2 Sources of Land Rights: U.S. 2 Sources of Land Rights: U.S.

2.1 First Nations, Conquest, Treaty, and Trust 2.1 First Nations, Conquest, Treaty, and Trust

2.1.1 Introduction: Source of Land rights in the US 2.1.1 Introduction: Source of Land rights in the US

Beginning in the 15th century, European colonists from many nations — some acting privately, many at the behest of or with the assistance of governments — claimed ownership of vast swaths of land and resources (including, in some instances, human beings) in North America, South America, Africa and Australia.

Settlement created at least three layers of competition for property rights: (1) between white European colonists and indigenous inhabitants of “newly discovered” lands; (2) between competing colonizing nations; and (3) between individual colonists.

If the rights of the indigenous inhabitants of those lands were recognized at all, it was only as a matter of convenience.  Colonialism used violence and even genocide against indigenous peoples whose claims of right colonists refused to recognize.  Among competing colonizing nations, war, treaty and customary international law were used to settle competing claims.  Among individual colonists, newly formed governments asserted the authority to settle competing claims through law.  All three of these conflicts can be seen at work in Johnson v. M’Intosh, an early effort by the Supreme Court to elaborate legal rules to justify the colonial expropriations.  As we see in the Tee-Hit-Ton Indians case,  the contradictions of American property law continue to form a basis for claims by the expropriated even today.

Land in the United States, after its “discovery” and expropriation by force or forced sales from the indigenous peoples, was distributed by the state, alternately to speculators (like George Washington) by sale, or to white settlers and squatters by sale or by adverse possession laws.

African slaves, whose labor was expropriated before and after emancipation, were systematically excluded from the initial land distribution. The short-lived land reform efforts that followed the Civil War, such as General Sherman’s famous Field Directive number 15, promising 40 acres to former slaves, were quickly undone by the southern states’ white power structure, through the Black Codes, intimidation, violence, and legal tools including foreclosures, partitions and tax seizures. Cities and towns in the South and the North used zoning laws and restrictive covenants to limit African-American home ownership to racially segregated neighborhoods, and the same neighborhoods were then redlined and excluded from mortgage financing by the Homeowners Loan Corporation in the 1930s and the Federal Housing Administration in the 1950s. Bank redlining and reverse redlining of these same neighborhoods continues today.

Understanding the history of land distribution and redistribution is vital for a critical perspective on modern U.S. property law rules and policies, including adverse possession, co-ownership and partition, fair housing and zoning laws, leases and installment sale contracts, and public accommodation laws, among others.

 

2.1.2 Johnson & Graham's Lessee v McIntosh 2.1.2 Johnson & Graham's Lessee v McIntosh

*Johnson and Graham’s Lessee v. William McIntosh.

Indian grants.

A title to lands, under grant to private individuals, made by Indian tribes or nations north-west of the river Ohio, in 1773 and 1775, cannot be recognised in the courts of the United States.1

Error to the District Court of Illinois. This was an action of ejectment for lands in the state and district of Illinois, claimed by the plaintiffs under a purchase and conveyance from the Piankeshaw Indians, and by the defendant, under a grant from the United States. It came up on a case stated, upon which there was a judgment below for the defendant. The case stated set out the following facts:

1st. That on the 23d of May 1609, James I., king of England, by his letters-patent of that date, under the great seal of England, did erect, form and establish Robert, Earl of Salisbury, and others, his associates, in the letters-patent named, and their successors, into a body corporate and politic, by the name and style of “The Treasurer and Company of Adventurers and Planters of the City of London, for the first Colony of Virginia,” with perpetual succession, and power to make, have and use a common seal; and did give, grant and confirm unto this company, and their successors, *under certain reservations and limitations in the letters patent expressed, “All the lands, countries and territories, situate, lying and being in that part of North America called Virginia, from the point of land called Cape or Point Comfort, all along the sea-coast, to the northward, two hundred miles; and from the said Cape or Point Comfort, all along the sea-coast to the southward, two hundred miles; and all that space and circuit of land lying from the sea-cast of the precinct aforesaid, up into the land throughout from the sea, west and north-west; and also all the islands lying within one hundred miles along the coast of both seas of the precinct aforesaid; with all the soil, grounds, rights, privileges and appurtenances to these territories belonging, and in the letters-patent particularly enumerated:" and did grant to this corporation, and their successors, various powers of government, in the letters-patent particularly expressed.

2d. That the place, called in these letters-patent, Cape or Point Comfort, is the place now called and known by the name of Old Point Comfort, on the Chesapeake bay and Hampton roads; and that immediately after the granting of the letters-patent, the corporation proceeded, under and by virtue of them, to take possession of parts of the territory which they describe, and to form settlements, plant a colony, and exercise the powers of government therein; which colony was called and known by the name of the colony of Virginia.

*2413d. That at the time of granting these letters-patent, and of the discovery of the continent of *North America, by the Europeans, and during the whole intermediate time, the whole of the territory in the letters-patent described, except a small district on James river, where a settlement of Europeans had previously been made, was held, occupied and possessed, in full sovereignty, by various independent tribes or nations of Indians, who were the sovereigns of their respective portions of the territory, and the absolute owners and proprietors of the soil; and who neither acknowledged nor owed any allegiance or obedience to any European sovereign or state whatever: and that in making settlements within this territory, and in all the other parts of North America, where settlements were made, under the authority of the English government, or by its subjects, the right of soil was previously obtained, by purchase or conquest, from the particular Indian tribe or nation by which the soil was claimed and held; or the consent of such tribe or nation was secured.

4th. That in the year 1624, this corporation was dissolved by due course of law, and all its powers, together with its rights of soil and jurisdiction, under the letters-patent in question, were re-vested in the crown of England; whereupon, the colony became a royal government, with the same territorial limits and extent which had been established by the letters-patent, and so continued, until it became a free and independent state; except so far as its limits and extent were altered and curtailed by the treaty of February 10th, 1763, between Great Britain and France, and by the letters-patent granted by the king of England, *for establishing the colonies of Carolina, Maryland and Pennsylvania.

5th. That some time previous to the year 1756, the French government, laying a claim to the country west of the Allegheny or Appalachian mountains, on the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, and their branches, took possession of certain parts of it, with the consent of the several tribes or nations of Indians possessing and owning them; and with the like consent, established several military posts and settlements therein, particularly at Kaskaskias, on the river Kaskaskias, and at Vincennes, on the river Wabash, within the limits of the colony of Virginia, as described and established in and by the letters-patent of May 23d, 1609; and that the government of Great Britain, after complaining of these establishments as encroachments, and remonstrating against them, at length, in the year 1756, took up arms to resist and repel them; which produced a war between those two nations, wherein the Indian tribes inhabiting and holding the countries north-west of the Ohio, and on the Mississippi, above the mouth of the Ohio, were the allies of France, and the Indians known by the name of the Six Nations, or the Iroquois, and their tributaries and allies, were the allies of Great Britain; and that on the 10th of February 1763, this war was terminated by a definitive treaty of peace between Great Britain and France, and their allies, by which it was stipulated and agreed, that the river Mississippi, from its source to the Iberville, should for ever after form the boundary between the dominions of *Great Britain and those of France, in that part of North America, and between their respective allies there.

6th. That the government of Virginia, at and before the commencement of this war, and at all times after it became a royal government, claimed and exercised jurisdiction, with the knowledge and assent of the govern*242ment of Great Britain, in and over the country north-west of the river Ohio, and east of the Mississippi, as being included within the bounds and limits described and established for that colony, by the letters-patent of May 23d, 1609; and that in the year 1749, a grant of 600,000 acres of land, within the country north-west of the Ohio, and as part of Virginia, was made by the government of Great Britain to some of its subjects, by the name and style of the Ohio Company.

7th. That at and before the commencement of the war in 1756, and during its whole continuance, and at the time of the treaty of February 10th, 1763, the Indian tribes or nations, inhabiting the country north and northwest of the Ohio, and east of the Mississippi, as far east as the river falling into the Ohio called the Great Miami, were called and known by the name of the Western Confederacy of Indians, and were the allies of France in the war, but not her subjects, never having been in any manner conquered by her, and held the country in absolute sovereignty, as independent nations, both as to the right of jurisdiction and sovereignty, and the right of soil, except a few military posts, and a small territory around each, *which they had ceded to France, and she held under them, and among which were the aforesaid posts of Kaskaskias and Vincennes; and that these Indians, after the treaty, became the allies of Great Britain, living under her protection as they had before lived under that of France, but were free and independent, owing no allegiance to any foreign power whatever, and holding their lands in absolute property; the territories of the respective tribes being separated from each other, and distinguished by certain natural marks and boundaries, to the Indians well known; and each tribe claiming and exercising separate and absolute ownership, in and over its own territory, both as to the right of sovereignty and jurisdiction, and the right of soil.

8th. That among the tribes of Indians, thus holding and inhabiting the territory north and north-west of the Ohio, east of the Mississippi, and west of the Great Miami, within the limits of Virginia, as described in the letters-patent of May 23d, 1609, were certain independent tribes or nations, called the Illinois or Kaskaskias, and the Piankeshaw or Wabash Indians; the first of which consisted of three several tribes united into one, and called the Kaskaskias, the Pewarias and the Cahoquias; that the Illinois owned, held and inhabited, as their absolute and separate property, a large tract of country, within the last-mentioned limits, and situated on the Mississippi, Illinois and Kaskaskias rivers, and on the Ohio, below the mouth of the Wabash; and the Piankeshaws, another large tract of country, within the same *limits, and as their absolute and separate property, on the Wabash and Ohio rivers; and that these Indians remained in the sole and absolute ownership and possession of the country in question, until the sales made by them, in the manner hereinafter set forth.

9th. That on the termination of the war between Great Britain and France, the Illinois Indians, by the name of the Kaskaskias tribes of Indians, as fully representing all the Illinois tribes then remaining, made a treaty of peace with Great Britain, and a treaty of peace, limits and amity, under her mediation, with the Six Nations, or Iroquois, and their allies, then known and distinguished by the name of the Northern Confederacy of Indians; the Illinois being a part of the confederacy then known and distinguished by *243the name of the Southern Confederacy, and sometimes by that of the Western Confederacy.

10th. That on the 7th of October 1763, the king of Great Britain made and published a proclamation, for the better regulation of the countries ceded to Great Britain by that treaty, which proclamation is referred to, and made part of the case.

11th. That from time immemorial, and always up to the present time, all the Indian tribes, or nations of North America, and especially the Illinois and Piankeshaws, and other tribes holding, possessing and inhabiting the said countries north and north-west of the Ohio, east of the Mississippi, and west of the Great Miami, held their respective lands and territories, each in common, the individuals *of each tribe or nation holding the lands and territories of such tribe, in common with each other, and there being among them no separate property in the soil; and that their sole method of selling, granting and conveying their lands, whether to governments or individuals, always has been, from time immemorial, and now is, for certain chiefs of the tribe selling, to represent the whole tribe, in every part of the transaction; to make the contract, and execute the deed, on behalf of the whole tribe; to receive for it the consideration, whether in money or commodities, or both; and finally, to divide such consideration among the individuals of the tribe: and that the authority of the chiefs, so acting for the whole tribe, is attested by the presence and assent of the individuals composing the tribe, or some of them, and by the receipt by the individuals composing the tribe, of their respective shares of the price, and in no other manner.

12th. That on the 5th of July 1773, certain chiefs of the Illinois Indians, then jointly representing, acting for, and being duly authorized by that tribe, in the manner explained above, did, by their deed-poll, duly executed and delivered, and bearing date on that day, at the post of Kaskaskias, then being a British military post, and at a public counsel there held by them, for and on behalf of the said Illinois nation of Indians, with William Murray, of the Illinois country, merchant, acting for himself and for Moses Franks and Jacob Franks, of London, in Great Britain, David Franks, John Inglis, Bernard Gratz, Michael *Gratz, Alexander Ross, David Sproat and James Milligan, all of Philadelphia, in the province of Pennsylvania; Moses Franks, Andrew Hamilton, William Hamilton and Edmund Milne, of the same place; Joseph Simons, otherwise called Joseph Simon, and Levi Andrew Levi, of the town of Lancaster, in Pennsylvania; Thomas Minshall, of York county, in the same province; Robert Callender and William Thompson, of Cumberland county, in the same province; John Campbell, of Pittsburgh, in the same province; and George Castles and James Ramsay, of the Illinois country; and for a good and valuable consideration in the said deed stated, grant, bargain, sell, alien, lease, enfeoff and confirm to the said William Murray, Moses Franks, Jacob Franks, David Franks, John Inglis, Bernard Gratz, Michael Gratz, Alexander Ross, David Sproat, James Milligan, Andrew Hamilton, William Hamilton, Edmund Milne, Joseph Simons, otherwise called Joseph Simon, Levi Andrew Levi, Thomas Minshall, Robert Callender, William Thompson, John Campbell, George Castles and James Ramsay, their heirs and assigns for ever, in severalty, or to George the Third, then King of Great Britain *244and Ireland, his heirs and successors, for the use, benefit and behoof of the grantees, their heirs and assigns, in severalty, by whichever of those tenures they might most legally hold, all those two several tracts or parcels of land, situated, lying and being within the limits of Virginia, on the east of the Mississippi, north-west of the Ohio, and west of the Great Miami, and thus  butted *and bounded:

Beginning, for one of the said tracts, on the east side of the Mississippi, at the mouth of the Heron creek, called by the French the river of Mary, being about a league below the mouth of the Kaskaskias river, and running thence a northward of east course, in a direct line, back to the Hilly plains, about eight leagues more or less; thence the same course, in a direct line to the Crab Tree plains, about seventeen leagues more or less; thence the same course, in a direct line, to a remarkable place known by the name of the Big Buffalo Hoofs, about seventeen leagues more or less; thence the same course, in a direct line to the Salt Lick creek, about seven leagues more or less; then crossing the Salt Lick creek, about one league below the ancient Shawanese town, in an easterly, or a little to the north of east, course, in a direct line, to the river Ohio, about four leagues more or less; then down the Ohio, by its several courses, until it empties into the Mississippi, about thirty-five leagues more or less; and then up the Mississippi, by its several courses, to the place of the beginning, about thirty-three leagues more or less:

And beginning, for the other tract, on the Mississippi, at a point directly opposite to the mouth of Missouri, and running up the Mississippi, by its several courses, to the mouth of the Illinois, about six leagues more or less; and thence up the Illinois, by its several courses, to Chicagou or Garlic creek, about ninety leagues, more or less; thence nearly a northerly course, in a direct line, to a certain remarkable place, being the ground on which a *battle was fought, about forty or fifty years before that time, between the Pewaria and Renard Indians, about fifty leagues more or less; thence by the same course, in a direct line, to two remarkable hills, close together, in the middle of a large prairie or plain, about fourteen leagues more or less; thence a north of east course, in a direct line, to a remarkable spring, known by the Indians by the name of “Foggy Spring,” about fourteen leagues more or less; thence the same course, in a direct line, to a great mountain, to the north-west of the White Buffalo plain, about fifteen leagues more or less; and thence nearly a south-west course to the place of beginning, about forty leagues more or less:

To have and to hold the said two tracts of land, with all and singular their appurtenances, to the grantees, their heirs and assigns, for ever, in severalty, or to the king, his heirs and successors, to and for the use, benefit or behoof of the grantees, their heirs and assigns, for ever, in severalty: as will more fully appear by the said deed-poll, duly executed under the hands and seals of the grantors, and duly recorded at Kaskaskias, on the 2d of September 1773, in the office of Vicerault Lemerance, a notary-public, duly appointed and authorized. This deed, with the several certificates annexed to or indorsed on it, was set out at length in the case.

13th. That the consideration in this deed expressed, was of the value of $24,000, current money of the United States, and upwards, and was paid and delivered, at the time of the execution of the deed, by William Murray, one *245*of the grantees, in behalf of himself and the other grantees, to the Illinois Indians, who freely accepted it, and divided it among themselves; that the conferences in which the sale of these lands was agreed on and made, and in which it was agreed that the deed should be executed, were publicly held, for the space of a month, at the post of Kaskaskias, and were attended by many individuals of all the tribes of Illinois Indians, besides the chiefs named as grantors in the deed; that the whole transaction was open, public and fair, and the deed fully explained to the grantors and other Indians, by the sworn interpreters of the government, and fully understood by the grantors and other Indians, before it was executed; that the several witnesses to the deed, and the grantees named in it, were such persons, and of such quality and stations, respectively, as they are described to be in the deed, the attestation, and the other indorsements on it; that the grantees did duly authorize William Murray to act for and represent them, in the purchase of the lands, and the acceptance of the deed; and that the two tracts or parcels of land which it describes, and purports to grant, were then parts of the lands held, possessed and inhabited by the Illinois Indians, from time immemorial, in the manner already stated.

14th. That all the persons named as grantees in this deed, were, at the time of its execution, and long before, subjects of the crown of Great Britain, and residents of the several places named in the deed as their places of residence; and that *they entered into the land, under and by virtue of the deed, and became seised as the law requires.

15th. That on the 18th of October 1775, Tabac, and certain other Indians, all being chiefs of the Piankeshaws, and jointly representing, acting for, and duly authorized by that nation, in the manner stated above, did, by their deed-poll, duly executed, and bearing date on the day last mentioned, at the post of Vincennes, otherwise called post St. Vincent, then being a British military post, and at a public council there held by them, for and on behalf of the Piankeshaw Indians, with Louis Viviat, of the Illinois country, acting for himself, and for the Right Honorable John, Earl of Dunmore, then governor of Virginia, the Honorable John Murray, son of the said Earl, Moses Franks and Jacob Franks, of London, in Great Britain, Thomas Johnson, jr., and John Davidson, both of Annapolis, in Maryland, William Russel, Matthew Ridley, Robert Christie, sen., and Robert Christie, jr., of Baltimore town, in the same province, Peter Campbell, of Piscataway, in the same province, William Geddes, of Newtown Chester, in the same province, collector of his majesty’s customs, David Franks and Moses Franks, both of Philadelphia, in Pennsylvania, William Murray and Daniel Murray, of the Illinois country, Nicholas St. Martin and Joseph Page, of the same place, Francis Perthuis, late of Quebec, in Canada, but then of post St. Vincent, and for good and valuable considerations, in the deed-poll mentioned and enumerated, grant, bargain, sell, alien, enfeoff, release, ratify and confirm to the said Louis Viviat, and the other persons last mentioned, their heirs and assigns, equally to be divided, or to George III., then King of Great Britain and Ireland, his heirs and successors, for the use, benefit and behoof of all the above-mentioned grantees, their heirs and assigns, in severalty, by which ever of those tenures they might most legally hold, all those two several tracts of land, in the deed particularly described, situate, lying and being north-west of the Ohio, east of the Mis*246sissippi, and west of the Great Miami, within the limits of Virginia, and on both sides of the Ouabache, otherwise called the Wabash; which two tracts of land are contained respectively within the following metes and bounds, courses and distances, that is to say:

Beginning, for one of the said tracts, at the mouth of a rivulet called Riviere du Chat, or Cat river, where it empties itself into the Ouabache or Wabash, by its several courses, to a place called Point Coupee, about twelve leagues above post St. Vincent, being forty leagues, or thereabouts, in length, on the said river Ouabache, from the place of beginning, with forty leagues in width or breadth, on the east side, and thirty leagues in breadth or width, on the west side of that river, to be continued along from the place of beginning to Point Coupee. And beginning, for the other tract, at the mouth of White river, where it empties into the Ouabache, about twelve leagues below post St. Vincent, and running thence down the Ouabache, by its several courses, until it empties into the Ohio; being from White river to the Ohio, about fifty-three leagues in length, more or less, with forty *leagues in width or breadth on the east side, and thirty in width or breadth, on the west side of the Ouabache, to be continued along from the White river to the Ohio; with all the rights, liberties, privileges, hereditaments and appurtenances, to the said tract belonging:

To have and to hold to the grantees, their heirs and assigns, for ever, in severalty, or to the king, his heirs and successors, for the use, benefit and behoof of the grantees, their heirs and assigns; as will more fully appear by the deed itself, duly executed under the hands and seals of the grantors, and duly recorded at Kaskaskias, on the 5th of December 1775, in the office of Louis Bomer, a notary-public, duly appointed and authorized. This deed, with the several certificates annexed to or indorsed on it, was set out at length.

16th. That the consideration in this deed expressed, was of the value of $31,000, current money of the United States, and upwards, and was paid and delivered, at the time of the execution of the deed, by the grantee, Lewis Viviat, in behalf of himself and the other grantees, to the Piankeshaw Indians, who freely accepted it, and divided it among themselves; that the conferences in which the sale of these two tracts of land was agreed on and made, and in which it was agreed, that the deed should be executed, were publicly held for the space of a month, at the post of Vincennes, or post St. Vincent, and were attended by many individuals of the Piankeshaw nation of Indians, besides the chiefs named as grantors in the deed; that the whole transaction was open, public and fair, and the deed fully explained to the grantors and other Indians, by skillful interpreters, and fully understood by them, before it was executed; that it was executed in the presence of the several witnesses by whom it purports to have been attested, and was attested by them; that the grantees were all subjects of the crown of Great Britain, and were of such quality, station and residence, respectively, as they are described in the deed to be; that the grantees did duly authorize Lewis Viviat to act for, and represent them, in the purchase of these two tracts of land, and in the acceptance of the deed; that these tracts of land were then part of the lands held, possessed and inhabited by the Piankeshaw Indians, from time immemorial, as is stated above; and that the several grantees under this deed entered into the land which it purports to grant, and become seised as the law requires.

*24717th. That on the 6th of May 1776, the colony of Virginia threw off its dependence on the crown and government of Great Britain, and declared itself an independent state and government, with the limits prescribed and established by the letters-patent of May 23d, 1609, as curtailed and restricted by the letters-patent establishing the colonies of Pennsylvania, Maryland and Carolina, and by the treaty of February 10th, 1763, between Great Britain and France; which limits, so curtailed and restricted, the state of Virginia, by its constitution and form of government, declared should be and remain the limits of the state, and should bound its western and northwestern extent.

*18th. That on the 5th of October 1778, the general assembly of Virginia, having taken by arms the posts of Kaskaskias and Vincennes, or St. Vincent, from the British forces, by whom they were then held, and driven those forces from the country north-west of the Ohio, east of the Mississippi, and west of the Great Miami, did, by an act of assembly of that date, entitled, “an act for establishing the county of Illinois, and for the more effectual protection and defence thereof,” erect that country, with certain other portions of territory within the limits of the state, and northwest of the Ohio, into a county, by the name of the county of Illinois.

