Summary
In Eu-che-lah v. Welsh, 10 N.C. 155, it was held that Indians in possession under treaty need not take out any grant from the State.
Summary of this case from Frazier v. Cherokee IndiansOpinion
June Term, 1824.
Cherokee Indians in possession of lands within the limits of North Carolina, reserved under the treaties of 1817 and 1819, made by the United States and the Cherokee Nation, are to be considered as purchasers of the land The exercise of power by the commissioners of the United States is legitimate; and, moreover, the stipulation in these treaties, having been recognized by several acts of the Legislature of North Carolina, passed since, she must be considered as assenting to them. A grant of the land to the Indian in possession is not necessary, for it is not claimed under those laws which point out the manner of acquiring title to vacant lands in this State, and title may be complete in some cases without grant; e. g., the University holds escheated lands under an act of Assembly.
EJECTMENT. The plaintiff's lessor, a Cherokee Indian, claimed title to the land in dispute, under treaties between the United States of America and the Cherokee Nation, made in 1817 and 1819.
The treaty of 8 July, 1817, after reciting that a deputation from the upper and lower Cherokee towns went to the city of Washington the first, to declare to the President their wish to engage in the pursuits of civilized life. and the impracticability of inducing the nation at large to do this, and, therefore, to request the establishment of a division line between the upper and lower towns; and the deputies from the lower towns to make known their wish to continue the hunters' life, the scarcity of game where they then lived, and their desire to remove to the westward of the Mississippi on vacant United States lands; and that the President of the United States permitted those who wished to remove to send an exploring party to reconnoiter the country on the Arkansas and White rivers, which exploring party, having selected a portion of country, the Cherokee Indians were desirous of ratifying the transaction by treaty, and for that purpose had sent on agents duly authorized, proceeds by the first and second articles to cede to the United States lands east of the Mississippi in exchange for lands on the western side of the river. The second article provides that a census of the Indians shall be taken; and the eighth article contains a reservation in the following words: "And to each and every head of any Indian family residing on the east side of the Mississippi River, on the lands that are now or may hereafter be surrendered to the United States, who may wish to become citizens of the United States, the United States do agree to give a reservation of 640 acres of land in a square, to include their improvements, which are to be as near the center thereof as practicable, in which they will have a life estate with a reversion in fee simple to their children, reserving to the widow her dower, the register of whose names is to be filed in the office of the Cherokee agent, which shall be kept open until the census is taken as stipulated in the third article of this treaty."
The treaty of 27 February, 1819, recites that whereas a greater part of the Cherokee Nation have expressed an earnest desire to remain on this side of the Mississippi, and, being desirous, in order to commence those measures which they deem necessary to the civilization and preservation of their nation, that the treaty between them and the United States, signed 8 July, 1817, might without further delay, or the trouble or expense of taking the census, as stipulated in the said treaty, be finally adjusted, have offered to cede to the United States a tract of country at least as extensive as that which they probably are entitled to under its provisions; the contracting parties have agreed to and concluded the following articles:
The first article cedes a portion of country (within which are the lands in dispute); and the second article is in these words: "The United States agree to pay, according to the stipulations contained in the treaty of 8 July, 1817, for all improvements on lands lying within the country ceded by the Cherokees which add real value to the land; and do agree to allow a reservation of of 640 acres to each head of any Indian family residing within the ceded territory, those enrolled for the Arkansas excepted, who choose to become citizens of the United States in the manner stipulated in said treaty."
Wilson for the lessor of the plaintiff.
Gaston and Ruffin contra.
The plaintiff's lessor, to bring himself within the provisions of the treaties, gave in evidence the following documents: (156)
1. A commission from James Monroe, President of the United States, to Col. Robert Houston, dated 12 March, 1819, constituting him an agent on the part of the United States to run the boundary lines of the lands ceded by the Cherokees, and to run off and (157) locate the Indian reservations in Tennessee.
2. A certificate from Colonel Meigs, Indian agent, that the lessor of the plaintiff had enrolled himself according to the provisions of the treaties.
3. A certificate and survey made by Colonel Houston and Robert Armstrong, surveyor, of 640 acres, the land now in dispute, for and and on his account, dated 27 September, 1820.
