Chickasaw Nation v. United States

22 Ct. Cl. 222, 1887 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 45, 1800 WL 1675
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedApril 4, 1887
DocketNo. 2, Departmental
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 22 Ct. Cl. 222 (Chickasaw Nation v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chickasaw Nation v. United States, 22 Ct. Cl. 222, 1887 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 45, 1800 WL 1675 (cc 1887).

Opinion

Davis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The removal of the Choctaws, Cherokees, and Chickasaws from the territory which they occupied at the beginning of this century gave rise to numerous difficult and complicated questions : first, questions political in their nature, all now happily ended by the settlement of the different tribes in the Indian Territory, where they are successfully pursuing the path of modern civilization; second, questions financial in their nature, springing from the treaties by virtue of which the Indians emigrated from the Bast.

It became necessary for the protection of the Indians, no less than for the advantage of the whites, that the tribes should move west of the Mississippi. The Indian was not prepared to surrender his tribal organization, and, taking land in sev-eralty, to settle into the domestic life of the American citizen and into Caucasian methods of agriculture; on the other hand, the United States could not, even had they desired, restrain the advance of their own people.

The Choctaws and Cherokees have already been before us demanding an adjustment of long-pending controversies with the Government, and now the Chickasaws, coming by a very different channel and under a very different grant of jurisdiction, invoke our aid for the same purpose.

Cases of this kind are most intricate, and are, for a court of law, most difficult to decide satisfactorily. The questions of law founded on the treaties and statutes present obstacles surmounted with comparative ease, but the facts are most difficult to find upon evidence at once competent and convincing. Over fifty years ago these Chickasaw Indians were gathered from the broad plains of the Southern States; they came into the place of rendezvous in straggling detachments; steamboats were employed to transport them, upon which many of them refused to go; the mode of the tribe’s assembling caused delay and expense; conductors, agents, interpreters, and other guides or servants were necessarily furnished them; many of the tribe [243]*243went overland, absolutely refusing water transit, and were, in some instances, months making the journey; others went part of the way by land and part of the way by water; the exact number taking either route is impossible of exact ascertainment, as is the total population of the nation at the time, and the number of those who remained at home preferring to share the white man’s system of government to an emigration westward.

The Indians complain that the transfer was extravagantly managed by the Government agents; that the treaty agreement was not fulfilled; that waste at least, if not actual fraud upon their rights, was committed by the officers acting for the United States, the guardians, in aid of the Indians, the wards.

More than fifty years after the event, upon testimony enormous in quantity but unsatisfactory in quality, we are called upon to examine these numerous questions of fact, as well as others, in relation to the disbursement of trust funds held by the Government for certain specified classes in the Chickasaw Nation.

The case is important in that it involves the just dealing of a powerful and rich Government with a weak tribe whose valuable lands were taken for a consideration alleged not to have been fairly fulfilled; and in that it also involves a sum of money of the utmost importance to the claimants, and which, if allowed, will make serious inroad upon the Treasury of the defendants.

In furtherance of the policy of transfer to the Indian Territory, several treaties were made with the Chickasaws, then principally resident in Mississippi. The first of these treaties was concluded October 20,1832, to which certain explanatory articles were added two days later (7 Stat. L., 381, 388); May 24,1834, another treaty was concluded (id., 450, 456); finally, the 22d of June, 1852, a third treaty was signed (10 id., 974) from which directly grew the reference to this court.

By the treaty of 1832 the Chickasaws declared that rather than be subject to State laws they preferred to remove to the West, where they might be governed by their own laws, and tor that purpose had determined to sell their lands and to seek á new home. To accomplish this, and with the President’s approval, they agreed to cede to the United States their lands east of the Mississippi, the lands to be surveyed as public [244]*244lands by the Government and offered for sale, all tlie money received to be paid over to the Chickasaw Nation less “the whole cost and expenses of surveying and selling the land, including every expense attending the same.” The Nation agreed to hunt up a home west of the Mississippi, but in the event of failing in that prior to the first public sale of their eastern lands, they promised to select out of the surveys a comfortable settlement for every family upon a certain specified allotment basis. When the Chickasaws were ready to remove west they were to notify the President, who was then to furnish them with the funds necessary for their transportation and journey and for one year’s provisions after reaching their new home, the cost thereof to be ultimately refunded from the proceeds of the. ceded lands, the money from which was to be largely invested, by the President in interest-bearing or dividend-paying stocks.

The treaty of 1834 related largely to the protection of those Indians entitled to land who were orphans or who were deemed incompetent to manage their affairs. It provides a plan for their protection, it makes various provisions affecting reservations of land, and generally covers the same subject as the treaty of 1832, which to some extent it repeals. These treaties we shall hereafter refer to more in detail.

In February, 1837, the chiefs and headmen of the Chickasaws notified the President that they were ready to remove to the Indian Territory, and asked that he provide means for their transportation and subsistence. This was done, and the tribe removed by degrees from Mississippi to the country of their friends and allies, the Choctaws, who had already gone west. After a temporary sojourn there they took up the lands upon which they still live. The expenses incurred by United States officers in the removal were charged against the nation’s fund, and upon these charges is founded the first general complaint of the Chickasaws, the second being based upon the wrongful payment by the United States to persons not entitled to receive it of Chickasaw money held in trust under the treaty of 1834 for the incompetents and orphans.

Article 4 of the treaty of 1852 was designed to quiet these complaints, and, as amended in the Senate, it provided in substance as follows:

That an account should be prepared, under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, exhibiting in detail all the moneys [245]*245which from time to time had been placed in the Treasury to the credit of the nation “ resulting from the treaties of 1832 and.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Ct. Cl. 222, 1887 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 45, 1800 WL 1675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chickasaw-nation-v-united-states-cc-1887.