Restrictions on alienation imposed by § 5 of the Act of
February 8, 1887, 24 Stat. 388, c. 119, on an allotment to a
Sisseton and Wahpeton Indian remained until the actual issuing of
patent carrying full and unrestricted title, and were not removed
instantly on its passage by an act of Congress permitting the
Secretary of the Interior to issue such a patent.
Page 231 U. S. 342
An act of Congress authorizing and empowering the Secretary of
the Interior to shorten the period of alienation of an Indian
allotment construed in this case a being permissive only, and not
effecting the removal of the restrictions prior to the actual
issuing of the patent by the Secretary.
A deed by an Indian of an allotment subject to restrictions on
alienation is absolutely void if made before final patent, even if
made after passage of an act of Congress permitting the Secretary
of the Interior to issue such patent; nor does the unrestricted
title subsequently acquired by the allottee under the patent inure
to the benefit of the grantee.
Starr v. Long Jim,
227 U. S. 613.
A state statute cannot make a deed the basis of subsequently
acquired title to Indian allotment lands when the federal statute
has pronounced such a deed entirely void.
22 S.D. 238 reversed.
The facts, which involve the title to land allotted to an Indian
of the Sisseton and Wahpeton tribe under the Act of February 8,
1887, and the effect of subsequent action by Congress in regard
thereto on the restrictions against alienation, are stated in the
opinion.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit to determine conflicting claims to the title to
160 acres of land in Roberts County, South Dakota. Both parties
claim through Henry A. Quinn, an Indian of the Sisseton and
Wahpeton Tribe, to whom the land was allotted under the Act of
Congress of February 8, 1887, 24 Stat. 388, c. 119, the fifth
section of which, omitting portions not here material, reads as
follows:
"That, upon the approval of the allotments provided
Page 231 U. S. 343
for in this act by the Secretary of the Interior, he shall cause
patents to issue therefor in the name of the allottees, which
patents shall be of the legal effect and declare that the United
States does and will hold the land thus allotted for the period of
twenty-five years in trust for the sole use and benefit of the
Indian to whom such allotment shall have been made, or, in case of
his decease, of his heirs, according to the laws of the state or
territory where such land is located, and that, at the expiration
of said period, the United States will convey the same by patent to
said Indian or his heirs, as aforesaid, in fee, discharged of said
trust and free of all charge or encumbrance whatsoever:
Provided, That the President of the United States may in
any case, in his discretion, extend the period. And if any
conveyance shall be made of the lands set apart and allotted as
herein provided, or any contract made touching the same, before the
expiration of the time above mentioned, such conveyance or contract
shall be absolutely null and void."
In 1889, following the approval of the allotment, a trust patent
or allotment certificate conforming to this statute was duly issued
to the allottee, and on March 3, 1905, nine years before the
expiration of the trust period, Congress incorporated in the Indian
appropriation act of that date (33 Stat. 1067, c. 1479) the
following provision:
"That the Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized and
empowered to issue a patent to Henry A. Quinn for the east half of
the northwest quarter, the northeast quarter of the southwest
quarter, and the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of
section thirty-two, township one hundred and twenty-five north,
range fifty west of the fifth principal meridian, South
Dakota."
The land so described is that covered by the allotment, and a
patent therefor, passing the full and unrestricted title, was
issued to the allottee by the Secretary of the
Page 231 U. S. 344
Interior, June 29, 1905, in the exercise of the authority and
power given by this provision.
Upon the trial, it appeared that the plaintiff claimed under two
warranty deeds from the allottee, one made and acknowledged May 31,
1905, and recorded June 2 following, and the other purporting to
have been made May 30, and acknowledged July 3, 1905, but not
recorded. The defendant claimed under a deed from the allottee
executed and delivered July 10, 1905, and recorded the same day.
The matters in controversy were (1) whether the plaintiff's deed of
May 31 was void because made and delivered before the unrestricted
patent was issued, (2) the real date of the acknowledgment and
delivery of the plaintiff's unrecorded deed, and whether it was
void for the like reason, and (3) whether the defendant purchased
with notice of the plaintiff's claim under the latter deed. That
deed was admitted in evidence over the objection of the defendant,
and the ruling was made the subject of a special exception.
The trial court found the issues for the plaintiff, and while
the finding made no mention of his deed of May 31, it did recite
that his unrecorded deed was executed and delivered July 3, 1905;
that he was in actual and open possession from that date until
after the date of the deed to the defendant, and that the latter
purchased with notice of the plaintiff's claim. Upon this finding,
a judgment was entered quieting the title in the plaintiff, and
shortly thereafter a motion to vacate the judgment and for a new
trial was interposed by the defendant, supported by divers
affidavits purporting to set forth newly discovered evidence
tending to discredit the plaintiff's unrecorded deed and the claim
that it was acknowledged and delivered July 3, 1905. The motion was
denied, and the defendant appealed to the supreme court of the
state, which affirmed both the judgment and the order denying the
motion. 22 S.D. 238. The affirmance was put upon
Page 231 U. S. 345
the ground that the plaintiff's deed of May 31 was valid, and,
being a warranty deed purporting to convey the land in fee simple,
the title subsequently acquired through the unrestricted patent
inured to the plaintiff by operation of a statute of the state.