4. A letter from the Secretary of War of the United States to Colonel Houston, inclosing the commission, and containing the following clause: "In addition to the duty required of you by the commission, you are requested to lay off also the tracts reserved in North Carolina and the Alabama Territory."
Defendant was proved to be in possession of the land described in the declaration, claiming under a purchase from North Carolina, and it was also found that the lessor of the plaintiff at the ratification of the treaty of 1819 was not living on the lands contained within the lines of his survey, nor within a mile and a half or two miles of it; but he had on it a field cleared and fenced, a crib within the enclosure where he housed his corn, and a hut.
Nash, J., who presided, directed the jury that if they were satisfied that the facts stated in the documentary evidence before them were true, that the plaintiff was seized of such a title as would enable him to support an action of ejectment; that it was not essential to the validity of his title that the land should have been laid off to him by the officer of the United States in an exact square; nor was it necessary for him to show that at the ratification of the treaty of 1819 he was living upon the land. If he had an improvement upon it it was sufficient, though he was living at another place.
The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, and a motion for (158) a new trial on the part of the defendant having been refused, from the judgment rendered he appealed.
Although this controversy is, in reality, between the plaintiff, a Cherokee Indian, on the one side, and the State of North Carolina on the other, who should certainly renounce all claim to the purchase money in the event of the defendant's being evicted; yet it is very gratifying to remark that throughout the whole progress of the business the faith of the State remains unpledged, her honor inviolate; for not the slightest inference can be drawn from any of the acts passed on the subject that she intended to sell the Indian reservations, or to confer that power upon the commissioners. The two acts confine the sale expressly to the lands acquired by treaty from the Cherokees, and are silent as to the lands reserved to the Indians. These, on the contrary, are recognized; the general reservations are protected from the purchase, lease, and cultivation of white men, under a heavy penalty; and the special ones to the two Indians called Major Walker and the Big Bear explicitly acknowledged to belong to them absolutely. 1819, ch. 997; 1820, ch. 1060; 1821, ch. 32; 1822, ch. 12; 1823, ch. 11; 1820, ch. 1062.
If the General Government had a constitutional right to make these two reservations, they had an equal right to make the whole, for the same principles apply to all. It will follow that as the commissioners were constituted for a particular purpose, and with a limited and circumscribed authority to sell the lands which were acquired by treaty, their selling the lands which were reserved was an excess of authority, neither in law nor reason obligatory upon the State, their principal. But as these observations relate solely to the defendant's title, the weakness of which, however obvious, will not enable the plaintiff to recover without showing a possessory right in himself, it becomes necessary to examine the several foundations on which that right has been (159) rested and the arguments by which it has been opposed. As to the nature of the Indian title in general, it will be necessary to make a few remarks for the sake of tracing some peculiar features which have been impressed upon it at different periods by the Legislature of this State in its intercourse with some of the tribes living within its limits.
It was a principle uniformly asserted by Great Britain that the ultimate dominion of newly discovered countries not known to Christian people belonged to the discoverer; and all the colonial charters, from the first granted to Cabot by Henry VII. down to the last, of Georgia, by George II., were made while the country was yet occupied by Indians. Most of these contain a grant of the soil as well as the powers of government, and they all proceed on the principle that the crown alone had a right to grant the soil; that the Indians had ceased to have any other than the temporary right of occupancy, and that a good title might be acquired by individuals under these grants, subject to the Indian right, and to be enjoyed when that right should be extinguished. 8 Wheat., 543. While the title remained in the crown no one was permitted to purchase from the Indians, nor was any title acquired from them deemed valid without the confirmation of the crown. The Indians were allowed to occupy and hunt on the lands, and to be governed by their own laws, but could not sell or lease without the consent of the government. When they retreated farther west, which sometimes happened from the scarcity of game or the constantly advancing settlement of the whites their lands reverted to the crown in full dominion, or became vested in possession in those individuals to whom they had been previously granted. This Indian right, consisting of the usufruct more than the ownership of the soil, was rather tacitly submitted to than expressly acknowledged, for in the charters it is not noticed. The lands are granted by boundaries, including many tribes, and in the charter to the lords proprietors (160) in this State, though the boundaries extend to the South Sea, comprehending many nations, they or their rights are not noticed.
