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CREWS ET AL. v. BURCHAM ET AL

U.S.
Jan 1, 1861
66 U.S. 352 (1861)

Summary

In Crews v. Burcham, 1 Black 352, 66 U.S. 352, 17 L.Ed. 91 (1861), the Pottawatomie Indians ceded their lands, subject to certain reservations for which patents were to be issued.

Summary of this case from Absentee Shawnee Tribe of Indians v. Kan.

Opinion

DECEMBER TERM, 1861.

1. Where a treaty with an Indian tribe reserves a certain quantity of land, to be afterwards selected by the President, and patented to an individual of the tribe, such reservation creates an equitable estate in the reservee to the land reserved, which he may sell, and upon the selection and patenting of the land, the title will vest in his grantee. 2. This is held to be the rule in a case where the reservee conveyed his interest under the treaty, and died before the issuing of the patent. 3. In a contest between the grantee of the reservee himself under a conveyance before the patent, and the grantee of his heir under a deed made after the land was selected and patented, the title of the former party must prevail. 4. It is no objection to the right of the first grantee that the land finally patented did not lie within the district ceded by the treaty which made the reservation, because the recitals in the patent are conclusive; and, at any rate, third parties have no right to impugn the patent for such a reason. 5. Where land has been laid out in town lots, or otherwise divided among many occupants, who are threatened with numerous suits, a bill in equity will lie to quiet the title, although the complainants have a legal title, and therefore an adequate remedy in a court of law in each several case. 6. It cannot be said of a party that he is an innocent purchaser, without notice, if, before he purchased, the adverse title was duly recorded, and persons claiming under that title were in actual possession.

Mr. Arrington, of Illinois, and Mr. Baxter, of Virginia, for appellants. The treaty did not proprio vigore give to Besion a title, legal or equitable, in this particular land, and the deed to Armstrong carried nothing, either by estoppel, by relation, or by virtue of the act of Congress. Jackson vs. Woodruff, (1 Cow., 286;) Livingston vs. Peru Iron Co., (9 Wend., 520;) Blake vs. Doherty, (5 Wheat., 362;) United States vs. King, (3 How., 786, 787;) Bullock's Case, (10 Eliz., Dyer, 281, cited 2 Co. Rep., 36;) Hayward's Case, (2 Co. Rep., 36;) Stukeley vs. Butler, (Hobart, 174;) Bacon's Abridg. Grant, H., 3; Sheppard's Touchstone, 251; Haven vs. Cram, (1 N. Hamp., 93;) Canning vs. Pinkham, (id., 356;) Vandenburgh vs. Van Bergen, (13 Johns, 217;) Jackson vs. Van Buren, (id., 525.)

The case of Doe vs. Wilson (23 How., 457) is not against the appellants. Grantees under a treaty are not tenants in common with the United States; and if they were, they could not convey particular portions of the common property to other parties. Litt., sec. 292; Comyn. Dig. Estates, K. 8; Fisher vs. Wigg, (1 Ld. Raym., 329;) Fleming vs. Kerr, (10 Watts, 444;) Ross vs. McJunkin, (14 Serg. R., 364;) 1 Story's Equ., sec. 634; 4 Kent, 368; Duncan vs. Sylvester, ( 24 Me. 482;) Peabody vs. Minot, (24 Pickering, 329;) Fletcher vs. Peck, (6 Cranch, 142;) Johnson vs. McIntosh, (8 Wheaton, 543.)

The appellants are protected by their character of bona fide purchasers. The record was no notice to them, because it was made before the patent; and the deeds, as recorded, contained no definite description of any land. Monroe vs. McCormick, (6 Ire. Equ., 85;) Farmers' Loan Trust Co. vs. Maltby, (8 Paige, 361;) State of Conn. vs. Bradish, ( 14 Mass., 302;) Moore vs. Hunter, (1 Gilman, 331.)

Mr. Carlisle, of Washington, and Mr. Niles, of Illinois, for the appellee. The provisions of the treaty amounted to a solemn grant to Besion, and to his heirs and assigns, of a half section of land. Such grants have been recognised as assignable in numerous cases. French vs. Spencer, (1 How., 228;) Landes vs. Brant, (10 How., 348;) Stoddard vs. Chambers, (2 Pet., 316.) The act of Congress passed May 20, 1836, (5 U.S. Stat., 31,) declares that where a patent has been issued to a person dead before the date of the patent, the title shall be vested in the heirs, devisees, or assigns of the patentee, and this act has received a judicial construction entirely favorable to the view of the appellees.

