72 P. 243 | Kan. | 1903
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This proceeding originates in a controversy over the title to thirty-two lots, forming parts of eight blocks, in Argentine Heights, an addition to the city of Argentine, in Wyandotte county. The northwest quarter of section 29, in township 11, of range 25 (in which quarter-section such lots are located) , was patented by the United States on December 28, 1859, to Susan Whitefeather, as a member of the Shawnee Indian tribe, under the provisions of the treaty of May 10, 1854. She died some time prior to July 10, 1862, and her son, George Washington, inherited such land. He remained a member of the tribe until September 26, 1900, when he was made a citizen of the United States. On November 27,1867, he being then over fourteen years of age, the probate court of Johnson county appointed Jonathan Gore as his guardian. Gore, as such guardian, under authority of such court, sold said quarter-section of land (with an additional tract of forty acres) to Joel F. Kinney for $2000, executing to him a guardian’s deed, which was approved by the secretary of the interior May 21, 1869. The title so acquired by Kinney to the property here involved has passed by a series of conveyances to the Greens, defendants in error. George Washington (who may be considered as the sole plaintiff in error, he alone claiming title) took no step to challenge the validity of the guardian’s deed until June 25, 1895, when, according to the agreed statement of facts upon which the case was submitted
We shall assume for the purposes of this case that the guardian’s deed was void for want of jurisdiction. It is not claimed that it was tainted by any fraud or that it was in contravention of any statute. It seems to be virtually conceded that in the case of an ordinary litigant inaction for so long a time would constitute an effective bar to the assertion of a claim to the land, regardless of any statute of limitation. It will be noted that George Washington must have reached the age of twenty-one years before November 27,1874. There was therefore an interval of more than twenty-one years after he attained his majority within which he did nothing to assert his title or to challenge the sufficiency of the guardian’s deed. In the meantime we know without evidence that the property must have increased greatly in value, and the record shows
At page 217 of volume 16 of the American and English Encyclopedia of Law (2d ed.), under the title “Indians,” and also at page 108 of volume 18 of the same work, under the title “Laches,” it is stated as a general proposition that laches cannot be imputed to a tribal Indian. However, only two cases are cited in support of 'the statement. They are Laughton v. Nadeau, 75 Fed. (C. C.) 789, and Felix v. Patrick, 145 U. S. 317, 12 Sup. Ct. 862, 36 L. Ed. 719. In the very extensive brief filed by plaintiffs in error the only cases cited upon this specific proposition are the two just noted and Sheldon v. Donohoe, 40 Kan. 346, 19 Pac. 901. The Kansas case is not in point. There a Chippewa Indian held title to a tract acquired under a treaty providing that the land could not be sold or otherwise disposed of, except to the United States or to the members of the tribe. While this treaty provision was still in force the Indian owner deeded the tract to a white man, who took possession and held it for sixteen years. The decision was that, since the paramount federal law prohibited the grantee from taking title, he could not indirectly build up one by adverse possession, estoppel, or any statute of limita-' tions. The question of the degree of accountability for his conduct to which an Indian is subject was not involved and was not discussed.
