Prentice v. Stearns
Prentice v. Stearns
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of ejectment for land in the city of Duluth. The contest arises out of the reservation or stipulation in the treaty of the thirtieth of September, 1854, between the Chippewa Indians and the United States. That stipulation declares that Buffalo, one of the chiefs of the tribe, should be authorized to
“I hereby select a tract of land one mile square, the exact 'boundary of which may be defined when the surveys are made, lying on the west shore of St. Louis bay, Minnesota territory, immediately above and adjoining Minnesota point; and I direct that patents be issued for the same, according to the above-recited provisions, to Shaw-bwaw-shung, or Benjamin G-. Armstrong, my adopted son, ‘ and then to the nephew, whose name is given, and to his two sons,’ — one quarter section to each.”
One of the questions that arises is whether that' was a valid selection, — a valid exercise of the power of selection and appointment by Buffalo under that treaty. The treaty was afterwards ratified without qualification in regard to this particular. We are of opinion that, so far as the appointment of ’the persons to receive this land is concerned, it was a valid appointment; and the right, so far as it could then vest, was vested by that paper in Benjamin Armstrong, and i-n the other beneficiaries who have conveyed their interest in said land to Benjamin Armstrong, and he has received the patent from the United States for the land under that treaty. Buffalo died before anything was done in the matter. Armstrong undertook to convey to. Frederick Prentice, the plaintiff in the action, an undivided one-half of the section of land which had been selected by Buffalo. The United States afterwards, coming through the land-office and interior department, to execute this treaty by making a deed of a section of land, found a difficulty in locating it under Buffalo’s directions. I do not know whether the difficulty was insuperable; probably it was. It was easy to see that á large discretion was left in the officers of the United States, because both the treaty and Buffalo’s directions say, “the boundary of which may be defined when the surveys are made.” It was therefore dependent upon future - surveys, whether that meant regular congressional surveys of land for public purposes, or whether it meant a special survey of the land of Buffalo’s selection. And the same question goes back to the treaty, whether Buffalo was to select a section after these surveys were made, or whether he was to select the amount of a section, which is a square mile. These are questions which are not easy to solve, neither is it necessary to do so. In either event we think that the treaty was valid, and we think that the patent which the United States, after encountering these difficulties, made to Armstrong of certain parts of sections regularly surveyed, as found in tbe congressional plats and surveys of the United States, was a valid execution of the treaty. And as the patent issued to Arm
Now, that presents the main question in this case; and that question is, whether Armstrong made such a conveyance to Prentice of the undivided one-half of any particular piece of land, or of the interest which he had acquired by what had taken place, so that Prentice could recover this specific piece of land in ejectment. That is the main question; and the one upon which we feel ourselves compelled to decide this case.
It will be remembered that tho deed from Armstrong to Prentice was made on the eleventh of September, 1856, two years after the treaty was made, — after Buffalo lujd made Armstrong the appointee of what he was to receive from the government, and after he had made his attempt at the selection oí tho land; which selection was described as “a section one mile square, the exact boundary of which may be defined when the surveys are made, lying on the west, shore of St. Louis bay, Minnesota territory, immediately above and adjoining Minnesota point.” Now, Armstrong conveys to him “the undivided half of the following described piece or parcel of land,” which language itself is important; he conveys to him the undivided one-half of the following described piece or parcel of land, situated in the county of St. Louis and territory of Minnesota, described as follows:
“Beginning ata largo stone or rook at the head of St. Louis river bay, nearly adjoining Minnesota point; commencing at said rock, and running east one mile, north one mile, west one mile, south one mile, to the place of beginning; and being the land set off to the Indian chief, Buffalo, at tho Indian treaty of September 80, 1854, and was afterwards disposed of by said Buffalo to said Armstrong, and is now recorded in the government documents.”
The main question to be decided here is whether this is an attempt to convey the specific piece of land one mile square, definitely located, and supposed to have come to Armstrong through means of the treaty and the appointment of Buffalo, or whether the true meaning of it was that it was intended to convey such interest as Buffalo had acquired and had transmitted to Armstrong, whatever that intérest might be, and wherever it might be found, whether it was one square mile in solido, or whether it was one square mile taken in different sections and subdivisions. Because if it was the purpose of Armstrong to convey to Prentice this specific piece of land by metes and bounds, of which the location was known and understood, or supposed to be known and understood, then the plaintiff, suing upon this deed, and nothing else, — which does not describe the land in controversy between the parties to the suit, — cannot recover, because the deed does not describe the particular land, — the specific land, or piece or parcel of land, — now held by defendant. It is not the piece or parcel
Without elaborating this view of the subject, we are of the opinion that that deed from Armstrong to Prentice .conveys no interest in the land in controversy here upon which the action of ejectment can be sustained. Wo further find that this deed to Prentice, which we find did not convoy the land, is otherwise a good deed. There is an objection to the want of two witnesses, but that is cured by a subsequent act of the Minnesota legislature. And we are of opinion that it was sufficiently acknowledged to have admitted it to record, and was so acknowledged and recorded, so that, with regard to the deed, its only defect was its want of description.
We are of the opinion that, under the statutes of Minnesota, the deed made by Mr. Gilman, under which the defendants claim, is merely a quitclaim deed. It is equivalent to the conveyance of such interests as Armstrong had when he made it. Secondly, if Armstrong, as we find, had conveyed the other undivided one-half by a valid deed for the land now in controversy, Mr. Gilman and his grantee would take nothing under his conveyance, because Armstrong had nothing to convey. But since the grantees under Gilman, the defendants, are in possession, it is for the plaintiff to show that he himself has a .good title. He has not made out any title to this particular piece of land, and he is in no condition to inquire into defects in the defendant’s title.
We are of opinion, in tho first place, as to the law of the case, that the treaty, having been fulfilled by the United States by the conveyance of the land, that no question arises about there being a donation, or gift, or grant for value, or anything of that kind. Secondly, we are of opinion that Buffalo’s attempt in the designation and appointment, as to the appointment was valid. In point of fact, that the ■ United States never granted, and never pointed out, that particular piece of land which it seems he supposed he had selected. In the third place, we are of opinion that Armstrong, by this conveyance, after he had become entitled to the interest which Buffalo had appointed to all four of them, — that being a quarter section to each, — that that conveyance he made to Prentice might have been a valid deed assigning the undivided one-half of Armstrong’s interest, under the treaty, bad he used language appropriate to that purpose, but that he did not do so. We also find that the undivided half of this property is worth the sum of $10,000.
Judgment is ordered for the defendants.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.