delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal brings under review the proceedings in a much-litigated suit in equity brought to determine adverse claims based on conflicting mining leases given by a Quapaw Indian of land which was part of his allotment. The plaintiffs (appellees here) claimed under the first lease, and the defendant (appellant here) under two later leases, which taken together included the same land as the first. The relief sought by the plaintiffs was full recognition of their lease and cancelation of the others. On the original hearing the District Court, following its decisions in earlier cases, held that the plaintiffs’ lease contravened restrictions imposed by laws of Congress, in that it was for a longer term than ten years, and therefore was void. Accordingly the bill was dismissed; but the Circuit Court of Appeals disapproved that ruling, reversed the decree and remanded the cause for further, proceedings,
The plaintiffs insist that this appeal cannot be entertainеd, although taken prior to'the Act of February 13, 195?5, c. 229, 43 Stat. 936, changing federal appellate jurisdiction. But we think they misapprehend the situation.
The suit was not within any of the classes as to which an appeal was denied by § 128, of the Judicial Code, as existing before the change. Either the suit was one arising under the laws of Congress relating to (he alienation and leasing of Quapaw allotments, or there’was an entire absence of federal jurisdiction. In either event § 241 of
*459
the Judicial Code, as existing before the change, permitted an appeal to this Court from the final decree оf the Circuit Court of Appeals. The only difference was that if the suit was one arising under the laws of Congress relating to the alienation and' leasing of such allotments the reexamination by this Court would extend to the merits; while if there was an absence of federal jurisdiction this Court could not consider the merits, but would have to reverse the decrees of both courts below and remand the cause to the District Court with a direction to dismiss the bill for want of jurisdiction.
Shoshone Mining Co.
v.
Rutter,
It therefore is necessаry at the outset to . determine whether this suit was one arising under the legislation relating to Quapaw allotments or was one where there was an absence of federal jurisdiction. The established rule is that a plaintiff suing in a federal court must show in( his pleading, affirmatively and distinctly, the existence of whatever is essential to federal jurisdiction; and, if he does not do so, the court, on having the defect called to its attention or on discovering the same, must dismiss the case, unless the defect be corrected by amendment.
Norton
v.
Larney,
Here the bill disclosed that the lease under which the plaintiffs were сlaiming, and which they sought to have recognized, was based on the laws of Congress relating to the right of Quapaw allottees to alienate and lease their lands, and that the defendant was claiming adversely under later leases from the same lessor. It apparently was intended to show that the suit was one arising under those laws; but it fell short of showing that a real dispute over their construction and. application was involved.
*460
See
Schulthis
v.
McDougal,
*461
The plaintiffs insist that, as the defendant did not appeal from the decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals on the first appeal, he is now precluded from questioning what was decided then. But the law and settled practice are otherwise. That decree was not final'but only interlocutory, and so was not appealable. Nor did the defendant acquiesce in it. On the contrary, he sought to have it reconsidered by the Circuit Court of Appeals on a timely petition for rehearing, and again on the second appeal to that court. He therefore is entitled to ask, as he does in his .assignments of error, that it be reexamined on this appeal.
United States
v.
Beatty,
We come then to the merits, which center about the. validity of the plaintiffs’ lease.
The lessor was a Quapaw Indian and under the guardiаnship of the United States. The land for which the conflicting mining leases were given was part of the-allotment made to him in the distribution of the lands of his tribe. His title rested on a patent issued to him in 1896 pursuant to the Ac.t of March 2, 1895, e. 188, 28 Stat. 907, which provided that the allotments should be inalienable for a period of 25 yеars from the‘date of the patents. The Act of June 7, 1897, c. 3, 30 Stat. 72, modified that restriction to the extent of authorizing the allottees “ to lease their lands, or any part thereof, for a term not exceeding three years for farming of grazing purposes, or ten years for mining or business purposes ”; and the Act of June 21,1906, c. 3504, 34 Stat. 344, further modified the restriction to the. extent of specially authorizing this allottee to alienate not exceeding 120 acres of his allotment, subject to the supervision and approval of the Secretary of the Interior.
On July 14, 1906, the allottee, with the approvаl of the Secretary of the Interior, conveyed 120 acres of his allot *462 ment to E. V. Kellett by a deed which described itself as a “ mortgage ” and contained a declaration that it was made to secure the payment of a promissory note given to Kellett by the allottee and was tо be null and void if the note was duly paid. In due course the note was paid, and on June 20, 1908, the land was reconveyed to the allottee by a deed which described itself as a “ release of mortgage ” and contained an acknowledgment of such payment.
