A claim to lands in East Florida, the title to which was derived
from grants by the Creek and Seminole Indians, ratified by the
local authorities of Spain before the cession of Florida by Spain
to the United States, confirmed.
It was objected to the title claimed in this case, which had
been presented to the Superior Court of Middle Florida under the
provisions of the acts of Congress for the settlement of land
claims in Florida, that the grantees did not acquire, under the
Indian grants, a legal title to the land.
Held that the
acts of Congress submit these claims to the adjudication of this
Court as a court of equity, and those acts, as often and uniformly
construed in its repeated decisions, confer the same jurisdiction
over imperfect, inchoate, and inceptive titles as legal and perfect
ones, and require the Court to decide by the same rules on all
claims submitted to it, whether legal or equitable.
By the law of nations, the inhabitants, citizens, or subjects of
a conquered or ceded country, territory, or province retain all the
rights of property which have not been taken from them by the
orders of the conqueror, and this is the rule by which we must test
its efficacy according to the act of Congress, which we must
consider as of binding authority.
A treaty of cession is a deed or grant by one sovereign to
another, which transferred nothing to which he had no right of
property and only such right as he owned and could convey to the
grantee. By the treaty with Spain, the United States acquired no
lands in Florida to which any person had lawfully obtained such a
right by a perfect or inchoate title that this Court could consider
it as property under the second article or which had, according to
the stipulations of the eighth article of the treaty been granted
by the lawful authorities of the King, which words "grants" or
"concessions" were to be construed in their broadest sense, so as
to comprehend all lawful acts which operated to transfer a right of
property, perfect or imperfect.
The effect of the clauses of the confirmation of grants made was
that they confirmed them presently, on the ratification of the
treaty, to those in possession of the lands, which was declared to
be that legal seizin and possession which follows title, is
coextensive with the right, and continues till it is ousted by an
actual adverse possession, as contradistinguished from residence
and occupation.
Page 34 U. S. 712
The United States, by accepting the cession under the terms of
the eighth article and the ratification by the King, with an
exception of the three annulled grants to Allegan, Punon Rostro,
and Vargas, can make no other exceptions of grants made by the
lawful authorities of the King.
The meaning of the words "lawful authorities" in the eighth
article or "competent authorities" in the ratification must be
taken to be "by those persons who exercised the granting power by
the authority of the Crown." The eighth article expressly
recognizes the existence of these lawful authorities in the ceded
territories, designating the governor or intendant, as the case
might be, as invested with such authority, which is to be deemed
competent till the contrary is made to appear.
By "the laws of Spain" is to be understood the will of the King
expressed in his orders or by his authority, evidenced by the acts
themselves or by such usage and customs in the provinces as may be
presumed to have emanated from the King or to have been sanctioned
by him as existing authorized local laws.
In addition to the established principles heretofore laid down
by this Court as the legal effect of an usage or custom, there is
one which is peculiarly appropriate to this case. The act of
Congress giving jurisdiction to this Court to adjudicate on these
causes contains this clause in reference to grants, &c.,
"which was protected and secured by the treaty, and which might
have been perfected into a complete title under and in conformity
to the laws, usages, and customs of the government under which the
same originated."
This is an express recognition of any known and established
usage or custom in the Spanish provinces in relation to the grants
of land and the title thereto, which brings them within a well
established rule of law that a custom or usage saved and preserved
by a statute has the force of an express statute, and shall control
all affirmative statutes in opposition, though it must yield to the
authority of negative ones, which forbid an act authorized by a
custom or usage thus saved and protected, and this is the rule by
which its efficacy must be tested according to the act of Congress,
which must be considered of binding authority.
In the case of
United States v.
Arredondo, 6 Pet. 691, the lands granted had been
in the possession and occupation of the Allachua Indians, and the
center of the tract was an Indian town of that name. But the land
had been abandoned, and before any grant was made by the intendant,
a report was made by the attorney and Surveyor General, on a
reference to them, finding the fact of abandonment, on which it was
decreed that the land had reverted to and become annexed to the
royal domain.
By the common law, the King has no right of entry on land which
is not common to his subjects; the King is put to his inquest of
office, or information of intrusion, in all cases where a subject
is put to his action; their right is the same, though the King has
more convenient remedies in enforcing his. If the King has no
original right of possession to lands, he cannot acquire it without
office found so as to annex it to his domain.
The United States has acted on the same principle in the various
laws which Congress has passed in relation to private claims to
lands in the Floridas; it has not undertaken to decide for itself
on the validity of such claims without the previous action of some
tribunal, special or judicial. It has not authorized an entry to be
made on the possession of any person in possession by color of a
Spanish grant or title, not the
Page 34 U. S. 713
sale of any lands as part of the national domain with any
intention to impair
private rights. The laws which give jurisdiction to the district
courts of the territories to decide in the first instance, and to
this on appeal, prescribe the mode by which lands which have been
possessed or claimed to have been granted pursuant to the laws of
Spain shall become a part of the national domain, which, as
declared in the seventh section of the act of 1824, is a "final
decision against any claimant pursuant to any of the provisions of
the law."
One uniform rule seems to have prevailed in the British
provinces in America by which Indian lands were held and sold, from
their first settlement, as appears by their laws that friendly
Indians were protected in the possession of the lands they
occupied, and were considered as owning them by a perpetual right
of possession in the tribe or nation inhabiting them, as their
common property, from generation to generation, not as the right of
the individuals located on particular spots. Subject to this right
of possession, the ultimate fee was in the Crown and its grantees,
which could be granted by the Crown or colonial legislatures while
the lands remained in possession of the Indians, though possession
could not be taken without their consent.
Individuals could not purchase Indian lands without permission
or license from the Crown, colonial governors, or according to the
rules prescribed by colonial laws, but such purchases were valid
with such license or in conformity with the local laws, and by this
union of the perpetual right of occupancy with the ultimate fee,
which passed from the Crown by the license, the title of the
purchaser became complete.
Indian possession or occupation was considered with reference to
their habits and modes of life; their hunting grounds were as much
in their actual possession as the cleared fields of the whites, and
their rights to its exclusive enjoyment in their own way and for
their own purposes were as much respected, until they abandoned
them, made a cession to the government, or an authorized sale to
individuals. In either case, their rights became extinct, the lands
could be granted disencumbered of the right of occupancy, or
enjoyed in full dominion by the purchasers from the Indians. Such
was the tenure of Indian lands by the laws of Massachusetts,
Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, New York, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina,
and Georgia.
Grants made by the Indians at public councils since the treaty
at Fort Stanwicks have been made directly to the purchasers or to
the state in which the land lies, in trust for them, or with
directions to convey to them, of which there are many instances of
large tracts so sold and held, especially in New York.
It was a universal rule that purchases made at Indian treaties
in the presence and with the approbation of the officer under whose
direction they were held by the authority of the Crown gave a valid
title to the lands; it prevailed under the laws of the states after
the Revolution, and yet continues in those where the right to the
ultimate fee is owned by the states or their grantees. It has been
adopted by the United States, and purchases made at treaties held
by their authority have been always held good by the ratification
of
the treaty, without any patent to the purchasers from the United
States. This rule in the colonies was founded on a settled rule of
the law of England, that by his prerogative, the King was the
universal occupant of
Page 34 U. S. 714
all vacant lands in his dominions, and had the right to grant
them at his pleasure or by his authorized officers.
When the United States acquired and took possession of the
Floridas, the treaties which had been made with the Indian tribes
before the acquisition of the territory by Spain and Great Britain
remained in force over all the ceded territory as the laws which
regulated the relations with all the Indians who were parties to
them, and were binding on the United States by the obligation they
had assumed by the Louisiana Treaty, as a supreme law of the land,
which was inviolable by the power of Congress. They were also
binding as the fundamental law of Indian rights, acknowledged by
royal orders and municipal regulations of the province, as the laws
and ordinances of Spain in the ceded provinces, which were declared
to continue in force by the proclamation of the governor in taking
possession of the provinces, and by the acts of Congress, which
assured all the inhabitants of protection in their property. It
would be an unwarranted construction of these treaties, laws,
ordinances, and municipal regulations to decide that the Indians
were not to be maintained in the enjoyment of all the rights which
they could have enjoyed under either had the provinces remained
under the dominion of Spain. It would be rather a perversion of
their spirit, meaning, and terms, contrary to the injunction of the
law under which the Court acts, which makes the stipulations of any
treaty, the laws and ordinances of Spain, and these acts of
Congress, so far as either applies to this case, the standard rules
for its decision.
The treaties with Spain and England before the acquisition of
Florida by the United States, which guaranteed to the Seminole
Indians their lands according to the right of property with which
they possessed them, were adopted by the United States, which thus
became the protector of all the rights they had previously enjoyed
or could of right enjoy under Great Britain or Spain, as
individuals or nations, by any treaty to which the United States
thus became party in 1803.
The Indian right to the lands as property was not merely of
possession, that of alienation was concomitant; both were equally
secured, protected, and guaranteed by Great Britain and Spain,
subject only to ratification and confirmation by the license,
charter, or deed from the governor representing the King. Such
purchases enabled the Indians to pay their debts, compensate for
their depredations on the traders resident among them to provide
for their wants; while they were available to the purchasers as
payment of the considerations which at their expense had been
received by the Indians. It would have been a violation of the
faith of the government to both to encourage traders to settle in
the province, to put themselves and property in the power of the
Indians, to suffer the latter to contract debts, and when willing
to pay them by the only means in their power, a cession of their
lands, withhold an assent to the purchase, which by their laws or
municipal regulations was necessary to vest a title. Such a course
was never adopted by Great Britain in any of her colonies, nor by
Spain in Louisiana or Florida.
The laws made it necessary, when the Indians sold their lands,
to have the deeds presented to the governor for confirmation. The
sales by the Indians transferred the kind of right which they
possessed; the ratification of the sale by the governor must be
regarded as a relinquishment of the title of
Page 34 U. S. 715
the Crown to the purchaser, and no instance is known where
permission to sell has been "refused, or the rejection of an Indian
sale."
In the present case, the Indian sale has been confirmed with
more than usual solemnity and publicity; it has been done at a
public council and convention of the Indians conformably to
treaties, to which the King was a party and which the United States
adopted, and the grant was known to both parties to the treaty of
cession. The United States was not deceived by the purchase, which
it knew was subject to the claim of the petitioner or those from
whom he purchased, and it made no stipulation which should put it
to a severer test than any other, and it was made to a house which,
in consideration of its great and continued services to the King
and his predecessor, had deservedly given them high claims as well
on his justice as his faith. But if there could be a doubt that the
evidence in the record did not establish the fact of a royal
license or assent to this purchase as a matter of specific and
judicial belief, it would be presumed as a matter of law arising
from the facts and circumstances of the case, which are admitted or
unquestioned.
As heretofore decided by this Court, the law presumes the
existence in the provinces of an officer authorized to make valid
grants;
a fortiori, to give license to purchase and to
confirm; and the treaty designates the Governor of West Florida as
the proper officer to make grants of Indian lands by confirmation
as plainly as it does the Governor of East Florida to make original
grants or the Intendant of West Florida to grant royal lands. A
direct grant from the Crown of lands in a royal haven may be
presumed on an uninterrupted possession of sixty years or a
prescriptive possession of Crown lands for forty years.