In the treaty of Utrecht (9th State Papers) the five nations were described as subjects of Great Britain; and in a proclamation issued in 1763 all purchases of lands made from the Indians were declared void unless made by treaties held under the sanction of government. In the treaty of 1763, by which Great Britain acquired from France the sovereignity of the Canadas, many nations of Indians were included in the boundaries. As most of the powerful and maritime nations of Europe were animated with a spirit of discovery and settlement of new countries, it became essential to their peace to adopt some principle by which their rights should be reciprocally acknowledged. The exclusive dominion over the soil of the Indians after their temporary occupancy should cease, and the right of purchasing from them such ownership as they were acknowledged to have, was accordingly claimed by each and acquiesced in by all, and may thenceforth be considered as incorporated in the law of nations.
Writers on the law of nature have maintained the justice of this principle in furthering the designs of Providence, and tending to the increase and civilization of the human race. Montesquieu L., 10; Vattel. They argue that every nation is under a natural obligation to cultivate the land that has fallen to its share, since otherwise the whole earth, which is destined to feed its inhabitants, would not yield an adequate supply if large tracts of fertile land were peopled only by hunters and shepherds; that however right this might have been in the first ages of the world, when the spontaneous productions of the earth were more than sufficient for its few inhabitants, it cannot now be justifiable, when the great multiplication of the human race in some countries has rendered it essential to their subsistence that the forests should be cleared (161) and cultivated. The unsettled habitation of savages in those extensive tracts of country over which they wander, but cannot cultivate, must be inconsistent with the views of nature, while other nations are confined within a small compass, which no degree of skill or labor will render sufficiently productive. The only obligation which justice imposes on other nations is that they leave the natives a sufficiency of land.
It is not intended to inquire into the force of this reasoning, but only to show the nature of the claim to Indian lands set up by Great Britain, and the condition in which it was transferred to the lords proprietors. Perhaps if such weighty reasoning could not be given, dominion would be claimed on the credit of the superiority which European nations possess over the nations of the new world; for to that must be referred the conquest of the civilized nations of Peru and Mexico. On this principle Caesar acted when, forgetting the passions as well as the rights of mankind, he complained that the Britons, after having sent him a submissive message to Gaul, pretended to fight for their liberties, and to oppose his descent on their island.
Caesar questus, quum ultro, in continentem legatis missis, pacem a se petissent, bellum sine causa intulissent. Lib. 4 de Bello Gallico.
However extensive the right was which passed by the charter of the lords proprietors, it appears that at a very early period after the settlement of the State, 1717, reservations of land were made to the Indians by treaty; and to the Tuscaroras, the only powerful nation with whom the whites then had intercourse, a grant was made of lands in consideration of their agreeing to relinquish their claims to other lands which had before been allotted to them. Afterwards an individual obtained a grant for the same lands, and an act of the Legislature subsequently passed, 1726, confirming all grants for lands within the Indian boundary, and permitting the grantees to enter upon the Indians deserting the same. Yet it was held that a title set up under this grant could not prevail against the original grant to the Indians, although they had (162) ceased to live upon the land, since the grant contained no condition of residence, and was made by persons having power to convey to persons capable of taking and holding lands. Sacarusa v. King, 4 N.C. 336. The Legislature has, indeed, since that time, 1778, passed acts declaring that lands granted to the Indians shall revert to the State upon the natives becoming extinct or entirely abandoning the possession; but there is no instance of their having revoked a grant made to them. On the contrary, the prevalent policy before the Revolution was to consider them as persons capable of being treated with and of holding property as a tribe or nation. Their rights of property, though much circumscribed by the repeated cessions they have made by treaty, were respected as to what remained, and much solicitude is shown in repeated enactments to restrain the cupidity of the whites.
In pursuance to this policy the people of this State, when they threw off their colonial dependence and declared the soil to be the property of the community, were not unmindful of Indian rights: "Provided always, that this declaration of right shall not prejudge any nation or nations of Indians from enjoying such hunting grounds as may have been or hereafter shall be secured to them by any former or future Legislature of this State." Section 25.
