Opinion of the Court by
Napton, Judge.This was an action of ejectment, for 800 arpens of land, lying in the county of St. Charles. Judgment being against the plaintiff below, he appeals to this court.
The circuit court found a special verdict, which sets out the following facts:
In the year 1806, Edward Hempstead, as agent for the inhabitants of Ihe town of St. Charles, filed a notice with the recorder of land titles of the claim of the inhabitants of said town to fourteen thousand arpens of land, as commons, which notice was recorded. This notice setforth their claim, as under a concession from Don Zenon Trudeau in 1797, and from Charles Dehault Delassus in 1801 and 1804.
With this notice Mr. Hempstead filed and had recorded sundry documents:
1. A petition from Charles Tayon, dated 11th January, 1797,'to the Lieut. Governor Trudeau for a tract of land fronting on the crooked swamp in the low prairie, and extending to .the Missouri, adjoining on one' side to Antoine Janis, and on the other side to lands not heretofore granted.
2. An answer of said Trudeau, which states that said land petitioned for “being in the vicinity of the village of St-Charles, and of various farms in the prairie of its dependency which would have to go a great deal further to procure wood, said tract shall remain, as well as all others adjoining either in ascending or descending the Missouri, and which have been asked by sundry persons addressed to us by Mr. Tayon, to the Royal Domain, and for the common use of the said village of St. Charles, and for the lands already granted in the prairie, and to be granted hereafter; all which Mr. Tayon shall make known to the inhabitants, and espe- , eially to those who have asked for land and whose petitions *515I herewith return.” This letter was dated January 23,1797.
3. The proceedings of the villagers of St. Charles, at a solemn meeting at their government house, in which they resolve to enlarge their commons, and they fix the boundaries. Having determined this matter, it was further agreed, that it was proper that the result of their deliberations should be communicated to the Lieut. Governor, and that he be supplicated to preserve to the said inhabitants of St. Charles •of Missouri, their upper and lower commons, in their whole and entire state, and they will bind themselves to enclose the same as they have done heretofore.” This paper was signed by all the inhabitants.
4. The answer of Charles Dehault Delassus, the then Lieu. Governor, is as follows: “St. Louis of Illinois, 26th February, 1801. All concessions and augmentations of property must be granted by the intendant of these provinces, on a petition, which is to be presented by those persons claiming lands; but if the common of the inhabitants of St. Charles is not sufficient for their cultivation, we do permit them provisionally to enlarge the same according to their wishes, without insuring to them the right of property, which they are to apply for as above mentioned, and the provisional lines of the said augmentation shall be drawn by Captain Antoine Soulard, Surveyor of Upper Louisiana, who is the only person authorized to survey under our orders. It being well understood that nothing shall be done to the prejudice of any person. Signed Carlos Dehault Delays us.”
5. A letter from Delassus; dajed 23rd Feb’y 1804, to Mr, Charles Tayon, commandant of the post of St. Charles, rebuking said Tayon sharply, for not communicating to hin: the petition of the villagers of the 27th April 1801, asking a survey .of the commons, and referring to his decree oí 26th Feb. 1S01, by which he says, “the augmentation therein mentioned is granted to them,” he proceeds to direct Mr Tayon to notify persons who have surveys made in the commons asked for, of his intention that the land should be granted as common, and ordering him to take the necessarj measures to have the whole surveyed according to his de *516cree. This letter is certified to be a copy of the original; by James Mackay, and that the same was presented to him, (Mackay) by the citizens of note of the village of St. Charles, whilst he was commandant of said village.
6. The petition of the villagers of St. Charles to the board of commissioners on land claims for Upper Louisiana, in which they ask a confirmation of 14000 arpens, and beg the board, if it should be thought that their powers did not extend to cases of this kind, to make the proper representations to Congress, to enable them to get a confirmation.— This petition is dated Feb. 3,1806. The certificate of the recorder is appended to these papers.
