United States v. Leathers

26 F. Cas. 897, 6 Sawy. 17, 11 Chi. Leg. News 354, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 31
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedJuly 1, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 26 F. Cas. 897 (United States v. Leathers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Leathers, 26 F. Cas. 897, 6 Sawy. 17, 11 Chi. Leg. News 354, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 31 (D. Nev. 1879).

Opinion

HILLVER, District Judge.

This is a criminal case, in which the indictment charges the defendant with attempting to reside as a trader, and to introduce goods, and to trade in the Indian country, without a license, in violation of section 2133 of the Revised Statutes, and also with introducing liquor into the Indian country, contrary to section 2139. The indictment alleges this Indian country to be the Pyramid Lake Indian reservation.

Special issues of fact were by agreement of parties submitted to the jury, and the United States attorney now moves for judgment on the facts found by the jury. The questions in the ease are: (1) Whether the now state of Nevada is Indian country in the sense of the sections above mentioned; (2) whether the tract of country called the “Pyramid Lake Indian Reservation” has ever been set apart by competent authority as an Indian reservation; (3) whether, admitting it is an Indian reservation, it is Indian' country, in the sense of the laws of congress; and, (4) the jury having found the defendant’s place of business to be outside the lines of the. reservation as shown on the ground, by certain posts set up by the Indian agent and certain stone monuments set up by the surveyor, but within the limits as established by the executive order, whether the defendant is guilty of the offense charged.

Upon the first point it is argued, on behalf of the United States, that the whole state of Nevada is Indian country, by virtue of the Indian intercourse act of 1834 (4 Stat. 729). and section 7 of the appropriation act of 1851 (9 Stat. 587). which enacts “that all the laws now in force regulating trade and intercourse with the Indian tribes, or such provisions of the same-as may be applicable, shall be, and the same are hereby extended over the Indian tribes, in the territories of New Mexico and Utah,”—Nevada, at that time being a part of Utah; and also by virtue of section 10 of the act of March 2, 1861, organizing the territory of Nevada, and section 11 of the act of March 21, 1864, enabling the people of Nevada to form a state, extending the laws of the UDited States not locally inapplicable over the territory and state of Nevada respectively.

It seems to me apparent that these enactments did not and do not make either the ter[898]*898ritories of Utah or Nevada or the state of Nevada Indian country. The act of 1834, which, in 1850, contained nearly all the law regulating intercourse with Indians, defines the term “Indian country,” and fixes its boundaries. Utah was not then a part of the United States, and did not become Indian country by the act of 1834. U. S. v. Tom, 1 Or. 26; U. S. v. Seveloff [Case No. 16,252].

The act of 1851, extending the laws regulating intercourse with Indian tribes over the Indian tribes in Utah, does not, in terms, certainly make Utah Indian country. Certain laws which before that enactment had been confined in their operations to the country described and designated as Indian country by those laws, were extended over the tribes in Utah. The provisions of law applicable to those tribes may be enforced without first being obliged to declare the territories in which those tribes live Indian country. The laws, too, are extended over the tribes and not over any specified territory. So that intercourse with those tribes is regulated even after the territory and state of Nevada has been set off from Utah. The general provisions extending the constitution and laws over Nevada, if they are to be regarded as extending the intercourse laws so far as applicable over the state, do not make it Indian country, but only give force to laws which before were confined to the Indian country as defined by congress.

In my judgment, then, Nevada is not Indian country. If, however, it is admitted to be such it would hardly be necessary to make any argument to show that the sections under which the defendant is prosecuted, are not applicable to the tribes in Nevada outside of the Indian reservations.

The defendant, in one count, is charged with attempting to reside and trade in the Indian country. If Nevada is Indian country, then every trader and every man who introduces goods here is liable to the penalty, unless he has a license from an Indian agent. This is, of course, absurd. The organization of the state and its admission into the Union require population. Congress has invited all citizens to explore the public mineral lands, and to make homes upon the agricultural lands. Traders must come with the rest, and goods must be introduced. It is the same as to the charge of introducing liquor into the Indian country. All over the state, dealers in spirituous liquors are licensed by the United States, and revenue thus collected. If Nevada is an Indian country, every liquor dealer therein is guilty of a violation of section 2130. It was argued that these sections were so far applicable here as trade with the Indian tribes themselves is concerned. But the answer is, that trading and introducing liquors into the Indian country are offenses which are complete without alleging or proving any dealing directly with the Indians.

We are next to determine whether the Pyramid Lake Indian reservation is legally an Indian reservation. It is said in behalf of the defendant that there is no law of congress setting it apart or giving the president authority to do so. The United States attorney claims that the reservation has been legally established by the following executive order inscribed upon a diagram purporting to be a map of the Pyramid Lake Indian reservation, viz.:

“Executive Mansion, March 23,1874.
“It is hereby ordered that the tract of country known and occupied as the Pyramid Lake Indian reservation in Nevada, as surveyed by Eugene Monroe in January, 1865, and indicated by red lines according to the courses and distances given in tabular form on accompanying diagram, be withdrawn from sale or other disposition and set apart for the use of the Pah Ute and other Indians residing thereon.
“(Signed) U. S. Grant.”

In Walcott v. Des Moines Co., 5 Wall. [72 U. S.] 681, it was held that land reserved from sale by the secretary of the interior for the special purpose of aiding in the improvement of the Des Moines river, and continued by the president and cabinet, was reserved by competent authority for that special purpose. The power of reserving lands is spoken of as a power which has been exercised ever since the establishment of the land department down to the present time.

In Grisar v. McDowell, 6 Wall. [73 U. S.] 363, the land in question had been exempted from sale and reserved for public purposes by an order of the president. The court say: “Prom an early period in the history of the government it has been the practice of the president to order lands to be reserved from sale and set apart fo»• public purposes, and that numerous acts of congress recognized the authority of the president in this respect as competent authority. In that case the reservation was used for military purposes, but establishing a reservation for Indians is equally for a public purpose, and both these cases are authority in support of the legality of the president’s order setting apart the reservation in question in this case.”

No direct authority to the president to reserve lands and set them apart for public purposes is found in either case, but in each the president’s authority is recognized by acts of congress which proceed upon the ground that he has it, and that the reservations so made are made by competent authority.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 897, 6 Sawy. 17, 11 Chi. Leg. News 354, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-leathers-nvd-1879.