50 Neb. 723 | Neb. | 1897
Rosalie Farley brought this action against William E. Peebles, A. C. Abbott, D. N. Wheeler, George F. Chittenden, and Harry F. Swanson, alleging in her petition that she is a member of the Omaha tribe of Indians; that there was made to her by said tribe, on the 1st of May, 1892, a lease of 21,632.18 acres of the unallotted tribal lands of said Omaha Indians for a period of five years, or until the allotment of the lands leased; that said lease was made for grazing purposes, rent being reserved at twenty-five cents per acre per year; that said lease was duly approved by the commissioner of Indian affairs and the secretary of the interior; and that plaintiff took possession under said lease of the lands therein described; that the lands were of great value to her for grazing purposes, and that she derived large profits therefrom; that in 1892 the defendants conspired together to interfere with her rights and to destroy her business of grazing and pasturing cattle upon said lands, and of renting saicl lands to owners of cattle for grazing purposes; and pursuant to said conspiracy the defendants caused to be printed and circulated among the customers of plaintiff a notice purporting to be signed by the members of the council of the Omaha tribe, which notice was to the effect that plaintiffs lease had expired, and that any cattle or stock found on said lands after May 1, 1893, would be taken up for trespass and held for damages. She further alleged that said notice was not in fact issued by the Omaha tribe; that many of the council knew nothing thereof and never signed or authorized the signing thereof, all to the defendants’ knowledge; that the sole purpose of issuing said notice was to prevent plaintiff from securing cattle to graze on said lands; that in fur
In addition to the foregoing statement, it may be well to say that the Omahas are a tribe of Indians having their residence chiefly in Thurston county. They were formerly in possession of a reservation, but by virtue of certain treaties and acts of congress a portion of their
In view of these facts it cannot be questioned that the plaintiff stated a cause of action. She alleged, more in detail than we have stated, a valid lease to herself of a large tract of land, the equitable ownership of which, if not the legal title, rests in the tribe of which she is a member; a conspiracy among persons outside the tribe to deprive her of the beneficial enjoyment of that lease; this conspiracy carried into effect by the publication of a false warning purporting to be, but not, in fact, signed by those having control of the tribal affairs, whereby strangers would be induced to avoid contracting with plaintiff on the faith of her lease; the institution of an action in the name of the Indians, but without their authority, to cancel her lease; and damages as the result of such acts.
There are many assignments of error, but we address our attention to only two groups, which present, as we think, the two questions of most importance developed by the trial. The other assignments relate either to matters of minor importance, to matters probably accidental to the first trial and not likely to recur, or to questions not properly preserved by exceptions or in the motion for a new trial.
Thomas L. Sloan was called as a witness for the plaint
The other subject which we deem it proper to consider is presented by numerous rulings upon the evidence, and by at least nine assignments of error. These we shall not consider in detail, although a detailed consideration might disclose that under the particular questions asked and offers of proof made some of the rulings may have been correct. Still, we are convinced that most of them were wrong, and that the court proceeded on an erroneous view of the law. The plaintiff, without first establishing by direct or by circumstantial evidence of a general character the existence of the conspiracy complained of, sought to show various acts of one or another
Reversed and remanded.