The length of time which brings a given case within the legal
presumption of a grant, charter, or license to validate a right
long enjoyed is not definite, depending on its peculiar
circumstances.
After the case had been fully heard in the Superior Court of
Middle Florida, the judge of that court, in examining the evidence
in the case with a view to its decision, considered that he had
discovered in the date of the watermark in the paper on which one
of the original Spanish documents had been written a circumstance
which brought into doubt the genuineness of the instrument. No
objection of this kind had been made during the argument of the
cause, and after the supposed discovery, no opportunity was
permitted
by the court of Florida to the claimants to explain or account
for the same. After the appeal had been docketed in this Court, the
appellants asked permission to send a commission to procure
testimony which it was alleged would fully explain the
circumstance, and offered to read
ex parte depositions to
the same purpose. By the Court:
"This is refused because in an appellate court, no new evidence
can be taken or received without violating the best established
rules of evidence. Under such circumstances, it would be dealing to
the petitioner a measure of justice incompatible with every
principle of equity to visit upon his title an objection which the
claimant was not bound to anticipate in the court below, which he
could not meet there, and which this Court was compelled to refuse
him the means of removing by evidence. We will not say what course
would have been taken if his title had depended on the date of the
paper alluded to; as the case is, it is only one of numerous
undisputed documents
Page 34 U. S. 716
tending to establish the grant, the validity of which is but
little if it could be in any degree"
affected by the date of the permission.
The appellants, on 18 October, 1828, presented to the Superior
Court of Middle Florida their petition under the authority of the
sixth section of the Act of Congress passed on 23 May, 1828,
entitled an act supplementary to the several acts providing for the
settlement and confirmation of the private land claims in the
Territory of Florida, and of the act of 1824, referred to in the
said act, authorizing claimants in Missouri to institute
proceedings to try the validity of their titles.
The appellants claimed title to a tract of land containing one
million two hundred thousand acres in the Territory of Florida, the
greater part of which was situated between the Rivers Appalachicola
and the St. Mark's, comprehending all the intervening seacoast and
the islands adjacent.
The title was asserted to be held under deeds from the Creek and
Seminole Indians to Panton, Leslie & Company, to John Forbes
& Company, and to John Forbes, and confirmed by the authorities
of Spain.
These lands, the petitioners alleged, were granted by the Indian
tribes, as an indemnity from the Spanish government and from those
Indians for losses sustained by them in prosecuting a trade with
the Indians under the special and exclusive license of Spain.
The Indian grants were dated on 25 May and 22 August, 1804, and
2 August, 1806, and were alleged to have been confirmed by Governor
Folch, the governor of the province.
The facts of the case and all the documents on which the title
of the petitioners was claimed to rest, with the evidence in the
case, are fully stated in the opinion of the Court.
The answer of the district attorney stated that the
commissioners under the act "for the settlement of private land
claims, and for the confirmation thereof" were instructed to
report, and not to decide upon large claims; that the claim of the
petitioners was reported upon by the commissioners, and
Page 34 U. S. 717
their report laid before Congress -- but it was denied that the
documents presented to the said commissioners and by them reported
were by the said report "admitted to be genuine." The title of the
appellant is invalid. Congress did not confirm or adopt the report
of the commissioners upon this claim, but referred all claims not
annulled by the treaty of cession, nor by the decree of the King of
Spain ratifying the same, nor reported by the commissioners as
antedated or forged, to the decision of the judiciary.
The cause was heard in the Superior Court of Middle Florida on
the evidence adduced by the petitioners and the United States and
on public documents, all of which were sent up with the record, and
was finally disposed of by a decree of the judge of that court
entered on 2 November, 1830, dismissing the petition.
The petitioners appealed to this Court. The appeal was entered
to January term, 1831.
At former terms of this Court, on the motions of the counsel for
the United States, the case was postponed to enable the government
of the United States to procure papers from Madrid and from Havana
which were considered important and necessary in the cause. These
motions were always resisted by the counsel for the appellants.
At January term, 1834, the case was continued, under an order of
the Court that it should not be argued before 2 February, 1835.
On 9 January, Mr. Butler, Attorney General of the United States,
moved the Court to postpone the hearing of the case until later in
the term than the day fixed for the same, alleging that the
documents which had been expected from Havana had not arrived and
that the government had dispatched a special messenger for them
whose return was expected before 25 February, during the term. The
Court refused to hear the motion until the case should be called,
on or after 2 February. Afterwards, on 9 February, the motion was
renewed on the part of the United States by the Attorney General
and was overruled, the Court not thinking it necessary to hear the
counsel for the appellants against it.
Page 34 U. S. 725
MR. JUSTICE BALDWIN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The land in controversy is claimed by the United States in
virtue of the treaty of cession by Spain by which the territory and
sovereignty of the two Floridas were acquired in consideration of
$5,000,000 paid in extinguishment of certain claims of the citizens
of the United States on the government of Spain. Colin Mitchel
claims by deeds from various tribes of Indians belonging to the
Great Creek Confederacy to Anton, Leslie & Co., to John Forbes
& Co., and to John Forbes, confirmed by the local authorities
of Spain, whose right has become vested in him by sundry mesne
conveyances, to which it is unnecessary to refer, as the regular
deraignment of whatever title was vested in the original grantees
to the present claimants is not questioned. (Record 362) The lands
are in four separate tracts, extending from the mouth of the River
St. Mark's, outside of the islands along the seacoast, to the west
end of St. Vincent's Island, west of the mouth of the River
Appalachicola, thence to that river about five miles from its
mouth, up the same for many miles, thence by a back line to a point
on the western bank of the St. Mark's above the old fort of that
name, and down the said river to the sea. It is unnecessary to
refer to the boundaries of the separate tracts or the particular
designation of the lines and points of the whole body of lands, as
they are not a subject of controversy in this case; the quantity,
as estimated by the claimant, is one million two hundred and fifty
thousand acres (Record 5), and by the Spanish officers one million
three hundred and ninety-one thousand arpents. (Record 224) The
history of the claim is this.
Page 34 U. S. 726
The commercial house of Panton, Leslie & Co. had long been
established at St. Augustine, in East Florida; it had extensive
connections and great credit in England, and its operations were
very great. After Spain had taken possession of the Floridas in
virtue of the treaty of peace in 1783, the King, by a royal order,
gave them license to carry on and continue their commercial
operations in those provinces and Louisiana. (Record 164-167,
236-281, 157-160.) As they were an English house, an oath of
allegiance was required, which was taken by Mr. Panton (Record 127,
128) and by Mr. Leslie, for himself and the other members of the
firm who were not in the province (Record 275, 281, 282), in 1786,
with which the Spanish government was satisfied as a compliance
with the royal orders of the same year. (Record 160-164.)
This house conducted its affairs to the entire satisfaction of
the successive governors general of Louisiana (Record 120-129) and
the local authorities of the Floridas, rendered important services
to the Crown, met with many and great losses, amounting, by the
estimate of the Marquis of Casa Calvo, then Governor General of
Louisiana, in 1800, to $400,000. (Record 125, 136, 147, 148.) Five
of his predecessors had recommended the awarding some indemnity to
the house; they had made repeated claims upon the Crown, the
justice of which had been acknowledged by all the local authorities
during all the changes of administration (Record 121, 122, 132,
133, 134), in their numerous dispatches to the ministry, which had
been submitted to the King. (Record 130, 374.) They concurred in
representing to the King the great importance and services of the
house as a political instrument of the government; that they had a
right to indemnity from the King; that the situation of the house
was such that they must sink under their losses if it was not
afforded; and that it must be sustained and preserved as
indispensable to retain any control over the Indians and secure the
possession of the provinces entrusted to their care. (Record 130,
139, 143-152, 151, 252-257, 302, 580.)
In consequence of the repeated solicitations of the house to the
King for compensation, a royal order was directed to the Captain
General of Cuba on the subject of the indemnities proper to be
given them, in reply to which, among other propositions made by the
Governor General of Louisiana was a grant
Page 34 U. S. 727
of twenty leagues square of royal lands west of the Mississippi,
or a loan of $400,000 without security. (Record 144, 145.) This
shows the sense of that high officer of the value of the services
of the house, the extent of their losses in their exertions in
favor of the government, with the measure of remuneration which he
considered to be due of right in 1800. (Record 144, 147.)
Among the losses sustained by the house was a large amount due
by the Seminole Indians prior to 1800, and for robberies of their
stores in 1792 and 1800 by members of that tribe, headed by the
celebrated adventurer Bowles, exceeding in all $60,000 (Record
22-28), of which they were unable to procure any payment from the
Indians, but who had expressed a willingness to make compensation
by a grant of their lands.
Early in 1799, the house made an application to the Governor
General of Louisiana for leave to purchase from the Indians as much
land as would satisfy the above claims, which was favorably
received by both him and his successor. (Record 54, 56.)
Negotiation with the Indians was followed by a deed of cession from
them, in 1804, of the large tract containing one million two
hundred thousand arpents. (Record 554.)
This deed was confirmed at a general council of the nation and
its chiefs held at Pensacola in 1806 in the presence of Folch,
Governor of West Florida (Record 568, 584, 590, 614), in all the
form and solemnity which Indians could give it. This governor had
previously given leave to make the purchase on a petition presented
to him by the house in January, 1804, setting forth the
circumstances of the case; which was granted on only one condition,
that they should not dispose of the lands without notice to and
knowledge of the government; and in December 1806, gave his full
confirmation to the grant of the Indians made to Panton, Leslie
& Co. (Record 58, 84.) Another application was made to the same
governor in 1807 for his permission to make an additional purchase
from the same Indians, which was granted in December, 1810, on
condition that the house should cede the whole or part of the lands
to the King, if he should want them, at the price at which they
acquired them, and not dispose of them without notice to the
government. (Record 273, 274, 275.) In the following
Page 34 U. S. 728
year, the Indians granted the other tracts between the Rivers
Wakulla and St. Mark's, including the fort, which was also
confirmed by the governor (Record 606) at a great public council of
the Indians at Pensacola; this tract contained by estimation
ninety-seven thousand arpents. At the same time, another tract on
the seacoast, including some islands at and west of the mouth of
the Appalachicola, was in like manner granted by the Indians and
confirmed by the governor to John Forbes & Co., the successors
of Panton, Leslie & Co. (Record 106), containing sixty-five
thousand arpents. At the same time and place, there was granted and
confirmed to John Forbes an island in the Appalachicola containing
six thousand eight hundred arpents, for which no consideration was
paid, the grant being a gratuity by the Indians to Forbes in
consideration of his services and friendship rendered and shown to
them for years before. (Record 217-224.) It is not deemed necessary
to recite more specially the various original deeds from the
Indians or those made in councils after the lines had been marked
which designated the boundaries of the respective grants, nor the
grants of the Governor of West Florida confirming them by titles in
form delivered to the parties; they are in form and substance alike
(Record 28-106, 430, 447), and no question has arisen on their
terms.
