No question is presented which brings this case within the
supervisory power of this Court, as the alleged invalidities of the
entries and of the patents do not arise out of any alleged
misconstruction or breach of any treaty, but out of the alleged
misconduct of the officers of the Land Office; to correct which
errors, if they exist, the proper course of the defendants was to
have gone to the circuit court of appeals.
THIS was an action of ejectment brought in the Circuit Court of
the United States for the Eastern District of Wisconsin in
February, 1896, by the Illinois Steel Company, a corporation of the
State of Illinois, against John Budzisz and August Budzisz,
citizens of the Wisconsin, to recover certain lots or parcels of
land in the Fifth Ward of the City of Milwaukee. The case was so
proceeded in that on November 20, 1897, a final judgment was
entered in favor of the plaintiff for possession of the premises,
and for costs. A writ of error was then sued out from this Court,
which the defendant in error moved to dismiss.
Page 170 U. S. 42
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This cause is now before us on a motion to dismiss the writ of
error, on the ground that there is not involved any question that
brings the case within any of those provisions of the Act of March
3, 1891, establishing circuit courts of appeals, which give this
Court jurisdiction to review the judgment of the circuit court.
Neither the petition, containing as it did only the allegations
usual in an action of ejectment, nor the answer first filed raised
any question which, however disposed of in the circuit court, would
have enabled either party to have brought the case directly to this
Court.
Subsequently, however, the defendants filed an amended answer in
which they averred that the title to the land in dispute was still
in the United States, that the Indian title to said land had not
been extinguished at the time of the inception of plaintiff's
title, that any patent or purported patent granted by the United
States while the Indian title was still existing was null and void.
After, on motion of the plaintiff, certain portions of these
answers had been stricken out, the defendants filed a second
amended answer the main allegations of which were as follows:
That the Indian title to the lands in dispute had not been
extinguished when Increase Claflin and Daniel Darnell made their
entry; that the Indian title was conveyed to the United States
under and by virtue of several treaties with the Menominee Indians,
to-wit, the Treaty of February 8, 1831, of February 17, 1831, of
October 27, 1882, of October 18, 1848; that, by reason of the
aforesaid treaties, the lands were not subject to entry under the
laws of the United States, and that therefore the entry of Claflin
and Darnell was null and void; that said lands were first offered
for sale by the proclamation of the President on May 6, 1835; that
the patent of the United
Page 170 U. S. 43
States dated September 1, 1838, to Alexander J. Irwin, assignee
of Increase Claflin and Daniel Darnell, was and is null and void;
that the patent of the United States dated April 16, 1838, to
Albert G. Ellis, assignee of Daniel Darnell, was and is null and
void, and in no way extinguished the title of the government of the
United States to the lands in dispute.
On July 30, 1897, the court, on motion of the plaintiff, struck
out those portions of the amended answers which have just been
enumerated, and on August 3, 1897, the defendants filed exceptions
to the orders of the court striking out those portions of the
answers, which exceptions were allowed and signed by the judge.
With the record in that condition, the case came on for trial
and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the
plaintiff.
The record shows no exceptions taken or allowed during the
course of the trial either to the admission or rejection of
evidence or to the charge of the judge. The only bill of exceptions
to be found in the record is the one allowed and signed by the
judge relating to striking out portions of the answers.
The course most favorable to the plaintiffs in error will be to
treat the orders of the court striking out portions of the answers
as if they were rejections of offers made at the trial to prove the
allegations contained in the portions stricken out.
The reasons given by the court for striking out those portions
of the answers were that a patent of the United States is the
highest evidence of title where the grant originates out of the
public domain; that the defendants were mistaken in the inference
that the ownership of these lands was at any time, in view of the
law, vested in the Indians or derived through the treaties referred
to; that there is no recognition by any of the authorities of a fee
vested in the Indians; that, as to the land in Wisconsin, the
treaty with Great Britain and the cessions of Massachusetts and
Virginia are the legal sources of title in the general government;
that the treaties with the Indians are regarded only for rights of
occupancy and for reservations from sale; that therefore the
doctrine is established that the patent issued by the government is
"an
Page 170 U. S. 44
invaluable muniment of title, and a source of peace and quiet to
its possessor;" that, even if it be allowed, for the purposes of
the motion, that there was no right of entry at the time of
original entry alleged, the answer concedes that these lands were
offered for sale by the President's proclamation of May 6, 1835,
upon survey of 1834, and that the patents were issued,
respectively, April 16 and September 1, 1838; that it is not
asserted that their validity has ever been since questioned, either
by the United States or by any person in its right, under equities
preexisting or otherwise; that these lands became patentable after
the survey and proclamation, and were clearly within the
jurisdiction of the Land Department when the patents were not
issued in 1838; that all questions as to entry and right to patent
were then determinable by that tribunal, and the patents were not
void, even if they were voidable at the instance of proper parties;
that the special matters alleged in the answers and included in the
motion to strike out state no grounds which are available to these
defendants by way of defense; that under the Act of Congress of
March 3, 1891, c. 559, 26 Stat. 1093, any action by the United
States is now barred, and that, even if the defendants were
possessed of paramount equities, or were in any manner entitled to
avail themselves of rights existing in the United States, they are
equally barred by that limitation.
Illinois Steel Co. v.
Budzisz, 82 F. 160.
The correctness of these views is not before us on this motion
to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, and we only state them to show
that no question is really presented which brings this case within
our supervisory power. It is not claimed that the construction or
application of the Constitution was involved, and we think it is
quite clear that in fact neither the construction nor the validity
of any treaty of the United States, or made under its authority, is
in any way involved, or arises, or is drawn in question in this
case. Mere allegations to that effect, not based upon the facts of
the case, do not create a case which we are authorized to review.
The alleged invalidity of the entries and of the patents does not
arise out of any alleged misconstruction or breach of any
treaty,
Page 170 U. S. 45
but out of the alleged misconduct of the officers of the land
office in permitting the entries and in issuing the patents, and if
any error was committed by the circuit court in dealing with that
question -- which we do not intimate -- the proper course for the
defendants was to have gone to the circuit court of appeals.
Moreover, the defendants did not connect themselves in any way
with the Indian treaties or with any of the parties to them, nor
did they claim any rights under said treaties, or under any of the
parties to them. In no true sense, therefore, can it be said that
this is a case in which the validity or construction of any treaty
made under the authority of the United States is drawn in question
by a party having a rightful interest in such question.
The motion of the defendant in error must be allowed, and the
writ of error is accordingly
Dismissed.