5 Indian Terr. 275 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1904
There is but one specification of error relied on by appellant. It is: “The court below erred in directing the jury to return a verdict for the defendant.” The charge of the court was as follows: “Gentlemen of the Jury: In this case Mr. Owens sues the defendant, Eaton, for an unlawful detainer of certain premises that are described in the complaint. The claim by Mr. Owens is that he owned the premises by reason of an assignment of a lease contract for the year 1902. It seems from the testimony that has been .introduced that for the year 1901 from some one who had a long-term lease contract on them, and that he and Mr. Eaton jointly went into a lease of these premises that they occupied the premises together in 1901 as joint tenants; that during that year that Mr. Owens bought out the interest of their landlord, and assumed the landlordship of the land for 1901. Now, it seems that Mr. Eaton held over under that contract, and went into the possession of the lands for the following year. Eaton, however, did not return possession of the lands to Mr. Owens, but just simply continued in possession, and undertook to turn him out, and did recognize another landlord, the owner of the premises. The court intends to instruct a verdict for Mr. Eaton in this case, for the reason that neither of these parties had any rights in those premises after the year 1901. The contract sought to be proven in evidence here is a contract of
The chain of title in this case, as far as it is necessary to state, begins with McGrady and wife, who on January 13, 1898, executed a lease for a term of five years to James Mynnahan. Mynnahan sold and assigned this lease to James M. Bloodworth on October .13, 1898, who on the 13th day of February, 1901, leased the land to the parties to this suit for one year. Before the termination of this last lease, Bloodworth sold and assigned the original lease to the plaintiff, and, as before stated, plaintiff’s tenant in common', the defendant, paid him the rent, and thus attorned to him. The plaintiff’s title, then, rests exclusively on the validity of the original deed of McGrady to Mynnahan, which had been conveyed to him by Bloodworth. If that title was procured by him “for purposes of violation of law,” or “for improvements on public lands specially reserved,” it was void; and it was such a want of title as that, under the exceptions to the rule above set out, his lessee, whether made so by written lease, or by the payment of rent, could dispute and deny and under which the plaintiff, as landlord, could claim no allegiance of the defendant. Was that lease void for the reasons stated? The act entitled “An act for the protection of the people of the Indian Territory and for other purposes,” the Curtis bill (30 Stat. 304, c. 517, § 23), enacted on June 28, 1898, provides “that all leases of agricultural or grazing land belonging to any tribe made after the first day of January, 1898, by the tribe or any member thereof, shall be absolutely void, and all such grazing leases made prior to said date shall terminate on the first day of April, 1899, and all such agricultural leases shall terminate on January first, 1900.” This was agricultural land.
We therefore hold that as Congress, in aid of the public policy of the government in relation to Indian lands, and the
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.