Those of the Indians recite the considerations which led to the
grants, convey the lands with a warranty of their title by
ascertained boundaries (Record 39, 40, 49, 91, 95, 86, 93, 69,
82-84, 29-36, 59, 63, 95-108, 562); those of the governor ratify
and confirm the grants in full and direct dominion (Record 37, 49,
91, 95, 111), and in full property, put the grantees in possession
and promise to defend and maintain it. (Record 106, 137, 145) all
of which he declares is done by using the powers vested in him.
(Record 75-91, 30-37, 99, 233, 234.) They are drawn up in great
form; contain a perfect recognition of the Indian grants, and give
to them all the validity which he could impart to them. (Record
106, 131, 175, 191, 193.) They are made in the name of the King,
executed and attested in all due formality, and their authenticity
proved as public documents and by the testimony of witnesses to the
official signatures. (Record 562, 579, 615, 620, 623, 646, 611,
612, 613-626.) The claims of the house upon the Indians
Page 34 U. S. 729
for debts due since 1789 and depredations committed were
notorious to the government and inhabitants of Pensacola (Record
273, 274, 536, 590), as were the purchases, and their confirmation
by the Indians, at which two thousand are computed to have attended
in 1811 (Record 592, 601), is proved as a fact by witnesses present
in the different councils; so is the fact of the ratification by
the governor. (Record 579, 614, 615, 620, 623, 646.) The original
deeds, and the demarcation of lines and boundaries were made
(Record 42, 43, 100 &c.) in the presence of the commandant at
St. Mark's (Record 73, 97, 104, 108), exercising the offices of
lieutenant governor and subdelegate of the intendancy, or were
approved by him; every act done in relation to the cessions and
their ratification, from the first application to the governor
general in 1799 to their consummation in 1811, was public and
notorious to both Indians and whites. (Record 590.)
Governor Folch reported all his proceedings to the Captain
General of Cuba, by whom they were approved, who declared that the
King would confirm them, and, as some of the witnesses say,
declared that he had confirmed them. (Record 228, 229, 232, 568,
572, 584, 594.) From the time of the first cession in 1804, the
Indians acknowledged the validity of the grants, were satisfied
with them, called the land the white land, or the land of the
whites (Record 606), asked permission from the house to hunt upon
them, and with the exception of some occasional depredations,
respected their possessions and property. (Record 619-621, 623.)
Their title too was equally respected by the local government, and
all the officers of the King (Record 234, 574, 624, 625); nor from
him to the lowest does there appear to have been expressed any
dissatisfaction at any of the acts of Governor Folch or the least
doubt of the perfect validity of the title, though the claim of the
house to the whole land conveyed was perfectly known and evidenced
by a partial actual possession, taken at an early period and
continued till the cession of the provinces. (Record 620, 624,
625.) There is no evidence in the record that either the Indians,
the governor, or intendant ever made a cession, grant, order of
survey, or gave permission to settle within the boundaries of any
of the grants. It is also a circumstance of no small consideration
that notwithstanding the long and inveterate controversy
Page 34 U. S. 730
between the governor and intendant about their powers to grant
lands even in small tracts, there was none in relation to
these.
Yet the intendant had full notice of them, spoke of them, but
made no objection (Record 571) or preferred any complaint to the
captain general or the King, although the quantity of land thus
granted to this house was nearly double to the whole amount of the
grants of royal lands made by the government of West Florida.
(Record 421, 469.) It was also proved that in the opinion of those
who know the land, as well as the officers of government, it was
not worth, at the time, the amount of the just claims of the house
on the Indians; that the grants were taken as the only means of
their indemnification, and that the purchase was much less
advantageous to them than to the King, who thereby became absolved
from a claim not only too just to deny, but too large to satisfy
with convenience. (Record 570-574, 579, 556, 573, 625.) It is also
proved that the Indians who made the cessions occupied the lands
for hunting grounds, were deemed the owners of them as Indian
lands, and had three settlements upon them previously (Record 559,
565, 576, 585), and that the country was claimed by the Seminoles.
(Record 12, 52, 607.) The lines were marked by persons appointed by
the governor in presence of the Indians, who consented to them
(Record 621-623, 632), and the governor gave formal possession to
the house (Record 625) according to the plats of the several grants
exhibited to him, which the witnesses declare to have corresponded
with the lines marked upon the ground and those recited in the
deeds and petitions. (Record 623.)
In opposition to this mass of documentary and parol testimony in
support of the allegations of the petitioners that the grants were
in fact made and confirmed in the manner and for the reasons and
considerations set forth, no direct evidence appears in the record.
Some of the witnesses were examined as to the supposed influence of
the house with Governor Folch, but the imputation was negatived and
the proceedings throughout declared to have been in good faith.
(Record 554-583.)
So far, then, as the merits of the case depend on the
genuineness of the deeds and documents, the facts of the grants and
confirmations by the Indians and governor, the marking the lines
and possession of the land, the good faith of the whole
Page 34 U. S. 731
transaction, the absence of fraud, the authority of the Indian
chiefs, as representatives of their respective tribes, we entirely
concur in opinion with the court below that the grants were made
bona fide, for a valuable consideration, of the adequacy
of which the Indians were competent judges, if they had any right
in the lands which they could convey; that the ratification of the
governor was fairly and fully made, and for good and sufficient
reasons, of which he was the judge, if he had competent authority
to give effect and validity to Indian cessions of the land in
controversy. The view which the learned judge took of these
questions after a thorough, searching examination of the documents
and evidence is so entirely satisfactory that we have only to
express our assent to the conclusions at which he arrived. (Record
662-669.)
There is, however, one subject which was considered by him into
which we do not feel at liberty to inquire, which is the watermark
in the paper on which the governor's permission of 7 January, 1804,
was written, noticed and commented on at large by the judge.
(Record 706.) This objection was not made in the court below, at
the hearing, or in the argument, so that no opportunity was
afforded to the petitioner to produce any evidence on the subject
or to his counsel to answer the objection. This Court also refused
to grant him a commission to take testimony to explain and account
for the watermark or permit him to read the
ex parte
evidence offered to explain it, because in an appellate court no
new evidence could be taken or received without violating the best
established rules of evidence and law. Under such circumstances, it
would be dealing to the petitioner a measure of justice
incompatible with every principle of equity to visit upon his title
an objection which he was not bound to anticipate in the court
below, which he could not meet there, and which this Court was
compelled to refuse him the means of removing by evidence. We will
not say what course would have been taken if his title had depended
on the date of the paper alluded to; as the case is, it is only one
of numerous undisputed documents tending to establish the grant,
the validity of which is but little if it could be in any degree
affected by the date of the permission.
It is objected by the counsel of the United States that the
Page 34 U. S. 732
original acts of confirmation of the Indian sales by Governor
Folch are not produced and that the copies in evidence are not
legal proof of such acts. This objection seems to us not to be well
founded in fact or law. The original Indian deeds were procured by
the agent of the United States from the public archives in Havana
(Record 529 &c.), and are now before us. The deeds of
confirmation were made according to the rules of the civil law
adopted by Spain and in force in Florida and Cuba; the original is
a record, and preserved in the office, which cannot be taken out; a
testimonio or copy is delivered to the party, which is deemed to be
and is certified as an original paper, having all the effect of one
in all countries governed by the civil law. Such is proved to be
the law of those colonies as a fact by Mr. White (Record 628); such
is the form of the certificates in this case, varying in
phraseology somewhat, but agreeing in substance and effect (Record
19, 38, 45, 50, 58, 91, 106, 111), in perfect accordance with the
civil law adopted in Louisiana, and recognized by this Court in the
case of
Owings v. Hull, decided at the present term. We
therefore consider those now produced as original deeds of
confirmation by the governor duly certified and proved.
It is objected that the deeds of 1804 and 1806 to Panton, Leslie
& Co. were inoperative to pass the lands, they having died
previously.
It is in proof as a fact that Forbes & Co. was the successor
in business and interest to Panton & Co. This change of the
name and partners of the house after the death of Mr. Panton was
known to the officers of the local government and the King, who by
a royal order in 1805 (Record 262) and another in 1807 (Record 270)
directed that it should have no effect on their privileges. To the
King it mattered not whether the lands were conveyed to the house
as a firm or to the partners
nominatim; they, it seems,
preferred considering the lands as a part of the general effects of
the partnership, and received the deeds accordingly; as it
concerned only them and as there has been produced no law of Spain
invalidating such a grant, the objection cannot be sustained.
Another objection, on account of an oath of allegiance not
Page 34 U. S. 733
having been taken by the grantees, is removed by the evidence
already referred to, and need be no further considered.
It is objected that the grant of 1811 is invalid because it
comprehends the fort of St. Mark's, then actually occupied by the
troops of the King. It is in full proof that the site of St. Marks
and the adjacent country was within the territory claimed by the
Seminole Indians (Record 12, 131, 603-607, 618). It is not certain
from the evidence whether it was purchased from the Indians or
merely occupied by their permission; there seems to be no written
evidence of the purchase, but no witness asserts that possession
was taken adversely to the Indian claim, and it is clearly proved
to have been amicably done. (Record 232, 306, 581.) Whether the
Indians had a right to grant this particular spot then or not
cannot affect the validity of the deeds to the residue of the lands
conveyed in 1811. The grant is good so far as it interfered with no
prior right of the Crown, according to the principles settled by
this Court in numerous cases arising on grants by North Carolina
and Georgia, extending partly over the Indian boundary, which have
uniformly been held good as to whatever land was within the line
established between the state and the Indian territory.
Wear v.
Danforth, 9 Wheat. 673;
Patterson
v. Jenckes, 2 Pet. 216, and
Winn v.
Patterson, decided by the Supreme Court of the United States
January, 1835,
ante, 34 U. S. 663. As to
the land covered by the fort and appurtenances to some distance
around it, it becomes unnecessary to inquire into the effect of the
deeds, as the counsel of the petitioners have in open court
disclaimed any pretensions to it.
Another objection is of a more general nature, that the grantees
did not acquire a legal title to the lands in question. But it must
be remembered that the acts of Congress submit these claims to our
adjudication as a court of equity, and as often and uniformly
construed in its repeated decisions, confer the same jurisdiction
over imperfect, inchoate, and inceptive titles as legal and perfect
ones, and require us to decide by the same rules on all claims
submitted to us, whether legal or equitable.
Whether, therefore, the title in the present case partakes of
the one character or the other, it remains only for us to inquire
whether that of the petitioner is such in our opinion that
Page 34 U. S. 734
he has, either by the law of nations, the stipulations of any
treaty, the laws, usages, and customs of Spain, or the province in
which the land is situated, the acts of Congress or proceedings
under them, or a treaty, acquired a right which would have been
valid if the territory had remained under the dominion and in
possession of Spain.
In doing so, we shall not take a detailed review of the leading
cases on Spanish grants already decided by this Court in relation
to those lands which formed a part of the royal domain, in
contradistinction to those which may be considered as Indian lands
claimed by Indians, by their title, whatever it may be. Those
comprehended within the claim of the petitioners being of the
latter description, as they contend and thereupon rest their title,
it will suffice to state some general results of former
adjudications which are applicable to this case, are definitively
settled, so far as the power of this Court can do it, and must be
taken to be the rules of its judgment. They are these:
That by the law of nations, the inhabitants, citizens, or
subjects of a conquered or ceded country, territory, or province
retain all the rights of property which have not been taken from
them by the orders of the conqueror or the laws of the sovereign
who acquires it by cession, and remain under their former laws
until they shall be changed.
