Court Opinion

ID: 5438271
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 17:57:45.139249+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:31:55.211927
License: Public Domain

By the Court, Crockett, J.:
Though there are two records in these cases, brought up on separate appeals, they constitute in fact but one case; one of the appeals being from the judgment, and the other from the order sustaining the demurrer to and dismissing the cross-complaint. It is unnecessary to decide whether this was an appealable order, and we shall treat the transcript filed on the last appeal, as only an amendment of the transcript on the first appeal.
The most important question to be considered, and which, we think, is decisive of the case, is whether the patent to Brunette, under which the plaintiff claims, is void on its face.,
The patent recites, that by the second article of the treaty with the Chippewas of Lake Superior and the Mississippi, dated thirtieth September, 1854, it is provided that “each head of a family or single person over twenty-one years of age, at the present time, of the mixed bloods belonging to the Chippewas of Lake Superior, shall be entitled to eighty acres of land, to be selected by them under the direction of the President,” and that there had been deposited in the General Land Office, a certificate of the Begister of the Land Office at San Francisco, whereby it appears that Chippewa certificate No. 166 C, in the name of Francoise Brunette, for eighty acres, issued by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, under the aforesaid treaty, has been located and surrendered by Brunette in full satisfaction for lots 1 and 2 (describing the premises in controversy in this action), which tract had been *561located by Brunette; and thereupon the patent proceeds to grant tho land to him in the usual form. The patent is signed by the President, and is in due form. The treaty (10 Statutes at Large, p. 1109), after providing, as quoted in the patent, also adds that the lands to be selected by the mixed bloods under the direction of the President, “shall be secured to them by patent in the usual form.”
There appears to have been no act of Congress authorizing the scrip issued to these mixed blood Indians to be located on the public lands of the United States; and the argument for the defendants is, first, that under the third section of the fourth article of the Constitution of the United States, Congress has the sole power “to dispose of and make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory and other property belonging to the United States;” and it is claimed that under the treaty-making power, tho President and Senate had no authority to dispose of these lands without the consent of Congress.
Second, that if it be conceded that it is competent for the treaty-making power, under any circumstances, without the consent of Congress, to cede a portion of the public domain, nevertheless, if the treaty provides that a patent in the usual form shall issue for the ceded lands, the officers of the Land Department have no power to permit entries of the lands to be made in the local land offices, nor has the President authority to issue patents therefor, unless empowered to do so by some Act of Congress. Under the views which we entertain in respect to the last proposition, it will be unnecessary to consider or determine the first.
In the exercise of its exclusive power under the Constitution, Congress has established a Land Department for the management and sale of the public lands. This department is under the immediate supervision of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, subject to the supervisory control of the Secretary of the Interior. And the subordinate duties are performed by Surveyors, Registers, and Receivers in the several districts. The duties of all these officers are prescribed by law, or by regulations having the force of law; and, in permitting entries to be made in their *562respective offices, the Registers and Receivers must look only to the Acts of Congress, and to such regulations of the General Land Office as have been made in pursuance of law. They have no powers except such as are derived from these sources; nor has the head of that department the authority to direct or permit entries to be made in the local offices, unless in cases authorized by some Act of Congress. They are the mere creatures of statutory law, from which all their powers are derived.
