Opinion
October Term, 1852
J.C. Spencer for appellants.
J.H. Martindale for respondent.
There are two objections to the decision of the county judge, apparent on the face of the return, which it seems to me are fatal to the proceedings and render the examination of any other part of this case unnecessary.
First. — It does not appear that any of the parties to the proceedings were summoned or caused to appear before the county judge or that any of them did appear except Waldron. Of course the judge had no power to proceed against any who did not appear; yet the judgment which he pronounced was as well against those who did not appear as against those who did. There is nothing which our law denounces more explicitly, than an adjudication of the rights of a party without offering him an opportunity of being heard in his defense.
Second. — Waldron having however voluntarily appeared, it may be necessary to examine further as to him, and in doing so the second objection to the proceedings appears.
The act of 1821, under which the proceedings were had, authorizes them only when there is an intrusion on lands owned or occupied by the Indians.
From this return it does not appear that these lands were owned by the Indians. The only word that is used upon that subject is that they were claimed to be owned by them. There is no evidence that such claim had any foundation — none of such ownership, no statement even that they were owned by them. The complaint avers that they are owned and occupied by the Indians. Waldron's answer denies both ownership and occupancy, and there is no statement or averment or evidence of ownership, except the conveyance to Ogden and Fellows, and that tends to show an ownership out of rather than in the Indians.
And as to occupancy, the return is equally imperfect. All that it says on that subject is that the Indians occupy all the tract except certain portions thereof settled upon by the persons named in the complaint and divers other white persons, c And it is nowhere said in the return that the Indians ever occupied those portions thus settled on by the whites.
There may have been other evidence before the county judge elucidating these points. But that we can not know. We are bound by the return, and for aught that appears there, their proceedings may have been taken in respect to lands never either owned or occupied by the Indians, and the judge may be exercising this summary jurisdiction in respect to lands to which the Indians never had either title or possession.
This can not be, and as such ownership or occupancy was essential to his jurisdiction, his judgment must be reversed.
Judgment of the supreme court reversed and proceedings of the respondent annulled.