The title under the patent relates back to the treaty. On this point it is not necessary to go behind the case of Doe vs. Wilson, (23 How., 457.) That case and this are precisely parallel.

The appellants are not bona fide purchasers without notice. The deeds under which the appellees claim were recorded: that fact and the possession of the land are conclusive upon the point of notice.


Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the northern district of Illinois.

By the treaty of 1832, the Pottawatomie Indians ceded to the United States all their lands in Illinois, Indiana, and Michigan, south of the Grand river; and by the same treaty the United States agreed to grant certain quantities of land to certain members of the tribe — among others, to Francis Besion a half section, to be selected for him by the President after survey. The half section was surveyed, selected, and a patent for it was duly issued in the name of Besion, in 1845. Besion died in 1843. Previous to his death, (and of course before the patent,) he conveyed his interest in the half section of land, to which he was entitled under the treaty, to William Armstrong, with covenants of warranty and further assurance. After Besion's death, and after the patent issued, his sister and sole heir conveyed the half section to Crews and Sherman. The plaintiffs below claim under the deed from Besion to Armstrong, and the defendants hold the title which was conveyed by Besion's heir after his death. The latter parties commenced actions at law against persons claiming through the former, and this bill was brought to quiet the title.

The main question was, whether Besion before the date of the patent had, by virtue of the treaty, such a title as he could convey by deed, or whether the deed to Armstrong was void for want of an assignable interest in the grantor. The defendants insisted that the deed to Armstrong passed no title; that, in fact, no title to this particular land existed out of the United States until the patent; that the patent vested the title in Besion's heirs, and that the deed from Besion's sister gave the whole estate to her grantees.

The Circuit Court held that the grantee of Besion, in his lifetime, took under his deed all the estate which Besion had in the half section; that the patent, when it issued, inured to the use of Armstrong and the parties claiming under him; and that, consequently, the sister and heir of Besion had no estate which could pass to Crews and Sherman by her deed to them.

The incidental points, which were taken on the hearing, are sufficiently stated in the opinion of Mr. Justice Nelson.

The Circuit Court enjoined the defendants against prosecuting the action already commenced, against bringing any fresh actions, and against every other interference with the plaintiffs' rights. And thereupon the defendants appealed to this court.


This bill was filed by the appellees, the complainants below, against the defendants, to enjoin a suit at law to recover a part of fractional section 24, in township 31, Illinois. By a treaty with the Pottawatomie tribe of Indians of October 27, 1832, the nation ceded to the United States all their lands in Illinois and other States, subject to certain reservations, for which patents were to be issued. Provision was made in the treaty, that the reservations should be selected under the direction of the President of the United States, after the land was surveyed, and the boundaries should correspond with the public survey. Francis Besion, a member of the tribe, was a reservee of one half section of land under this treaty. As we have said, the treaty bears date 27th October, 1832. On the fourth of February following, Besion conveyed, for a valuable consideration, all his right and interest in the half section to William Armstrong, under whom the complainants below derive their title. The selection of the half section was made by the President, in pursuance of the treaty, and a patent was issued on the 17th February, 1845, for the same, to Besion and his heirs, with an habendum clause, "to have and to hold the said tract, with the appurtenances, unto the said Francis Besion, his heirs and assigns." Besion died in 1843, before the issuing of the patent. The defendants set up a title to the tract under conveyances from the heirs of the reservee, claiming that the deed from him to Armstrong carried with it no right or title to the half section, which was subsequently selected and patented. The decree of the court below was in favor of the complainants, enjoining the suit at law, and restraining the institution of others for the purpose of quieting the title.

The main and controlling questions involved in this case were before this court in the case of Doe et al. vs. Wilson, reported in 23 How., 457, which arose under a reservation in this treaty in behalf of the chief, Pet-chi-co.

It was there held, that the reservation created an equitable interest to the land to be selected under the treaty; that it was the subject of sale and conveyance; that Pet-chi-co was competent to convey it; and that his deed, upon the selection of the land and the issue of the patent, operated to vest the title in his grantee.

