Sharon v. Wooldrick

By the Court.

McMillan, J.

The treaty of Mendota of August 5th, 1851, as originally made between the United States government and Med-ay-wa-kaw-toan and "Wah-pay-koo-tay bands of Dakota or Sioux Indians, and submitted to the senate, contained a section reserving to the Indians a tract of country of the average width of teii miles on either side of the Minnesota River, and bounded on the west by the Tchaytam-bay and Yellow Medicine rivers, and on the east by the Little Rock River, and a line running due south from its mouth to the Waraju River.

The senate of the United States amended the treaty by striking out the section providing for the reservation aforesaid, and by adding a stipulation to pay said bands of Indians at the rate of ten cents per acre for the lands included in said reservation provided for in the section stricken out, and by adding the further stipulation that the president be authorized, with the assent of the Indians after their assent to the amended treaty, as soon as may be'convenient, “ to cause to be set apart by appropriate landmarks and boundaries, such tracts of country without the limits of the cession made by the first article of the treaty as may be satisfactory for their future home: Provided, that the president may, by the consent of these Indians, vary the conditions aforesaid if deemed expedient.” *357The Indians “ confiding in the justice, liberality and humanity of the president, and the congress of the United States, that such tracts of country will be set apart for our (their) future occupancy and home as will be to us (them) acceptable and satisfactory,” assent to the treaty as amended by the senate. 10 U. S. Statutes at Large, 954-959.

The president so far varied the condition of said senate amendment as to permit said bands to locate for the time be- ■ ing upon the tract originally reserved by said bands for a home* and no tract of country without the limits of the cession made in said treaty has ever been provided for or offered to said bands.

And by the act making appropriation for the current and contingent expenses of the. Indian department, and for fulfiling treaty stipulations with various Indian tribes, approved July 31, 1854, the president was authorized to confirm to the Sioux of Minnesota, forever, the reserve on the Minnesota River at that time occupied by them upon such conditions as he may deem just. Treaty June 19, 1858, art. 2, 12 U. S. Statutes at Large, 1038; 10 Ib. p. 326.

The president never having directly confirmed said reservation to the Indians, a treaty was entered into between the United States and these, with other bands of Indians, on the 19th of June, 1858, by the second 'article of which, after reciting, inter alia, the foregoing facts, it is stipulated that the question shall be submitted to the senate for decision whether the Indians have title to the reservation occupied by them; and upon the submission of the question under the treaty the senate decided, “ that said Indians possessed a just and valid right and title to said reservation.” Treaty June 19, 1858, art. 2, 12 U. S. Statutes at Large, p. 1032; Resolution of the Senate of the United States, 12 Ib. 1042.

By the terms of the treaty of Mendota it is expressly pro*358vided, as we have seen, that the president, with the consent of the Indians, might vary the conditions of the amendment made by the senate if deemed expedient. Under this provision it was clearly competent for the president to vary the amended treaty so as to permit these bands of Indians to occupy the tract described in the treaty as first submitted, no other reservation having been provided for them.

The fact of title to land in the government, subject to the exclusive right of the Indians to occupy the same as a home or reservation, is not at all inconsistent; indeed that is ordinarily the case when an Indian reservation exists by virtue of a treaty, and would have been the case if this treaty had been ratified as submitted.

But if there .were doubts about the question upon the treaty itself, in view of the construction given it by the senate in its decision upon the question submitted to it by the treaty of 1858, such doubts would seem to be resolved in favor of the existence of the power exercised by the president in this instance.

We are, therefore, to take judicial notice that the tract of country from the Little Rock River and a line running due south from its mouth to the Waraju River, to the Tchay-tambay and Yellow Medicine rivers of the average width of ten miles on either side of the Minnesota River, was an Indian reservation throughout the year 1857.

By the stipulation made by the parties in the case, it is settled that the premises in question at the time of the location were embraced in the Indian treaties, but were not surveyed as an Indian reservation by any actual survey, but were afterwards found to be upon the Sioux reservation.

The scrip located upon the premises by the plaintiff was issued under the act of congress entitled “ An act to authorize the president of the United States to cause to be surveyed the *359tract of land in the territory of Minnesota, belonging to the half-breeds or mixed-bloods of the Dakota or Sioux nation of Indians, and for other purposes,” approved July 17, 1854. (10 U. S. Statutes at Large, 304.)

It could be located upon any unoccupied lands subject to pre-emption or private sale, or upon any unsurveyed lands not reserved by government, &c.

The premises in question were reserved by the government, and were not subject to pre-emption or private sale. The scrip, therefore, could not be located upon them ; the location of the scrip upon the land, and the patent issued thereupon were void, and vested no title in the plaintiff.

By act of congress approved March 3d, 1863, the president was directed to provide a tract of land outside of the limits of any state or territory for these Indians, with others, and the lands then occupied by them, including the locus in quo, were to be surveyed and opened to pre-emption, entry and settlement. By the stipulation between the parties, above referred to, and by which we are concluded, it is stated, “ that on the 28th of July, 1866, William Mock entered the land in question by pre-emption, reservation being vacated. No patent has been issued on this entry,' That Wooldrick furnished the money to Mock and purchased land in question of Mock, and took a deed on the day of pre-emption for the land, and that defendant has ever since occupied the same.”

The presumption is that these facts were established by competent evidence; that the entry of the land by Mock was proved by the certificate of the proper land officer of the United States, which by our statute is prima facie evidence that the title to the land was in Mock at the time of the conveyance. (Walsh vs. Kattenberg, 8 Minn. 132.)

The mere fact that Mock obtained from Wooldrick the money with which to pay for the pre-empted land, if it was not *360done under any contract or agreement of any kind by wbicb the title he might acquire from the government should enure in whole or in part to any person except himself, would not tend to invalidate the pre-emption. And if, having received such money without any such contract, after perfecting his pre-emption and receiving his certificate of purchase from the proper officer, he desired to sell the land to Wooldrick or any other person, he could do so. Camp vs. Smith, 2 Minn. 155.

If the conveyance of the land by Mock to Wooldrick was made under and in pursuance of an ante-pre-emption contract of purchase, it was a fraud upon the government, and Mock must have sworn falsely.

We think it is a reasonable construction of the language of the stipulation, if not the only reasonable one, that the purchase, that is, the entire negotiation for the purchase of the land, as well as the execution of the deed, was subsequent to the time Mock obtained his certificate of pre-emption.

This being so, we cannot infer the existence of a contract of purchase ■ inhibited by the pre-elnption law from the fact that Wooldrick furnished Mock the money to pay for the land, and after Mock had obtained his certificate purchased the land from him, and took a deed therefor on the same day, for that would be to impute both fraud and crime, to Mock, upon a state of facts, at least doubtful. ’ Mock’s pre-emption, and the conveyance by. him to Wooldrick were, therefore, valid; and by the conveyance the title to the land vested in Wooldrick.

The plaintiff’s location and patent being void, we are inclined to doubt whether it appears that she had possession of that portion of the premises described in her patent which constitutes the locus in quo ; but even conceding her possession at the time, her title being void, and Wooldrick having entered peaceably under a valid title, was not a trespasser.

*361The defendant, therefore, was entitled to a finding in his favor.

The order denying a new trial is affirmed.