Highrock v. Gavin

179 N.W. 13, 43 S.D. 315, 1920 S.D. LEXIS 110
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 25, 1920
DocketFile No. 4454
StatusPublished

This text of 179 N.W. 13 (Highrock v. Gavin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Highrock v. Gavin, 179 N.W. 13, 43 S.D. 315, 1920 S.D. LEXIS 110 (S.D. 1920).

Opinions

POLLEY, J.

This action was brought for the purpose of determining adverse claims to 80 acres of land in Charles Mix county. Plaintiff in her complaint alleges that she is the owner of said land and asks that title thereto be quieted in her.

Defendants, by way of defense and counterclaim to plaintiff’s complaint, allege that the land in question had been alloted to one Paul Gondrow, a member of the Yankton Band of .Sioux Indians, by a so-called trust patent issued by the government of the United States, pursuant to Act of Congress approved February 8, 1887, c. 119, 24 'Stat. 388, known as the General Allotment Ljaw, and which patent bears date November 24, 1894; that said allottee died within the trust period named in said trust patent, and that thereafter said land was sold to defendants’ grantors on the 23d [322]*322day of November, 1904, by a person who was found by the Secretary of the Interior to toe the sole heir at law of said Paul Gondrow, and which sale was approved by the Secretary of the Interior on the nth day of February, 1905.

[1] To this defense plaintiff interposed a reply, wherein she alleged that she is the mother, and the sole heir at law, of the said Paul Gondrow; that under the provisions of said allotment act, and the laws of this state, she inherited the said allotment upon the death of the said Paul Gondrow; that she • had never sold nor consented to the sale of the said land, but that she is now the owner thereof. When the case was called for trial, defendants moved for judgment on the pleadings. By this motion defendants concede the truth of the material allegations in the reply, to-wit: That plaintiff is the sole heir at law of the said allottee, that she inherited and 'became the owner of the said allotment upon the death of the said allottee, and that she had never sold nor in any manner. divested herself of the title to the said allotment. But, notwithstanding the admission of these facts, the trial court granted the motion, and entered judgment dismissing plaintiff’s complaint, and quieted title to said land in the defendant John P. Gavin. From this judgment plaintiff appeals.

The conclusion reached toy the trial court is based wholly upon what was said by this court in Daugherty v. McFarland, 40 S. D. 1, 166 N. W. 143. In that case this court laid down the to road general proposition that, where an allottee under the General Allotment Act dies, and thereafter the Secretary of the Interior approves a deed made by a party or parties claiming to be the heir or heirs at law of the deceased allottee, which deed purports to convey the allotment, such deed does in fact convey title to such allotment to the grantee named in said deed, and thereby deprives such heir or heirs of all interest in and right to said allotment; and this, too, notwithstanding thé fact that said heirs of the allottee did not consent to such conveyance, have any knowledge thereof, or receive any part of the consideration therefor. This proposition of law appellant now contends is erroneous, and we are asked to overrule the same.

[2] Whether said proposition of law is right or wrong, it was certainly unnecessary and immaterial to any of the issues involved in that case. It was therefore pure obliter dicta, and not [323]*323controlling upon this or any other court. In the opinion in that case it is said:

“From the various acts of Congress, and from the interpretations thereof by the many decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, we are of the opinion that the lands allotted under the act of February 8, 1887, continued to be government property; that the government, by its Congress, had complete authority over tribal Indians, and over the property, real or personal, committed to them, unaccountable to any other body or tribunal; that, while it held the property in trust for the Indians, such trust differed from' the ordinary trust, in that Congress had full authority to make or unmake the rules governing the execution of the trust; that the federal government could dispose of such property through the agency of the Secretary of the Interior; that by the approval of the deed in question it did- convey to August Lahr the fee-simple title to the whole of the tract involved, free and clear of the rights of any heirs of Goodcloud or of Iron Soldier; and that the rights, if any, of such omitted heirs, should not follow the land, but should follow the fund realized upon the sale. United States v. Thurston County, 74 C. C. A. 425, 143 Fed. 287; Nat. Bank of Commerce v. Anderson, 77 C. C. A. 259, 147 Fed. 87.”

[3] And it is further said in that case that the allotment under the General Allotment Law “amounted only to an apportionment of the tribal possessory right,” and again, “such possessory right must be the only right given by the so-called trust patent.” 'These expressions are based largely, if not wholly, upon what was said by the Supreme Court in United States v. Chase, 245 U. S. 89, 38 Sup. Ct. 24, 62 L. ed. 168. But an examination of that case will show that the facts in that case were so different from the facts in the Daugherty Case that what was said in the former has no application to the facts in the latter. In United States v. Chase the controversy grew out of an assignment of a tract of land made under the treaty of 1865 by the United .States government and the Ornfaha Tribe of Indians. 14 Stat. 667. That treaty made provision for the assignment in severalty of specified and' limited tracts of land to the individual Indian. Article 4 of said treaty contains the following provision:

“Said division and assignment of lands to the Otttahas in severalty shall be made under the direction of the Secretary of the [324]*324Interior, and, when approved by him- shall be final and conclusive. Certificates shall -be issued by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs for the tracts so assigned, specifying the names of the individuals to whom they have been assigned respectively, and that they are for the exclusive use and benefit of themselves, their heirs, and descendants; and said tracts shall not be alienated in fee, leased, or otherwise disposed of except to the United Spates or to other members of the tribe, under such rules and regulations as may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior, and they shall be exempt from taxation, levy, sale, or forfeiture, until otherwise provided by Congress.”

Under this provision of the treaty, members of the tribe, including defendants’ predecessor in interest, received an assignment of r60 acres of land. The assignee went into possession of the land assigned, and afterwards died, and the defendant succeeded to her rights under the assignment. While defendant was in the occupation of the said tract of land, Congress passed a law (Act Cong. August 7, 1882, c. 434, 22 Stat. 341, which was accepted and adopted by a vote of the tribe) authorizing the members of the Omaha Tribe of Indians to take land in severalty by “allotment,” which allotments were to be taken in lieu of the assignments that had been made under the treaty of 1865. The sixth section of this act provided for the issuance of trust patents covering a period of 25 years, and for full patents conveying the fee at the end of that period. ¡Under this act an Indian, other than the defendant, received a trust patent to an allotment of a tract of land, which included 40 acres of the tract' of land that was occupied by the defendant under the assignment made under the treaty of 1865.

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Bluebook (online)
179 N.W. 13, 43 S.D. 315, 1920 S.D. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/highrock-v-gavin-sd-1920.