in possession, yet there is ample proof of such fact in the record introduced by appellant, in the transcript of proceedings had before the surveyor-general at the instance of Eaton from whom appellees deraign title and who were therefore privy in title to. him, to which proceedings before the surveyor-general all persons then having an interest in the property in question were parties. The evidence of the witnesses then taken and which has been included in said transcript and introduced in evidence here is competent evidence in this cause, said witnesses being shown to be dead at the time of the trial of this cause and their evidence having been taken on an investigation duly authorized and in reference to the subject-matter of this suit. The court below, in the findings and conclusions to the contrary to those here announced, was in error.
The appellees, however, rely upon the further defense of the statute of limitations to defeat appellants' action. The confirmation limiting Eaton's title to that derived through Fernandez, this court can not view the deed from which Eaton’s title was derived and upon which the claim is based in any different light than it appears to have been considered by Congress. So long therefore as Eaton and his successors in title deraign their title under the grant, the statute of limitations will not avail them as against any of the cograntees, because at the time of the confirmation Eaton’s relation to them was that of a cotenant, and his possession was as much on their behalf as his own. Therefore if ap-pellees continued to claim under the confirmation, or claimed under the deed from Domingo Fernandez to Eaton until it was placed of record in 1886, four years prior to the institution of this suit, they may not assail or dispute the common title. In order that appellees may sustain, their claim of adverse possession under the statute, it must appear from the record that such a state of facts has been established as constituted either actual or constructive ouster of one cotenant by another, and a ripening thereafter of title in them under the statute. Tracing appellees’ claim of adverse possession, we find they contend, first, that the deed from Fernandez to Eaton, dated January 20, 1851 (recorded in 1886) conveyed the entire grant; that Eaton thereunder went into possession thereof, and that Eaton and Laughlin, his successor in title, held the grant adversely to appellants for more than ten years prior to the bringing of this suit. This contention, so far as it is based upon the deed of 1851, is not borne out by the record. The general description in the deed from Fernandez to Eaton of “all that tract or parcel of land known as the lands of Pueblo of San Cristobal,” is limited by the specific description therein, which is conceded to- be that portion of the grant embraced within the first survey, or about a third part only of the whole. The court will not presume that Fernandez intended to convey more than he thought he owned, and Eaton himself testified that he claimed no more than the deed from Fernandez to him purported to convey. Eaton’s deed of 1874 to Laughlin conveys: “That certain portion of the grant made to Domingo Fernandez by the Mexican authorities,” and Eaton in delivering possession to Laughlin, delivered possession of only that portion of the grant ;so embraced within the so-called first survey, and Laugh-lin’s lessee, Wiley, testified that he received possession as such lessee from Eaton (Eaton having held after deeding for nearly two years as Laughlin’s agent), in 1876, of this surveyed part of the grant, and that as Laugh-lin’s lessee he neither held nor claimed any other possession up to 1888. Even if this possession were sufficient to constitute an adverse possession against appellants, which we need not and do not here decide, it can not be held to have extended to any other portion of the grant than that within the first survey. But appellees further trace their alleged adverse possession of the grant and particularly to the remainder of the grant by claiming under Eaton’s, possession, followed by Gilder-sleeve’s possession, under Eaton’s deed to him in 1878, purporting to convey the-entire grant, and Laughlin’s possession under Gilder-sleeve’s deed to him in 1890, which latter deed purported to convey that portion of the grant not theretofore conveyed to Laughlin by Eaton. There is no evidence whatever in the record to show that Eaton prior to 1874, when he deeded to Laughlin, ever had possession of any portion of the grant except that which fell within the first, survey; nor indeed is there any evidence that he claimed ■ to have any larger possession until he made the deed to-Gildersleeve in 1878, purporting to convey thereby the-entire grant as described in the act of juridical possession. Assuming for the purposes of a decision of this-case, that this deed is a sufficient act on Eaton’s part to constitute ouster of his cotenants, the question arises whether the possession thereunder up to April, 1890, and the possession of his successor, Laughlin, from then until suit instituted, has been of such a character as to-extinguish the title of the cograntees and to vest in Laughlin an indefeasible title under the statute. The court below found as a matter of law that it did; in effect thereby adjudicating that by virtue of Gilder-sleeve’s possession for more than ten years, a title had been acquired to a tract of land covering -in extent over eighty-one thousand acres. Appellees however, having already set up a different claim of adverse possession-under Laughlin, who entered by virtue of Eaton’s deed to him, they would seem to be here claiming under Gil-dersleeve’s adverse possession only that part of the grant not theretofore occupied by Laughlin. Our conclusion, as to these claims covers both aspects.
