Green v. Menominee Tribe

233 U.S. 558, 34 S. Ct. 706, 58 L. Ed. 1093, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1199
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 11, 1914
Docket285
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 233 U.S. 558 (Green v. Menominee Tribe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Menominee Tribe, 233 U.S. 558, 34 S. Ct. 706, 58 L. Ed. 1093, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1199 (1914).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this appeal a review is sought of a judgment of the court below holding that an amended petition filed by the appellant stated no cause of action and dismissing the same. (47 Ct. Cls. 281.) Our attention therefore must be directed to the petition, but as a means of at once clarifying the issues, we refer to the act of Congress authorizing the suit and briefly state the averments of an original petition which was likewise dismissed because stating no cause of action.

By an act of Congress of May 29, 1908 (35 Stats. 444, c. 216, § 2), jurisdiction was conferred upon the Court of Claims “to hear, determine, and render final judgment, notwithstanding lapse of time or statute of limitation, for any balances found due, without interest, with the right of appeal as in other cases,” upon the claims of eight named persons who were described in the act as “traders,” against the “Menominee tribe of Indians in Wisconsin and against certain members of said tribe at the Green Bay Agency, for supplies, goods, wares, merchandise, tools, and live stock furnished certain members of the said tribe after the first day of January, in the year eighteen hundred and eighty, for the purpose of carrying on logging operations upon the Menominee Indian Reservation, in Wisconsin.” The statute further provided: “Said court shall,, in rendering judgment, ascertain and determine the amount, if any, due ■ upon each of said claims, and if the court find that there is a liability upon' any of said claims, it shall then determine if such liability be that of the said Menominee tribe of Indians as a tribe or that, of individual members of said tribe, and it shall *563 render judgment for the amount, if any, found due from said tribe to any of said claimants, and it shall render judgments for the amounts, if any, found due from any of the individual members of said tribe to any of said claimants.” The statute then provided the means by which the judgments, if any were rendered, whether against the tribe or against individual Indians, should be paid.

Green, the appellant, one of the traders named in the act, sought to recover from the Menominee tribe and 158 named members thereof an amount alleged to be the price of certain equipment and supplies alleged to have been furnished by him. The-liability of the individual Indians was based upon averments that they had received during the years 1886 to 1889 the amount of thé equipment and supplies sued for, and that they had contracted to pay for the same, the supplies having been furnished them to enable them to carry on logging operations on the Menominee Reservation in Wisconsin. The liability of the tribe was based on averments that it had expressly guaranteed that the individual Indians, members of the tribe, would pay for the supplies furnished them for the purposes and under the circumstances alleged. The defendants jointly demurred on two grounds: first, that the act conferring authority to bring suit was repugnant to the Constitution, and second, because the petition stated no cause of action. Holding that Congress had the undoubted, power to pass the jurisdictional act, the court overruled the first ground. It also overruled the second ground as to the individual members of Ihe tribe who were made defendants, but it sustained the exception of no cause of action as to the tribe, the court holding that “under the averments of the petition the Menominee Tribe of Indians is but a naked guarantor for the debt of another, and such promise not being in writing is void under the statute of frauds.” The suit, as to the tribe, was therefore dismissed.

*564 By. leave, an amended petition was filed stating a new cause of action and joining the .United States as defendant. This petition after alleging that the petitioner was a citizen of the United States and a resident of Wisconsin and after counting upon the jurisdictional act, made in substance the following averments: That in 1881 the Menominee Indians on the reservation were in a destitute condition and to save them and their families from starvation, the United States granted them permission to cut and sell the dead and down timber on the reservation “ten per cent, of the proceeds to go to the benefit of the said tribe and of those performing labor in that respect.” That when it developed that the Indians, because of their extreme poverty and want of credit could not procure the equipment and supplies which were essential to enable them to make use of the permission, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs sent a special agent, John A. Wright, to the Reservation to make some arrangement whereby such condition could be remedied. That a council of the tribe was thereupon held, attended by all the chiefs and head men and practically all the members of the tribe, and it was agreed by and between the then Indian Trader, M. Wescott, “as one party to the agreement, and the Menominee Indian Tribe as the other party thereto, that the said M. Wescott, the duly licensed Indian Trader, at Keshéna, Wisconsin, should furnish necessary equipment' and supplies to those members of the tribe who desired to engage in logging operations to enable them to carry on such work, and support their respective families while so engaged, such equipment and supplies not to exceed the. sum of $2.50 for each thousand feet of logs so cut and sold; that all logs but and- hauled by the Menominee Tribe in the logging operations were to be sold through the Indian Agent to the highest and best bidder; and that the prices for such supplies as were to be furnished by the petitioner, should be such prices as were being paid in cash for similar *565 supplies jn that part of the State, with transportation added; that said Menominee Tribe promised and agreed that such equipment and supplies so furnished should be paid for out of the first proceeds from the sale of the logs so tó be cut and sold. That said agreement was made with the consent ar^d approval of the Indian Agent residing at Keshena, Wisconsin, and in. charge of said Menominee Indian Reservation, and also by said special agent, John A. Wright. That said agreement had the unanimous approval of all members of the tribe present at said council. That said agreement was made orally by the said M. Wescott, personally, and by the chiefs and head men on behalf of said tribe. . . .” It was alleged that the agreement thus'made was carried out by the tribe and by Wescott who made advances for the purposes of the operations in cutting the dead and down timber and continued to do so until the year 1886 when Wescott ceased to be the Indian trader and was succeeded by Green, the petitioner, and one Stacy whose rights the petitioner Green had acquired. The petition then charged that as the condition of destitution and inability to obtain equipment and supplies which had led to the making of the agreement with Wescott yet prevailed after petitioner and Stacy became the Indian traders, on the first of January, 1887, it was agreed between petitioner and Stacy and the tribe that the previous agreement should be continued in full force and effect with petitioner and Stacy, the petition expressly averring that “said last mentioned agreement was made with your petitioner and W. H. Stacy, personally, and on behalf of the Menominee Tribe by the chiefs and head men thereof, which said chiefs and head men still continued to have and were recognized as having authority to make contracts in behalf of, and binding on said tribe.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 U.S. 558, 34 S. Ct. 706, 58 L. Ed. 1093, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-menominee-tribe-scotus-1914.