after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court:
By section 15 of the act of March 3, 1875,18 Stat. 402, c. 131, any Indian born in the United States, who was the head of a family or who had arrived at the age of twenty-one years, and who had abandoned or might thereafter abandon his tribal relations, was, on making satisfactory proof of such abandonment, entitled to the benefits .of the act entitled “An act to secure homesteads to actual settlers on the public domain,” approved May 20, 1862, and acts amendatory thereof, “provided, however, that the title to lands acquired by any Indian by virtue hereof shall not be subject to alienation ,or incumbrance, either by voluntary conveyance or the judgment, decree or order of any court, and shall be and remain inalienable, for a period of five years from the date of the patent issued therefor.”
By section 16, in all cases in which Indians had theretofore entered public land under the homestead law and proceeded in accordance with the regulations of the Land Office, the conditions prescribed by law having' been complied with, the entries so. allowed were confirmed and patents directed to issue thereon, “ subject, however, to the restrictions and limitations contained-in the fifteenth section of this act in regard to alienation and incumbrance.” - ’
"West came within the sixteenth section, and obtained his patent accordingly. «
The question, upon the disposition of. which the decision of the Supreme Court of ,the Territory was based, and which ive are first to consider, arises upon the proper construction of the-proviso to the fifteenth section. The restraint on alienation was to continue for a period of five years. Was it the intention that the computation of time Should include the day of the issue of the patent? If so, the deed of June 15, 1885, was not invalid, and the decree must be affirmed.
In
Matthews v. Zane,
\ But this cannot be said to be a universal rule either in England or this county.
Webb
v.
Fairmaner,
3 M.
&
W. 473;
Robinson
v.
Waddington,
13 Q. B. 753;
Sheets
v.
Selden,
In Hatter v. Ash, 1 Ld. Raym. 84, it was argued that the words “from the date,” when used to pass an interest, included the day; aliter, when used by way of computation in matters of account; and Powell, senior Justice, was of this opinion, but the other justices expressed none.
The distinction indicated was recognized by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in Lysle v. Williams, 15 S. & R. 135, where a seire facias was issued on the 22d of July, 1823, upon a bond dated the 22d of July, 1818, and payable in five years from the date, and the court held that, as upon the execution of the bond an immediate interest passed to the plaintiff, the first day should be included in the five years, and that the seire facias was properly issued.
While it is desirable that there should be a fixed and certain rule upon this subject, it must be conceded that the rule which excludes the terminus a quo is not absolute, but that it may be included when necessary to give effect to the obvious intention.
This was the view entertained by Lord Mansfield who ruled in Pugh v. Duke of Leeds, 2 Cowp. 714, that “ the sense of the word’‘from’ must always depend upon the context and' subject-matter, whether it shall be construed inclusive or exclusive of the terminus a quo.” '
In Lester v. Garland, 15 Ves. 248, it- was held by Sir William Grant that, in computing time from an act or event, no. *645 general rule of inclusion or exclusion should be laid down; that it depended on the reason of the thing according to the circumstances.
In
Griffith
v. Bogert,
It may also be observed that, as to the general doctrine that the law does not allow of fractions of a day, it is settled that when substantial justice requires it courts may ascertain the
*646
precise time when a statute is approved or an act done.
Louisville
v. Bank,
The - power of free alienation is incident to an estate in fee simple, but a condition in a grant preventing alienation to a limited extent or for a certain and reasonable time may be valid, and the grantee forfeit his estate by violating' it, (1 , Prest. Est. 477,) and while such a result does not ensue in transactions with members of a race of people treated as in al state of pupilage and entitled to special protection,
(Pickering v
. Lomax,
The power to alienate came with the patent and the restriction for the period named was- carefully drawn to operate eo instanti, that is, to commence in its entirety coincidently with the possession of the power.
The decree of the Supreme Court of the Territory is affirmed, ' and the mandate will issue to the Supreme Court of South Dakota for further proceedings in conformity to law.