. 7. A plat of survey of the 14000 arpens, to which was the following certificate: “I Don Antoine Soulard, particular surveyor of the establishment of Upper Louisiana, certify that there was bounded, measured and-with the approbation, and in presence of Messieurs the Syndics of the town of St. Charles of Missouri, a majority of the inhabitants of said town assisting, the land which is designated on the preceding plat of survey, conformably to the petition which they made on the 18th January 1801, and to the decree of Mr. Lieu. Governor, which provides that they shall be put in possession provisionally by means of the plat and certificate thereof of the quantity of land necessary for a common of extent sufficient to answer the people of that establishment, and having calculated the extent, after having performed the operations, it resulted in containing 14000 arpens superficie, measured by the perch of the city of Paris of eighteen lineal feet in length of the same city, according to the field measure of this province, which land situated on the left shore of the river Missouri, and about twenty-one miles north west of this town of St. Louis is bounded as follows: (here follows the boundaries,) which is done in virtue of the decree of Mr. the Lieu. Governor, and sub-delegate of the royal domain, Don Carlos Dehault Delassus, of date 26th Feb’y 1801, and that all the matter above referred to may appear, I give the present with the preceding plat of suryey drawn in conformity with the labors periormed by the Lieu. Surveyor Don James Mackay of date of the 27th *517and of the days following of the month of February of the present year, which conforms to the minutes which I authenticate. St. Louis of the Illinois on the 2nd March 1801, signed Antoine Soulard.” I Antoine Soulard, particular surveyor of Upper Louisiana, certify that the preceding plat and certificate agree in the whole with the originals, which remain deposited in the archives of the office of survey in my charge, to which I refer, signed, &c.
The special verdict finds further, that certain proceedings were had on this claim before the board of commissioners, which proceedings are- set forth on the record. From these it appears that the testimony of some witnesses .was taken, which conduced to establish the importance of the said commons for the convenience of the villagers of St. Charles. It also appears that the claim was rejected by the commissioners. The verdict also finds certain documents to be correct translations of the original, extracted from the records of the recorder of land titles of the United States. These documents are, 1st. A petition from Isadoro Lacroix, a merchant of Michilimackinack, to Zenon Trudeau, Lieu. Governor, dated 17th January 1797. This petitioner prays for a concession of a lot near St. Charles and a piece of land at Marais Croché, where he desired to locate. Mr. Tayon writes, in relation to this petition, to the Lieu. Governor, that the lot asked by Lacroix was on the King’s domain, but that the land at Marais Croché “has been reserved for the use of the lands in the prairie of the jurisdiction of St. Charles.”
2. A petition from Don Antoine Gautier, to the Lieu. Governor, dated Nov. 29; 1796, praying a concession of land :at two places, one at a place called Clear Weather Swamp, ■ and another of ten arpens front on the borders of the same, ■running so as to join the Marais Croché. The Lieu. Governor Trudeau thereupon orders the surveyor, Antoine Sou-lard, to put said Gautier in possession. But an order of Don Antoine Soulard, dated 17 January 1803, appears, in ■which he states in consequence of expected difficulties between this petitioner and the inhabitants of St. Charles and Portage des Sioux, and in conformity to official instructions given him by Delassus, then Lieu. Governor, Don James *518Mackay as his deputy is ordered to measure the same quantity of land mentioned in the petition of Gautier on some other vacant place of the King’s domain. The special verdict finds the following facts as admitted. “Said Bird claims ' the land in dispute under the inhabitants of St. Charles, and also by deed from the heirs of Auguste Francois Giguare; Defendant was in possession at commencement of this suit, claiming title to six hundred arpens under said Giguare. It is admitted that whatever title one Pierre Lord ever had in said six hundred arpens is now vested in Matthew Kerr, under whom defendant holds. It is admitted that whatever title the inhabitants of St. Charles had in the premises in dispute is now in the plaintiff. It is admitted that whatever title Auguste Francis Giguare died seized of, is now in plaintiff”
The court further finds a certain ordinance enacted by the corporation of St. Charles, providing for a conveyance to Gustavus A. Bird, and a conveyance made pursuant thereto. It is also found, that the premises mentioned in the declaration are within the limits of the St. Charles commons as surveyed by Mackay in 1804.
The special verdict also finds, that on the 15th day of December 1808, James Piper filed and recorded in the office of the recorder of land titles, a notice and affidavit, setting forth said Piper’s claim to 800 arpens, under a concession from Delassus, 14th May 1800, and cultivation in the years 1801,2 and 3, and avering that the notice of the said claim had been presented to the recorder Donaldson, about one month before the first board of commissoners commenced their session, and was rejected by said recorder, because no plat of survey accompanied the same. With the said notice and affidavit, said Piper filed and recorded a petition of Auguste Francis Giguare, praying for 800 arpens of land upon such part of the King’s domain as shall be most convenient to his interests, which petition was dated 12th May 1800, and filed and recorded a concession by the Lieu. Governor on 14th May 1800, conceding the petitioner the land he asked for, so that it prejudiced no one else, and ordering the surveyor to put the petitioner in possession of the quan*519tity of land he asked, in some vacant part of his Majesty’s domain, and to make out a plat of survey, so that petitioner might make out his title, &c. Piper also filed and had recorded first, a deed from Giguare to one Pierre Lord, dated Dec. 4, 1804, and second, a deed from said Lord to Piper dated 5th Dec., 1804.
