De Louis v. Meek

2 Greene 55
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 15, 1849
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Greene 55 (De Louis v. Meek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Louis v. Meek, 2 Greene 55 (iowa 1849).

Opinion

Opinion by

William®, C. J.

Elizabeth De Louis, formerly Elizabeth limit, John Wright and TTenry De Louis, husband of tlie said Elizabeth, outlie 20th day of August, 1815, tiled tbeir bill of complaint against William Meet, et al. in the district court of Lee county, setting forth that by treaty between the United States of America and the [56]*56Sac and Fox nation of Indians, dated August 4, 1824, a certain, tract of land lying and being within said county of Lee, and commonly known as the “Half Breed Tract,” and lying between the rivers Des Moines and the Mississippi, and bounded on the north by a line running due east from the north west corner of the state of Missouri to the Mississippi river, as in said treaty set forth, was reserved for the use of the half breeds belonging to the Sac and Fox nation, to be held by them as other Indian titles were held; that on the 80th of June, 1834, by an act of Congress, the reversionary interest of the DnitedStates was relinquished, and vested in such half breeds as were, by the Indian title, entitled to the same, under the re ser v? ationin said treaty; that the tract of land contains about one hundred and nineteen thousand acres, more or less; that Elizabeth De Louis is one of said half breeds mentioned in the treaty, and in said act of Congress, to whom said reservation and relinquishment was made; that by virtue thereof, she became the legal owner of one full undivided and equal share of said tract of land, in fee, in common with the other half breeds designated and intended as the recipients of the said reservation and relinquishment of the land aforesaid; that she was married to Henry De Louis; that she, or her said husband had never sold, or in any manner parted with her or their interest in said land; but had since said treaty resided on the land, and liad never in any manner abandoned the same or her interest therein; that she and her husband, at the time of the filing of the bill, were entitled to one equal share of the land; and that they then resided on, and occupied a part of the land, as their home, and had made improvements thereon.

The bill then sets forth that John Wright claims, and is, the owner in fee of one-fourtli of a full share in the said land, so held by reserve and relinquishment as aforesaid, by purchase from one Isaac It. Campbell, and Wilson Overall, who had purchased the same from Francoise Hebert, a half breed of the Sac and Fox nation, who was [57]*57entitled thereto by virtue of the treaty and act of Congress aforesaid; that she, the said Francoise, had intermarried with one Charles Menar; that at the time of the relinquishment she had not abandoned her claim, and had her home on the land; that she and her said husband had conveyed their share in the land to the said Campbell and Overall, from whom said "Wright had purchased the same for a valuable consideration. For all which reference is made to the title deeds ready to be produced in court.

The claim and title of Wright by proper deeds of conveyance from Hebert and wife to him, for one-fourth of a share in the land in common with the other owners, is set forth, with the averment that he had his home and resided on the land at the time of making his complaint, and for a long time before it; and that he was an occupant thereof, and had made valuable improvements on said half breed tract. The complainants then proceed to state in their bill that on or about the 14th day of April, 1840, Josiah Spalding and others 'therein named, filed, in the district court of Lee county, their petition for a partition of said half breed tract of land among themselves and certain other persons pretending and claiming to be the persons entitled thereto, under the treaty, reservation and relinquishment aforesaid, or legally claiming under those who were originally so entitled; that very many of the persons so petitioning had no good and legal right or equitable title to any part of said tract of land. The bill admits that the claims or titles of thirty-three persons besides those of De Louis and Wright, the complainants, are correct and just, and avers that all the rest and residue of the claims which were adjudicated and allowed in the said decree of the district court, made upon the said petition for the partition of the said land, were illegal and fraudulent, being obtained in the names of persons who had no real existence, or by persons who had fraudulently represented themselves to be half breeds, when in truth they were not; and that the petitioners well knew that the said claims were unjust and could not be substantiated by legal proof.

[58]*58Tbe bill also charges, on behalf of "Wright, that Reid & Johnston, Solicitors of the District Court of Lee county, entered his appearance for him, said Wright, in the suit for partition in which the decree was entered, and assumed to act for him without any legal authority so to do, and without his knowledge; and consented to the decree on the part of your orator without legal authority so to do; that they, said Reid & Johnston, were at the same time acting as solicitors for Marsh, Lee & Delavan, and others in the same proceeding; that they entered into said consent so as to procure a large portion of said spurious claims to be allowed in favor of said Marsh, Lee & Delavan, and others, so as to swell, greatly, their interests, and thereby proportionably to diminish that of said Wright; that all such claims to said land, so admitted and allowed, except the thirty-three shares and one-fourth of a share named in petitioners’ bill of complaint, were fraudulent and unjust, never could have been substantiated by legal proof, and would never have been admitted into the decree, except by the consent or compromise so made. It then avers that the actings and doings aforesaid are contrary to equity and good conscience, and that the petitioners were thereby greatly injured and defrauded.

It is also charged in the bill, that the consent or compromise upon which the decree was entered, was made by the parties thereto and the conductors thereof in fraudulent confederation and collusion with each other, they having combined to cheat and defraud petitioners in the premises, and that the complainants did not participate therein; that the same was intended to, and did, injure the rights and possessions of the petitioners, and injuriously aifect and endanger them in the quiet enjoyment of their improvements and homes on the said half breed tract of land.

The bill further charges that the decree was produced and obtained by falsely and fraudulently inducing the court which made it to believe that all legal claimants, interested in the said tract of land, were duly and legally [59]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Greene 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-louis-v-meek-iowa-1849.