13 Ind. 438 | Ind. | 1859
In 1826, there was granted, by the United States, to Ann Sharp, an Indian woman, a tract of land in Laporte county. The grant was contained in the terms of an Indian treaty, made at the mouth of the Mississinewa river, in Indiana, and was coupled with this restriction, viz., that the land so granted should never be conveyed by the said Awn Sharp, or her heirs, without the consent of the president of the United States. U. S. Stat. at Large, vol. 7, pp. 295 to 299. Subsequently Ann Sharp married Luther Rice, and bore him a son named William M. Rice, in the' Indian territory west of the state of Missouri. Luther Rice died. His widow, once Ann Sharp, married William W. Cleghorn. Subsequently she died, leaving no child by Cleghorn. Cleghorn alleged that she made a will, and he procured probate of it in Missowi. He then came to Laporte county, Indiana, and applied for an order to sell the land granted to Ann Sharp by the treaty above named. He made publication against William M. Rice, sole heir of Ann, then being a resident in the Indian country west of Missowi.
The Laporte Common Pleas Court ordered a sale, and it was made. In the meantime, William M. Rice, the heir of Ann Sharp, sold the land, with the approbation of the president of the United States, to Crews and Sherman. Subsequently Rice, Crews, and Sherman appeared in Court and applied to have the proceedings for the sale of the land
Cleghorn then renewed his motion for an order to sell the land, and Rice, Crews, and Sherman opposed it. But the Court seems to have been of the opinion that they had no right to be further heard, and, therefore, refused to give instructions asked by them, or to require the jury to find specially upon questions propounded, &c.
The code provides that a defendant constructively summoned, shall be allowed, at any time before judgment, to appear and defend the action; and upon a substantial defense being disclosed, time may be given on reasonable terms, to prepare for trial. 2 R. S. p. 125.
In this case, Rice, one of the defendants, was constructively summoned; and the others, who claimed the right to appear as defendants, derived title through him, and were proper parties-defendant.
The statute above quoted, we have no doubt, gives the right to appear and defend till final judgment.
The order to sell was not such. Staley v. Dorset, 11 Ind. R. 367.
This being the case, when the sale that had been made was set aside, the defendants, upon showing, as they did, sufficient grounds, should have been let in to answer the complaint for the order of sale, and to defeat the application for it entirely, if, upon all the facts of the case, it ought not to have been made, or to be continued. They were not estopped from doing this by anything appearing in the previous proceedings in the suit. The simple dismissal of a suit is no bar to another for the same cause.
The question has been suggested, how the executor of Ann Sharp can procure the sale of land, which she could not have made herself without permission of the president? The question is a grave one, which we will not consider till it has been argued. See Doe v. Beardsley, 2 McLean, 412; Verden v. Coleman, 4 Ind. R. 457; Doe v. Avaline, 8 id. 6; Harris v. Doe, 3 id. 494.
The judgment below is reversed with costs, and the proceedings set aside to the complaint, with leave to the de
The judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, &c.