1 Doug. 546 | Mich. | 1845
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The bill in this cause was filed under the provisions of an act, entitled “An act relative to proceedings in Chancery,” approved March 28, 1840. The first section of the act is in the following words ; “Beit enacted, &c. that any person having the possession and legal or equitable title to lands, may institute a suit against any other person or persons setting up a claim thereto, and if the complainant shall be able to substantiate his title to such land, the defendant shall be decreed to release to the complainant all claim thereto,” &c. S. L. 1840, p. 127.
1. The first question to be determined is, what estate passed to the reservee under the treaty? The third article is in the following words: “ There shall be reserved for the me of each of the persons herein after mentioned, and their heirs, which persons are all Indians by descent, the following tracts of land,” &c. “ For the use of Mokitchenoqua, six hundred and forty acres of land, to be located at and near the Grand Traverse of the Flint river, in such manner as the President of the United States may direct.”
It is very clear that, if a fee simple estate was intended to be granted, the parties to the treaty were unfortunate in the choice of terms by which to give effect to that intention ; and yet it is difficult to conceive that any other estate was in the contemplation of the parties at the time of its execution. Will, then, the third article warrant such a construction ? It will be observed that the reservation is to the use of Mokitchenoqua and her heirs. No limitation as to the time of holding, or restriction upon the right of alienation, is contained in the grant. The us.e of
2. The second question to be decided is, whether the
It was urged by the counsel for the complainants that, until the patent issued, the fee was in the government. The power of the government to grant the soil while in possession of the Indians, and subject to their right of occupancy, is a proposition which has long since been settled by a series of decisions of controlling authority. It is equally well established that the Indians do not possess the power to dispose of the soil at their own will, to whomsoever they please; upon the principle “that discovery gave exclusive title to those who made it,” and to the discoverers belonged the exclusive right of purchasing from the natives. 8 Wheat. R. 543; 6 Pet. R. 515. In furtherance of the policy pursued by the United States since its existence as a separate and independent government, a treaty was entered into with the Indians at Saginaw, the object of which was to extinguish their title to the country therein described. Here then were two parties capable of contracting; the one having the legal title and ultimate right to the land which was the subject of the contract; the other having the right of possession or occupancy, which has always been respected. The first article cedes to the United States land comprehended within certain defined boundaries. The second article reserves from the operation of the first, certain tracts of land for the use of the Chippewa nation. The third article makes specific reservations in favor of certain persons of Indian descent. The right of the Indians to the lands described in the second article, was neither enlarged nor
We have already said that the third article contained a grant in fee simple, to the reservees therein named, and we are now to determine whether the treaty operated as a present grant or conveyance to the reservees, or whether further action was required on the part of the government to perfect the title of the reservees to the lands reserved in that article. If it shall appear that the treaty itself operated as an absolute relinquishment of the right, title and interest, as well of the government as of the Indians, to the lands therein described, then it will follow as a corollary to this proposition, that the issuing of a patent to the reservees was unnecessary, and could confer no other or further rights upon them, than were conferred by the treaty itself, and that each must look to the treaty as the source and basis of .title to the lands reserved to them respectively. The right of the government to make a grant of lands either by treaty or act of Congress, is as unquestionable as the right to make a grant by patent issued by the President when duly authorized bylaw. Y/hat then is the-true construction of the treaty in this particular? It is admitted that the language of the third article is somewhat ambiguous, and admits of a twofold construction. In such case it is the duty of the Court to give effect to the intention of the parties to the treaty, provided we can discover what that intention was from the article itself; a resort to extrinsic evidence being inadmissible under the rules of law. It was not denied that the article in question operated as an absolute extinguishment of the right which the Chippewas, as a nation, had in the land reserved to the several individuals named in that article. No other or further act on their part was necessary to divest them of their pre-existing right of occupancy, or to invest the reservees, respectively, with all the rights which they, as a
The phraseology of the third article might warrant the inference that some legislation was necessary on the part of the government to perfect the titles of the reservees in the treaty. The words, “ There shall be reserved,” would seem to imply that something further was to be done to perfect the rights acquired under the treaty. But when it is considered that a quarter of a century has elapsed since the treaty was ratified, without any action on the part of Congress, in reference to the grants made by the third article, it is almost a necessary inference that the government have given to the treaty the construction contended for by the defendants; that, in respect to such grants, it executed itself. This view derives additional confirmation from the action of the Senate, on the report of Judge White, to which I have already adverted.
We think the view we have thus taken, cannot be overthrown, by the fact that the lands granted to Mokitchenoqua, were to be located “ at and near the Grand Traverse of the Flint river, in such manner as the President of the
From what has been said, it becomes unnecessary to comment upon that part of the arguments of the counsel for the complainants, relating to the acts of high public functionaries acting within the scope of their authority, or of the force and effect of a patent, regularly and according to law issued, by the government. The principles contended for, we do not controvert. On the contrary, they receive our unqualified approbation; but are, in our opinion, inapplicable to the present case.