That a treaty of cession was a deed or grant by one sovereign to
another which transferred nothing to which he had no right of
property, and only such right as he owned and could convey to the
grantee. That by the treaty with Spain, the United States acquired
no lands in Florida to which any person had lawfully obtained such
a right by a perfect or inchoate title, that this Court could
consider it as properly under the second article, or which had,
according to the stipulations of the eighth, been granted by the
lawful authorities of the King, which words grants or concessions
were to be construed in their broadest sense, so as to comprehend
all lawful acts which operated to transfer a right of property,
perfect or imperfect.
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
710;
32 U. S. 7 Pet.
86-88;
33 U. S. 8 Pet.
445,
33 U. S.
449-450,
33 U. S.
486.
That the effect of the clauses of confirmation of grants made
was that they confirm them presently, on the ratification of the
treaty, to those in possession of the lands, which was declared
Page 34 U. S. 735
to be; that legal seizin and possession which follows a title,
is coextensive with the right, and continues till it is ousted by
an actual adverse possession, as contradistinguished from residence
and occupation.
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
743;
12 U. S. 8 Cranch
229-230;
17 U. S. 4 Wheat.
213,
17 U. S. 233;
29 U. S. 4 Pet.
480,
29 U. S.
504-506;
30 U. S. 5 Pet.
354-355.
That the United States by accepting the cession under the terms
of the eighth article and the ratification by the King, with an
exception of the three annulled grants to Allegon, Punon Rostro,
and Bargas can make no other exceptions of grants made by the
lawful authorities of the King.
33 U. S. 8 Pet.
463-464.
That the meaning of the words "lawful authorities" in the eighth
article, or "competent authorities" in the ratification, must be
taken to be "by those persons who exercised the granting power by
the authority of the Crown." That the eighth article expressly
recognizes the existence of these lawful authorities in the ceded
territories, designating the governor or intendent, as the case
might be, as invested with such authority, which is to be deemed
competent till the contrary is made to appear.
33 U. S. 8 Pet.
449-453.
That "by the laws of Spain" is to be understood the will of the
King expressed in his orders or by his authority, evidenced by the
acts themselves or by such usages and customs in the province as
may be presumed to have emanated from the King or to have been
sanctioned by him, as existing authorized local laws.
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
714-716.
In addition to the established principles heretofore laid down
by this Court as to the legal effect of an usage or custom, there
is one which is peculiarly appropriate to this case. The act of
Congress giving jurisdiction to this Court to adjudicate on these
causes contains this clause in reference to grants &c.,
"which was protected and secured by the treaty, and which might
have been perfected into a complete title, under and in conformity
to the laws, usages, and customs of the government under which the
same originated."
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
708-709; 3 Story's Laws 1959, 1960.
This is an express recognition of any known and established
usage or custom in the Spanish provinces in relation to the grants
of land and the title thereto, which brings them within a well
established rule of law. That a custom or usage saved
Page 34 U. S. 736
and preserved by a statute has the force of an express statute,
and shall control all affirmative statutes in opposition, though it
must yield to the authority of negative ones, which forbid an act
authorized by a custom or usage thus saved and protected; 4
Co.Inst. 86, 298; and this is the rule by which we must test its
efficacy according to the act of Congress, which we must consider
as of binding authority.
In taking possession of Florida pursuant to the treaty and in
establishing a government in and over it, Congress has acted on the
same principles as those which were adopted by this Court in the
former cases. In the act of 1821, for carrying the treaty into
execution, Congress authorizes the vesting the whole power of
government in such person as the President may direct for the
maintaining the inhabitants in the free enjoyment of their
property. Pamphlet Laws 47.
The governor thus appointed, by his proclamation in the same
year, announces to the inhabitants that he has been invested with
all the powers, and charged with all the duties heretofore held and
exercised by the Captain General and of the Intendant of the Island
of Cuba over the Floridas, and the Governor thereof; recites the
foregoing act of Congress, declares that they shall be maintained
and protected in the free enjoyment of their property, &c., and
that all laws and municipal regulations which were in existence at
the cessation of the late government remain in full force. Pamphlet
of 1822, 113.
The tenth section of the act of 1822 contains the same pledge
for the protection of property, and the thirteenth continued in
force the existing laws, till altered by the local legislature then
organized. Pamphlet 15.
The formal act of the surrender of the Floridas by Spain to the
United States was made by the commandants of both of the provinces
by the authority of the Captain General of Cuba under a royal
order. Pamphlet 110.
These are most solemn acts of both governments, which, as the
proceedings under the treaty of cession, are made a rule for our
guide in deciding on the validity of the title to lands in the
provinces; they have all been ratified and approved by the King and
Congress, affording the highest possible evidence of the true
meaning of both the high contracting parties to the treaty. They
point directly to the kind of government
Page 34 U. S. 737
which existed before the cession as being vested in the Captain
General and Intendant of Cuba, and the governors of the provinces,
as the supreme legislative, executive, and judicial power,
subordinate to the King only. And as it became afterwards in the
hands of the governor alone by act of Congress subordinate only
thereto, while under both, the government was administered in
conformity to the local laws and municipal regulations. It cannot,
therefore, be doubted that among the other powers of the former
government, that of granting lands was invested in some of its
officers, nor that such officers were the governor, the intendent,
or captain general, as the case might be, thus exhibiting a union
of opinion between the King of Spain as well as the legislative and
judicial departments of this government as to the meaning of the
treaty, which cannot be without its influence on its true
construction and bearing on the rights of parties now before this
Court, sitting in an appellate court of equity, directed to decide
"in conformity to the principles of justice" and the laws and
ordinances of the government under which the claim of the
petitioner originated, they must be our guide.
Colin Mitchel claims the land in controversy as a purchaser from
Panton, Leslie & Co., John Forbes & Co., and John Forbes,
who were purchasers from the Seminole or Tallapoosa Indians,
bona fide, for a valuable consideration paid by one party
and received by the other by force or contract, accompanied with
the legal seizin and possession of the whole, and actual
pedis
possessio of a part, under a claim of right and title to the
whole by grant. The equity of the parties from whom Mitchel
purchased commenced in 1789, 1790, 1792, when the depredations were
first committed and the debts contracted which formed the
consideration of the Indian deeds, the debts increasing till 1800,
and the depredations then renewed. A claim early made on the
Indians for compensation and on the government of Spain for
indemnity, continued till an agreement for the cession of lands by
the former was made in 1800, and carried into effect in 1804 and
1806, when it was carried into grant, ratified and confirmed by the
Indians, the Governor of West Florida, and Captain General of Cuba,
without an interfering claim till the cession to the United States
in 1820-1821. On the other hand, the United States claims the
land
Page 34 U. S. 738
by purchase from the King of Spain, made
bona fide, for
a valuable consideration fully paid, but with full and direct
notice of the equity of Forbes & Co., and the purchase in the
name of Panton, Leslie & Co., of which Forbes was partner,
which notice was as early as 1804 (Record 283, 286, 290, 291, 568).
The earliest equity claimed by the United States was in January,
1818, when the cession was first proposed; the first agreement to
convey by Spain was in 1819, the date of the treaty; and the final
grant was made in 1820, the date of the ratification, and
possession first taken in 1821 pursuant to the conveyance of the
treaty.
Thus viewing the contending parties, we proceed as a court of
equity to inquire whether at the time the cession by the treaty
took effect in favor of the United States, there was a right of
property in Colin Mitchel to the lands included in his grants, or
whether they had been previously granted by the lawful authorities
of the King. That they were granted in fact is incontestable, and
they were private property if there was a grant competent by law to
vest a title.
It is contended by the United States that the acts of Governor
Folch in the permissions to purchase from the Indians and the
ratifying and confirming their deeds are void, as the lands were
not in West Florida, over which province alone he had any
jurisdiction.
There seems no doubt that under the British government the River
Appalachicola remained the boundary between East and West Florida,
as it was so established by the proclamation of the King in 1763, 1
Laws U.S. 444, but it does not appear that Spain had adopted it in
administering the government of those provinces by any royal order
or that such was a common opinion of the inhabitants (Record 602 to
604); on the contrary, it appears that so early as 1785, Don
Galvez, then Governor General of Louisiana, considered the District
of St. Mark's de Appalachy as a dependency of his government, and
in 1686 placed it under care of the government of West Florida and
ordered the establishment of a post there by a detachment from the
garrison of Pensacola, which acts were approved by a royal order in
March, 1787 (Record 306, 197). These orders were acquiesced in by
the Governor of East Florida, who appears to have exercised no
jurisdiction within that
Page 34 U. S. 739
territory, or to the west of it, after 1786 (Record 260). There
is abundant evidence in the record that that post, the circumjacent
territory, with what lies between it and the Appalachicola, was a
dependency on and subject to both the civil and military
jurisdiction of the Governor of West Florida, and was so considered
by all the officers of the government, the captain general and the
King, as appears from many documents (Record 163, 165, 167, 168,
189, 190, 201, 202, 203, 209, 227, 228, 234, 236, 266, 267, 297,
298, 304). The fact of the exercise of jurisdiction over that
territory by the Governor of West Florida is also established by
the concurring testimony of many witnesses (Record 582, 600, 601,
602, 604), as is also the fact of its surrender by him to the
United States as a part of the territory under his command. (Record
602; Laws of 1832, pamphlet 112.)
But evidence of the fact still more conclusive, and its most
solemn recognition by both governments, is to be found in the
formal act of surrendering the sovereignty and possession of the
province by Spain to the United States. The Governor of West
Florida
"placed the commissioner of the United States in possession of
the country, territories, and dependencies of West Florida,
including the fortress of St. Mark's, with the adjacent islands,
dependent on said province."
(White 198; Pamphlet Laws 112.) So it was accepted and is yet
held by the United States, and so we must consider it as understood
by Congress in the various laws passed since the cession and the
proceedings therein authorized under the treaty in reference to
East and West Florida. The boundary between them must be taken to
be that which existed under Spain from 1785 till 1821, as
incontestably proved and most solemnly admitted by the United
States, up to which the powers of the Governor of West Florida,
whatever they might be, could be exercised in their plenitude, both
as a government
de facto and a government
de
jure.
It becomes needless to inquire whether, after these solemn acts,
it is competent for the United States to now contest the existence
of such boundary; it suffices for this case that it is abundantly
established by all the evidence, which is uncontradicted, and that
the lands in controversy are situated within West Florida,
according to the boundaries recognized by both
Page 34 U. S. 740
governments. This objection cannot, therefore, be allowed to
prevail. It is next contended that the power to grant lands in West
Florida was not vested in the governor, but was confided
exclusively to the intendant; this is clearly proved to be the
settled law of that province as to royal lands, which were the
property of the Crown, and is admitted by the counsel of the
petitioner.
