Challefoux v. Ducharme

4 Wis. 554
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 4 Wis. 554 (Challefoux v. Ducharme) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Challefoux v. Ducharme, 4 Wis. 554 (Wis. 1856).

Opinion

By the Court,

Oole, J.

A tribunal was instituted by an act of Congress approved February 21st, 1823, consisting of a board of commissioners, for the purpose of “ ascertaining and deciding on the rights of persons claiming lands -at Green Bay, Prairie du [561]*561Chien, and the county of Michilimackinaci” The powers and duties of the commissioners, as defined by the act, were to ascertain and decide on the rights of persons claiming land in those districts, and transmit their report containing transcripts of their decisions, to the secretary of the treasury, to be laid before Congress. The fifth section of the act designates who might be claimants, in the following language:

“That every person who, on the first-day of July, one thousand eight hundred and twelve, was a resident of Gyeen Bay( Prairie du Chien, or within the county of Michilimackinac, and who bn the said day occupied and cultivated, or occupied a tract of land which had previously been, cultivated by said occupant, lying within either of'said settlements, and who has continued to submit to -the authority of the United States, or the legal representatives of every such'person, shall be confirmed in the tract so occupied and cultivated,” &c.

Pierre Challefoux, the father of the complainant Challefoux, and from whom the complainant claims title, filed before the commissioners, pursuant to the act, a claim to lot number twenty-seven, at Green Bay, and proved by two witnesses, Baptiste Brunette, and Jean Baptiste Broder, that he occupied and cultivated the tract on the 1st day of July, A. D. 1812, and had submitted to the authority of the United States.

The defendant Susan La Rose or Susan Ducharme, from whom all the defendants derive title as purchasers (except Mary Grig, non, who is a .nominal party), also claimed the same tract before the commissioners as grand-daughter and heir of Augustin Ash-waubunay. She .proved likewise by two witnesses, Pierre Cousey and Joseph Roy, that Ashwaubunay occupied and cultivated the land on the 1st day of July, 1812, and submitted to the authority of the United States.

The commissioners decided in favor of both claims, and confirmed them; ■ and in their report recommended both for confirmation. Congress, by an act approved April 17th, 1828,. confirmed “ the claims purporting to be confirmed or recommended for confirmation by the commissioners.” A patent for the land was issued to Susan La Rose on the 5th of November, 1829.. Susan went into actual possession of the land some fifteen years ago, or more. The exact time when she went into possession [562]*562does not very clearly appear, neither is it material in the disposition of the cause. On the 31st of October, 1842, Susan La Rose sold and conveyed the north half of the tract to Ephraim Shaler, and the other defendants derive their title through this purchase. The complainants file their bill praying that this patent issued to Susan La Rose, may be delivered up to them, and that the defendants be decreed to quit-claim their interest in the premises. And the position upon which the complainants rely to sustain their cause is, that it is proved that Ashwaubunay was an Indian, and therefore that he could neither receive or transmit any right under the act of 1823 ; and that the title under the grant and patent enured to the benefit of their ancestor Pierre Challefoux, senior. Considerable testimony has been taken to establish the fact that Ashwaubunay was an Indian; and also to show that Challefoux, senior, did not occupy and cultivate the land on the 1st of July, 1812. The view, however, which we have taken of the case relieves us from the necessity of entering upon an 'examination of the testimony to ascertain what facts are or are not established by it. Eor we are of the opinion that we cannot go behind the decision and report of the commissioners, and the confirmation of that report by .Congress, and inquire into the sufficiency and nature of the evidence introduced before them.

Congress, well aware of the condition of the country, and the nature of these claims, saw fit to establish those boards of commissioners to examine into and decide upon the rights of the claimants. Reasons of sound policy have led to the establishment of these boards of commissioners to settle claims to land from time to time, and • courts have uniformly approved of the laws, and sustained the acts of commissioners, when acting within the scope of their authority. 12 Wheat. 530, 601; 6 Peters, 763 ; 7 id. 51; 12 id. 410 ; 2 Howard, 344. Notwithstanding the act of 1823 (or more properly the acts of March 3d, 1807, April, 23d, 1812, and May 11th, 1820, all of which have to be looked into in determining the powers and duties of the commissioners) empowers the commissioners to decide upon the rights of the complainants, yet those decisions were not final until approved by Congress. The primary object for which the board of commissioners was appointed, seems to have been to examine into [563]*563and report to Congress such claims' as ought to be confirmed. In the discharge of this duty they had, to a certain extent, to act judicially upon evidence and facts laid before them. They ■were to decide whether a claim was supported by competent evidence under the law. And this decision, when confirmed by Congress, we think, must be considered, final and conclusive. It is admitted by the counsel for the complainants that the decision of the commissioners upon any fact, -as, for instance, whether a ■claimant occupied and cultivated his claim on the 1st of July, 1812, or not, must be considered conclusive, and that no evidence can be now received contradictory to the proofs made before them. But he insists that their decision is not conclusive upon the question, as to whether a person was competent to take under the law or not. In other words that we may inquire into the question as to whether Ashwaubunay was an Indian, but cannot as to whether Ohallefoux occupied and cultivated the land on the 1st of July, 1812. We are unable to make a distinction between the cases. We think that if we are permitted to go back of the decision of the commissioners, and the confirmation of that decision by Congress, and inquire into the question of the citizenship of a claimant, we may, upon the same principle, inquire into any other fact passed upon by the commissioners. It is not by any means clear that Congress intended to confine the- benefits of the act to citizens of the United States. The language of the law is very comprehensive, “ that every person” who resided at Green Bay, &c., and occupied and cultivated his claim on the 1st of July, 1812, and submitted to the authority of the United States, might be a claimant for six hundred and forty acres. There might, perhaps, have been cases of Indians abandoning the wild and savage life of their people, who had become permanent habitants, occupying and cultivating the soil, submitting to the authority of the United States, and who would have been entitled to take a claim under the -liberal provisions of this act. However, -it is not necessary for us to decide whether Congress did or did not intend to discriminate in this respect. We must consider the decision of the commissioners upon a claim as correctly made, upon good and sufficient evidence. It seems that any other rule would at once ■disturb, and throw open to litigation these old claims, that Con[564]*564gress has been so sedulous in quieting and forever putting at rest.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Wis. 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/challefoux-v-ducharme-wis-1856.