Carpenter v. Rannells

Currier, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court

This is an ejectment suit for two hundred arpents of land in township 45, St. Louis county, located under New Madrid certificate of re-location No. 511. This certificate was issued under the act of Congress of February 17, 1815, and supplementary acts, in lieu of lands in New Madrid county which had been injured by earthquakes. The plaintiffs seek to deduce title to the premises in suit through John Butler, who acquired an interest in the New Madrid lands in virtue of a Spanish permission of settlement granted April 16, 1801. This inception of title is conceded. The defendants, however, contend that Butler, July *58723, 1801, by a conditional sale, conveyed bis inchoate title to James Bankson; and that Bankson, under the act of Congress of March 2, 1805, filed his claim to the lands with the United States land commissioners, as also his evidence of derivative title, and procured confirmation of the same to himself. The plaintiffs admit the conditional sale, but insist that there is no evidence that the stipulated conditions were complied with, and claim that Butler, in fact, made the claim which was filed with the land commissioners, and secured a confirmation for his own benefit. The effect to be given to the proceedings of the land commissioners determines the disposition to be made of the case; for if Butler was the claimant before the land commissioners, and the confirmation was to him, it is not questioned that the plaintiffs have his title. On the other hand, if Bankson was the claimant, and furnished the evidence of his derivative equitable title, and the confirmation inured to him, and not to Butler, then the plaintiffs have no title. At the trial the court declared, as matter of law, that the “legal effect of the proceedings'before the board of commissioners for the adjustment of land titles in 1811, read in evidence by the plaintiffs, is to confirm the land therein mentioned to James Bankson, assignee of John Butler, the assignment by Butler to Bankson having been filed as part of the claim of said Bankson.”

This instruction assumes that Bankson was the claimant before the board. Does the record of the proceedings of the board show this fact ? The following entries appear:

‘ ‘ Claim, Statement, and JYotice. — John Butler claims 200 arpents of land situated in the" district of New Madrid, under second section of the act of Congress.”

Then follows the record of an order and certificate of survey, the survey being dated February 6,1806. Then follows Butler’s contract of sale to Bankson. The first action which the board appears to have taken on the subject was in April 12, 1811. The record is as follows:

Friday, April 12, 1811.
“Boardmet. Present: JohnB. O. Lucas, Charles B. Penrose, and Frederick Bates, commissioners.
*588“ James Bankson, assignee o£ John Butler, claiming 200 ■ arpents of land situated on Cypress. Swamp, district, of New Madrid, produces to the board an order of survey dated April 16, 1801, a certified copy of'a conditional- transfer from Butler to claimant, dated July 28, 1801, a.plat of survey dated February 2, 1806.
“ The board grant to-John Butler, or his legal- representatives, 200 arpents of land> and order that the same-be:surveyed-as nearly in a square as maybe so, and to include his. improvements.
“ Board adjourned till Monday next,-9- o’clock A. M.”

The record is then signed by the commissioners:. -

The record then shows an entry under date of June 20, 1811, thus: “ Board met. Present, full board. Certificate No. 1103. John .Butler’s legal representatives, book 5, p. 148. Survey at expense of the United States.” Certificate No. 1103 .recites that the board had.“ decided that, the legal representatives of John Butler ” were entitled to a patent. The certificate is dated June 20,1811. It is thus seen that the record shows with distinctness that James Bankson, as. assignee, of John Butler,, claimed the land, and “produced” to the board the evidence upon which-a confirmation was granted. The-memorandum, “John Butler .claims,” etc., is evidently an error-. When .the commissioners took up the claim and acted upon it, they. only, recognize.. Butler as the assignor of Bankson... Bankson. is recognized- as the real claimant, and as the party, who in due time and way furnished the evidence on which the action of the board was founded-. The conditional transfer from Butler 'to Bankson was a prominent feature in the evidence, and .shows that Bankson was the claimant before the board, and that he was claiming under the conditional conveyance. The transfer furnished a linhyin.his chain of title, and was therefore important to him.- Butler’s claim rested upon the original permission of.settlement.and survey. -That was his evidence of title. The only effect of the transfer was to-show that he had parted with his interest, and that- Bankson was -the true equitable .owner.-.

Neither Butler nor Bankson-. had.a legal title. The claim originated in á permission of .settlement. The-legal title did not *589pass till the claim was confirmed by the United States. The confirmation, therefore, was of an equitable title. But the equitable title, for the purpose of the confirmation, was sufficient. The confirmation inured equally to the claimant, whether the title was legal or equitable, as was settled in Papin v. Massey, 27 Mo. 455.

The contract of sale, given in evidence by the plaintiff, shows that the entire purchase money was paid by Bankson, and that nothing remained for him to do but the performance of the stipulated settlement duties, which were of benefit to him, and of no advantage to Butler, the seller. The performance of these duties constituted no part of .the consideration of the sale. They were conditions to be performed in order to the acquisition of a perfect legal title from the Spanish government. . These conditions were to be performed in three years from July 23, 1801, the date of the contract. The land commissioners’ records show that evidence was produced before them proving that the premises were improved, inhabited, and cultivated in 1802, and continuously till 1805,” and they must have found the fact to have been so.