But the reverse is, we think, equally apparent as to Indian
lands until their right had been abandoned and the land become
annexed to the royal domain by a process in the nature of an office
at common law. (White 25, 40, 42, 79, 43, 47, 215.) The relations
between the Indians and the government of Spain were considered as
matters of the deepest political concern, in nowise connected with
its fiscal operations; the commerce with the Indians was, as a
political instrument, entrusted exclusively to the governors, as
clearly appears by their correspondence with each other, the
Captain General of Cuba, and the ministry in the mother country and
regulated by royal orders (Record 113-153), with which the
intendancy had nothing to do. (Record 151, 571, 579, 586, 587, 590;
White 32.)
It was a part of the governor's oath, as prescribed by the laws
of the Indies, "that you shall take care of the welfare, increase
and protection of the Indians." (Record 237.) He was their
protector, whose duty it was to examine whether claims upon them
were well founded, and if so, contribute by all possible means to
their being paid (Record 587), but not to lend his sanction or
allow the smallest injury to be done to them. (Record 571, 232.)
The fact of the supervision of Indian sales of their land by the
governors of provinces and commandants of posts, in acts of
confirmation and putting the purchasers in possession, is very
clearly established by the report of the land commissioners of the
United States in Louisiana. (Record 325-333.) It was exercised by
Don Galvez, Governor General of Louisiana, as early at least as
1777, in confirming an Indian sale of the great Houma tract on the
Mississippi (1 Laws U.S. 551, 552, 554); and there is no evidence
that this power was ever entrusted to or conferred on any other
officer, nor that it was ever exercised by any other.
It was an authority expressly delegated to them by the laws
(White 232-234), and so reported by the commissioners (Record
329);
Page 34 U. S. 741
proved also as a fact by the former secretary of the province
(Record 572) and Governor Folch (Record 231-234). It cannot,
indeed, be well questioned that the governors and commandants of
posts were the appropriate officers for these purposes in the
absence of any evidence of confirmations by intendants, with
positive evidence of their approbation by the Captain General of
Cuba, in making (Record 12) formal acts of confirmation without
objection by the Intendant General of Cuba or by local intendants.
When to these considerations is added another, arising from the
circumstance of there being no instance of the rejection or
disaffirmance of a deed confirming an Indian sale by any of the
superior authorities in the provinces or by the King, as is clearly
established (Record 336, 627, 628) and admitted in the argument, we
cannot feel authorized to declare that Governor Folch usurped any
powers vested in the intendant in any of his acts relating to these
lands.
The confirmation of similar grants made by acts of Congress or
by boards of commissioners acting under their authority are also
powerful evidence of the lawful exercise of the authority of these
officers, and being proceedings under the treaty and laws, they are
made a rule by which, among others, we may adjudicate on the claims
of the present parties, in doing which we cannot sustain this
objection without overlooking such a concurrence of evidence of
various descriptions as leaves no reasonable cause of a doubt of
the authority of Governor Folch, especially when we connect with
his first permission to make the purchase of 1804 the condition
attached to it that the lands should not be disposed of without the
giving notice to and knowledge of the government, and to that of
1811 that it should be conveyed to the King, if required, at the
price at which it was purchased, and the mode in which that
condition was performed and released.
Pursuant to these conditions, John Forbes applied to the Captain
General of Cuba in 1817 for permission to sell the land to the
petitioner, which being referred to the assessor general for his
advice, he reported that the lands had been transmitted actually
and lawfully in full property to Mr. Forbes, with a conditional
title, or
"titulo oneroso," for which acquisition
competent permission was given by Governor Folch, who
Page 34 U. S. 742
delivered titles of confirmation subsequently; whereupon a
formal permission was given by the captain general to make the
sale, which was a direct approbation of all the proceedings
authorized by that governor, as well as that he was the officer
designated for such purpose. (Record 12, 52, 53.) Such a
confirmation by an officer subordinate only to the King, performed
so long after the acts done by the governor of a province who was
under the control of the captain general, must be referred to his
legitimate authority competent for the purpose. It was done also on
the deliberate advice of an officer responsible to the Crown, which
makes the presumption very strong, if not irresistible, that
everything preceding it had been lawfully and rightfully done.
(White 25, 40, 43, 47, 49.) This proceeding is in the nature of an
inquest of office, in analogy to the writ of
ad quod
damnum, which by the common law precedes the grant of any
charter, license, or patent of the King of anything which may be
injurious to his or the rights of others, on which an inquest is
taken, on whose report the King acts, on the advice of the proper
officer or tribunal, makes the grant or withholds it, as advised. 3
Bl.Com. 259; 17 Vin.Ab. 171, 176; 7 Day's Com.Dig. 80.
The report of the assessor general seems to have been acted on
as an inquisition at common law, finding that there was no obstacle
to the making use of the powers entrusted to the captain general.
We should feel it to be an assumption of much responsibility to
declare that on the evidence in this record, and the law arising
upon it, that either of the officers referred to usurped powers not
vested in them or exercised them against or without the authority
of the King.
The counsel of the United States pressed in argument the
decision of this Court in the case of
Arredondo as an
affirmance of the right of the intendant of the province, or of
Cuba, to grant Indian lands. In that case, the lands granted had
been in the possession and occupation of the Allachua Indians, and
the center of the tract was an Indian town of that name. But the
land had been abandoned, and before any grant was made by the
intendant, a report was made by the attorney and surveyor general
on a reference to them, finding the fact of abandonment, on which
it was decreed that the land had reverted to and become annexed to
the royal domain.
Page 34 U. S. 743
Considering this to be a judicial act in the nature of an
inquest of office, and the decree of the intendant as making the
fact a
res adjudicata, we did not feel at liberty to look
behind it for the evidence on which it was founded, the consequence
of which was that by the judgment of a competent tribunal, the land
was part of the royal domain, subject to the disposition of the
intendant. There is no pretense of a similar proceeding having been
had in relation to these lands, nor could there well be in
opposition to the evidence in the record, especially the report of
the assessor general in 1817, that they were the lands of the
Seminoles at the time of the cession by them and the confirmation
by Governor Folch. By the common law, the King has no right of
entry on lands which is not common to his subjects; the King is put
to his inquest of office, or information formation of intrusion, in
all cases where a subject is put to his action; their right is the
same, though the King has more convenient remedies in enforcing
his. If the King has no original right of possession to lands, he
cannot acquire it without office found so as to annex it to his
domain. 2 Co.Inst. 46; Saville 8, 9, pl. 20; Hob. 347; Hardress
460; 7 Day's Com.Dig. 77; Gilbert's Ex. 109; 3 Bl.Com. 257; Fitz.
N.B. 90b; 4 Co. 58b; 16 Vin. 552; 3 Co. 10-11; 9 Co. 95-96, 98;
Hardress 51-52; Plow. 236, 486; 1 Co. 42; 5 Co. 52b; Plow. 229-230.
Such too seems to be the law of Spain in the Floridas and Cuba, as
appeared in the case of
Arredondo and as it must have been
understood by the Spanish authorities when they acknowledged the
Indian right to lands in the harbor of Pensacola to be an existing
one in 1816. Nor is there any evidence in the record that their
right ceased to be respected, or that lands which had been in their
possession became annexed to the royal domain till some official
proceeding, founded on the law of Spain in the nature of an office
by the common law, had taken place under the proper
authority.(White 25, 40, 37.)
The United States has acted on the same principle in the various
laws which Congress has passed in relation to private claims to
lands in the Floridas; it has not undertaken to decide for itself
on the validity of such claims without the previous action of some
tribunal, special or judicial. It has not authorized an entry to be
made on the possession of
Page 34 U. S. 744
any person in possession by color of a Spanish grant or title,
nor the sale of any lands as part of the national domain, with any
intention to impair private rights. The laws which give
jurisdiction to the district courts of the territories to decide in
the first instance, and to this on appeal, prescribe the mode by
which lands which have been possessed or claimed to have been
granted pursuant to the laws of Spain shall become a part of the
national domain, which, as declared in the seventh section of the
act of 1824, is a "final decision against any claimant pursuant to
any of the provisions of the law."
Another objection is made to the title of the petitioner on the
allegation that by the Treaty of Picolata between Great Britain and
the Creeks in 1765, the Indians had ceded all the lands in
controversy between the sea and flow of the tide, in virtue of
which they became the property of the Crown and passed to Spain by
the treaty of 1783.
The fifth article of the Treaty of Picolata, made to prevent
encroachments on the lands or hunting grounds of the Creeks,
stipulates that the boundary of the Province of East Florida "shall
be all the seacoast as far as the tide flows, in the manner settled
with the great Tomachiches by the English," with all the country
particularly described therein, which they grant and confirm to the
King.
As this refers to a treaty or compact made with this chief, its
meaning must be sought in it, and unless something can be found
there which will make the expression more definite than the general
terms "all the seacoast as far as the tide flows," it will require
great latitude of construction, as to an Indian cession, to extend
it from the St. Mary's around the peninsula of Florida to the mouth
of the Appalachicola. The tract of country ceded lies on the
seacoast, east of a point formed by a line run from the source of
the St. John's, which is its southern boundary; the western
boundary is a line run from the junction of the Ocklawaugh with the
St. John's northwardly to the St. Mary's, nearly parallel to the
seacoast, at an average distance of about thirty miles west. It
would be stretching the meaning of this treaty very far to embrace
within it an extent of seacoast and contiguous land within the flow
of the tide to its whole extent when the extent of the lands ceded
west of a line from the mouth of the Ocklawaugh to
Page 34 U. S. 745
the sea was so small. Before we could do it, it must appear to
have been so previously settled between the English and
Tomachiches, as is referred to in the Treaty of Picolata. From the
account given in McCall's history of Georgia, the treaty with
Tomachiches was held in 1733, and the cession of the seacoast was
only between the Altamaha and Savannah, extending west to the
extremity of the tidewater. 1 McCall's Hist. 37.
As this is the act referred to, it must be taken in connection
with the subsequent treaty to make it certain by the reference,
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
739, which entirely removes the objection, and shows the cessions
of the seacoast to be confined to that part which is between the
St. Mary's and St. John's Rivers.
The report of the surveyor general in 1817 is very full on the
subject of the boundaries between the British government and the
Indians in East and West Florida. (Record 184-194) He says
"With regard to East Florida, I have never been able to discover
that there has ever been any treaty or agreement with the natives
of that province concerning the limits of their possession, nor in
that of the Spanish authority."
As the surveyor general had referred to the Treaty of Picolata
in his report, it is clear that it was construed by the Spanish
government as it now is by this Court.
We now come to consider the nature and extent of the Indian
title to these lands.
As Florida was for twenty years under the dominion of Great
Britain, the laws of that country were in force as the rule by
which lands were held and sold; it will be necessary to examine
what they were as applicable to the British provinces before the
acquisition of the Floridas by the treaty of peace in 1763. One
uniform rule seems to have prevailed from their first settlement,
as appears by their laws -- that friendly Indians were protected in
the possession of the lands they occupied, and were considered as
owning them by a perpetual right of possession in the tribe or
nation inhabiting them, as their common property, from generation
to generation, not as the right of the individuals located on
particular spots.
