Northern Pac. Ry. Co. v. United States

191 F. 947, 112 C.C.A. 359, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5011
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 6, 1911
DocketNo. 1,916
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 191 F. 947 (Northern Pac. Ry. Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern Pac. Ry. Co. v. United States, 191 F. 947, 112 C.C.A. 359, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5011 (9th Cir. 1911).

Opinion

MORROW, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). [1] The question to be determined in this case is the westerly boundary of the Yakima Indian reservation as described in the treaty of June 5, 1855 (12 Stat. 952). -

It will be convenient to repeat the description contained in the treaty, identifying its calls by numbers as follows:

(1) Commencing on the Yakima river, at the mouth of the Attahnam river.

(2) Thence westerly along said Attah-nam river to the forks.

(3) Thence along the southern tributary to the Cascade Mountains.

(4) Thence southerly along the main ridge of said mountains, passing south and cast of Mt. Adams, to the spur whence flows the waters of the Klickitat and Pisco rivers.

(5) Thence down said spur to the divide between the waters of said rivers.

(61 Thence along said divide to the divide separating the waters of the Satas river from those flowing into the Columbia river.

(7) Thence along said divide to the main Yakima, eight miles below the mouth of the Satas river.

(8) And thence up the Yakima river to the place of beginning.

There is no controversy as to the location of the point “commencing on the Yakima river, at the mouth of the Attah-nam river,” nor is there any controversy as to the second call, “westerly along said Attah-nam river to the forks,” nor as to the third call, “along the southern tributary”; but the controversy begins with the terminal point of this call, “the Cascade Mountains.”

The call is limited by the Schwartz survey to the southern boundary of the Attah-nam river and terminates where that tributary takes its rise in a range of the Cascade Mountains. But it is now known that this is not the main range of the Cascade Mountains, and that the southern tributary of the Attah-nam river does not take its rise in that range. In the general description of his survey Schwartz reported that this range along which he ran the western boundary of the reservation “is not the main range of the Cascade Mountains.” His instructions were that the western boundary line coming up from the south should he “the main ridge of the Cascade Mountains, thence northerly along said ridge, passing south and east of Mt. Adams, to the southern tributary of the Attah-nam river.” He was further instructed that the question as to which was the main ridge of the Cascade Mountains referred to in the treaty was a subject of disagree[954]*954ment; the Indians claiming that the main ridge extended to the base of Mt. Adams on the south and east, and white men with diverse interests claiming the said ridge to be further east. He was further instructed :

“It is therefore advisable that before you proceed, to definitely locate and extend the boundary of the reservation from the 47% milepost, you confer with the agent in charge of the Yakima agency, and with other white persons, and Indians, familiar with the country, and obtain all the information possible that will tend to a proper location and establishment of this section of the boundary line according to the provisions of the treaty of June 9, 1855."

Schwartz appears to have consulted with the Indian agent in charge of the Yakima agency, and with other white persons and Indians, and found and identified the main ridge of the Cascade Mountains. But he did not carry his survey.along that ridge, as instructed, btit along a ridge 15 to 20 miles further east. His reason for running his line along the eastern ridge instead of the main ridge to the west was that the former was a ridge dividing the waters of the Satas and Klickitat rivers, and along which he could carr)*- his line to the source of the southern tributary of the Attah-nam river “without crossing the Klickitat river, and the treaty did not call for that.” But his instructions did not require him to follow that ridge or to avoid crossing the Klickitat river. On the contrary, he was instructed to ascertain and follow the main ridge of the Cascade Mountains. Nor did any call of the treaty require him to follow the ridge dividing the waters of the Satas and Kickitat rivers.

This brings us to the consideration of one of the controlling questions in this case. Between the main ridge of the Cascade Mountains, along which the fourth call of the treaty locates the western boundary and the apparent terminal point of the third call of the treaty at the source,of the Attah-nam river in the Cascade Mountains, there is a gap of 15 to 20 miles; that is to say, the third call of the treaty following the southern tributary of the Attah-nam river does not reach the main ridge of the Cascade Mountains, but appears to terminate in an inferior eastern ridge of the Cascade Mountains. Between that ridge and the summit of the main ridge there is a distance of from 15 to 20 miles, and a straight line between these two points leaves the eastern ridge and crosses the headwaters of the Klickitat river to the main or western ridge. Is this gap in the description of the treaty boundary of such a character as to defeat the western boundary along the main ridge of the Cascade Mountains? We think not. Gov. Stevens, who negotiated the treaty with the Indians, had a map made in 1857, two years after the making of the treaty and two years before its ratification, showing the location of the Indian nations and tribes of the territory of Washington and the territory of Nebraska west of the mouth of the Yellowstone. On this map is a tracing of the Yakima Indian reservation which clearly carries the western boundary of the reservation to and southerly along the main ridge of the Cascade Mountains, passing south and east of Mt. Adams as required in the fourth call of the treaty. The map is, however, incorrect, in this, that it appears to locate the rise of the southern tributary of the Attahnam river in the main ridge of the Cascade Mountáins. There is in [955]*955the record a copy of another map, the original of which is said to have been deposited at the Yakima agency, having, it is alleged, been given by Gov. Stevens to an Indian named White Swan; hence the map is named the 'White Swan Map.” This map shows the boundaries of the Yakima reservation and appears to be a reproduction, in part at least, of the tracing of that reservation as it is shown on the larger map and transmitted to Washington by Gov. Stevens in 1857. On ¡his map the northern boundary of the reservation follows the southern tributary of the Attah-nam river to a point manifestly on the main ridge of the Cascade Mountains, thence southerly along the main ridge for a short distance, when the boundary turns eastwardly passing south and east of Mt. Adams.

The error in these maps in locating the head or source of the .¿southern tributary of the Attah-nam river in the main ridge of the Cascade Mountains is not difficult of explanation. The Cascade Mountains is a range of considerable length and elevation, extending north and south through Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia, and run-, niug. nearly parallel to the Pacific Coast line. In the state of Washington this range forms an elevated plateau with a general elevation of from 5,000 to 7,000 feet, rising into a rugged and complex order of ridges and peaks from 50 to 100 miles in width. Along the main axis of the range are a number of high peaks, among othei s M t. Adams, with an elevation of -12,325 feet.

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Related

Sekaquaptewa v. MacDonald
626 F.2d 113 (Ninth Circuit, 1980)
Yakima Tribe v. United States
158 Ct. Cl. 672 (Court of Claims, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
191 F. 947, 112 C.C.A. 359, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-pac-ry-co-v-united-states-ca9-1911.