6 Rob. 175 | La. | 1843
The plaintiff alleges, that by a treaty made and entered into between the United States and the Caddo tribe of Indians, on the 1st of July, 1835, the boundaries between them were recognized and established, and the lands lying within the said recognized limits of the Caddo tribe, were ceded by them to the United States. That by supplementary articles to said treaty, entered into, and signed on the same day, there were given, granted, and reserved unto the heirs and legal representatives of Franpois Grappe, and to- Jacques Grappe, Dominique Grappe, and Balthazar Grappe, four leagues of land, to them and their heirs forever, the said land to be taken out of the land thus ceded, to be laid off in one body in the south east corner of the ceded land, bounded by Red River four leagues, and by the Pascagoula bayou one league, running back for quantity from each, so as to contain four square leagues of land. That the said treaty and supplementary articles were duly accepted and ratified by the President of the United States, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. That the heirs and representatives of Franpois Grappe, and the other Grappés, in whose favor the reservations had been made, sold and conveyed to the petitioner, all the said four square leagues of land; and that said leagues of land have been located according to the treaty, and are situated on the right bank of Red River, in the parish of Caddo. Pie further represents, that Samuel Norris, notwithstanding his knowledge of the petitioner’s rights, has illegally entered upon 640 acres of the said land, and refuses to give it up, to the petitioner’s damage, ten thousand dollars. Pie, therefore, prays that Norris may be cited,
The defendant, by his answer, denies that the land claimed from him is comprehended in that, said to be ceded to the United States by the Caddo Indians, or in that, said to have been reserved for the Grappes.
He further answers, that he is the rightful owner of the land claimed from him, having, at and before the date of the treaty between Spain and the United Slates, of the 22d February, 1819, been in possession, occupancy, and cultivation, and that he has duly proved his title or claim before the proper officers, in pursuance of the laws of Congress; and that he has been in good faith and under a just title, in peaceable possession ever since the year 1817.
He further says, that the Caddo Indians never ceded to the United States, or reserved to the Grappes, or ever had any title or interest to, or in the land described in the petition; nor had the Grappes, nor did they claim to have any title, or interest, until after the treaty ; and that the Indians never were the owners of the lands ceded by the treaty. The defendant expressly charges, that through gross frauds and impositions, practised upon the government, the Indians, and the Grappes, the plaintiff, who was himself the Commissioner on the part of the United States, to treat with the Indians, procured first, the treaty and reservation to the Grappes, and then the assignment to himself; and that the whole is, therefore, null and void.
Thus the case presents a question of title in Brooks to lands said to have been reserved for the Grappes, in the treaty negotiated by Brooks himself, with the Caddo Indians; the defendant alleging that the land never belonged to the Indians, that they never made any grant of it to the Grappes, and that the whole was a fraudulent contrivance by Brooks himself, with a view to private speculation.
The reservations in favor of the Grappes are contained in certain supplementary articles, which appear to have been agreed to on the same day, but were not known even to the witnesses to the
The first supplementary article recites, that “ whereas the said nation of Indians did, in the year 1801, give to one Frangois Grappe, and to his three sons then born, and still living, named Jacques, Dominique, and Balthazar, for reasons stated at the time, and repeated in a memorial, which the said nation addressed to the President of the United States in the month of January last, one league of land to each, in accordance with the Spanish custom of granting lands to individuals. That the chiefs and head men, with the knowledge and approbation of the whole Caddo people, did go with the said Frangois Grappe, accompanied by a number of white men, who were invited by the said chiefs and head men to be present, as witnesses, before the Spanish authority at Natchitoches, and then and there did declare their wishes touching the said donation of land to the said Grappe, and his three sons, and did request the same to be written out in form, and ratified and confirmed by the proper authorities according to law, &c. It is agreed, that the legal representatives of the said Frangois Grappe. deceased, and his three sons, Jacques, Dominique, and Balthazar Grappe, shall have their right to the said four leagues of land reserved to them, and their heirs, and assigus forever. The said land to be taken out of the lands ceded to the United States'by the said Caddo nation, as expressed in the treaty to which this article is supplementary. And the four leagues shall be laid off in one body, in the south east corner of their lands ceded .as aforesaid, and bounded by the Red River four leagues, and by the Pascagoula bayou one league, running back for quantity for each, so as to contain four square leagues of land, in conformity with the boundaries established, and expressed in the original deed of gift, made by the said Caddo nation of Indians to the said Frangois Grappe, and his three sons, Jacques, Dominique, and Balthazar Grappe.”