The treaty-making power cannot confer upon the Land Department any authority, nor enjoin upon it any duty, in respect to the sale, conveyance, or disposal of the public lands of the United States, except with the consent of Con-, gress, which is the source of all its powers. An entry in the local land office is void, unless authorized by some Act of Congress, and the President has no authority to issue patents, except in the cases provided by law. In Stoddard v. Chambers, 2 How. 318, it was decided that a location “ made on lands not liable to be thus appropriated, but expressly reserved,” and a patent issued in accordance with the location, were void. In Easton v. Salisbury, 21 How. 431, the Court says: “The President of the United States has no right to issue patents for land, the sale of which is not authorized by law.” In United States v. Stone, 2 Wall. 535, it was held that patents are void “where the officer has no authority in law to grant them.” In Patterson v. Winn, 11 Wheat. 388, it was announced as the settled doctrine of the Court “that if a patent is absolutely void on its face, or the issuing thereof was without authority, or prohibited by statute, or the State had no title, it may be impeached collaterally in a Court of law in an action of ejectment.” The same proposition is maintained in Polk's Lessee v. Mendell, 9 Cranch, 99; 5 Wheat. 303; Ladiga v. Roland, 2 Howard, 588; Reinhart v. Phelps, 6 Wall. 160,) and numerous other cases. But the plaintiff contends, inasmuch as the constitution declares a treaty to be the supreme law of the land, first, that if the treaty, as in this case, provides that patents shall issue, this provision is as obligatory as any other; second, that the acts of Con*563gress establishing and regulating the land departments, prescribe the method in which and the officers by whom patents are to be issued, and that no further legislation was necessary to carry the treaty into effect. In Foster v. Neilson, 2 Pet. 814, Chief Justice Marshall, in delivering the opinion of the Court, said: “Our constitution declares a treaty to be the law of the laud. It is, consequently, to be regarded in Courts of Justice as equivalent to an Act of the Legislature, whenever it operates of itself without the aid of any legislative provision. But when the terms of the stipulation import a contract, when either of the parties engages to perform a particular act, the treaty addresses itself to the political and not the judicial department; and the Legislature must execute the contract before it can become a rule of the Court.” In that case the language of the treaty was that “ all the grants of land made before the 24th of January, 1818, by his Catholic Majesty, etc., shall be ratified and confirmed to the persons in possession, to the same extent that the same grants would be valid if the territories had remained under the dominion of his Catholic Majesty.” The Court held the treaty to create only a contract, that the grants should be ratified and confirmed in futuro; and that until the legislative department, either directly or through its agents appointed for that purpose, had ratified the grants, they had no standing in the Courts. In Turner v. The American Baptist Mission Union, 5 McLean, 344, it was provided by a treaty with a tribe of Indians that “the net proceeds of the sale of the one hundred and sixty acres of land upon the Grand river, upon which the missionary society have erected their buildings, shall be paid to the said society, in lieu of the value of their improvements.” In discussing the question whether the treaty was self-executing, the Court said: “A treaty under the Federal Constitution is declared to be the supreme law of the land. This, unquestionably, applies to all treaties when the treaty-making power, without the aid of Congress, can carry it into effect. It is not, however, and cannot be, the supreme law of the land, when the concurrence of Congress is necessary to give it effect until this *564power is exercised, as where the appropriation of money is required, the treaty is not perfect * * * * *. Without a law, the President is not authorized to sell the public lands; so that this treaty, though so far as the Indians were concerned, was the supreme law of the land, yet, as regards the right to the proceeds of the above tract, an Act of Congress is required. The treaty, in fact, appropriated the above tract of one hundred and sixty acres for a particular purpose, but, to effectuate that purpose, an Act of Congress was passed. '
Tested by these rules, we think it is clear that the officers of the land department, in the absence of any legislation by Congress authorizing it to be done, had no authority to issue the Chippewa scrip, nor to permit entries to be made under it, and, consequently, that the patent was issued without authority of law. The language of the treaty is, that the lands to be selected by mixed bloods, under the direction of the President, “shall be secured to them by patent in the usual form.” This imports a contract that the Government would thereafter cause the patents to be issued; and in principle, is not to be distinguished in this respect from the treaty considered in Foster v. Wilson, supra, in which it was stipulated that certain grants “shall be ratified and confirmed." In both cases the acts were to be performed in futuro, and in neither could there be a performance without the aid of the legislative department. So in Turner v. The American Baptist Mission Union, supra, it was held that a stipulation in the treaty for the sale of certain lands and the application of the proceeds could not be carried into effect without an Act of Congress. In the case of Stockton v. Williams, 1 Doug. 546, the Supreme Court of Michigan considered the question now under discussion. The facts were that by a treaty with the Chippewas there was reserved out of the ceded lands a tract