Subject to this right of possession, the ultimate fee was in the
Crown and its grantees, which could be granted by the
Page 34 U. S. 746
Crown or colonial legislatures while the lands remained in
possession of the Indians, though possession could not be taken
without their consent.
Individuals could not purchase Indian lands without permission
or license from the Crown, colonial governors, or according to the
rules prescribed by colonial laws, but such purchases were valid
with such license or in conformity with the local laws, and by this
union of the perpetual right of occupancy with the ultimate fee,
which passed from the Crown by the license, the title of the
purchaser became complete.
Indian possession or occupation was considered with reference to
their habits and modes of life; their hunting grounds were as much
in their actual possession as the cleared fields of the whites, and
their rights to its exclusive enjoyment in their own way and for
their own purposes were as much respected until they abandoned
them, made a cession to the government or an authorized sale to
individuals. In either case, their right became extinct, the lands
could be granted disencumbered of the right of occupancy, or
enjoyed in full dominion by the purchasers from the Indians. Such
was the tenure of Indian lands by the laws of Massachusetts (Indian
Laws 9, 10, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 21); in Connecticut (40, 41, 42);
Rhode Island (52, 55); New Hampshire (60); New York (62, 64, 71,
85, 102); New Jersey (133); Pennsylvania (138); Maryland (141, 143,
144-145); Virginia (147, 148, 150, 153, 154); North Carolina (163,
4, 58); South Carolina (178, 179); Georgia (186-187); by Congress
(Appendix 16); by their respective laws, and the decisions of
courts in their construction.
See cases collected in 2
Johnson's Dig. 15, tit. Indians; and Wharton's Dig. tit. Land,
&c., 488. Such too was the view taken by this Court of Indian
rights in the case of
Johnson v.
McIntosh, 8 Wheat. 571,
21 U. S. 604,
which has received universal assent.
The merits of this case do not make it necessary to inquire
whether the Indians within the United States had any other rights
of soil or jurisdiction; it is enough to consider it as a settled
principle, that their right of occupancy is considered as sacred as
the fee simple of the whites.
30 U. S. 5 Pet.
48. The principles which had been established in the colonies were
adopted by the King in the proclamation of October, 1763, and
applied to the provinces acquired by the treaty of peace and
Page 34 U. S. 747
the Crown lands in the royal provinces, now composing the United
States, as the law which should govern the enjoyment and
transmission of Indian and vacant lands. After providing for the
government of the acquired provinces, 1 Laws U.S. 443-444, it
authorizes the governors of Quebec, East and West Florida, to make
grants of such lands as the King had power to dispose of, upon such
terms as have been usual in other colonies, and such other
conditions as the Crown might deem necessary and expedient, without
any other restriction. It also authorized warrants to be issued by
the governors for military and naval services rendered in the then
late war. It reserved to the Indians the possession of their lands
and hunting grounds, and prohibited the granting any warrant of
survey, or patent for any lands west of the heads of the Atlantic
waters, or which, not having been ceded or purchased by the Crown,
were reserved to the Indians, and prohibited all purchases from
them without its special license. The warrants issued pursuant to
this proclamation for lands then within the Indian boundary, before
the Treaty of Fort Stanwick in 1768, have been held to pass the
title to the lands surveyed on them in opposition to a Pennsylvania
patent afterwards issued.
Sims v.
Irvine, 3 Dall. 427-456. And all title held under
the charter or license of the Crown to purchase from the Indians
has been held good, and such power has never been denied; the right
of the Crown to grant being complete, this proclamation had the
effect of a law in relation to such purchases; so it has been
considered by this Court.
21 U. S. 8
Wheat. 595-604. Settlements made by permission of the commanding
officers of posts on lands not ceded by the Indians have been held
to give a preemption to lands in a proprietary government, and
warrants and patents for such lands have been uniformly held good
when knowingly made by the proprietary or his officers as lands not
purchased from the Indians.
See Wharton's Dig. tit. Lands
488. This proclamation also directed that purchases from Indians
should be made at a public council or assembly in the presence of
the governor or commander-in-chief of the colony, and be purchased
for the King and in his name. 1 Laws 447.
The Indian deeds made at the treaty of Fort Stanwick were to the
King in trust for the grantees. Colony Titles 82-98.
Page 34 U. S. 748
Grants made by the Indians at public councils have since been
made directly to the purchasers or to the state in which the land
lies, in trust for them or with directions to convey to them, of
which there are many instances of large tracts so sold and held,
especially in New York. Indian Treaties 13-38.
It was an universal rule that purchases made at Indian treaties,
in the presence and with the approbation of the officer under whose
direction they were held by the authority of the Crown, gave a
valid title to the lands; it prevailed under the laws of the states
after the Revolution, and yet continues in those where the right to
the ultimate fee is owned by the states or their grantees. It has
been adopted by the United States, and purchases made at treaties
held by their authority have been always held good by the
ratification of the treaty, without any patent to the purchasers
from the United States. This rule in the colonies was founded on a
settled rule of the law of England that by his prerogative, the
King was the universal occupant of all vacant land in his
dominions, and had the right to grant it at his pleasure or by his
authorized officers. Hob. 322; Co.Litt. 1, 41b; 4 Bac.Abr., Prerog.
153; 7 Day's Com.Dig. 76.
The authority of the proclamation is in the right of the King to
legislate over a conquered country, which, as Lord Mansfield says,
was never denied in Westminster Hall or questioned in Parliament.
If a King comes to a country by conquest, he may alter its laws;
but if he comes to it by title and descent, it must be with consent
of Parliament. He is entrusted with making the treaty of peace; he
may yield up the conquest or retain it on what terms he pleases.
These powers no man ever disputed; neither has it hitherto been
controverted that the King might change part or the whole of the
law or political form of government of a conquered dominion. He
comes in place of the King of Spain, the former sovereign. Cowper
204, 213, in a case arising under this proclamation. The
proclamation of October, 1763, then, must be taken to be the law of
the Floridas till their cession by Great Britain to Spain in 1783,
superseding during that period the laws of Spain which had been
before in force in those provinces so far as they were repugnant,
and according to the established principles of the
Page 34 U. S. 749
laws of nations, the laws of a conquered or ceded country remain
in force till altered by the new sovereign. The inhabitants thereof
also retain all rights not taken from them by him in right of
conquest, cession, or by new laws. It is clear, then, that the
Indians of Florida had a right to the enjoyment of the lands and
hunting grounds reserved and secured to them by this proclamation,
and by such tenure and on such conditions as to alienation as it
prescribed, or such as the King might afterwards direct or
authorize. The Indians had also a right to the full enjoyment of
such rights of property as the King might choose to impart to them
by any regulation by treaty or promise made to them by his
authority.
By the Treaty of Mobile in 1765, the boundary of the lands or
hunting grounds reserved and claimed by the Chickasaw and Choctaw
Indians was settled, a cession was made to the King, reserving to
themselves full right and property in all the lands northward of
such boundary. (Record 309.)
The Treaty of Pensacola in the same year established the
boundary with the upper and lower Creeks, who made a cession of
lands, which they granted and confirmed to the King (Record 310,
311), and a similar treaty was made with the Creeks at Picolata, in
East Florida, in the same year. (Record 312.)
By thus holding treaties with these Indians, accepting of
cessions from them with reservations, and establishing boundaries
with them, the King waived all rights accruing by conquest or
cession, and thus most solemnly acknowledged that the Indians had
rights of property which they could cede or reserve, and that the
boundaries of this territorial and proprietary rights should be
such and such only as were stipulated by these treaties.
This brings into practical operation another principle of law
settled and declared in the case of
Campbell v. Hall that
the proclamation of 1763, which was the law of the provinces ceded
by the treaty of 1763, was binding on the King himself, and that a
right or exemption, once granted by one proclamation, could not be
annulled by a subsequent. Cowp. 213. It cannot be necessary to
inquire whether rights secured by a treaty approved by the King are
less than sacred under his voluntary proclamation.
Page 34 U. S. 750
By the Treaty of Augusta in 1773, a cession was made to the King
of certain lands for a specified consideration, which was to be
paid to persons to whom the Cherokees and Creeks were indebted, and
to defray the expenses of the treaty. This cession was made under
an asserted claim of a right of property by the Creeks to the ceded
lands, and a boundary was established between their remaining lands
and those of the King in Georgia. (Record 313-317.) By a subsequent
treaty at Augusta in 1783 and at Shoulderbone in 1786, the
obligation of the Indians to pay their debts is mutually
recognized. (Record 317.) By the Treaty of Fort Schuyler in 1788,
the obligation of the Indians to make compensation for injuries
committed by them is also admitted, as is also the case in treaties
with the United States. 1 Laws 371, 407, 409-410. It may then be
considered as a principle established by the King that the Indians
were competent judges of the consideration on which they granted
their lands, that they might be granted for the payment of debts,
and that this principle has been fully recognized by the United
States. It can hardly be contended that while such cessions by the
Creeks were valid in Georgia on one side of a then imaginary line,
they would be void on the other side in Florida, as to lands held
under the same law and by the same tenure.
Whether the grants were made to the King directly, and the debts
or injuries which formed their consideration be paid by him to the
persons to whom they were due, or compensation made through him, or
directly to the parties by a grant to them, must be a matter purely
in the discretion of the King, or the officer whom he had
authorized to accept or confirm the cessions by his license. Such
were the relations between the Indians and Great Britain as
established by the proclamation of 1763 and confirmed by subsequent
treaties between them from 1765 to 1779 (Record 186, 188) during
the period of her dominion over the Floridas. This liberality and
kindness to them, with respect for their rights of property in
their lands or hunting grounds, would seem to have arisen more from
a sense of justice than motives of mere policy when we consider the
position of Great Britain between the treaty of 1763 and the
commencement of the Revolution. The undisputed sovereign of the
whole territory from the Gulf of Mexico to that
Page 34 U. S. 751
of St. Lawrence, she had little to fear from the rival or
hostile policy of Spain, the only neighbor to her colonies, and who
had been humbled during the preceding war and weakened to such a
degree that she was no longer formidable in Louisiana. It was far
different with Spain. On taking possession of the Floridas after
the independence of the United States had been established, with
such a formidable and rival, if not hostile, neighbor along the
whole line of a narrow and weak province, the friendship of the
Indians was a most important consideration. It would have been lost
by adopting towards them a less liberal, just, or kind policy than
had been pursued by Great Britain, or acting according to the laws
of the Indies in force in Mexico and Peru. It was soon found
necessary not only to respect their rights as they had been enjoyed
for twenty years before, but to place them on the permanent
foundation of treaties and direct guarantees by the King. The most
solemn assurances of both were given. (Record 232.)
A treaty was accordingly held in Pensacola in 1784 with the
Tallapoosas or Seminoles, the object of which was declared to be to
make the subjects of the King enjoy the fruits of peace, by which
the Indians acknowledge themselves his subjects, promising to obey
the laws in those points which were compatible with their character
and circumstances, conforming themselves to the usages and
municipal customs which are established (Record 320), observing
their contracts with the traders in good faith (Record 323), and
promising to observe "those orders exacted by reason, equity and
justice, the principal basis of this Congress." By the thirteenth
article, the officers of the Crown promised in the royal name the
security and guarantee of the lands which the Indians hold,
according to the right of property with which they possessed them,
on the sole condition that they are comprehended within the limits
of the King as the sovereign. (Record 324, 404, 405, 364.)
