5 Port. 327 | Ala. | 1837
The plaintiffs in the Court below, on the trial of this cause, shewed in evidence, a patent from the United States to An-sel Sawyer, for the land in controversy. This patent is dated, the twenty-ninth of February, eighteen hundred and thirty-six, and recites, that Ho-gillis-i-nihaw, one of the Creek tribe of Indians, by virtue of the treaty made the twenty-fourth day of March, eighteen hundred and thirty-two, became entitled, out of the lands ceded to the United States, by the said treaty, to the tract of land, which is the subject of this suit, which, with the approbation of the President of the United States, had been duly sold and conveyed, by the said Indian, to Ansel Sawyer, as appears by the conveyance thereof, dated the seventeenth of January, eighteen hundred and thirty-five, with the approbation of the President of the United States, indorsed thereon, dated first of February, eighteen hundred and thirty-five, deposited by the said Ansel Sawyer, in the general land office of the United States. They then shewed in evidence a deed for the land, from Ansel Sawyer to them, dated the ninth of June, eighteen hundred and thirty-five.
To the introduction of this patent in evidence, the plaintiff in error objected, as it bore date after the commencement of this suit, but the Circuit Court overruled the objection, because the recitals in the patent shewed, that the deed from Hogillis-i-nihaw to Sawyer, was made and approved by the President, before suit brought; and the Court deci
The exception of the plaintiffs in error, to the admission of the patent in evidence, and to the opinion expressed by the Circuit Court, as to the effect of the recitals therein contained, are presented by the assignments of errors, for the examination of this Court.
It is insisted, that if the recitals in the patent are to be taken as evidence of the facts recited, yet no legal title was shewn to be in the defendants, when this suit was instituted.
The patent can convey no interest to the grantee, anterior to its date, but it might be shewn to be connected with, and to relate back, to a previous inchoate legal title. Thus, a patent may be shewn to have' been founded, on a certificate of entry and purchase, and to be connected with the legal title, created by the act of entry. So in the present case, the patent might be shewn to have emanated from the location of the land, to Hogillis-i-nihaw, if that is to be considered as a legal estate.
So far as the question now presented, involves the consideration of the title, we think that the patent may be entirely placed out of view, for it is clear, that if no legal title was in existence, when it issued, for the land, it could have no effect to support an action previously commenced. But if the recitals are evidence of the facts stated, it was made to appear, that the Indian named, was entitled to a reservation of the land in controversy, under the treaty of eighteen hundred and thirty-two; and that he had. with the aonroval of the Presi
By the treaty of eighteen hundred and thirty-two, Indians of a particular description, were entitled to a tract of one half section of land, to be selected in the manner pointed out by the treaty, and the land was to be reserved from sale for their use, for the term of five years, unless sooner disposed of by them. All intruders were to be removed from the reservations, for the term of five years, or until conveyed to white persons; and at the end of five years, all the Creeks, entitled to their reservations, and desirous of remaining, shall receive patents therefor, in fee simple, from the United States.— These are the terms used in the treaty, and we can arrive at no other conclusion, than that the Indian, after his tract of land had been selected, and set apart by a location, was entitled to the possession of the same, until he should dispose of it, according to the terms of the treaty, or should voluntarily relinquish or abandon it; and this right was a legal estate, vested in the Indian, and could be, by him. enforced in a Court of law. But although the Indian may, under the treaty, be entitled to a legal estate, in his reservation, when located, if may not follow as a consequence, that he can transfer'this
The third article, provides, that these tracts, (re-' servations allotted to Indians,) ■ may be conveyed, by the persons selecting the same, to any other persons, for a fair consideration, in such manner as the President shall direct. • The contract shall he certified by some person, appointed for that purpose by the President, but shall not be valid, until the President approves of the same.
A title shall be given by the United States, on the completion of the payment.
Again, the second article, in speaking of the lands reserved by the Indians, — ‘‘which tracts shall be reserved from sale for their use, for the term of five years, unless sooner disposed of by them.”