All of the testimony in this voluminous record offered by appellees in support of this claim of adverse possession by Gildersleeve we quote. Mr. Gildersleeve testified :
“The interest I acquired by purchase from Eaton was uninclosed and the exact extent of it at that time unknown, as a question of a’resurvey of the grant was then pending before the Land Department of the United States; a resurvey was ordered and made in 1879, and completed in that year; from that time until the time I conveyed to Laughlin, the portion of the grant so conveyed by me to him has remained uninclosed; at different times between 1879 and 1880 from the time I sold to him, I have leased portions of the grant and had parties in possession for me ... I leased a portion of it at one time to Jose de la Cruz Chavez, and at another time to Romulo Martinez; I employed Manuel Robledo in 1886 to take possession of it and to keep off herds of sheep and cattle and I had two or. three other parties employed at different times between 1880 and 1888. I don’t recall their names now. . . I gave them (Jose de la Cruz Chavez and Romulo Martinez) permission, at different times to herd cattle and sheep on the .portion of the grant that I purchased, and also to lamb sheep at some of the wateringplaces on the grant. I didn’t see them there but they came afterwards and settled for the rental. . . . He (Manuel Robledo) was instructed by me to keep herds of sheep and cattle off the grant and reported to me from time to time that he was doing so. I paid him. ... At the time I purchased from Mr. Eaton (1878) until I sold to Mr. Laughlin (1890) I was on the land perhaps an average of once a year; sometimes I would stay a day or two; there may have been several years that I was not there at all. I can not now recall the dates of my being there, nor the length of time I remained at my different visits. . . . My recollection is that he (Manuel Robledo) was employed by me in 1886, in the summer and fall, about six months.”
Appellees failed to call as witnesses in corroboration of Gildersleeve, any of the parties referred to by him as his agents in possession, but appellants called Manuel Robledo who corroborated appellee, Gildersleeve, in part, as follows:
“Q. Do you know the property known as the San Cristobal or Eaton Grant? A. I know the grant of San Cristobal which Mr. Wilder (Wiley) was taking care of, and where Mr. Eaton lived before. Q. State whether or not at any time, you acted as agent for anyone with reference to that property or any portion thereof? A. Yes, I acted .as agent as an employee of Mr. Charles H. Gildersleeve, watching the property so that no trespassers would enter. I put those notices on the grant so as to keep trespassers away; my best recollection and belief is that they were signed with three names, Gilder-sleeve, Catron and Laughlin were signed to them. Mr. Gildersleeve paid for .the services.”
It is also shown by Gildersleeve’s testimony that in 1879 when he visited the grant, he made his headquarters at the residence of Nicolas Pino, one of the appellants, whose Stinking Spring ranch, house and some other improvements are admitted to be within the limits of the grant, and admitted to have been Pino’s residence since late in the sixties. Gildersleeve further testified that Pino asserted to him that he claimed he had purchased for account of himself and Mr Catron, appellant, some of the interests of the parties named in the act of possession of August 21, 1827, and that Pino exhibited to him, Gildersleeve, some deeds purporting to convey to him, Pino, the interests of some of the parties named in the act of possession of 1827; he further testified that appellant, Catron, had told him in 1879, or about that time, that he, Catron and Pino, claimed interests in the grant; he also testified that he proposed, that if Nicolas Pino and Ambrosio Pino would cause the lands they claimed to own within the grant to be surveyed, he, Gil-dersleeve, would pay the expense of the survey and give them a deed for it; that only one piece of land had ever been surveyed; that he refused to give Ambrosio Pino a deed for the property until he, and Nicolas Pino should cause a survey to be made of all the other lands they were claiming within the grant. “Q. Did they fever do this? A. No.”- By appellees’ witnesses Sylvester Davis, Jose Manuel Sandoval and Robert Stanfield, they have themselves established the fact that Pino, appellant, continued uninterruptedly to occupy his Stinking Springs ranch, house and other improvements, which were conceded to be upon the grant and which were identified by Gildersleeve in his testimony, from the year 1869 or 1870 up to the date of the giving of their testimony in this cause in 1895, and that appellant Pino pastured and grazed his live stock during all of said time over the whole of said grant and tract of land which was not cultivated or enclosed.
Citation of authorities is not necessary to show that possession to operate as a bar under the statute must be open, visible, notorious, continuous and adverse. We cannot find that the character of Gildersleeve’s possession meets any requirements of the law. He is not shown to have exercised for any period of time dominion over the whole grant, nor to have occupied any particular locality on the grant for a single day during the entire period of his claim of possession nor to have placed any improvements upon the property. His evidence taken most strongly in his favor shows only what has been characterized by the authorities as a roving possession, and such a possession is ineffectual to create a bar. There being no evidence in the record to uphold the findings ■of the court below, upon which it based its conclusion of law that the defense of the statute of limitations was «satisfactorily sustained, the judgment must for this further error be reversed.
