154 P.2d 798 | Mont. | 1944
The action is by the purchaser Chatterton to quiet title to a tract of land in Glacier County obtained from the county by tax deed. The lower court found for plaintiff and entered a decree quieting title in him.
On May 23, 1918, John Vielle, a one-half-blood Blackfeet Indian, received a trust patent from the United States to the lands in controversy agreeably with the terms of the General Allotment Act, (
Defendants urge on this appeal that the land in question was not subject to taxation and that therefore the county could not take it for taxes nor sell it to Chatterton.
The defendants introduced in evidence, over objection, an[1] affidavit of the Indian Vielle, under date of April 10, 1931, ten years after the fee patent was issued, and a year after the county took the tax title. The affidavit purported to state that his application for a fee patent was under mistake of fact, that he did not represent himself to be competent to administer his own affairs, and requested cancellation of the fee patent. Another statement under oath dated September 12, 1932, is to the same effect. The respondent urges that such evidence is not competent in this quiet title action because it constitutes a collateral attack upon the fee patent, and that the only way to overcome the fee patent is by direct proceeding for that purpose. The authorities so hold. (Mouat v. Minneapolis Mining Smelting Co., 1923,
It is of no significance that Vielle never accepted manual[2] delivery of the fee patent from the local Indian agent at Browning. A patent issued under authority of law by the proper officials and properly authenticated requires no delivery. Title is passed by matter of record. In United States v. Schurz, 1880,
"We are of opinion that when, upon the decision of the proper office that the citizen has become entitled to a patent for a portion of the public lands, such a patent made out in that office is signed by the President, sealed with the seal of the General *422
Land-Office, countersigned by the recorder of the land-office, and duly recorded in the record-book kept for that purpose, it becomes a solemn public act of the government of the United States, and needs no further delivery or other authentication to make it perfect and valid. In such case the title to the land conveyed passes by matter of record to the grantee, and the delivery which is required when a deed is made by a private individual is not necessary to give effect to the granting clause of the instrument." Even the dissent in that case agrees on this point. At page 406 of
That brings us to the crux of the case. Will the conversion of a trust patent to a fee patent upon the application of the allottee, accompanied by a finding of competency, conformably with the federal statute,
In the case of United States v. Benewah County, 9 Cir., 1923,
In the view we take of the matter, it is not necessary to pass upon the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to make a case under section 2214, Revised Codes, calling for a deposit in court by the alleged true owner for the use of the tax deed grantee, for the appellants put their defense on the ground that the lands in question were exempt from state tax levies and from sale upon non-payment of taxes, a defense which we have found to be untenable. Further, no question of redemption is raised by the pleadings.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JOHNSON and ASSOCIATE JUSTICES ANDERSON, MORRIS and ADAIR concur.
Rehearing denied January 23, 1945.
Writ of certiorari denied by the Supreme Court of the United States on June 18, 1945.