Court Opinion

ID: 7882293
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:35:05.982074+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:31:38.041435
License: Public Domain

*183The opinion'of the court was delivered by
Kingman, C. J.:
This cause comes to this court.from a judgment rendered upon the report of a referee. No exceptions were taken to the report as to the facts found, but were taken to the conclusions of law arising from those facts. The court therefore need not look beyond the facts found by the referee; and the only question is, whether the law was correctly applied to the facts. The suit was for the recovery of six hundred and forty acres of land in Douglas county. The plaintiff claims the land through and under a Wyandotte float, and the defendants claim under a preemption made by several different parties on different portions of the section. Some points are conceded by all parties. Among them, that the land was not open to preemption and settlement previous to the proclamation of the President on the 9th of July, 1858, and that if Irwin P. Long’s title was good, the plaintiffs ought to recover, as whatever title was at any time in Long is now in the plaintiffs.
The decision of the case must turn upon the point of whether the land in controversy was open for the location of Long’s float prior to its being opened for preemption and settlement by the proclamation of the President on the 9th of July, 1858; for that was the-first day on which the defendants could get any claim by reason of their settlement or attempted preemption. Previous to that day their settlement was a trespass, and cannot be recognized in law, whatever may have been the natural justice of their claims. If previous to that time it was open for the location of the Wyandotte float of Long, then his location thereof on the 8th of May, 1857, gave a right in law, of which the preemption of the defendants, and *184those under whom they claim, could not divest him. If it was not so open, then the settlement of the defendants, and their preemption, vested rights in them which could not be taken away by law, or by the determination and action of the departments of the government, and give them the better equities, and the decision of the referee must stand.
As both the referee, and the counsel for defendants in error seem to lay some stress upon the fact that the defendants entered upon and settled their lands in February, 1857, and make valuable improvements thereon, and were in possession thereof when Long’s float was located, it may not be improper to state why we have decided as above indicated, that they acquired no rights thereby. These lands had at one time belonged to the Shawnee Indians, and by the fifth article of the treaty made with that tribe on the 10th of May, 1854, (10 U. S. Stat at Large, 1056,) it is provided that, “ No white person or citizen shall be permitted to make locations or settlements within the thirty-mile limits, until after all of the lands shall have been surveyed, and the Shawnees shall have made their selections and locations, and the President shall have set apart the surplus.” Now, until these acts were done, no person-having the right of preemption could make the settlement necessary to initiate that right on these lands. The things to be done were, the survey, the selection and location by the Indians, and the act of the President setting apart the surplus. This last act would be the evidence that the others had been performed; and until this was proclaimed, all settlements were in law mere trespasses, and cannot be regarded by the courts. On the other hand, we may remark here, that if the lands were not open for the location of Long’s *185float at the time.he laid it in 1857, such location .could give him no rights in law, and he acquired none subsequently until after the defendants had perfected theirs by preempting. The action of thé departments of the government in recognizing Long’s location of the float by issuing a patent for the land, in 1861, could give him no rights as against the defendants, unless his original location was authorized by law when it was made.
The right of the plaintiffs’ grantor to any land rests upon two treaties between the Wyandotte tribe of Indians and the United States. By article 14 of the treaty of March 17th, 1842, the United States agree to grant by patent in fee simple 640 acres of land to Irwin P. Long, out of any lands west of the Mississippi river set apart for Indian use not already claimed or occupied by any person or tribe; (7 U. S. Stat. at Large, 608-9.) . By the treaty of March 1st, 1865, it is provided in section nine, among other things, that each of the reservees under the treaty of 1842, of whom Long was one, should be permitted to select and locate their lands on any government lands west of the States of Missouri and Iowa subject to preemption and settlement. (10 U. S. Stat. at Large, 1162-3.) The sáme section provides that any selection of, settlement upon, or claims to, land included in any of said reservations, made by any other person or persons, after the same shall have been selected by the. reservees, their heirs or legal representatives, shall be null and void.
