Johnson v. McIntosh
Johnson v. McIntosh (1823) is a notable
Supreme Court case that held that private citizens could not purchase lands from Native Americans; it affirmed the relationship between the tribes and the United States government. The decision was written by Chief Justice
John Marshall, who was a close friend of
Thomas S. Hinde. The latter later purchased a substantial portion of the property that was in question in the litigation. McIntosh had obtained a land patent from the United States government, while Johnson's descendants had inherited the land from a purchase he had made directly from the
Piankeshaw Indians. The court ruling rendered the Johnson purchase invalid, as he had no authority to buy land from the Piankeshaw after the United States had formed as a nation. In short, McIntosh won based on Marshall's creation of the
discovery doctrine. ==Death and additional information==