The 120 acres thus conveyed to Kellett and reconveyed to the allottee is the land for which the allottee gave the mining leases in question here. They were given in 1912 and 1913, but were not approved by the Secretary of the Interior. The 'plaintiffs’ lease was for a term exceeding ten years, while the defendant’s leаses were limited to a ten-year term.
The evidence at the final hearing took a wide range, but in no wise tended to show either that the defendant was precluded from assailing the plaintiffs’ lease or that the plaintiffs were entitled to any equitable relief if their lease was originally invalid. The defendant took his leases with notice of the plaintiffs’ lease, but had been proceeding with operations under his for a year or two before any effort was made to take possession or begin operations under the plaintiffs’.
The first question on the merits is, whether the Act of 1906 and the conveyance made to Kellett with the approval of the Secretary of the Interior took the land éntirely out of the prior restrictions on its alienation, so that when that conveyance had served its purpose and the reconveyance to the allottee was made hе was free to lease the land, and even to sell it, as he saw fit. The plaintiffs contend that the answer should be in the affirmative. ' Both courts below held the other way, and we think they were right. The Act of 1906 did not accord to the allottee an unqualified,.right' of alienation, *463 but a right which was to-be exercisеd only under the supervision and with the approval of the Secretary of the Interior. Nor was the conveyance to Kellett an absolute alienation. In terms and effect it was a conditional conveyance, called a mortgage, and the contingency which might have convеrted it into an absolute alienation never happened. The Secretary’s approval was of that particular conveyance and of course was measured by its terms and purpose. When the condition on which the conveyance was to'be null and void was performed and the reconveyance was made the situation was essentially the same as if there had been no conveyance. In substance a lien had been created with the Secretary’s approval and then extinguished, thus leaving the land subject to the restrictions.
This brings us to the defendant’s cоntention that the plaintiffs’ lease was void because given for a term exceeding ten years. Wé have seen that the District Court originally so held, .in keeping with its decisions' in prior cases, and that the Circuit Court of Appeals, while re-' garding the lease as given for a term exceeding ten years, held it good for that period and invalid as to the excess. To determine this conflict involves a consideration of the purpose and effect of the restrictive provisions in the Acts of 1895 and 1897 and an examination of the terms of the lease.
The Act of 1895 declared broadly that the allоtments should be inalienable for 25 years from the date of the patents, and the Act of 1897 relaxed that restriction to the extent only of permitting the allottees to lease not exceeding a term of three years for farming or grazing pur-. poses, or ten.years for rhining or business purposes. Thus it wаs beyond the power of any allottee, on his own volition, to grant any interest in his allotment during the 25-year period otherwise than by a lease permitted
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by the Act of 1897.
United States
v. Noble,
The Circuit Court of Appeals concluded that the provisions just described were so far independent and sever-able that the one declaring that .the term was to be ten years should be given effect and those declaring that it was to continue beyond that period should be rejected as invalid, and the lease sustained for a ten-year term. We think thát conclusion overlooks the nature and purpose of the restrictions in the Acts of 1895 and 1897.’ -In adopting the restrictions Congress was not imposing restraints on a class of persons who were sm
juris,
but on Indians who were being conducted from a state of dependent wardship to one of full emancipation and needed to be safeguarded against their own imprоvidence during the period of transition. The purpose of the restrictions
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was to give the needed protection, and they should be construed in keeping with that purpose. The permission to give short leases was in the nature of an exception to the comprehensive restraint аlready imposed and hardly could have been intended to give any effect or recognition to leases negotiated and made in disregard of that limited permission. A lease not within that permission evidently was intended to be left where it was before— within the general prohibition and invalid. Otherwise thе .allottees would be exposed to much of the evil intended to-be excluded; for of course many intending lessees would be disposed to obtain leases for long terms if no other risk was run than that of having their rights held down to the maximum admissible term, if the allottee or the United States should discover the situаtion and take proceedings to correct it. Such a view would almost certainly result in beclouding the title of the allottees and in bringing the land into needless litigation to their detriment. We think the better view is that where an allottee undertakes to negotiate a lease for a forbidden term hе enters a field in which he must be regarded as without capacity or authority to negotiate or act and that the resulting lease is void. See
Taylor
v.
Parker,
This conclusion 'makes it unnecessary to consider other objections urged against the plaintiffs’ lease. It follows that the first decree of the District Court was right and the subsequent decrees were wrong.
Decree reversed.
