Vachon v. Nichols-Chisholm Lumber Co.

144 N.W. 223, 126 Minn. 303, 1913 Minn. LEXIS 638
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 5, 1913
DocketNos. 18,301—(36—39)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 144 N.W. 223 (Vachon v. Nichols-Chisholm Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vachon v. Nichols-Chisholm Lumber Co., 144 N.W. 223, 126 Minn. 303, 1913 Minn. LEXIS 638 (Mich. 1913).

Opinion

Dibell, C.

This action is brought to recover upon a contract between plaintiff’s intestate, Nay-tah-waush, and the defendant whereby the defendant agreed to pay the balance of the agreed purchase price of certain timber lands within 15 days after the issuance and delivery to it of the patent therefor. There were findings for the defendant and the plaintiff appeals from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

Nay-tah-waush was an adult mixed-blood Chippewa Indian of the White Earth Indian Neservation. The lands mentioned in the contract were allotted to him, and the allotment was approved by the Secretary of the Interior on September 13, 1907. On October 15, 1907, contemporaneously with the execution of the contract above mentioned, he conveyed the timber on the lands to the defendant. On January 20, 1908, he died. The plaintiff is his administrator. On February 6, 1908, a trust patent was issued by the United States in the name of Nay-tah-waush, as grantee, and it was recorded on January 12, 1909. On April 14, 1909, a fee simple patent was issued to the heirs of Nay-tah-waush, without naming them, and this patent was recorded on June 25, ,1909.

The general Indian Allotment Act is the act of February 8, 1887 (24 St. 388). Section 5 provides that upon the approval of the allotments the Secretary of the Interior shall cause patents to issue in the name of the allottees declaring that the United States holds the lands allotted for a period of 25 years in trust for the sole use and benefit of the allottees. It further provides that any conveyance of the lands or any contract made touching them before the expiration •of the trust period shall be absolutely null and void.

Section 6 of the act, as amended hy the act of May 8, 1906 (34 St. 182) provides that when an allotment of land is made to an Indian and he dies before the expiration of the trust period, the land shall revert to the United States and the Secretary of the Interior shall ascertain the legal heirs of the Indian and cause a patent to be issued to them and in their names in fee simple; or in certain cases [306]*306the secretary may cause the lands to be sold. This same provision is found in the act of June 25, 1910, c. 431 (36 St. 855).

The amendment of June 21, 1906 (34 St. 325, 353) and the act of March 1; 1907 (34 St. 1015, 1034), provide in substance that all restrictions as to the sale, incumbrance or taxation of allotments within the White Earth Reservation theretofore or thereafter held by adult mixed-blood Indians shall be deemed removed, and that trust deeds theretofore or thereafter executed by the department shall pass title in fee, or the mixed-bloods, upon application, shall be entitled to patents in fee for their allotments. None of the statutes relative to the rights of the mixed-bloods were expressly repealed. The provision of section 5 relative to the issuance of trust deeds was not disturbed. The provision that upon the death of the allottee the land allotted to him should revert to the United States, and a patent, issue to the heirs, they thus taking by grant and not by descent, was. not disturbed.

The whole question here is whether the efféct of the amendment, was to remove all restrictions upon the right of the adult mixed-blood Chippewa to convey his lands after the approval of his allotment, by the Secretary of the Interior and before the issuance of th'e trust patent, or whether in the interim his right of sale was still restricted. As we construe the various statutes bearing upon the rights and interests of the mixed-bloods it was not intended to give the mixed-bloods the right to convey before the issuance of patent and while they had nothing but an allotment. We are of the opinion that the restrictions removed by the amendment were restrictions theretofore operating within the trust period after the issuance of the trust, patent, and that it was not intended that a mixed-blood whose allotment had been approved could convey prior to the issuance of the patent. By section' 5 of the allotment act the United States declared that at a time after the allotment, provisionally fixed at 25 years, it would convey the lands in fee to the Indian, free of all-charge and incumbrance, and that a conveyance by the Indian before that time should be void. It undertook to put in him a free- and unincumbered fee title. The-amendment of June 21, 1906, and March 1, 1907, intended to give him the free and unincumbered [307]*307fee title prior to the expiration of the 25 year period theretofore provisionally determined upon, with the unrestricted right to convey it when he got it, but it did not intend to give him the right of conveyance prior to fee title. It was intended that the Indian then holding a trust patent, or afterwards acquiring one, might convey without restriction, and that trust patents should be in effect fee patents.

If this be so the contract upon which suit is brought was not performed and the plaintiff cannot recover.

Order affirmed.

A motion for reargument was granted, the case was reargued, and on July 10, 1914, the following opinion was filed:

In this case a motion for reargument was granted. Additional briefs were filed, the whole case was reargued, and it has been considered by the court.

The action was brought to recover upon a written contract between the plaintiff’s intestate, Nay-tah-waush, a mixed-blood Chippewa Indian of the White Earth Indian Reservation, and the defendant, whereby the defendant agreed to pay the sum of $5,490, upon the issuance and delivery to it of the patent for certain lands, Naytah-waush at the time giving the defendant a deed of the timber on the land, the amount stated being a portion of the purchase price. The court found for the' defendant. The plaintiff appeals from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The contract mentioned is as follows:

“Whereas, Jolm Nay-tah-waush * * * has this fifteenth day of October, a. d. 1907, for a valuable consideration, sold and conveyed by a deed of conveyance, to the Nichols-Chisholm Lumber Co., of Erazee, Minnesota, all the timber now standing, lying, growing and being upon the following described real estate in the county of Clear-water, in the state of Minnesota, to-wit: Lot one (1) and the northwest of the southeast (NW. SE.), all in section 35, township one hundred forty-three (143) north of range thirty-eight (38).
[308]*308“Now, therefore, there is a balance of the unpaid purchase price to the amount of the sum of Five Thousand Four Hundred Ninety and no hundredths dollars, which' we hereby agree to pay to the said John Nay-tah-waush within fifteen days after the patent from the United States government shall have been issued and delivered to the said Nichols-Chisholm Lumber Co., at Frazee, Minnesota. This obligation shall be nonnegotiable until after said patent shall have been issued and delivered to said Nichols-Chisholm Lumber Co.
“In testimony whereof, the said corporation has caused these presents to be executed in its corporate name by its president, and its corporate seal to be hereunto affixed the date of first above written.
“Nichols-Chisholm Lumber Co.
“By J. A. Nichols, its president.”

Prior to this contract and on September 13, 1907, the allotment to Nay-tah-waush of the lands described was approved by the Secretary of the Interior. On January 20, 1908, Nay-tah-waush died.

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Related

Geray v. Mahnomen Land Co.
173 N.W. 871 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1919)
Holmes v. Praun
153 N.W. 951 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 N.W. 223, 126 Minn. 303, 1913 Minn. LEXIS 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vachon-v-nichols-chisholm-lumber-co-minn-1913.