People ex rel. Schuyler v. Livingstone

123 Misc. 605, 41 N.Y. Crim. 480, 205 N.Y.S. 888, 1924 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1160
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 123 Misc. 605 (People ex rel. Schuyler v. Livingstone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Schuyler v. Livingstone, 123 Misc. 605, 41 N.Y. Crim. 480, 205 N.Y.S. 888, 1924 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1160 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Cheney, J.

This is a writ of habeas corpus to inquire into the cause of the detention of Rosanna Schuyler, a prisoner in the [606]*606Onondaga Penitentiary. Various informalities appear in the papers. The petition is not properly sworn to, as it was verified before one of the attorneys of record of the relator Kuh v. Barnett, 57 N. Y. Super. Ct. 234. The same irregularity appears in the traverse to the return. These irregularities are not jurisdictional, but may be waived. Vreeland v. Pennsylvania Tanning Co., 130 App. Div. 405. The writ originally ran to the sheriff of Onondaga county, while the prisoner was in the custody of the superintendent of the penitentiary. Both these officers have made returns to the writ and the proceeding has been treated as if the writ ran to the proper person. These informalities will, therefore, be disregarded, and the proceeding determined on the real questions involved.

The relator was convicted before a justice of the peace of the town of Onondaga, Onondaga county, N. Y., of the crime of assault in the third degree, committed upon one Rundel Jones, a white boy, upon the highway which passes through the Onondaga Indian Reservation in Onondaga county, and sentenced to imprisonment in the Onondaga County Penitentiary for ten days and to pay a fine of twenty-five dollars and be imprisoned until said fine is paid, not exceeding twenty-five days. She was in custody under the commitment issued by the justice at the time these proceedings were instituted.

She alleges that such imprisonment is unlawful for the reason that she is an Indian, and the crime for which she was convicted was committed within the confines of an Indian reservation, and, therefore, that the courts of this state have not jurisdiction to punish her therefor.

The return and traverse thereto raise two questions of fact. The first is as to the status of the relator as an Indian, and the second, whether the crime was committed upon an Indian reservation. These questions must be determined before we reach the question of the jurisdiction of our courts. Evidence was taken at the hearing upon those questions of fact.

The evidence upon the question of the nationality of the relator is not very satisfactory, as it depends for the most part upon the testimony of the relator herself, which is necessarily largely hearsay, but is probably competent under the pedigree rule. She claims that she was born upon the Mohawk Indian Reservation in Canada, that her father was a Mohawk Indian and her mother a half breed Oneida Indian, born of an Oneida Indian mother by a white father. The respondent claims that relator was brought to the reservation in Canada when an infant by her mother who subsequently married the Indian she claims as her father. No proof of that fact was produced, the only evidence being that as a child relator was living on the reservation in Canada with her [607]*607mother and supposed father and was brought up by them there. It also appears that the relator has lived upon the Onondaga reservation, off and on, for about thirty-three years, with various Indians, and for the last four years has lived there with her husband, a full blooded Oneida Indian. That is probably sufficient to make out a prima facie case under the rule that the status of an Indian may be proved by general reputation or his residence upon a reservation. Charbonneau v. DeLorimier, 8 Que. Pr. 115.

An interesting question is raised on account of the mixed blood of the relator, whether the rale of the common law that the child follows the condition of the father (United States v. Ward, 42 Fed. Rep. 320; Smith v. Bonifer, 154 id. 883) applies, or the exception to that rule that the child of a white citizen and of an Indian mother, who is abandoned by his father, is nurtured and reared by the Indian mother in the tribal relation, becomes a member of the tribe of the mother (Farrell v. United States, 110 Fed. Rep. 942; United States v. Higgins, 103 id. 348; United States v. Hadley, 99 id. 437); or as is held in other authorities that under the Indian Law and customs, the offspring of mixed Indian and white marriages take the race and nationality of the mother. United States v. Saunders, 27 Fed. Cas. No. 16,220, p. 950; Alberty v. United States, 162 U. S. 499; Waldron v. United States, 143 Fed. Rep. 413. It is unnecessary, however, to decide which is the proper rule, as by the application of either, the result would be that the relator is an Indian. If the rale of the common law applies, as her father was an Indian, she would be an Indian irrespective of the status of her mother. If the other rule applies it will be necessary to go back to the first admixture of white blood in order to determine the status of the mother. She was the child of an Indian mother and a white father. If the status of the mother governs, that offspring was an Indian, and she would confer the same status upon her child, the relator. I, therefore, hold that for the purpose of the proceeding, the relator is an Indian, a descendant of the Oneida tribe, one of the Six Nations, but not a member of the Onondaga tribe although residing on its reservation.

Upon the question as to whether the crime was committed within the reservation, it is conceded that /the locus of the crime was within the territorial limits thereof, put the claim is made that by reason of the fact that it was comnáitted upon the highway, it cannot be said to be within the reservation. I am not convinced of the soundness of that contention.

By the treaty between the state of New York and the Onondaga Indians, made in 1788, the Onondagas ceded all their lands to the state of New York, with the proviso that “ The Onondagas shall [608]*608of the said ceded lands hold to themselves and their posterity forever, for their own use and cultivation, but not to be sold, leased or in any manner aliened or disposed of to others ” a tract of land described by metes and bounds, which includes the location of this crime. Subsequently by the treaty of 1793, certain of those lands were released to the state of New York. This treaty contained this further provision: The People of the State of New York shall from time to time and at all times forever hereafter have full power and authority to lay out and open roads through any part of the lands appropriated by the People of the State of New York to the use of the Onondagas and not hereby quit claimed in the same way and manner as roads now are and hereafter may be directed by Law to be laid out and made generally in other parts of the state.” Presumptively, this highway in question was laid out pursuant to that authority, and is being maintained pursuant to the provisions of section 12 of the Indian Law, and presumptively the public generally have the right to use the highways laid out upon the reservation for the purpose of passage, without becoming trespassers upon the reservation. The court will take judicial notice that such has been the practical construction of the treaty by the acts of the parties since the treaty.

Subsequently by the treaties of 1795, 1817 and 1822, other lands of the reservation were released to the state of New York, leaving the reservation as it now exists, with the highway thereon, upon which this crime was committed.

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Bluebook (online)
123 Misc. 605, 41 N.Y. Crim. 480, 205 N.Y.S. 888, 1924 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-schuyler-v-livingstone-nysupct-1924.