It is true that no title to the particular lands in question could vest in the reservee, or in his grantee, until the location by the President, and, perhaps, the issuing of the patent; but the obligation to make the selection as soon as the lands were surveyed, and to issue the patent, is absolute and imperative, and founded upon a valuable and meritorious consideration. The lands reserved constituted a part of the compensation received by the Pottawatomies for the relinquishment of their right of occupancy to the Government. The agreement was one which, if entered into by an individual, a court of chancery would have enforced by compelling the selection of the lands and the conveyance in favor of the reservee, or, in case he had parted with his interest, in favor of his grantees. And the obligation is not the less imperative and binding, because entered into by the Government. The equitable right, therefore, to the lands in the grantee of Besion, when selected, was perfect; and the only objection of any plausibility is the technical one as to the vesting of the legal title.

The act of Congress, May 20, 1836, (5 U.S. St., 31,) provides, "that in all cases where patents for public lands have been or may hereafter be issued in pursuance of any law of the United States, to a person who had died, or who shall hereafter die, before the date of such patent, the title to the land designated therein shall inure to, and become vested in, the heirs, devisees, or assigns of such deceased patentee, as if the patent had issued to the deceased person during life."

We think it quite clear, if this patent had issued to Besion in his lifetime, the title would have inured to his grantee. The deed to Armstrong recites the reservation to the grantee of the half section under the treaty, and that it was to be located by the President after the lands were surveyed; and then, for a valuable consideration, the grantee conveys all his right and title to the same with a full covenant of warranty. The land is sufficiently identified to which Besion had the equitable title, which was the subject of the grant, to give operation and effect to this covenant on the issuing of the patent within the meaning of this act of Congress. The act declares the land shall inure to, and become vested in, the assignee, the same as if the patent had issued to the deceased in his lifetime.

The warranty estops the grantee, and all persons in privity with him, from denying that he was seized. The estoppel works upon the estate, and binds the after-acquired title as between parties and privies. (11 How., 325; 21 ib., 228.)

Some expressions in the opinion delivered in the case of Doe vs. Wilson, the first case that came before us arising out of this treaty, were the subject of observation by the learned counsel for the appellant in the argument, but which were founded on a misapprehension of their scope and purport. It was supposed that the court had held that the reservee was a tenant in common with the United States after the treaty of cession, and until the surveys and patent. It will be seen, however, that the tenancy in common there mentioned referred to the right to occupy, use, and enjoy the lands in common with the Government, and had no relation to the legal title.

An objection was taken, that a portion of the half section embraced in the patent to Besion did not lie within the district of country ceded by the treaty. The same objection was taken in the case of Doe vs. Wilson, and the answer given was, the recitals in the patent, that the sections were those selected by the President, and to which the reservee was entitled under the treaty, were conclusive on the point; and we may add, that certainly no third party has any right to complain, if the fact were as alleged.

An objection was also taken, that if the complainants held the legal title to the premises in question, their remedy was at law, and not in equity. But the answer is, that the bill was filed by the complainants, among other things, to relieve their title from the embarrassment of the adverse claims set up under the deeds from the heirs of Besion, and also to restrain a multiplicity of suits. It appears that a portion of the land has been laid out in town lots, which are held under the complainants' title.

A further objection was taken, that the defendants are bona fide purchasers for a valuable consideration. But the answer is, that the deed from Besion to Armstrong, which referred specially to this reserved right to the half section, was duly recorded before the purchase of the defendants; and, besides, those deriving title under this deed to Armstrong were in possession of the tract, claiming title to the whole at the time, which operated as notice to the subsequent purchasers.

The decree of the court below affirmed.


Summaries of

CREWS ET AL. v. BURCHAM ET AL

U.S.
Jan 1, 1861
66 U.S. 352 (1861)

In Crews v. Burcham, 1 Black 352, 66 U.S. 352, 17 L.Ed. 91 (1861), the Pottawatomie Indians ceded their lands, subject to certain reservations for which patents were to be issued.

Summary of this case from Absentee Shawnee Tribe of Indians v. Kan.
Case details for

CREWS ET AL. v. BURCHAM ET AL

Case Details

Full title:CREWS ET AL. vs . BURCHAM ET AL

Court:U.S.

Date published: Jan 1, 1861

Citations

66 U.S. 352 (1861)

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