Hale v. Wilder

8 Kan. 545
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 Kan. 545 (Hale v. Wilder) 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
Hale v. Wilder, 8 Kan. 545 (kan 1871).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kingman, C. J.:

Four errors are assigned to which attention will be given in their order. The court excluded a copy of a letter written by commissioner "Wilson to Hon. W. E. Niblack as to the status of the land in controversy. This was right. The letter was to a private individual. Its contents «did not tend to prove any facts; they only showed the opinion of an officer of the government as to the title to certain lands. The act of congress referred to only makes an exemplified copy of a paper evidence where the paper itself would be evidence; and the commissioner’s letter would not be evidence in this case.

II. The witness Abbott was asked the question, “Did Graham Rogers, one of the acting chiefs of the Shawnees, in Washington City, before the adoption of the fifth modified rule, execute a deed to you of the land in controversy?” Hie [553]*553court refused to permit the question to be answered. There is no explanation of the use that could be made of the answer, nor can we perceive any relevancy. It did not show or tend to show that the title was transferred from the Shawnee tribe to Abbott. If there was such a deed made, and it conveyed no title, as both parties contend, then even the introduction of the deed itself, if one existed, became immaterial.

III. The court refused to permit Mr. Eoberts, the agent, to testily whether he knew that the defendants were in possession and occupancy of the land at the time of the sale, and whether he promised them the land should not be sold till he had given them notice and a preference. Answered either way the testimony would have had no bearing upon the case under the issues on trial. Again, the questions were not proper cross-examination of the witness: and if considered as in chief, were not in proper form. The record is silent as to the grounds of objection, or the reason of the court. In any view the questions were immaterial and irrelevant.

IY. The only other error alleged is that the judgment was for the plaintiff when it should have been for the defendants. The cause was tried by the court without the intervention of a jury, and a judgment rendered for the plaintiff, to which defendants excepted. The questions presented to this court are purely questions of law, the counsel upon either side in then-arguments conceding the facts as they appear of record. The action was for the recovery of four hundi-ed acres of land in Johnson county. The plaintiff below (defendant in error in this court) claiming by a deed from Graham Eodgers and Charles Tucker, chiefs of the Shawnee Nation, to him. . The consideration of the deed is $2,000. It is attested by James E. Abbott and E. S. Eoberts, and acknowledged before Eoberts the U. S. Indian agent for the Shawnees. On the 5th of January, 1870, the acting Commissioner of Indian Affairs submitted this deed to the Secretary of Interior for his approval, and on the 6th of January, 1870, the deed was approved by the Secretary of the Interior. It is claimed that this deed when so made and acknowledged vested the legal title to the land in [554]*554the defendant in error. The plaintiffs in error admit the regularity of the steps taken to procure the deed, and that it is done in conformity with the fifth modified rule of the Department of the Interior, but deny the power of the Department to dispose of the'lands, on two grounds: First, that the lands are part of the “ surplus lands ” of the Shawnee tribe, and are by the joint resolution of congress of 1869 to be sold to the settler occupying said lands, and having made improvements thereon, at the price of $2.50 per acre; (16 Stat. at Lai’ge, p. 53:) Second, That the Department had no power under the laws and treaties to dispose of the lands, unless it was under the joint resolution referred to: "Whether the decision of the first question be one way or the other, the proceeds of the sale go alike to the use of the Shawnee Indians as a nation, so that so far as they are concerned it makes no difference how it is decided, except as to the amount. If the plaintiffs in error are right in their construction of the laws and treaties, the Indians will get $2.50 per acre for the land when it is sold under the joint resolution of 1869. If the title of the defendant in error is good, then the Indians have already to their credit on the sale made to him, and paid to the proper department for their use, $5.00 per acre. The land is probably worth much more than either sum, so that to the parties the decision is one of much greater importance.

It is admitted by both parties that the land in controversy is a part of the two hundred thousand acres ceded to the Shawnee Indians by the second article of the treaty of 1854, between the government of the United States and the Shawnee tribe of Indians. (10 U. S. Stat. at Large, 1053.) "We are first to determine what is the status of this land, and this demands careful consideration of the whole treaty; but we think the grounds of our decision may be briefly stated so as to be understood. It appears from the record, and is conceded in argument, that the land in controversy was double allotment land made to Lewis Hayes and George Sylcambus, and that they have since received other lands. The plaintiffs in error contend that these lands have now become a part of the surplus land set apart for the [555]*555absentee Shawnee Indians, and are covered by the joint resoluof congress of 1869. The defendant in error insists that they remained allotted lands, and were subject to the disposal of the department of the government having charge of Indian affairs. The condition of the lands is anomolous, and one not contemplated by the treaty. That instrument makes no positive provision for a case of double allotments, such a contingency not having suggested itself to the parties. The treaty provides that there is to be a certain specified quantity of land out of the two hundred thousand acres given, first, to the churches, societies, and schools, and a few individuals named in the treaty, on certain terms; second, two hundred acres are to be allotted to each Shawnee Indian who shall elect to hold his land in severalty; third, those Indians of the Black Bob and Long-Tail bands who shall prefer to hold their lands in common are to have land amounting to two hundred acres each set apart in one body to be held in common; and after all these selections are made it is supposed there will be a surplus, which shall be set apart in one body of land, in a compact form, under the direction of the president of the United States, for the use of such absentee Indians of the tribe as shall return within a given time; and what of this tract is not so taken by the absentees within the stipulated time is to be sold for the benefit of the whole tribe. In these different ways the whole of the two hundred thousand acres ceded to the Shawnees by the treaty were to be appropriated. All these various selections were made in due time, and by the proper authorities, and the same became fixed by the selections made. It then became known that there was a small portion that had been double allotted, including the land in controversy. The different societies and individuals had all the land they were entitled to. The Indians who chose had their head-rights. Those who preferred had their proportion assigned them in common. The residue had been set apart for the absentees in one body in a compact form under the direction of the president of the United States. These different selections and lists of land were required to be made out within certain periods designated in the treaty, and [556]

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Related

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46 Kan. 1 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1891)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Kan. 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hale-v-wilder-kan-1871.