Trenier v. Stewart

MANNING, J.- —

This is an action at law, brought by ap-pellees to recover four-fifths of a parcel of- land on Mon Louis Island; which island, as it is called, is a triangular tract of over 14,000 acres of land in tbe lower part of Mobile county, bounded east by tbe bay of Mobile, north-west by tbe narrow watercourse, or “ cut-off,” called Fowl river, and south by tbe waters of tbe sound which separates tbe mainland, of wbicb Mon Louis Island is a part, from Dauphin Island. Tbe plaintiffs claim title aspuchasersfrom tbe heirs of Nicholas Baudin, deriving it from a French concession formerly made to him by Bienville, as lieutenant of tbe Xing, and Dartiguette, as Xing’s counsellor, in 1710, and approved and ratified, in 1713, by La Motbe Cadillac, governor of Louisiana, officers of tbe highest rank and chief authority in tbe French settlements then recently made on tbe lower part of tbe Mississippi river, and in tbe vicinity of Mobile bay. Pains, it seems, were taken to have tbis concession presented to, and recognized by tbe new authorities of tbe colony, British, Spanish, and American, tbat subsequently exercised rule in the territory. It was presented to the officials of tbe United States, appointed to receive notice, and make registration of such claims, twice : once, to Wm. Crawford, commissioner under tbe acts of 1812 and 1813, and *464again, in 1828, to John B. Hazard and John H. Owen, of tbe land-office of the United States, at St. Stephens. Plaintiffs say, that this concession, and the subsequent recognition thereof, and the confirmation of it by the second section of the act of congress of March 2d, 1829 (ch. 40. p. 358), operated to make it effectual as a grant of the entire tract of land known as Mon Louis Island. The defendants below (appel-ants here) deny this ; and they claim the land in controversy by a title derived from the heirs of one Henry Francois, to whom, they assert, it was granted by operation of the third section of the act of congress of May 8th, 1822, by reason of said Henry’s inhabitation and. cultivation of it before 1819, and by a patent issued in 1870, which was founded on a land-office certificate dated in 1869. The documentary evidence of title on both sides, excepting this land-office certificate, is fully set out in the report of this case (which was here on a former occasion) in 49 Ala. Rep. 492, ei seq., to which report we refer. It is admitted that the proper parties are before the court; and the dispute is only in regard to the validity or operation of the grants and documentary evidence, as conveyances of the particular property in controversy.

The case now is made to differ from what it was when here before, only by evidence fuller and more complete, on the side of plaintiffs below, that the land occupied, claimed, and used by the family and descendants of Nicholas Baudin, was Mon Louis Island, and that it took its name (of course, a considerable time after the grant was made) from a son of said Nicholas, named Louis Baudin, who lived and died there over sixty years ago, and who seems to have been always called in the family, “ Mon Louis,” whence the name Mon Louis Island, or My Lewis’ Island ; while on the part of defendants below, and in order to show that the land described in the concession to Baudin as “ the land of Grosse Point ” was not on Mon Louis Island, considerable testimony was adduced, to show that there was land somewhere west of Fowl river, formerly called Grand Point, and sometimes, perhaps, Gros Point, both meaningBig Point; though it is not shown that any member of the Baudin family was ever upon it. The testimony of surveyors was also introduced, to prove that the land embraced by the concession to Baudin could not be surveyed by the description of it in that instrument, or a starting point be found for such a survey, and that its identity with Mon Louis Island could not, therefore, be established.

The following is the description in, and a part of the concession : “ To Mr. Nicholas Baudin, the land of Grosse Point, to begin at and run along the course of Fowl river, till it *465reaches tbe Oysters (Oyster Pass) wbicb separate Massacre Island from the mainland, in order to raise cattle thereon. Of the said land, we have made to him, for and in the name of his majesty, the entire cession and transfer, with its circumstances and dependencies, in order that he, his children, heirs, or assigns, may enjoy and use it henceforward and forever, without being liable to be troubled and disturbed in the peaceable possession thereof.” This was done in November, 1710, more than one hundred and sixty years ago. Of the names used in the description of the property, none remain to designate the objects to which they were then applied, or have passed down as such to any witness belonging to the present generation, except only that of Fowl river. This is well known as a channel, too narrow and tortuous for navigation by vessels of large size, beginning at its upper end in the west side of the bay of Mobile, and extending south of west to the waters of the sound, between the coast of the mainland and the outlying islands in the Gulf of Mexico*- But there is no land in that vicinity known in our day as “ Grosse Point,” nor any pass known as “ The Oysters,” or “ Oyster Pass,” nor any island known as “ Massacre Island.” One of the witnesses, it is true, says that Massacre Island was west of Dauphin Island. But this testimony cannot avail much in determining what island it was that bore that name, evidently only for a short time, nearly a century before the witness was born. The most satisfactory and important evidence on the subject has been hitherto entirely overlooked.

