1 Ind. 446 | Ind. | 1849
This was a‘bill in chancery, filed by Longlois. The object of his suit was to establish a title to a certain half section of land claimed by him, and for a decree restraining the defendant from committing trespass on the land. The cause was submitted to the Circuit Court on bill, answer, and replication, "and a statement of facts. The bill was dismissed.
The material facts are as follow: In 1837, a treaty,
The schedule referred to in that article contains the following entry: “To Peter Longlois one-half section of land, to be located' at a point on Wild Cat, where the old trace from Mississineway to Thorntown crosses the same.” The lands ceded to the United States by this treaty were afterwards surveyed by an agent of the United States, and the west half of section three, township twenty-three north, range two east, was located by him for said Longlois, under the provisions of said treaty.
Afterwai’ds, the president of the United States issued and forwarded to said Longlois a patent for the land thus located; but the patent was immediately returned to the president by Longlois, on the ground that it was not' for the right land.
The old trace, referred to in the treaty, crossed Wild Cat creek very near the center of the east half of said section numbered three.
After the location of the west half of said section for Longlois, the United States granted the east half of that section to the state of Indiana, and the state afterwards sold the same to the defendant.
The land now in dispute between the parties to this suit, is the said east half of section numbered three.
The complainant’s'claim is founded on the treaty alone. He contends that, by the said third article of tíre treaty, and the said schedule, the title to the land in question was absolutely vested in him. If this proposition be cor.rect, the complainant could, immediately after the ratification of the treaty, have taken possession of the land
Our opinion is, that before the complainant could claim any tract of land under the treaty, the tract must have been located under the authority of the United States, and a patent to him for the same must have been issued by the president. There being no such location and patent, there is no ground for the present suit.
The principal case relied on by the complainant to sustain the proposition, that the treaty itself is a grant to him of the land in dispute, is Doe on the demise of Godfrey v. Beardsley, 2 McLean’s R. 412. That case arose under an Indian treaty entered into at Chicago in 1821, which ceded certain lands to the United States. That treaty contained the following clause: “ There shall be granted by the United States to each of the following persons, being all Indians, by descent, and to their heirs, the following tracts of land.” There then followed this clause: “ To Pierre Moran, or Peevish, a Pottawatamie chief, one section of land, and to his children two sections, at the mouth of the Elkhart river.”
The Chicago treaty provides further, that the tracts of land therein stipulated to be granted, should be located after the lands ceded had been surveyed, and in conformity with such surveys, as near as might be, and in such manner as the president might direct.
The lands ceded by the last-named treaty were after-wards surveyed, and a certain section of land, within the cession, was located for Moran by the United States agent under the treaty. That location was approved by the president, and the section designated on the official plat of the township in which the section was situate. The section thus located and designated on the plat, was section 5, in township 27 north, of range 5 east, in the La
That suit, on the trial, was objected to, on the ground that as no patent had issued for the land, the title to it was still in the United States. The Court overruled the objection, saying that the land was granted to Moran by the treaty, and that, therefore, no patent was necessary.
The opinion in that case, that no patent was necessary to the transfer of the title, is no doubt correct. The case, however, differs materially from the one now under consideration. In the case cited, the section of land had been regularly located in conformity with the treaty, before the title to any specified tract was claimed by Moran or by any one under him, by virtue of the treaty; and the treaty contained no provision that the land should be granted by a patent.
The correct doctrine on the subject we understand to be this: Where a treaty says that the title to a certain tract of land is thereby vested in a certain individual, his heirs, and assigns, the treaty operates as a grant of the land. But where it says, as in the present case, that a half section of land, at a specified point, shall be granted to a certain person, his heirs, and assigns, by a patent from the president of the United States, the clause amounts only to a contract that the land shall be afterwards properly located by an agent of the government, and be conveyed by a patent from the president.
It may be that the general government has not done its duty as to the claim of the complainant, but with that we have nothing to do. That government is not a party to this suit; and if it was, we have no power to enforce the performance of its contracts or duties.
The decree is affirmed with costs.