3. We now come to the consideration of those questions which affect, more particularly, the merits of the case. To discuss these questions understanding^, it is important to analyze the provisions of the statute under which the bill is filed. Its language is very comprehensive, and would appear to confer upon the Court of Chancery unlimited jurisdiction in all cases involving the title to real
4. It is made a prominent point in the argument of the complainants counsel, that they are entitled to have the deed executed by Elizabeth Lyons to Williams and Pritchette, declared void, for the reason, that it was executed while complainants were in actual possession, claiming under a title adverse to that of the grantor. We are not disposed to review or disaffirm the doctrine laid down in the case of Bruckner v. Lawrence, (ante, 19,) referred to by counsel; but the true question is, whether, admitting that the complainants held adversely at the time of the execution of the deed from Elizabeth Lyons to Williams and Pritchette, this Court will for that reason, not simply decree the deed void, but also direct a release from the grantees in the deed to the complainants. No rule is better established than that a court of equity will not restrain
5. This brings us to the consideration of the last point to be determined. Have the complainants substantiated their titled This must depend upon the proofs taken in the case. To review minutely the mass of testimony in the transcript before us, would involve an amount of labor I am not disposed to undertake. A very large proportion of that taken, is either irrelevant or incompetent; and it is to be regretted that, in conducting the cause, more regard was not paid to those rules of evidence which are of universal application, and familiar to every lawyer. In this case a vast amount of labor and expense was incurred for no valuable purpose, and the duty devolving both upon the counsel and the Court greatly increased, in separating that which is legal and competent, from that which is manifestly illegal and incompetent. The testimony on both sides relates principally to the establishment of one fact: Was Nancy Smith, alias Crane, under whom the complainants claim, the person referred to in the treaty by the Indian cognomen of Mokitchenoqua, or was Elizabeth Lyons, under whom the defendants claim, that person ?
In treating of “ the nature and character of the evidence, by which the parties must establish their rights under the treaty,” the Chancellor decided, that “ hearsay evidence is admissible to show which of the two per
“It is a general principle in the law of evidence, that if any fact is to be substantiated against a person, it ought to be proved in his presence, by the testimony of a witness
“Hearsay evidence is the statement which a witness professes to have heard given by a third person as to some particular transaction or thing; literally, what the witness says he heard another person say.” 1 Stark. Ev. 229. The nature of hearsay evidence, — the reasons on which it is generally excluded, — and the rules which regulate its admission, — are too familiar to need illustration. To justify its introduction, it must be shown to fall within some one of the exceptions recognized by the adjudged cases on that subject. To relax the general rule further than those cases warrant, and admit hearsay, would be dangerous in the extreme, and lead to consequences most disastrous. The exceptions to this general rule are divided by Mr. Greenleaf, in his excellent treatise on evidence, into four classes : — First, those relating to matters of public and general interest; — Secondly, those relating to ancient possession; — Thirdly, declarations against interest ; — Fourthly, dying declarations, and some others of a miscellaneous nature. The admission of a part of what is properly hearsay evidence, was allowed by the Chancellor upon the supposition that it related to matters of public and general interest. Keeping in view the fact sought to be proved, was such evidence admissible upon the ground stated ?
“ The terms, public and general, are sometimes used as synonymous, meaning, merely, that which concerns a multitude of persons.” Greenl. Ev. 152. Hearsay is admitted in this class of cases upon the principle that, “ in matters of public interest, all persons must be presumed conversant.” Id. “ And, as rights which are common are
Having hinted at some of the rules which regulate the
Applying, then, these legal principles to the testimony before us, but little is left upon which this Court can act. The acts of the Register and Receiver of the land office, can have no influence in determining the question of identity. They acted, it is true, under the instructions of the Treasury Department, but their adjudication can have no binding force on the parties. The treaty did not provide a mode for adjudicating upon the question sub'mitted to them, and parties claiming rights, are necessarily remitted to the judicial tribunals of the country, whose judgments alone are binding and authoritative. On the part of the complainants, there are numerous witnesses who testify that Jacob Smith had an Indian daughter, called Mokitchenoqua, while there are but two or three witnesses, Cecil Boyer and Macons, whose testimony is regarded as admissible to establish the fact that she was the person to whom the grant was intended to be made. That Elizabeth Lyons’ Indian name was Mokitchenoqua, appears to be satisfactorily established. »It is also clear that she was at the treaty. The testimony of Campau, Cochois, Trudell, Knaggs and As-sin-o-ka-man, tend to establish the fact that she was the individual referred to in the treaty. We have given to the whole of the testimony a very careful examination, and without recapitulating that testimony here, or entering into a critical examination and analysis of its contents, with a view to determine whether it preponderates in favor of the complainants or defendants, we are all clearly of the opinion, that the complainants have not “ substantiated their title to the land,” by evidence so clear, satisfactory and convincing, as to authorize us to decree a release by the defendants. From the view we have taken of the statute un
Decree affirmed.