We do not understand that these clauses of separate treaties conflict. The one granted 640 acres of land to Long, to be selected out of any lands west of the Mississippi river set apart for Indian use not already claimed or occupied by any person or tribe; the other enlarges this right, by giving the privilege of selecting the land *186on any government lands subject to preemption and settlement, west of tbe States of Missouri and Iowa — so that the reservees could locate their claims on either of said classes of lands. By the last treaty the reservees are not restricted in the location of their floats to land set apart for Indian use, as in the first, but may locate them upon certain government lands; and this requires an examination of the right of Long to locate under each of the treaties. His right under the treaty of 1842 depends upon whether the land in controversy was set apart for Indian use, and not already claimed or occupied by any person or tribe; for such are the conditions of the grant. Up to the treaty with the Shawnee tribe on the 2d of November, 1854, this land all belonged to the Shawnee Indians by virtue of the treaty made with that tribe in 1825, and the action of the President in May, 1844. They held it by deed: (10 U. S. Stat. at Large, 1053.) Hp to this time, Nov. 2d, 1854, it is too apparent to need discussion, that there could be no location of the float of Long on the land in controversy, for while it was Indian land, it was Indian land already claimed, and occupied by a tribe. The Shawnees claimed it; and after the habits of the tribe, occupied it. It would have been bad faith to have given any member of any other tribe any part of this land, without the consent of the Shawnees. If the executive and senate could deprive the tribe, without their consent, of one acre, by a treaty with another tribe, they could as well have deprived them of all of it. But this they did not do. They scrupulously avoided doing it by inserting the limitation that the lands should not be occupied or claimed by a person or tribe.
Bid the grantor of the plaintiffs obtain any right to locate his float on this land by reason of the treaty with *187the Shawnees, made November 2d, 1854? By the first section of this treaty the Shawnees ceded all this tract to the government, amounting as it was supposed, to 1.600.000 acres. By the second section the United States ceded back to .the Indians 200,000 acres of this land, to be afterwards selected. The most of the selections were to be made on a part of the tract lying between the Missouri State line, and a line parallel thereto, and west of the same, thirty miles distant, and covering the land in controversy. By this treaty, as we understand it, 200,000 acres of the land remained Indian lands; the residue thereof was government lands. It can make no difference that it could not be known what part was government lands and what part Indian lands until after the selections were made.
In this, as in many other cases, it may be difficult to define in legal terms, with accuracy and precision, the exact estate which the Indians had in this thirty-mile tract, after the treaty, and before the selections were made and the President’s proclamation issued. The whole tract was ceded to the' United States; 200,000 acres thereof, in a certain locality containing about 480.000 acres, were ceded back to the Indians, and were certainly theirs by the terms of the treaty. They had some interest in every acre of the tract, an interest certain in amount, contingent as to location. Any day, until the selections were all made, the land involved in this controversy was liable to be selected" by some one of the Shawnee Indians. Such a right on their part was undoubted, and is not questioned even by the learned counsel for the plaintiffs in error. Therefore, the Indians had a contingent possessory right to every foot of this strip, subject to be converted into an absolute legal right *188any day. Such a right, while that condition of things remained, was inconsistent with the right of any other person to obtain any interest in the land, present or prospective, absolute or contingent. It is obvious from the terms of the treaty that great care was taken in order that perfect freedom to select the lands should be preserved to the Indians. The latter clause of section five, quoted above, excluded in terms any white person or citizen from making locations or settlements on this land. This was intended to guard the right of the Indians to a free and unrestricted selection. It conferred no right, or made no prohibition, which the law would not raise on the treaty otherwise. Without this clause there would have been in law no right on the part of any one to make settlement upon or acquire rights in the land. The object of the clause was to secure by plain and positive stipulation to the Indian' his right of selection, free from interference by the parties that experience had shown were most likely to interfere with and embarrass such free action. No inference can rightfully be drawn from it in favor of the plaintiffs’ grantor. If he had a right to locate his float on this land without this clause, it remained to him; but the clause does not give it, even by inference. Whatever right he had was a right secured by treaty, and was absolute, and would become certain, definite, and fixed, whenever he exercised his right to locate his float on any lands subject thereto by the terms of the grant. Wherever he had a right to locate his float that right was