Midway Co. v. Eaton

183 U.S. 602, 22 S. Ct. 261, 46 L. Ed. 347, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 738
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 13, 1902
Docket80
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 183 U.S. 602 (Midway Co. v. Eaton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Midway Co. v. Eaton, 183 U.S. 602, 22 S. Ct. 261, 46 L. Ed. 347, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 738 (1902).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The decision of the controversies in this case depends upon the validity or invalidity of the scrip locations, either originally when the land was unsurveyed, or subsequently when the location was adjusted to the land as surveyed.

The act of Congress of July 17, 1854, c. 83, 10 Stat. 304, authorized the issue of scrip to the half-breeds of the Sioux Nation of Indians in exchange for certain lands, which scrip might be located (1) upon any land within the Sioux half-breed reservation ; or (2) “ upon any other unoccupied lands subject to preemption or private sale; ” or (3) “ upon any other unsurveyed lands not reserved by the Government, upon which they (the half-breeds) have respectively made improvements. It is provided in said act, “ That no transfer or conveyance of any of .said certificates or scrip issued shall be valid.”

*608 On the latter provision of the act the plaintiff in error bases the contention that the scrip is not assignable, and that the .power of location is s.trictly personal to the- Indian, and must-be made whether on surveyed or. unsurveyed land, either by him or for his benefit, and that the improvements on unsurveyed land must be made under his personal supervision and direction ; that he must come in personal, contact with the land. And it is hence asserted that the powers of attorney giren to Eaton and Merritt were virtual assignments of the scrip and frauds upon the act of Congress; that the improvements were made not by Orillie Stram, the half-breed, or for her benefit, but by Eaton and for his benefit; and that the subsequent adjustment of the locations of the land after its survey was''made for him, not for her; for-his benefit, not for hers. On the-other hand, the defendants in error contend that the prohibition against the assignment of the scrip is strictly of the scrip as such, not of the rights or powers conferred by it:,that the provision of the statute is- not a prohibition upon the alienation of the land, but is intended to protect the Government against controversies about the transfer of the scrip, and to require and secure all of the steps and proceedings to be in the name of the Indian and the title to be issued in his name. It is claimed, therefore, that the' requirements of the statute have been observed ; that the locations were made in the name of the Indian, and for her.benefit. ' And it is also claimed that if there was any defect in the location upon the land when unsurveyed, by reason of the insufficiency of the improvements or by whom erected, that defect was supplied by the location of the scrip after the land was surveyed, and the acceptance of the location of the scrip by the local land office, there being then no ‘ adverse rights to the land. And furthei’, that the power of Eaton to make the location for the Indian was ratified by her (if it needed ratification), and all rights which enured to her were conveyed by her warranty deed to Eaton.

These contentions exhibit the controversy between the parties and present the only questions upon which we think it is necessary to pass, and the questions are certainly close ones. The Interior Department has not always given the same answer to *609 them, and the latest decision of that Department is opposed in the case at bar by the courts of Minnesota.

It is natural to respect the rulings of the Land Department upon any statute affecting the public domain, and if the rulings were contemporaneous with the enactment of the statute they afford a somewhat confident presumption of its meaning. One of the reasons is that the officers of the Land Department may have recommended the statute — indeed, may have written its words or, at' any rate, were familiar with the circumstances which induced the legislation. Ve have not, however, in the case at bar, an exactly contemporaneous construction of the act of 1854 by the Land Department. The first circular of instructions was not issued until March 21, 1857. It is, however, not without value, and it tends to the support of the contentions of the defendants in error. The circular stated that the scrip “ must be located in the name of the part}7 in whose favor the scrip is issued, and the location may be made by him or her in person, or by his or her 'guardian.” And further: You will observe that this scrip is not assignable, transfers of the same being held void; consequently, each certificate, as hereinbefore stated, can only be located in the name of the half-breed; and such certificate or scrip are not to be- treated as money, but located acre for acre.”

In the circular issued February 22, 1864, those instructions were repeated, and the following added : When not located by the reservee in proper person, the application to locate must be accompanied by the affidavit of the agent that the reservee is living, and that the location is made for the sole use and benefit of said reservee.” Prior to the issuance of the circular of February 22, 1864, to wit, in 1863, a contest came on appeal to the Land Department, between a location made by Sioux scrip which was issued to one Sophia Felix, and a claim under a preemption settlement. . The Commissioner of the Land Department decided against the scrip location on two grounds, one of which was: “ That ‘ the location of the scrip, although made in her name, was not made by her in person, nor by her guardian or duly authorized agent, for her use and benefit, but by *610 an unauthorized person, and. for the use and benefit of a person having no legal interest therein.’ ”

The decision was reversed by the Secretary of the • Interior, who stated, through Otto, Assistant Secretary :

“ As to your second objection, I remark that this kind of scrip is by the law declared to be not assignable. In this case Sophia Felix has signed the application to locate her own scrip. The signature must be treated by us as genuine, when there is no proof to the contrary; and when she has made no complaint against this use of her scrip. The fact that the scrip was carried to the land office and the business transacted by another person, does not affect the validity of her entry of the land.
“ As the certificate of location issued in her name, and the patent will issue to her, neither the register’s report nor the affidavits of third parties can be admitted to .establish the interest of any other person in the location.
“We could not recognize such interest if an assignment in writing was produced and duly proven to have been executed by the half-breed — whether she could sell or did sell the land after the location' of her scrip we need not inquire, and the validity and effect of any such sale or assignment must be left to the arbitrament of the courts of law. The location is valid on its face, and the owner of the scrip, so far as she is represented at all, demands the patent to issue in her name, and my decision is that she is entitled thereto.”

In 1812 a special circular was issued (1 C. L. L. 723), which contained the following direction :

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Bluebook (online)
183 U.S. 602, 22 S. Ct. 261, 46 L. Ed. 347, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midway-co-v-eaton-scotus-1902.