19th. That on the 20th of December 1783, the state of Virginia, by an act of assembly of that date, authorized their delegates in the congress of the United States, or such of them, to the number of three at least, as should be assembled in congress, on behalf of the state, and by proper deeds or instruments in writing, under their hands and seals, to convey, transfer, assign and make over to the United States, in congress assembled, for the benefit of the said states, all right, title and claim, as well of soil as jurisdiction, which Virginia had to the territory of tract of country within her limits, as defined and prescribed by the letters-patent of May 23d, 1609, and lying to the north-west of Ohio; subject to certain limitations and conditions in the act prescribed and specified; and that on the 1st of March 1784, Thomas Jefferson, Samuel Hardy, Arthur Lee and James Monroe, then being four of the delegates *of Virginia to the congress of the United States, did, by their deed-poll, under their hands and seals, in pursuance and execution of the authority to them given by this act of assembly, convey, transfer, assign and make over to the United States, in congress assembled, for the benefit of the said states, all right, title and claim, as well of soil as jurisdiction, which that state had to the territory north-west of the Ohio, with the reservations, limitations and conditions in the act of assembly prescribed; which cession the United States accepted.

20th. That on the 20th day of July, in the year of our Lord 1818, the United States, by their officers duly authorized for that purpose, did sell, grant and convey to the defendant in this action, William McIntosh, all those several tracts or parcels of land, containing 11,560 acres, and butted, bounded and described, as will fully appear in and by the patent for the said lands, duly executed, which was set out at length.

21st. That the lands described and granted in and by this patent, are situated within the state of Illinois, and are contained within the lines of the last, or second, of the two tracts, described and purporting to be granted and conveyed to Louis Viviat and others, by the deed of October 18th, 1775 and that William McIntosh, the defendant, entered upon these lands, *248under and by virtue of his patent, and became possessed thereof, before the institution of this suit.

22d. That Thomas Johnson, one of the grantees, *in and under the deed of October 18th, 1775, departed this life, on or about the 1st day of October 1819, seised of all his undivided part or share of and in the two several tracts of land, described and purporting to be granted and conveyed to him and others by that deed, having first duly made and published his last will and testament in writing, attested by three credible witnesses, which he left in full force, and by which he devised all his undivided share and part of those two tracts of land, to his son, Joshua Johnson, and his heirs, and his grandson, Thomas J. Graham, and his heirs, and the lessors of the plaintiff in this action, as tenants in common.

23d. That Joshua Johnson and Thomas J. Graham, the devisees, entered into the two tracts of land last above mentioned, under and by virtue of the will, and became thereof seised as the law requires. That Thomas Johnson, the grantee and devisor, during his whole life, and at the time of his death, was an inhabitant and citizen of the state of Maryland; that Joshua Johnson and Thomas J. Graham, the lessors of the plaintiff, now are, and always have been citizens of the same state; that the defendant, William McIntosh, now is, and at and before the time of bringing this action was, a citizen of the state of Illinois; and that the matter in dispute in this action is of the the value of $2000, current money of the United States, and upwards.

24th. And that neither William Murray, nor any other of the grantees under the deed of July the 5th, 1773, nor Louis Viviat, nor any other of the *grantees under the deed of October the 8th, 1775, nor any person for them, or any of them, ever obtained, or had the actual possession, under and by virtue of those deeds, or either of them, of any part of the lands in them, or either of them, described and purporting to be granted; but were prevented by the war of the American revolution, which soon after commenced, and by the disputes and troubles which preceded it, from obtaining such possession; and that since the termination of the war, and before it, they have repeatedly, and at various times, from the year 1781, till the year 1816, petitioned the congress of the United States to acknowledge and confirm their title to those lands, under the purchases and deeds in question, but without success.

Judgment being given for the defendant on the case stated, the plaintiffs brought this writ of error.

February 17th-19th.

The cause was argued by Harper and Webster, for the plaintiffs, and by Winder and Murray, for the defendants.

But as the arguments are so fully stated in the opinion of the court, it is deemed unnecessary to give anything more than the following summary.

On the part of the plaintiffs, it was contended: 1. That upon the facts stated in the case, the Piankeshaw Indians were the owners of the lands in dispute, at the time of executing the deed of October 10th, 1775, and had power to sell. But as the United States had purchased the same lands of the same Indians, both parties claim from the same source. It would seem, therefore, to be unnecessary, and merely speculative, to discuss *the question respecting the sort of title or ownership, which may be *249thought to belong to savage tribes, in the lands on which they live. Probably, however, their title by occupancy is to be respected, as much as that of an individual, obtained by the same right, in a civilized state. The circumstance, that the members of the society held in common, did not affect the strength of their title by occupancy. Grotius, de Jure Belli ac Pacis, lib. 2, c. 2, § 4; lib. 2, c. 24, § 9; Puffend. lib. 4, c. 5, § 1, 3. In the memorial or manifesto of the British government, in 1755, a right of soil in the Indians is admitted. It is also admitted in the treaties of Utrecht and Aix-la-Chapelle. The same opinion has been expressed by this court, Fletcher v. Peck, 6 Cranch 87; and by the supreme court of New York, Jackson v. Wood, 7 Johns. 296. In short, all, or nearly all, the lands in the United States, is holden under purchases from the Indian nations; and the only question in this case must be, whether it be competent to individuals to make such purchases, or whether that be the exclusive prerogative of government.

2. That the British king’s proclamation, of October 7th, 1763, could not affect this right of the Indians to sell; because they were not British subjects, nor in any manner bound by the authority of the British government, legislative or executive. And because, even admitting them to be British subjects, absolutely, or sub modo, they were still proprietors of the soil, and could not be divested of their rights of property, or any of its *incidents, by a mere act of the executive government, such as this proclamation.

3. That the proclamation of 1763 could not restrain the purchasers under these deeds from purchasing; because the lands lay within the limits of the colony of Virginia, of which, or of some other British colony, the purchasers, all being British subjects, were inhabitants. And because the king had not, within the limits of that colonial government, or any other, any power of prerogative legislation; which is confined to countries newly conquered, and remaining in the military possession of the monarch, as supreme chief of the military forces of the nation. The present claim has long been known to the government of the United States, and is mentioned in the Collection of Land Laws, published under public authority. The compiler of those laws supposes this title void, by virtue of the proclamation of 1763. But we have the positive authority of a solemn determination of the court of king’s bench, on this very proclamation, in the celebrated Grenada Case, for asserting that it could have no such effect. ( Campbell v. Hall, Cowp. 204.) This country being a new conquest, and a military possession, the crown might exercise legislative powers, until a local legislature was established. But the establishment of a government, establishes a system of laws, and excludes the power of legislating by proclamation. The proclamation could not have the force of law, within the chartered limits of Virginia. A proclamation, *that no person should purchase land in England or Canada, would be clearly void.

4. That the act of assembly of Virginia, passed in May 1779,(a) cannot *250affect the right of the plaintiffs, and others claiming under these deeds; because, on general principles, and by the constitution of Virginia, the legislature was not competent to take away private, vested rights, or appropriate private property to public use, under the circumstances of this case. And because the act is not *contained in the revisal of 1794, and must, therefore, be considered as repealed; and the repeal re-instates all rights that might have been affected by the act, although the territory, in which the lands in question lie, was ceded to the United States, before the repeal. The act of 1779 was passed, after the sales were made, and it cannot affect titles previously obtained. At the time of the purchases, there was no law of Virginia rendering such purchases void. If, therefore, the purchases were not affected by the proclamation of 1763, nor by the act of 1779, the question of their validity comes to the general inquiry, whether individuals, in Virginia, at the time of this purchase, could legally obtain Indian titles. In New England, titles have certainly been obtained in this mode. But whatever may be said on the more general question, and in reference to other colonies or states, the fact being, that in Virginia, there was no statute existing at the time, against such purchases, mere general considerations would not apply. It may be true, that in almost all the colonies, individual purchases from the Indians were illegal; but they were rendered so by express provisions of the local law. In Virginia, also, it may be true, that such purchases have generally been prohibited; but at the time the purchases now in question were made, there was no prohibitory law in existence. The old colonial laws on the subject had all been repealed. The act of 1779 was a private act, so far as respects this case. It is the same as if it had enacted, that these particular deeds were void. Such acts *bind only those who are parties to them, who submit their case to the legislature.

On the part of the defendants, it was insisted, that the uniform understanding and practice of European nations, and the settled law, as laid down by the tribunals of civilized states, denied the right of the Indians to be considered as independent communities, having a permanent property in the soil, capable of alienation to private individuals. They remained in a state of nature, and have never been admitted into the general society of nations. Penn v. Lord Baltimore, 1 Ves. 445; 2 Ruth. Inst. 29; Locke, Govern*251ment, B. 2, c. 7, § 87-9; c. 12, § 143; c. 9, § 123-30; Jefferson’s Notes 126; Colden’s Hist. Five Nations 2-16; Smith’s Hist. New York 35-41; Montesquieu, Esprit des Loix, liv. 18, c. 11, 12, 13; Smith’s Wealth of Nations, B. 5, c. 1. All the treaties and negotiations between the civilized powers of Europe and of this continent, from the treaty of Utrecht, in 1713, to that of Ghent, in 1814, have uniformly disregarded their supposed right to the territory included within the jurisdictional limits of those powers. 5 Annual Reg. 56, 233; 7 Niles’ Reg. 229. Not only has the practice of all civilized nations been in conformity with this doctrine, but the whole theory of their titles to lands in America, rests upon the hypothesis, that the Indians had no right of soil, as sovereign, independent states. Discovery is the foundation of title, in European nations, and this overlooks all proprietary rights in the natives. Marten’s Law of Nations 67, 60; Vattel, Droit des Gens, lib. 2, c. 7, § 83; lib. 1, c. 18, § 204-5. The sovereignty and *eminent domain thus acquired, necessarily precludes the idea of any other sovereignty existing within the same limits. The subjects of the discovering nation must necessarily be bound by the declared sense of their own government, as to the extent of this sovereignty, and the domain acquired with it. Even if it should be admitted, that the Indians were originally an independent people, they have ceased to be so. A nation that has passed under the dominion of another, is no longer a sovereign state. Vattel, lib. 1, c. 1, § 11. The same treaties and negotiations, before referred to, showed their dependent condition. Or, if it be admitted, that they are now independent and foreign states, the title of the plaintiffs would still be invalid: as grantees from the Indians, they must take according to their laws of property, and as Indians subjects. The law of every dominion affects all persons and property situate within it (Cowp. 204); and the Indians never had any idea of individual property in lands. It cannot be said, that the lands conveyed were disjoined from their dominion; because the grantees could not take the sovereignty and eminent domain to themselves.

Such then, being the nature of the Indian title to lands, the extent of their right of alienation must depend upon the laws of the dominion under which they live. They are subject to the sovereignty of the United States. The subjection proceeds from their residence within our territory *and jurisdiction. It is unnecessary to show that they are not citizens, in the ordinary sense of that term, since they are destitute of the most essential rights which belong to that character. They are of that class who are said by jurists not to be citizens, but perpetual inhabitants, with diminutive rights. Vattel, lib. 1, c. 19, § 213. The statutes of Virginia, and of all the other colonies, and of the United States, treat them as an inferior race of people, without the privileges of citizens, and under the perpetual protection and pupilage of the government. The act of Virginia of 1662, forbade purchases from the Indians, and it does not appear that it was ever repealed. The act of 1779 is rather to be regarded as a declaratory act, founded upon what has always been regarded as the settled law. These statutes seem to define sufficiently the nature of the Indian title to lands; a mere right of usufruct and habitation, without power of alienation. By the law of nature, they had not acquired a fixed property, capable of being transferred. The measure of property acquired by occupancy is determined, according to the law of *252nature, by the extent of men’s wants, and their capacity of using it to supply them. Grotius, lib. 2, c. 11; Barbeyr.; Puffend. lib. 4, c. 4, § 2, 4; 2 Bl. Com. 2; Puffend. lib. 4, c. 6, § 3; Locke on Government, B. 2, c. 5, § 26, 34-40. It is a violation of the rights of others, to exclude them from the use of what we do not want, and they have an occasion for. Upon this principle, the North American Indians could have acquired no proprietary interest in the vast tracts *of territory which they wandered over; and their right to the lands on which they hunted, could not be considered as superior to that which is acquired to the sea by fishing in it. The use in the one case, as well as the other, is not exclusive. Locke, c. 5, § 36-48; Grotius, lib. 2, c. 11, § 2; Montesq. tom. 2, p. 63; Chalmers’ Polit. Annals, 5; 6 Cranch 87. According to every theory of property, the Indians had no individual rights to land; nor had they any, collectively, or in their national capacity; for the lands occupied by each tribe were not used by them in such a manner as to prevent their being appropriated by a people of cultivators. All the proprietary rights of civilized nations on this continent are founded on this principle. The right derived from discovery and conquest can rest on other basis; and all existing titles depend on the fundamental title of the crown by discovery. The title of the crown (as representing the nation) passed to the colonists by charters, which were absolute grants of the soil; and it was a first principle in colonial law, that all titles must be derived from the crown. It is true, that, in some cases, purchases were made by the colonies from the Indians; but this was merely a measure of policy to prevent hostilities; and William Penn’s purchase, which was the most remarkable transaction of this kind, was not deemed to add to the strength of his title. Penn v. Lord Baltimore, 1 Ves. 444; Chalmers’ Polit. Annals 644; Sullivan’s Land Tit. c. 2 ; Smith’s Hist. N. Y. 145, 184. In most of the colonies, the *doctrine was received, that all titles to land must be derived exclusively from the crown, upon the principle that the settlers carried with them, not only all the rights, but all the duties of Englishmen; and particularly the laws of property, so far as they are suitable to their new condition. 1 Bl. Com. 107; 2 P. Wms. 75; 1 Salk. 411, 616. In New England alone, some lands have been held under Indian deeds. But this was an anomaly arising from peculiar local and political causes. Sulliv. Land Tit. 45.

As to the effect of the proclamation of 1763: if the Indians are to be regarded as independent sovereign states, then, by the treaty of peace, they became subject to the prerogative legislation of the crown, as a conquered people, in a territory acquired, jure belli, and ceded at the peace. Cowp. 204; 7 Co. 17 b; 2 Meriv. 143. If, on the contrary, this country be regarded as a royal colony, then the crown had a direct power of legislation; or, at least, the power of prescribing the limits within which grants of land and settlements should be made within the colony. The same practice always prevailed, under the proprietary governments, and has been followed by the government of the United States.

March 10th, 1823.

1

s. p. Mitchel v. United States, 9 Pet. 712; Clark v. Smith, 13 Id. 195; Lattimer v. Poteet, 14 Id. 4; United States v. Rillieux’s Heirs, 14 How. 189; Sparkman v. Porter, 1 Paine 457. And see Smith v. Stevens, 10 Wall. 321; United States v. Cook, 19 Id. 591; Beecher v. Wetherby, 95 U. S. 517, 525.

(a)

This statute is as follows: “An act for declaring and asserting the rights of this commonwealth, concerning purchasing lands from Indian natives. To remove and prevent all doubt concerning purchases of lands from the Indian natives, be it declared by the general assembly, that this commonwealth hath the exclusive right of *250pre-emption from the Indians, of all the lands within the limits of its own chartered territory, as described by the act and constitution of government, in the year 1776. That no person or persons whatsoever, have, or ever had, a right to purchase any lands within the same, from any Indian nation, except only persons duly authorized to make such purchases on the public account, formerly for the use and benefit of the colony, and lately of the commonwealth, and that such exclusive right or pre-emption will and ought to be maintained by this commonwealth, to the utmost of its power. And be it further declared and enacted, that every purchase of lands heretofore made, by, or on behalf of, the crown of England or Great Britain, from any Indian nation or nations, within the before-mentioned limits, doth and ought to inure for ever, to and for the use and benefit of this commonwealth, and to or for no other use or purpose whatsoever; and that all sales and deeds which have been, or shall be, made by any Indian or Indians, or by any Indian nation or nations, for lands within the said limits, to or for the separate use of any person or persons whatsoever, shall be, and the same are, hereby declared utterly void and of no effect.”

Marshall, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court. — The plaintiffs in this cause claim the land in their declaration mentioned, under two grants, purporting to be made, the first in 1773, and the last in 1775, by the chiefs of certain *Indian tribes, constituting *253the Illinois and the Piankeshaw nations; and the question is, whether this title can be recognised in the courts of the United States? The facts, as stated in the case agreed, show the authority of the chiefs who executed this conveyance, so far as it could be given by their own people; and likewise show, that the particular tribes for whom these chiefs acted were in rightful possession of the land they sold. The inquiry, therefore, is, in a great measure, confined to the power of Indians to give, and of private individuals to receive, a title, which can be sustained in the courts of this country.

As the right of society to prescribe those rules by which property may be acquired and preserved is not, and cannot, be drawn into question; as the title to lands, especially, is, and must be, admitted, to depend entirely on the law of the nation in which they lie; it will be necessary, in pursuing this inquiry, to examine, not simply those principles of abstract justice, which the Creator of all things has impressed on the mind of his creature man, and which are admitted to regulate, in a great degree, the rights of civilized nations, whose perfect independence is acknowledged; but those principles also which our own government has adopted in the particular case, and given us as the rule for our decision.

On the discovery of this immense continent, the great nations of Europe were eager to appropriate to themselves so much of it as they could respectively acquire. Its vast extent offered an *ample field to the ambition and enterprise of all; and the character and religion of its inhabitants afforded an apology for considering them as a people over whom the superior genius of Europe might claim an ascendency. The potentates of the old world found no difficulty in convincing themselves, that they made ample compensation to the inhabitants of the new, by bestowing on them civilization and Christianity, in exchange for unlimited independence. But as they were all in pursuit of nearly the same object, it was necessary, in order to avoid conflicting settlements, and consequent war with each other, to establish a principle, which all should acknowledge as the law by which the right of acquisition, which they all asserted, should be regulated, as between themselves. This principle was, that discovery gave title to the government by whose subjects, or by whose authority, it was made, against all other European governments, which title might be consummated by possession. The exclusion of all other Europeans, necessarily gave to the nation making the discovery the sole right of acquiring the soil from the natives, and establishing settlements upon it. It was a right with which no Europeans could interfere. It was a right which all asserted for themselves, and to the assertion of which, by others, all assented. Those relations which were to exist between the discoverer and the natives, were to be regulated by themselves. The rights thus acquired being exclusive, no other power could interpose between them.

*In the establishment of these relations, the rights of the original inhabitants were, in no instance, entirely disregarded; but were, necessarily, to a considerable extent, impaired. They were admitted to be the rightful occupants of the soil, with a legal as well as just claim to retain possession of it, and to use it according to their own discretion; but their rights to complete sovereignty, as independent nations, were necessarily diminished, and their power to dispose of the soil, at their own will, to whomsoever they pleased, was denied by the original fundamental principle, *254that discovery gave exclusive title to those who made it. While the different nations of Europe respected the right of the natives, as occupants, they asserted the ultimate dominion to be in themselves; and claimed and exercised, as a consequence of this ultimate dominion, a power to grant the soil, while yet in possession of the natives. These grants have been understood by all, to convey a title to the grantees, subject only to the Indian right of occupancy.

The history of America, from its discovery to the present day, proves, we think, the universal recognition of these principles. Spain did not rest her title solely on the grant of the Pope. Her discussions respecting boundary, with France, with Great Britain, and with the United States, all show that she placed it on the rights given by discovery. Portugal sustained her claim to the Brazils by the same title. France, also, founded her title to the vast territories she claimed in America on discovery. However *conciliatory her conduct to the natives may have been, she still asserted her right of dominion over a great extent of country, not actually settled by Frenchmen, and her exclusive right to acquire and dispose of the soil which remained in the occupation of Indians. Her monarch claimed all Canada and Acadie, as colonies of France, at a time when the French population was very inconsiderable, and the Indians occupied almost the whole country. He also claimed Louisiana, comprehending the immense territories watered by the Mississippi, and the rivers which empty into it, by the title of discovery. The letters-patent granted to the Sieur Demonts, in 1603, constitute him Lieutenant-General, and the representative of the king, in Acadie, which is described as stretching from the 40th to the 46th degree of north latitude; with authority to extend the power of the French over that country, and its inhabitants, to give laws to the people, to treat with the natives, and enforce the observance of treaties, and to parcel out, and give title to lands, according to his own judgment. The States of Holland also made acquisitions in America, and sustained their right on the common principle adopted by all Europe. They allege, as we are told by Smith, in his History of New York, that Henry Hudson, who sailed, as they say, under the orders of their East India Company, discovered the country from the Delaware to the Hudson, up which he sailed to the 43d degree of north latitude; and this country they claimed under the title acquired by this voyage. *Their first object was commercial, as appears by a grant made to a company of merchants in 1614; but in 1621, the States-General made, as we are told by Mr. Smith, a grant of the country to the West India Company, by the name of New Netherlands. The claim of the Dutch was always contested by the English; not because they questioned the title given by discovery, but because they insisted on being themselves the rightful claimants under that title. Their pretensions were finally decided by the sword.

No one of the powers of Europe gave its full assent to this principle, more unequivocally than England. The documents upon this subject are ample and complete. So early as the year 1496, her monarch granted a commission to the Cabots, to discover countries then unknown to Christian people, and to take possession of them in the name of the king of England. Two years afterwards, Cabot proceeded on this voyage, and discovered the continent of North America, along which he sailed as far south as Virginia. *255To this discovery, the English trace their title. In this first effort made by the English government to acquire territory on this continent, we perceive a complete recognition of the principle which has been mentioned. The right of discovery given by this commission, is confined to countries “ then unknown to all Christian people;" and of these countries, Cabot was empowered to take possession in the name of the king of England. Thus asserting a right to take possession, *notwithstanding the occupancy of the natives, who were heathens, and, at the same time, admitting the prior title of any Christian people who may have made a previous discovery. The same principle continued to be recognised. The charter granted to Sir Humphrey Gilbert, in 1578, authorizes him to discover and take possession of such remote, heathen and barbarous lands, as were not actually possessed by any Christian prince or people. This charter was afterwards renewed to Sir Walter Raleigh, in nearly the same terms.

By the charter of 1606, under which the first permanent English settlement on this continent was made, James I. granted to Sir Thomas Gates and others, those territories in America, lying on the sea-coast, between the 34th and 45th degrees of north latitude, and which either belonged to that monarch, or were not then possessed by any other Christian prince or people. The grantees were divided into two companies, at their own request. The first, or southern colony, was directed to settle between the 34th and 41st degrees of north latitude; and the second, or northern colony, between the 38th and 45th degrees. In 1609, after some expensive and not very successful attempts at settlement had been made, a new and more enlarged charter was given by the crown to the first colony, in which the king granted to the Treasurer and Company of Adventurers of the city of London for the first colony in Virginia,” in absolute property, the lands extending along the sea-coast four hundred miles, and *into the land throughout from sea to sea. This charter, which is a part of the special verdict in this cause, was annulled, so far as respected the rights of the company, by the judgment of the court of king’s bench, on a writ of quo warranto; but the whole effect allowed to this judgment was, to revest in the crown the powers of government, and the title to the lands within its limits.

At the solicitation of those who held under the grant to the second or northern colony, a new and more enlarged charter was granted to the Duke of Lenox and others, in 1620, who were denominated the Plymouth Company, conveying to them in absolute property all the lands between the 40th and 48th degrees of north latitude. Under this patent, New England has been in a great measure settled. The company conveyed to Henry Rosewell and others, in 1627, that territory which is now Massachusetts; and in 1628, a charter of incorporation, comprehending the powers of government, was granted to the purchasers. Great part of New England was granted by this company, which, at length, divided their remaining lands among themselves; and in 1635, surrendered their charter to the crown. A patent was granted to Gorges, for Maine, which was allotted to him in the division of property. All the grants made by the Plymouth Company, so far as we can learn, have been respected.