In 1793, another treaty was held at the Walnut Hills with the
same Indians (among others); it was declared to be a treaty of
friendship and warranty between them and the King, who was declared
their immediate protector and mediator between them and the
American states, in order to regulate their boundaries with them
and preserve the Indians in the possession of their lands. They
were referred to the Governor of West Florida "as
Page 34 U. S. 752
representing the King in it," by the fifth article, with a
stipulation in the fifteenth, that the points negotiated would be
determined on by the commissaries of the King, with the approbation
of the governor of that province, with the same force as if
expressed in the treaty. By the nineteenth article, the Spanish and
Indian nations approved and ratified all which was contained it and
mutually promised and swore a mutual guarantee, the Indians
declaring themselves under the protection of the King, he assuring
them of his protection in all cases where they wanted it. (Record
240-245.) This treaty also ratified all former treaties made from
1784. (Record 241.) They were also approved by the King (Record
117, 118), and thereafter considered by the highest officers of the
government in Florida, Louisiana, and Cuba as solemn guarantees to
the Indians of all the rights they held under Great Britain.
(Record 139-140, 168, 174, 181-189, 228-229, 232-247, 257-258, 295,
570, 583.) This right was occupancy and perpetual possession,
either by cultivation or as hunting grounds, which was held sacred
by the Crown, the colonies, the states and the United States, while
the unauthorized settlement of the whites on royal or proprietary
lands gave them not even the right of preemption unless by special
laws or custom and usage sanctioned by proprietary officers.
See Wharton's Dig.,
ut supra.
But Spain did not consider the Indian right to be that of mere
occupancy and perpetual possession, but a right of property in the
lands they held under the guarantee of treaties, which were so
highly respected that in the establishment of a military post by a
royal order, the site thereof was either purchased from the Indians
or occupied with their permission, as that of St. Mark's. The
evidence of Governor Folch, given in 1827, on the nature of the
Indian title is very strong and full (Record 231-235), and the high
respect paid to it by all the local authorities so late as 1816 is
strikingly illustrated in a report of the Surveyor General of West
Florida. It seems that in that year, an application was made for
permission to buy lands on the other side of the Bay of Pensacola,
to which the reply of the governor and sub-intendant was, if the
lands are situated on the side from Yellow Water hitherward, "I am
persuaded they belong to the Indians, even our own
Page 34 U. S. 753
careening ground which is in front of this town" (Record 172),
which, according to another report from the surveyor general,
belonged by the treaties with England, to the Indians (Record 175),
and who refers to the limited space of province left to the
government, and the necessity of recurring to negotiations with the
Indians to obtain some of the lands, which are the best in the
vicinity of Pensacola. (Record 176.)
When their right is thus regarded as to their lands in the
immediate vicinity of the seat of government of the province at so
late a period, it cannot be doubted that it was considered by the
officers of the King as at least equally valid in a far distant
part, remote from any habitation of the whites, save those
connected with the house of Panton or Forbes. Although it may be
conceded as a principle of national law that when Spain took
possession of these provinces, the King could establish whatever
form of government or system of laws he pleased, consider by the
law of power, though not of right, the Indians as his subjects or
as mere savages, with whom there should be no relations but those
of peace and trade and who held no rights otherwise than at the
pleasure of the government or according to the laws in force in
other provinces; yet it was his orders to his officers to continue
and confirm those relations which had previously existed, to
consider, treat and protect the Indians as his subjects, and to
give them new and most solemn pledges of his protection in all
their rights, as individuals, and as nations or tribes, competent
parties to treaties of mutual guarantee, for his as well as their
protection in those provinces, which had not before been done in
any of his dominions.
This was not done for slight reasons, but for such as would seem
in the opinion of all the great officers of the provinces to have
led to these treaties, and strong stipulations, as indispensable to
secure their possession. But their obligation on the King did not
depend on the motives which led to their adoption; they bound his
faith, and when approved by him became the law of the provinces, by
the authority of royal orders, which were supreme, and bound both
King and Indians as contracting parties, in this respect as nations
on a footing of equality of right and power. The consequence was
that when once received into his protection as individuals,
they
Page 34 U. S. 754
became entitled by the law of nations and of the provinces, on
the same footing as the other inhabitants thereof, to the benefits
of the law and government which, in every dominion, equally affect
and protect all persons and all property within its limits, as the
rule of decision, for all questions which arise there (Cowper 208),
as in this case it must be as to the right of property in the
Indians. The situation of the Florida Indians was well known to the
United States, as is most clearly indicated in the fifth article of
the Treaty with Spain in 1795: "So that Spain will not suffer her
Indians to attack the citizens of the United States, nor the
Indians inhabiting their territory."
As thus considered by the United States and Spain, they were
called "her Indians," while those in the United States was
considered as the mere inhabitants of their territory, as the
practical result of the respective treaties which were recognized
as subsisting ones between the then contracting parties and the
Indians; of the stipulations of which and their effect, the United
States could not have been otherwise than well informed at that
time, as to the right of property in Indian lands in the Floridas.
When they acquired these provinces by the treaty of cession, it was
not stipulated that any treaty with the Indians should be annulled,
or its obligation be held less sacred than it was under Spain; nor
is there the least reference to any intended change in the
relations of the Indians towards the United States. They came in
the place of the former sovereign by compact, on stipulated terms,
which bound them to respect all the existing rights of the
inhabitants, of whatever description, whom the King had recognized
as being under his protection. They could assume no right of
conquest which may at any time have been vested in Great Britain or
Spain, for they had been solemnly renounced, and new relations
established between them by solemn treaties; nor did they take
possession on any such assumption of right; on the contrary, it was
done under the guarantee of Congress to the inhabitants, without
distinction, of their rights of property, and with the continued
assurance of protection. They might, as the new sovereign, adopt
any system of government or laws for the territory consistent with
the treaty and the Constitution; but instead of doing so, all
former laws and municipal regulations which were in existence at
the cession, were
Page 34 U. S. 755
continued in force. It was not necessary for the United States,
in the treaty of cession, to enter into any new stipulation to
protect and maintain the Indians as inhabitants of Florida, in the
free enjoyment of their property, or as nations, contracting
parties to the treaties of Pensacola and Walnut Hills with Spain in
1784 and 1793; for by the sixth article of the Louisiana Treaty
between France and the United States, they had promised
"to execute such articles and treaties as may have been agreed
on between Spain and the nations or tribes of Indians, until by
mutual consent, other suitable articles shall have been agreed
upon."
1 Laws 137. These were the treaties which guaranteed to the
Seminole Indians their lands according to the right of property
with which they possess them, and which were adopted by the United
States, who thus became the protectors of all the rights they had
previously enjoyed, or could of right enjoy under Great Britain or
Spain, as individuals or nations, by any treaty to which the United
States thus became parties in 1803.
When they acquired and took possession of the Floridas, these
treaties remained in force over all the ceded territory by the
orders of the King, as the law which regulated the relations
between him and all the Indians, who were parties to them, and were
binding on the United States, by the obligation they had assumed by
the Louisiana Treaty, as a supreme law of the land which was
inviolable by the power of Congress. They were also binding as the
fundamental law of Indian rights, acknowledged by royal orders and
municipal regulations of the province, as the laws and ordinances
of Spain in the ceded provinces, which were declared to continue in
force by the proclamation of the governor in taking possession of
the provinces, and by the acts of Congress, which assured all the
inhabitants of protection in their property. It would be an
unwarranted construction of these treaties, laws, ordinances, and
municipal regulations, were we to decide that the Indians were not
to be maintained in the enjoyment of all the rights which they
could have enjoyed under either, had the provinces remained under
the dominion of Spain. It would be rather a perversion of their
spirit, meaning, and terms, contrary to the injunction of the law
under which we act, which makes the stipulations of any treaty, the
laws and ordinances of Spain,
Page 34 U. S. 756
and these acts of Congress, so far as either applies to this
case, the standard rules for our decision.
On these considerations, we are clearly of opinion that the
Indians who claimed the lands in question had, under the government
of Great Britain and Spain, a right of property in them which could
not be impaired without a violation of the laws of both, and the
sanctity of repeated treaties; that these rights continued till the
time of the cession, are guaranteed by the treaty and acts of
Congress relation to the Floridas, in perfect conformity with its
stipulations and faith, unless the Indians had previously made a
binding transfer to the parties under whom the petitioner claims
them.
The remaining question is whether he has become invested with
the right of the Indians, either in virtue of their deeds or by the
grant of the lawful authorities of the King, pursuant to the laws,
usages, and customs of the Spanish government of the province. The
proclamation of 1763 was undoubtedly the law of the province till
1783; it gave direct authority to the Governors of Florida to grant
Crown lands subject only to such conditions and restrictions as
they or the King might prescribe. These lands were of two
descriptions, such as had been ceded to the King by the Indians, in
which he had full property and dominion, and passed in full
property to the grantee, and those reserved and secured to the
Indians, in which their right was perpetual possession, and his the
ultimate reversion in fee, which passed by the grant subject to the
possessory right. The proclamation also authorized the union of
these rights by a purchase from the Indians, and taking possession
with the leave and license of the Crown in favor of an individual,
or by the governor at an Indian council, for and in the name of the
King. This proclamation was also the law of all the North American
colonies in relation to Crown lands. The grants of the governors
were universally considered as made by the King through his
authorized representatives, and when his authority to grant those
lands of the Crown, the right to which was perfect by the union of
the rights of possession with the reversion, it is scarcely
possible that their authority would be more limited as to those in
which the King had only a remote ultimate fee. As a matter of
policy, it was for the benefit of the King and colony to substitute
the possession, settlement, and
Page 34 U. S. 757
cultivation of the whites for the mere occupancy of the Indians
in the pursuit of game, and it cannot be imagined without clear
proof that the autograph of the King, or his order in council,
should be indispensable for a license or permission to purchase,
when a patent was valid without either. There is no evidence in the
record or in the history of the colonies that such a distinction
existed in law or usage, but is in direct collision with all the
colonial laws relating to purchases from the Indians, as well as
the course pursued at treaties, when deeds were made to purchasers
with the consent of the governor, or to the King, state, or United
States, for their use or in trust to convey to them. There is no
evidence or reason to induce the belief that Spain acted in any
other manner in the confirmation of Indian deeds; the usage of her
local governors and commandants of posts in such confirmation is in
precise conformity to that of the other colonial officers under
Great Britain, and was also in conformity to the existing laws of
Spain. (Record 329.) From the confirmation of the Houma grant in
1777 by the Governor General of Louisiana to that of the Captain
General of Cuba of this in 1811, during forty years, no instance
appears of a direct confirmation by the King, or of his ever having
required any other act than the approbation of the local governor
to give perfect validity to the purchase.
