36 F. 457 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Nebraska | 1888
This case is submitted on demurrer to the bill. The facts, as alleged, are these: In 1854 one Sophia Felix was a half-breed Sioux Indian, residing near Mendota, in Minnesota. Under and by virtue of the treaty with the Sioux Indians of date July 15, 1830, and proclaimed February 1, 1831, and an act of congress approved July 17, 1854, said Sophia Felix was entitled'to receive from the government scrip for the location of 480 acres. In 1857 this scrip was issued to her in separate parcels. The act provided that no transfer or conveyance of the scrip should be valid. Afterwards said Sophia Felix intermarried with one David Garnelle. On the 31st of March, 1860, some persons unknown, by fraudulent practices, obtained from her and her husband a portion of this scrip, good for a hundred and twenty acres, also a blank power of attorney, duly acknowledged, for the location of said scrip, and for the conveyance of the land after locatiqn; also a blank quitclaim deed, duly acknowledged. In these instruments the name of the attorney, the description of the land, and the name of the grantee were blank. In November, 1861, the defendant, Mathewson T. Patrick, obtained possession of this scrip and these blank instruments from some unknown persons. Prior to that time said Patrick had been in possession of the premises now in controversy, seeking to acquire title thereto by pre-emption, but had been unsuccessful, the land being within the corporate limits of the town of Omaha. After obtaining possession of this scrip, Patrick used it to enter the land, and July 3, 1863, the patent was issued in the name of Sophia Felix. The blanks in the instruments were filled with the name of an attorney, a description of the land, and the name of Patrick as grantee; and the attorney thus' named in the power of attorney executed another deed in the name of Sophia Garnelle and her husband to him. These instruments were all placed of record. Patrick knew at the time of these transactions — indeed, was charged by law with knowledge of the fact — that the scrip was inalienable, and therefore was still the property of Sophia Felix, yet he used it for the purpose of securing title to the land to himself, and did not pretend and was not attempting to act as her agent. On July 25,1868, congress passed an act confirming the title to certain lands in the city of Omaha which had been entered with Indian or half-breed scrip. The land in question was, however, in express terms exempted from the operation of this act. 'Aft-erwards, on February 2, 1869, another act was passed touching this land, which reads as follows:
“An act supplementary to an act entitled ‘ An act to confirm the titles to certain lands in the state of Nebraska: ’ Be it enacted by the senate and*459 house of representatives of the United States of America, in congress assembled, that the provisions and benefits of an act entitled ‘ An act to confirm the title to certain lands in the state of Nebraska, approved the 25th day of July, Anno Domini eighteen hundred and sixty-eight, be, and the same are hereby, extended to the east half and north-west quarter of the south-east quarter of section nine, township fifteen, range thirteen east, Sixth principal meridian, in Douglas county, Nebraska, and that the title of the same is hereby confirmed to the parties holding by deed from the patentee.’ ” 15 U. S. St. at Large, 269.
The tract lies, as heretofore stated, within the limits of the city of Omaha; has been platted into lots and blocks, and large numbers of lots sold to individuals, many of -whom are joined as parties defendant. It has become of immense value; worth, as stated by counsel, from a million to a million and a half dollars. Sophia Felix Garnello died on the 25th day of December, 1865, without children and inféstalo. Iler husband, David Garnelle, died in 1882. Her mother died before her, and her father died October 22, 1876. The present plaintiffs are her brothers and sister and her sole heirs. Neither she nor her husband nor father nor these plaintiffs knew what had become of the scrip, or that it has been entered for this land, until the year 1887. The present plaintiffs became citizens of the United States for the first time on August 29, 1887, having then severed their tribal relations with the Sioux Indians. This bill was filed in the present year, and seeks to charge the defendants as trustees for the benefit of plaintiffs, and asks that the power of attorney and the two deeds be canceled as clouds upon their title, and the act of congress of February 2, 1869, in so far as it attempted to vest title in Patrick, be declared unconstitutional and void, and also that possession be delivered to them.
Several grounds of demurrer were urged and argued by counsel with great earnestness and ability before my Brother Dundy and myself. The two principal ones are as to the effect of the act of congress of February 2, 1869, and the staleness of plaintiffs’ claim. It will be noticed that the act of congress confirms the title “to the parties holding by deed from the patentee.” Now, if the land, by reason of its location within corporate limits was not subject to pre-emption or private entry, as seems probable, (section 2258, Rev. St. U. S.; Root v. Shields, Woolw. 340; Eldred v. Sexton, 19 Wall. 189,) it may be that the patent in 1863 was improperly issued, and that the equitable title still remained in the United States: and a plausible argument is made that congress by this act of 1869 vested the title which still equitably remained in the government in Patrick, as an apparent, at least, grantee of the patentee. But I do not care to discuss this question, for to my mind the other defense is satisfactory and clear. Prior to 1861, Patrick had been in possession of these lands, seeking to acquire title from the government. In that year he obtained possession of this scrip, and in 1863 acquired the patent. Twenty-eight years after Sophia Felix had parted with her scrip, '27 years after defendant had obtained and used the scrip, 25 years after the patent had been issued, and when the lands, with the growth of the city of Omaha, had risen in value from a mere nominal sum to over a million
“Sec. 13. All courts shall be open, and every'person, for any injury done him in his lands, goods, person, or reputation, shall have a remedy by due course of law and justice, administered without denial or delay.”
“Every person,” is its language; so that the doors of the courts of this state were open to these plaintiffs as well as to any other person who had or thought he had any claims to property within this state. As a matter of fact Indians are frequent suitors in the courts of the various states. I recall three cases in the supreme court of my own state, Kansas, and have no doubt there were many more. In Swartzel v. Rogers, 3 Kan. 374, a suit to establish title to a half interest in certain lands, and for partition, was maintained by an Indian. In Blue Jacket v. Johnson Co., Id. 299, an action was maintained by one of the chiefs of the Shawnee nation to restrain the taxation of his lands, and in Wiley v. Keokuk, 6 Kan. 94, an action for false imprisonment was also maintained by an Indian. The second of these cases was taken to the supreme court of the United States. The Kansas Indians, 5 Wall. 737. While the judgment of the supreme court of Kansas was reversed, the right of the Indian to sue in the courts of the state was not questioned. Indeed, it was impliedly recognized, for the court say:
“It is argued because theTndians seek the courts of Kansas for the preservation of rights and the redress of wrongs, sometimes voluntarily, and in certain specified cases by direction of the secretary of the interior, that they submit themselves to all laws of the state.”
¡Further, the Revised Statutes, in' section- 2126, carries the same implication. It reads:
“In all trials about the right of property in which an Indian may be a party on one side, and a white person on the other, the burden of proof shall rest upon the white person whenever the Indian shall make out a presumption of title in himself from the fact of previous possession or ownership. ”