In pursuance of the same principle, the king, in 1664, granted to the Duke of York the country of New England, as far south as the Delaware *bay. His royal highness transferred New Jersey to Lord *256Berkeley and Sir George Carteret. In 1663, the crown granted to Lord Clarendon and others, the country lying between the 36th degree of north latitude and the river St. Mathes; and in 1666, the proprietors obtained from the crown a new charter, granting to them that province in the king’s dominions in North America, which lies from 36 degrees 30 minutes north latitude to the 29th degree, and from the Atlantic ocean to the south sea.

Thus has our whole country been granted by the crown, while in the occupation of the Indians. These grants purport to convey the soil as well as the right of dominion to the grantees. In those governments which were denominated royal, where the right to the soil was not vested in individuals, but remained in the crown, or was vested in the colonial government, the king claimed and exercised the light of granting lands, and of dismembering the government, at his will. The grants made out of the two original colonies, after the resumption of their charters by the crown, are examples of this. The governments of New England, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and a part of Carolina, were thus created. In all of them, the soil, at the time the grants were made, was occupied by the Indians. Yet almost every title within those governments is dependent on these grants. In some instances, the soil was conveyed by the crown, unaccompanied by the powers of government, as in the case of the northern neck of Virginia. It has never *been objected to this, nor to any other similar grant, that the title as well as possession was in the Indians when it was made, and that it passed nothing on that account.

These various patents cannot be considered as nullities; nor can they be limited to a mere grant of the powers of government. A charter intended to convey political power only, would never contain words expressly granting the land, the soil and the waters. Some of them purport to convey the soil alone; and in those cases in which the powers of government, as well as the soil, are conveyed to individuals, the crown has always acknowledged itself to be bound by the grant. Though the power to dismember regal governments was asserted and exercised, the power to dismember proprietary governments was not claimed; and in some instances, even after the powers of government were revested in the crown, the title of the proprietors to the soil was respected. Charles II. was extremely anxious to acquire the property of Maine, but the grantees sold it to Massachusetts, and he did not venture to contest the right of that colony to the soil. The Carolinas were originally proprietary governments. In 1721, a revolution was effected by the people, who shook off their obedience to the proprietors, and declared their dependence immediately on the crown. The king, however, purchased the title of those who were disposed to sell. One of them, Lord Carteret, surrendered his interest in the government, but retained his title to the soil. That *title was respected until the revolution, when it was forfeited by the laws of war.

Further proofs of the extent to which this principle has been recognised, will be found in the history of the wars, negotiations and treaties, which the different nations, claiming territory in America, have carried on, and held with each other. The contests between the cabinets of Versailles and Madrid, respecting the territory on the northern coast of the gulf of Mexico, were fierce and bloody; and continued, until the establishment of a Bourbon on the throne of Spain, produced such amicable dispositions in the two *257crowns, as to suspend or terminate them. Between France and Great Britain, whose discoveries as well as settlements were nearly contemporaneous, contests for the country, actually covered by the Indians, began, as soon as their settlements approached each other, and were continued until finally settled in the year 1763, by the treaty of Paris. Each nation had granted, and partially settled the country, denominated by the French, Acadie, and by the English, Nova Scotia. By the 12th article of the treaty of Utrecht, made in 1703, his most Christian Majesty ceded to the Queen of Great Britain, “all Nova Scotia or Acadie, with its ancient boundaries.” A great part of the ceded territory was in the possession of the Indians, and the extent of the cession could not be adjusted by the commissioners to whom it was to be referred. The treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, which was made *on the principle of the status ante bellum, did not remove this subject of controversy. Commissioners for its adjustment were appointed, whose very able and elaborate, though unsuccessful, arguments, in favor of the title of their respective sovereigns, show how entirely each relied on the title given by discovery to lands remaining in the possession of Indians.

After the termination of this fruitless discussion, the subject was transferred to Europe, and taken up by the cabinets of Versailles and London. This controversy embraced not only the boundaries of New England, Nova Scotia, and that part of Canada which adjoined those colonies, but embraced our whole western country also. France contended not only that the St. Lawrence was to be considered as the centre of Canada, but that the Ohio was within that colony. She founded this claim on discovery, and on having used that river for the transportation of troops, in a war with some southern Indians. This river was comprehended in the chartered limits of Virginia; but though the right of England to a reasonable extent of country, in virtue of her discovery of the sea-coast, and of the settlements she made on it, was not to be questioned, her claim of all the lands to the Pacific ocean, because she had discovered the country washed by the Atlantic, might, without derogating from the principle recognised by all, be deemed extravagant. It interfered, too, with the claims of France, founded on the same principle. She, therefore, sought to strengthen her original title to *the lands in controversy, by insisting that it had been acknowledged by France, in the 15th article of the treaty of Utrecht. The dispute respecting the construction of that article has no tendency to impair the principle, that discovery gave a title to lands still remaining in the possession of the Indians. Whichever title prevailed, it was still a title to lands occupied by the Indians, whose right of occupancy neither controverted, and neither had then extinguished.

These conflicting claims produced a long and bloody war, which was terminated by the conquest of the whole country east of the Mississippi. In the treaty of 1763, France ceded and guarantied to Great Britain, all Nova Scotia or Acadie, and Canada, with their dependencies; and it was agreed, that the boundaries between the territories of the two nations, in America, should be irrevocably fixed by a line drawn from the source of the Mississippi, through the middle of that river and the lakes Maurepas and Ponchartrain, to the sea. This treaty expressly cedes, and has always been understood to cede, the whole country, on the English side of the dividing line, between the two nations, although a great and valuable part of it was *258occupied by the Indians. Great Britain, on her part, surrendered to France all her pretensions to the country west of the Mississippi. It has never been supposed, that she surrendered nothing, although she was not in actual possession of a foot of land. She surrendered all right to acquire the country; and any after-attempt to purchase it from the Indians, would have been considered *and treated as an invasion of the territories of France. By the 20th article of the same treaty, Spain ceded Florida, with its dependencies, and all the country she claimed east or south-east of the Mississippi, to Great Britain. Great part of this territory also was in possession of the Indians. By a secret treaty, which was executed about the same time, France ceded Louisiana to Spain; and Spain has since retroceded the same country to France. At the time both of its cession and retrocession, it was occupied, chiefly, by the Indians. Thus, all the nations of Europe, who have acquired territory on this continent, have asserted in themselves, and have recognised in others, the exclusive right of the discoverer to appropriate the lands occupied by the Indians. Have the American states rejected or adopted this principle?

By the treaty which concluded the war of our revolution, Great Britain relinquished all claim, not only to the government, but to the propriety and territorial rights of the United States,” whose boundaries were fixed in the second article. By this treaty, the powers of government, and the right to soil, which had previously been in Great Britain, passed definitively to these states. We had before taken possession of them, by declaring independence; but neither the declaration of independence, nor the treaty confirming it, could give us more than that which we before possessed, or to which Great Britain was before entitled. It *has never been doubted, that either the United States, or the several states, had a clear title to all the lands within the boundary lines described in the treaty, subject only to the Indian right of occupancy, and that the exclusive power to extinguish that right, was vested in that government which might constitutionally exercise it.

Virginia, particularly, within whose chartered limits the land in controversy lay, passed an act, in the year 1779, declaring her “exclusive right of pre-emption from the Indians, of all the lands within the limits of her own chartered territory, and that no person or persons whatsoever, have, or ever had, a right to purchase any lands within the same, from any Indian nation, except only persons duly authorized to make such purchase; formerly for the use and benefit of the colony, and lately for the commonwealth.” The act then proceeds to annul all deeds made by Indians to individuals, for the private use of the purchasers. Without ascribing to this act the power of annulling vested rights, or admitting it to countervail the testimony furnished by the marginal note opposite to the title of the law, forbidding purchases from the Indians, in the revisals of the Virginia statutes, stating that law to be repealed, it may safely be considered as an unequivocal affirmance, on the part of Virginia, of the broad principle which had always been maintained, that the exclusive right to purchase from the Indians resided in the government. In pursuance of the same idea, Virginia proceeded, at the same session, to open her *land-office, for the sale of that country which now constitutes Kentucky, a country, every acre of which was then claimed and possessed by Indians, who maintained their title with as much persevering courage as was ever manifested by any people.

*259The states, having within their chartered limits different portions of territory covered by Indians, ceded that territory, generally, to the United States, on conditions expressed in their deeds of cession, which demonstrate the opinion, that they ceded the soil as well as jurisdiction, and that in doing so, they granted a productive fund to the government of the Union. The lands in controversy lay within the chartered limits of Virginia, and were ceded with the whole country north-west of the river Ohio. This grant contained reservations and stipulations, which could only be made by the owners of the soil; and concluded with a stipulation, that all the lands in the ceded territory, not reserved, should be considered as a common fund, for the use and benefit of such of the United States as have become, or shall become, members of the confederation,” &e., according to their usual respective proportions in the general charge and expenditure, and shall be faithfully and bona fide disposed of for that purpose, and for no other use or purpose whatsoever.” The ceded territory was occupied by numerous and warlike tribes of Indians; but the exclusive right of the United States to extinguish their title, and to grant the soil, has never, we believe, been doubted.

*After these states became independent, a controversy subsisted between them and Spain respecting boundary. By the treaty of 1795, this controversy was adjusted, and Spain ceded to the United States the territory in question. This territory, though claimed by both nations, was chiefly in the actual occupation of Indians. The magnificent purchase of Louisiana, was the purchase from France of a country almost entirely occupied by numerous tribes of Indians, who are in fact independent. Yet, any attempt of others to intrude into that country, would be considered as an aggression which would justify war. Our late acquisitions from Spain are of the same character; and the negotiations which preceded those acquisitions, recognise and elucidate the principle which has been received as the foundation of all European title in America.

The United States, then, have unequivocally acceded to that great and broad rule by which its civilized inhabitants now hold this country. They hold, and assert in themselves, the title by which it was acquired. They maintain, as all others have maintained, that discovery gave an exclusive right to extinguish the Indian title of occupancy, either by purchase or by conquest; and gave also a right to such a degree of sovereignty, as the circumstances of the people would allow them to exercise. The power now possessed by the government of the United States to grant lands, resided, while we were colonies, in the crown or its grantees. The validity of the titles given by either has never *been questioned in our courts. It has been exercised uniformly over territory in possession of the Indians. The existence of this power must negative the existence to any right which may conflict with and control it. An absolute title to lands cannot exist, at the same time, in different persons, or in different governments. An absolute, must be an exclusive title, or at least a title which excludes all others not compatible with it. All our institutions recognise the absolute title of the crown, subject only to the Indian right of occupancy, and recognise the absolute title of the crown to extinguish that right. This is incompatible with an absolute and complete title in the Indians.

We will not enter into the controversy, whether agriculturists, merchants *260and manufacturers, have a right, on abstract principles, to expel hunters from the territory they possess, or to contract their limits. Conquest gives a title which the courts of the conqueror cannot deny, whatever the private and speculative opinions of individuals may be, respecting the original justice of the claim which has been successfully asserted. The British government, which was then our government, and whose rights have passed to the United States, asserted a title to all the lands occupied by Indians, within the chartered limits of the British colonies. It asserted also a limited sovereignty over them, and the exclusive right of extinguishing the titles which occupancy gave to them. These claims have been maintained and established as far west as the river Mississippi, by the sword. The title *to a vast portion of the lands we now hold, orignates in them. It is not for the courts of this country to question the validity of this title, or to sustain one which is incompatible with it.

Although we do not mean to engage in the defence of those principles which Europeans have applied to Indian title, they may, we think, find some excuse, if not justification, in the character and habits of the people whose rights have been wrested from them. The title by conquest is acquired and maintained by force. The conqueror prescribes its limits. Humanity, however, acting on public opinion, has established, as a general rule, that the conquered shall not be wantonly oppressed, and that their condition shall remain as eligible as is compatible with the objects of the conquest. Most usually, they are incorporated with the victorious nation, and become subjects or citizens of the government with which they are connected. The new and old members of the society mingle with each other; the distinction between them is gradually lost, and they make one people. Where this incorporation is practicable, humanity demands, and a wise policy requires, that the rights of the conquered to property should remain unimpaired; that the new subjects should be governed as equitably as the old, and that confidence in their security should gradually banish the painful sense of being separated from their ancient connections, and united by force to strangers. When the conquest is complete, and the conquered inhabitants can be blended with the conquerors, *or safely governed as a distinct people, public opinion, which not even the conqueror can disregard, imposes these restraints upon him ; and he cannot neglect them, without injury to his fame, and hazard to his power.

But the tribes of Indians inhabiting this country were fierce savages, whose occupation was war, and whose subsistence was drawn chiefly from the forest. To leave them in possession of their country, was to leave the country a wilderness; to govern them as a distinct people, was impossible, because they were as brave and as high-spirited as they were fierce, and were ready to repel by arms every attempt on their independence. What was the inevitable consequence of this state of things? The Europeans were under the necessity either of abandoning the country, and relinquishing their pompous claims to it, or of enforcing those claims by the sword, and by the adoption of principles adapted to the condition of a people with whom it was impossible to mix, and who could not be governed as a distinct society, or of remaining in their neighborhood, and exposing themselves and their families to the perpetual hazard of being massacred. Frequent and bloody wars, in which the whites were not always the aggressors, unavoida*261bly ensued. European policy, numbers and skill prevailed; as the white population advanced, that of the Indians necessarily receded; the country in the immediate neighborhood of agriculturists became unfit for them; the game fled *into thicker and more unbroken forests, and the Indians followed. The soil, to which the crown originally claimed title, being no longer occupied by its ancient inhabitants, was parcelled out according to the will of the sovereign power, and taken possession of by persons who claimed immediately from the crown, or mediately, through its grantees or deputies.

That law which regulates, and ought to regulate in general, the relations between the conqueror and conquered, was incapable of application to a people under such circumstances. The resort to some new and different rule, better adapted to the actual state of things, was unavoidable. Every rule which can be suggested will be found to be attended with great difficulty. However extravagant the pretension of converting the discovery of an inhabited country into conquest may appear; if the principle has been asserted in the first instance, and afterwards sustained; if a country has been acquired and held under it; if the property of the great mass of the community originates in it, it becomes the law of the land, and cannot be questioned. So too, with respect to the concomitant principle, that the Indian inhabitants are to be considered merely as occupants, to be protected, indeed, while in peace, in the possession of their lands, but to be deemed incapable of transferring the absolute title to others. However this restriction may be opposed to natural right, and to the usages of civilized nations, yet, if it be indispensable to that system under which the country has been settled, and be *adapted to the actual condition of the two people, it may, perhaps, be supported by reason, and certainly cannot be rejected by courts of justice.

This question is not entirely new in this court. The case of Fletcher v. Peck, grew out of a sale made by the state of Georgia, of a large tract of country within the limits of that state, the grant of which was afterwards resumed. The action was brought by a sub-purchaser, on the contract of sale, and one of the covenants in the deed was, that the state of Georgia was, at the time of sale, seised in fee of the premises. The real question presented by the issue was, whether the seisin in fee was in the state of Georgia, or in the United States. After stating, that this controversy between the several states and the United States had been compromised, the court thought it necessary to notice the Indian title, which, although entitled to the respect of all courts, until it should be legitimately extinguished, was declared not to be such as to be absolutely repugnant to a seisin in fee on the part of the state. This opinion conforms precisely to the principle which has been supposed to be recognised by all European governments, from the first settlement of America. The absolute ultimate title has been considered as acquired by discovery, subject only to the Indian title of occupancy, which title the discoverers possessed the exclusive right of acquiring. Such a right is no more incompatible with a seisin in fee, than a lease for years, and might as effectually bar an ejectment.

Another view has been taken of this question, *which deserves to be considered. The title of the crown, whatever it might be, could be acquired only by a conveyance from the crown. If an individual might *262extinguish the Indian title, for his own benefit, or, in other words, might purchase it, still he could acquire only that title. Admitting their power to change their laws or usages, so far as to allow an individual to separate a portion of their lands from the common stock, and hold it in severalty, still it is a part of their territory, and is held under them, by a title dependent on their laws. The grant derives its efficacy from their will; and, if they choose to resume it, and make a different disposition of the land, the court of the United States cannot interpose for the protection of the title. The person who purchases lands from the Indians, within their territory, incorporates himself with them, so far as respects the property purchased; holds their title under their protection, and subject to their laws. If they annul the grant, we know of no tribunal which can revise and set aside the proceeding. We know of no principle which can distinguish this case from a grant made to a native Indian, authorizing him to hold a particular tract of land in severalty. As such a grant could not separate the Indian from his nation, nor give a title which our courts could distinguish from the title of his tribe, as it might still be conquered from, or ceded by his tribe, we can perceive no legal principle which will authorize a court to say, that different consequences are attached to this purchase, because it was made by a stranger. By the treaties concluded *between the United States and the Indian nations, whose title the plaintiffs claim, the country comprehending the lands in controversy has been ceded to the United States, without any reservation of their title. These nations had been at war with the United States, and had an unquestionable right to annul any grant they had made to American citizens. Their cession of the country, without a reservation of this land, affords a fair presumption, that they considered it as of no validity. They ceded to the United States this very property, after having used it in common with other lands, as their own, from the date of their deeds to the time of cession; and the attempt now made, is to set up their title against that of the United States.

The proclamation issued by the king of Great Britain, in 1763, has been considered, and we think, with reason, as constituting an additional objection to the title of the plaintiffs. By that proclamation, the crown reserved under its own dominion and protection, for the use of the Indians, “all the land and territories lying to the westward of the sources of the rivers which fall into the sea from the west and north-west,” and strictly forbade all British subjects from making any purchases or settlements whatever, or taking possession of the reserved lands. It has been contended, that, in this proclamation, the king transcended his constitutional powers; and the case of Campbell v. Hall (reported by Cowper), is relied on to support this position. *It is supposed to be a principle of universal law, that, if an uninhabited country be discovered by a number of individuals, who acknowledge no connection with, and owe no allegiance to, any government whatever, the country becomes the property of the discoverers, so far at least as they can use it. They acquire a title in common. The title of the whole land is in the whole society. It is to be divided and parcelled out according to the will of the society, expressed by the whole body, or by that organ which is authorized by the whole to express it. If the discovery be made, and possession of the country be taken, under the authority of an existing government, which is acknowledged by the emigrants, it is sup*263posed to be equally well settled, that the discovery is made for the whole nation, that the country becomes a part of the nation, and that the vacant soil is to be disposed of by that organ of the government which has the constitutional power to dispose of the national domains, by that organ in which all vacant territory is vested by law.

According to the theory of the British constitution, all vacant lands are vested in the crown, as representing the nation; and the exclusive power to grant them is admitted to reside in the crown, as a branch of the royal prerogative. It has been already shown, that this principle was as fully recognised in America as in the islands of Great Britain. All the lands we hold were originally granted by the crown; and the establishment of a regal government has never been considered as *impairing its right to grant lands within the chartered limits of such colony. In addition to the proof of this principle, furnished by the immense grants, already mentioned, of lands lying within the chartered limits of Virginia, the continuing right of the crown to grant lands lying within that colony was always admitted. A title might be obtained, either by making an entry with the surveyor of a county, in pursuance of law, or by an order of the governor in council, who was the deputy of the king, or by an immediate grant from the crown. In Virginia, therefore, as well as elsewhere in the British dominions, the complete title of the crown to vacant lands was acknowledged. So far as respected the authority of the crown, no distinction was taken between vacant lands and lands occupied by the Indians. The title, subject only to the right of occupancy by the Indians, was admitted to be in the king, as was his right to grant that title. The lands, then, to which this proclamation referred, were lands which the king had a right to grant, or to reserve for the Indians.

According to the theory of the British constitution, the royal prerogative is very extensive, so far as respects the political relations between Great Britain and foreign nations. The peculiar situation of the Indians, necessarily considered, in some respects, as a dependent, and in some respects, as a distinct people, occupying a country claimed by Great Britain, and yet too powerful and brave not to be dreaded as formidable enemies, required, that means should be adopted for *the preservation of peace; and that their friendship should be secured by quieting their alarms for their property. This was to be effected by restraining the encroachments of the whites; and the power to do this was never, we believe, denied by the colonies to the crown.

In the case of Campbell v. Hall, that part of the proclamation was determined to be illegal, which imposed a tax on a conquered province, after a government had been bestowed upon it. The correctness of this decision cannot be questioned, but its application to the case at bar cannot be admitted. Since the expulsion of the Stuart family, the power of imposing taxes, by proclamation, has never been claimed as a branch of regal prerogative; but the powers of granting, or refusing to grant, vacant lands, and of restraining encroachments on the Indians, have always been asserted and admitted. The authority of this proclamation, so far as it respected this continent, has never been denied, and the titles it gave to lands have always been sustained in our courts.

In the argument of this cause, the counsel for the plaintiffs have relied *264very much on the opinions expressed by men holding offices of trust, and on various proceedings in America, to sustain titles to land derived from the Indians. The collection of claims to lands lying in the western country, made in the 1st volume of the Laws of the United States, has been referred to; but we find nothing in that collection to support the argument. Most of the titles were derived *from persons professing to act under the authority of the government existing at the time; and the two grants under which the plaintiffs claim, are supposed, by the person under whose inspection the collection was made, to be void, because forbidden by the royal proclamation of 1763. It is not unworthy of remark, that the usual mode adopted by the Indians for granting lands to individuals, has been to reserve them in a treaty, or to grant them under the sanction of the commissioners with whom the treaty was negotiated. The practice, in such case, to grant to the crown, for the use of the individual, is some evidence of a general understanding, that the validity even of such a grant depended on its receiving the royal sanction.

The controversy between the colony of Connecticut and the Mohegan Indians, depended on the nature and extent of a grant made by those Indians to the colony; on the nature and extent of the reservations made by the Indians, in their several deeds and treaties, which were alleged to be recognised by the legitimate authority; and on the violation by the colony of rights thus reserved and secured. We do not perceive, in that case, any assertion of the principle, that individuals might obtain a complete and valid title from the Indians.

It has been stated, that in the memorial transmitted from the Cabinet of London to that of Versailles, during the controversy between the two nations, respecting boundary, which took place in 1755, the Indian right to the soil is recognised. *But this recognition was made with reference to their character as Indians, and for the purpose of showing that they were fixed to a particular territory. It was made for the purpose of sustaining the claim of his Britannic majesty to dominion over them.

