63 F. 417 | 8th Cir. | 1894
This action was brought in the United States court for the first division of the Indian Territory by the defendants in error, tbe Atlantic & Pacific Railroad Company and the St. Louis & San Francisco Railway Company, to recover the possession of a small parcel of ground, particularly described in the complaint, with the improvements thereon, situated in Vinita, Cherokee Nation, Indian Territory, the plaintiffs alleging that the land claimed constituted a part of the right of way of the plaintiff the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad Company. There was judgment for the plaintiffs in the lower court, and the defendants sued out this writ of error. It is assigned for error that the court refused to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the defendants, and instructed them to return a verdict for the plaintiffs.
Article 11 of the treaty between the United States and the Cherokee Nation of July 19, 1866 (14 Stat. 799), provides that:
“Tbe Cherokee Nation hereby grant a right of way not exceeding two hundred feet wide, except at stations, switches, water-stations, or crossing of rivers, where more may be indispensable to tbe full enjoyment of tbe franchise herein granted, and then only two hundred additional feet shall be taken, and only for such length as may be absolutely necessary, through all their lauds, to any company or corporation which shall be duly authorized by congress to construct a railroad from any point north to any point south, and from any point east to any point west of, and which may pass through the Cherokee Nation. Said company or corporation, and their employees and laborers, while constructing and repairing the same, and in operating- said road or roads, including all necessary agents on the line, at stations, switches, water-tanks, and all others necessary to the successful operation of a railroad, shall be protected in the discharge of their dirties, and at all times subject to tbe Indian intercourse laws, now or which may hereafter be enacted and be in force in the Cherokee Nation.”
Tbe plaintiff tbe Atlantic & Pacific Railroad Company was incorporated by act of congress of July 27, 1866 (14 Stat. 292), and authorized to construct a railroad through the Cherokee Nation upon a line and in a direction that entitled it to the benefits of the provisions of article 11 of the treaty above quoted. The road was constructed through the Nation, and the parties have filed a stipula
The plaintiffs in error assert that, under the laws of the Nation, a citizen has the right to occupy any part of the public domain of the Nation not already taken up by another citizen; and that as the parcel of land in controversy was not actually occupied by the tracks or other structures of the railroad company, and as it was, in their opinion, not necessary for such purposes, they had the right to appropriate it to their own use. But the land had been previously dedi