The board of commissioners rejected this claim in 1811. In 1813, the recorder of land titles, acting as commissioner, took up this claim, and proof was made to him that some improvements were made on this tract in 1803, and in 1815 this claim was reported by said recorder for confirmation.
It is found, that on the 4th of December 1804, Francis Giguare was not 25 years old, but probably about 19—that thirty-five years since, one Durocher lived upon the land in dispute, and after his death Louis Barada lived there, and after Louis Barada died, Antoine Barada lived upon'the land until he was turned out by Matthew Kerr, about two years since—that for the last thirty-five years, James Piper has not lived on said land, but lived about two, (or ten) miles from the land, towards Portage des Sioux, where he lived until his death. The court found, that Louis Barada took possession of said land, having purchased a claim to it under said Durocher, saying he considered it belonging to the commons of St. Charles, but he would risk it; and Antoine Ba-rada, whilst he possessed said land, said it belonged to the commons. The land was surveyed for the first time in 1830.
On this state of facts, the circuit court gave judgment for defendant.
Before enquiring into the legal effect of these documents, it is proper to notice an objection raised to the sufficiency of the special verdict. The court have found that Mr. Hempstead, as agent for the inhabitants of St. Charles, filed sundry documents in the office of the recoi’der of land titles, which documents are not declared to be genuine, but are merely set forth on the record. The act of Feb. 1, 1839, concerning evidence, provides, “that all grants and concessions of land, all warrants, orders, plats and certificates of survey, made and signed by the proper officer of the French or Spanish government, which shall have been filed in the *520office of the recorder of land titles by virtue of any law of the United States, being certified by such recorder to have been recorded in his office, shall be received in evidence without further proof.” By the act of Congress of March 2, 1805, all persons,having grants, or incomplete titles under the French or Spanish government, were required to file their concessions, surveys and other evidences of title with the recorder of land titles, before the first of March 1806. The time was extended by subsequent acts of Congress.— These documents were found by the court to have been filed in the proper place, and were therefore under our act of assembly admissible in evidence without 'further proof than what appears on this record. It would seem to be a strained interpretation of this verdict to suppose that the court, whose duty it was to find facts, should have intended to leave the question as to the genuineness of these documents to mere inference. Not, however, being entirely satisfied on this point, we waive the further consideration of it for the present, and proceed to enquire into the legal effect of these documents, supposing them to be well found.
The record presents two separate claims of title, first the title of plaintiff under the inhabitants of St. Charles, and second, plaintiff’s title under Francis Giguare.
We will consider the title of the commons first. It ap* peáis, then, that in 1796 and 1797, various persons petitioned the Lieu. Governor Trudeau, for concession of land in the neighbourhood of St. Charles, and these petitions were all refused, on the ground that the Lieu. Governor intended an indefinite quantity of land in that neighborhood should be reserved for the use of the villagers of St. Charles and its dependencies in the prairie. It appears also that the inhabitants of St. Charles in 1801, in solemn meeting, resolved on enlai-ging their commons, and fixed upon the limits of the commons so enlarged, and petitioned Delassus, the then Lieu. Governor, for a concession of the entire commons. Delas-sus in his answer to this petition, makes a provisional grant, not pretending to assure them the right of property, which he declares in his decree is only in the power of the inten-dant of the provinces. He also directs the surveyor of the *521crown do run out the lines, in accordance with the wishes of the inhabitants. This is accordingly done by Janies Mack-ay in March 1804, and is authenticated by the public surveyor under whom Mackay was deputy.
The act of -the I3th of June 1812, declares that the “rights, titles, and claims, to town or village lots, out lots, common field lots and commons, in, adjoining, and belonging to the several towns or villages of Portage des Sioux, St. Charles &c. which lots have been inhabited, cultivated, or possessed prior to the 20th day of December 1803, shall be and the same are hereby confirmed to the inhabitants of the respective towns or villages aforesaid, according their seve. ral rights in common thereto.”
The only question is whether this act confirmed the claim of the inhabitants of St. Charles to a common of 14000 arjens, and would enable them, and all holding under them, to maintain an ejectment on such title.