The opinion of the attorney and solicitor-general, Pratt and Yorke, have been adduced to prove, that, in the opinion of those great law-officers, the Indian grant could convey a title to the soil, without a patent emanating from the crown. The opinion of those persons would certainly be of great authority on such a question, and we were not a little surprised, when it was read, at the doctrine it seemed to advance. An opinion so contrary to the whole practice of the crown, and to the uniform opinions given on all other occasions by its great law-officers, ought to be very explicit, and accompanied by the circumstances under which it was given, and to which it was applied, before we can be assured that it is properly understood. In a pamphlet, written for the purpose of asserting the Indian title, styled “Plain Facts,” the same opinion is quoted, and is said to relate to purchases made in the East Indies. It is, of course, entirely inapplicable to purchases made in America. Chalmers, in whose collection this opinion is found, does not say to whom it applies; but there is reason to believe, that the author of “Plain Facts” is, in this respect, correct. The opinion commences thus: “In respect to such places as have been, or shall be acquired, by treaty or grant, from any of the Indian princes or governments, *your majesty's letters-patent are not necessary." The words *265“princes or governments,” are usually applied to the East Indians, but not to those of North America. We speak of their sachems, their warriors, their chiefmen, their nations or tribes, not of their “princes or governments.” The question on which the opinion was given, too, and to which it relates, was, whether the king’s subjects carry with them the common law, wherever they may form settlements. The opinion is given with a view to this point, and its object must be kept in mind while construing its expressions.

Much reliance is also placed on the fact, that many tracts are now held in the United States, under the Indian title, the validity of which is not questioned. Before the importance attached to this fact is conceded, the circumstances under which such grants were obtained, and such titles are supported, ought to be considered. These lands lie chiefly in the eastern states. It is known that the Plymouth Company made many extensive grants, which, from their ignorance of the country, interfered with each other. It is also known, that Mason, to whom New Hampshire, and Gorges, to whom Maine was granted, found great difficulty in managing such unwieldy property. The country was settled by emigrants, some from Europe, but chiefly from Massachusetts, who took possession of lands they found unoccupied, and secured themselves in that possession by the best means in their power. The disturbances in *England, and the civil war and revolution which followed those disturbances, prevented any interference on the part of the mother country, and the proprietors were unable to maintain their title. In the meantime, Massachusetts claimed the country and governed it. As her claim was adversary to that of the proprietors, she encouraged the settlement of persons made under her authority, and encouraged, likewise, their securing themselves in possession, by purchasing the acquiescence and forbearance of the Indians.

After the restoration of Charles II., Gorges and Mason, when they attempted to establish their title, found themselves opposed by men, who held under Massachusetts, and under the Indians. The title of the proprietors was resisted; and though, in some cases compromises were made, and in some, the opinion of a court was given ultimately in their favor, the juries found uniformly against them. They became wearied with the struggle, and sold their property. The titles held under the Indians, were sanctioned by length of possession; but there is no case, so far as we are informed, of a judicial decision in their favor.

Much reliance has also been placed on a recital contained in the charter of Rhode Island, and on a letter addressed to the governors of the neigh boring colonies, by the king’s command, in which some expressions are inserted, indicating the royal approbation of titles acquired from the Indians.

The charter to Rhode Island recites, “that the said John Clark, and others, had transplanted *themselves into the midst of the Indian nations, and were seised and possessed, by purchase and consent of the said natives, to their full content, of such lands,” &c. And the letter recites, that “Thomas Chifflinch and others, having, in the right of Major Asperton, a just propriety in the Narraghanset country, in New England, by grants from the native princes of that country, and being desirous to improve it into an English colony,” &c., “are yet daily disturbed.” The impression this language might make, if viewed apart from the circum*266stances under which it was employed, will be effaced, when considered in connection with those circumstances.

In the year 1635, the Plymouth Company surrendered their charter to the crown. About the same time, the religious dissensions of Massachusetts expelled from that colony several societies of individuals, one of which settled in Rhode Island, on lands purchased from the Indians. They were not within the chartered limits of Massachusetts, and the English government was too much occupied at home, to bestow its attention on this subject. There existed no authority to arrest their settlement of the country. If they obtained the Indian title, there were none to assert the title of the crown. Under these circumstances, the settlement became considerable. Individuals acquired separate property in lands which they cultivated and improved; a government was established among themselves; and no power existed in America which could rightfully interfere with it.

On the restoration of Charles II., this small society *hastened to acknowledge his authority, and, to solicit his confirmation of their title to the soil, and to jurisdiction over the country. Their solicitations were successful, and a charter was granted to them, containing the recital which has been mentioned. It is obvious, that this transaction can amount to no acknowledgment, that the Indian grant could convey a title paramount to that of the crown, or could, in itself, constitute a complete title. On the contrary, the charter of the crown was considered as indispensable to its completion.

It has never been contended, that the Indian title amounted to nothing. Their right of possession has never been questioned. The claim of government extends to the complete ultimate title, charged with this right of possession, and to the exclusive power of acquiring that right. The object of the crown was, to settle the sea-coast of America; and when a portion of it was settled, without violating the rights of others, by persons professing their loyalty, and soliciting the royal sanction of an act, the consequences of which were ascertained to be beneficial, it would have been as unwise as ungracious, to expel them from their habitations, because they had obtained the Indian title, otherwise than through the agency of government. The very grant of a charter is an assertion of the title of the crown, and its words convey the same idea. The country granted, is said to be “ our island called Rhode Island;" and the charter contains an actual grant of the soil, as well as of the powers of government.

*The letter was written a few months before the charter was issued, apparently at the request of the agents of the intended colony, for the sole purpose of preventing the trespasses of neighbors, who where disposed to claim some authority over them. The king, being willing himself to ratify and confirm their title, was, of course, inclined to quiet them in their possession. This charter, and this letter, certainly sanction a previous unauthorized purchase from Indians, under the circumstances attending that particular purchase, but are far from supporting the general proposition, that a title acquired from the Indians would be valid against a title acquired from the crown, or without the confirmation of the crown.

The acts of the several colonial assemblies, prohibiting purchases from the Indians, have also been relied on, as proving, that, independent of such prohibitions, Indian deeds would be valid. But, we think, this fact, at most, *267equivocal. While the existence of such purchases would justify their prohibition, even by colonies which considered Indian deeds as previously invalid, the fact that such acts have been generally passed, is strong evidence of the general opinion, that such purchases are opposed by the soundest principles of wisdom and national policy.

After bestowing on this subject a degree of attention which was more required by the magnitude of the interest in litigation, and the able and elaborate arguments of the bar, than by its intrinsic difficulty, the court is decidedly of opinion, that the plaintiffs do not exhibit a title which can *be sustained in the courts of the United States; and that there is no error in the judgment which was rendered against them in the district court of Illinois.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.

2.1.3 Herman Melville, Moby-Dick (​​​​​​​p. 375 (1922)) 2.1.3 Herman Melville, Moby-Dick (​​​​​​​p. 375 (1922))

Herman Melville, Moby-Dick 
p. 375 (1922) [1892] 

What was America in 1492 but a Loose-Fish, in which Columbus struck the Spanish standard by way of waifing it for his royal master and mistress? What was Poland to the Czar? What Greece to the Turk? What India to England? What at last will Mexico be to the United States? All Loose-Fish. 

Federal Land Patent to William McIntosh 

2.1.4 Tee-Hit-Ton Indians v. United States 2.1.4 Tee-Hit-Ton Indians v. United States

348 U.S. 272, 75 S.Ct. 313

The TEE-HIT-TON INDIANS, An Identifiable Group of Alaska Indians, Petitioner, v. The UNITED STATES.

No. 43

Supreme Court of the United States.

Argued Nov. 12, 1954.

Decided Feb. 7, 1955.

Rehearing Denied March 14, 1955.

See 75 S.Ct. 521, 15 Alaska 488.

*421Mr. James Craig Peacock, Washington, D.C., for petitioner.

Mr. Ralph A. Barney, Washington, D.C., for respondent.

Mr. Justice REED

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case rests upon a claim under the Fifth Amendment by petitioner, an identifiable group of American Indians of between 60 and 70 individuals residing in Alaska, for compensation for a taking by the United States of certain timber from Alaskan lands allegedly belonging to the group.1 The area claimed is said to contain over 350,000 acres of land and 150 square miles of water. The Tee-Hit-Tons, a clan of the Tlingit Tribe, brought this suit in the Court of Claims under 28 U.S.C. § 1505, 28 U.S.C.A. § 1505. The compensation claimed does not arise from any statutory direction to pay. Payment, if it can be compelled, must be based upon a constitutional right of the Indians to recover. This is not a case that is connected with any phase of the policy of the Congress, continued throughout our history, to extinguish Indian title through negotiation rather than by force, and to grant payments from the public purse to needy descendants of exploited Indians. The legislation in support of that policy has received consistent interpretation from this Court in sympathy with its compassionate purpose.2

*422Upon petitioner’s motion, the Court of Claims under its Rule 38(b), 28 U.S.C.A.,3 directed a separate trial with respect to certain specific issues of law and any related issues of fact essential to the proper adjudication of the legal issues.4 Only those pertinent to the nature of the petitioner’s *423interest, if any, in the lands are here for review. Substantial evidence, largely documentary, relevant to these legal issues was introduced by both parties before a Commissioner who thereupon made findings of fact. The Court of Claims adopted these findings and held that petitioner was an identifiable group of American Indians residing in Alaska; that its interest in the lands prior to purchase of Alaska by the United States in 1867 was “‘original Indian title’” or “‘Indian right of occupancy'”. Tee-Hit-Ton Indians v. United States, 120 F.Supp. 202, 204, 15 Alaska 1, 128 Ct.Cl. 82, 85, 87. It was further held that if such original Indian title survived the Treaty of 1867, 15 Stat. 539, Arts. III and VI, by which Russia conveyed Alaska to the United States, such title was not sufficient basis to maintain this suit as there had been no recognition by Congress of any legal rights in petitioner to the land in question. 120 F.Supp. 202, 15 Alaska 1, 128 Ct.Cl. at page 92. The court said that no rights inured to plaintiff by virtue of legislation by Congress. As a result of these conclusions, no answer was necessary to questions 2, 5 and 6. The Tee-Hit-Tons’ petition was thereafter dismissed.

Because of general agreement as to the importance of the question of compensation for congressionally approved taking of lands occupied in Alaska under aboriginal Indian use and claim of ownership,5 and the conflict concerning the effect of federal legislation protecting Indian occupation between this decision of the Court of Claims, 120 F.Supp. 202, 15 Alaska 1, 128 Ct.Cl., at page 90, and the decision of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Miller v. Unit*424ed States, 159 F.2d 997, 1003, 11 Alaska 285, we granted certiorari, 347 U.S. 1009, 74 S.Ct. 864, 98 L.Ed. 1133.

The Alaskan area in which petitioner claims, a compensable interest is located near and within the exterior lines of the Tongass National Forest. By Joint Resolution of August 8, 1947, 61 Stat. 920, the Secretary of Agriculture was authorized to contract for the sale of national forest timber located within this National Forest “notwithstanding any claim of possessory rights.” 6 The Resolution defines “possessory rights” 7 and provides for all receipts from the sale of timber to be maintained in a special account in the Treasury until the timber and land rights are finally determined.8

Section 3(b) of the Resolution provides:

“Nothing in this resolution shall be construed as recognizing or denying the validity of any claims of possessory rights to lands or timber within the exterior boundaries of the Tongass National Forest.”

The Secretary of Agriculture, on August 20, 1951, pursuant to this authority contracted for sale to a private company of all merchantable timber in the area claimed by petitioner. This is the sale of timber which petitioner alleges constitutes a compensable taking by the United States of a portion of its proprietary interest in the land.

The problem presented is the nature of the petitioner’s interest in the land, if any. Petitioner claims a “full pro*425prietary ownership” of the land; or, in the alternative, at least a “recognized” right to unrestricted possession, occupation and use. Either ownership or recognized possession, petitioner asserts, is compensable. If it has a fee simple interest in the entire tract, it has an interest in the timber and its sale is a partial taking of its right to “possess, use and dispose of it.” United States v. General Motors, 323 U.S. 373, 378, 65 S.Ct. 357, 359, 89 L.Ed. 311. It is petitioner’s contention that its tribal predecessors have continually claimed, occupied and used the land from time immemorial; that when Russia took Alaska, the Tlingits had a well-developed social order which included a concept of property ownership; that Russia while it possessed Alaska in no manner interfered with their claim to the land; that Congress has by subsequent acts confirmed and recognized petitioner’s right to occupy the land permanently and therefore the sale of the timber off such lands constitutes a taking pro tanto of its asserted rights in the area.

The Government denies that petitioner has any compensable interest. It asserts that the Tee-Hit-Tons’ property interest, if any, is merely that of the right to the use of the land at the Government’s will; that Congress has never recognized any legal interest of petitioners in the land and therefore without such recognition no compensation is due the petitioner for any taking by the United States.

I. Recognition. — The question of recognition may be disposed of shortly. Where the Congress by treaty or other agreement has declared that thereafter Indians were to hold the lands permanently, compensation must be paid for subsequent taking.9 The petitioner contends that Con*426gress has sufficiently “recognized” its possessory rights in the land in question so as to make its interest compensable. Petitioner points specifically to two statutes to sustain this contention. The first is § 8 of the Organic Act for Alaska of May 17, 1884, 23 Stat. 24.10 The second is § 27 of the Act of June 6, 1900, which was to provide for a civil government for Alaska, 31 Stat. 321, 330.11 The Court of Appeals in the Miller case, supra, felt that these Acts constituted recognition of Indian ownership. 159 F.2d 997, 1002-1003, 11 Alaska 285, 294-296.

We have carefully examined these statutes and the pertinent legislative history and find nothing to indicate any intention by Congress to grant to the Indians any permanent rights in the lands of Alaska occupied by them by permission of Congress. Rather, it clearly appears that what was intended was merely to retain the status quo until further congressional or judicial action was taken.12 There is no particular form for congressional recognition of Indian right of permanent occupancy. It may be established in a variety of ways but there must be the definite intention by congressional action or authority to accord legal rights, not merely permissive occupation. Hynes v. Grimes Packing Co., 337 U.S. 86, 101, 69 S.Ct. 968, 978, 12 Alaska 348, 366, 93 L.Ed. 1231.

This policy of Congress toward the Alaskan Indian lands was maintained and reflected by its expression in the Joint *427Resolution of 1947 under which the timber contracts were made.13

II. Indian Title. — (a) The nature of aboriginal Indian interest in land and the various rights as between the Indians and the United States dependent on such interest are far from novel as concerns our Indian inhabitants. It is well settled that in all the States of the Union the tribes who inhabited the lands of the States held claim to such lands after the coming of the white man, under what is sometimes termed original Indian title or permission from the whites to occupy. That description means mere possession not specifically recognized as ownership by Congress. After conquest they were permitted to occupy portions of territory over which they had previously exercised “sovereignty,” as we use that term. This is not a property right but amounts to a right of occupancy which the sovereign grants and protects against intrusion by third parties but which right of occupancy may be terminated and such lands fully disposed of by the sovereign itself without any legally enforceable obligation to compensate the Indians.

This position of the Indian has long been rationalized by the legal theory that discovery and conquest gave the conquerors sovereignty over and ownership of the lands thus obtained. 1 Wheaton’s International Law, c. V. The great case of Johnson v. McIntosh, 8 Wheat. 543, 5 L.Ed. 681, denied the power of an Indian tribe to pass their right of occupancy to another. It confirmed the practice of two hundred years of American history “that discovery gave an exclusive right to extinguish the Indian title of occupancy, either by purchase or by conquest.” 8 Wheat, at page 587.

“We will not enter into the controversy, whether agriculturists, merchants, and manufacturers, have a right, on abstract principles, to expel hunters from the territory they possess, or to *428contract their limits. Conquest gives a title which the Courts of the conqueror cannot deny, whatever the private and speculative opinion of individuals may be, respecting the original justice of the claim which has been successfully asserted.” 8 Wheat, at page 588.
“Frequent and bloody wars, in which the whites were not always the aggressors, unavoidably ensued. European policy, numbers, and skill, prevailed. As the white population advanced, that of the Indians necessarily receded. The country in the immediate neighborhood of agriculturists became unfit for them. The game fled into thicker and more unbroken forests, and the Indians followed. The soil, to which the crown originally claimed title, being no longer occupied by its ancient inhabitants, was parcelled out according to the will of the sovereign power, and taken possession of by persons who claimed immediately from the crown, or mediately, through its grantees or deputies.” 8 Wheat, at pages 590-591. See Buttz v. Northern Pacific R. Co., 119 U.S. 55, 66, 7 S.Ct. 100, 104, 30 L.Ed. 330; Martin v. Waddell, 16 Pet. 367, 409, 10 L.Ed. 997; Clark v. Smith, 13 Pet. 195, 201, 10 L.Ed. 123.

In Beecher v. Wetherby, 95 U.S. 517, 24 L.Ed. 440, a tract of land which Indians were then expressly permitted by the United States to occupy was granted to Wisconsin. In a controversy over timber, this Court held the Wisconsin title good.

“The grantee, it is true, would take only the naked fee, and could not disturb the occupancy of the Indians: that occupancy could only be interfered with or determined by the United States. It is to be presumed that in this matter the United States would be governed by such considerations of justice as would control a Christian people in *429their treatment of an ignorant and dependent race. Be that as it may, the propriety or justice of their action towards the Indians with respect to their lands is a question of governmental policy, and is not a matter open to discussion in a controversy between third parties, neither of whom derives title from the Indians. The right of the United States to dispose of the fee of lands occupied by them has always been recognized by this court from the foundation of the government.” 95 U.S. at page 525.

In 1941 a unanimous Court wrote, concerning Indian title, the following:

“Extinguishment of Indian title based on aboriginal possession is of course a different matter. The power of Congress in that regard is supreme. The manner, method and time of such extinguishment raise political, not justiciable issues.” United States v. Santa Fe Pacific R. Co., 314 U.S. 339, 347, 62 S.Ct. 248, 252, 86 L.Ed. 260.

No case in this Court has ever held that taking of Indian title or use by Congress required compensation. The American people have compassion for the descendants of those Indians who were deprived of their homes and hunting grounds by the drive of civilization. They seek to have the Indians share the benefits of our society as citizens of this Nation. Generous provision has been willingly made to allow tribes to recover for wrongs, as a matter of grace, not because of legal liability. 60 Stat. 1050.

(b) There is one opinion in a case decided by this Court that contains language indicating that unrecognized Indian title might be compensable under the Constitution when taken by the United States. United States v. Alcea Band of Tillamooks, 329 U.S. 40, 67 S.Ct. 167, 91 L.Ed. 29.

Recovery was allowed under a jurisdictional Act of 1935, 49 Stat. 801, that permitted payments to a few specific Indian tribes for “legal and equitable claims arising under or *430growing out of the original Indian title” to land, because of some unratified treaties negotiated with them and other tribes. The other tribes had already been compensated.14 Five years later this Court unanimously held that none of the former opinions in Vol. 329 of the United States Reports expressed the view that recovery was grounded on a taking under the Fifth Amendment. United States v. Tillamooks, 341 U.S. 48, 71 S.Ct. 552, 95 L.Ed. 738. Interest, payable on recovery for a taking under the Fifth Amendment, was denied.

Before the second Tillamook case, a decision was made on Alaskan Tlingit lands held by original Indian title. Miller v. United States, 9 Cir., 159 F.2d 997, 11 Alaska 285. That opinion holds such a title compensable under the Fifth Amendment on reasoning drawn from the language of this Court’s first Tillamook case.15 After the Miller decision, this Court had occasion to consider the holding of that case on Indian title in Hynes v. Grimes Packing Co., 337 U.S. 86, 106, note 28, 69 S.Ct. 968, 979, 981, 12 Alaska 348, 367, 372, 93 L.Ed. 1231. We there commented as to the first Tillamook case: “That opinion does not hold the Indian right of occupancy compensable without specific legislative direction to make payment.” We further declared “we cannot express agreement with that [compensability of Indian title by the Miller case] conclusion.” 16

*431Later the Government used the Hynes v. Grimes Packing Co. note in the second Tillamook case, petition for certiorari, 75 S.Ct. 319, to support its argument that the first Tillamook opinion did not decide that taking of original Indian title was compensable under the Fifth Amendment.17 Thereupon this Court in the second Tillamook case, 341 U.S. 48, 71 S.Ct. 552, 553, held that the first case was not “grounded on a taking under the Fifth Amendment.” Therefore no interest was due. This later Tillamook decision by a unanimous Court supported the Court of Claims in its view of the law in this present case. See Tee-Hit-Ton Indians v. United States, 120 F.Supp. 202, 15 Alaska 1, 128 Ct.Cl. 82, 87. We think it must be concluded that the recovery in the Tillamook case was based upon statutory direction to pay for the aboriginal title in the special jurisdictional act to equalize the Tillamooks with the neighboring tribes, rather than upon a holding that there had been a compensable taking under the Fifth Amendment.18 This leaves unimpaired the rule derived from *432Johnson v. McIntosh, 8 Wheat. 543, 5 L.Ed. 681, that the taking by the United States of unrecognized Indian title is not compensable under the Fifth Amendment.

This is true, not because an Indian or an Indian tribe has no standing to sue or because the United States has not consented to be sued for the taking of original Indian title, but because Indian occupation of land without government recognition of ownership creates no rights against taking or extinction by the United States protected by the Fifth Amendment or any other principle of law.

(c) What has been heretofore set out deals largely with the Indians of the Plains and east of the Mississippi. The Tee-Hit-Tons urge, however, that their stage of civilization *433and their concept of ownership of property takes them out of the rule applicable to the Indians of the States. They assert that Russia never took their lands in the sense that European nations seized the rest of America. The Court of Claims, however, saw no distinction between their use of the land and that of the Indians of the Eastern United States. See Tee-Hit-Ton Indians v. United States, 120 F.Supp. 202, 15 Alaska 1, 128 Ct.Cl. 82, 87. That court had no evidence that the Russian handling of the Indian land problem differed from ours. The natives were left the use of the great part of their vast hunting and fishing territory but what Russia wanted for its use and that of its licensees, it took. The court’s conclusion on this issue was based on strong evidence.

In considering the character of the Tee-Hit-Tons’ use of the land, the Court of Claims had before it the testimony of a single witness who was offered by plaintiff: He stated that he was the chief of the Tee-Hit-Ton tribe. He qualified as an expert on the Tlingits, a group composed of numerous interconnected tribes including the Tee-Hit-Tons. His testimony showed that the Tee-Hit-Tons had become greatly reduced in numbers. Membership descends only through the female line. At the present time there are only a few women of child bearing age and a total membership of some 65.

The witness pointed out that their claim of ownership was based on possession and use. The use that was made of the controverted area was for the location in winter of villages in sheltered spots and in summer along fishing streams and/or bays. The ownership was not individual but tribal. As the witness stated, “Any member of the tribe may use any portion of the land that he wishes, and as long as he uses it that is his for his own enjoyment, and is not to be trespassed upon by anybody else, but the minute he stops using it then any other member of the tribe can come in and use that area.”

*434When the Russians first came to the Tlingit territory, the most important of the chiefs moved the people to what is now the location of the town of Wrangell. Each tribe took a portion of Wrangell harbor and the chief gave permission to the Russians to build a house on the shore.

The witness learned the alleged boundaries of the Tee-Hit-Ton area from hunting and fishing with his uncle after his return from Carlisle Indian School about 1904. From the knowledge so obtained, he outlined in red on the map, which petitioner filed as an exhibit, the territory claimed by the Tee-Hit-Tons. Use by other tribal members is sketchily asserted. This is the same 350,000 acres claimed by the petition. On it he marked six places to show the Indians’ use of the land: (1) his great uncle was buried here, (2) a town, (3) his uncle’s house, (4) a town, (5) his mother’s house, (6) smokehouse. He also pointed out the uses of this tract for fishing salmon and for hunting beaver, deer and mink.