History informs us that the name first given to Dauphin Island was “ Massacre Island.” It was named, probably, by Bienville himself, since his discovery on it of a large quantity of human bones was the occasion of its being called 'Massacre Island. He made it for a short time the headquarters of the colony that he brought to the Bay of Mobile, a few years before the date of his concession to Baudin.— See 1 Pickett’s History of Ala. pp. 185 and 191; 8 Bancroft’s History of U. S. ch. 21. A key is thus afforded for the interpretation of that document. Since Massacre Island was the land well known, almost from that time to the present, as Dauphin Island, which extends horn the front of Mobile Bay westwardly as far as the mouth of Fowl river ; the waters called in the concession “ The Oysters (or Oyster Pass) which separate M&ssaci'e Island from the mainland;” are identified with the sound which extends from the mouth of Fowl river, eastwardly, into Mobile Bay; and by bringing the river boundary down to the waters of this sound, the land it defines is also brought down to the sound, and must lie on the east side of the river, because the mainland on the *466west side of it, and bounded by it, ceases far north of the pass that “ separates Massacre Island from the mainland; ” the only land on the west side, extending toward this pass, being some small sandy islands. We thus have a boundary for the land embraced in the concession, which begins with Fowl river at the Bay of Mobile, and, running with it south-westwardly and southwardly, reaches a tract of water that stretches back again eastwardly into the broad expanse of the same bay, which bay itself completes the boundary around the land in question. In other words, a point of the mainland, on the west side of the mouth of Mobile Bay, which point is very large (gros) when compared ivith the narrow and sharp point on the opposite mainland where Fort Morgan now stands, and is bounded on one side by Mobile Bay, and on another by the waters of the Gulf of Mexico coming in between Dauphin Island and the mainland,"and forming (disregarding indentations) almost a right angle at the mouth of the bay, is out off by the narrow channel of Fowl river, extending from one of these sheets of water to the other, to constitute “the land of Grosse Point” granted to Nicholas Baudin, his heirs, and assigns; a body of land which, seen correctly, as it was seen by the parties to that instrument when it was made, is the Mon Louis Island of a later and the present day. The concession granting it shows that it was executed at Fort Louis, which was then the headquarters of the colony, and was situated a few miles north of Fowl river, at the mouth of Dog river, and on the same west side of Mobile Bay. — 1 Pickett’s History of Ala. Of course, the surveyors, having knowledge of the names that were afterwards changed and disappeared, and that Massacre Island was the same as Dauphin Island, would have no difficulty in surveying the land described in the concession. As surveyed in 1831, by order of the government of the United States for Alexis D. Durand, who, as the evidence shows, claimed through the grant to Baudin, it was found to contain 14,586 acres, which is near the quantity of the claim, 14,360 arpents, as presented for registration to Crawford in 1814 or 1815, and again to Hazard and Owen in 1827 or 1828. The foregoing considerations make it more certain than does even the residence, births, and deaths, of the family Baudin, on this tract, that there is no mistake in reference to its identity. By the fact of its being an island, it was separated from the public domain, and no survey was necessary for the ascertainment of it.

It would seem that an instrument so complete in itself as the concession is, so solemnly executed and ratified, so frequently produced to, and recognized by the authorities in *467tbe colony of the several foreign states that successively acquired dominion over it; granting a body of land so distinctly separated by natural boundaries from the public domain, and so long and continuously occupied by the family and descendants of the grantee, — should certainly be considered confirmed by the treaty through which the United States acquired the country. If it is not, then there is, besides, the express confirmation of it, by section two of the act of congress of March 2d, 1829 (Ch.XL); this grant to Baudin being the subject of special report No. 2, referred to in said section, — and the land being described in the caption of the report as “ Grosse Point, or 1’ Isle Mon Louis, estimated to contain about 14,360 arpents.”

This confirmation in 1829 being “ a relinquishment forever on the part of the United States, of any claim whatever ” to the land known as Mon Louis Island, defined by well-known natural boundaries, is as effectual as a patent to convey all the legal title that was in the United States. No kind of title was conveyed, on the other hand, to the appellants, or those from whom they claim, prior to the date of the land-office certificate of 1869, on which the patent of 1870 was issued. There was no previous equity, as against the United States even, that gave to Francois, or his heirs, any right to the land he cultivated and inhabited. The posture of their case was this: The register and receiver reported Francois in the list of those who had inhabited and cultivated, before the year 1813, a parcel of land in the territory ceded by France to the United States, without having any claim thereto from any source; and in their reports they said: “It is believed that some of the settlers are upon lands claimed by other persons under written evidence of title; but it is impossible to particularize them, as so few maps or plats accompany the claims.” The persons mentioned in this list as settlers, or heirs of settlers, were permitted to make application by having their names registered, for the lands so cultivated and inhabited; and congress, in the statute relied on (of May 8th, 1822, ch. 128, section 3), declared they should “be entitled to a grant for the lands so claimed or settled on, as a donationprovided, the quantity to any one should not exceed 640 acres, and that no claim should be confirmed where the quantity was not ascertained, and report made thereon, prior to the 25th day of July, 1820. This was the mere offer of a gratuity. There being no right in the heirs of Francois to be confirmed, no land designated by the statute granted to him, he had no color of title, until the land-office certificate was issued to him in 1869; and such title as was conveyed by the patent issued thereupon, *468was made, by the express words of that document, subject to any just claim of any other person thereto, that was derived from the United States, or from either the British, French, or Spanish authorities.

Without saying more, we concur in the conclusion reached by our predecessors when this case was here before. By the documentary evidence in it, considered in view of the historical and geographical facts of which the court must take notice, the legal title to the land in controversy is shown to be vested in the appellees. This' view of the case is conclusive. All the numerous special charges to the jury, except one or two, that were asked of the circuit judge on behalf of appellants, are based on a theory of the case not consistent with the documentary evidence, and were asked with a view to have that evidence so construed by the jury as to invalidate the title it established. This was not within their province; and the charges were properly refused. They could only have confused and embarrassed the jury, instead of affording them aid to a correct verdict.

There was no error prejudicial to appellants in the rulings of the Circuit Court. Let the judgment be affirmed.