United States v. Elm

25 F. Cas. 1006, 23 Int. Rev. Rec. 419, 2 Cin. L. Bull. 307, 1877 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedDecember 24, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 25 F. Cas. 1006 (United States v. Elm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Elm, 25 F. Cas. 1006, 23 Int. Rev. Rec. 419, 2 Cin. L. Bull. 307, 1877 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44 (N.D.N.Y. 1877).

Opinion

WALLACE, District Judge.

The defendant, an Oneida Indian, who was bom and had always resided within the town of Le-nox, Madison county, voted' for representative in congress at the election. of 1876, claiming to be a citizen of the United States. He was indicted for illegal voting, tried, and convicted in this court. Sentence was suspended by the court in order that the questions presented on the trial, and which were then formally ruled against the defendant, might be deliberately considered and decided upon a motion for a new trial. That motion has been made, and the question is now presented whether or not the Oneida Indians are citizens of the United: States,, and, as such, entitled to vote.

If the defendant was a citizen of the United States, he was entitled to exercise the-right of suffrage. The right to vote is conferred by the state, not by the United States, and it has been conferred in New York upon “every male citizen of the age of twenty-one years, who shall have been a citizen for-ten days and an inhabitant of this state one year next preceding an election, and for the last four months a resident of the county,, and for the last twenty days a resident of the election district in which he may offer his vote.” By the fourteenth amendment to-the constitution it is declared that “all persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof are-citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside,” and by force of this language every citizen of the United States-is a citizen of the state wherein he resides. It is not enough to confer citizenship on the defendant that he was bom in the United States. It must also appear that he was “subject to the jurisdiction thereof,” within the meaning of the fourteenth amendment.

In a general sense every person bom in the United States is within the jurisdiction thereof while he remains in the country. Aliens, while residing here, owe a local allegiance, and are equally bound- with citizens to obey all general laws for the maintenance of peace and order which do not relate specially to our own citizens, and they are amenable to the ordinary tribunals of the country. But there are classes of residents who, though they may be bom here, are not subject to the exercise of those prerogatives: of sovereignty which a government has the-right to enforce over its own citizens, and' over them alone, and it is to these that the language of the amendment applies. Within this sense, those persons who, though-bora here, are bom within the allegiance of a foreign sovereign, or of another government, are not subject to the jurisdiction of' the United States. The children of ambassadors, though in fact born here, are, in the theory of the law, bom within the allegiance of the foreign power the parent represents.

Indians who maintain their tribal relations, are the subjects of independent governments, and, as such, not in the jurisdiction of the United States, within the meaning of the amendment, because the Indian nations-have always been regarded as distinct political communities, between which and our-government certain international relations were to be maintained. These relations are-established by treaties to the same extent as with foreign powers. They are treated as-[1007]*1007sovereign communities, possessing and exercising the right of free deliberation and action, but, in consideration of protection, owing a qualified subjection to the United States.

If defendant’s tribe continued to maintain its tribal integrity, and he continued to recognize his tribal relations, his status as a citizen would not be affected by the fourteenth amendment; but such is not his case. His tribe has ceased to maintain its tribal integrity, and he has abandoned his tribal relations, as will hereafter appear; and because of these facts, and because Indians in this state are subject to taxation, he is a citizen, within the meaning of the fourteenth amendment. This conclusion is sanctioned not only by the language of the fourteenth amendment, but is fortified by other legislation by congress concerning citizenship.

By Act Cong. 1866, c. 31 [14 Stat. 27], commonly known as the “Civil Rights Bill,” all persons bom in the United States and not subject to any foreign power, excluding Indians not taxed, are declared to be citizens of the United States. Native Indians in this state are taxed. By an act of the legislature passed in 1843, native Indians are authorized to purchase, take, hold, and convey real estate, and, when they become freeholders to the value of 8100, “are subject to taxation and to the civil jurisdiction of courts of law and equity in the same manner and to the same extent as citizens.” When by the civil rights bill Indians not taxed were excluded from the classes upon which citizenship was conferred, upon well-settled rules of construction those who were taxed were by implication included in the grant. In other words, those Indians who were taxed were not excepted from the class who were declared to be citizens.

Previous to the adoption of the fourteenth amendment, it had been held by high authority that congress might naturalize Indians by special act (7 Op. Attys. Gen. 746); and, of course, if this could be done by special act, it could by a general law, and the act in question would confer citizenship on the defendant. No doubt can be entertained of the power of congress to declare what persons shall be recognized as citizens of the United States, and when, by the fourteenth amendment, such citizens were declared to be citizens of the several states in which they should reside, the whole subject of citizenship was transferred to the jurisdiction of congress, and the rights of the defendant could safely rest upon the act in question. It is not necessary, however, to decide that the Indians in this state became citizens by force of the civil rights bill. I prefer to regard that act as a contemporaneous construction of the meaning of the fourteenth amendment The civil rights bill was passed by the same congress which adopted the resolution to submit the fourteenth amendment to the legislatures of the several states. Both the amendment and the civil rights bill dealt with the question of citizenship, and in the declaration defining the class of persons to whom it was extended language almost Identical was used in each. While, primarily, these measures, originated for the-protection of natives of African descent, who, by the decision in the ease of Scott v. Sandford, 19 How. [60 U. S.] 393, were held not to be citizens of the United States, within the meaning of the constitution, it is not to-be doubted that they were intended to confer the rights of citizenship upon such others as, owing to the peculiar condition of our national development, were not citizens in legal contemplation, though by birth and by allegiance they were or might become entitled to recognition as such.

The phraseology employed is sufficiently broad to include Indians who have abandon-. ed their tribes and become so far integrated with the general body of citizens that the states in which they reside have subjected them to the duties of citizens and enforced over them the prerogatives of sovereignty. Prior to the adoption of the fourteenth amendment, many of the Indian tribes had become disintegrated, and the members had abandoned their tribal relations, and were distributed among and assimilated- with the general body of citizens of the state in which they lived, conforming to the same usages; and their rights of person and property regulated by the same laws, which controlled the rest of the inhabitants' of the state.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 F. Cas. 1006, 23 Int. Rev. Rec. 419, 2 Cin. L. Bull. 307, 1877 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-elm-nynd-1877.