The testimony further shows that while membership in the tribe and therefore ownership in the common property descended only through the female line, the various tribes of the Tlingits allowed one another to use their lands. Before power boats, the Indians would put their shelters for hunting and fishing away from villages. With the power boats, they used them as living quarters.

In addition to this verbal testimony, exhibits were introduced by both sides as to the land use. These exhibits are secondary authorities but they bear out the general proposition that land claims among the Tlingits, and likewise of their smaller group, the Tee-Hit-Tons, was wholly tribal. It was more a claim of sovereignty than of ownership. The articles presented to the Court of Claims by those who have studied and written of the tribal groups agree with the above testimony. There were scattered shelters and villages moved from place to place as game or fish became scarce. There was recognition of tribal rights to hunt and *435fish on certain general areas, with claims to that effect carved on totem poles. From all that was presented, the Court of Claims concluded, and we agree, that the Tee-Hit-Tons were in a hunting and fishing stage of civilization, with shelters fitted to their environment, and claims to rights to use identified territory for these activities as well as the gathering of wild products of the earth.19 We think this evidence introduced by both sides confirms the Court of Claims’ conclusion that the petitioner’s use of its lands was like the use of the nomadic tribes of the States Indians.20

*436The line of cases adjudicating Indian rights on American soil leads to the conclusion that Indian occupancy, not specifically recognized as ownership by action authorized by Congress, may be extinguished by the Government without compensation.21 Every American schoolboy knows *437that the savage tribes of this continent were deprived of their ancestral ranges by force and that, even when the Indians ceded millions of acres by treaty in return for blankets, food and trinkets, it was not a sale but the conquerors’ will that deprived them of their land. The duty that rests on this Nation was adequately phrased by Mr. Justice Jackson in his concurrence, Mr. Justice Black joining, in Northwestern Bands of Shoshone Indians v. United States, 324 U.S. 335 at page 355, 65 S.Ct. 690, 700, 89 L.Ed. 985, a case that differentiated “recognized” from “unrecognized” Indian title, and held the former only compensable. Id., 3-24 U.S. at pages 339-340, 65 S.Ct. 692, 693. His words will be found at pages 354-358 of 324 U.S., at pages 699-701, of 65 S.Ct. He ends thus:

“We agree with Mr. Justice Reed that no legal rights are today to be recognized in the Shoshones by reason of this treaty. We agree with Mr. Justice Douglas and Mr. Justice Murphy as to their moral deserts. We do not mean to leave the impression that the two have any relation to each *438other. The finding that the treaty creates no legal obligations does not restrict Congress from such appropriations as its judgment dictates ‘for the health, education, and industrial advancement of said Indians’ which is the position in which Congress would find itself if we found that it did create legal obligations and tried to put a value on them.” Jd., 324 U.S. at page 358, 65 S.Ct. at page 701.

In the light of the history of Indian relations in this Nation, no other course would meet the problem of the growth of the United States except to make congressional contributions for Indian lands rather than to subject the Government to an obligation to pay the value when taken with interest to the date of payment. Our conclusion does not uphold harshness as against tenderness toward the Indians, but it leaves with Congress, where it belongs, the policy of Indian gratuities for the termination of Indian occupancy of Government-owned land rather than making compensation for its value a rigid constitutional principle.

The judgment of the Court of Claims is affirmed.

Affirmed.

Mr. Justice DOUGLAS,

with whom The CHIEF JUSTICE and Mr. Justice FRANKFURTER, concur, dissenting.

The first Organic Act for Alaska became a law on May 17, 1884, 23 Stat. 24. It contained a provision in § 8 which reads as follows:

“the Indians or other persons in said district shall not be disturbed in the possession of any lands actually in their use or occupation or now claimed by them but the terms under which such persons may acquire title to such lands is reserved for future legislation by Congress: And provided further, That parties who have located mines or mineral privileges therein under the laws of the United *439States applicable to the public domain, or who have occupied and improved or exercised acts of ownership over such claims, shall not be disturbed therein, but shall be allowed to perfect their title to such claims by payment as aforesaid”.

Section 12 provided for a report upon “the condition of the Indians residing in said Territory, what lands, if any, should be reserved for their use, what provision shall be made for their education [,] what rights by occupation of settlers should be recognized,” etc.

Respondent contends, and the Court apparently agrees, that this provision should be read, not as recognizing Indian title, but as reserving the question whether they have any rights in the land.

It is said that since § 8 contemplates the possible future acquisition of “title,” it expressly negates any idea that the Indians have any “title.” That is the argument; and that apparently is the conclusion of the Court.

There are, it seems to me, two answers to that proposition.

First. The first turns on the words of the Act. The general land laws of the United States were not made applicable to Alaska. § 8. No provision was made for opening up the lands to settlement, for clearing titles, for issuing patents, all as explained in Gruening, The State of Alaska (1954), p. 47 et seq. There were, however, at least two classes of claimants to Alaskan lands—one, the Indians; the other, those who had mining claims. Section 8 of the Act did not recognize the “title” of either. Rather, it provided that one group, the miners, should be allowed to “perfect their title”; while the others, the Indians, were to acquire “title” only as provided by future legislation. Obviously the word “title” was used in the conveyancer’s sense; and § 8 did service in opening the door to perfection of “title” in the case of miners, and in deferring the perfection of “title” in the case of the Indians.

*440Second. The second proposition turns on the legislative history of § 8. Section 8 of the Act commands that the Indians “shall not be disturbed in the possession of any lands actually in their use or occupation or now claimed by them”. The words “or now claimed by them” were added by an amendment offered during the debates by Senator Plumb of Kansas. 15 Cong.Rec. 627-628. Senator Benjamin Harrison, in accepting the amendment, said, “ * * * it was the intention of the committee to protect to the fullest extent all the rights of the Indians in Alaska and of any residents who had settled there, but at the same time to allow the development of the mineral resources. * * * ” Id.

Senator Plumb spoke somewhat humorously about the rights of the Indians:

“I do not know by what tenure the Indians are there nor what ordinarily characterizes their claim of title, but it will be observed that the language of the proviso I propose to amend puts them into very small quarters. I think about 2 feet by 6 to each Indian would be the proper construction of the language 'actually in their use of occupation.’ Under the general rule of occupation applied to an Indian by a white man, that would be a tolerably limited occupation and might possibly land them in the sea.” Id., at 530.

Senator Plumb went on to say, “I propose that the Indian shall at least have as many rights after the passage of this bill as he had before.” Id., at 531. Senator Harrison replied that it was the intention of the committee “to save from all possible invasion the rights of the Indian residents of Alaska.” Id., at 531. He gave emphasis to the point by this addition:

“It was the object of the committee absolutely to save the rights of all occupying Indians in that Territory until the report which is provided for in another section of the bill could be made, when the *441Secretary of the Interior could ascertain what their claims were and could definitely define any reservations that were necessary to be set apart for their use. We did not intend to allow any invasion of the Territory by which private rights could be acquired by any person except in so far as it was necessary in order to establish title to mining claims in the Territory. Believing that that would occupy but the smallest portion of the territory here and there, isolated and detached and small quantities of ground, we thought the reservation of lands occupied by the Indians or by anybody else was a sufficient guard against any serious invasion of their rights.” Id., at 531.

The conclusion seems clear that Congress in the 1884 Act recognized the claims of these Indians to their Alaskan lands. What those lands were was not known. Where they were located, what were their metes and bounds were also unknown. Senator Plumb thought they probably were small and restricted. But all agreed that the Indians were to keep them, wherever they lay. It must be remembered that the Congress was legislating about a Territory concerning which little was known. No report was available showing the nature and extent of any claims to the land. No Indian was present to point out his tribe’s domain. Therefore, Congress did the humane thing of saving to the Indians all rights claimed; it let them keep what they had prior to the new Act. The future course of action was made clear—conflicting claims would be reconciled and the Indian lands would be put into reservations.

That purpose is wholly at war with the one now attributed to the Congress of reserving for some future day the question whether the Indians were to have any rights to the land.*

*442There remains the question what kind of “title” the right of use and occupancy embraces. Some Indian rights concern fishing alone. See Tulee v. State of Washington, 315 U.S. 681, 62 S.Ct. 862, 86 L.Ed. 1115. Others may include only hunting or grazing or other limited uses. Whether the rights recognized in 1884 embraced rights to timber, litigated here, has not been determined by the finders of fact. The case should be remanded for those findings. It is sufficient now only to determine that under the jurisdictional Act the Court of Claims is empowered to entertain the complaint by reason of the recognition afforded the Indian rights by the Act of 1884.

2.1.7 United States v. Percheman 2.1.7 United States v. Percheman

The United States, appellants v. Juan Percheman, appellee.

Juan Percheman claimed two thousand acres of land lying in the territory of Florida, by virtue of a grant from the Spanish governor, made in 1815. His title consisted of a petition presented by himself to the governor of East Florida, praying for a grant of two thousand acres, at a designated place, in pursuance of the royal order of the 29th of March 1815, granting lands to the military who were in St Augustine during the invasion of 1812 and 1813; a decree by the governor, made 12th December 1815, in conformity to the petition, in absolute property, under the authority of the royal order, a certified copy of which decree and of the petition was directed to be issued to him from the secretary’s office, in order that it may be to him in all events an equivalent of a title in form; a petition to the governor, dated 31st December 1815, for an order of survey, and a certificate of a survey having been made on the 20th of August 1819 in obedience to the same. This claim was presented, according to law, to the register and receiver of East Florida, while acting as a board of commissioners to ascertain claims and titles to lands in East Florida. The claim was rejected by the board and the following entry made of the same. “In the memorial of the claimant to this board, he speaks of a survey made by authority in 1829. If this had been produced it would have furnished some support for the certificate of Aguilar. As it is, we reject the claim.” Held: that this was not a final action on the claim in the sense those words are used in the act of the 26th of May 1830, entitled “an act supplementary to,” &c.

Even in cases of conquest, it is very unusual for the conqueror to do more than to displace the sovereign and assume dominion over the country.

The modern usage of nations, which has become law, would be violated; that sense of justice and of right, which is acknowledged and felt by the whole civilized world, would be outraged; if private property should be generally confiscated, and private rights annulled on a change in the sovereignty of the country. The people change their allegiance, their relation to their ancient sovereign is dissolved; but their relations to each other, and their rights of property remain undisturbed.

Had Florida changed its sovereign by an act containing no stipulation respecting the property of individuals, the right of property in all those who became subjects or citizens of the new government would have been unaffected by the change. It would have remained the same as under the ancient sovereign.

The language of the second article of the treaty between the United States and Spain, of 22d February 1819, by which Florida was ceded to the United States, conforms to this general principle.

The eighth-article of the treaty must be intended to stipulate expressly for *52the security to private property, which the laws and usages of nations would, without express stipulation, have conferred. No construction which would impair that security, further than its positive words require, would seem to be admissible. Without it, the titles of individuals would remain as valid under the new government as they were under the old. And those titles, so far at least as they were consummated, might be asserted in the courts of the United States, independently of this article.

The treaty was drawn up in the Spanish as well as in the English languages. Both are original, and were unquestionably intended by the parties to be identical. The Spanish has been translated; and it is now understood that the article expressed in that language is, that the grants shall remain ratified and confirmed to the persons in possession of them, to the same extent,” &c. thus conforming exactly to the universally received law of nations.

If the English and Spanish part can, without violence, be made to agree, that construction which establishes this conformity ought to prevail.

No violence is done to the language of the treaty by a construction which conforms the English and Spanish to each other. Although the words shall be ratified and confirmed,” are properly words of contract, stipulating for some future legislation, they are not necessarily so. They may import that they shall be ratified and confirmed” by force of the instrument itself. When it is observed that in the counterpart of the same treaty, executed at the same time, by the same parties, they are used in this sense, the construction is proper, if not unavoidable.

In the case of Foster v. Elam, 2 Peters, 253, this court considered those words importing a contract. The Spanish part of the treaty was not then brought into view, and it was then supposed there was no variance between them. It was not supposed that there was even a formal difference of expression in the sane instrument, drawn up in the language of each party. Had this circumstance been known, it is believed it would have produced the construction which is now given to the article.

On the 8th of May 1822 an act was passed “for ascertaining claims and titles to land within the territory of Florida.” Congress did not design to submit the validity of titles, which were valid under the Spanish government, or by the law of nations,” to the determination of the commissioners acting under this law. It was necessary to ascertain these claims, and to ascertain their location, not to decide finally upon them. The powers to be exercised by the commissioners ought to be limited to the object and purpose of the act.

In all the acts passed upon this subject previous to May 1830, the decisions of the commissioners, or of the register and receiver acting as commissioners, have been confirmed. Whether these acts affirm those decisions by which claims are rejected, as well as those by which they are recommended for confirmation, admits of some doubt. Whether a rejection amounts to more than a refusal to recommend for confirmation, may be a subject of serious inquiry. However this may be, it can admit of no doubt that the decision of the commissioners was conclusive in no *53case until confirmed by an act of congress. The language of these acts, and among others that of the act of 1828, would indicate that the mind of congress was directed solely to the confirmation of claims, not to their annulment. The decision of this question is not necessary to this case.

The act of 26th May 1830, entitled “an act to provide for the final settlement of land claims in Florida,” contains the action of congress on the report of the commissioners of 14th January 1830, in which is the rejection of the claim of the petitioner in this case. The first, second and third sections of this act confirm the claims recommended for confirmation by the commissioners. The fourth section enacts “that all remaining claims, which have been presented according to law, and not finally acted upon, shall be adjudicated and finally settled upon the same conditions,” &c. It is apparent that no claim was finally acted upon until it had been acted upon by congress; and it is equally apparent that the action of congress in the report containing this claim, is confined to the confirmation of those titles which were recommended for confirmation. Congress has not passed upon those which were rejected. They were, of consequence, expressly submitted to the court.

From the testimony in the case, it does not appear that the governor of Florida, under whose grant the land is claimed by the petitioner, exceeded his authority in making the grant.

Papers translated from a foreign language, respecting the transactions of foreign officers, with whose powers and authorities the court are not well acquainted, containing uncertain and incomplete references to things well understood by the parties, but not understood by the court; should be carefully examined, before it pronounces that an officer holding a high place of trust and confidence, has exceeded his authority.

On general principles of law, a copy of a paper given by a public officer, whose duty it is to keep the originals, ought to be received in evidence.

APPEAL from the superior court for the eastern district of Florida.

On the 17th of September 1830, Juan Percheman filed in the clerk’s office of the superior court for the eastern district of Florida, a petition, setting forth his claim to a tract of land containing two thousand acres, within the district of East Florida, situated at a place called the Ockliwaha, along the margin of the river St John.

The petitioner stated that he derived his title to the said tract of land under a grant made to him on the 13th day of December 1815 by governor Estrada, then Spanish governor of East Florida, and whilst East Florida belonged to Spain.

The documents exhibiting the alleged title annexed to the petition were the following:

*54His excellency the governor: — Don Juan Percheman, ensign of the corps of dragoons of America, and stationed in this place, with due veneration and respect appears before your excellency and says, that in virtue of the bounty in lands, which, pursuant to his royal order of the 29th of March of the present year, the king grants to the military which were of this place in the time of the invasion which took place in the years 1812 and 1813, and your petitioner considering himself as being comprehended in the said sovereign resolution, as it is proved by the annexed certificates of his lordship brigadier don Sebastian Kindelan, and by that which your lordship thought proper to provide herewith, which certificates express the merits and services rendered by your petitioner at the time of the siege, in consequence of which said bounties were granted to those who deserved them, and which said certificates your petitioner, solicits from your goodness may be returned to him, for any other purposes which may be useful to your petitioner: therefore, he most respectfully supplicates your lordship to grant him two thousand acres of land, in the place called Ockliwaha, situated on the margins of St John’s river, which favour he doubts not to receive from your good heart and paternal dispositions. St Augustine, of Florida, 8th December 1815.

Juan Percheman.

St Augustine, of Florida, 12th December 1815. Whereas this officer, the party interested, by the two certificates inclosed, and which will be returned to him for the purposes which may be convenient to him, has proved the services which he rendered in the defence of this province, and in consideration also of what is provided in the royal order of the 29th March last past, which he cites, I do grant him the two thousand acres of land which he solicits, in absolute property, in the indicated place; to which effect let a certified copy of this petition and decree be issued to him from the secretary’s office, in order that it may be to him in all events an equivalent of a title in form.

Estrada.

Petition. His excellency the governor: — Don Juan Percheman, sergeant of the squadron of dragoons of America, stationed in this place, with due veneration and respect appears before your excellency, and says, that in virtue of the royal *55bounties in lands, granted by his majesty, by his royal order of the 29th of March of the present year, to the military individuals who were in this place aforesaid in the time of the invasion thereof, in the years 1812 and 1813, and your petitioner considering himself as included in the said royal resolution, as he proves it by the annexed certificates, exhibited with due solemnity, one of them from the brigadier Don Sebastian Kindelan, and the other with which your excellency thought proper to provide him, which certificates express the merits and services which he acquired and rendered in the time and epochs of the siege, in consequence of which the meritorious were thus rewarded, and which certificates your excellency will be pleased to return to your petitioner, for other purposes which may be useful to him, wherefore, your petitioner most respectfully supplicates your excellency to be pleased to grant him two thousand acres of land, in the place called Ockliwaha, situated on the margins of the river St John, which favour he doubts not to receive from the benevolent and charitable dispositions of your excellency. St Augustine, of Florida, on the 8th of December 1815.

Juan Percheman.

Decree. St Augustine, of Florida, on the 12th of December 1815. Whereas this officer interested proves by the two certificates annexed, and which will be returned to him for such purposes as may suit him, the services which he has rendered in the defence of this province, and also in consideration of the provisions of the royal order, under date of the 29th March last, which is referred to, I do grant to him, in absolute property, the two thousand acres of land, in the place which he indicates; for the attainment of which let a certified copy of this petition and decree be issued to him; which documents, will at all events serve him as a title in form.

Estrada.

I, Don Thomas de Aguilar, under-lieutenant of the army, and secretary for his majesty of the government of this place, and of the province thereof, do certify that the preceding copy is faithfully drawn from the original, which exists in the secretary’s office, under my charge; and in obedience to what is *56ordered, I give the present in St Augustine, of Florida, on the 12th of December 1815.

Tomas de Aguilar,

Petition for survey. His excellency the governor:— Don Juan Percheman, ensign of the corps of dragoons, and commandant of the detachment of the same, stationed in this place, with due respect represents to your excellency that this government having granted your petitioner two thousand acres of land in the place called Ockliwaha, on the margin of the river St John, he may be permitted to have the same surveyed by a competent surveyor, as soon and at any time your petitioner will find it convenient, which favour your petitioner hopes to receive from the high consideration of your excellency. St Augustine, of Florida, on the 31st December 1815.

Juan Percheman.

St Augustine, 31st December 1815. The preceding petition is granted.

Estrada.

I, Don Robert M’Hardy, an inhabitant of this province, and appointed surveyor by decree of this government, rendered on the 31st December 1815, in behalf of the interested party; do certify that I have surveyed for Don Juan Percheman, lieutenant of the Havana dragoons, a tract of land containing two thousand acres, situated on the south side of Ockliwaha, and is conformable in all its circumstances to the following plat. In testimony whereof, I sign the present in St Augustine, of Florida, on the 20th of August 1819.

Rt. M’Hardy. 

The petitioner proceeds to state that his claim to said tract of land so claimed by him was submitted to the examination of the board of commissioners appointed under and in virtue of an act of the congress of the United States of America, entitled “an act for ascertaining claims and titles to lands in the territory of Florida, and to provide for the survey and disposal of the public lands in Florida,” passed the 3d day of March 1823.

And that the land so claimed by him, and situated, as aforesaid, within the territory of Florida, and within the jurisdiction *57of this honourable court, as aforesaid, is embraced by the treaty between Spain and the United States of the 22d of February 1819; that his claim to said land has not been finally settled under the provisions of the act of the congress of the United States, entitled “an act supplementary to the several acts providing for the settlement and confirmation of private land claims in Florida,” passed the 23d day of May 1828, or of any of the acts, to which the said last recited act is supplementary; and that the claim of the petitioner to the said land has not been reported by the said commissioners appointed under any of the said acts of congress, or any other, or by the register and receiver acting as such, under the several acts of the congress of the United States in such case made and provided, as antedated or forged, and that the said claim hath not been annulled by the aforesaid treaty between Spain and the United States, nor by the decree ratifying the same.

Wherefore he prayed that the validity of his claim to said land may be inquired into, and decided upon by the court, and that, in pursuance of an act of congress for that purpose, in that case made and provided, the United States be made a party defendant to this petition, and that process, &c. &c.

On the 2d of October the attorney of the United States for the district of East Florida filed an answer to the petition of Juan Percheman, in which it is stated, that on the 28th of November 1823, he, the said Juan Percheman, sold, transferred and conveyed, to one Francis P. Sanchez, all his right, title and interest in the tract of land claimed by him; which, the answer asserted, appeared by a copy of the conveyance annexed to the action, and that he had not, at the time of the filing of his petition, any right, title or interest in the land. The answer admits that the claim of the said Francis P. Sanchez to the said tract of land was duly presented to the register and receiver of the district, while they were acting as a board of commissioners to ascertain titles to land in East Florida, and avers that the said claim was finally acted upon and rejected by the said register and receiver, while lawfully acting as aforesaid, as appears by a copy of their report thereon, annexed to the answer.

The United Slates further say that the tract of land claimed *58by the petitioner contains a less quantity than three thousand five hundred acres, to wit, but two thousand acres by the showing of the petitioner himself, and that the court has no jurisdiction in the case, nor can any court exercise jurisdiction over the claim against the United States.

The answer submits, that if the governor Estrada did make the grant or concession set forth by the petitioner at the time, “and in the manner alleged in the said petition or bill of complaint, he made it contrary to the laws, ordinances, and royal regulations of the government of Spain, which were then in force in East Florida, on the subject of granting lands, and without any power or authority to do so, and that the said grant was and is therefore null and void; and that the right and title to said tract of land, consequently, is vested in the said United States, as will more fully appear by reference to the laws, ordinances and royal regulations aforesaid.”

The proceedings of the register and receiver in the claim of Francis P. Sanchez, referred to in the answer, were as follows:

“This is a certificate of Thomas de Aguilar, that, in December 1815, Estrada granted Don Juan Percheman, cornet of squadron of dragoons, for services, two thousand acres of land, at a place called Ockliwaha, on the St John’s river. In 1819, Percheman sold to Sanchez. In the memorial of the claimant to this board, he speaks of a survey made by authority in 1819. If this had been produced it would have furnished some support to the certificate of Aguilar. As it is, we reject the claim.”