of 640 acres for the use of a half-breed woman named Mokitchenoqua, “to be located at and near the general traverse of the Plint river, in such manner as the President of the United States may direct." The Land Department subsequently directed the Register and Receiver of the proper district to take *565proofs as to the identity of the person entitled to the reservation, and, on ascertaining the fact, to issue to such person a proper certificate. A half-breed woman named Elizabeth Lyons, claiming that her Indian name was Mokitchenoqua, and that she was the reservee named in the treaty, made the proofs before the Register and Receiver, and received the certificate. Several years later, another half-breed woman, named Nancy Crane, applied to the Register and Receiver for a certificate, claiming that her Indian name was Hokitckenoqua, and that she was the person for whom the reservation was made. On hearing the proofs, the Register and Receiver awarded the certificate to her; on which a patent was afterward issued to her by the President. The plaintiffs claimed under this title, and the defendants under the title of Elizabeth Lyons. The plaintiffs contended that the patent was conclusive of the rights of the parties; whilst the defendants claimed that the patent was void, because it was issued without authority of law. In considering this point, the Court said: “But it may be said that the title is in the grantees of Mokitchenoqua, to whom the patent issued. But this presupposes a power on the part of the President to issue a patent for the land in question. Did this power exist ? If it did, its existence must be shown, for it will hardly be contended that under our form of government and system of laws respecting the public domain, it is competent for the President to issue a patent without the authority of law. The authority to issue patents is not inherent in the President, but belongs to Congress, who have the sole power to determine by whom and to whom, and upon what conditions they shall be issued, and to declare their dignity and effect. The third article of the treaty of Saginaw does not provide that a patent shall issue, and no Act of Congress has been produced authorizing the President to issue patents to the several reservees named in that article. We are bound, therefore, to suppose that the patent issued without any authority, derived either from the treaty or any Act of Congress designed to carry into effect its provisions, and is, therefore, nugatory and void.”
*566The Court, it will be observed, lays some stress upon the fact, that the treaty contains no provisions authorizing a patent to issue. But whatever weight this may be entitled to, in respect to lands reserved within the ceded territory, the title to which did not pass to the United States under the treaty, it is entitled to none, in respect to other lands not included within the ceded territory, and which appear on the face of the patent not to have been so included. In respect to this latter class of lands, the President has no authority to issue patents, except such as is derived from some Act of Congress. No treaty can divest the legislative department of the “ sole power to determine by whom, and to whom, and upon what conditions,” patents shall issue, for portions of the public domain. Whatever control the treaty-making power may exercise over lands reserved under a treaty of cession to the United States, it is clear that it cannot divest Congress of its exclusive power to determine in what cases patents shall issue for public lands not included in the ceded territory.
Thus far we have proceeded on the assumption that it was contemplated by the seventh subdivision of the seeond article of the treaty with the Chippewas, that each of the mixed bloods therein specified, should be entitled to eighty acres of land, to be selected by him, under the direction of the President, from any portion of the public domain of the United States, whether within or without the ceded territory. But we think this is not the proper interpretation of the treaty. By the second article there was set apart and withheld from sale six large bodies of land, for the use severally of six different bands of that tribe. Immediately following these reservations is the provision for the mixed bloods, by which each is to be entitled “to eighty acres of land to be selected by them under the direction of the President, and which shall be secured to them by patent in the usual form.” The third article, after providing for a survey of the reservations, authorizes the President to “ assign to each head of a family, or single person over twenty-one years of age, eighty acres of land for his or their separate use; and he may, at his discretion, as fast as the occupants *567become capable of transacting their own affairs, issue patents therefor to such occupants, with such restrictions of the power of alienation as he may see fit to impose.” The provisions of the third article manifestly apply only to lands within the reservation; and there is nothing to justify the inference that the lands to be secured to the mixed bloods, were not to stand upon the same footing, with the single exception, that on account, probably, of their greater intelligence and of their supposed capacity to manage their own affairs, the lands selected by them were to be immediately patented, and without any restriction as to the power of alienation. But there is nothing we think, to warrant the conclusion, that they were authorized to select lands outside of the reservations and the ceded territory. We are, therefore, of opinion, that the scrip on which the patent is founded, was issued without authority of law, and that the patent is void on its face.
This view of the case renders it unnecessary to decide the other questions discussed by counsel.
Judgment and order reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.