13 Ala. 793 | Ala. | 1848
By the treaty of the 24th of March, 1832, the Creek tribe of Indians ceded to the United States all their land east of the Mississippi river. The United States engaged by the same instrument to survey this land as soon as the same could be conveniently done, and when surveyed to allow ninety principal chiefs of the tribe to select one section each, and every head of a Creek family to select one half section each, “ which tracts shall be reserved from sale for their use for the term of five years, unless sooner disposed of by them. A census of these persons shall be taken under the direction of the President, and the selections shall be made so as to include the improvements of each person within his selection, if the same can be so made, and if not, then all the persons belonging to the same town, entitled to selections, and who cannot make the same, so as to include their improvements, shall take them in a body in a proper form.” It
Without stopping to inquire what the law may be, upon the point, it may be conceded that the enrolment of the name of Mary Wells as the head of a Creek family, and the allotment to her as such, of the land in controversy, gave her prima facie a legal estate, on which she might maintain an action for the recovery of the possession against an intruder. It may also be conceded that if she died before the expiration of five years, without conveying the same as provided by the third article, that her interest did not revert to the United States, but descended to her heirs to be disposed of by them, if adults, or to hold under the provisions of the fourth article. But in the case before us, it does not appear the reservee was in possession, or asserted her right to the land by conveying it, or otherwise; and although she died within the five years, her heirs did not within that time set up their claim to it. In fact, previous to the treaty, they removed with their father to Arkansas, and did not again return to Alabama until after the death of their mother.
The title acquired by the “ head of a Creek family ” under-the treaty, was to continue for five years, unless it was. sooner conveyed with the approval of the President; but if there was no such conveyance, it reverted to the United States, unless the reservee or his heirs were desirous of remaining in the country after the expiration of that period.. True, this is not explicitly declared, yet it follows from the terms employed in the fourth article, in which the United States stipulate to issue patents to all the reservees who are “ desirous of remaining” “ at the end of five years.” All the title of the Indian tribe passed from it, and the federal gov-
This interpretation of the treaty is enforced by an act of Congress of the 3d of March, 1837, which authorizes the President to cause all reserves belonging to the Creek Indians by virtue of the treaty, and remaining unsold on the fourth of April thereafter, (precisely five years after the treaty became operative,) to be sold at public auction, &c. The second section of the act authorizes the President to confirm the sales made by the widow, the widow and children, the children, or the lawful administrator of Creek Indians who had died or might die prior to the fourth of April, without having legally disposed of their reserves, and to receive the unpaid purchase money, &c. By the third section, the President is invested with a discretion in the investment and paying over to the persons entitled, the money received from the purchasers of reserves. 5 U. S. Stat. by Peters, 186. The terms of this enactment go quite beyond what the terms of the treaty justify, and profess to direct the sale of all reserves, and of course those where the reservee is “ desirous of remaining.” Butin respect to reserves, the allottees of which do not come within the latter category, and have not conveyed their interests, the act is potent to show that Congress
There is perhaps another objection to the plaintiff’s title equally fatal to their right to recover in the present action, as that we have considered. Mrs. Wells was of Indian extraction, but not more than one fourth Indian blood, and married Wm. J. Wells, according to the laws of Alabama, in Monroe county, in 1821, where they both resided. Shortly after their marriage, they removed into the country occupied by the Creek tribe, where they resided until 1828, when they again moved to the “Ten Islands” with their children (the plaintiffs.) At this latter place the husband formed an adulterous connection with another woman, and Mrs. Wells left him with her children, and went to her father’s house in the Creek territory, whither he had removed after her marriage in 1821. There is no law of this State, which inhibits the marriage of a white man with a woman whose blood partakes of the white and Indian races; and if such a marriage is consummated between persons able and willing to contract, the parties become subject to all the disabilities, and are entitled to all the rights and privileges incident to such a relation. See Frank and Lucy v. Denham’s Adm’r, 5 Litt. Rep. 530.