It appears from Gildersleeve’s evidence and from ■the deeds in evidence that the property in question was purchased at a tax sale on June 16, 1885, by one George 0. Preston, who in so doing acted as the agent of Gil-•dersleeve, the purchase, however, being made in his own name. Gildersleeve, as he testifies, paid the amount of the purchase money, and Preston assigned the certificate of sale given to him to Gildersleeve prior to the expiration of three years after the day of sale, which is the time given by the statute for redemption. It also appears from the record that Gildersleeve, at the time of said sale for taxes, and at the time said Preston assigned the certificate of sale to him, was the owner by purchase and conveyance to him of the original interests of one or more of the said twenty-six original grantees of the entire grant, and that said conveyances to him of the said interests in the entire grant were of record in the records of deeds and conveyances in Santa Fe county,, where the land in question was situate, and that the said Gildersleeve was at the time of the said sale for taxes, ánd at the time of the said assignment by Preston of the certificate of said sale, to- him, Gildersleeve, an owner of an undivided interest in the whole of said tract of land, excepting the small allotments made in sever-alty to the said twenty-six'grantees. By the property-returned for taxes on which said sale was made, and which is in evidence, it appears that the property was-not returned for taxation by anyone, nor "in the name-of anyone, nor against “unknown owners,” as it should' have been under and in accordance with section 4041 of' the Compiled Laws;.but it appears thereby that it was. simply an assessment of “the undivided two-thirds (2-3) of the Eaton grant,” which was not a legal assessment-in any manner; besides, it appears from the evidence-that appellant, Pino, then an owner of an interest in said property, and now deceased, had for the same time-in his own name, made a return for taxation of his interest in the said entire tract of land which had been accepted and the taxes thereon paid by him. Gilder-sleeve, it appears, after the expiration of three years-, from the date of the purchase by Preston for him, under the assignment from Preston, applied for and on December 3,1888, obtained a deed of conveyance to him of the: said land, as sold for non-payment of taxes. Not only was the assessment under wliicb Gildersleeve purchased void, but Ms deed-was also void; and even if it were not, the payment of taxes by Gildersleeve in that way on a sale and assignment to him of the certificate of sale, while he was the owner of an undivided interest in the property so attempted to be conveyed to him, operated as a redemption of the property from the tax sale and as a satisfaction of the taxes and a discharge of the land from the operation of the sale on behalf of all the other owners as well as himself. Certainly the payment by appellant Pino, of the taxes on his interest, would have at least as much force and effect as the purchase and conveyance to Gildersleeve under . the assessment through which he purchased. It also appears by the evidence of plaintiff Catron, that Catron also actually paid to the collector of the county the taxes for which that sale to Preston was made. It is not necessary, however, to decide which evidence, that of Catron or of Gil-dersleeve, should be given most credit, for the reason that it is well established by numerous authorities, that the payment of taxes by an owner of an undivided interest before the right of redemption has expired, either for the purpose of redeeming or for the purpose of having the certificate of sale assigned to him, so as to get the title in his own name, is simply a redemption or payment of the taxes for and on behalf of all of his associates in title. And as it . clearly appears of record in this case that. Gildersleeve was at the time Of the said sale for taxes and at the time of the assignment of said certificate of sale to him, and also at the time he paid the amount of the purchase price, which was less than three years from the date of the sale, an owner of an undivided interest in said property, such payment is held by all the authorities to be simply a payment of the taxes and a redemption from the sale for taxes for the benefit of himself and all of his co-owners in the title, and the conveyance subsequently made to him thereof was of no force, effect or validity. Blackwell on Tax Title, 571-2; Lewis v Robinson, 10 Watts 354; Williams v. Gray, 3 Me. 207-8; Brown v. Hogle, 30 Ill. 119; Dubois v. Campu, 34 Mich. 360; Paige v. Webster, 8 Mich. 263; Butler v. Porter, 13 Micb. 292; and other cases cited in Blackwell on Tax Title.
As a consequence of tbe foregoing tbe conveyance by Gildersleeve to defendant Laugblin, wbicb purports to convey tbe entire property in question is only colorable so far as it undertakes to convey any interest except sucb as Gildersleeve at tbe time possessed, independent of the said conveyance from tbe said tax sale, said deed not including any of tbe interests shown to be tbe property of other grantees, their heirs or assigns, who bad sold to appellants Pino or Catron, or who bad not sold and conveyed at all.
The deeds of conveyance under $aid tax sale to Gildersleeve and of said Gildersleeve to Laugblin having been put of record, are clouds upon tbe title of appellant, and they and their records should be cancelled, and tbe appellant Catron’s title should be relieved from said cloud placed upon it, be being ndw tbe owner of tbe interest of Pino, wbicb tbe record shows was conveyed to him after tbe commencement of this suit; and said appellant Catron’s title should be quieted and set at rest and tbe said appellee Laugblin decreed to be barred and forever estopped from having or claiming any right or title to the said premises except so far as be may be able to show himself entitled to those interests in tbe grant and tbe allotments of cultivable land thereto pertaining other than tbe nineteen twenty-sixths (19-26ths) parts and one twelfth of one twenty-sixth (1-12 of 1-26) part of the said grant and tbe allotments of cultivable land pertaining thereto claimed and alleged to be owned by appellant Catron, and further except so far as be may be able to assert title by adverse possession to any part or all of said portion of tbe grant lying within tbe so-called first survey thereof.
Tbe judgment of the court below is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to the court below to proceed therein in accordance with the law as expressed in this opinion.
The above opinion was written by Crumpacker, A. J., while he was on the bench, and the same is adopted by this court as its opinion.
William J. Mills, Chief Justice.