The case of Laughton v. Nadeau (decided in 1896 by Judge Foster), however, tends to support the contention of plaintiffs in error. There a conveyance was made
The case of Felix v. Patrick, supra, we construe as an authority against the contention of plaintiffs ih'
■ “But in such cases equity will recognize the defense of laches and staleness of claim, under proper circumstances, and this is a case where it seems eminently proper to recognize and enforce such a defense. Under ordinary circumstances it does not seem probable that any one would seriously contend that a claim so stale could be enforced, or that equity would take property which had increased so enormously in value after this lapse of time and give it to parties who had done nothing towards such enhancement of value. But it is earnestly contended that a different rule should be applied in this case, because plaintiffs and their ancestors were Indians; that the law is very tender in respect to the rights of such persons, who are not familiar with our laws and methods of transacting governmental or private business, and were ignorant of the disposition which had been made of the scrip. And it is also urged that as Indians they were the wards of the government, and could not have asserted their rights to the property even if they had known what their rights were. It is not shown that they were not persons of education and*563 intelligence, or that they were not in fact familiar with the land laws and the methods of governmental business, or that they were not in fact as competent to look after their rights as any persons. We all know that many of these Indians, especially half-breeds, are well educated, intelligent, and as fully competent to look after their business affairs as any pex*sons ; and the fact that they were Ixidians, and maintaining tribal x’elations, and were in a certain sense the wards of the govexmment, did not debar them from a hearing in the courts of Nebraska. ... At any time during the last twenty-seven years these plaintiff's or their ancestors could have come into the courts of Nebraska and asserted their rights, ánd, as this scrip was of value simply for the entering of lands, they could at any time, by examining the records at Washington., have ascertained whether it had been u.sed and by whom, and where the land for which it liad been used was located. The means of knowledge were open before them. They had the right to sue, and the courts would have given them full protection. It would savor little of equity to permit them to come in now and take from these many defendants, most of whom are innocent of any intentional wrong, property of such enormous value, on the ground that their ancestor twenty-eight years ago was swindled out of scrip of such trifling value — a million dollars to-day for one hundred and fifty dollars twenty-eight years ago. I cannot'believe tliat equity demands or even tolerates this. The demurrer will be sustained.”
Upon the appeal the supreme court affirmed the decree of the circuit court. The opinion, after stating that there were really but two questions involved in the case, one being whether plaintiffs were estopped by laches, and after discussing the other' question, proceeded as follows:
“The most important question in this case, however, the question upon which its result must ultimately depend, is that of laches. . . It admits of no doubt that if Sophia Felix and these plaintiffs*564 had been ordinary white citizens, under no legal disabilities, such as those arising from infancy, lunacy, or coverture, this lapse of time would be fatal to a recovery ; at least, unless it were conclusively shown that knowledge of the fraud was not obtained, and could not by reasonable diligence have been discovered, within a reasonable time after it was perpetrated. In reply to this defense of laches, plaintiffs rely mainly upon the fact that Sophia Felix and her heirs were at the time, and continued to be until 1887, tribal Indians, members of the Sioux nation, residing upon their reservation in the state of Minnesota, and incapable of suing in any of the courts of the United States. We are by ■no means insensible to the force of this suggestion. Whatever may have been the injustice visited upon this unfortunate race of people by their white neighbors, this court has repeatedly held them to be the wards of the Nation, entitled to a special protection in its courts and as persons ‘ in a state of pupilage.’ Congress, too, has recognized their dependent condition and their hopeless inability to withstand the wiles or cope with the power of the superior race, by imposing restrictions upon their power to alienate lands assigned to them in severalty, either by making their scrip non-assignable, as in this case, or by requiring the assent of the president to their execution of deeds as in the case of Pickering v. Lomax, ante, 310, decided at this term. We fully coincide with what was said by Mr. Justice Davis in the case of The Kansas Indians, 5 Wall. 737, 758, that ‘the conduct of Indians is not to be measured by the same standard which we apply to the conduct of other people.’ But their very analogy to persons under guardianship suggests a limitation to their pupilage, since the utmost term of disability of an infant is but twenty-one years, and it is very rare that the relations of guardian and ward under any circumstances, even those of lunacy, are maintained for a. longer period than this. It is practically admitted in this case, that, in 1887, when their relations with their tribe were severed by accepting ■ allotments of land in severalty under the treaty of 1878, they become citizens of the*565 United States ; that they were then chargeable with the same diligence as white people in the discovery of this fraud ; and, as their bill was filed in 1888, it was. claimed that they fulfilled all the requirements of law in this particular. While, as alleged in the bill, their discovery of this fraud may have been contemporaneous with their becoming citizens of the United States, there is no palpable connection between the one fact and the other, and we think the bill is defective in failing to show how the fraud came to be discovered, and why it was not discovered before. A simple letter to the land department at any time after this scrip was located would have enabled them to identify the land, and the name of the person who had located it; and it is difficult to see why, if they had ever suspected the misuse of this scrip, they had not made inquiries long before they did, or why their emancipation in 1887 should have suddenly awakened their diligence in this particular. . . . Sophia Felix and her husband must have known that she had parted with the scrip, yet she lived until 1865, and her husband until 1882, without apparently making any attempt to discover what had become of it. Nor did their heirs apparently make any effort to discover it until 1887, when their intelligence seems to have suddenly sprung into activity upon their becoming citizens of the United States. It is scarcely necessary to say in this connection, that while until this time they were not citizens of the United States, capable of suing as such in the federal courts, the courts of Nebraska were open to them as they are to all persons irrespective of race or color. . . . The mere fact that in 1887 these plaintiffs took their land in severalty and became citizens does not adequately explain how they so quickly became cognizant of this fraud, or why they had remained so long in ignorance of it.”