It is insisted by the defendant, that the act of 1812 operated to confirm the titles of claimants only where there was a grant from the Spanish Government, or such long use and enjoyments of a specific-quantity of land as would amount to a grant. This position is believed to be correct. But if it is intended by the word ‘grant’ to exclude all inchoate titles, and such concessions as were made by the representative of the Spanish government, and which did not purport to convey all the proprietary rights of the crown, the doctrine appears to be entirely untenable. If the grant from the King of Spain in this case, to the inhabitants of St. Charles, or in any other case, was a complete grant and parted with all his ownership, the rights of the commoners or the rights of au individual, under such a grant, would have been completely protected by the Treaty of 1803 between this Government and France, and no act of Congress would have been necessary to give validity to such claims. The act of 1812 speaks of claims rights and titles, and the object of that act was to divest the United States of all ownership or claim to such property as comes within its provisions. In this case, there was not only a claim to an indefinite quantity of land as far back as 1796, and which was recognized *522by the- proper authorities of that day, but a more distinct and definite claim, set up in 1801, and expressly conceded by the-proper officer, so far as he had authority to make such a-< concessions The • rights of the crown of Spain were reserved in .the concession of Delassus,. and this government acquiring all .the right and ownership which Spain and.-. France ever had, thought proper to relinquish all their interest and confirm the concession of the Spanish commandant. But'this claim-is fixed not merely by a .petition and" concession,-but a survey-made by the proper officer, before-the. actual transfer of. upper Louisianain 1804.1 This claim,,, concession and survey/andall the.documents relatingihereto, were pursuant to the act of -lSOSj filed in the office of the recorder of land titles. It was then not only an existing claim under the Spanish Government, founded on a. concession.from the- representative of the crown, but a claim urged'upon this Government by a compliance with the requisitions of the law, and brought- to the notice of its duly con- • stituted agents. With all these facts appearing • on the re-cords of the Government, and filed in the archives of its own.. functionaries, congress passed'1'the act of 1812, ‘confirming, all claims to commons of certain villages enumerated in the act. - The claim of the inhabitants of St. .Charles to 14000-' arpens of commons, conceded in 1801, by the Spanish officer-' Delassus, and surveyed by the Spanish surveyor Soulard in-1804,-and laid before the Board of commissioners in 1808, - was in the .-opinion of this court confirmed by this act.
The claim of tho inhabitants of the town of St. Charles to the commons adjoining the town, conceded to them by the Lt. Governors of Upper Louisiana in 1797. and 1801, and surveyed by the Surveyor General of 'that province in J8u4, was -confirmed by the act of Congress of June I-3th, IB HI.The objection to the want of a sufficient use?-- of these commons, does not arise when there has been a concession,, and if such an objection could arise, íhere-is, I think, ample, evidence on this record of the use?- established in 1776 and. thenceforward®, was of an indefinite quantity of land, and! if no subsequent acts of the inhabitants and of the Svanish government had reduced the claim to any more certainty than all the land “up and down the Missouri river,” the user, might not have been available any farther than particular limits could have been established by competent evidence,, Butin 1801 the claim and the user were reduced to certainty by a petition, containing a s, ecúl description by metes and bounds, and a consequent survey in 1804.
The rules of the common law are inap-pi ¡cable to the construction of grants and concessions of the royal domain, during the Spanish government of T-pper Louisiana.*523It is contended, however, that if the commons resisted ‘•under the Spanish Government in the inhabitants of St, • Charles, it was in connexion with other persons, owners d -property in the vicinity, and consequently ihe St.' Charles part of the commoners could not alienate any portion of the /.land. This argument appears to be founded on certain expressions used by the Lieu. Governor Trudeau in 1796 and 1797, in refusing to make' concessions of lands, lying within the limits of the commons, to certain petitioners. The replies of Trudeau, to Mr. Tavon, to Lacroix, and to Gautier, speak of St. Charles, and “lands in the prairie of its depen“dency,” or lands in the prairie of the jurisdiction of St. Charles.” The application in 1801 was made by the inhabitants of the town of St. Charles, the concession of Delassus is made to them and to no others, and the act of 1812 confirms the commons to the inhabitants of the towns and villages therein enumerated. If the expressions of Trudeau in 1796 are calculated to convey the idea that certain farms in the vicinity of St. Charles were dependencies on that village, .and as such were entitled to share the privileges of its inhabitants, they only go to show that the occupiers of such farms constituted a portion of the inhabitants of St. Charles, and as such were entitled to a beneficial interest in the grant or confirmation from congress. Be this as it may, the difficulty, if any exists, is entirely foreign to any question properly arising on this record. Who the inhabitants of St, Charles are, and who can take underihat description of persons, is of no consequence to the merits of plaintiff’s title. It remains to be considered, what estate or interest the inhabitants of the town of St. Charles acquired from the King of Spain, or by grant or confirmation from the United States.