Rev.Civ.Code, § 947, subdiv. 4. Reaching that conclusion, the
court deemed it unnecessary to consider or decide the questions
presented respecting the plaintiff's unrecorded deed and the effect
to be given to it.
The federal question presented for decision by us is whether the
restrictions upon alienation imposed upon the allottee by § 5
of the Act of 1887 were instantly removed by the Act of March 3,
1905, or remained in force until the issuing of the patent carrying
the full and unrestricted title. The defendant sought to maintain
the latter view, but the state court sustained the other.
The Act of 1887 was adopted as part of the government's policy
of dissolving the tribal relations of the Indians, distributing
their lands in severalty, and conducting the individuals from a
state of dependent wardship to one of full emancipation, with its
attendant privileges and burdens. Realizing that so great a change
would require years for its accomplishment, and that, in the
meantime, the Indians should be safeguarded against their own
improvidence, Congress, in prescribing by the Act of 1887 a system
for allotting the lands in severalty, whereby the Indians would be
established in individual homes, was careful to avoid investing the
allottee with the title in the first instance, and directed that
there should be issued to him what is inaptly termed a patent
(
United States v. Rickert, 188 U.
S. 432,
188 U. S.
436), but is in reality an allotment certificate,
declaring that, for a period of twenty-five years or such enlarged
period as the President should direct, the United States would hold
the allotted land in trust for the sole use and benefit of the
allottee, or, in case of his death, of his heirs, and at the
expiration of that period would
Page 231 U. S. 346
convey to him by patent the fee, discharged of the trust, and
free of any charge or encumbrance, and, as a safeguard against
improvident conveyances or contracts made in anticipation of the
ultimate or real patent, it was expressly provided that any
conveyance of the land, or any contract touching the same, made
before the expiration of the trust period should be absolutely null
and void. It is thus made plain that it was the intention of
Congress that the title should remain in the United States during
the entire trust period, and that, when conveyed to the allottee or
his heirs by the ultimate patent at the expiration of that period,
it should be unaffected by any prior conveyance or contract
touching the land.
It also is plain that, in the absence of further and permissive
legislation, the Secretary of the Interior was without authority to
shorten the trust period and at once invest the allottee with the
title in fee. Recognizing that this was so, and for reasons deemed
sufficient, Congress, by the provision in the Act of March 3, 1905,
clothed the Secretary with such authority with respect to this
allotment. That provision says: "The Secretary of the Interior is
hereby authorized and empowered to issue a patent" to the allottee.
By "patent" is meant, of course, the ultimate patent passing the
fee; for the trust patent or allotment certificate had issued
sixteen years before. The language of the provision is permissive,
not mandatory, and evidently was designed to enable the Secretary
to shorten the trust period by issuing the final patent if, in his
judgment, it seemed wise, but not to require him to do so. And it
is significant that the provision contains no words directly or
presently removing the existing restrictions upon alienation, while
other kindred provisions in the same act, relating to other
allotments, contain the words "and all restrictions as to sale,
encumbrance, or taxation of said lands are hereby removed." It
hardly can be said that the absence of those words in this
instance
Page 231 U. S. 347
and their presence in others is not indicative of a difference
in meaning and purpose. We conclude that the restrictions upon
alienation contained in the Act of 1887 were not instantly removed
by the Act of 1905, but remained in force as to this allotment
until the Secretary of the Interior, in the exercise of the
authority conferred by the latter act, terminated the trust period
by issuing the final patent passing the fee.
As that patent was issued June 29, 1905, and as the deed from
the allottee upon which alone the judgment of affirmance was rested
was made and delivered May 31 preceding, it follows that this deed
was, in the language of the statute, absolutely null and void, and
that the title subsequently acquired by the allottee through the
final patent could not inure to the plaintiff in virtue of his
being the grantee in that deed.
See Starr v. Long Jim,
227 U. S. 613,
227 U. S. 624.
A state statute could not make it the basis of passing subsequently
acquired title when the federal statute pronounces it entirely
void.
See Bagnell v.
Broderick, 13 Pet. 436,
38 U. S. 450;
Gibson v.
Chouteau, 13 Wall. 92,
80 U. S. 99.
The judgment is accordingly reversed, and the cause remanded,
but without prejudice to the power of the supreme court of the
state to proceed to a determination of the questions which were
left open by its opinion.
See Murdock v.
Memphis, 20 Wall. 590,
87 U. S.
635-636.
Judgment reversed.