Menominee Tribe of Indians v. United States

101 Ct. Cl. 10, 1944 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 95, 1944 WL 3683
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedFebruary 7, 1944
DocketNo. 44298
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 101 Ct. Cl. 10 (Menominee Tribe of Indians 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
Menominee Tribe of Indians v. United States, 101 Ct. Cl. 10, 1944 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 95, 1944 WL 3683 (cc 1944).

Opinion

Madden, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is one of several suits brought by the plaintiff tribe of Indians pursuant to a special jurisdictional act. In this suit the plaintiff seeks to recover interest which, it claims,, the Government caused the plaintiff to lose over a period from 1890 to the present time on certain interest-bearing funds belonging to the plaintiff but held in the Treasury of the United States. The stated reason for the loss and the liability therefor is that there were several separate funds of the plaintiff’s money in the Treasury, five bearing no interest; two bearing 4%; and two, 5% interest. The-plaintiff claims that when there was occasion for the Government to spend money on behalf of the Tribe, the non-interest-bearing funds should have been spent first, the 4% funds next, and the 5% funds last. We have found that this practice was not always followed and that substantially less-interest accrued to the Tribe as a result. The question for [16]*16decision is whether the Government’s failure to follow the practice gives the plaintiff a right to recover in this suit.

The special act confers jurisdiction on this court to hear, determine, adjudicate, and render final judgment on

* * * all legal or equitable claims of whatsoever nature which the Menominee Tribe of Indians may have against the United States, arising under or growing out of any treaties, agreements, or laws of Congress, or out of any maladministration or wrongful handling of any of the funds, land, timber, or other property or business enterprises belonging to said tribe or held in trust for it by the United States, or otherwise; including, but without limiting the generality of the foregoing, * * * claims for damages resulting from the improper or unlawful expenditures of tribal trust funds, including trust funds created by the Act of April 1,1880, entitled “An Act to authorize the Secretary of the Interior to deposit certain funds in the United States Treasury in lieu of investment” (21 Stat. L. 70), and the Act of March 22,1882, entitled “An Act authorizing the sale of certain logs cut by the Indians of the Menominee Reservation in Wisconsin” (22 Stat. L. 30), and the Act of June 12,1890, entitled “An Act to authorize the sale of timber on certain lands reserved for the use of the Menominee Tribe of Indians, in the State of Wisconsin” (26 Stat. L. 146), and the Act of March 2S, 1908, entitled “An Act to authorize the cutting of timber, the manufacture and sale of timber, and the preservation of the forests on the Menominee Indian Reservation in the State of Wisconsin” (35 Stat. L. 51), and the Act of February 12, 1929, entitled “An Act to authorize the payment ox interest on certain funds held in trust by the United States and Indian tribes” (45 Stat. L. 1164); * * *

The first interest-bearing fund originated in the Act of 1880, referred to in the jurisdictional act. As shown in finding 2, the United States, in 1836, by treaty provided that $76,000 should be allowed to the plaintiff tribe and invested in some safe stock, the income from which was also to be invested until such time as, in the judgment of the President, the income from the accumulated stock could be usefully applied to the payment of annuities as provided in the treaty, or some other purpose beneficial to the Indians. The money was invested in state and federal bonds. The Act of [17]*171880 authorized the Secretary of the Treasury to deposit the proceeds of the redemption of the bonds in the Treasury, instead of reinvesting the proceeds, and provided that interest should be paid upon these deposits at the rate stipulated by treaties or prescribed by law. In 1881 a deposit of $153,039.38 was made in the Treasury, in a fund called “Menominee Fund,’’.which bore interest at 5% per annum. This fund was never encroached upon, and no complaint is made of its management.

The act of 1890, referred to in the jurisdictional act, and in 'finding 2, provided for the sale of timber from the plaintiff’s reservation and for the deposit in the Treasury of one-fifth of the proceeds in a non-interest-bearing fund and four-fifths in a fund bearing 5% interest. This latter fund became known as the “Menominee Log Fund.” The interest, as it accrued, was placed in a non-interest-bearing fund. The two 4% funds and the other non-interest-bearing funds arose out of similar legislation which is outlined in the findings.

The Secretary of the Interior has had frequent occasion to make expenditures on behalf of the Indians, and out of their funds, for the general support'and welfare of the tribe, as for health, education, maintenance of the agency, etc.; for per capita payments; and for the expense of the care and sale of timber and lumber. The various acts of Congress authorizing these expenditures used slightly differing language to indicate what moneys could be drawn upon for these expenses. For example, the act of 1890 empowered the Secretary to advance money for the expense of cutting and marketing timber “out of any money in the Treasury belonging to said Indians.” The act of 1906 authorized the payment of the expense of cutting and sawing timber to be paid “out of the funds of the said Menominee tribe of Indians now on deposit in the United States Treasury.” Looking at all the statutes authorizing expenditures of the plaintiff’s money, we find that none of them expressly restrict the expenditures to either non-interest-bearing funds or interest-bearing funds. The statutes enacted between 1890 and 1927 authorizing per capita payments would not have permitted such payments from two of the non-interest-[18]*18bearing funds, since they permitted such payments to be made out of, and, apparently, only out of, tribal funds created by the Acts of 1890 and 1908. But there were two other non-interest-bearing funds which were set up under those acts, from which the per capita payments could have been made, so far as those funds were sufficient.

The evidence, largely in the form of accounts furnished by the Comptroller General, shows that if the Secretary of the Interior had, so far as the several funds were sufficient, and so far as the statutes authorizing expenditures permitted, spent the non-interest-bearing funds first and the 4% funds next, before spending any of the 5% funds, a substantially larger amount of interest would have accrued for the plaintiff’s benefit.

Section 3 of the jurisdictional act provides that “At the trial of said suit the court shall apply as respects the United States the same principles of law as would be applied to an ordinary fiduciary and shall settle and determine the rights thereon both legal and equitable of said Menominee Tribe against the United States * * The defendant urges that if this provision of Section 3 is construed as intended to have any substantial effect, it becomes unconstitutional as an illegal interference by Congress with the judicial function of the court.

We think this contention is without merit. Congress is the lawmaking branch of the Government, and laws made by it are not unconstitutional because they are special, applicable to only one or some persons, rather than of general application, or because they are retrospective and applicable to fact situations which have occurred before their enactment, rather than prospective, in their operation. The cases cited by the defendant were cases where the effect of the special, or retroactive, legislation was to deprive a private person of a right which he had acquired under the law which was in effect when the transaction occurred.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 Ct. Cl. 10, 1944 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 95, 1944 WL 3683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/menominee-tribe-of-indians-v-united-states-cc-1944.