Chouteau v. Molony

57 U.S. 203, 14 L. Ed. 905, 16 How. 203, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1549
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 23, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 57 U.S. 203 (Chouteau v. Molony) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chouteau v. Molony, 57 U.S. 203, 14 L. Ed. 905, 16 How. 203, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1549 (1854).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is neeessarv to make a statement of the facts of the case *221 from the pleadings, in order that the opinion which we shall give may be fully understood.

It is a suit' for the recovery of land, but not according to the form of the proceedings in ejectment. It. is a petition according to the course of pleading allowed in the courts of Iowa, (which has been adopted by the District Court of the United States,) setting forth in detail the facts upon which the petitioner claims the ownership of the land.

The petitioner, Henry Chouteau, states that he is the owner of several tracts of land, and that they are wrongfully withheld from him by the defendant, Patrick Molony. It is admitted that Molony purchased the lands from the United States, and that he has a patent for them. But the validity of the .patent is denied, upon the ground that the land had been granted to Julien Dubuque by the authorities of Spain, before Louisiana had been transferred by France to .the United States.

Dubuque’s claim is said, by the petitioner, to be a purchase from the Fox Indians of a large tract of land situated in what is now the Dubuque Land District.

It is described as bordering on the Mississippi River, extending from the Little Makoketa River to the mouth of the Musquabinenque Creek, now called Tete des Morts. The purchase, it is said, was made at Prairie du Chien, from the chiefs of the Fox Indians, on the • 22d September, 1788. In proof of it, an instrument in uniting, in French, is produced, with a translation into English.

It is further stated that Dubuque paid the Indians for the ■ land in goods when the writing was executed. The petitioner then states, that the chiefs of the Fox Indians, a few days after-wards, assented to the erection of monuments, and that they were erected at the mouths of the rivers just mentioned, as evidence of the upper and lower boundaries of the tract of land.

It is also said that Dubuque occupied the land from the time it was sold to him; -that he made improvements on it, cleared an extensive farm, constructed upon it houses and a horse-mill; that he cultivated the farm and dug lead ore from .the land, which he' smelted in a furnace constructed for that purpose. This land was in the Spanish province of Louisiana; Dubuque resided on this land from 1788 to his death in 1810. Upon his first settlement there, he employed ten white men as laborers, who removed from Prairie du Chien tof enter his service; that the white inhabitants who resided on the land were almost entirely persons who had been inhabitants of Prairie du Chien before Dubuque made his. settlement, and that other persons from that town entered into his service in the interval between the date of his contract with the Indians and the time when he ap *222 plied to the Governor of Louisiana, the Baron de Carondelet, for the confirmation of the sale of the Indians to him. It also appears .that Dubuque, from the time he made his settlement until the province of Louisiana was transferred to the United States, did not permit any one to carry on bus¡ ess pn the land without having first obtained his consent, and that he drove forcibly from it a person named Guérien, who came there with goods to trade.

It seems, too, that Dubuque was a man, of enterprise; that, during his residence upon this land, he exercised great influence over the Indians on both sides of the Mississippi River; and that the Winnebagoes on the east of it, and the Foxes on the west of it, were in the habit of consulting with him upon their more important concerns.

It will be remembered that Dubuque’s settlement on the land began with the date of his bargain with the Fox Indians, which was the 22d of September, 1788. Eight years afterwards, or to be precise, on the 22d of October, 1796, Dubuque presented to the Baron de Carondelet, at' the city of New Orleans, his petition for a grant to him of the land which he alleges he bought from the Fox Indians, by his contract with'them of the 22d ofi' September, 1788, and their subsequent assent to the erection of the monuments upon the Makoketa and Tete des Mor’ts, as designations of the boundary of the land on the Mississippi. River. The governor referred his petition to Andrew Todd, an Indian trader, who had received a license for the monopoly of that trade, for Todd to give to him information of the nature of Dubuque’s demand. Todd replied, that he had acted upon the reference of the memorial, saying, that as to the land for which he asked, nothing occurred to him why it should not be granted, if you deem it advisable to do so; with the condition, néverthless, that Dubuque should observe his Majesty’s provisions relating to the trade with the Indians, and that he should be absolutely prohibited from doing so uifless he shall have Todd’s consent in writing.

Upon this answer of Todd, Governor Carondelet makes this order: Granted as asked, under the restrictions expressed in the information given by the merchant, Andrew Todd.

The contract with the • Indians, Dubuque’s petition to the governor, the reference of it. to Todd, Todd’s return of it with his written opinion, and the governor’s final order, are . here annexed.

The exhibit referred to in the petition, and filed therewith, .and marked A, is in the words and figures following, to wit:

Exhibit A.■— Conveyance from Foxes to Dubuque.

Copie de .conseil tenu.par Messrs, les Renards, c’est a dire, le *223 chef et le brave de cinque villages avec l’approbation du reste de leur gens, expliqué par Mr. Quinantotaye, deputé par eux, en leur presence<et en la notre, nous soussignés, scavior, que les Renards permette á Julien Dubuc, appelé par eux la petite huit, de trávaiÜer á la mine jusqu’á qui lui plaira, des s’en fetirer sans lui specifier aucun terme ; de plus, qu’il lui vende et abandonne toute la coté et contenu de la mine'trouve par le femme Peosta, que sans qu’aucuns bláncs ni sauvages, ni puissent pretendre sans’le consentnient du Sr. Julien Dubuc; et si en cas ne trouve rien dedans, il sera metre de cherche ou bon lui semblera, et de travailler tranquillement, sans qu’aux qu’un he puisse le nuire, ni portez aucune prejudice dans ses travaux; ainsi nous, chef et brave, par la voie de tous nos villages, nous sommes convenu avec Julien Dubuque, lui vendant et livrant de ce jour d’hui comme il ést mentionneé ci-dessus, en presence de Francois qui noús attende, qui sont les temoins de cette piece, a la Prairie du Chien, en plein conseil le 22 7br., Í788.

BLONDEAU, sa ALA x AUSTIN, marque. • AUTAQUE.

sa Bazil x Teren, temoin, marque. marque Blond'eatj X DE Quirneau, tobague. . Joseph Fontigny, temoin.

The exhibit referred to in the petition, and filed therewith, and marked B, is in the words and figures following, to wit:

Exhibit B. A Translation of A.

Copy of the council held by the Foxes, that is to say, of the •branch of five villages, with the approbation of the rest of their people, explained by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
57 U.S. 203, 14 L. Ed. 905, 16 How. 203, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chouteau-v-molony-scotus-1854.