Since the treaty of peace, by which the territorial limits of the State were acknowledged in as full sovereignty as they formerly belonged to the mother country, it has been the invariable object of the United States and of this State to regulate their intercourse with the Indians, not by any speculative notions of right which they might have exercised without violating any admitted principle, but by the dictates of a just, humane, and liberal policy. As to the United States, it is sufficient to refer to the treaty of Greenville, 1795, by which "The Indian tribes are quietly to enjoy their lands; hunting, planting, and (163) dwelling thereon as long as they please without molestation from the United States; but that when their tribes or any of them are disposed to sell their lands, they are to be sold only to the United States; that until such sale the United States will protect all the said Indian nations in the quiet enjoyment of their lands against all the citizens of the United States, and against all other white persons who intrude on the same, and that the said Indian tribes again acknowledge themselves to be under the protection of the United States, and of no other power whatever."
Of the policy of this State, Laws 1783, ch. 185, under which the plaintiff claims title, affords a conclusive example. By this act it is declared that the Cherokee Indians shall have and enjoy all the tract of land therein described, and that it is reserved to them and their nation forever. The effect of this grant was to vest the land in the nation in fee simple; it conveyed to them a specific and definite right, according to which they could no longer be considered as tenants at sufferance, but as holding under the faith of the State and the guarantee of the declaration of rights. It is true that no individual had a distinct portion allotted to him which he might protect from aggression, and on that account the Legislature has made it penal to trespass on the land; but the right of the Legislature to make the grant cannot be doubted; and it is not less clear that it must inure to the benefit of the tribe as long as they subsist upon it and their title is not surrendered by their own consent.
If this grant required confirmation, it has received it in the most ample manner by the treaty of Hopewell, 1785, made under the authority of the United States, and by the treaty of Holstein, 1791, by which the lands not ceded by the Cherokee nation are solemnly guaranteed to them.
In this state of things the two treaties were made under which (164) the plaintiff claims the land described in the declaration as having been set off and allotted to him, and located according to the terms of the treaties, 1817 and 1819.
The 8th article of the first treaty provides that a reservation of 640 acres of land shall be given to every head of an Indian family residing on the east side of the Mississippi River, the register of whose names is to be filed in the office of the Cherokee agent. The land is to be laid off in a square, including their improvements, which are to be as near the center thereof as practicable, in which they will have a life estate, with a reversion in fee to their children, reserving to their widow her dower. By the second article of the latter treaty it is provided that a reservation of 640 acres of land shall be allowed to each head of any Indian family residing within the ceded territory who chooses to become a citizen of the United States in the manner stipulated in said treaty.
The only manner stipulated in the treaty of 1817 is that the Indians who wish to become citizens shall register their names in the office of the Cherokee agent. This has been done by plaintiff, as appears from the certificate of the Indian agent, and the 640 acres of land have been surveyed and laid off for him.
The following objections have been made to the plaintiff's recovery:
1. That the commissioners who made the treaty had no authority to make reservations to the Indians, but only to extinguish their title; when that is done the land reverts to the State by force of its ancient seisin, and that the Government of the United States is restrained by the Constitution from granting the territory of or dismembering a State.
2. That, supposing the commissioners had this power, they have not executed it, but only agreed to do so; the contract was intercepted by the paramount right of the State.
3. That the land is not laid off in a square of 640 acres, to (165) include the improvements, which are to be as near the center of it as possible.
4. That Armstrong made the surveys without proper authority.
5. That his plat was not returned to the General Government.
1. The first objection is founded on the assumption that the treaty has first extinguished the title of the Indians to the whole lands granted them by the act of 1783, and then assigned part of it to the plaintiff; but a just construction of the treaty will not, in my apprehension, warrant this conclusion. It extinguishes all the Indian title except to those lands which were reserved. The very term "reservation" imports in common acceptation something kept back or not surrendered. The plaintiff does not derive his title from the treaty, but from the act of 1783, which gave the whole land to him in common with the rest of the nation. His claim in severalty is alone derived from the treaty and the location made according to it. As well might it be said that if a grant were made to three persons as tenants in common of 100 acres of land, and they agree to sell the land to a fourth person, reserving 10 acres to one of them, to be laid off by metes and bounds, that he held the land under the surrender and not under the original grant.