The opinion then presents a further argument to the effect that, even conceding that the complainants were incapable of being affected with laches, it would not necessarily follow that they should have the relief
We quote thus extensively from this opinion in an effort to present practically all of it that directly affects the subject under consideration, in view of the fact that it has been cited as supporting the view that laches cannot be attributed to a tribal Indian. In the brief of appellants in the federal supreme court the followr"- cases, and no others, were cited upon this question. The Cherokee Nation v. The State of Georgia, 5 Pet. 1, 17, 8 L. Ed. 25; Fellows v. Blacksmith et al., 19 How. 366, 15 L. Ed. 684; Kansas Indians, 5 Wall. 737, 18 L. Ed. 667; New York Indians, 5 Wall. 761, 18 L. Ed. 708; Ex parte Crow Dog, 109 U. S. 556, 568, 3 Sup. Ct. 396, 27 L. Ed. 1030; Elk v. Wilkins, 112 id. 94, 111, 5 Sup. Ct. 41, 28 L. Ed. 643; United States v. Kagama, 118 id. 375, 383, 6 Sup. Ct. 1109, 30 L. Ed. 228; Choctaw Nation v. United States, 119 id. 1, 7 Sup. Ct. 75, 30 L. Ed. 306. These cases have only the most remote application, and were doubtless invoked, in the absence of more direct authority, because they abound in expressions to the effect that Indians are the wards of the Nation and are entitled to protection at the hands of the federal government. We conclude that the weight of judicial opinion is against the rule announced in Laughton v. Nadeau, above cited. See, also, in this connection Rubideaux v. Vallie, 12 Kan. 28; Hannon v. Taylor, 57 id. 1, 45 Pac. 51; Schrimpcher v. Stockton, 58 id. 758, 51 Pac. 276, s. c. 183 U. S. 290, 22
We also approve, on principle, the doctrine that the fact that a litigant is a tribal Indian is not a complete bar to the defense of laches, although it is to be taken into account in determining the effect of his inaction. Whenever this defense is invoked there must be a consideration of all the special circumstances of the case.. The mere extent of the delay is one item to be considered. Among others are, any change of conditions, the intervention of the rights of third parties, the likelihood of other interests being affected by the delay, the presence of fraud and its character, the diligence required to discover it, and so on. The partial disability of a litigant, resulting from his membership in an Indian tribe, is merely one factor, to be considered with all the other features of the case, and given the weight to which it may be entitled, in reaching a conclusion consonant with the general rule. His being an Indian entitles him to more liberal treatment in the matter just so far as it is an indication of his inferior capacity. To hold this guarantees him the exact amount of special protection to which he is fairly entitled. To go further, and hold that it gives him absolute immunity from the consequences of his own neglect, would be to make it a means of injustice toward others, rather than of protection to himself.
Taking this view of the case, we find no difficulty in affirming the judgment of the trial court. Apart from the mere fact of the claimant’s being an Indian there is nothing to excuse the delay in this case. The land was sold for a price that two Shawnee chiefs and an Indian agent certified to be fair ; the secretary of the interior approved the sale ; the owner received and retained certainly a part, and presumably the
The judgment is affirmed.