Again, in the fifth article, the right to remove'an intruder from the reservation, under the summary mode pointed out, in that article, is taken away, as soon as the lands “are conveyed to white persons.”
We do not doubt, that these provisions of the treaty, were intended to authorise the conveyance of the title and estate, which the Indian was entitled to possess and enjoy, and that so soon as the conveyance is rendered valid, by the approval of the President of the United States, the purchaser, or grantee, from the Indian, is entitled to all the estate, which was vested in the Indian, by virtue of the treaty, and his location; and that he is further
The case of Chinnubbee vs Nicks, et al. (3 Porter, 362,) has been cited, and relied on by the plaintiffs in error. With the decision made in that case, we remain satisfied, — believing the law to be there correctly laid clown: but the Court do not attempt to settle, that the reservee has no legal title, but merely, that he is possessed of no such estate, as his widow- could be endowed of.
See also the case of Herring vs M’Elderry, et al. (this vol. 161,) in which it is ruled, that until approval of the contract bij the President, the purchaser, from an Indian reservee, has no legal or equitable title to the land purchased.
Having thus arrived at the conclusion, that if the recitals in the patent, are to be considered as establishing the facts recited, the defendants in error, did shew such a legal estate, as would enable them to maintain this action, it remains to inquire if the recitals were properly admissible in evidence.
It is not difficult to ascertain the general rule, as to the effect of recitals in deeds of an ordinary description. It is well settled that they may be evidence against him, who executed the deed, or claims under the party.—(7 Comyn. Dig. tit. Testmoigne, B. 5. page 432. Penrose vs Griffith, 4 Binn. 231. Garwood vs Dennis, id 327. Morris vs Vanderin, 1 Dall. 67. Denn ex dem Colden vs Cornell, 3 Johns. Cases, 174. Shelly vs Wright, Willes 9.) But as against a stranger, a recital is no evidence. (7 Comyn. Dig. tit. Testmoigne, B. 5, page 492.) —
Such are the general rules: — but it is conceived, that the peculiar situation of the parties interested in the titles and estates, created by virtue of the treaty of eighteen hundred and thirty-two, requires,an essential modification of these rules, as applicable to those estates.
By the treaty, so far as the disposition of any estate in the lands, allotted thereby, is concerned, the Indian is placed under the care and protection oí the President, and he supervises and approves every step, taken in relation to a sale or conveyance. He is to direct the manner in which the land may be conveyed. The contract in relation to the sale, is to be certified by some person appointed for that purpose, by him, and it has no validity, until it receives his approval; and finally, a title is to be given by the United States to the purchaser. We cannot resist the conclusion, that it was intended by the parties to the treaty, that the action of the President, on all these matters, was intended to be final and conclusive; at least, so much so, as to preclude any inquiry in a collateral way, into the identity or capacity of the Indian, who is said to have parted with his interest in the land, — unless in a suit,
But notwithstanding, we have arrived at the conclusion, that a mere stranger has no right to inquire if the recitals in the patent, be true or false, yet the case now to be decided, presents a question which is not affected by this conclusion. At the time when the suit was instituted, the defendants in error, (if the recitals in the patent are in conformity with the facts,) were invested with a title, sufficient to authorise and maintain their action; but this title they do not produce in evidence. The evidence, on. which they rely, amounts to no more than an admission, by the United States, that Sawyer, on. the seventeenth of January, eighteen hundred and thirty-five, had a legal estate in the land sued for, derived from the Indian reservee; and in consequence, they convey to him, on the twenty-ninth of February, eighteen hundred and thirty-six, the fee, which previously, had remained in them.— This admission cannot so operate, as to give a right
So in this case, the patent' conveys the fee, from its date, and if it becomes necessary for the purposes of this suit, to connect it with the antecedent estate, the title to such antecedent estate, should have been producedj
The Circuit Court, having ruled, that the recitals in the patent, were proper evidence of the deed, from Hogillis-i-nihaw to Sawyer, pronounced an erroneous opinion, for which the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.