Jemison v. . Bell Telephone Co.

79 N.E. 728, 186 N.Y. 493, 24 Bedell 493, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1142
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 21, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 79 N.E. 728 (Jemison v. . Bell Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jemison v. . Bell Telephone Co., 79 N.E. 728, 186 N.Y. 493, 24 Bedell 493, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1142 (N.Y. 1906).

Opinion

Edwabd T. Babtlett, J.

The plaintiff had been for nineteen years, at the time of the trial, a chief of the Tonawanda band of Seneca Indians, and for forty years or more a resident, and exceeding twenty years a landowner, on the Tonawanda Indian reservation, in the town of Alabama, county of Genesee and state of New York.

The plaintiff’s premises are briefly described as follows in the'complaint: “It is bounded on the east by the lands of Jonathan Jemison, oil the south by the West Shore Railroad, on the west by the lands of Erastns Printup, on the north by the center of the highway leading from Bascom to Akron and the lands of Joseph Charles and Anna Charles his wife.”

The defendant is a domestic corporation organized some years' before the transactions involved in this action, and has its principal office in the city of Buffalo, Erie county.

The complaint charges that prior to the commencement of *496 this action the defendant, its agents and servants, did unlawfully enter and without his authority upon said premises of the plaintiff, lying between the center of the aforesaid highway and the southerly side thereof, and did eject the plaintiff therefrom and dug holes in and erected telephone poles upon and stretched wires over said premises throughout the whole length thereof, from the easterly line to the westerly line of the same, and cut and trimmed various trees that the plaintiff or his ancestors or grantees had planted on said premises.

The complaint further alleges, after setting forth possession and occupancy on the part of the plaintiff, that the defendant unlawfully withholds the possession of said property to his damage of $500.00. The plaintiff also avers that he brings this action in accordance with the Laws of 1902, chapter 296, entitled “ An act to amend the Indian Law in relation to the erection of poles and wires on the Tonawanda Reservation!” It is also alleged that the plaintiff brings this action in his individual right and to right an individual wrong.

The defendant in its answer puts in issue the allegations of the complaint and sets up the following defenses, in substance : That in or about the year 1900 it obtained from the Tonawanda Ration of Seneca Indians the permission and right to erect the poles and stretch the wires and trim the trees, as alleged in the complaint, by a certain resolution adopted by the said Tonawanda Ration of Seneca Indians, paying therefor a valuable consideration; that chapter 296 of the Laws of 1902 is unconstitutional and void in that it is violative of subdivision one of section ten of article one of the Constitution of the United States in that it impairs the obligation of contracts. It is also alleged that chapter 296 of the Laws of 1902 is unconstitutional and void in that it is violative of and in conflict with the statutes of the United States providing for the regulation of commerce with the Indian tribes, among others, section 2116 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, and chapter 882 of the Laws of the United States, passed in the year 1901, pursuant to the provisions of the Constitution of the United States, among other provisions *497 subdivision three of section eight of article one of said Constitution.

It is proper at the outset to dispose of the constitutional and statutory defenses interposed by the defendant. The suggestion that chapter 296 of the Laws of 1902 is in conflict with the Constitution and statutes of the United States ignores the history of the Seneca Indians and several other Indian tribes in the state of New York. That history dates back, so far as the Seneca tribe is concerned, to a time when two charters to their lands, among others, were granted; one by Charles the First of England to the colony of Massachusetts Bay and New England in 1628, and the second by Charles the Second to James, Duke of York, in 1664. After the ¡Revolutionary war and the original thirteen states had adopted their Constitutions, the state of Massachusetts claimed these lands in western New York under the first charter named, and the state of New York claimed them under the second charter. Commissioners were appointed by the states of Massachusetts and New York and the result was, as announced in 1786, that the jurisdiction and sovereignty of these lands were found to be in the state of New York; that the state of Massachusetts retained the right to pre-empt these lands from the Indians and extinguish the Indian titles thereto.

It is unnecessary to trace this history for the next seventy-five years through the negotiations and transfers-that resulted in the creation of the Ogden Land Company, the Holland Land Company and other purchases and sales of the Indian lands, many óf which reflect little credit upon the transactions so far as the white men were concerned.

In 1857 the Tonawanda band of Seneca Indians negotiated a new treaty by which they surrendered the right to certain land in western Kansas, to which they had been practically exiled, and purchased of the surviving trustee of the Ogden Company 7,547 acres, comprising the present Tonawanda reservation, paying therefor twenty dollars an acre. By the terms of the treaty these lands were conveyed to the secretary of the interior of the United States in trust, and in February, *498 1863, the secretary of the interior conveyed these lands to Lucius Robinson, the then comptroller of the state of Hew • York and his successors in office, in fee, in trust for the. Tonawanda band of Seneca Indians, pursuant to an act of the legislature of tire state designating the party to whom the conveyance was to be made in pursuance of the said treaty of 1857.

This historical question is dealt with to a great extent in the case of Seneca Nation of Indians v. Christie (126 N. Y. 122; affirmed, 162 U. S. 283). The state of New York exercises the exclusive sovereignty and jurisdiction over the Seneca Nation of Indians, and the case at bar consequently involves no Federal question. The Constitution, and statutes of the United States apply to Indian lands in many jurisdictions outside of this state.

The defense interposed to the effect that the Laws of 1962, chapter 296, is unconstitutional as impairing the obligation of contracts, does not seem to have been seriously insisted upon at the trial of this action. Be that as it may, we hold that the law is a' valid exercise of the legislative power.

This brings us to the consideration of the merits. The title of the plaintiff to the premises in question rests on the provisions of section 56 of the Indian Law and the laws and usages of the Seneca Hation to which reference is therein made. Section 56 provides, in part, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.E. 728, 186 N.Y. 493, 24 Bedell 493, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jemison-v-bell-telephone-co-ny-1906.