Goodell v. Jackson ex dem. Smith

20 Johns. 693
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedFebruary 15, 1823
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 20 Johns. 693 (Goodell v. Jackson ex dem. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodell v. Jackson ex dem. Smith, 20 Johns. 693 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1823).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

Two questions have been made and discussed in this case:

(1) Whether William, the only lawful issue of John Sagoharase, the Oneida Indian, was competent to take, and hold as heir, the lands in question, which had been granted to his father by the patent of the 13th of July, 1793 ?

(3) Whether Peter Smith acquired a lawful title to those lands by the deed from William, the heir, in the year 1797 ?

1. The patent is stated to have issued in pursuance of the act of the legislature of the 6th of April, 1790, and it grants the lands, in the usual form, to Lieutenant John Sagoharase, " his heirs and assigns, as a good and indefeasible estate of inheritance, for ever.” It is stated, in the special verdict, that this John Sagoharase was an Oneida Indian, and a lieutenant in a company of Indians in the army of the United States, in the line of this state, in the revolutionary war.

I think it might have admitted of a question, whether the patent to Sagoharase was not issued unadvisedly by the commissioners of the land office, and without authority of law. The act under which it issued, directed the commissioners to issue letters patent to persons entitled to lands by virtue of the concurrent resolutions of the senate and assembly, of the 37th of March, 1783, and by virtue of the 11th sectioh of the act of the 11th of May, 1784. To determine w6o were entitled, it was necessary to recur to those resolutions, and to that eleventh section. The concurrent resolution of the 37th of March, 1783, declared, that “ the legislature would provide, that the generals then serving in the line of the army of the United States, and being citizens of this state, and the officers and privates of the two regiments ©f infantry commanded by Colonels Van Schaick and Van Cortlandt, and the officers of Colonel Lamb’s regiment of artillery, who were inhabitants of this state, and the piivates thereof, and all officers deranged by the act of Cos-[704]*704gross of 16th of September, 1776, and all officers recommended by Congress as persons whose depreciation or pay ought to be made good by this state, and who may hold military commissions in the line of the army at the close of the war,” sho^M receive a bounty of lands according to a ratio there prescribed, and by which a lieutenant was to receive 1000 acres.

Lieutenant Sagoharase did not come within the terms of this concurrent resolution. He was not an officer in Van Schaiclc’s or Van Cortlandt’s regiment of infantry! or Colonel Lamb’s regiment of artillery. That, I apprehend, cannot be pretended. A company of Indians, certainly formed no part of either of those three regiments, apd were never known or returned as such. Nor was he a deranged officer under the resolution of Congress of the 16th of September, 1776, as is evident from the face of that resolution. And there is as little ground to infer, that he was one of the officers recommended by Congress as persons whose depreciation or pay ought to be made good by this state. That provision was also expressly confined to those officers who held military commissions in the* line of the army, at the close of the war, whereas, Sagoharase died before the 27th of March, 1783.

He was, therefore, not embraced by the terms of the concurrent resolution of March, 1783; and the eleventh section of the act of the 11th of May, 1784, was confined to the officers and soldiers of Colonel Lamb’s regiment of artillery. The patent was issued, according to the terms of it, under the authority of the act of the 6th of April, 1790, yet that act confined the bounty to those officers and soldiers which have been specified, and Sagoharase did not come Within the description. Upon what legal authority was this patent issued ? By the acts of the 11th of May, 1784, and of the 6th of April, 1790, the commissioners of the land office were to decide who were entitled to lands under the concurrent resolution ; and by the latter act, they were to examine the claims of the officers and soldiers who were returned as the quota of this state, and those of them who received the depreciation of their pay from this state, were to be,entitled to the gratuity and bounty lands. This last pro[705]*705vision does not help the patent, for a company of Indians never could have been returned as part of the quota of this state.

I have not been able, then, to discover the legislative authority for this patent. But the commissioners of the land office did decide, that Sagoharase was entitled to a portion of the bounty lands as a lieutenant, and we ought now to acquiesce in the authority of that decision. They gave him a patent, not for 1,000, but for 1,200 acres 5 and it is now too late, and certainly this is not the occasion, to call in question the validity of the patent. The legislature, by the act of the 7th of March, 1809, made for the relief of the heirs of the Oneida Indians, to whom lands had been granted, assume those grants to be valid. The decision of the commissioners of the land office must now be taken to have been correctly made 5 and owing to the numerous and complex provisions in the early laws of this state on the subject of military grants, it is very possible there may have been some further, or other, authority for these Indian patents, which I have not discovered.

The patent was granted in, 1792, and the patentee was dead before the 27th of March, 1783. But the act of 1790, to which I have already referred, provided that the patents should issue in the names of the persons who had actually served in the line of the army of the United States, as designated in the concurrent resolutions, and that the lands should be deemed to have vested in the grantees and their heirs, on the 27th of March, 1783. This provision, however, was not sufficient for a case like the present, for here the patentee was dead on the 27th of March, 1783; and had it not been for the subsequent act of the 5th of April, 1803, 1 should have considered the patent as null and void, because, the act of 1790 could not, by any just construction, be considered as authorizing grants, when the patentee was not alive in March, 1783, the period to which the patent was to have relation. But', the act of 1803, removed this objection to patents made to persons who were dead in 1783, by declaring that patents to officers and soldiers serving in the line of this state, in the army of the United States, in the revolutionary war., and who died previous to the 37th of March [706]*7061783, vested in those persons, at the time of their deaths re? spectively.

We have now arrived at this conclusion, and which, in the further progress of this, decision, I shall assume to be a just and true one, that the patent to Sagoharase was duly issued by authority of the legislature, and vested in him, his heirs and assigns, a good and indefeasible estate of inheritance in the premises in question, at the time of his death, which was prior to March, 1783. The important question now occurs, what heirs of John Sagoharase were intended by the grant ? He was an Oneida Indian, and lieutenant of a company of Indians, and died in the war.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Johns. 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodell-v-jackson-ex-dem-smith-nycterr-1823.