Bealmear v. Hutchins

134 F. 257

This text of 134 F. 257 (Bealmear v. Hutchins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bealmear v. Hutchins, 134 F. 257 (circtwdnc 1904).

Opinion

BOYD, District Judge.

This is an action of ejectment, brought by the plaintiff, who seeks thereby to recover two tracts of land, each containing 640 acres, alleging that he is the owner and entitled to the immediate possession thereof, and that the defendants are in wrongful possession. Defendants in their answer deny plaintiff’s title. The lands are now located in Swain county, N. C., but at the time of the entries and grants hereinafter mentioned they were located in Jackson county, N. C.; Swain being a new county, since erected from part of the said county of Jackson. The issues which arise upon the pleadings are these: First. Is the plaintiff the owner in fee, as alleged in his complaint, of the land described therein, and entitled to the possession thereof? Second. Are the defendants in the wrongful possession, as alleged in the complaint? Third. What damage is the plaintiff entitled to recover?

After the jury was impaneled the plaintiff, in order to prove his title, offered in evidence two grants from the state of North Carolina to one J. L. Moore, each dated January 5, 1854. These grants showed upon their face that they were based upon an entry dated the 26th day of July, 1852, and that the amount per acre paid to the state by the grantee was 10 cents. Attached to the grants are copies of the survey of the entries, from which it appears that the surveys were made by the surveyor of Jackson county, by virtue of a warrant from the entry taker’s office of Macon county. The surveyor certifies that he has surveyed each of the 640-acre tracts of land “in the county of Jackson, in which said lands now lie, October 31, 1853.” The defendants objected to these grants as evidence, on the ground, first, that they were void, for the reason that the lands embraced in them were a part of the lands acquired by the state of North Carolina, under the treaties of 1817 and 1819 between the United States and the Cherokee Nation of Indians,, [259]*259which lands, as defendants insist, were not subject to entry and grant under the general laws of the state of North Carolina at the date of the said entries, to wit, July 26, 1852, and could only be acquired by citizens of the state, at said date and at the date of the said grant, under and in pursuance of the provisions of the special legislation of the state in relation to the said lands; and, second, because of the fact, as appeared upon the face of the grants, that said grants were issued for lands located in the county of Jackson, upon entries and warrants made and issued by the entry taker of Macon county. The counsel for the plaintiff admits that these grants are the sole basis of his title, and, if they are invalid, he cannot recover, and that the lands covered by the grants were a part of what were known as “Cherokee Lands.”

In the course of the very learned and exhaustive discussion of the question of the validity of these grants, the counsel have furnished the court with the treaties made between the United States and the Cherokee Indians, under which these lands were derived to the state of North Carolina; also the several acts of the General Assembly of North Carolina, both general and special, pertaining to the Cherokee lands; and, in addition thereto, numerous decisions of the Supreme Court of the state in relation to the question involved. It is well to state, in the outset, that the lands of which those in controversy are a part, from the earliest history of the treaties in relation thereto between the United States and the Cherokee Nation of Indians, were known as and called “Cherokee Lands,” and the General Assembly of the state of North Carolina, by special acts and provisions of acts, put them upon a special and different footing from all other public lands in respect to the method of their disposition to private individuals. The following is a history of this legislation:

The first act that needs to be noticed is that of 1783, found in 1 Potter’s Revisal, c. 185, §§ 5-8. By this act no land within the boundary allotted to the Indians could be entered or granted. The next act was passed in 1809, and was entitled “An act to prevent speculations in obtaining lands which may hereafter accrue to this state by purchase from the Indians.” It provides, first, that the land lying west of the line run by Meigs & Freeman, within the bounds of this state, shall not be subject to be entered under the entry laws of this state, but the same, when the Indian title shall be extinct, shall remain and inure to the sole use and benefit of the state, any law to the contrary notwithstanding; second, that all entries made or grants obtained, or which may hereafter be made or obtained, shall be null and void. See chapter 774, 2 Potter’s Revisal. In 1817 an act was passed, supplementary to the one last cited, forbidding entries west of the Meigs & Freeman line, in Haywood county, under a heavy penalty. 2 Potter’s Revisal, c. 950. Then came the act of 1819 (2 Rev. St. 1837, p. 189), entitled “An act prescribing the mode of surveying and selling the lands lately acquired by treaty from the Cherokee Indians.” By the fifth section of this act, after providing for the laying off into sections of [260]*260as much of the land as would sell for 50 cents per acre, it is declared :

“That the residue of said lands shall be reserved for the future disposition of the Legislature, and that no part or portion thereof shall be liable to be entered in the entry taker’s books for the county of Haywood, or elsewhere, until provision be made by law for the disposal thereof; and entries heretofore made or grants obtained, or which hereafter may be made, otherwise than as provided by this act, be, and the same are hereby declared to be, utterly void and of none effect.”

This section was continued in force by section 5 of the act of 1826. 2 Rev. St. 1837, pp. 201, 202. The act of 1819 was recognized by the act of 1828. 2 Rev. St., p. 204. The act of 1836 (2 Rev. St., p. 209) is a replica of the act of 1819, and the act of 1819 was brought forward as an existing and unrepealed law in 2 Rev. St. 1837, by express authority of section 10 of “An act concerning the Revised Statutes,” ratified the 23d day of-January, 1837. See 1 Rev. St. 1837, c. 1, § 10. By chapter 90, p. 194, Pub. Laws 1848-49 (section 7), it is provided:

“That all the bonds due the state for the sales of Cherokee lands, and all judgments rendered on such bonds, together with all the lands, sold and unsold, when the purchase money has not been paid, in the counties of Cherokee, Macon, and Haywood, are hereby pledged for the making of said road a turnpike road from Salisbury west to the line of the state of Georgia.”

Here we find the Legislature of North Carolina, as late as the session of 1848-49, appropriating the proceeds from the sales of Cherokee lands, in the counties of Cherokee, Macon, and Haywood, to the construction of a turnpike road from Salisbury, N. C., west to the Georgia line, and, as will be observed, the act making the appropriation does not refer to funds derived from the granting of Cherokee lands, under the general entry and grant laws of the state, but to bonds due the state for the sale of Cherokee lands and judgments rendered on such bonds. Now, under the general entry and grant laws there could be no bonds to the state for the entry price, for that was established at 10 cents an acre, to be paid in cash; and, further, it will be seen that the special acts of the Legislature, authorizing the entry and grant of what were known as the “Cherokee Lands,” classified them, and established a price for the first, second, third, and fourth classes.

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Bluebook (online)
134 F. 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bealmear-v-hutchins-circtwdnc-1904.