The petitioner, by an amended petition filed on the 14th of December 1830, stated that the register and receiver of the United States for East Florida, in their final report on the land claims, transmitted on the 12th December 1828 to the secretary of the treasury, reported the claim of the petitioner as rejected on the ground that the claim depended on a certificate only of Don Thomas Aguilar, notary of the Spanish government in East Florida; and he averred that his claim depended on an original grant or file in the office of the public archives of East Florida, a certified copy of which is filed with the petition in the court, dated 8th December 1815.

The amended petition also states that the sale made by him *59of the tract of land described in the original petition, was a conditional sale and no more.

It also states that the register and receiver further reported that the survey of the tract of land, made by the authority of the Spanish government, was not produced to them: but the petitioner avers the contrary, for that the survey was filed with the claim and was before them when they examined the same, for the truth of which averment a certificate from the keeper of the office of archives was filed with the amended petition.

On the hearing of the case before the supreme court for the district of East Florida, the claimant, by his counsel, offered in evidence a copy from the office of the keeper of public archives of the original grant on which this claim is founded; to the receiving of which in evidence the said attorney for the United States objected, alleging that the original grant itself should be produced, and its execution proved, before it could be admitted in evidence, and that the original only could be received in evidence: which objection, after argument from the counsel, was overruled by the court, and the copy from the office of the keeper of the public archives, certified according to law, was ordered to be received in evidence. And the court further ordered, that though by the express statute of this territory, copies are to be received in evidence, yet, in cases where either the claimant or the United States shall suggest that the original in the office of the keeper of the public archives is deemed necessary to be produced in court, on motion therefor, a subpoena will be issued by order of the court to the said keeper, to appear and produce the said original in court, for due examination there.

The court proceeded to a decree in the case, and adjudged that the claim of the petitioner as presented was within its jurisdiction — “that the grant is valid, that it ought to be, and by virtue of the statute of the 26th of May 1830, and of the late treaty between the United States and Spain, it is confirmed.”

The United States appealed to this court.

The case was argued by Mr Taney, attorney-general, for the United States; and by Mr White, for the appellee.

*60For the United States it was contended:

1. That the copy of the grant and other proceedings produced by the petitioner, were not admissible in evidence, but the original papers ought to have been produced.

2. That the court had not jurisdiction of the case under the act of congress of May 26, 1830; the claim in question having been finally acted upon and rejected by the register and receiver.

3. If the court had jurisdiction of the claim, the suit could be maintained only by Francis P. Sanchez, to whom Percheman had conveyed his interest; and the court erred in confirming and decreeing the land to Percheman.

4. That if these points are against the United States, the authority exercised by the Spanish governor in making the grant to the appellee, was not within the royal order of the king of Spain.

As to the first point, the admissibility in evidence of certified copies of the grant and other proceedings, the attorney-general cited the act of congress of May 26, 1824, sect. 4, of May 23, 1828, and the Laws of Florida of July 3, 1823, sect. 4.

As to the second point, that the court had not jurisdiction of the case under the act of May 26, 1830, the claim having been finally acted upon and rejected; he cited the fourth section of that law. The acts of congress made the decision of the commissioners, and afterwards of the register and receiver, final in all cases, under three thousand five hundred acres. For the correctness of this position he referred to the various provisions of the laws on the subject of the claims to lands in Florida, which are found in the first, fourth, fifth and sixth sections of the act of May 8, 1822; the second section of the act of March 3, 1823; the fourth and fifth sections of the act of February 8, 1827; and the fourth and sixth sections of the act of May 23, 1828. The language and provisions of all these laws, he contended, sustain the position that the decision of the register and receiver upon the claim of the appellee was final, as his claim was within three thousand five hundred acres.

The act of congress of May 26, 1824 gave jurisdiction to decide on all claims to lands in Missouri. In Arkansas the jurisdiction was confined to claims not exceeding one league *61square. No argument can therefore be drawn in favour of the jurisdiction in Florida from that given in Missouri.

The restrictive words in the act of 1828 are not in the act of 1824; and their introduction shows that the legislature, warned by experience, did not mean to give the same jurisdiction which it had given before.

Nor did the act of 26th May 1830 mean to extend the jurisdiction beyond that given by the law of 1828. It uses strong words of restriction. It refers to the jurisdiction given by the law of 1828, and not that given by the act of 1824.

It is said, that the act of 1830, section 4, would be nugatory according to this construction. If that were the case, it would not alter the plain meaning of the words.

The legislature intended to provide for any cases which, in the various legislation on that subject, might, by possibility, be found not to have been finally acted on, and to supersede the necessity of further legislation. The fact that no such case existed, and that there is nothing for it to operate on, and that there were no cases brought to the view of the legislature for which this section provides, cannot affect its construction.

Congress meant to provide for any unforeseen contingency, and any cases unknown or overlooked, which had not been finally acted on.

As to the third point, that if the court had jurisdiction, the claim could only be maintained by Francis P. Sanchez, it was argued, that the provisions of the act of 1824 required that the party having title must file the petition: the language of the section which gives the power to the commissioners to decide is, “to hear and determine all questions relative to the title of the claimants.” Thus, the title under which a claimant presents himself must be exhibited, and the decision of the commissioners, and afterwards of the register and receiver, must be upon the title. The conveyance of the appellee to Sanchez was absolute; it gave him all the title and rights derived from the grant of the Spanish governor; it made him the legal owner of the tract of land described in the grant; and thus by him only, or by those holding under him, could a petition be presented under the provisions of the act of congress.

The petition of the appellee was a suit in chancery against *62the United States, by a person who claims the title against every one else, and he must show his title, and establish it as a complete title, before he can be relieved. Cited, act of congress of 1824, sect. 6; act of 1830, sect. 4. How can land be decreed to one in a court of chancery, when it appears to the court that he is not entitled to it, and that another is the owner of it?

To sustain the position that governor Estrada was not authorized by the royal order of the king of Spain to make the grant to the appellee, it was argued, that the powers of the governor did not extend to the issuing of grants for so large a tract of lands as that claimed by the petitioner in this case. The royal order of March 29, 1815, White’s Collection of Land Laws, 248; the letter of governor Kenderland to the captain-general of Cuba, White’s Collection of Land Laws, 247, were cited. Also, The United States v. Arredondo, 6 Peters, 727, 728.

Mr White, for the appellee.

The appellee, who was petitioner in the court below, obtained a decree of confirmation to his claim of two thousand arpens of land in East Florida.

From that decree the United States have appealed, and the grounds upon which that appeal was taken, have been explained by the attorney-general. This case is one of great importance, because it involves a principle common to a number of others, and more especially because it concerns the honour and good faith of the government of the United States. The title set up by the petitioner, an officer in the service of the king of Spain, is admitted to be genuine.

It was made by the governor of East Florida, in pursuance of a royal order promulgated in 1815.

It was made to one of the officers, specially designated as a person intended to be benefited by the royal bounty which dictated the ordinance. The grant was made as a remuneration for services rendered by the claimant to the province at a time of great peril, occasioned by external invasion and internal insurrection. The grant was made prior to the limitation contained in the treaty, and was presented to the commissioners *63appointed to ascertain claims and titles to land in East Florida. Upon this state of the facts presented on the record, three points will be submitted on the part of the appellee to the consideration of the court, and relied upon in support of the decree of the court below.

1. This title was confirmed by the treaty of the 22d of February 1819.

2. It is not competent for congress to pass any law authorizing any tribunal created under its authority to invalidate such a title.

3. By the act of 1830 this court has jurisdiction of the case. The first point involves the construction of the treaty. Whether is the eighth article executory or executed? This requires an examination into the article itself, and the negotiations which led to it.

By the treaty of the 22d of February 1819, Spain ceded the Floridas to the United States.

The latter acquired these provinces and their appendages in full sovereignty, including all public grounds and edifices, and all vacant lands which were not private property. Article 2d.

It was stipulated between the high contracting parties that all grants made by his catholic majesty, or his lawful authorities, before the 24th of January 1818, in the ceded territory, should remain confirmed and acknowledged, in the same manner as they would have been if the provinces had continued under the dominion of his catholic majesty. Article 8th. Further time was given to proprietors who had been prevented from fulfilling the conditions of their grants by the recent circumstances of the Spanish monarchy, and the revolutions in Europe.

The inhabitants of the ceded territory were protected in all their rights, and became citizens of the United States. Articles 5th and 6th.

Congress has, from time to time, adopted various legislative provisions for the purpose of preserving the national faith, separating private property from the public domain, and securing the individual titles intended to be protected by the treaty.

Commissioners were appointed to examine land claims, with authority to confirm grants not exceeding a certain size, and *64to report those above that limit to congress. When these commissions were dissolved, similar powers were vested in the register and receiver of the land offices. In some instances, an option was given to the holders of certain grants to select a league square within their respective concessions, upon condition of surrendering the residue by deed to the United States. Through these and other means, the titles of the smaller proprietors have, for the most part, been definitively adjusted, and the larger claims alone remain for settlement. These, congress, by act of 23d May 1828, authorized the courts of the territory to hear and determine, with an appeal to the supreme court of the United States. Several cases have been adjudicated in the courts below. Decisions have been pronounced, not easily reconcilable, if not at total variance with each other: appeals have been taken, and the questions discussed are now before this court, whose judgment is deeply interesting, not merely to the parties on the record, but to the numerous other suitors whose rights, or supposed rights, depend on similar principles.

One or two considerations of a general nature may here, it is presumed, be not inappropriately introduced. Those who represent the interests of the United States in some of the cases before the court, have thought proper to assume, as one ground of defence, that the confirmation or rejection of these titles is matter essentially of executive or legislative cognizance, and addresses itself exclusively to their discretion. The question they urge is a political, not a judicial one, and is equally unfit to be submitted to, and incapable of being decided by a court. Waiving all considerations of the hardship and mockery of referring claimants under a treaty to a tribunal incompetent to afford them redress—forbearing to touch on the indecorum of a construction which attributes to congress an act of futile or deceptive legislation—it will be enough to say that this interpretation, it is believed, has been once considered and rejected. Soulard’s case, 4 Peters, 511.

The argument, indeed, amounts to little more than this—we have bound ourselves to do what Spain would have done. What that is, we know not: and having referred the question to those who cannot decide it, we will therefore do nothing. *65Perfidy often wears the mask of subtlety, as well from shame as cowardice: but it is seldom that the counsellors of bad aith, if they condescend to argue at all, are satisfied with a defence so feeble.

The act of congress requires the court to examine and decide upon these claims in conformity with the law of nations, the treaty, and the laws of Spain.

It is proposed to consider the subject in reference to each of these several rules of decision.

1. The law of nations.

It is conceived that, according to the mitigated rights of war, as now well understood and settled by international law, the lands of individuals are safe even after conquest, Vattel, b. 3, c. 13, sect. 200: much less can a cession, of itself, destroy private rights. Absolute or perfect grants, it is believed, would be protected by the law of nations, independent of the treaty. Some legislative recognition of their validity might indeed be necessary to sustain a suit upon them in our courts, but the national obligation to respect them could hardly be denied. It is in behalf of concessions or inchoate grants that the stipulations of the treaty were most requisite and important. To the acts of the Spanish government in this respect, not merely the authority of res adjudicata, such as belongs to all foreign sentences and decrees, was given by the treaty; its effect was to make binding on us, all that would have been valid against Spain; and to oblige us to complete whatever she, in good faith, had begun, but left unfinished.

A detailed examination of the maxims of customary international law, as they would bear upon the rights of proprietors of land in Florida, is not called for in the presence of an express treaty stipulation; and, in referring to the law of nations as a rule of decision for the courts, congress perhaps had more expressly in view such part of it as relates to the interpretation of treaties. This will be more conveniently considered under another head.

2. The treaty.

This instrument, it is contended, should be most liberally construed. Its interpretation is to be sought in the motives and policy of the parties; in their words, and in their acts. *66The leading objects of the United States were, to procure a more convenient and secure frontier; to command the Gulf of Mexico, the outlet of a large portion of their commerce; to obtain indemnity for their merchants, and to secure themselves against the annoyance they must naturally expect from Florida, in the hands of an enemy, or a false or feeble neutral. It is notorious that for more than a century this territory had been a constant source of injury, jealousy, and vexation to the adjoining colonies and states. The colony of Georgia was founded as a barrier against the encroachments of the Spaniards; and the refuge and encouragement afforded by the latter to absconding slaves, hostile Indians, and other incendiaries, was a continued cause of complaint, from the settlement of Carolina to the Seminole campaign. In examining the interests and duties of the United States in connexion with this subject, it is not as landed proprietors alone that we must regard them. The rage for new settlements, indeed, makes this the chief point among the people, and greatly increases the prejudices against the large grants; but the court is far above the contagion of their example.

To consider the cession of Florida merely as a land-jobbing transaction, would be doing great injustice to the liberal and enlightened policy which sought this valuable acquisition, with steady calmness, through so long a course of evasion and delay. Yet its value even in that point of view is not unworthy of notice. Thirty-five millions and a half of acres, of which up to the 30th of June 1828, but little more than a million and a half had been granted or sold, (Reports of Committees, H. R. No. 95, 2d session 20th congress), will surely, after making a most liberal allowance for the satisfaction of unsettled land claims, more than refund to us the five millions paid to our own merchants. Computing but thirty millions at the minimum price to which it is proposed to reduce the refuse lands, the United States will receive back their principal from the soil, and obtain the sovereignty for nothing.

It is admitted that, in the cession of a province, the disposition of the inhabitants and their effects is a question of policy between the parties. To divest them of their rights of property is, however, in modern times, an unheard of cruelty. Usually *67the option is allowed them of becoming subjects of the new government, or of selling their estates, and removing within a specified period. Such were the terms of cession of this very province from Spain to Britain in 1763; and from Britain to Spain twenty years afterwards. It will be borne in mind by the court that population rather than land is the want of the United States; that their policy as to naturalization is as liberal as that which the wisest modern philosopher has praised in the greatest of the ancient republics; and that sovereignty, not soil, was the great motive for the acquisition.

Our government, it may safely be affirmed, neither contemplated the expulsion of the ancient inhabitants, nor any injury to their property. The terms held out in the treaty ceding Louisiana, as well as that by which Florida was acquired, show that the United States never intended to grasp a barren sceptre, and wave it over a dispeopled territory. The inhabitants were made citizens. The province was to become a state. Can it be imagined that any rational government would act so unwisely, as to receive into their society a large body of foreigners, endow them with civil rights and political power; and, after rendering them disaffected, by stripping them of their property; leave to these malcontents the protection of an extensive, important, and exposed frontier?

Many of the motives which must have operated on Spain are equally obvious. She naturally wished to extinguish demands, the justice of which had been admitted, while their satisfaction had been evaded until all the arts of procrastination were exhausted. She might desire to get rid of a useless and expensive appendage; and she must have foreseen that it would probably be wrested from her as an indemnity, if she trifled much longer with our patience. But, in yielding up the inhabitants with the territory, she would naturally stipulate most favourably for the people she was about to surrender. She did not intend to sacrifice them. Their fidelity to her in every vicissitude; the temptations by which they had been assailed; the invasions to which they had been exposed; their sufferings, their constancy, their very helplessness, all pleaded powerfully in their favour.

In the eighth article, two parties were stipulating for the. *68security and advantage of a third, whom both had the strongest reasons to cherish and protect. It is submitted, therefore, with some degree of confidence, that, so far as the motives and policy of the parties afford a key to the meaning of their words, the construction most favourable to the claimants is permitted, to, nay, is enjoined upon the court.

Before proceeding to examine the language of the treaty, a few observations on the rules of interpretation may, perhaps, be pardoned. Jurists generally admit that all grants, contracts, and stipulations are to be taken most strongly against the grantor. Cooper’s Justinian, in note, 601. The words of the party promising are to be regarded rather than those of the party to whom the promise is made. Vattel, b. 2, c. 17, sec. 267. Other general rules are to be found in the works of the most esteemed publicists, and must be familiar to the court. Grotius, b. 2, ch. 16, p. 136. Vattel, b. 2, ch. 17, sec. 270. Among the rest, that interpretation which is drawn from the reason of the act is strongly and safely recommended. Vattel, b. 2, c. 17, sec. 287. A special rule of construction has, moreover, been deduced from the character of the stipulation itself. Hence the distinction between things favourable and things odious—a distinction recognized by Grotius and Vattel. Grotius, b. 2, ch. 16, sec. 10, p. 148. Vattel, b. 2, ch. 17, sec. 300, 301, 303. The difference between the former, and mere acts of liberality prejudicial to the sovereign, is illustrated by the last named author, (Vattel, b. 2, ch. 17,. sec. 310), in such a manner as leaves no doubt to which class the provisions of the eighth article belong.

What, indeed, can be more clearly entitled to rank among things favourable than engagements between nations securing the private property of faithful subjects, honestly acquired under a government which is on the eve of relinquishing their allegiance, and confided to the pledged protection of that country which is about to receive them as citizens?

This brings us to the words of the treaty. There is a difference between the English and the Spanish versions of the eighth article. Both are equally originals, but surely the justice and liberality of the United States will extend to the claimants the full benefit of either. The first difference is in render*69ing “concesiones de terrenos” as “grants of land.” Concesiones, it is apprehended, is a term much broader than grants, and comprehends all which we, in the technical language of our land laws, might call entries or warrants of survey or location. The substitution of lawful, in the English, for legítimos, in the Spanish, will be commented on in another place. The residue of the clause, that those grants shall be ratified and confirmed to the persons in possession of the lands, to the same extent that the same grants would be valid, &c. is by no means equivalent to the Spanish phraseology. The latter, fairly rendered, is to this effect: “All concessions of lands made by his catholic majesty, or by his legitimate authorities, before the 24th January 1818, in the aforesaid territories, which his majesty cedes to the United States, shall remain confirmed and acknowledged to the persons in possession of them (i.e. the concessions), in the same manner that they would have been if the dominion of his catholic majesty over these territories had continued.”

The difference between declaring that these grants shall be ratified and confirmed to the persons in possession of the lands, to the same extent that the same grants would have been valid, &c., and saying that all concessions of land shall remain confirmed and acknowledged to the persons in possession of them (i.e. the title papers), in the same manner that they would have been, &c., is sufficiently obvious and important. The sense is materially different. The English side of the treaty leaves the ratification of the grants executory—they shall be ratified; the Spanish, executed—they shall continue acknowledged and confirmed, quedaran ratificados. Quedan signifies remain or continue, and in this sense is used in the last clause of the same articlequedan anuladas y de ningún valor, remain null and of no effect. In the English, possession refers to the lands; in the Spanish, to the grants. The relative ellas agrees with the antecedent concesiones; if it referred to terrenos, the relative would have been ellos. No word equivalent to recent is to be found in the Spanish.

It has been supposed, with little reason, that the eighth article might be interpreted to confer a discretion, rather than impose an obligation on the American government. It is one of the admitted rules of construction, that interpretations which *70lead to an absurdity, or render an act null, are to be avoided. Vattel, b. 2, ch. 17, sec. 282, 304.

The king of Spain can annul a grant made by himself without any allegation of surprise or fraud, simply in virtue of his absolute will and sovereign power. It is too late for us to deny that position; we have recognized it by the treaty. The grants to Alagon, Vargas, and Punon Rostro, were annulled. By the treaty we succeed to all the rights of Spain: the concessions made by Spain are to continue valid to the same extent, &c.: but will it be asserted that, in succeeding to the rights of Spain, we succeed to the right of his catholic majesty to annul the grants of his subjects? Can it be pretended that the provisions of the eighth article were designed only to leave all grants, perfect and inchoate, as completely at the mercy of the American government as they had been at that of the Spanish monarch?

In attempting to ascertain the true meaning of the parties, it is humbly conceived we are not confined to the language of the treaty. We may look into the negotiations which preceded it. In this instance, there is a particular propriety in doing so. “As the instrument of ratification, an essential part of the whole treaty refers to the history of the negotiation: it lets in the whole of that history, as matter to be adverted to, according to all the strictness of legal argument, in reasoning on the construction of the claim in question. The matter is thus made capable of being argued as if the question were upon an act of parliament, or private deed reciting the circumstances under which it was obtained. One might, therefore, rest, as elucidating the case, upon all the authorities which establish, with respect to private and diplomatic instruments, that, however general and comprehensive particular expressions may be, they ought, in their effect, to be confined to the particular object the parties had in view. The reports of the court of chancery in England contain a variety of instances as to the restriction of deeds, however widely expressed, to the particular object of the parties, founded on a review of the circumstances under which they were made. (Vide Cholmondly and Clinton.) It is also observed by Vattel (268), that we are to interpret a clause in the utmost latitude that the strict *71and appropriate meaning of the words will admit of, if it appears that the author had in view every thing which that strict and appropriate meaning comprehends but we must interpret it in a more limited sense when it appears probable that the author did not mean it to extend to every thing which the strict propriety of the terms might be made to include.” MS. Opinion of sir John Joseph Dillon on Rattenbury’s grant.

A short sketch of the negotiations, with some brief extracts and references, will therefore be submitted. In January 1818 the government of the United States proposed to the Chevalier de Onis to terminate all differences in the following terms

1. Spain to cede all territory eastward of the Mississippi.

2. The eastern boundary to be the Colorado.

3. Claims for indemnities to be referred to commissioners.

4. The lands in East Florida, and to the Perdido, to be held as security for the indemnities; but no grant subsequent to August 11, 1802, to be considered valid.

5. Spain to be released from the payment of the debts. Lyman’s Diplomacy U. States, vol. 2, p. 133.

On the 24th October 1818, Don Luis de Onis proposes to cede the Floridas: “the donations or sales of land made by the government of his majesty, or by legal authorities, until this time, are nevertheless to be valid.” 1 Executive Papers, 1st sess. 16th cong. 1819, 1820, doc. 2, p, 25.

The secretary of state replies, October 31, 1818, “neither can the United States recognize as valid all the grants of land until this time, and at the, same time renounce all their claims for indemnity.” He adverts to the notice given to the government of Spain, that all the grants lately made within those territories (i. e. to Alagon, Vargas, &c.) must be cancelled, unless some other adequate fund should be provided to satisfy the claims of the United States and their citizens. 1 Executive Papers, 1st sess. 16th cong. 1819, 1820, doc. 2, p. 25.

De Onis rejoins, 10th November 1818, “my second proposal has been admitted by your government, with this modification, that all grants and sales of land made by his catholic majesty, or by lawful Spanish authorities in the Floridas, from the year 1802 to the present, shall be null and void. To this modification, in its absolute sense, I cannot assent, in as much *72as it is offensive to the dignity and imprescriptible rights of the crown of Spain; which, as the legitimate owner of both the Floridas, had a right to dispose of those lands as it pleased: and, further, as the said modification would be productive of incalculable injury to the bona fide possessors, who have acquired, settled, and improved those tracts of land.” 

“The extent of what I can agree to is, that the late grants made by his catholic majesty in the Floridas since the 24th of January last, the date of my first note, announcing his majesty’s willingness to cede them to the United States (the said grants having been made with a view to promote population, cultivation and industry; and not with that of alienating them), shall be declared null and void, in consideration of the grantees not having complied with the essential condition of the cession, as has been the fact.” 1 Ex. Papers, 1st sess. 16th cong. doc. 2, p. 26.