perfect, not contingent; and once exercised could not be disturbed or invaded by any one. This affords a fair test of his right to locate on this laud. When he did it on the 8th of May, 1857, his location was liable to be overthrown and *189made nugatory on the very next day, or at any time thereafter, at the option of any Shawnee, until all the selections were made. Now this right of the Shawnees to select this land at any day after the float was laid upon it was incompatible with the right of plaintiffs’ grantor. By the very terms of the grant, “ any selection of, settlement upon, or claim to land included in any of said reservations, made by any other person or persons, after the same shall have been selected by the reservees, their heirs and legal representatives, shall be null and void.” Such is the language of the grant. Now, if his claim to this land was subject to a right on the part of the Shawnees to select the same land, then it shows at once that it was not such land as was open to his claim. It can make no difference that the Indians did not afterwards select this land. We are determining what his rights were, at the time. They were subject to no such contingency as that just indicated. They were absolute and exclusive, not possible and contingent. This conclusion is strengthened by other considerations. If he had a right to so locate, he was entitled to a patent; and it might have issued in a week, however unlikely such an event was to occur, and the patent would have been an obstruction to the right of selection guarantied to the Shawnees. Again, if he had a right to so locate, subject to the possibility of having his location set aside by the Shawnee Indians selecting the same lands, he had aright to settle on the same lands so located, for he acquired his rights from the grant, not from the patent, which might issue; and an actual settlement on the land, coupled with a contingent right, would have embarrassed that free selection reserved by the treaty. No man likes to have his rights to land clogged by an adverse posses*190sion. It renders Ms rights in the land, however clear his title may be, less valuable. Much more would this be the case with an Indian than with a white man, uninformed as he is as to the various and complex laws that civilized society has found necessary to protect its interests and secure the rights of its members. A fair construction of the treaty with the Shawnees, and a consideration of the objects contemplated, therein, lead to the conviction that at the time Long made his location he had in law no right so to do.
We have not decided whether the lands were Indian lands or government lands. If they were Indian lands, they belonged to the Shawnees, and were not subject to the location of Long’s float, under the provisions of the treaty of 1842. If they were government lands, they were not open for preemption and settlement, and of course not subject to the location by virtue of the enlarged provisions of the treaty of 1855, until they were made so by the proclamation of the President. This proclamation was made on the 9th of July, 1858; and then, for the first time, could the grantor of the plaintiffs lawfully' take any steps to locate his float thereon, and his location previous to that time, being without authority of law, and not within the limits of the grant, was a nullity, and neither gave any rights nor conferred any advantages.
The conclusion of the referee, “that up to the 9th of July, 1858, neither the plaintiff nor the defendants, nor said Long, had acquired any right, legal or equitable, in or to said land,” is correct. The land on this last-mentioned day was open for the location of Long’s float, or to any qualified person to preempt the same; and whoever took the first steps would have the better right. Long took no action to give Mm any rights to the land. *191The defendants, and those under whom they claim, on the 30th of July, filed each his notice of settlement and intention to preempt, and from that time at least had a clear legal right in the land. This right was a lawful possession, and the privilege of purchasing the land at the minimum price at any time before actual sale. This purchase was finally made on the 5th of May, 1859. By this purchase a good equitable title was obtained, at a time when Long had no right or interest in the land. The subsequent issue of a patent to Long gave him the legal title to the land. It is claimed for the plaintiffs in error that the issue of a patent relates back to the entry, and takes date with it. This is undoubtedly law. Ross v. Barland, 1 Peters, 655; French’s Lessee v. Spencer, 21 Howard, 240. But it relates back only to show that the patentee was the owner at the date of entry; not to create equities. Had Long’s entry been one authorized bylaw, then the patent would relate back, and his title run from that date, but as it was not, his rights began with his patent. It had no lawful entry to relate back to. The patent was issued when the equities of the defendants were in full force, and perfect; and of such equities, the records in the land office, and the open possession of defendant, were sufficient notice. With these conclusions the judgment of the court coincides. The plaintiffs held their legal title, subject to the superior equitable title of the defendants. Lindsey v. Hawes, 2 Black, 554; Story v. Lehmer, 10 Ohio St., 93.
The judgment is affirmed.
Saeeord, J., concurring.
Valentine, J , having decided the cause in the court below, did not sit in this case.