Assuming, then, that the records show that Bankson was the legal claimant before the commissioners, and that he produced to the board the evidences of his title on which the claim was founded, what was the legal effect of the judgment of confirmation? Was the title thereby confirmed in Bankson? That is the question that controls the case. According to the rule laid down in Bissell v. Penrose, 7 How. 338, followed in Boon v. Moore, 14 Mo. 420, and frequently referred to in subsequent decisions, and never overruled, that question must be answered in the affirmative.

In Bissell v. Penrose the case was this r the claim was for 4,000 arpents of land by the five sons of Tasques, one of whom, Benito, had assigned his share to one Rudolph Tillier. Tillier filed his claim for confirmation with the land commissioners. It was confirmed as follows: “The board are unanimously of the opinion that the claim ought to be confirmed to said Benito, Antoine, Hypolite, Joseph, or Pierre Tasques, or their legal representatives.” It was held that this confirmation inured to *590the benefit of Tillier, who filed and proved up the claim before the land commissioners, although his name does not appear as the confirmee. Nelson, J., in delivering the opinion of. the court, says: “By that act (the act of 1805) every person claiming lands, etc., shall deliver to the recorder a notice, etc., of the nature and extent of his claim, and also the grant, order of survey, deed, conveyance, or other written evidence of his claim, to be recorded; provided, at the same time, in the case of a complete grant, that the claimant need only record the original grant, together with the order of survey and plat, all other conveyances and deeds to be deposited with the recorder — thereby making a distinction between the two cases as it respects the derivative title, and in both clearly contemplating that the assignee might be a claimant.” The judge then proceeds to say: “This is the view taken of the question in Strother v. Lucas on each occasion when it- was before this court. (6 Pet. 772; 12 Pet. 458.) It was there held that the confirmation was to be in favor of the person claiming it.”

Boon v. Moore, 14 Mo. 420, presents this case. The claim in question in that suit was filed before the recorder of land titles in 1808, by Jesse Richardson, assignee of Mackay, who was assignee of David Cole, the original concedee. The transfers from Cole to Mackay, and from Mackay to Richardson, were produced and filed with the commissioners. The confirmation, however, was to “David Cole, or his legal representatives.” Copies of these transfers were offered in evidence and excluded. The propriety of their exclusion was a question before the Supreme Court. In reference to it, Napton, J., says.: “If the confirmation by.the act of Congress of July 4, 1836, was to Richardson, and not to the legal representatives of Cole, the admissibility of these copies is an immaterial question. We understand the Supreme Court of the United States to have distinctly decided this quéstion in the case of Bissell v. Penrose.”

There can be no doubt as to what the court understood the effect of the decision in Bissell v. Penrose to be. If the exclusion of the copies was an immaterial matter, it was so because the confirmation adjudicated Richardson’s title, •’ and thereby *591superseded tbe necessity of going into proof of its sufficiency prior to tbe confirmation. And this is tbe doctrine laid down in Boon v. Moore, as recognized by the judge delivering the opinion of the court in Hogan v. Page, 22 Mo. 65. In Hogan v. Page, 2 Wall. 605, it was held that a confirmation to tbe original grantee, or bis “legal representatives,” embraced representatives of such grantee by contract as well as by operation of law; leaving tbe question open in a court of justice as to the party to whom the confirmation should inure. But in that case the “ minutes did not record the fact that any assignment of the land from Conde (the original grantee) to Lamonde (the claimant) had been presented to the board, or that other proof was made of such conveyanceand the absence of that ‘ ‘ fact ” marks exactly the difference between that case and the class of cases it represents, and Bissell v. Penrose, Boon v. Moore, and other like cases. Where the assignee claimant made no proof of his derivative title before the board, the confirmation is open; but where that proof was supplied and submitted to the judgment of the commissioners, so that they could pass upon that as well as upon the merit of the original concession, the confirmation inures to the claimant, although his name is omitted in the form of confirmation. Such seems to be the result of the authorities. In Connoyer v. Washington University, 36 Mo. 481, that principle seems to be recognized by the court, although it held that in that case the defendants failed to bring themselves within its scope.

The same judge (Nelson) who delivered the opinion in Bissell v. Penrose also delivered the opinion in Hogan v. Page, and clearly distinguishes between the two classes of cases, thus: “ On looking into the cases cited on the part of the plaintiff, it will be seen that the confirmations which there appear were either to the assignee claimant by name, or in general terms ; that is, to the original grantee or his legal representatives; and where, in the latter form, it was the assignee claimant who had presented the claim before the board, and had furnished evidence before it of his derivative title, and which had not been, the subject of dispute.” The'present case, therefore, is different-from either of *592the cases referred to. There is here no abandonment of the principle announced in Bissell v. Penrose, but rather an affirmance and reiteration of it. That principle, as illustrated and applied in Boon v. Moore, clearly meets the facts of the case before us. What could the distinction drawn by Judge Nelson in the Hogan case between assignee claimants who had, and those who had not, filed the evidence of their derivative titles, avail, unless it placed the former on a better footing than the latter ? And how were the parties filing the evidence benefited by that..fact, unless the confirmation thereupon awarded is treated as an adjudication of the derivative as well as the original title ? If this result does not follow, it is difficult to perceive what substantial reality there is in the distinction taken, and upon which the Hogan case appears to turn.

The result- of these views involves an affirmance of the judgment of the Circuit Court, which was for the defendants.

The other judges concur.