On the 9th of February 1819, the minister of Spain submitted his project of a treaty. The ninth article, answering to the eighth of the present treaty, is as follows:

“All grants of lands made by his catholic majesty, or his legitimate authorities, in the aforesaid territories of the two Floridas, and others which his majesty cedes to the United States, shall be confirmed and acknowledged as valid, excepting those grants which may have been made after the 24th of January of last year, the date that the first proposals were made for the cession of those provinces, which shall be held null, in consideration of the grantees not having complied with the conditions of the cession.” 1 Ex. Papers, 1st sess. 16th cong. doc. 2, p, 37.

On the 13th of February 1819, the American secretary offered his counter project, in which the eighth article proposed stands thus:

“All grants of land made by or in the name of his catholic majesty in the aforesaid territories, after the 24th of January 1818, shall be held null, the conditions of the said grants not having been performed by the grantees. All grants made before that date by his catholic majesty, or by his legitimate authorities in the said territories, the conditions of which shall have been performed by the grantees according to the tenor of *73their respective grants, and none other, shall be confirmed and acknowledged as valid.” 1 Ex. Panel’s, 1st sess. 16th cong. doc. 2, p. 43.

In the minute or protocol of conferences preserved by M. Hyde de Neuville, whose good offices were interposed on this occasion, the following entry will be found:

“Article eighth. This article cannot be varied from what is contained in the chevalier’s project, as the object of the last clause therein is merely to save the honour and dignity of the sovereignty of his catholic majesty.

“Note of Mr Adams thereon. Agreed, with the following explanation: that all grants of land which shall not be annulled by this convention are valid to the same extent as they are binding on his catholic majesty.

“Remarks of M. De Neuville. The secretary of state observed to me, that the federal government would, most assuredly, never entertain the idea of disturbing individuals who were vested with a bona fide title to their property; but, as a treaty ought not to cover fraudulent practices, so no more could be asked of the United States than could be offered by his catholic majesty that, being in this case substituted for his majesty, they would scrupulously fulfil their engagements, but that more could not be expected of them.

“The secretary of state even proposes, if M. De Onis wishes it, that the article shall be inserted in the treaty as proposed by the minister of Spain, on condition that the above explanation shall be given in the form of a note. The federal government, unwilling to leave any thing in a state of doubt or uncertainty, only wish to place on the most secure footing whatever is just and honourable, and is at the same time perfectly satisfied that his catholic majesty neither asks nor wishes more.” 1 Ex. Papers, 1st sess, 16th cong. doc. 2, p. 48.

The eighth article was finally inserted as it at present stands; but doubts arising whether the recent large grants were effectually excluded by the words of the treaty, Mr Adams writes to the Chevalier De Onis on the 10th March 1818, that it was distinctly understood that the grants to Alagon, Vargas and Puhon Rostro, were all annulled by the treaty, as much as if they had been specifically named, and that they will be so *74held by the United States. 1 Ex. Papers, 1st sess. 16th cong. doc. 2, p. 63.

Mr Adams, on the 14th July 1819, submits to M. De Neuville the following observations on the eighth article: “M. De Neuville’s particular attention is requested to the difference between the two projected articles, because it will recall particularly to his remembrance the point upon which the discussion concerning this article turned. By turning to the written memorandum, drawn up by M. De Neuville himself, of this discussion, he will perceive he has noted that M. De Onis insisted that this article could not be varied from what was contained in the chevalier’s project, as the object of the last clause therein was merely to save the honour and dignity of the sovereignty of his catholic majesty.”

It was then observed by Mr Adams, that the honour and dignity of his catholic majesty would be saved by recognizing the grants prior to the 24th of January, as “valid to the same extent as they were binding on his catholic majesty and he agreed to accept the article as drawn by M. De Onis, with this explanation. (See M. De Neuville’s memorandum.) It was on this occasion that M. De Neuville observed, that, if the grants prior to January 24, 1818, were confirmed only to the same extent that they were binding on the king of Spain, there were many bona fide grantees, of long standing, in actual possession of their grants, and having actually made partial settlements upon them, but who had been prevented by the extraordinary circumstances in which Spain had been situated, and the revolutions in Europe, from fulfilling all the conditions of their grants; that it would be very harsh to leave these persons liable to a forfeiture, which might indeed, in rigour, be exacted from them, but which very certainly never would be, if they had remained under the Spanish dominion. It will be remembered by M. De Neuville how earnestly he insisted upon this equitable suggestion, and how strongly he disclaimed for M. De Onis every wish or intention to cover, by a provision for such persons, any fraudulent grants. And it was then observed by M. De Neuville, that the date assumed, of 24th of January 1818, was not sufficient for guarding against fraudulent grants, because they might be easily antedated. It was with refer*75ence to these suggestions of M. De Neuville, afterwards again strenuously urged by M. De Onis, that the article was finally modified as it now stands in the treaty, declaring all grants subsequent to 24th January 1818, absolutely null, and those of prior date valid to the same extent only that they would have been binding on the king; but allowing to bona fide grantees, in actual possession, and having commenced settlements, but who had been prevented by the late circumstances of the Spanish nation, and the revolutions in Europe, from fulfilling all the conditions of their grants, time to complete them. The terms of the article accord precisely with the intentions of all the parties to the negotiation, and the signature of the treaty. If the dates of the grants are subsequent to the 24th of January 1818, they are annulled by the date; if prior to that date, they are null, because not included among the prior grants confirmed. 1 Ex. Papers, 1st sess. 16th cong. pp. 68, 69.

From all these documents, the clear inference is, that the great subject of anxiety with our negotiator was the large grants to Alagon, Vargas, and Punon Rostro. It was against them almost alone that the article was directed. The American government, indeed, at one time, proposed to carry the date back to 1802, by which means they would have excluded the claims of Forbes, Arredondo, and others, with whose existence there is every reason to believe they were perfectly well acquainted. But this pretension was speedily abandoned. If there appeared a distinct declaration on the part of the American government that the sole object of the eighth article was to exclude the grants to Alagon, Punon Rostro, and Vargas, such declaration, it is apprehended, would be conclusive. It could no longer be deemed just or honourable to apply the question ordinary and extraordinary to other grants, dated before the 24th January 1818, with a view of extorting from them by legal subtlety something which should debar their proprietors the benefits of that very article which was framed solely to admit them, and to exclude others. Yet, it is respectfully submitted, that no express admission of the fact could be stronger than the implication arising from this correspondence. If, however, an explicit avowal on the part of our government will alone be received, we refer to the message of the president to congress, in which *76he tells that body, “it was the intention of the parties to annul these latter grants, and that clause was drawn for that express purpose, and none other.” 1 Ex. Papers, 1st sess. 16th cong. 1819, 1820, doc. 2, p. 5.

May we not ask whether this is the sole purpose to which it is now sought to be applied, and how far it is consistent with justice and good faith to extend the effect of the clause in question beyond what either of the parties contemplated at the time of its adoption?

The application of the common law principle, that a grant may be absolutely void where the officer issuing it had no authority, is insisted on: and it is asserted that the royal governors of the Spanish colonies had no power to make sales or donations of the public lands, except in very limited quantities and under numerous restrictions. An inquiry into the truth of this assertion will be attempted, according to the limited means within our power; and the more readily because of the intimations thrown out by this court in the cases of Soulard and Smith. 4 Peters’s Reports.

Every fair presumption is against these supposed limitations. Legal or constitutional restrictions upon the power of the king or his officers, according to our ideas of them, are inconsistent with the character of the Spanish monarchy. They are hardly comprehensible by a native of that country, and have been rejected, together with the constitutional monarchy, by the people of Spain. How is it possible to reconcile limitations of power with the fundamental maxim, “the will of the prince has the force of a law?”

Portions of the royal authority, as arbitrary as that of the king himself, were entrusted to the several governors of provinces, each of whom, within the limits of his own government, was the image of his sovereign, and, in practice at least, and in popular opinion also, absolute. The only restraints upon his acts were his instructions, and accountability to the king; but the royal instructions, and the residencia, or account of his transactions, which the governor was obliged to give, were not properly legal limitations upon his power, but rather directions for the exercise of his discretion, and securities for his good behaviour.

*77Every nation has its own manner of securing the fidelity of its agents. Free governments are constructed upon the principle of entrusting as little power as possible, and providing against its abuse preventively by all species of checks and limitations. Arbitrary ones proceed upon the principle of bestowing ample powers and extensive discretion, and guarding against their abuse by prompt and strict accountability and severe punishment. Both have been invented by mankind for purposes of mutual defence and common justice, but the pervading spirit of the one is preventive, of the other vindicatory.

How absurd would it be, then, to apply the maxims of the one government to the acts of the other. As well might we judge the life of Pythagoras by the law of the New Testament, or the philosophy of Zoroaster by that of Newton; as subject the administration of a Spanish governor to the test of magna charta, the bill of rights, the habeas corpus act, or the principles of American constitutional law.

Even the laws of the Indies, obscure, perplexed, and sometimes even unintelligible as they are, hardly reached across the ocean; and the decline of the Spanish, like that of the Roman empire, was marked by the absolutism of the distant prefects.

Nor were the offices of captain general, intendant or sub-delegate, sinecures. Entrusted with the command and defence of remote and exposed possessions; often reduced to the greatest extremities, for the want of money and supplies; neglected by the feeble government of the mother country, they were yet expected to guard the colony, and execute the most rigorous system of monopoly, amid greedy neighbours and an impoverished people. They were frequently obliged to create their own resources; and some idea of their difficulties, and the devotion and address which surmounted them, may be formed by remembering how long the able but cruel Morilla protracted a desperate warfare, amid every species of distress and destitution.

Their first duty was to preserve his catholic majesty’s province, committed to their care; and if they did it, and could only do it by some invasions of the fisc, or dilapidations of the royal domain; does it lie with us to complain of their fidelity to *78him, and vitiate those titles which were devised from a law above all others—necessity? Vide White’s Land Laws, 235; 7 Ex. Doc. p. 2, 1824, 1825. Also, MS. Extracts from Col. M’Kee’s Correspondence. See also the letter of Gov. Chester to the Earl of Dartmouth, MS. Letter Book, West Florida, 18th Nov. 1775, p. 34.

This general outline of the treaty, the negotiations which led to it, the objects of the contracting parties, cannot fail to be considered by the court in the adjudication of every case presented to it. If it be considered, as it has been proved and admitted in part in another case decided at the last term, that the treaty itself operated as a confirmation of every legitimate and valid title which “emanated from his catholic majesty, or his lawful authorities prior to the 24th of January 1818;” it only remains to be shown that this was such a title.

Juan Percheman was an officer in the Spanish service at the period of the invasion of that province in 1812, 1813. He was referred to by name in the royal despatch, and this grant was made in absolute property to him as a remuneration for his services.

How is it attempted by the government agents to defeat so just and equitable a claim? The first ground taken is, that “the copy of the grant is not admissible evidence; but the original ought to have been produced and proved.”

This involves the question, what is a copy, and what an original, under the Spanish government; as defined by the Spanish laws. This is a paper certified by the escribano of government to be a full copy of the petition and decree of the governor of East Florida. It is, in fact, the original grant. The petition and decree of the governor are preserved in the office of the escribano, are placed there in paper books as composing the dilligencias of his office.

These papers never go out, any more than the notes of the surveyors, upon which a grant issues in the United States. In this country the original patent, signed by the governor or president, is delivered to the patentee, and the copy is retained in the office. Now, if we are asked why this is so, the answer is, “ita lex scripta est.” It is the law and the custom of Spain and her provinces; and it would be as reasonable to ask, why *79has she not adopted the common law of England? The decree of the governor has been certified under his seal of office, and the seal and signature proved.

The second point relied upon by the agents of the United States, to avoid the confirmation of this grant, is, the court has not jurisdiction, the claim having been finally settled by the rejection of the register and receiver.

If the title was confirmed by the treaty, which is the supreme law of the land, the United States have no power to create a tribunal “finally to reject a claim,” without an appeal to this court. Such an act would directly violate the treaty, and must be considered void.

The decisions of the commissioners and register and receiver have never been considered final by congress itself. In every report made since the date of the Louisiana treaty upon claims, which the commissioners nominally had power to decide, an act of congress has been deemed necessary to consummate the title.

There is a case in point in the very act relating to the report, in which it is contended that this claim has been finally rejected.

The first section of the act of congress to confine it, provides, that all the cases except those subsequent to a certain period, are confirmed and approved. Here the government agents have two horns of a dilemma. If the decrees of this register and receiver, like the laws of the Medes and Persians, are irreversible, it must operate both ways. It will not do for any honest government to say it is final when in our favour, aliter when against us. If the proposition be maintained that a register and receiver appointed to sell lands, and who were not selected with reference to their ability to decide those delicate legal questions, have been invested with such extraordinary powers, over the rights of individuals; it will follow of course that all such as were excluded by congress were improperly excluded, and the decision which bars the hope of redress against this claim will give confirmation to all those rejected. A contrary doctrine would involve the absurd consequence of the assumption by congress of judicial power, and of its exercise in reversing the decisions of a tribunal vested with autho*80rity by law to decide in the last resort, or, to use the language of the attorney-general, “finally to decide.” The register and receiver never had such a power, and it was not competent to congress to confer it without a palpable violation of the treaty. The register and receiver never had power to decide this case at all, and consequently could not have rejected it. The cases which were authorized to be presented to commissioners, divided themselves into two classes, one of which the commissioners decided subject to the approval of congress, and the other they reported to the secretary of the treasury.

This was regulated by the quantity. The act of 1822 required them to decide claims under one thousand acres, and report all over that quantity. The act of 1823 increased the quantity, in certain cases, to three thousand five hundred acres. These specified cases were such as where the owners were in the actual possession and occupation of the land at the date of the treaty. It was intended to give a preference to actual occupants, who have always been deservedly favourites with the congress of the United States. This was a case in which the owner, Juan Percheman, was not in possession at the date of the treaty; and consequently the register and receiver could only report, and not decide his case. The report was made, and opposite the name of the claimant with a short note was written “rejected.” In this state this case was presented to congress. It is evident that it was not prepared before the register and receiver. This report was made after the act of 1828. That act disposed of all claims under a league square, and referred all over that quantity to the courts for decision.

This brings us to the question of jurisdiction in this case. It is contended that the court cannot take jurisdiction of any case under a league square. That is admitted under the act of 1828. This is a very different case. The act of 1830 did not dispose of these cases. A part were referred by the first section back to the register and receiver, requiring them to report the evidence. Some were confirmed. This one was rejected without the power to reject, because it was over one thousand, and under three thousand five hundred acres, without proof of actual possession. The first section of the act of 1830 disposes of certain Spanish claims. The second, of con*81flicting Spanish and British claims. The third, of British claims. The fourth section provides that “all the remaining claims which have been presented according to law, and not finally acted upon, shall be adjudicated and finally settled upon the conditions, restrictions, and limitations of the act of 1828.” The claim of Percheman was a “remaining claim not finally acted upon;” because I have shown it could not be finally acted upon by the register and receiver. It was one of those which the law declared should be adjudicated upon the principles of the act of 1828. It will be observed by the court, that this act says nothing about the quantity of land.

The question then arises, which must be decisive of the point of jurisdiction, do the words “adjudicated and settled upon the conditions, restrictions and limitations” of another law, confine the quantity to the amount authorized by that law? All these relate to the quo modo of the adjudication. The conditions are, that they are to file a bill, conduct their case, &c. The restrictions are, that certain evidence shall be admitted, and certain dates regarded. The limitations, that they shall be presented within a certain time. All these relate to the mode of conducting the cases remaining. This is too plain to require argument.

The third point relied upon by the United States is, that the land was conveyed by the grantee to F. P. Sanchez. Whether this land belongs to Percheman or Sanchez must be perfectly immaterial to the United States. If confirmed to Percheman, it operates eo instanti as a confirmation to Sanchez. The attempt to hunt up a deed conditional or absolute, is but an expedient to avoid the trial of the merits of the case, in the favourable decision of which the United States, as a just government, ought to feel as much solicitude as in the performance of the most sacred national obligation. These pleas in abatement and technical niceties, may serve to retard the country, impoverish individuals, promote litigation, and embarrass public justice, at the expense of individual rights and public faith. They never can receive the sanction or countenance of this court. If the petition had been filed in the name of Sanchez, and the astuteness of the government agents could have discovered the point, we should have been thrown out of *82court, because possession is necessary to give validity to a deed, and because the seal is to the name of the attorney, and not to that of the grantee. Such a deed conveys no title, and might have been excluded. The record shows, however, that the contract was to be void unless the title was confirmed. The act of congress for 1823, dispenses with the deraignment of title; and this case is to be decided not only according to “the treaty,” but the “proceedings under the same.” That act, being one of the proceedings under the treaty, dispenses with the production of deeds from the grantee; and sub-proprietors have a right to file their petition in the name of the original grantee.

The last point made by the attorney-general was, that the governor had no right to grant. This question has been raised in every Spanish case.

Such a point could not have been expected, in the face of the royal order commanding him to grant to the individual in question by name. This question was settled at the last term; and although an attempt has been made to reverse that decision by a bill in congress, the judiciary committee put the seal upon it by a unanimous rejection. Upon the subject of the powers of Spanish governments, the court is furnished with translations from Soloozano’s Politica Indiana. This author is one of the most celebrated of the Spanish commentators. His authority was considered unquestionable by lord Ellenborough in the court of king’s bench, in the trial of The King v. Picton, governor of Trinidad, 3 State Trials.

Mr Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree pronounced by the judge of the superior court for the district of East Florida, confirming the title of the appellee to two thousand acres of land lying in that territory, which he claimed by virtue of a grant from the Spanish governor, made in December 1815. The title laid before the district court by the petitioner, consists of a petition presented by himself to the governor of East Florida, praying for a grant of two thousand acres of land in the place called Ockliwaha, situated on the margins of St John’s river; which *83he prays for in pursuance of the royal order of the 29th of March 1815, granting lands to the military who were in St Augustine during the invasion in the years 1812 and 1813; to which the following grant is attached.

St Augustine of Florida, 12th of December 1815. Whereas this officer, the party interested, by the two certificates inclosed, and which will be returned to him for the purposes which may be convenient to him, has proved the services which he rendered in the defence of this province, and in consideration also of what is provided in the royal order of the 29th of March last past, which he cites, I do grant him the two thousand acres of land which he solicits, in absolute property, in the indicated place, to which effect let a certified copy of this petition and decree be issued to him from the secretary’s office, in order that it may be to him in all events an equivalent of a title in form.

Estrada.

In a copy of the grant, certified by Thomas de Aguilar, secretary of his majesty’s government, the words “which documents will at all events serve him as a title in form,” are employed instead of the words “in order that it may be to him in all events an equivalent of a title in form.”

The petitioner also filed his petition to the governor for an order of survey dated the 31st of December 1815, which was granted on the same day; and a certificate of Robert M’Hardy, the surveyor, dated the 20th of August 1813, that the survey had been made.

The attorney of the United States for the district, in his answer to this petition, states, that on the 28th of November 1823 the petitioner sold and conveyed his right in and to the said tract of land to Francis P. Sanchez, as will appear by the deed of conveyance, to which he refers; that the claim was presented by the said Francis P. Sanchez to the register and receiver, while acting as a board of commissioners to ascertain claims and titles to land in East Florida, and was finally acted upon and rejected by them, as appears by a copy of their report thereon. As the tract claimed by the petitioner contains less than three thousand five hundred acres of land, and had been rejected by the register and receiver acting as a board of com*84missioners, the attorney contended that the court had no jurisdiction of the case.

At the trial the counsel for the claimant offered in evidence a copy from the office of the keeper of public archives, of the original grant, on which the claim is founded, to the receiving of which in evidence the attorney for the United States objected, alleging that the original grant itself should be procured, and its execution proved. This objection was overruled by the court, and the copy from the office of the keeper of the public archives, certified according to law, was admitted. The attorney for the United States excepted to this opinion.

It appears, from the words of the grant, that the original was not in possession of the grantee. The decree which constitutes the title, appears to be addressed to the officer of the government whose duty it was to keep the originals and to issue a copy. Its language, after granting in absolute property, is, “for the attainment of which let a certified copy of this petition and decree be issued to him from the secretary’s office, in order that it may be to him in all events equivalent to a title in form.” This copy is, in contemplation of law, an original.

It appears too from the opinion of the judge, “that by an express statute of the territory, copies are to be received in evidence.” The judge added, that “where either party shall suggest that the original, in the office of the keeper of the public archives, is deemed necessary to be produced in court, on motion therefor a subpoena will be issued by order of the court to the said keeper to appear and produce the said original for examination.”

The act of the 26th of May 1824, “enabling the claimants of lands within the limits of the state of Missouri and territory of Arkansas to institute proceedings to try the validity of their claims,” in its fourth section, makes it the duty of “the keeper of any public records who may have possession of the records and evidence of the different tribunals which have been constituted by law for the adjustment of land titles in Missouri, as held by France, upon the application of any person or persons whose claims to lands have been rejected by such tribunals or either of them, or on the application of any person interested, *85or by the attorney of the United States for the district of Missouri, to furnish copies of such evidence, certified under his official signature, with the seal of office thereto annexed, if there be a seal of office.”

The act of the 23d of May 1828, supplementary to the several acts providing for the settlement and confirmation of private land claims in Florida, declares in its sixth section, that certain claims to lands in Florida, which have not been decided and finally settled, “shall be received and adjudicated by the judge of the superior court of the district within which the land lies, upon the petition of the claimant, according to the forms, rules, regulations, conditions, restrictions and limitations prescribed by (for) the district and claimants in the state of Missouri by act of congress approved May 26th, 1824, entitled “an act enabling the claimants,” &c.

The copies directed by the act of 1824 would undoubtedly have been receivable in evidence on the trial of claims to lands in Missouri. Every reason which could operate with congress for applying this rule of evidence to the courts of Missouri, operates with equal force for applying it to the courts of Florida; and a liberal construction of the act of May 23d, 1828, admits of this application.

The fourth section of the act of May 26th, 1830, “to provide for the final settlement of land claims in Florida,” adopts, almost in words, the provision which has been cited from the sixth section of the act of May 23d, 1828.

Whether these acts be or be not construed to authorize the admission of the copies offered in this cause; we think that, on general principles of law, a copy given by a public officer whose duty it is to keep the original, ought to be received in evidence.

We are all satisfied that the opinion was perfectly correct, and that the copies ought to have been admitted.

We proceed then to examine the decree which was pronounced, confirming the title of the petitioner.

The general jurisdiction of the courts not extending to suits against the United States, the power of the superior court for the district of East Florida to act upon the claim of the petitioner Percheman, in the form in which it was presented, must be specially conferred by statute. It is conferred, if at all, by *86the act of the 26th of May 1830, entitled “an act to provide for the final settlement of land claims in Florida.” The fourth section of that act enacts “that all the remaining claims which have been presented according to law, and not finally acted upon, shall be adjudicated and finally settled upon the same conditions, restrictions and limitations, in every respect, as are prescribed by the act of congress approved the 23d of May 1828 entitled “an act supplementary,” &c.