The next article provides for a small reservation in favor of Edwards ; and it is then agreed, that if the supplementary articles
The first question of law, which presents itself, at this stage of our inquiry, is, whether the plaintiff, in making out his title as the assignee of the Grappes, and which, in common with all plaintiffs in actions of this kind, he is bound to show, may rely upon the treaty alone, and the recitals therein contained, or whether he is compelled to go fürlher back, and produce, or satisfactorily account for the written donation from the Indians to his vendors. Leaving out of view for the moment, and reserving for future consideration, the question whether the treaty may be construed as a substantive grant from the government, independently of the original donation which is recognized as having taken place in 1801, and'looking upon the question as one between the plaintiff, the Indians, and the defendant, it appears to us to resolve itself into the question, whether such a recital in a recognitive act, dispenses the party claiming title under it, from producing the primordial title, that is, the original donation in writing, which is said to have been made in 1801. The treaty is, as it relates to the Indians, a mere recognitive act, expressing their intention not to .cede to the United States, but to reserve to the Grappes, the four leagues as described in the written act of donation to them.
According to Dumoulin and Pothier, as well as a formal article of the Civil Code of this State, recognitive acts do not dispense with the exhibition of the primordial title, unless its tenor be therein specially set forth. Those authors distinguish between recognitive acts, or acknowledgments, which are in the form which they call ex certa scientia, and those in forma commnni. The former, said to be in forma speciali et dispositiva, are those in which the primordial title is set. forth. They have this peculiarity, that they are equivalent to the original title in the event of its loss, and prove its existence against the person making it, and they dispense with the production of the primordial title. On the other hand, recognitive acts, in forma communi, are those in which the tenor of the primordial title is not set forth. “ These acknowledgments,” says Pothier, “ serve only to confirm the primordial title, and to interrupt prescription, but they confirm the original title only, so far as it is true ; they do not prove its
Such is believed to be also the rule of evidence at common law. Where the recital in a deed points to higher evidence in the power of the party, the withholding of which creates suspicion of an intended fraud or unfairness, the party will be held to account for the non-production of the higher evidence, before the recital can avail him. 3 Phillips on Evidence, 1236. Greenleaf on Evidence, 93.
But not only is the pretended deed of gift of 1801 not produced, nor accounted for; but it is not to be believed that any such gift ever took place. In the first place we know, as a part of the history of the country, that the place where the Caddos lived at that lime, was within the jurisdiction of Nacogdoches, in the then Spanish province of Texas, which was under the government of the Captain General of the internal provinces ; and that any matter of that kind would have been transacted either at Nacogdoches, or at San Antonio de Bexar, the capital of the province, where the public archives were kept. In the second place, it is equally well known, and satisfactorily proved in the record, that the Caddo tribe of Indians were never recognized as the proprietors of any lands, either by the Spanish or American governments. Jt is known to us judicially, as apart of the jurisprudence of Louisiana, as well as other dependencies of Spain on this continent, that that power never acknowledged any primitive title in the Indian tribes, but that they were only entitled to-hold such small allotments of about a league round their villages, as the government thought fit to grant them, 5 Mart. 655, 490. 6 Ib. N. S. 357. Nor did the American government, the successor of Spain, ever recognize the Gaddo tribe, as the owners of any lands within the limits of Louisiana. The Secretary of War who was in office at the date of the treaty, (Cass,) in answer to a communication from the memberof Congress then representinglhis district, says: “I cannot find that the government of the United States has ever recognized any claim of the Caddo Indians to a definite portion of the State of Louisiana, and my impression is, that no country was actually assigned to them by the Spanish government; and this impression is confirmed by the fact, as I understand it, that settlements
But let the claim of the Caddos be what it may to the land occupied by them, it is abundantly shown, by evidence in the record, that they never occupied, and never claimed that part of the territory pretended to be ceded, in which the settlement and confirmed claim of Norris is situated, to wit, Rüsh Island, or L'Isle des Préles, which is formed by Red River, Bayou Pierre, and Pascagoula Bayou ; and that they never pretended to have any possessions to the east of the Bayou Pierre branch of Red River. The lands embraced in these reservations are among the most fertile in the valley of Red River. There is no evidence that the Indians ever hunted over them, although they appear sometimes to have turned their horses on them, during the winter, to feed upon the rushes. Brooks himself, the Commissioner, and the plaintiff in this action, while acting as Indian agent, knew of the settlements of Norcis, and many others on the Island, and so far from ever objecting to their residing there as within the Caddo lands, he assisted one of them in building his house.
But if the Indians do not appear to have known of their having any claim to Rush Island, the Grappes were equally ignorant of any grant to them as far back as 1801, and even of the reservation in the treaty in their favor, until propositions were made to them by the negociator of the treaty to purchase their pretensions. The conduct of the plaintiff, while negotiating the treaty, was singularly mysterious. The supplementary articles were kept secret even from one, at least, of the witnesses to the treaty, and there is no evidence that those articles were ever read to the Indians, in the hearing of the witnesses.
