14 Kan. 259 | Kan. | 1875
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Suit was brought in the court below by defendant in error to compel a conveyance to her from plaintiff in error of two certain specified tracts of land, being part and parcel of the Kickapoo Reservation in Atchison county. The plaintiff below bases her case upon two certificates of purchase issued by the United' States government to the defendant below, of date January 2d 1866, which had passed into plaintiff’s possession, and upon two written instruments written upon the same pieces of paper with said certificates, executed by S. C. Pomeroy, president of and attorney-in-fact for the defendant railroad company, and purporting to have been so executed to plaintiff at the date thereof, August 10th
On behalf of the plaintiff in error counsel submit in this' court, that the court below erred in overruling defendant’s objection to the introduction of evidence under plaintiff’s petition. This is the principal, and about the only substantial- question in the case. The question really is, whether the petition below states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. We think it does. It is not necessary to plead the public laws or treaties of the United States. They will be taken notice of judicially, without pleading or proving them. Hence all the provisions of the Kickapoo treaty of 1862 (13 U. S. Stat. at Large, 623,) will be taken notice of judicially, although some of the provisions thereof may not have been specifically mentioned in the petition. This proposition does not seem to be controverted by counsel on either side. Now
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
No; 700. Department op the Interior,
January 2d, 1866.
• Whereas, it is provided by the fifth article of the Treaty between the United States and the Kickapoo Tribe of Indians, concluded June 28, 1862, as afterwards amended and proclaimed on the 28th day of May, 1863, that after certain portions of the lands belonging to said tribe of Indians shall have been allotted and set apart for the use and benefit of the members of said- tribe, the Atchison and Pike’s Peak Railroad Company shall have the privilege of becoming the purchaser of the remainder of the lands not so set apart and allotted, upon certain conditions therein prescribed; and—
Whereas, the said lands have been allotted and set apart to the members of said tribe, as prescribed by said Treaty, and the said Railroad Company has • elected to become the purchaser of the remainder thereof, and by its President, the Honorable Samuel C. Pomeroy, has executed and delivered to the Secretary of the Interior its bond in the penal sum of three hundred and tenthousand dollars, being double the value of such remainder, or surplus of said lands, estimated at the rate of one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre, conditioned as by the terms and provisions of said Treaty is required, which said Bond has been accepted and approved by the Secretary of the Interior: Now, therefore:
It is hereby-certified, that under and by virtue of the provisions and terms of the said Treaty, as amended, the Atchison and Pike’s Peak Railroad Company has become the purchaser, and is entitled to the possession of 160 acres, being the s. e. J of Section Nineteen, Township Five s., Range Seven
It is also hereby further certified, that in case the said Atchison and Pike’s Peak Railroad Company shall well and truly do and perform all things required to be done and performed on' its part, in the time and manner prescribed by said Treaty, and shall well and truly pay for said surplus or remainder of said lands, as by said Treaty stipulated, then and in that case the said Atchison and Pike’s Peak Railroad Company, or the assignee hereof, will be entitled to demand and receive from the United States of America a patent in fee simple for the premises above described.
In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and , -j caused the seal of said Department to be hereunto *- affixed, this second day of January, 1866.
Jas. Harlan, Secretary.
For value received, I, S. C. Pomeroy, President of, and as the duly authorized attorney-in-fact of the Atchison and Pike’s Peak Railroad Company, for said Company, do hereby transfer and assign to Nanay J. Wilcox all the right, title, and interest of the said Atchison and Pike’s Peak Railroad Company to the s. e. of Section Nineteen (19,) Township Five (5) south, Range Seventeen (17) east of 6th p. m., and require the issue of a patent to Nancy J. Wilcox, as assignee of said Company, in accordance with the terms of said certificate.
"Witness my hand and seal this tenth day of August, 1866. Attest: S. C. Pomeroy, President of, [l. s.]
and Attorney-in-fact for the Atchison and Pike’s Peak Railroad Co.
State of New York, County of New York:
On this tenth day of August, 1866, before me, personally came S. C. Pomeroy, President of and Att’y-in-fact for A. &P. P. Railroad Co., to me well known, and acknowledged the foregoing assignment to be his. vokmtary act and deed, and the 'voluntary act and deed^of the said A. & P. P. Railroad, Company. Chas. V. Ware, .
[l. s.] Notary Public, New York City.
It will be noticed that the railroad company agreed to “require the issue of the patent to Nancy J. Wilcox, as assignee of said company, in accordance with the terms of said certifi
Me now come to the supposed errors in admitting and excluding evidence. The most of the evidence complained of, which was either admitted or excluded, was wholly immaterial to .the issues in the case, but was of such a character that the action of the court certainly did not tend to prejudice any of the substantial rights of either of the parties. That the defendant was a corporation, as alleged in the petition, was expressly admitted by the pleadings; and that said certificates, said assignments, and said patent, were all duly executed, were impliedly admitted by the pleadings. The plaintiff in
Under the pleadings the question asked the witness Wilcox, and nearly all of the deposition of Pomeroy, were wholly immaterial, and neither their admission nor exclusion could have materially affected the case. In those portions of Pomeroy’s deposition, material to the case, and read in evidence, we do not see any question sufficiently leading to require a reversal of the case. We do not think the demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained, for the allegations of the petition were*amply proved. We take no notice of the evidence which was merely immaterial, or which did not tend to prove any issue in the case, and which did not tend to-prejudice the substantial rights of the plaintiff in error. There was some of this kind of evidence introduced. The most of the facts found by the court were facts admitted by the pleadings. Whether the eighth finding of fact was warranted by the testimony outside of the pleadings, or not, is-wholly immaterial. The pleadings impliedly admit the due execution of said certificates and said assignments, and evidence could not properly have been admitted to show that they were not duly executed. It makes but very little difference whether the court below was technically correct in all its conclusions of law or not, provided the pleadings, and'the evidence thereunder, and the facts found from such evidence, sustain the judgment. And we think the pleadings, the evidence thereunder, and the facts found therefrom, amply sustain the judgment, and it is therefore affirmed.