The claim of the petitioner, it is admitted, “had been presented according to law;” but the attorney for the United States contended, that “it had been finally acted upon.” The jurisdiction of the court depends on the correctness of the allegation. In support of it, the attorney for the United States produced an extract from the books of the register and receiver acting as commissioners to ascertain claims and titles to land in East Florida, from which it appears that this claim was presented by Francis P. Sanchez, assignee of the petitioner, on which the following entry was made. “In the memorial of the claimant to this board, he speaks of a survey made by authority in 1819. If this had been produced, it would have furnished some support for the certificate of Aguilar. As it is, we reject the claim.”

Is this rejection a final action on the claim, in the sense in which those words are used in the act of the 26th of May 1830?

In pursuing this inquiry, in endeavouring to ascertain the intention of congress, it may not be improper to review the acts which have passed on the subject, in connexion with the actual situation of the persons to whom those acts relate.

Florida was a colony of Spain, the acquisition of which by the United States was extremely desirable. It was ceded by a treaty concluded between the two powers at Washington, on the 22d day of February 1819.

The second article contains the cession, and enumerates its objects. The eighth contains stipulations respecting the titles to lands in the ceded territory.

It may not be unworthy of remark, that it is very unusual, even in cases of conquest, for the conqueror to do more than to displace the sovereign and assume dominion over the country. The modern usage of nations, which has become law, *87would be violated; that sense of justice and of right which is acknowledged and felt by the whole civilized world would be outraged, if private property should be generally confiscated, and private rights annulled: The people change their allegiance; their relation to their ancient sovereign is dissolved: but their relations to each other, and their rights of property, remain undisturbed. If this be the modern rule even in cases of conquest, who can doubt its application to the case of an amicable cession of territory? Had Florida changed its sovereign by an act containing no stipulation respecting the property of individuals, the right of property in all those who became subjects or citizens of the new government would have been unaffected by the change. It would have remained the same as under the ancient sovereign. The language of the second article conforms to this general principle. “His catholic majesty cedes to the United States in full property and sovereignty, all the territories which belong to him situated to the eastward of the Mississippi, by the name of East and West Florida.” A cession of territory is never understood to be a cession of the property belonging to its inhabitants. The king cedes that only which belonged to him. Lands he had previously granted, were not his to cede. Neither party could so understand the cession. Neither party could consider itself as attempting a wrong to individuals, condemned by the practice of the whole civilized world. The cession of a territory by its name from one sovereign to another, conveying the compound idea of surrendering at the same time the lands and the people who inhabit them, would be necessarily understood to pass the sovereignty only, and not to interfere with private property. If this could be doubted, the doubt would be removed by the particular enumeration which follows. “The adjacent islands dependent on said provinces, all public lots and squares, vacant lands, public edifices, fortifications, barracks and other buildings which are not private property, archives and documents which relate directly to the property and sovereignty of the said provinces, are included in this article.”

This special enumeration could not have been made, had the first clause of the article been supposed to pass not only the objects thus enumerated, but private property also. The grant *88of buildings could not have been limited by the words “which are not private property,” had private property been included in the cession of the territory.

This state of things ought to be kept in view when we construe the eighth article of the treaty, and the acts which have been passed by congress for the ascertainment and adjustment of titles acquired under the Spanish government. That article in the English part of it is in these words. “All the grants of land made before the 24th of January 1818 by his catholic majesty, or by his lawful authorities, in the said territories ceded by his majesty to the United States, shall be ratified and confirmed to the persons in possession of the lands, to the same extent that the same grants would be valid if the territories had remained under the dominion of his catholic majesty.”

This article is apparently introduced on the part of Spain, and must be intended to stipulate expressly for that security to private property which the laws and usages of nations would, without express stipulation, have conferred. No construction which would impair that security further than its positive words require, would seem to be admissible. Without it, the titles of individuals would remain as valid under the new government as they were under the old; and those titles, so far at least as they were consummate, might be asserted in the courts of the United States, independently of this article.

The treaty was drawn up in the Spanish as well as in the English language. Both are originals, and were unquestionably intended by the parties to be identical. The Spanish has been translated, and we now understand that the article, as expressed in that language, is, that the grants “shall remain ratified and confirmed to the persons in possession of them, to the same extent, &c.,”—thus conforming exactly to the universally received doctrine of the law of nations. If the English and the Spanish parts can, without violence, be made to agree, that construction which establishes this conformity ought to prevail. If, as we think must be admitted, the security of private property was intended by the parties; if this security would have been complete without the article, the United States could have no motive for insisting on the interposition of government in order to give validity to titles which, according *89to the usages of the civilized world, were already valid. No violence is done to the language of the treaty by a construction which conforms the English and Spanish to each other. Although the words “shall be ratified and confirmed,” are properly the words of contract, stipulating for some future legislative act; they are not necessarily so. They may import that they “shall be ratified and confirmed” by force of the instrument itself. When we observe that in the counterpart of the same treaty, executed at the same time by the same parties, they are used in this sense, we think the construction proper, if not unavoidable.

In the case of Foster v. Elam, 2 Peters, 253, this court considered these words as importing contract. The Spanish part of the treaty was not then brought to our view, and we then supposed that there was no variance between them. We did not suppose that there was even a formal difference of expression in the same instrument, drawn up in the language of each party. Had this circumstance been known, we believe it would have produced the construction which we now give to the article.

This understanding of the article, must enter into our construction of the acts of congress on the subject.

The United States had acquired a territory containing near thirty millions of acres, of which about three millions had probably been granted to individuals. The demands of the treasury, and the settlement of the territory, required that the vacant lands should be brought into the market; for which purpose the operations of the land office were to be extended into Florida. The necessity of distinguishing the vacant from the appropriated lands was obvious; and this could be effected only by adopting means to search out and ascertain pre-existing titles. This seems to have been the object of the first legislation of congress.

On the 8th of May 1822, an act was passed, “for ascertaining claims and titles to land within the territory of Florida.”

The first section directs the appointment of commissioners for the purpose of ascertaining the claims and titles to lands within the territory of Florida, as acquired by the treaty of the 22d of February 1819.

*90It would seem from the title of the act, and from this declaratory section, that the object for which these commissioners were appointed, was the ascertainment of these claims and titles. That they constituted a board of inquiry, not a court exercising judicial power and deciding finally on titles. By the act “for the establishment of a territorial government in Florida,” previously passed at the same session, superior courts had been established in East and West Florida, whose jurisdiction extended to the trial of civil causes between individuals. These commissioners seem to have been appointed for the special purpose of procuring promptly for congress that information which was required for the immediate operations of the land office. In pursuance of this idea, the second section directs that all the proceedings of the commissioners, the claims admitted, with those rejected, and the reason of their admission and rejection, be recorded in a well bound book, and forwarded to the secretary of the treasury to be submitted to congress. To this desire for immediate information we must ascribe the short duration of the board. Their session for East Florida was to terminate on the last of June in the succeeding year; but any claims not filed previous to the 31st of May in that year to be void, and of none effect.

These provisions show the solicitude of congress to obtain, with the utmost celerity, that information which ought to be preliminary to the sale of the public lands. The provision, that claims not filed with the commissioners previous to the 30th of June 1823 should be void, can mean only that they should be held so by the commissioners, and not allowed by them. Their power should not extend to claims filed afterwards. It is impossible to suppose that congress intended to forfeit real titles not exhibited to their commissioners within so short a period.

The principal object of this act is further illustrated by the sixth section, which directed the appointment of a surveyor who should survey the country; taking care to have surveyed and marked, and laid down upon a general plan to be kept in his office, the metes and bounds of the claims admitted.

The fourth section might seem in its language to invest the commissioners with judicial powers, and to enable them to de*91cide as a court in the first instance, for or against the title in cases brought before them; and to make such decision final if approved by congress. It directs that the “said commissioners shall proceed to examine and determine on the validity of said patents,” &c. If, however, the preceding part of the section to which this clause refers be considered, we shall find in it almost conclusive reason for the opinion that the examination and determination they were to make, had relation to the purpose of the act, to the purpose of quieting speedily those whose titles were free from objection, and procuring that information which was necessary for the safe operation of the land office; not for the ultimate decision, which, if adverse, should bind the proprietor. The part of the section describing the claims into the validity of which the commissioners were to examine, and on which they were to determine, enacts, that every person, &c. claiming title to lands under any patent, &c. “which were valid under the Spanish government, or by the law of nations, and which are not rejected by the treaty ceding the territory of East and West Florida to the United States, shall file, &c.”

Is it possible that congress could design to submit the validity of titles, which were “valid under the Spanish government, or by the law of nations,” to the determination of these commissioners?

It was necessary to ascertain these claims, and to ascertain their location, not to decide finally upon them. The powers to be exercised by the commissioners under these words, ought therefore to be limited to the object and purpose of the act.

The fifth section, in its terms, enables them only to examine into and confirm the claims before them. They were authorized to confirm those claims only, which did not exceed one thousand acres.

From this review of the original act, it results, we think, that the object for which this board of commissioners was appointed, was to examine into and report to congress such claims as ought to be confirmed; and their refusal to report a claim for confirmation, whether expressed by the term “rejected,” or in any other manner, is not to be considered as a final judicial *92decision on the claim, binding the title of the party; but as a rejection for the purposes of the act.

This idea is strongly supported by a consideration of the manner in which the commissioners proceeded, and by an examination of the proceedings themselves, as exhibited in the reports to congress.

The commissioners do not appear to have proceeded with open doors, deriving aid from the argument of counsel, as is the usage of a judicial tribunal, deciding finally on the rights of parties: but to have pursued their inquiries like a board of commissioners, making those preliminary inquiries which would enable the government to open its land office; whose inquiries would enable the government to ascertain the great bulk of titles which were to be confirmed, not to decide ultimately on the titles which those who had become American citizens legally possessed.

On the 3d of March 1823, congress passed a supplementary act, which also provided for the survey and disposal of the public lands in East Florida. It authorizes the appointment of a separate board of commissioners for East Florida, and empowers the commissioners to continue their sessions until the second Monday in the succeeding February, when they were to return their proceedings to the secretary of the treasury.

This act dispenses with the necessity of deducing title from the original grantee, and authorizes the commissioners to decide on the validity of all claims derived from the Spanish government in favour of actual settlers, where the quantity claimed does not exceed three thousand five hundred acres. The act “to extend the time for the settlement of private land claims in the territory of Florida,” passed on the 28th of February 1824, enacts that no person shall be deemed an actual settler, “unless such person, or those under whom he claims title, shall have been in the cultivation or occupation of the land, at and before the period of the cession.”

On the 8th of February 1827, congress passed an act extending the time for receiving private land claims in Florida, and directing them to be filed on or before the 1st day of the following November, with the register and receiver of the dis*93trict; “whose duty it shall be to report the same with their decision thereon,” on or before the 1st day of January 1828, to be laid before congress at the next session.

These acts are not understood to vary the powers and duties of the tribunals authorized to settle and confirm these private land claims.

On the 23d of May 1828 an act passed supplementary to the several acts providing for the settlement and confirmation of private land claims in Florida.

This act continues the power of the register and receiver till the first Monday in the following December, when they are to make a final report; after which it shall not be lawful for any of the claimants to exhibit any further evidence in support of their claims.

The sixth section of this act transfers to the court all claims “which shall not be decided and finally settled under the foregoing provisions of this act, containing a greater quantity of land than the commissioners were authorized to decide, and above the amount confirmed by this act, and which have not been reported as antedated or forged,” and declares that they “shall be received and adjudicated by the judge of the district court in which the land lies, upon the petition of the claimant, according to the forms," &c. “prescribed,” &c. by act of congress approved May 26th, 1824, entitled “an act enabling the claimants to land within the limits of the state of Missouri and territory of Arkansas to institute proceedings,” &c. A proviso excepts from the jurisdiction of the court any claim annulled by the treaty or decree of ratification by the king of Spain, or any claim not presented to the commissioners or register and receiver.

The thirteenth section enacts that the decrees which may be rendered by the district or supreme court “shall be conclusive between the United States and the said claimants only, and shall not affect the interests of third persons.”

In all the acts passed upon this subject previous to that of May 1830, the decisions of the commissioners, or of the register and receiver acting as commissioners, have been confirmed. Whether these acts affirm those decisions by which claims are rejected, as well as those by which they are recommended for confirmation, admits of some doubt: whether a rejection *94amounts to more than a refusal to recommend for confirmation, may be a subject for serious inquiry: however this may be, we think it can admit of no doubt that the decision of the commissioners was conclusive in no case until confirmed by an act of congress. The language of these acts, and among others that of the act of 1828, would indicate that the mind of congress was directed solely to the confirmation of claims, not to their annulment. The decision of this question is not necessary to this case. The claim of the petitioner was not contained in any one of the reports which have been stated.

On the 26th of May 1830, congress passed “an act to provide for the final settlement of land claims in Florida.” This act contains the action of congress on the report of the 14th of January 1880, which contains the rejection of the claim in question. The first section confirms all the claims and titles to land filed before the register and receiver of the land office under one league square, which have been decided and recommended for confirmation. The second section confirms all the conflicting Spanish claims, recommended for confirmation as valid titles.

The third confirms certain claims derived from the former British government, and which have been recommended for confirmation.

The fourth enacts “that all remaining claims which have been presented according to law, and not finally acted upon, shall be adjudicated and finally settled upon the same conditions,” &c.

It is apparent that no claim was finally acted upon until it had been acted upon by congress; and it is equally apparent that the action of congress on the report containing this claim, is confined to the confirmation of those titles which were recommended for confirmation. Congress has not passed on those which were rejected. They were, of consequence, expressly submitted to the court.

The decision of the register and receiver could not be conclusive for another reason. Their power to decide did not extend to claims exceeding one thousand acres, unless the claimant was an actual settler: and it is not pretended that either the petitioner, or Francisco de Sanchez, his assignee, *95was a settler, as described in the third section of the act of 1824.

The rejection of this claim, then, by the register and receiver did not withdraw it from the jurisdiction of the court, nor constitute any bar to a judgment on the case according to its merits.

An objection not noticed in the decree of the territorial court, has been urged by the attorney-general; and is entitled to serious consideration. The governor, it is said, was empowered by the royal order on which the grant professes to be founded, to allow to each person the quantity of land established by regulation in the province, agreeably to the number of persons composing each family.

The presumption arising from the grant itself of a right to make it, is not directly controverted; but the attorney insists that the documents themselves prove that the governor has exceeded his authority.

Papers translated from a foreign language, respecting the transactions of foreign officers, with whose powers and authorities we are not well acquainted, containing uncertain and incomplete references to things well understood by the parties, but not understood by the court; should be carefully examined before we pronounce that an officer, holding a high place of trust and confidence, has exceeded his authority.

The objection rests on the assumption that the grant to the petitioner is founded entirely on the allowance made in the royal order of the 29th of March 1815, at the request of the governor of East Florida; and the petition to the governor undoubtedly affords strong ground for this assumption; but we are far from thinking it conclusive. The petitioner says, “that, in virtue of the bounty in lands which, pursuant to his royal order of the 29th of March of the present year, the king grants to the military who were of this place in the time of the invasion which took place in the years 1812 and 1813, and your petitioner considering himself as being comprehended in the said sovereign resolution, as it is proved by the annexed certificates of his lordship brigadier Don Sebastian Kindelan, and by that which your lordship thought proper to provide herewith, which certificates express the merits and services *96rendered by your petitioner at the time of the siege, in consequence of which said bounties were granted to those who deserved them;” “therefore he most respectfully supplicates your lordship, to grant him two thousand acres of land in the place,” &c. The governor granted the two thousand acres of land for which the petitioner prays.

The attorney contends that the royal order of the 29th of March 1815, empowered the governor to grant so much land only, as, according to the established rules, was allowed to each settler. This did not exceed one hundred acres to the head of a family, and a smaller portion for each member of it.

The extraordinary facts that an application for two thousand acres should be founded on an express power to grant only one hundred; that this application should be accompanied by no explanation whatever; and that the grant should be made without hesitation, as an ordinary exercise of legitimate authority, are circumstances well calculated to excite some doubt whether the real character of the transaction is understood, and to suggest the propriety of further examination.

The royal order is founded on a letter from governor Kindelan to the captain-general of Cuba, in which he recommends the militia as worthy the gifts to which the supreme governor may think them entitled; “taking the liberty of recommending the granting of some, which may be as follows: to each officer who has been in actual service in said militia, a royal commission for each grade he may obtain as provincial, and to the soldiers a certain quantity of land as established by regulation in this province, agreeably to the number of persons composing each family, and which gifts can also be exclusively made to the married officers and soldiers of the said third battalion of Cuba.”

The words “and which gifts,” &c. in the concluding part of the sentence, would seem to refer to that part which asks lands for the soldiers of the militia; and yet it is unusual in land bounties for military service, to bestow the same quantity on the officers as on the soldiers.

But be this as it may, the application of governor Kindelan is confined to the privates who served in the militia, and to the married officers and soldiers of the third battalion of Cuba. *97The petitioner was in neither of these corps. He was an ensign of the corps of dragoons.

The royal order alluded to, is contained in a letter of the 29th of March 1815, from the minister of the Indies; who, after stating the application in favour of the militia, and the third regiment of Cuba, adds, “at the same time that his majesty approves said gifts, he desires that your excellency will inform him as to the reward which the commandant of the third battalion of Cuba, Don Juan José de Estrada, who acted as governor pro tem. at the commencement of the rebellion, the officers of artillery, Don Ignacia Salus, Don Manuel Paulin, and of dragoons, Don Juan Percheman, are entitled to as mentioned by the governor in his official letter. By royal order I communicate the same to his excellency for your information and compliance therewith, enclosing the royal commissions of local militia, according to the note forwarded by vour excellency.”

The governor adds, “I forward you a copy of the same, enclosing also the documents above mentioned, that you may give their correspondent direction, with the intention, by the first opportunity of informing his majesty of what I consider just as to the remuneration before mentioned.”

It appears then that the part of the royal order which is supposed to limit this power of the governor to grants of one hundred acres does not comprehend the petitioner; that he is mentioned in that order as a person entitled to the royal bounty, the extent of which is not fixed, and respecting which the governor intended to inform his majesty.

The royal order then is referred to in the petition, as showing the favourable intentions of the crown towards the petitioner; not as ascertaining limits applying to him, which the governor could not transcend.

The petition also refers to certificates granted by general Kindelan, and by the govenor himself, expressing his merits and services during the siege. These could have no influence if the amount of the grant was fixed.

In his grant annexed to the petition, the governor says, “whereas this officer, the party interested by the two certificates enclosed, has proved the services which he rendered in defence of *98this province, and in consideration also of what is provided in the royal order of the 29th of March last past, which he cites, I do grant him,” &c.

Military service, then, is the foundation of the grant, and the royal order is referred to only as showing that the favourable attention of the king had been directed to the petitioner.

The record furnishes other reasons for the opinion that the power of the governor was not so limited in this case, as is supposed by the attorney for the United States.

The objection does not appear to have been made in the territorial court, where the subject must have been understood. It was neither raised by the attorney for the United States, nor noticed by the court.

The register and receiver, before whom the claim was laid by Sanchez, the assignee of the present petitioner, did not reject it because the governor had exceeded his power in making it, but because the survey was not exhibited. “If this” (the survey), say the register and receiver, “had been produced, it would have furnished some support for the certificate of Aguilar. As it is, we reject the claim.”

It may be added that other claims under the same royal order for the same quantity of land, have been admitted by the receiver and register; and have been confirmed by congress.

We do not think the testimony proves that the governor has transcended his power.

The court does not enter into the inquiry, whether the title has been conveyed to Sanchez or remains in Percheman. That is a question in which the United States can feel no interest, and which is not to be decided in this cause. It was very truly observed by the territorial court, that this objection “is founded altogether on a suggestion of a private adverse claim:” but adverse claims, under the law giving jurisdiction to the court, are not to be decided or investigated. The point has not been made in this court.

The decree is affirmed.

2.2 Initial Distribution: State Land Sales, Squatter Preemption, Homesteading 2.2 Initial Distribution: State Land Sales, Squatter Preemption, Homesteading

2.3 Reconstruction and Black Land Ownership 2.3 Reconstruction and Black Land Ownership

2.3.2 Howard Circular #15 1865 - restoring confiscated rebel lands 2.3.2 Howard Circular #15 1865 - restoring confiscated rebel lands

Resource Sheet #8

Circular No. 15

Circular #15

War Department Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands. Washington Sep 12, 1865.

I. Circular No 13 of July 28, 1865, from this Bureau, and all portions of Circulars from this Bureau conflicting with the provisions of this Circular are hereby rescinded.

II. This Bureau has charge of such tracts of lands within the insurrectionary states as shall have acquired title by confiscation or sale, or otherwise, and no such lands now in its possession shall be surrendered to any claimant except as having after provided.

III. Abandoned lands are defined in Sec 2 of the Act of Congress, approved July 2, 1864, as lands, the lawful owner whereof shall be voluntarily absent, therefrom, and engaged either in arms or otherwise in aiding or encouraging the rebellion.

IV. Land will not be regarded as confiscated until it has been condemned, and sold by decree of the U.S. Court for the District in which the property may be found, and the title thereto thus vested in the United States.

V. Upon its appearing satisfactorily to any Assistant Commissioner that any property under his control is not abandoned as above defined, and that the U. S. has acquired no title to it, by confiscation, sale, or otherwise, he will formally surrender it to the authorized claimant or claimants promptly reporting his action to the Commissioner.

VI. Asst Commissioners will prepare accurate descriptions of all confiscated and abandoned lands under their control, keeping a record thereof themselves, and forwarding monthly, to the Commissioner, copies of these descriptions in the manner prescribed in Circular No. 10 of July 11, 1865, from this Bureau.

They will set apart as much of said lands as is necessary for the immediate use of loyal Refugees and Freedmen, being careful to select for this purpose those lands which most clearly fall under the control of this Bureau, which selection must be submitted to the Commissioner for his approval.

The specific division of lands so set apart, into lots and the rental or sale thereof, according to Sec. 4 of the law establishing the Bureau, will be completed as soon as practicable and reported to the Commissioner.

VII. Abandoned Lands held by this Bureau may be restored to owners pardoned by the President, by the Asst Commissioners to whom applications for such a restoration

should be forwarded, so far as practicable through the Supts of the Districts in which the lands are situated.

Each application must be accompanied by –

1st Evidence of especial pardon by the President, or a copy of the oath of amnesty prescribed in the President’s Proclamation of May 29, 1865, when the applicants is not included in any of the classes therein exempted from the benefits of said oath.

2nd Proof of title.

Officers of the Bureau through whom this application passes will endorse thereon such facts as may assist the Asst Commissioner in his decision, stating especially the use made by the Bureau of the Land.

VIII. No lands under cultivation by loyal Refugees or Freedmen, will be restored under this Circular, until the crops now growing shall be secured for the benefit of the cultivators unless full and just compensation be made for their labor and its products, and for their expenditures.

Oliver O. Howard
Major Genl. Commissioner

Approved
Andrew Johnson.
President of the United States

______________________________________________________________________ Source: National Archives and Records Administration, Record Group 105, Entry 24, No. 139 Asst Adjutant General Circulars 1865-1869, Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, pp. 17-18. (Transcribed from the original by John Soos, August, 2003)