United States v. Peterson

121 F. Supp. 2d 1309, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20442, 2000 WL 1737760
CourtDistrict Court, D. Montana
DecidedNovember 17, 2000
DocketCR00-9-M-DWM
StatusPublished

This text of 121 F. Supp. 2d 1309 (United States v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Peterson, 121 F. Supp. 2d 1309, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20442, 2000 WL 1737760 (D. Mont. 2000).

Opinion

ORDER

MOLLOY, District Judge.

I. Factual Background

This case presents the issue of whether Blackfeet Treaty Rights to hunt and fish in the area known as Glacier Park were abrogated when Glacier Park was created by Congress. For the following reasons, I find the Blackfeet have no treaty right to hunt in Glacier Park.

A. The Agreement History

In 1895, three Commissioners dispatched by the United States government arrived at the Blackfeet Reservation with a proposal for the Blackfeet Tribe. They wanted to buy a strip of land on the western portion of the Reservation. The strip ran from the summit of the main chain of the Rocky Mountains in the west to a line running south and southeast from the summit of Chief Mountain in the east. This mountainous territory was thought to contain mineral riches that the Government wanted to exploit. It is clear the Blackfeet wanted no part of this proposal. It is also clear they wanted to keep certain rights, including hunting rights. The Commissioners offered to pay a nominal sum of $1 million for this land.

The Blackfeet resisted the sale. The transcript of the negotiations shows that the Blackfeet were aware that a cession would probably mean the abandonment of hunting rights they wanted to keep in the ceded territory. On September 21, 1895, the first day of the unwanted negotiations, Little Dog said, “From Cut Bank north to the boundary line is what I wish to sell. When any young man goes out to kill game he will then know where the line is and can kill game for his family.” S. Doc. No. 118, 54th Cong., 1st Sess., at 10 (Feb. 12, 1896).

Initially, the Blackfeet asked $3 million for the land. The Commissioners — William Pollock, George Bird Grinnell, and *1311 Walter Clements — refused, saying that Congress would not ratify a $3 million deal. The Tribe urged the Commissioners to consider seriously their offer, because they had no intention of revising it. Negotiations were on the verge of breaking down.

Little Dog: I am about to make a proposition on that land and I think it will surprise you; make you faint and fall down. We don’t want the Great Father to feed and clothe us all our lives. We ask for the land north from the railroad Three Million Dollars, so we will be able to maintain ourselves and care for our wives and children. There are many things in which the Great Father has cheated us. Therefore we ask Three Million Dollars for that land. Those mountains will never disappear. We will see them as long as we live; our children will see them all their lives, and when we are all dead they will still be there. This money will not last forever. I knew that you would be afraid when I told you our price, so I will rest awhile and let you consider it, as we do not intend to retreat or go back. You must not forget that we have wives and children; it is for them that we ask this money. Those mountains will last forever; the money will not. I will now sit down and give you time to consider and let us know the results of your decision.
Mr. Pollock: The Commission has studied this matter carefully since coming here three weeks ago. There may be mineral. No one can tell whether it is in paying quantities or not. We have based our proposition on the fact that there may be. If there is no mineral, the government will never get as much money from it as it pays. You have asked twice as much for this mountain land as you did for a larger tract of land upon which your cattle could graze. It is true that these mountains have always been there. They were there when your grandfathers lived. They never furnished you houses; never fed your cattle nor fed you and clothed you. I am glad to know that you think of your wives and children; but can you send them to these mountains to ask for food, clothing, wagons and cattle? You must know that you can keep those mountains forever and not realize anything from them. It is true that the money you may get will be gone after a time, but in the meantime you will be getting clothing, blankets, cattle, wagons, food, etc. That money offers you all these things while the mountains offer you nothing but snow and ice and rock. I leave it for you to choose which you will take.
Little Dog: I have two things to tell you, then some others will talk. I know that you are trying now to say that the mountains are of no benefit to us. I know that they are of some benefit to us. It is a fact that when a small child places a value upon an article an older person will take pity and give it more than it asks. We want you to treat us in the same manner.
S. Doc. No. 118, 54th Cong., 1st Sess., at 12 (Feb. 12,1896).

The Commissioners persisted in trying to convince the Tribe to reconsider its price. The Blackfeet wanted nothing to do with what can plainly be viewed as an adhesion negotiation.

Mr. Pollock: I had hoped when we got together that we could come closer together. I thought later on that we would have to leave to-morrow, but have concluded to meet you to-morrow, at ten o’clock, and I hope you will come to some definite conclusion. As Mr. Grinnell has said it will do you an injury to agree to your proposition. We would be glad to do so if we thought Congress would ratify it, but we feel certain that it will not. I repeat that we would gladly do so if it would do any good. To do so would make you and us the laughing stock of *1312 the whole country. We will be sorry to go away without making an agreement with you, but would rather make one that would be more acceptable to Congress. We have the kindliest feelings towards the Piegans, and you should not blame us for not meeting your proposition and making a treaty when you know it would be useless. We hope to begin promptly.
Little Dog: For what object shall we meet again?
Mr. Pollock: Some have not spoken, and then we want to give you another chance to talk this matter over.
Little Dog: We had better come together now and save another meeting; we can then go home. You have named your price and we have named ours. We will never recede. We cannot agree. Why meet again then?

Id. at 18.

For two days, the Commissioners waited while the Tribe deliberated. After conferring with the resident Agent, Major Steell, the Blackfeet offered to take $1.5 million, reserving their hunting and fishing rights in the mountains, securing an anti-allotment clause, and expressing their unwillingness to sell any more land in the future. The Blackfeet reserved their rights to take timber from the land for “so long as the same shall remain public lands of the United States.” Agreement of September 26, 1895, art. I (Gov’t Exh. A); Act of June 10, 1896, 29 Stat. 353 (1896) (“the Agreement”). They retained their right to hunt on the land and fish in the streams for “so long as the same shall remain public lands of the United States, under and in accordance with the provisions of the game and fish laws of the State of Montana.” Id.

The instigation of this deal came not from the Indian people but from the Nineteenth Century Federal government.

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Bluebook (online)
121 F. Supp. 2d 1309, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20442, 2000 WL 1737760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-peterson-mtd-2000.