As the United States have alone the power of making treaties, their acts within the limits of their authority must be obligatory on the State, their constituent. They might unquestionably have extinguished the Indian title to the whole tract, in which case the right to the whole would have reverted to the State. Why, then, may they not extinguish the title to a part? The stipulations of the treaty are equally binding on both parties; and it was not to have been expected that an acquisition so valuable could have been made to the State without some equivalent. The reservations are more entitled to respect since (166) they further the policy of the State in leading the few Indians that remain to an agricultural and civilized life.
According to this view of the case, any opinion on the power of the United States to grant away any part of the territory of the State would be extra judicial. That question would arise if the grants had been made out of other lands, the title to which did not previously subsist in the Indians, or if the cession had been made by one treaty and the reservation by a subsequent one.
2. The words of the treaty are: "do agree to allow a reservation of 640 acres of land to each head of a family formerly residing within the ceded territory." 1819, Art. 2. The words "do hereby allow or reserve" would have been more technical; but treaties and legislative acts are to be construed in good faith according to the intention of the parties making them. The reservations were allowed by the treaty in words of sufficient import, not of any particular 640 acres to any individual, for that depended upon the future acts of enrollment and the location. By these acts the general reservations became particular ones, according to the case of Rutherford v. Green, 2 Wheat., 197. By the act of 1782 it was provided "that 25,000 acres shall be allotted to General Green, his heirs and assigns, within the bounds of the lands reserved for the use of the army, to be laid off by commissioners." It was contended against the general's title that the words gave nothing; that they indicate an intention to give in future, but create no present obligation on the State nor present interest in General Green. But it was held by the Court that it was a present donation, not of any specific land, but of 25,000 acres within the territory set apart for the officers and soldiers, and that when the survey and allotment had marked out the land it became a particular gift of the land contained in the security. The words (167) of the treaty are quite as strong as if they were in the present tense, and were evidently intended to be used in the same sense.
3. If the plaintiff claims title under the treaty of 1819, Art. 2, this objection fails in its application, for that provides simply for an allowance of 640 acres of land to those who become citizens according to the 5th article of the treaty of 1817. It makes no sort of provision for the manner in which the land shall be located, but confines that to special reservations for those Indians whose names are inscribed on the list annexed to the treaty. But if the claim is founded on the first treaty, it does not furnish an objection to the title. The survey was to be made by the State through its agent, the United States. If laid off in a different shape from that specified in the treaty, the Indian might have excepted to it, but it is not competent for the State to do so after the Indian has accepted of it. It was not to be expected that the Indians could control and direct the manner in which the lands were run, and it would be a most unjust act to deprive them of the land because the surveyor, the officer of the Government, had departed from the shape specified in the treaty. It has been often decided that purchasers from the State shall not be injured by the mistakes of those who are appointed by the State to lay off and survey the land entered.
4. The first treaty provides that the land ceded by the Indians by the first and second articles shall be run by a commissioner or commissioners appointed by the President of the United States, 1817, Art. 11, and the land ceded by the first article of the treaty, 1819, Art. 5, are to be run by a commissioner appointed by the President; but the treaties are silent as to the persons by whom the lines of reservation are to be run. If, therefore, they are run under the authority of the United States, I think the treaty may be substantially executed without a commission from the President. It is true that his commission to Mr. Houston authorizes him to lay off the reservations in Tennessee (168) as well as to run the line of the cession. The act of running the lines, then, of the reservations, if not otherwise provided for by the treaty or by law, seems to me to come within the power of the duty of the Secretary of War as prescribed by law. 2 U.S. L., 32. It is a reasonable presumption that he was entrusted with this duty by the President, more especially as the Secretary of War was the person by whom the treaty of 1819 was made, and he must have been apprised of the necessity of laying off the reservations. To require proof of the President's authority to the Secretary for every act done in the course of his multifarious duties would be a strictness not to be foreseen or calculated upon in the ordinary transaction of business.
5. A general title to the land vested by the treaty in those who should comply with the condition of becoming citizens in the manner prescribed. This became a special and definite title to 640 acres as soon as the survey was completed and returned. The surveyor's plat of the land claimed has been exhibited in the present case, and by that the plaintiff has been enabled to ascertain and identify the tract allotted to him.
The validity of his title cannot be affected by the neglect of the surveyor to return a copy of the plat to the General Government.
