Halbert v. United States

283 U.S. 753, 51 S. Ct. 615, 75 L. Ed. 1389, 1931 U.S. LEXIS 176
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 1, 1931
Docket141-154
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 283 U.S. 753 (Halbert v. United States) 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
Halbert v. United States, 283 U.S. 753, 51 S. Ct. 615, 75 L. Ed. 1389, 1931 U.S. LEXIS 176 (1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Van Devanter

delivered the opinion of the Court.

These suits were brought in the District Court for the Western District of Washington to establish and enforce asserted rights to allotments, each of 80 acres, in the Quinaielt Indian Reservation in the southwestern part of that State. Authority for bringing the suits is found in the statute providing that any person who is “ in whole or in part of Indian blood or descent ” and claims to be entitled to an allotment of land under any law of Congress may prosecute a suit against the United States to determine and give effect to such right. 1 The suits were heard together in the District Court, where decrees were given for the plaintiffs, and again in the Circuit Court of Appeals, where those decrees were reversed. 2 The cases are here on certiorari.

The plaintiffs are all of Indian blood and descent, but none is a full-blood Indian. Some are members of the Chehalis, Chinook and Cowlitz tribes, and the question is presented whether these tribes are among those whose members are entitled to allotments from lands within *756 the Quinaielt Reservation. Many do not personally reside on the resérvation, and we are asked to decide whether this defeats their claims. Some are the issue, either children or grandchildren, of a marriage between an Indian woman and a white man, and whether this is an obstacle to allowing their claims is a further question.

In 1855 the Quinaielt, Quillehute (also called Quileute), Chehalis, Chinook and Cowlitz Indians were neighboring tribes in the southwesterly section of what is now the State of Washington. They were all known as “fish-eating Indians ” and lived in small villages adjacent to the Pacific coast and the lower reaches of the Columbia River. The Quits and Ozettes were also fish-eating tribes living in coast villages a little north of the others, the Ozettes being farther north than, the Quits.

During the early part of 1855 negotiations were had between a representative of the United States and representatives of the Quinaielt, Quillehute, Chehalis, Chinook, Cowlitz and Quit tribes looking towards a cession by these tribes of much territory and their consolidation within a single reservation. These negotiations failed of their full purpose, but resulted in a treaty between the United States and the Quinaielts and Quillehutes which was signed on July 1, 1855, and January 25, 1856. 3 By this treaty the Quinaielts and Quillehutes ceded a large district to the United States, and the latter engaged to reserve for their use and occupancy a tract “ sufficient for their wants,” to which when established they were to remove. There were also provisions in the treaty securing to the Indians the right of taking fish “ at all usual and accustomed grounds and stations,” in common with all citizens of that section, and of erecting temporary houses to be used in that connection; authorizing the President, at his discretion, to survey the whole or any *757 part of the reserved lands and assign the same to such individuals or families “ as are willing to avail themselves of the privilege and will locate on the same as a permanent home”; and consenting that the President might “ consolidate ” the Quinaielts and Quillehutes and “ other friendly tribes,” whenever in his opinion the public interest and the welfare of the Indians would be promoted by it.

Under the treaty a reservation of about 10,000 acres at the mouth of the Quinaielt River was provisionally selected and its boundaries surveyed. Some years later the local superintendent reported that the reservation, by reason of being small and containing but a small amount of agricultural and pasture lands, had proved unattractive to the Indians; that the Chehalis, Chinook and other coastal tribes in southwestern Washington, like the Quinaielts and Quillehutes, who were parties to the treaty, were all “emphatically fish-eaters,” drawing their subsistence almost wholly from the water, and that all of these fish-eating tribes should be collected on a single reservation, including suitable fisheries. To that end he recommended that the existing reservation be greatly enlarged and designated the territory which he believed should be included in it. This recommendation led to an order of November 4, 1873, by the President, the material parts of which are as follows: 4

“ In accordance with the provisions of the treaty with the Quinaielt and Quillehute Indians, concluded July 1, 1855, and January 25, 1856, and to provide for other Indians in that locality, it is hereby ordered that the following tract of country in Washington Territory ... be withdrawn from sale and set apart for the use of the Quinaielt, Quillehute, Hoh, Quit, and other tribes of fish-eating Indians on the Pacific Coast, . . .”

*758 This enlarged reservation contained about 200,000 acres and included the prior provisional reservation of 10,000 acres.

By an Act of March 4,1911, 5 Congress directed the Secretary of the Interior to make allotments on the Quinaielt Reservation under the provisions of the allotment laws “ to all members of the Hoh, Quileute, Ozette or other tribes of Indians in Washington who are affiliated with the Quinaielt and Quileute tribes in the treaty [before named] and who may elect to take allotments on the Quinaielt Reservation rather than on the reservations set aside for these tribes.” This direction was followed by a proviso declaring, “ The allotments authorized herein shall be made from the surplus lands of the Quinaielt Reservation after the allotments to thé Indians thereon have been completed.” The reference to other reservations” may be sufficiently explained by stating that some small reservations 6 had been set aside theretofore for particular villages of the Hoh, Quileute, Ozette, Quit, Chehalis and other fish-eating tribes, but that these reservations were in some instances limited to 640 acres and were in no instance large enough to provide allotments to more than a small fraction of the Indians thereon.

When the bill which became the Act of March 4, 1911, was introduced in Congress it contained a direction that allotments be made to “ all members of the Hoh, Quileute and Ozette tribes of Indians in Washington who may elect” etc., and said nothing about other tribes; but in the course of its passage this provision was amended so as to read: “to all members of the Hoh, Quileute, 7 Ozette or other tribes of Indians in Washington who are *759 affiliated with the Quinaielt and Quileute7 tribes in the treaty [before named] and who may elect,” etc. This shows that Congress intended to include tribes not included in the original provision; and it shows further that they were to be tribes having, like the Hoh and Ozette tribes, some affiliation with the Quinaielt and Quileute tribes “ in the treaty.” Probably “ in ” was used in the sense of “under” or “through.” Strictly speaking there was no affiliation in the treaty.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 U.S. 753, 51 S. Ct. 615, 75 L. Ed. 1389, 1931 U.S. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halbert-v-united-states-scotus-1931.