Verden v. Coleman (66 U.S. 472)
Writ of error to the Supreme Court of Indiana.
Coleman filed a bill in equity against Verden in the Benton county circuit, Indiana, to foreclose a mortgage. The complainant set out a note given by Verden to him for $2,315, and a mortgage on six pieces of land to secure its payment, and prayed a decree of foreclosure. The defendant, in his answer, admitted the making of the note and the execution of the mortgage; and set up, by way of avoidance, the following facts: That he purchased, at the time the note and mortgage were given, six pieces of land, five from the complainant and one from Samuel Coleman, for the gross sum of $4,315, of which he paid down $2,000, and gave the note and mortgage to secure the balance, $2,315. The whole six lots were included in the mortgage, and the whole constituted one transaction. But the defendant alleged, that for one of the six lots, the value of which alone was greater than the sum specified as due on the note and mortgage, he had got a worthless title. The title which he got rested upon a patent given to one Hewett in 1841, as a pre-emptor. He alleged that the land patented to Hewett had been reserved by the treaty of 1832 with the Pottawatomie Indians, to one To-pen-na-be, a member of the tribe, and that previous to the date of Hewett's preemption title the President of the United States had selected and located the tract in question and assigned it to the Indian to whom it legally belonged at the date of the patent. The defendant set out the documents upon which To-pen-na-be's title rested. In reply, the complainant insisted that Hewett acquired the legal title as pre-emptor, and that To-pen-na-be acquired none by the treaty and the proceedings had under it. He set out the documents upon which the Hewett title rested. The defendant demurred to the replication, but the demurrer was overruled and a decree of foreclosure entered. He appealed to the Supreme Court of the State, where the decree was affirmed. He, thereupon, removed the cause to the Supreme Court of the United States by a writ of error under the 25th section of the judiciary act.
Mr. Gillet, of Washington city, and Mr. Mace, of Indiana, for plaintiff in error.
Mr. Baird, of Indiana, for defendant in error.
Mr. Justice GRIER.
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This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).
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