Upon the whole case, my opinion is that the reservation was rightfully and constitutionally made, and that the plaintiff has proved a good title to the land described in the declaration, and, moreover, that the State commissioners exceeded the limits of their authority in selling the said land to the defendant.
It is admitted that the lands in question lie within the limits of North Carolina, and also within the boundaries of those lands which were set apart for the nation of Cherokee Indians by that State before the cession of Tennessee to the United States. It is also (169) admitted that the Cherokee nation lived upon those lands, and other adjoining lands, both while this State was a colony and after that time.
In the examination of this case it would be useless to inquire with what justice it was that the King of England seized upon these lands and declared himself sovereign thereof, without regarding the rights of the inhabitants whom he found in possession of them; because those rights formed no item in the title now relied upon, either for the plaintiff or defendant. This subject will be found to be ably and satisfactorily discussed and elucidated by the Chief Justice of the United States in Johnson v. McIntosh, 8 Wheat., 543.
While this State was a colony the British monarch not only claimed and exercised acts of sovereignty over it, but he, or those to whom he granted it, claimed a right to the soil itself.
By the Declaration of Independence, which gave to North Carolina as well as the other States their freedom and independence, all right to sovereignty and soil was transferred from the British Crown to the State of North Carolina, and the first step consequent thereon was the adoption by her of her present Constitution.
In section 26 of the Bill of Rights it is declared "that this declaration of rights shall not prejudge any nation of Indians from enjoying such hunting ground as may have been or hereafter shall be secured to them by any former or future Legislature of this State." After that time, in 1778, N. Rev., 137, the Legislature passed a law prohibiting all persons from hunting on their grounds; and also in 1783 they passed another law by which they reserved to them and their nation forever their lands by metes and bounds, for bidding purchase to be made from them and denouncing penalties against all persons who should make entries on their lands. The Constitution and these laws were (170) guarantees of the nation's rights by the State of North Carolina.
By the Articles of Confederation, of which the State of North Carolina became a member, it is declared in Article 9, "that the United States in Congress assembled shall have the sole and exclusive right and power of regulating the trade and managing all affairs with the Indians, not members of any of the States; provided that the legislative right of any State, within its own limits, be not infringed or violated."
In 1785 commissioners were appointed by Congress, who made the treaty of Hopewell. By this treaty the Cherokees are declared to be under the protection of the United States, and the boundaries of their grounds are agreed upon.
By section 8 of Article I Constitution of the United States, Congress are empowered to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several States, and with the Indian tribes. In the year 1791 another treaty was made with them, under the authority of the United States, by William Blount. By this treaty they are also declared to be under the protection of the United States, and new boundaries are marked out and agreed upon for their lands. Citizens of the United States are forbidden to hunt upon their lands, and all their lands not then ceded were solemnly guaranteed to them.
The next treaty was made in 1817 by Andrew Jackson, Joseph McMinn, and D. Meriwether, commissioners on behalf of the United States. By this treaty 640 acres of land was given to every head of an Indian family who wished to become a citizen of the United States, out of the ceded lands, to be laid off in a square, including their improvements, which improvements were to be as near the center as possible, in which they were to have a life estate, with a reversion to their children.
Another treaty was made by the Secretary of War on behalf of the United States in 1819. In this treaty the same reservation of lands is agreed upon to each head of an Indian family residing within the ceded territory who choose to become citizens of the United States (171) in the manner stipulated in the former treaty of 1817. In the same year, but afterwards, the Legislature passed another law prescribing the mode of surveying and selling the lands lately acquired by treaty from the Cherokee Indians. No clause in this act relates to the land reserved for Indians who might become citizens of the United States under the two last treaties. By this law the Legislature seems to sanction and adopt the provisions and stipulations of the treaties of 1817 and 1819; they accept of the land ceded by those treaties; they speak of them as acquired by the treaties, and proceed to direct the mode in which they shall be disposed of; and there is no dissatisfaction expressed, nor is there is any reason to believe that any was felt at the stipulation in the treaty by which a portion of the lands were reserved for certain Indians; and when it is remembered that the United States gave to the Indians, out of lands belonging to the United States, an equivalent for the lands ceded by them, perhaps it will not appear that there was much room for dissatisfaction.
