Blakesly v. Caywood
Blakesly v. Caywood
Opinion of the Court
By the Court,
This is a suit to compel the defendants to convey to the plaintiffs a parcel of land claimed under the Donation Act of September 27, 1850. The defendants demurred to the complaint, stating as ground of demurrer that it does not state facts sufficient, to constitute a cause of suit, and the Circuit Court having sustained the demurrer, the plaintiffs appeal to this Court.
The plaintiffs claim through Charles P. Matt, the father of the plaintiff, Theresa Blakesly, who settled upon the land in controversy in 1844, and continued to reside upon it with his wife until 1851, at which time he died intestate, leaving a widow and an only child-—the plaintiff Theresa. The defendant claims under one G. W. Taylor, who entered upon the land after the death of Charles P. Matt, and has since obtained a patent for the land from the United States.
The complaint sets out fully the proceedings taken by Matt and by Taylor in their efforts respectively to obtain title from the Government, and the sufficiency of the pleading depends upon an alleged disability on the part of Charles P. Matt, and those claiming under him, to take and hold the
The same section contains the following:
“Provided, that no alien shall be entitled to a patent for lands granted by this Act, until he shall produce to the Surveyor-General of Oregon record evidence that his naturalization as a citizen of the United States has been completed. But if any alien having made his declaration of an intention to become a citizen of the United States after the passage of this Act, shall die before his naturalization shall be completed, “the possessory right acquired by him under the provisions of this Act, shall descend to his heirs at law, or pass to his devisees, to whom, as the case may be, the patent shall issue.”
One of the principal inquiries involved in this case is whether this explicit declaration that no alien shall be entitled to a patent until he shall produce evidence of his naturalization, is to be regarded as annexing a condition to the estate granted, the breach of which will amount to a forfeiture and annul the grant. If by the terms of the Act nothing passed to the donee until the issuing of the patent, the subject would be easily disposed of; for in that case, denying a patent would be denying all right and interest in the land. If becoming a citizen was thus made a condition precedent, the proposed grant would become a nullity upon the death of the party without naturalization. But in this, case, Charles P. Matt, being qualified as a donee
The title thus conferred on the donee was encumbered with conditions and liable to be defeated by the failure of the donee to perform; but it was nevertheless a present grant vesting the title, notwithstanding the estate was upon conditions subsequent and might be defeated by non-performance; and we are to consider whether, by the terms of the grant, failure to become naturalized was such breach of a condition subsequent as to defeat the grant. Up to the last moment of the life of the donee the delay was no breach of condition, there being nothing in the Act requiring the donee to be naturalized within a specified time. On the contrary, the effect of naturalization would have been the same had it been accomplished on the last day of his life as if done at a former period; and had he complied with all other requirements of the Act and lived until the present time without becoming naturalized, all the right and interest in the land that were his immediately after the Act took effect would still be his. Should an alien so circumstanced become naturalized hereafter, the disability in regard to receiving a patent would thereupon disappear, and he would then stand in respect to the title and in respect to receiving a patent in the same position as a native citizen. It is clear, therefore, that during the lifetime of Charles P. Matt his rights were not divested because of his failure to become
There is, in the language first above quoted, a special provision in regard to aliens who made the declaration of intention after the passage of the Act, and it is a peculiar and noticeable feature of the provision that it omits to mention the survivor, and enacts that if one of that class ‘ ‘ shall die before his naturalization shall be completed, the possessory rights acquired by him under the provisions of this Act shall descend to his heirs at law.”- No such special reference is made to the disposition of the property of those who had previously declared the intention. On the hearing it was argued that an inference arises from omitting to make special provision touching the latter class, that the share or interest granted them would not descend, but would terminate with the life of the donee. Such an inference might arise if no general rule had been made broad enough to include the latter class, but inasmuch as the scope of the general provision for disposing of property on the death of the donee does include the class of aliens not mentioned in this exception or special provision, the only presumption thus raised is that no special provision is intended in regard to that class, and the only logical deduction is that on the death of an alien of that class the disposition of the property is within the general rule. The circumstance that the land of the other class is made to descend in an exceptional manner leads to the same conclusion.
The provision of the Donation Act that indicates an intention to discriminate against aliens of any class, is that part of the proviso above quoted which declares that an alien shall not be entitled to a patent until he produces proof of his naturalization, and the right of the plaintiff to the relief prayed for in this case depends upon the question whether the death of Charles P.- Matt, while he labored under the disability as to receiving a patent, forfeited the right to the land.
There are several provisions in the Act itself that show that its framers did not conceive that issuing a patent to the donee was indispensable to the operation of the grant; as, for instance, the provision of the fourth section, by which
We find in §§ 4 and 8 of the original Act, §§ 1 and 8 of the second Act, and § 5 of the third Act, such manifest intention to deal liberally with the heirs and widows of those who are prevented by death from complying with the conditions which Congress deemed it necessary tó impose, that nothing short of a clear manifestation of such intention can reasonably be' construed to place a particular class of persons in an attitude so opposite to that in which the framers of the law have evidently sought to place those deemed worthy to receive a donation.
The case before us presents this state of facts: A British subject settled upon the land in controversy in 1844, and, with his family, continued to reside upon it until his death, in 1851, prior to which time he made the usual application at the Land Department, he having in 1849 made declaration of his intention to become a citizen. At his death the plaintiff, Theresa Blakesly, who was his only daughter, still claimed the land in right of her father, and it was entered upon by the said Taylor, a stranger to the title, under claim that by the terms of the Donation Law the land which had been thus held by the plaintiff’s father for seven years had reverted to the Government.
By the operation of the Donation Act, the plaintiff’s father acquired the land in fee, subject to the conditions specified in the Act. (Summers v. Dickinson, 9 Cal. 554; Kernan v. Griffith, 27 Cal. 87.)
The only restriction contained in the Act bearing any relation to the facts before us, is that expressed in the words, “Provided that no alien shall be entitled to a patent to the land granted by this Act until he shall produce” evidence of his naturalization. It has been universally held that a
This land having been donated to Matt, and the title, on his death, having vested in the plaintiff, Theresa Blakesly, and her mother, whose interest she now has, the United States having no title could not lawfully grant it to another. (Polk’s Lessee v. Wendal, 9 Cranch, 87; Patterson v. Winn, 11 Wheat. 380.)
There are sufficient facts alleged in the complaint to show that the plaintiff is entitled to relief. The title, having vested in the plaintiff’s father at the time of the passage of the Donation Act, was not divested by failure to issue a patent to him, nor by his death while he labored under the disability affecting only his power to receive a patent and not his power to take the land, and on .his death'the land did not revert to the Government. It being private property, the Government could not grant it, and the defendants, as grantees of Taylor, must be deemed to hold the patent i’n trust for the plaintiff. A decree should be entered in the Circuit Court in accordance with this opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ABRAM BLAKESLY and THERESA BLAKESLY v. FRANCIS CAYWOOD and J. C. CAYWOOD
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- 1 case
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