Ex Parte Pero

99 F.2d 28, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2795
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 26, 1938
Docket6471
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 99 F.2d 28 (Ex Parte Pero) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Pero, 99 F.2d 28, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2795 (7th Cir. 1938).

Opinion

TREANOR, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court granting a writ of habeas corpus. The petitioners were convicted in a state court of Wisconsin of the crime of murder and were sentenced to life imprisoument in the Wisconsin State Prison, The person against whom the alleged crime was committed was a licensed trader on what is known as the Bad River Indian Reservation, the alleged crime having been committed within the confines of that reservation. The reservation had been set aside under the terms of a treaty with the Federal Government as a reservation for the Lake Superior Chippewa Indians and particularly “for the La Pointe band, and such other Indians as may see fit to settle with them.” 1 -

Jt js phe contention of the petitioners, appellees, that jurisdiction to try petitioners for ¿e commission of the alleged crime was exclusively with the proper federal court; that the trial in the state court and the judgment rendered therein were a nuljjty and; consequently, that the petitioners were being held in prison unlawfully by the respondent-appellant, Warden of the Wisconsin State Prison. The foregoing propositions rest upon the assumption that Petitioners are Indian wards of the United Government and that by force of the laws of the Unded Sfte? the aUeg.ed crlme ^ “gmzable onI7 f a district court oí thc Untlted Stat“« and,tllat the P.e' titioners are subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States.

Congress has enacted that “All Indians committing against the person or property another Indian or othei pel son any of the following crimes, namely, murder * * * on and within aüy Indian reserVation under the jurisdiction of the United States Government * * * shall be subject to the same laws, tried in the same courts, and in the same manner, and be subject to the same penalties as are all otiler Pers«ns committing any of the above crimes withm the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States.” 2

+. The_ trial judge considered the jurisdictl0nal ^es ügation to be limited to the narrow ?uestl°n of what jurisdictional test was to be made under the ioregomg act; and jn his memorandum opinion aptly states the question thus: “Who is an Indian within the meaning of that Act?”

The respondent, appellant here; urges that neither of the petitioners is an Indian within the meaning of Section 548, supra, and that both, therefore, were subject to the criminal laws of the state of Wisconsin, even though the crime was committed by them on an Indian reservation. As to petitioner Pero the respondent urges *30 that by force of congressional enactment 3 Pero had been made subject to the criminal laws of Wisconsin and was no longer under federal guardianship. Pero was a full-blood Chippewa Indian and respondent assumes that prior to the commission of the alleged crime Pero had been allotted lands under a “trust patent.” 4 This is a written instrument or certificate, issued to an allottee, which declares that the United States will hold the allotted land for a designated period, usually 25 years, m trust for the sole use and benefit of the allottee, or, m case of his death for the use of his heirs; and the certificate further declares that at the expiration of the trust period ,1 tt 1 , -n ±1 1 j x the United States will convey the land to the allottee or to his heirs, m fee discharged of the trust and free of all charge .s , « j •• • * or incumbrance. And it is the position oi , - , - . f ,.r. respondent that the issuance of a certificate of competency not only freed Pero of restrictions on his power to alienate the allotted land, but also freed him from the guardianship of the United States.

. .... , As to petitioner Moore respondent contends that he was not an Indian for the purposes of federal jurisdiction because he had not been enrolled with any Indian tribe or on any reservation. Although Moore was not enrolled, he resided on the reservation and maintained tribal relations .. T .. - TT. - with the Indians thereon. His mother was £ 11 i~i j j t j* * ^ . a full-blooded Indian of the St. Croix Band of Lake Superior Chippewas. Moores father- was a half-blood whose mother was a full-blood Indian Moores father and mother and their relatives re- .. - - ,. , . sided on the reservation and were known , - J<f T T .. to the other Indians as Chippewa Indians. « .i li ,. t Members of bands other than the La Pointe Band of Lake Superior Chippewas resided'On the reservation, and the reserva- . - . J j. -j £ j.1 t tion was by treaty set aside for the La t-. . , , -L x j. * . ,, Pointe Band and other Indians who might £j. , ^ .Al_ ^ rpi tv * • 4. see fit to settle with them. The District 11v/r , - T ,. j. Court found Moore to be an Indian and to - , e ,1 «t A -l. £ t 1 be a member of the “Lost Tribe of Lake Superior Chippewas.

^ _ The petitioners were convicted in 1927; and at that time the law, as announced by the Wisconsin Supreme Court, was that the state courts had jurisdiction of crimes committed by Indians on a reservation. 5 Thereafter in 1931 in the case of State of Wisconsin v. Rufus, 6 the Wisconsin Supreme Court overruled its prior decision and held that such crimes were exclusively within the federal jurisdiction. The effeet of this holding is that by the law of Wisconsin the state court was without power to try the petitioners for the alleged offense if they were Indians within the meaning of Section 548, supra.

Tbe federal statute which ives federal CQUrts exdusive jurisdiction 0VSer tbe crime .Q tion wben committed b an Indian Qn an Indian reservation does not define „Indian„ for ^ of tbe act And f A , ,■ x we have not been cited to any section of a federal ac and we haye be¿n unable find whicb ts t0 ive a defini_ ,. £ !u , _ fíT i- » £ r tion of the term f Indian for purposes of . . . . . , jurisdiction m criminal causes,

_ In the case of United States v. Rogers 7 it was held that a white man who ■ at a mature age had been adoipted into an Indian tribe does not thereby become an Indian within the meaning of an exception ¡n tbe statute which provides that a named section <<shall nQt extend to crimes com_ mitted b one Ind¡an a inst ,the on Qr of another Indian » The court „„„ °S^°a that th^ exception was . r ^ T^/r' 0 ^ e UjafeS customs of the Indians are regarded as be- ^ tt^-4. a c, x longing to their race. In United States v. Higgins 8 it was held ^ one born of a wbite father and an Ind¡an and who was a recognized member of the’tribe of Ind¡ans in which his mother be] ed ^ u • , . ,♦ ____A . was not subject to taxation under the laws _r u , T *.%. or the state m which he resided. In the „ .* _ . A

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 F.2d 28, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-pero-ca7-1938.