By an act passed in 1820 any person is forbidden to buy or cultivate any of the lands reserved to the Cherokee Indians by the treaties of 1817 and 1819. This expression of the public will is strongly corroborative of the plaintiff's right under those treaties.
The Legislature by another act, passed in 1821, gave authority to any white man who shall have purchased from this State at the sales made by commissioners under the act of the General Assembly lands reserved for the Cherokee Indians, to purchase or extinguish the right of the Indians to whom said lands were reserved. By this act the right of the Indians under the treaties is unquestionably acknowledged.
In 1822 another act was passed which provides for the sale of (172) lands lately acquired by treaty from the Cherokee Indians, which have been surveyed and remain unsold.
In the following year the Legislature passed another law respecting the reservations of certain Indians in the lands lately acquired by treaty from the Cherokee nation. By this act commissioners were appointed to contract with them for lands which the commissioners may believe they have a right to under the treaty; and by the 5th and last section in that act it is declared that when the commissioners appointed by this act shall adjudge that a title claimed by an Indian to a reservation under the above mentioned treaty is not a good and valid title where the land so claimed has been sold under the authority of the State, and the purchaser has been sued for the same, it shall be the duty of the Governor to employ able counsel to appear on behalf of such purchaser. This act, as well as those preceding it, recognizes the title of the Indians to the lands reserved for them under the treaties. But the Legislature, by the last clause, guarded against pretended Indian claims that might be attempted to be made under the treaty, not sanctioned by it. But if the claim now set up by the plaintiff is one of that sort, it has not been made to appear so to this Court.
It appears that the lessor of the plaintiff has elected to become a citizen of the United States by enrolling himself under Colonel Meigs, Indian agent, according to the provisions of the treaty.
It appears that a commission issued from James Monroe, President of the United States, to Robert Houston to survey the lands reserved for the Indians within the State of Tennessee, but not those reserved for the Indians in North Carolina. Of course, that commission can have no bearing on the case. A letter from the Secretary of War to Robert Houston was given in evidence, authorizing him to survey the lands reserved for the Indians in North Carolina. I am not prepared to say that that is a legal authority for making the survey. (173) However, it appears that the defendant is in possession of the lands contained in plaintiff's declaration. Of course, he is in possession of the plaintiff's improvements and the land adjoining thereto, to which the plaintiff has a right under the treaty.
I do not pretend to say that the plaintiff has any right to recover in this case upon any title which he or his nation had before the treaties of 1817 and 1819. Before that time their right was a national right; no individual had any distinct right to any particular part, but they all had a right to the whole. The national right was the subject of contract when the treaties were made. It was the consideration for which the United States lands were given on the west side of the Mississippi, and the general relinquishment of it was the consideration for which certain reservations were made by the same treaty (one of which the lessor of the plaintiff has acquired title to and holds it, not as one of the Cherokee tribe, but as a citizen of the United States under the treaty).
It has been objected that their title has not been evidenced by a grant. This objection would be good if the land in dispute was claimed under those laws which point out the manner of acquiring title to vacant lands in this State. But that mode is not pointed out by the treaties under which the plaintiff claims; his title is the treaty, which treaty is recognized by North Carolina. It is not an uncommon thing in this State to claim title directly under an act of Assembly. The trustees of the University claim title to the escheated lands in this State under an act of the Legislature; no grant was ever made to them.
It has been said in argument that the commissioners had no authority to give away the Indian lands; that the present case is one of a gift to the plaintiff. When it is remembered that the possession and use of the lands were guaranteed to the Cherokee nation both by this State and the Congress of the United States, and that the Indians gave up the possession of those lands, with the exception of the reserved lands, for lands beyond the Mississippi; and that if those reservations had (174) not been made a greater quantity of lands would have been insisted on by the Indians, in addition to those which have been given them west of the Mississippi — I say, when these things are kept in view, we must consider the plaintiff as a purchaser of the land; and that he claims it under a legitimate exercise of power by the commissioners, acting under the authority of the United States, and that the stipulations in the treaties of 1817 and 1819 have been acknowledged and recognized by the State of North Carolina in the several acts of Assembly which she has passed from 1819 up to the present time. From all these considerations I think the rule for a new trial should be discharged.
HENDERSON, J., assented.
PER CURIAM. No error.
Cited: Frazier v. Cherokee Indians, 146 N.C. 481.