Siniscal v. United States United States v. Siniscal

208 F.2d 406
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 29, 1953
Docket13681_1
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 208 F.2d 406 (Siniscal v. United States United States v. Siniscal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Siniscal v. United States United States v. Siniscal, 208 F.2d 406 (9th Cir. 1953).

Opinion

DENMAN, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court which ordered all transactions involved in a transfer of allotted Indian lands set aside as void, and a cross-appeal from that portion of the judgment which ordered the return of the consideration to the purchaser.

The lands in question are located near Gold Beach, Oregon. Jasper Grant and Harold F. Thornton were the heirs of five original Indian allottees of the land which is held in trust by the United States Government. Patrick Gray, a forester employed in the Forestry Division of the Indian Office, made an appraisal of the land in question in May, 1951, to determine its value as timber land. The appraisal set was $135,000.00, a figure which the court found to be “grossly inadequate.”

*408 In the same month, S. D. Alexander, a white man, contacted Elmer A. Reed, an Indian, about the possibility of purchasing the land in suit. A deal was arranged whereby Reed was to purchase the land and deed it over to Alexander. Alexander was to pay Reed $12,500.00 for his services. Under the applicable law and regulations an Indian could buy this land at its appraised value, but a non-Indian could only buy it after the property had been offered for public bids. 25 U.S.C.A. § 372; 25 C.F.R. 241.11, 241.17-241.33.

In July, Reed and Alexander, accompanied by Grant and Thornton, Indians and beneficial owners of the property which was held by the United States under Trust Patents, appeared in the Indian Office. There they were informed that the projected deal could not go through because the ultimate purchaser was Alexander — a white man — and a public offer for bids would be necessary. However, the officers of the Indian Bureau secured from the beneficial owners a consent to sell the lands at $135,000, in order to complete the Bureau records and “in the event in the future a purchaser could be found * *

Also in July, one John C. Blanford approached Reed about making a similar deal and was refused because of Reed’s pre-existing contract with Alexander. Fred M. Marsh was also interested in making the deal and was evidently working with Blanford. Reed suggested that since his daughter, Mrs. Ernestine Sin-iscal, was an Indian, she might be able to make a deal for Blanford.

Reed then talked to Mrs. Siniscal and suggested that she try to put through the deal for $25,000, for herself. When contacted, by Blanford, Mrs. Siniscal made a deal whereby she was to buy the land and then was to sell it to persons whom Blanford was to contact. Mrs. Siniscal was to receive $25,000. for her services.

Blanford then sought out William F. Brenner, seeking financing for the deal. Brenner contacted Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Taylor, the ultimate purchasers of the property. Arrangements were made to-examine the property. A timber cruiser went along on this examination and there was talk that there was 30 or 40-million board feet of timber in the tract worth around $10. per thousand board, feet, making the tract worth at least, $300,000.

All of the parties to the deal were aware of the fact that the land could not be purchased except at a public sale by any but an Indian. The arrangement ultimately made was that Mrs. SiniscaL should purchase the land through the Indian Office, that she should then 'recon-vey it to the Taylors, and that $25,000.. should be put in escrow to be delivered! to Mrs. Siniscal when the Taylors received a marketable title. In pursuance-of this arrangement, Mrs. Siniscal appeared at the land office and prepared an. application form for the release of restrictions on the land to be purchased.. The purpose of this form is to establish the competency of the applicant so that, restrictions upon the property can be removed and the Indian safely entrustecL with its future disposition. In filling in. financial information, she claimed ownership to property which in fact was. owned by her mother and father and income which was in fact her father's. In. answer to the question, “Have you made-an agreement to sell your land?” (meaning the land to be purchased), she answered no.

The Indian Bureau officers then prepared an instrument entitled an “Order Transferring Inherited Interests in Indian Lands.” This order is used where-inherited allotted land is sold by one Indian to another. It causes a change to-be made in the government records to-reflect the new beneficial ownership, the-fee remaining in trust in the United! States. The standard form used for this, purpose expressly provides that the land' remains under the restrictions, but in. this case this clause of the form was altered to read: “* * * subject to the. express condition that these lands shall *409 not be alienated, sold, or encumbered without the consent of the Secretary of the Interior.”

Meanwhile, the Taylors, Brenner, Blanford, and Marsh met in Portland where final arrangements were made. The $25,000. was placed in escrow with the United States National Bank of Portland. Taylor purchased a Cashier’s check for $135,000 which was used to pay for the land. Mrs. Siniscal then executed a deed to the Taylors, and the Taylors gave Brenner and Marsh an option to purchase the property at $300,-000. The Taylors went into possession and had done some preliminary logging operations and felled some trees prior to the commencement of this action.

The United States, in its capacity as trustee for Grant and Thornton, instituted this action to recover the lands and to set aside all of the above transactions. Named as defendants were: Mrs. Siniscal, the Taylors, Brenner, Reed, Marsh and six Does. Alexander entered the case as an intervenor.

The district court found, in addition to the above facts, that no patent in fee to the lands in question had ever been issued by the United States; that Mrs. Siniscal was acting as a mere conduit or agent for the Taylors and not in her own behalf and hence was not an Indian within the meaning of 25 C.F.R. Sec. 241.11; that good cause exists for the return of the $135,000 to the Taylors with interest at 6%. The judgment of the district court provided (1) that all of the instruments involved were null and void; (2) that the Taylors were to be paid the sum of $135,000 plus interest at 6% from July 18, 1952, from the following sources (a) moneys belonging to Grant and Thornton on deposit with the Portland Trust & Savings Bank, appointed by a state court as Conservator, (the undissipated proceeds of the transfer) and (b) the balance from the proceeds of a public sale of the property in question; and (3) that the complaint in intervention of Alexander be dismissed.

Mrs. Siniscal and Reed appear to have appealed from the entire judgment. Their notice of appeal, dated November 6, 1952, states that they are appealing “from the final decree * * * made and entered herein on the 18th day of September, 1952. * * *” An examination of the record reveals no final decree entered on September 18th. However, it appears that there is but one ap-pealable final decree in the record, that of the judgment of July 18, 1952, which was sufficiently described in its final character. Cf. Lemke v. United States, 346 U.S. 325, 74 S.Ct. 1.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Becker v. Hardwood
D. Nebraska, 2024
Becker v. Miller
D. Nebraska, 2024
Becker v. Worden
D. Nebraska, 2024
Becker v. Mickey
D. Nebraska, 2024
Becker v. Forbis
D. Nebraska, 2024
Becker v. Bryne
D. Nebraska, 2024
Becker v. Schenider
D. Nebraska, 2024
Davis v. Bridges
Tenth Circuit, 2024
Register v. Smidt
D. Nebraska, 2024
Becker v. Lambertson
D. Nebraska, 2024
Scott v. Bridges
E.D. Oklahoma, 2023
Greene v. United States
Federal Claims, 2022
Robinson v. Oaks
W.D. North Carolina, 2022
Logsdon v. Crawford
E.D. Oklahoma, 2021
Mattwaoshshe v. Nextera Energy, Inc.
District of Columbia, 2021

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 F.2d 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siniscal-v-united-states-united-states-v-siniscal-ca9-1953.