United States v. Paine Lumber Co.

206 U.S. 467, 27 S. Ct. 697, 51 L. Ed. 1139, 1907 U.S. LEXIS 1175
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 27, 1907
Docket101
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 206 U.S. 467 (United States v. Paine Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Paine Lumber Co., 206 U.S. 467, 27 S. Ct. 697, 51 L. Ed. 1139, 1907 U.S. LEXIS 1175 (1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

Action by the United States against the Paine Lumber Company for the recovery of the value of a quantity of timber and logs, to wit: 7,500 feet of basswood; 6,500 feet of elm; 51,020 feet of pine logs, alleged to have been cut and removed from certain lands in the Eastern District of Wisconsin.

The answer contained denials of the complaint, and set up that defendant company.' purchased the basswood and .elm logs of one Thomas Gardner, and the pine' logs of one Daniel *468 Davids, in the fore part of 1899, the logs being at the time in the county of Shawano in Wisconsin, and being in possession of -Gardner and Davids respectively, who claimed and repre-' sented themselves to be the sole and absolute owners thereof, and that defendant in the regular course of its business sold and disposed of them.

Defendant also pleaded payment of the sum of $271.37 in full satisfaction and accord.

The action was tried by the court, who found the following facts:

“That the defendant is and was during all the times mentioned in the complaint a duly incorporated Wisconsin corporation.
“That long prior to the commencement of this action and long prior to the acts alleged in the complaint the head men or council of the Stockbridge and Munsie Indians, claiming authority so to do under the treaties and arrangements with the United States, allotted to one Thomas Gardner the east half of the northwest quarter of section thirty-five (35), township twenty-eight (28),' range fourteen (14) east, of the fourth principal meridian, of the State of Wisconsin, and-to one Daniel Davids the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section twenty-one (21), township twenty-eight (28), range -fourteen (14) east, of the fourth principal meridian, of the State of Wisconsin, said lands being a part of the tract of land given to the Stockbridge and Munsie Indians by the treaty of 1856, eách of said Indians being a member of said tribe óf Stockbridge and Munsie Indians and the head of a family, and the said allotments being made to them respectively as their separate and individual allotments and being the same lands described in the complaint herein.
“That thereupon Thomas Gardner and Daniel Davids entered into immediate possession of their respective .allotments and' each of them has ever since claimed to hold the same as his allotment and has constantly asserted his ownership and right to take the timber therefrom without restric *469 tions under the said treaty-and arrangements with the plain-' tiff. ,
"That no patent has ever been issued for either of said parcels' of land and that the ownership of the same by said Indians has received no official sanction on the part of the plaintiff aside- from the recognition of their respective rights to the. occupancy of the parcels so claimed and. held by them respectively as aforesaid. • '
“And that .their respective rights to the occupancy of their respective parcels of land allotted to them as aforesaid has been recognized by the United States..
' “That the timber and logs involved in this case, to wit,.-7,500 feet of basswood, 6,500 of elm, and 51,020 feet of pine were cut in the winter' of 1898-1899, upon said respective parcels of land by the said Thomas Gardner and the said’ Daniel Davids, respectively, not for the purpose of clearing the land for. cultivation, but for the purpose of providing means for the support of their families, and that such cutting by each of them was done in good faith, and each of them claiming • and believing that he had the. right to so cut for said purpose.
“That after said' cutting, and in the summer of 1899, at Weeds Point, in the county of Shawano,' Wisconsin, the said logs were .bought by the defendant of said Thomas Gardner and Daniel Davids, the same then and there being at said Weeds Point and off of the said reservation, for a valuable and fair consideration.
“That the defendant bought .the same in good faith, believing the said Thomas Gardner and the said Daniel Davids were the bona fide and absolute owners thereof, and that they respectively were lawfully., entitled to sell the logs cut from their respective allotments.
“That at the time of the cutting of the timber in question the said Thomas Gardner was living upon his said allotment; that shortly thereafter his wife died, and that he has not since lived thereon except at intervals .of two or three months at *470 a time, but for the most part has lived elsewhere with his brother.
“That at the time of the-said eúttingthe said Daniel Davids had no house on his allotment and was only there at times temporarily.
“It is stimulated in this case that if defendant is liable for the value of the logs and timber at the time of taking or while in his hand's that the measure of damages therefor be the sum of five hundred and sixty-six dollars and twenty-eight cents ($566.28), and that if it be liable for the value of said logs and timber at the time of the cutting thereof or at the time of the talcing thereof by the defendant, less the additions in value made thereto by the Indians in cutting, hauling, and banking the same, then the measure of damages therefor shall be the sum of three hundred and seventy-eight dollars and fifty-nine, cents ($378.59). The measure of damages in both cases includes the cost of. the scale and estimate thereof made by the Government officials.”

From these findings the conclusion of law was deduced:

“That the said Thomas Gardner and the said Daniel Davids, as such allottees, had the right'to cut and sell the timber on their respective allotments for the purpose for which the same was cut and sold, and timt the defendant is entitled to judgment herein in its favor and against the plaintiff, dismissing the. plaintiff’s complaint.on the merits, but- without costs.”

The' court expressed the reasons for its judgment in an opinion of such circumstantial care and consideration that makes unnecessary an elaborate discussion by us. It stated the primary issue to be “whether the Indian allottees under the Stockbridge and .Munsie treaty of 1856 (11 Stat. 663) and the act of .Congress- of .1871 (16 Stat. 404) were vested with sufficient title in their allotments , to authorize the cutting of timber, for sale and not by way of improvements, without the approval of the Department of the Intérior.” And stating the purpose of the treaty and. its provision, the court said:

*471 “The Stockbriclge and Munsie treaty of: 1856 was entered into to provide for relocation of the remnant of the tribe in Wisconsin, as they were unwilling to remove to a reservation in Minnesota theretofore provided. It recites valuable, retro-cessions and releases to the United States and reserves a tract ‘near the south boundary of the Menominee Reservation' of sufficient extent to furnish individual allotments.

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Bluebook (online)
206 U.S. 467, 27 S. Ct. 697, 51 L. Ed. 1139, 1907 U.S. LEXIS 1175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-paine-lumber-co-scotus-1907.