14 Kan. 435 | Kan. | 1875
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action of ejectment for a tract of land in Franklin county. Both parties claimed title under
“It being the wish of said tribe of Ottawas to remunerate several of the chiefs, councilmen and headmen of the tribe, for their services to them many years without pay, it is hereby stipulated that five sections of land are reserved and set apart for that purpose, to be apportioned among the said chiefs, councilmen and headmen, as the members of the tribes shall in full council determine; and it shall be the duty of the Secretary of the Interior to issue patents in fee simple of said lands, when located and apportioned to said Indians.”
Said article also grants to these parties, and to all heads of families, 160 acres, and to all other members of the tribe, 80 acres each. By art. 6, twenty thousand acres are given for the endowment, and one section for the site, of a school. Art. 7 provides that ten acres shall be set apart for the Ottawa Baptist church, and eighty acres to each of the two children of a former missionary among the Ottawas, which last two tracts are to be selected and located as the other allotments- provided for are to be selected and located, and to be “inalienable the same as the land allotted to the Ottawas.” It then continues as follows:
“And all the above-mentioned selections of lands shall be made by the agent of the tribe under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior. And plats and records of all the selections and locations shall be made, and upon their completion and approval proper patents by the United States*437 shall be'issued to each individual member of the tribe, and person entitled for the lands selected and allotted to them, in which it shall be stipulated that no Indian, except as herein provided, to whom the same may be issued, shall alienate or incumber the land allotted to him or her in any manner until they shall by the terms of this treaty become a citizen of the United States; and any conveyance or incumbrance of said lands, done or suffered except as aforesaid by an Ottawa Indian, of the lands allotted to him or her, made before they shall become a citizen, shall be null and void.”
Does this apply to the lands patented under art. 3? It seems to us that it does. It says, “All the above-mentioned selections.” Upon what shall be founded an exception in favor of this selection? It must refer to lands selected under art. 3, because it speaks of allotments to Indians, and only in that article are such allotments provided for. Indeed there are no personal allotments provided for except in art. 3, and those to the children of the missionary, and as to them we have seen that it is expressly mentioned that they are to be inalienable the same as the allotments to the Ottawas. Referring then necessarily to selections under art. 3, and declaring that it embraces “All the above-mentioned selections,” it must include this, unless’there be something to make this an exception. It is said that the restriction contemplates some exception, because it says, “no Indian, except as herein provided,” and that there can be no other exception than these selections for the chiefs, etc. The use of the term, “except as herein provided,” would naturally refer to some express exception, and not to one arising by mere implication, and we find in the treaty as originally made by the Indians, the express exception, attached to the first article was a proviso, “that John T. Jones, now a member of the Ottawas, being an educated and experienced man, * * * is hereby declared to be a citizen of the United States, exempt from the restrictions hereinafter provided concerning the purchase, alienation, or incumbrance of the Ottawa lands.” Here then was the express exception, and the only express exception, one which might properly be said to be “herein provided.” "When the
It follows from these considerations that the restrictions of art. 7 applied to this land, and that the deed under which the defendant holds is null and void. The judgment of the district court must therefore be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.