State v. Bush, Sr.

263 N.W. 300, 195 Minn. 413, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 874
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 15, 1935
DocketNo. 30,481.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 263 N.W. 300 (State v. Bush, Sr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bush, Sr., 263 N.W. 300, 195 Minn. 413, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 874 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

Hilton, Justice.

Appeal from a judgment of the district court sustaining a judgment of a justice court finding the defendant, Joe Bush, Sr., guilty of a violation of the state game and fish laws.

The facts were stipulated as follows:

“(2) That the defendant above named is a full-blood Indian by birth and is 62 years of age; that he now is and always has been an enrolled member of the Mille Lacs Removal Band of Chippewa *414 Indians; that he now is and at the time of the offenses alleged in the complaint herein lawfully was resident upon and within the White Earth Indian Reservation upon unpatented lands known as 'The Rice Lake Reserve’; that he now is and always has been lawfully entitled to money payments, allotments and annuities as a member of the aforesaid band of Indians; that he is under the charge of the Indian Superintendent of the Consolidated Chippewa Agency at Cass Lake, Minnesota, and ivas under such charge on and before March 25,1933; that the White Earth Indian Reservation now is and at the time of the offenses alleged in the complaint herein, and for many years prior thereto, was an Indian Reservation duly established by Treaty, concluded and ratified, with the Chippewa Indians, by Executive Orders of the President of the United States and by the laws of the United States;
“(3) That defendant, under his Indian name, to-wit: O-pah-Ke-Dub-e-tung, received from the United States many years ago Trust Patents, issued under authority of the laws of the United States relating to land allotments on the Reservation aforesaid, to the following tracts of lands, lying within the boundaries of said Reservation, to-wit: [legal description of land].
“That defendant, long prior to March 25, 1933, received a patent in fee simple from the United States covering the tracts of land aforesaid, which tracts of land he sold and conveyed to white persons, in fee simple, subsequent to the issuance by the United States of said fee simple patent and long prior to March 25, 1933;
“(4) That on the forenoon of March 25, 1933, defendant trapped two muskrats in the waters of Roy Lake, which now is and all during and since 1858'has been a navigable body of water in law and in fact, lying within the boundaries or limits of said White Earth Indian Reservation, ® * *;
“That on the forenoon of March 25, 1933, at 11:20 A. M. defendant was arrested and was found in the possession of said muskrats by a State Game Warden, on the ice covering Roy Lake, the distance from the shore line thereof being unascertainable, at a point on said lake where lands patented in fee simple and conveyed to white persons abutted; said place of arrest lying within the *415 exterior limits or boundaries of said White Earth Indian Beservation;
“That the lake and lands mentioned and described in this paragraph numbered foxir lie in the Town of Twin Lakes, in the County of Mahnomen, Minnesota, and are situate within the exterior limits of said Indian Beservation;
“(5) That the carcasses and pelts of the muskrats, trapped and possessed as aforesaid, Avere intended for the defendant’s OAvn personal use and were not intended by defendant either to be sold or marketed in any fashion.”

The sole question in this case is whether under the facts herein-before recited the defendant Avas subject to the state game and fish laAvs prohibiting the doing of the act which admittedly he did. It is the defendant’s contention that such jurisdiction, if any, is exclusively vested in the federal government.

“The OAvnership of wild gnimals so far as they are capable of ownership, is hereby declared to be in thd state, not as a proprietor, but in its sovereign capacity as the representative and for the benefit of all its people in common.” 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 5496.

That a state has the poAver to legislate for the protection of game within its borders Avas upheld in Geer v. Connecticut, 161 U. S. 519, 16 S. Ct. 600, 40 L. ed. 793.

“Muskrats may be taken only by trapping in such counties of the state and in such numbers and during such times in the several counties, not exceeding 30 days betAveen March 1 and April 30, both inclusive, in any year in any county, and subject to such other provisions not inconsistent AArith laAAr, as the commissioner may by regulation from time to time prescribe according to conditions existing in the respective counties.” L. 1929, c. 418, § 4, 3 Mason Minn. St. 1934 Supp. § 5542(2).

At the time of the taking of the muskrats in question Mahnomen county was closed to such trapping, and the taking thereof was unlawful, it being a misdemeanor and punishable as such.

*416 A brief résumé of the legislation relative to tribal Indians living on the White Earth Indian Reservation will be helpful. Until 1855 the territory included in the reservation was unceded Indian territory. By the treaty of February 22, 1855, Revision of Indian Treaties (1873)., 263, certain bands of Chippeiva Indians ceded to the United States all title and interest in a large area of land, a part of which constituted the present White Earth Reservation. From that date until 1867 the Chippewa Indians had no rights within the ceded area, and the jurisdiction of Minnesota over it, both as a territory and as a state, was as complete as over any other area within its limits, except that intoxicating liquors could not there be sold. By the treaty of March 19, 1867, Revision of Indian Treaties, 271, the White Earth Indian Reservation was set apart out of the larger tract. For the history of the Chippewa Indians and as to their interest in the Allotment Act of 1889, hereinafter mentioned, see United States v. Mille Lac Band, 229 U. S. 498, 33 S. Ct. 811, 57 L. ed. 1299.

Until 1885 there was but meager legislation under which an Indian could be held accountable for committing acts of a criminal nature. In Ex Parte Crow Dog (1883), 109 U. S. 556, 3 S. Ct. 396, 27 L. ed. 1030, it was held that there was no authority by which the federal courts could assume jurisdiction to punish a tribal Indian for the killing of another member of his own tribe, even though the homicide occurred within a place and district under the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States. As a result of that decision, congress enacted the so-called “Seven Crimes Act” on March 3,1885, 23 St. 385, 18 USCA, § 548, which, with subsequent amendments, provided:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 N.W. 300, 195 Minn. 413, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 874, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bush-sr-minn-1935.