Independently of these considerations, there is another founded
on the Treaty at the Walnut Hills with the Creek and Tallapoosa
Indians, held by the then Governor of West Florida, under the
authority of the Governor General of Louisiana. The governor of
that province is, in the fifth article, declared to be "as
representing the King in it." Such a stipulation in a treaty of
friendship and warranty would bind the King in good faith not to
disavow his acts declared to be done in the royal name and
authority. It would be an imputation on his faith to his
acknowledged subjects, plighted by repeated guarantees, to suppose
that he intended by the treaty of cession to exclude from
confirmation, those lands which his white subjects had purchased
from the Indians under the sanction of treaties, with the
approbation and formal confirmation of his highest officers, and to
confirm only those grants of the royal domain, which had been made
at the mere will of his governors, for such consideration only as
they might prescribe. If there could be any
Page 34 U. S. 758
foundation for such an imputation in any case, the history,
terms and consideration for the present grants would at once repel
it, and when we consider that the United States accepted of the
cession with a knowledge that they had been made, as well as the
circumstances under which they were made, connected with the
quantity of land embraced within them, without excepting them from
confirmation, we can have little doubt that it was the meaning and
intention of both contracting parties to the treaty, to place them
on the same footing as the grants of lands belonging to the royal
domain.
There is nothing in the treaty which authorizes a distinction
between such grants, which operate by their own force as a transfer
of the full property in royal lands, held by the Crown under
cessions from the Indians, or deeds of confirmation, which give
validity to grants conveying the Indian right, in confirming the
transfer by the license of the King in the person of his
representative.
The governor was equally the lawful authority of the King for
the one purpose as the other, though he had, by his royal order,
transferred the power to grant royal lands, from the governor to
the intendant; he had not affected the authority of the former, to
confirm grants made by the Indians in such form as to validate the
title conveyed. Whether this act of the governor operated by way of
confirmation or grant is immaterial; it gave such effect to the
purchase, that the lands became the property of the purchaser, so
that they could not revert to the Crown by the abandonment of the
Indians, or any judicial process known to the law of England or
Spain, which in substance and effect were the same. When we look,
too, to the very remote contingent interest which the King could
have to these lands, consistently with his guarantee to the
Indians, there can be no reason perceived why deeds or grants,
operating to confirm in full property to the purchasers from the
Indians, lands thus guaranteed to them, should not be held in a
court of equity as valid as original grants of the royal
domain.
The Indian right to the lands as property was not merely of
possession, that of alienation was concomitant; both were equally
secured, protected, and guaranteed by Great Britain and Spain,
subject only to ratification and confirmation by the license,
charter, or deed from the governor representing the
Page 34 U. S. 759
King. Such purchases enabled the Indians to pay their debts,
compensate for their depredations on the traders resident among
them, to provide for their wants; while they were available to the
purchasers as payment of the considerations which at their expense
had been received by the Indians. It would have been a violation of
the faith of the government to both, to encourage traders to settle
in the province, to put themselves and property in the power of the
Indians, to suffer the latter to contract debts, and when willing
to pay them by the only means in their power, a cession of their
lands, withhold an assent to the purchase, which by their laws or
municipal regulations was necessary to vest a title. Such a course
was never adopted by Great Britain in any of her colonies, nor by
Spain in Louisiana or Florida; of this fact there is abundant proof
in the record, by public documents, and the testimony of the
highest officers of the local government, the laws, usages, and
customs of which were well known to the United States before the
treaty. The report of the commissioners on Opelousas claims was
submitted to the Secretary of the Treasury in 1815, acted on and
approved by Congress in 1816, in which report the commissioners
state that the right of the Indians to sell their land was always
recognized by the Spanish government. (Record 328.) The laws made
it necessary when the Indians sold their lands to have the deeds
presented to the governor for confirmation. (Record 329.) The sales
by the Indians transferred the kind of right which they possessed;
the ratification of the sale by the governor must be regarded as a
relinquishment of the title of the Crown to the purchaser (Record
333), and no instance is known where permission to sell has been
"refused [Record 330], or the rejection of an Indian sale" [Record
336].
In the present case, the Indian sale has been confirmed with
more than usual solemnity and publicity; it has been done at a
public council and convention of the Indians conformably to
treaties to which the King was a party, and which the United States
adopted, and the grant was known to both parties to the treaty of
cession. The United States was not deceived by the purchase, which
they knew was subject to the claim of the petitioner, or those from
whom he purchased, and made no stipulation which should put it to a
severer test than
Page 34 U. S. 760
any other, and it was made to a house which, in consideration of
its great and continued services to the King and his predecessor,
had deservedly given them high claims as well on his justice as his
faith. But if there could be a doubt that the evidence in the
record did not establish the fact of a royal license or assent to
this purchase as a matter of specific and judicial belief, it would
be presumed as a matter of law arising from the facts and
circumstances of the case, which are admitted or unquestioned.
As heretofore decided by this Court, the law presumes the
existence in the provinces of an officer authorized to make valid
grants,
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
728;
33 U. S. 8 Pet.
459;
a fortiori, to give license to purchase and to
confirm, and the treaty designates the Governor of West Florida as
the proper officer to make grants of Indian lands by confirmation
as plainly as it does the Governor of East Florida to make original
grants,
33 U. S. 8 Pet.
452, or the intendant of West Florida to grant royal lands. A
direct grant from the Crown of lands in a royal haven may be
presumed on an uninterrupted possession of sixty years, 2 Anst.
614; 1 Dow.Par.Ca. 322, 323, or a prescriptive possession of Crown
lands for forty years, 3 Dow.Par.Ca. 112. An encroachment on a
royal forest by a continued possession of twenty years will be
presumed to have been by the license of the Crown or by a grant, if
no act of Parliament prohibits it. 11 East 57, 284, 488, 495. On
the same principle, after a long possession of Indian lands the law
would presume that it was founded on an Indian deed duly confirmed,
or any title consistent with the facts and circumstances in
evidence. 1 Paine 469, 470. Anything which would make the ancient
appropriation good, Cowper 110, if it could have had a lawful
foundation, for whatever may commence by grant is good by
prescription. 1 Roll.Ab. 512; 4 Mod. 55; 1 Saund. 345. The length
of time which brings a given case within the legal presumption of a
grant, charter, or license, to validate a right long enjoyed, is
not definite, depending on its peculiar circumstances; in this
case, we think it might be presumed in less time than when the
party rested his claim on prescriptive possession alone. There is
every evidence, short of the sign manual or order of the King,
approving and confirming this grant, and if that were wanting to
secure
Page 34 U. S. 761
a right of property to lands which have been held as these have
been, the law would presume that it once existed, but was lost in
the lapse of time and change of governments. The more especially as
by the laws of Spain prescription for the period of ten years has
the same effect as twenty by the principles of the common law.
For these reasons, we think the title of the petitioner is valid
by all the rules prescribed by the acts of Congress which give us
jurisdiction of the case.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Superior Court for the Middle District of Florida and was
argued by counsel, on full consideration whereof, this Court is
unanimously of opinion that the title of the petitioner to so much
of the lands in controversy as is embraced within the lines and
boundaries of the tract granted by the deeds, grants, and acts of
confirmation to Panton, Leslie & Co. in 1804 and 1806; also to
the island in the River Appalachicola ceded, granted, and confirmed
to John Forbes in 1811; also to the lands and islands at and west
of the mouth of said river, which were ceded, granted, and
confirmed to John Forbes & Co. in 1811, is valid by the law of
nations; the treaty between the United States and Spain by which
the Territory of the Floridas was ceded to the former; the laws and
ordinances of Spain, under whose government the title originated;
the proceedings under said treaty, and the acts of Congress
relating thereto, and do finally order, decree, determine, and
adjudge accordingly. And this Court doth in like manner order,
adjudge, determine, and decree that the title of the petitioner to
so much of the tract of land which lies east of the first mentioned
tract, between the Rivers Wakulla and St. Mark's, which was
conveyed to John Forbes & Co. in 1811, as shall not be included
in the exception hereinafter made, in valid by the laws, treaty,
and proceedings as aforesaid, with the exception of so much of the
last mentioned tract as includes the fortress of St. Marks and the
territory directly and immediately adjacent and appurtenant
thereto, which are hereby reserved for the use of the United
States. And it is further ordered and decreed that the territory
thus described shall be
Page 34 U. S. 762
that which was ceded by the Indian proprietors to the Crown of
Spain for the purpose of erecting the said fort, provided the
boundaries of the said cession can be ascertained.
If the boundaries of the said cession cannot now be ascertained,
then the adjacent lands which were considered and held by the
Spanish government or the commandant of the post as annexed to the
fortress for military purposes, shall be still considered as
annexed to it, and reserved with it for the use of the United
States. If no evidence can now be obtained to designate the extent
of the adjacent lands, which were considered as annexed to St.
Mark's as aforesaid, then so much land shall be comprehended in
this exception as, according to the military usage, was generally
attached to forts in Florida or the adjacent colonies. If no such
military usage can be proved, then it is ordered and decreed that a
line shall be extended from the point of junction between the
rivers St. Mark's and Wakulla to the middle of the River St.
Mark's, below the junction, thence extending up the middle of each
river three miles in a direct line, without computing the courses
thereof, and that the territory comprehended within a direct line,
to be run so as to connect the points of termination on each river,
at the end of the said three miles up each river, and the two lines
to be run as aforesaid, shall be, and the same is hereby declared
to be, the territory reserved as adjacent and appurtenant to the
fortress of St. Mark's, and as such reserved for the use of the
United States. To which the claim of the petitioner is rejected,
and as to which this Court decree that the same is a part of the
public lands of the United States.
The decree of the court below is therefore reversed and annulled
in all matters and things therein contained, with the exception
aforesaid, and this Court, proceeding to render such decree as the
said court ought to have rendered, do order, adjudge, and decree
that the claim of the petitioner is valid and ought to be
confirmed, and is and remains confirmed by the treaty, laws and
proceedings aforesaid, to all the lands embraced therein, except
such part as is herein above excepted. And this Court does further
order, adjudge, and decree that the clerk of this Court certify the
same to the Surveyor General of Florida, pursuant to law, with
directions to survey and lay off the lands described in the
petition of the claimant, according
Page 34 U. S. 763
to the lines, boundaries and description thereof in the several
deeds of cession, grant, and confirmation by the Indians or
Governor of West Florida filed as exhibits in this cause, or
referred to in the record thereof, excepting nevertheless such part
of the tract granted in 1811, lying east of the tract granted in
1804 and 1806 as is hereby declared to be the territory of the
United States, pursuant to the exception hereinbefore mentioned,
and to make return thereof according to law as to all the lands
comprehended in the three first herein mentioned tracts. And as to
the tract last herein mentioned, to survey and in like manner to
lay off the same, so soon as the extent of the land herein excepted
and reserved for the use of the United States shall be ascertained
in the manner hereinbefore directed.
And this Court doth further order, adjudge, and direct that the
extent and boundaries of the land thus excepted and reserved shall
be ascertained and determined by the Superior Court of the Middle
District of Florida in such manner and by such process as is
prescribed by the acts of Congress relating to the claims of lands
in Florida, and to render thereupon such judgment or decree as to
law shall appertain.