Brown v. Belmarde

3 Kan. 41
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 3 Kan. 41 (Brown v. Belmarde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Belmarde, 3 Kan. 41 (kan 1864).

Opinion

By the Court,

Crozikr, O. J.

Upon the trial of this cause in the court below, the plaintiffs in error asked the court to charge the jury as follows :

I. “ The statute law in force in the state of Kansas at the date of the act of Congress, entitled £An act to settle the titles to certain lands set apart for the use of certain half-breed Kansas Indians in Kansas territory,’ approved May 26, 1860, is the law by which the rights of the parties in this case are to be governed; that in ascertaining who are the heirs of Louis Lavonture, we are required to look to the statute law of Kansas in force at the date of the said act of Congress. That by the law of the state of Kansas at the date of said act of Congress the defendant Mrs. Brown, would be the sole heir of Louis Lavonture, if the jury should be satisfied from the evidence in the case that Lavonture and Mrs. Brown were lawfully married ; and that Lavonture died before 1860, having a child living, which child died prior to 1860, leaving no child or children,
II. ££ That if the jury are satisfied from the evidence in the case that Martin Trapp, the former husband of Mrs, Brown, was dead, and that after his death the defendant Mrs. Brown and Louis Lavonture were married, then upon the death of Louis Lavonture without children, Mrs. B, [46]*46would be under the laws of Kansas, and the said act of Congress, the only heir of Louis Lavonture, her deceased husband.
III. “That if the jury are satisfied from the evidence in the case that Mrs. Brown and Lavonture were married according to the forms of law, the issue of said marriage would not be bastard and incapable of inheriting from Lavonture on his death, although Mrs. Brown may have had another husband living at the time of her said marriage with Lavonture. That if the jury were satisfied from the evidence, Louis Lavonture had a child by the said defendant Mrs. Brown after said marriage, the said child would be entitled as heir to all the interest and right of the said Lavonture in said reserve or section numbered 9; and upon the death of the said child without a child or children, the said interest in said section would pass to and vest in Mrs. Brown, the mother of said child.”

The court refused to give these instructions or either of them, and a verdict and judgment were rendered for the defendant in error. We are asked to reverse the judgment on the ground that the court erred in refusing so to instruct the jury. r

Prior to 1825, the Kansas nation of Indians had what is known as the Indian title to a large body of lands in the eastern portion of this state, including the lands in controversy. On the 3d of June of that year, that nation made a treaty with the United States by which the Indians ceded to the government the said lands subject to the reservation mentioned in the sixth article of the treaty. That article is in the following words:

YI. “From the lands above ceded to the United States, there shall be made the following reservations of one mile square for each of the hall-breeds of the Kansas nation, viz: for Adel and Clement — the two children of Clement; for Josette, Julie, Pelagie and Yictoire, the four children of Louis Gouvil; for Marie and Lafleche, the two children of [47]*47Baptiste of Gouvil; for Lavontnre, the son of Francis Lavonture; for Elizabeth and Pierre Carbonate, the children of Pierre Brisee; for Louis Joucas; for Basil Joucas; for James Joucas ; for Elizabeth Dolcharnte, daughter of Baptiste Dolcharute; for Joseph Butter; for William JRodgers; for Joseph Cote; for the four children of Cicile Compare— each one mile square, and for one Joseph Joucas; to be located on the north side of the Kansas river, in the order above named, commencing at the line of the Kansas reservation, and extending down the Kansas river for quantity.”

Lavonture, the son of Francis Lavontnre, mentioned in the foregoing article, died in 1847 or ’48.

On the 26th day of May, 1860, Congress passed an act upon the subject of these lands. After reciting the above article, the first section provides : “ That all the title, interest and estate of the United States, is hereby vested in the said reservees, who are now living, to the land reserved, set apart and allotted to them, respectively, by the said sixth article of said treaty; and in case any of the said reservees named in the said sixth article are deceased and leaving heirs, then all the title, interest or estate of the United States to the land allotted to such deceased reservees, is hereby vested and confirmed in such persons as shall by the Secretary of the Interior be decided to be the heir of such deceased reservees; but nothing herein contained shall be construed to give any force, efficacy or binding effect to any contract in writing or otherwise for the sale or disposition of any lauds named in this act heretofore made by any of said reservees or their heirs.”

The second section provides that in case any of the reservees or their heirs shall not desire to occupy the lands, the Secretary of the Interior may sell them for their benefit. The third section directs what shall be done with the proceeds of such sales.

On the 17th of July, 1862, Congress passed a joint reso[48]*48lution, providing: “ That sections two and three ‘ of the above act ’ and so much of the first section as authorized the Secretary of the Interior to decide what persons are heirs to deceased reservees as mentioned therein, be and the same is hereby repealed.”

The first question to be considered is, by what rule shall it be ascertained who are meant by the words heirs of such deceased reservees ” as used in the act of Congress.

Prior to the treaty 0^1825, the Kansas nation of Indians had the Indian title to the land in controversy, i. e. the right to use, occupy and enjoy. This title was by the sixth article vested in Lavonture. His title was no greater than that of the nation had been. The nation’s title was transferred to and vested in him, individually. After the boundaries were ascertained in the manner contemplated by the treaty, he was the sole owner of section No. 9 to the extent of the Indian title. His interest did not amount to an estate of inheritance, but was a mere life interest in the resufruct. There are no words in the treaty which upon any known rule of interpretation, would create an estate of inheritance. Before the treaty the United States held the ultimate title charged with the right of undisturbed occupancy and perpetual possession in the Indian nation ” so long as it should remain a nation. Had the nation become extinct without a treaty, the lands would have become the property of the United States, disencumbered of the Indian title. So, after the treaty Lavonture having but a life estate to the extent of the Indian title in section nine, should he die with or without issue, the whole title to that section would vest in the United States. The record shows that he did die in 1847 or ’48. Therefore from that time to the passage of.the act of May 26, 1860, the whole title to the lands in controversy, was in the government. That act operated as an original grant to the persons who shall be ascertained to be meant by the word “ heirs ” used therein.

It was insisted in the argument that whoever would un[49]*49der the law have-inherited the real estate generally of Lavonture at the time of his death, are the persons meant by the word “ heirs” in the act of Congress.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Kan. 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-belmarde-kan-1864.