If, therefore, we regard the Caddo Indians as the grantors of
But it is contended, that the Grappes acquired the tille of the United States by virtue of the reservation in the treaty, and that the treaty is their title, and equivalent to a patent; We do not so understand the treaty. The' treaty after reciting a donation made in 1801, with the approbation of the Spanish government, and which had been reduced to writing,- of four leagues of land to the Grappes, goes on to stipulate, that the said Grappes “ shall have their right to the said four leagues of land reserved for them, and their heirs for everThis amounts certainly to nothing more than a confirmation of such grant as the Indians may have made, in 1801,- to the Grappes, and not to a substantive grant from the government. We are of opinion, that the government is not concluded by the recital by the Indians in the treaty, that they had made a grant in writing in 1801 ; and that recognition of a previous grant cannot be more conclusive upon the government, than it is upon the Indians. If no such primitive grant exists, then nothing was reserved, and it is clear the United States acquired no new title by the treaty.
This view of the character of the reservation is supported by considering the different expressions used in reserving, in the same treaty, a section of land to Larkin Edwards. No'previous grant to him by the Indians is recited ;■ but in consideration of his long services to them, his age, and incapacity to labor,- it is declared, that there shall be reserved for him, his heirs, and assigns for ever, one section of land, to be selected out of the ceded lands.
That the Grappes should have been for more than thirty years the owners of more than thirty thousand acres of land by the bounty of the Caddos, without ever knowing it, or apparently dreaming of it, appeared to the jury, who tried this cause, to surpass all belief.
Before we proceed to notice the bills of exceptions to which our attention has been called, it is proper to examine the title of the defendant to the 640 acres claimed by him.
It appears, that Samuel Norris settled in 1817, on Rush Island, within the limits of the State of Louisiana, although at that time commonly known as the Neutral Territory, between the Arroyo Hondo and the Sabine, to which the land laws of the United States had not been extended. ■ This was two years before the treaty of limits between Spain and the United States. It is true, that that treaty created no change in that part of Louisiana, which was clearly embraced within the treaty of cession of 1803, and had been recognized by Congress as early as 1811, as forming a part of the territory of Orleans, and which was then created into a State. But no provision had been made by law for such residents within the neutral ground, as might have obtained from the authorities of Texas inchoate titles to lands, or made improvements with the expectation of receiving ultimately a grant for lands. In 1823, Congress established a Board of Commissioners to inquire into such cases within that region. Norris then came forward, and proved his claim as a settler, and his claim was included in the list of those which were recommended for confirmation. When other'similar claims were after-wards confirmed by Congress, that of Norris, and a few others, were suspended, until it could be ascertained whether it was or was not within the Indian boundaries. But it is now admitted, that during the pendency of this suit, his claim has been finally confirmed and ratified by Congress. Norris never was considered, or treated, as an intruder upon the Indian land, and there is nothing to induce the belief, that the government, in treating with the Indians, in 1835, with instructions to their Commissioners, to procure from the Indians a cession of their “ right of occupation
We now proceed to examine the bills of exceptions taken during the progress of the trial. The first, was to the admission of certain depositions of witnesses, notwithstanding the objection, that the defendant could not go behind the treaty to prove fraud in any person ; and upon the ground, that if there was fraud in the treaty, the government alone can allege and attack it; and upon the further ground, that the government having, in the treaty, recognized the boundary of the Caddo lands, the defendant has no right to prove, that the land was located by the treaty and the Surveyor General, out of the Indian territory. But the depositions were admitted to go to the jury, on the ground, that the parties had consented to read the depositions, instead of examining the witnesses, viva voce, and that they might prove the same facts as the witnesses in person might prove, if present. The court did not err. According to our view of the parties, and the peculiar circumstances of the case, Norris, with a title emanating from the government, had a right to go into the questions of fraud, of Indian title, and of boundaries, and to show the nullity of the plaintiff’s title by competent evidence.
The second bill, is to the admission of the two Poriers as witnesses, who had been objected to on the ground, that suits were pending against them, brought by the same plaintiff for other tracts of land, claimed under the same title, and that they had set up the same defence.
The court did not err in ruling that the objection went not to their competency, but to their credibility. They were interested in the question involved, but not in the case.
The last bill, is to that part of the charge to the jury, in which the Judge told them, in substance, that the right of the United States to the Neutral Territory, was recognized by Spain, by the treaty of 1819; that Congress, proceeding to legislate concerning land claims within that territory, by act, in 1824, directed the Commissioners appointed to examine claims, to report those of settlers who had occupied, and cultivated land before the date of the treaty, and continued to do so, in the third class if in their opinion said claims ought to be confirmed ; that the title set up
Judgment affirmed.