New York Indians v. United States

40 Ct. Cl. 448, 1905 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 37, 1904 WL 879
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMay 15, 1905
DocketNo. 17861
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 40 Ct. Cl. 448 (New York 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
New York Indians v. United States, 40 Ct. Cl. 448, 1905 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 37, 1904 WL 879 (cc 1905).

Opinion

Nott, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

1. The cause of action confided to the jurisdiction of this court is thus defined by the Act 28th January, 1898 (27 Stat. L., p. 426) : The claim “ of those Indians who were parties to the treaty of Buffalo Creek ” “ growing out of the alleged unexecuted stipulations of the treaty on the part of the United States.”

2. The unexecuted stipulations of the treaty on the part of the United States were these: By the treaty the United States agreed to set apart 1,824,000 acres of land “ as a permanent home for all the New York Indians.” Such of the tribes as did not “ accept and agree to remove to the country set apart for their homes within five years ” were to “ forfeit all interest in the lands set apart.” None of the tribes moved or was removed to the country set apart; none of them made a demand or request for removal; some of them positively refused to remove when requested by agents and commissioners of the United States; others of them denied that they Avere parties to the treaty and averred that it had been procured in their names by corruption and fraud. After twenty-two years thus passed, the United States declared the lands open for public entry and sold them. But the treaty chanced to be in such form that the Supreme Court construed it to be a grant in p’rcesenti, and held that the United States not having declared a forfeiture the title remained in the Indians who were parties to the treaty, and that they Avere entitled to recoA^er the avails of the land, amounting to $1,967,056. (170 U. S. R., 1; 173 id., 464.)

The action, therefore, is substantially one to recover money had and received by the defendants to the use of the plaintiffs; and the primary question uoav before the court is, To Avhom shall this money be paid — who Avere the parties, within the intent of the treaty, that are entitled to receive it?

3. If the Indians had removed to the West, as contemplated by the treaty, the different tribes would have received tracts of land proportionate to their numbers, and the members of the tribes Avould have held as communal OAAmers. The present suit is not to recover land, but money, the proceeds of land, the title of which land was vested in [452]*452the Indians as communal owners. The proceeds, therefore, in the matter of disposition, must follow the rule which would have governed the disposition of the land. The Government as guardian of the Indians, might have treated the proceeds as a fund to be retained by the guardian, the income to be paid to the communal owners per capita, or it might have treated the fund as Indian lands have been treated, by partitioning them by personal allotment among the communal owners. It has substantially selected the last course. The intent is that each communal owner of the land who would have been entitled under the treaty to 820 acres, if the lands were allotted, shall recover his proportionate part of the fund.

4. In determining who are the communal owners, entitled to be paid per capita, the court will follow Indian laws and customs so far as they do not come in conflict with the laws of the United States or the purposes of the treaty or with natural law and justice.

The court therefore will adhere so far as possible to the fundamental Indian law of communal ownership, and will respect, as long as it does not conflict with the purposes of the treaty, the tribal determination of membership; but the court'must at the same time recognize the fact that an Indian community is not the intact thing which it once was, and that communal ownership is not the well-defined, ascertainable estate, or interest, which it was when there were real communities living in unity and communal possession on communal lands. The changes which had taken place in 1860 when these lands were opened to purchase had even then nearly obliterated the old communal lines; and the changes which have since come have reduced some, if not all, of those communities to little more than voluntary societies held together by the annuities paid by the Government per capita. Thus, for instance, the Oneidas were once a powerful tribe of the Six Nations. They have been divided and subdivided into the New York Oneidas, the Canadian Oneidas, the Wisconsin Oneidas; and the New York Oneidas have been subdivided into two “ Christian parties ” and two a Orchard parties.” There are also Oneidas living upon the Onondaga Reservation, and Oneidas living upon their [453]*453own lands, and Oneidas to whom lands have been allotted in severalty, and who have become citizens of the State of New York and who have ceased to be, in a political sense, Indians. To accept as final the determination of such communities or societies, on the question of a legal right to participate in the fund.would be an evasion of judicial duty. It would be committing individual rights to the incompetent hands of those who have a direct pecuniary interest in the decision. Neither can the court accept the action'of any community subsequent to the date of the treaty as being a legal determination on the question of communal membership; and where it appears that since the execution of the treaty a communal roll has been tampered with and persons who were not Indians have been admitted to communal membership from improper motives and by arbitrary methods, the court will not regard them as beneficiaries under the treaty or as persons entitled to participate in the fund within the intent of the jurisdictional statute.

5. The treaty of Buffalo Creek, as has been said, was a grant in prcesenti of the lands west of the Mississippi; but it was also an executory contract between the parties. The intent was (which was the chief consideration for the contract) that all the New York Indians should remove West and should receive all the lands designated, and that they should do so within five years, and that if they should fail to do so the contract should come to an end by the United States declaring a forfeiture, in which case it was expressly provided that the Indians should “ forfeit all interest in the lands so set apart.” The lands so set apart were 1,824,000 acres, and the acreage was ascertained by taking the number of all persons belonging to the tribes, so far as known, amounting to 5,485, and adding thereto 215 (apparently for nonenmnerated Indians), and allowing to each person 320 acres of land.

6. The persons, therefore, to be removed to the West and to receive 320 acres of land each, or a communal interest therein, were the Indian communities (embracing by that term all persons affiliated with the Indians) whom the United States desired to remove west of the Mississippi. [454]*454The United States were not interested in academic questions of Indian blood or Indian citizenship. Whether an Indian family of half bloods residing on an Indian reservation in the State of New York or the State of Wisconsin were children of white men or of white women was, for the purposes of the contract, abstract and irrelevant. That one such family should be called Indian and be allowed to go to the West to acquire lands of the United States, but that the other should be called white and not be allowed to go or to acquire lands, would be an incongruity utterly foreign to the intent of the agreement.

It is true that with the Iroquois, as with almost all Indian tribes, descent was through the mother. The Iroquois woman was the daughter of the tribe unchangeably, irrevocably. She could not marry within the tribe,'for all who were born of the daughters of a tribe were brothers and sisters.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 Ct. Cl. 448, 1905 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 37, 1904 WL 879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-indians-v-united-states-cc-1905.