112 F. Supp. 231 | Ct. Cl. | 1953
delivered the opinion of the court:
This case is before us on appeal from the decision of the Indian Claims Commission, Docket No. 53, dismissing appellant’s petition.
In its petition it is alleged that by an Act of the Tribal Council of the Seminole Nation, approved April 23,1897, a townsite commission was created, which, in the exercise of the .authority conferred by that Act, acquired a tract of approximately 640 acres, divided it into lots, blocks, streets and alleys, and proceeded to sell the lots. By February 12, 1900, the balance of some 3,132 lots were sold to John F. Brown, the Principal Chief of the Nation, for $12,000. This sale was not in accordance with the Act of the Seminole Nation, in that it relieved Brown of the requirement of the Act that a building or buildings be erected on the lots purchased within six months thereafter. The sale, however, was ratified and confirmed by the Seminole General Council on April 18, 1900, and again on December 16, 1903, and on March 3,1905, the Congress of the United States ratified and confirmed these acts of the Seminole General Council (33 Stat. 1048,1068).
Appellant’s petition before the Indians Claims Commission is almost identical with the one it filed in this court on May 31, 1930, as amended by its amended petition filed December 27, 1937. The only substantial difference is that in its petitions filed in this court it asserted that under the facts alleged the defendant had taken its lands, for which it was required by the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution to pay just compensation; whereas in the petition before the Indian Claims Commission it alleges that these same facts show that the defendant had been guilty of unfair and dishonorable dealings with the tribe and for this reason the sale to Brown should be set aside.
In our opinion on the case brought originally in this court we held (92 C. Cls. 210, 214-216) that defendant had not appropriated plaintiff’s lands unless the sale of them by the tribe to Brown, the Principal Chief, was fraudulent and the United States was a party to the fraud. We said the United States could not have been a party to the fraud except by the passage of the Act of March 3,1905, ratifying the acts of the Seminole General Council of April 18, 1900, and December
All that was said in that case on the question of whether or not the defendant was a party to any fraud that may have been committed in the sale of these lands, is equally applicable to the allegation in the present suit that the defendant was guilty of unfair and dishonorable dealings. There is no evidence to support such an allegation.
On the authority of our former opinion,
Petition for certiorari was denied, 331 U. S. 563.