9 Port. 354 | Ala. | 1839
The regularity of the sheriff’s sale and deed to the defendant, is not disputed, or the validity of the judgments and executions under which the levy was made, denied; nor is it pretended that Sutherland acquired any new title, or that any thing occurred to affect the one previously held by him, between the time when the levy was made, and the commencement of this action. These circumstances, naturally enough, wo ild lead to the conclusion, that there was something very peculiar, either in the nature of the title under which the plaintiff seeks a recovery, or that the rules which govern this action, must be very different from those which govern actions of ejectment, because an ordinary legal title would have passed from Sutherland by such a sale, so as to leave no estate to be subsequently conveyed by him, and an ordinary equitable title, will not enable any one to maintain the action of ejectment. The plaintiff can succeed in this action, only by showing that the title of Sutherland to this iand, at the time when the levy was made, was of this extraordinary description.
We will, therefore, proceed to examine the nature of the title held by him at that period. He was the purchaser, by deed, from an Indian reservee, and the consideration for the purchase of the land having been paid in the presence of the certifying agent, appointed by the executive, the deed was certified in the usual form, and subsequently approved by the President of the United States. It has been determined several times by this court, that as soon as the individual Indians were located on their respective reservations, they acquired a legal title
In the case of Goodlet vs. Smithson, (5 Porter, 215,) we determined that the purchaser of land from the United States, acquired such a title by the act of purchase, evidenced by the usual receipt of the receiver of public monies, as was subject to be sold under an execution from a court of law. Tin se cases go very far to determine the present case, both as to the nature of the title, and its subjection to the ordinary process of execution. It is supposed, by the plaintiff’s counsel, that a material distinction can be drawn between this, and the case of Goodlet vs. Smithson, as by the terms of the treaty, the purchaser from the Indian reservee does not acquire any right to a title from the United States, until the payment of the purchase money is made, notwithstanding the contract of sale has been approved by the President. It is true, that this difference exists between the cases, but it does not seem to us to introduce any new principle.
The right to receive the evidence of title from the United States, depends, in either case, on the actual payment of the purchase money. In the case of the sale of the public lands, the mode of entering into the contract is prescribed by law ; in the case of the sale of the Indian
Another distinction is attempted to be shown between the principle which it is supposed should govern this case, and that of Goodlet vs. Smithson, and arises from the use of the term title, in the latter clause of the third article of the treaty. This word is evidently used as an equivalent for patent, in the ordinary acceptation in which that word is received, when applied to a grant by the government. If a title is the right whereby one holds lands, it cannot be denied, that a title to the occupancy, Coupled with the power to sell, is vested by the treaty in the Indian reservee, and although this is certainly an incomplete title, and subject to be divested by the grant Of the government, evidenced by act of Congress, or by what is usually termed a patent, it is nevertheless & sufficient right to be recognised and enforced by the courts. All of the arguments a'j inconvenienti, might, however, bo well answered with the remark, that the case on the record; is free from all the supposed difficulties, and that it Will b,a sufficient, to dispose of the actual case before the court, and the supposed ones, whenever they arise.
It is not perceived that the decision of this court, in the case of Chinnubee vs. Nix, (3 Porter, 362.) has any material bearing on this case., There, the. question before, the court was, whether the widow of an Indian reservee, was. entitled to dower in the reserved land which her
It has been argued, that the act of eighteen hundred and twenty (Aik. Dig. 287, 173,) has an influence on this case. This statute did no more than repeal so much of the 9th section of the act of eighteen hundred and twelve, (Aik. Dig. 163,) as vested the equitable estate of a defendant in execution, where his lands were sold, in the purchaser, and revived the common law rule. By the common law, any legal estate in lands could be sold under execution, if coupled with a beneficial interest.
It has been supposed by the plaintiff’s counsel, that as Sutherland never had the actual possession of the land, that the mere right, to the possession, was not capable of sale. By the statute of uses, (Aik. Dig. 94,) the possession of the bargainor is transferred to the bargainee, and if the Indian reservee was possessed, or entitled to possession, all his rights passed to the purchaser from him, and could be transmitted to others, unless an actual adverse possession existed at the lime of executing the deed of conveyance.
The argument, that th* estate of Sutherland was ex
Our conclusion is, that the title to the land, the subject of this suit, passed to the defendant, Bradford, by the sheriff's sale, and that no interest remained in Sutherland, which could be conveyed to the plaintiff.
Let the judgment be affirmed.