Monroe county was the domicil of both the parties at the time they were married, and it cannot be inferred that they then contemplated a residence without the jurisdiction of Alabama. Their subsequent removal to the Creek territory did not ipso facto dissolve their connection. Even conceding that they became affiliated with the tribe, did the customs of the nation in respect to marriage, so revolting to Christianity, furnish rules by which the obligations and duties of that state — its permanency and incidents, when solemnized in a civilized country, should be ascertained and determined? We should long hesitate before we would give to this question an affirmative response. It involves other considera
The marriage, then, of W. J. Wells with the plaintiffs’ mother, and the birth of issue capable of inheriting, being proved, the husband became tenant by the curtesy initiate of the inheritable estate of his wife in lands, and by the death of the wife this tenancy became consummate. By the common law as administered in England, it was essential to an ■estate by the curtesy that the wife should have had an actual seizin or possession of the land, and not a bare right to possess, which is a seizin in law. 1 Step. Com. 246, et seq. But this rule has been relaxed in this country; and if the wife be the owner of waste, uncultivated lands, not held adversely, she is deemed seized in fact, so as to entitle her husband to his right of curtesy. The title to such property ■draws to it the possession; and that constructive possession continues in judgment of law, until an adverse possession be clearly made out. 4 Kent’s Coin. 29, et seq. It is said that curtesy applies as well to qualified or conditional, as to absolute estates in fee. Id. 32; 8 Johns. Rep. 262; 1 Pet. Rep. 506; 5 Cow. Rep. 574.
The bill of exceptions does not inform us whether the land in question was occupied during the lifetime of Mrs.
Although the statute of Westminster the 2d declares, that the wife’s dower shall be lost by her adultery, no such misconduct on the part of the husband will work a forfeiture of his curtesy. And it has been said that the forfeiture of the wife’s estate by her act will not defeat the curtesy. 4 Kent’s Com. 34.
The husband, as well as any other tenant for life, may forfeit his curtesy by a wrongful alienation, or by making a feoffment, or levying a fine importing a grant in fee, suffering a common recovery, joining the mise in a writ of right, or by any other act tending to the disherison of the reversioner or remainder-man. 4 Kent’s Com. 34. This is the rule of the English common law, and it seems has been recognized in Maine. 21 Maine Rep. 372. But in McKee v. Pfout, 3 Dall. Rep. 486, it was held, that a conveyance in fee by a tenant by the curtesy, though by indenture duly recorded, and with a covenant of special warranty, is not a forfeiture of the estate.
In the case at bar, there is nothing in the record to indicate that W. J. Wells attempted to convey to his vendees a greater interest than his estate by the curtesy. The recital in the patent is, that the land had “been duly sold and conveyed by William J. Wells, to Julian S. Devereux, Moses Thompson, and Weldridge C. Thompson, as appears by the conveyance thereof, dated the 3d day of March, 1836, approved by the President of the United States the 18th day of September, 1841, and deposited in the general land office of the United States.” The inference from this is, that the vendor transferred his estate in the land to the vendees according to law; and this conclusion is strengthened by the fact, that the usual form of conveyances by reservees under the treaty, was nothing more, in legal effect, than a relinquishment
We do not intend to be understood as asserting that the estate of W. J. Wells, as a tenant by the curtesy, or otherwise, continued beyond thé 4th of April, 1837. But if the interest of Mrs. Wells, as derived from the treaty, and her subsequent recognition as the head of a “ Creek family,” survived that period, it will not descend to the plaintiffs during the life of their father, but vests in the latter, or his assignees, to be enjoyed until his death.
It is not material to consider other questions discussed as to the effect of the evidence of title set up by either party. The plaintiffs, we have seen, have failed to show such a right as will sustain their action; and as they must recover upon the strength o’f their own claim, and not upon the weakness of that of their adversary, we will not stop to examine the pretensions of the defendant. We have but to add, that the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.