On this head, the defendant assumes two positions. First, .that the .right of common, as it existed under the Spanish government, was an incorporeal right, distinct from the fee, and if claimed in this shape will not sustain an action oí ejectment. 'And second, that if claimed-under the act of 1812, as a grant from the United States, its character must be determined by the common law, which clearly could not *524authorize an action. In examining the first proposition, it is clear that the use of terms derived from feudal customs and feudal tenures would be inapplicable and inappropriate. To speak of “fees” and “incorporeal hereditaments,” as applicable to a people, whose usages and laws were foreign to the countries in which the feudal system prevailed, and were i derived from a very different origin, must tend to produce a confusion of ideas. It is to be regretted, that the absence of authorities on this point, leaves the nature of the laws and customs prevalent in Spanish America, somewhat uncertain, and the only sources of information accessible to the court, are such extracts from Spanish compilations as have been engrafted and commented on in various decisions made by the supreme court of the United States.
In the case of a complete grant, of a part of the royal domain, by the crown of Spain, the dominion retained by the King was purely political, and not proprietory. In the case of the St. Charles commons, however, there was no such complete grant, but a- mere concession or inchoate title had been made, and the King of Spain undoubtedly retained so much proprie-tory right as would have , authorised him to restrict or modify, though not, perhaps, entirely to abrogate, the commons. This proprie-tory interest passed to the UnitedStates, and they parted with all their interest by the act of June 13th, 1812.*524It seems to have been the custom with the Kings of France and Spain, to grant to towns and villages a portion of land contiguous thereto, as a common, for the supply of fuel to the commoners, and to furnish pasturage for their cattle, and the King himself could not alienate such commons. Strother v. Lucas, 12 Peter R. 44. New Orleans v. United States, 10 Peters R. 724, 730. A careful examination of the laws and usages of both these countries, led the supreme court of the U. S. to the conclusion that these sovereigns could exercise a certain jurisdiction over these commons, and other places similarly situated, but it was purely a police regulation. New Orleans v. the United States, 10 Peters 7. Indeed, what kind of proprietary interest can we imagine, existing in the crown which is inalienable? The very terms of an absolute dominion imply the power of alienation. The dominion retained by the King of Spain, then, was not proprietary, but purely political—a dominion never severed from the sovereignty of our country, and nowise inconsistent with the absolute ownership of a subject.
It is needless, however, to enter into any minute inquiry,, in relation to the exact nature of the ownership of the commoners, under the Spanish Government. Whether corporeal or incorporeal, it was absolute and allodial; and no fee, according to the feudal understanding of that term, was outstanding in the King or any one else. This is upon the sup*525position of a complete grant, but in the present case there was no such complete grant. A mere concession or inchoate title had been made, and the King of Spain undoubtedly retained so much proprietary right as would have authorized him to restrict or modify, though not perhaps entirely to abrogate, the commons. This proprietary interest passed to the United States, and they parted with all their interest by the act of 1812. The political dominion, if the-phrase be admissible, has passed into the State of Missouri.
If then, under the King of Spain, the rights of the commoners were purely incorporeal, they unite under this government, to that intangible interest the absolute proprietor- . ship, ceded by the United States.
The arguments tojestablish that these commons are inalienable, even by the commoners, I apprehend, are founded on this supposed intangible nature of the right. If the positions which I have advanced be correct, the foundation up' on which these arguments are based, is gone. Indeed the whole argument seems at variance with the spirit of our laws, and contrary to the genius of our political institutions. The general spirit and tendency of our government and laws, no judicial tribunal is at liberty entirely to disregard. A construction which tends to perpetuities, will not be fa-voured. Whilst every thing else is progressive, whilst our most solemn political charters may be altered or abolished by the power which created them, and one generation is denied the power of binding its successors, shall a few French villagers be compelled to stand still in the march of improvement, and abide by a system of customs, which experience and necessity and more enlightened views have taught them to disregard?
It is the opinion of the court, that the legislation of this State may provide the ways and means, by which the inhah itants of St. Charles may dispose of this property. Whether they have done so, in this instance, and whether the law, if such an one exists, has been complied with; is immaterial in this case. The admissions on the record preclud* jhe defendant from questioning the conveyances from the inhabitants of St. Charles to Bird.
*526Entertaining this view of the title under the commons, it becomes useless to examine the titles under Giguare. Piper’s claim was not reported for confirmation until 1815, and if confirmed at all, was not confirmed until 1826. It must yield to a previous confirmation in 1812 of the same land to the inhabitants of St. Charles.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the clerk will enter up judgment for the plaintiff.