Hartley v. Brown
Hartley v. Brown
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of ejectment to recover the possession of a portion of the Tolenas Rancho. The title was confirmed to the heirs of Antonio Maria Armijo, deceased; and a patent was duly issued to them by the United States, in pursuance of the decree of confirmation and survey of the rancho. The plaintiffs claim title by means of conveyances made by the heirs, intermediate the filing of their petition for the confirmation of their claim to the rancho and the issuing of the patent. The defendants claim title through a sale and deed made by the administrator of the estate of Antonio Maria Armijo, deceased, under the orders of the Probate Court of Solano County. They do not set up an equitable defense, nor do they allege any facts by means of which the confirmation or patent inured to their benefit.
The land described in the grant was confirmed to the petitioners—Dolores Riesgo, and others who are named, and are described as the heirs of Antonio Maria Armijo, deceased— and the patent was issued to them; and the effect of the confirmation and patent was to vest in them and their grantees the legal title. That title must prevail in an action of ejectment in the absence of a valid equitable defense. If it be conceded that the defendants have shown a valid deed, executed by the administrator of the estate of Antonio Maria Armijo, deceased, sufficient to convey the interest which the deceased had in the land, such deed will not entitle them at law to the benefits of the confirmation and patent. The legal
Judgment and order reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.
Mr. Chief Justice Wallace did not express an opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ELIZA M. HARTLEY, Administratrix of the Estate of Henry Hare Hartley, THOMAS M. SWAN, SAMUEL C. GRAY, B. C. WHITMAN, JOHN D. STEVENS, and WILLIAM S. WELLS v. WILLIAM B. BROWN, RICHARD C. HAILE, NATHAN M. LINCOLN, BERRY BLANKENSHIP, WESLEY LAMBERT, MARK A. LONG, JOHN SMITHERS, L. GREEN McWILLIAMS, CHARLES WESLEY BROWN, and RICHARD ROE
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Confirmees of Mexican Grant. — The legal title to a Mexican or Spanish grant of land vests in the confirmees and their assigns. Legal Title in Ejectment. — If the confirmation of a Mexican grant of land is made to the children of the grantee, they have the legal title, and they and their assigns will prevail in ejectment against one claiming title under a sale made by the administrator of the grantee, when no equitable defense is set up. Legal Title to Mexican Grant. —The title which passes to the confirmee and patentee of a Mexican grant, when such confirmee and patentee is not the grantee, does not inure to the benefit of a purchaser at a sale made by an administrator of the grantee, so as to vest in him the legal title. Legal Title in Ejectment. — In ejectment the legal title must prevail where there is no valid equitable defense set up.