Anderson v. Lewis

1 Free. Ch. 178
CourtMississippi Chancery Courts
DecidedJuly 1, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1 Free. Ch. 178 (Anderson v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Chancery Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Lewis, 1 Free. Ch. 178 (Mich. Super. Ct. 1844).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The statements of the complainants’ bill, so far as it is necessary to consider of them in disposing of the demurrer, are, that on the 7th of October, 1837, they purchased of an Indian woman, by the name of Ta-na-cha, a tract of land, being section 20, town. 3, range 2, west, which she claimed as a reservation, under the sixth article of the Chickasaw treaty of May, 1834. That on the 6th of October, 1837, one day preceding the purchase, said woman was enrolled and located on said section “by the agent and chiefs of the Chickasaw nation.” That the secretary of war had so construed the treaty, that no deed would be valid until the locar tion was confirmed by the president. They took'no deed at that time, but procured the Indian woman to make to one E. P. McDowell a power of attorney, authorizing him to make title in her name. That McDowell, on the 2nd April, 1838, accordingly made them a deed; but that dying immediately afterward, they were not able to complete the deed by procuring the necessary certificates of the agent and examining agent. That on the 1st of June, 1838, they procured from Ta-na-cha a confirmation of that deed, as also a deed directly from herself, having previously procured from two of the chiefs a certificate of her competency, which latter deed was proved for registration on the 7th of December, 1838. That they took possession of the land in November, 1837, and that by themselves, and those claiming under them, that possession has been continued to the present time. That defendants (claiming by virtue of a deed purporting to be from the same Indian, bearing date 31st March, 1836, and approved 13th February, 1838, by the agent representing the president,) have in[180]*180stituted a proceeding for the recovery of the possession of the land by writ of forcible entry and detainer.’ They charge that this deed of the defendants is void: 1st. Because at the date of it there had been no location and approval of the reservation. 2nd. There was no certificate that the purchase money had been paid. 3rd. That at the time of signing the same, the deed was in blank, (this cannot affect it, if filled up before delivery,) and was afterwards filled up by the defendants with a full knowledge of the complainants’ prior purchase and location. That the approval of the examining agent was procured by the defendants through fraud and misrepresentation in substituting one Indian for another, &c. The bill prays for an injunction against the proceeding at law, and that the defendants’deed maybe declared void, and be delivered up and cancelled, &c.

To this bill there is a general demurrer. As both parties claim to derive title indirectly under the Chickasaw treaty of May, 1834, their respective pretensions must depend mainly upon a sound construction and application of the provisions of that treaty. Amongst other things, it is provided by the sixth article of the treaty, that a section of land within the territory, which was the principal subject of the treaty, should be reserved to each male and female of the Chickasaw tribe, not being the heads of families, and who were of the age of twenty-one years and upwards; a list of whom was to be made out and filed with the agent, and by him certified to the register and receiver, who was to cause such reservations to be located. The fourth article of the treaty assumes that there were many of the Chickasaw Indians who were incapable of managing their own affairs, and were subject to be imposed upon by designing men. To guard against fraud and imposition, it requires that in order to the validity of a conveyance from an Indian of his reservation, a certificate of capacity to contract, and a certificate that a fair consideration had been paid, should have been obtained, and finally an indorsement in the deed by the president of the United States, or his agent for that purpose, that the same was approved. It was said in argument, that these conditions and restrictions could not be rightly implied. The ultimate title to the lands in question being in the United States, subject to the Indian right of occupancy, it was, doubtless, competent for the two pow[181]*181ers, in disposing of them by treaty, to fix and prescribe to their donee such form and mode of alienation as they thought fit.

The principle is well established, that the donor of a thing may annex to his gift or grant such .conditions, precedent or subsequent, as he may choose, provided they be not against law. It is true, that in conveyances between private persons any conditions in restraint of the right of alienation are generally held void. But the restrictions imposed by the treaty do not come within die reason or policy of that rule; they may. be said to be rather descriptive of the mode, than restrictive of the right of alienation; or perhaps they may be more properly regarded as conditions subsequent. The complainants not having complied with any of the requirements of the treaty, (except that of procuring the certificate of the capacity of their vendor,) the question arises, what title, any, did they acquire by virtue of .their deed from the Indian? for if they do not show prima fades, good equitable title in themselves, the bill must be dismissed. The rule that the plaintiff must recover upon the strength of his own title, and not upon the weakness of his adversary’s, being equally regarded by courts of law and equity — the complainants’ title must depend in part upon the character of the title of their vendor at the time of the purchase. Had the Indian woman any right or title to the land in question, at the date of her sale to complainants? and was that right a legitimate subject of contract and sale prior to the completion of its location? In regard to the first branch of-the proposition, I apprehend there can be no doubt. The facts that she was of the Chickasaw tribe, not being the head of a [family, and of the age of twenty-one years or upwards, of themselves, gave to her, under the treaty,' a right in the abstract to a section of land. The subsequent acts of enrollment and location required by the treaty, do not create the right, but merely serve to locate and attach it specifically to definite prescribed boundaries. Rutherford v. Green’s Heirs, 2 Whea. 196. See 6th Art. Chic. T.

The second branch of the proposition is to my mind equally clear. It is how the well settled doctrine, that even a mere possibility, clothed with an interest in real estate, may be made the subject of contract, which a court of equity will inforce. Hobson v. Tenor, 2 P. Wms. 191; Wright v. Wright, 1 Ves. sr. 408. And [182]*182such possible interest may be devised by will. 3 Ed. Rep. 342; 2 Dessaus. 430.

I conclude, then, that the -Indian reservation right to a section of land was the proper subject of a contract of bargain and sale, even before location was made to the extent of creating an equity in favor of the vendee, and that a subsequent location, together with a deed made in accordance with such contract and carried through the forms prescribed by the treaty, would pass the title to the vendee; and that, as between the parties themselves, and as to third persons with notice, the deed would relate back to the date of the contract for purchase. 2 Wheat. 196.

Indeed it will appear that the acts required by the treaty to give validity to the conveyance of the Indian right, do not precede but follow the contract for purchase.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Free. Ch. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-lewis-misschanceryct-1844.