United States v. Reily

290 U.S. 33, 54 S. Ct. 41, 78 L. Ed. 154, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 445
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 6, 1933
Docket31
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 290 U.S. 33 (United States v. Reily) 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. Reily, 290 U.S. 33, 54 S. Ct. 41, 78 L. Ed. 154, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 445 (1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Vast Devanter

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought by the United States to enforce its rights and regulations in respect of allotted Indian land held under a so-called trust patent. The land was allotted, and the trust patent issued, witl\ the express restriction that the land should be'inalienable for a designated period, which the President might extend, and that any alienation contrary to the restriction should be absolutely void. 1 After the allottee’s death and'during* the period of restriction, as extended by the President, the heir conveyed part of the land to the defendant;

The defendant prevailed in both courts below, 62 F. (2d) 621, and the United States petitioned for certiorari, which this court granted. - .

It is settled, and is conceded, that a restriction on alienation such as is here shown is not personal to the allottee but runs with the land and operates upon the heir the same as upon the allottee. 2 So it is apparent the heir’s conveyance was void, unless in some way the restriction was removed before the conveyance was made.

The real question is whether the restriction was removed by Congress by the Act of June 21, 1906, 3 which will be set forth later on.

The material findings of the District Court stand unchallenged and are to the following effect: The allottee, a *35 Kickapoo Indian woman, and her infant son were members of the Kickapoo tribe of Oklahoma whose lands were allotted in severalty among its members in 1894. Both were then living with the tribe in Oklahoma and each received an allotment from the tribal lands. In 1903 the mother, taking the son with her, moved into the Republic of Mexico and established a residence in a Mexican community or tribe of Kickapoos to be described later on. She continuously maintained that residence and affiliated with that tribe until 1929, when she died intestate, leaving the son as her only heir. The son resided in Mexico until 1920 and then gave up that residence and returned to the Kickapoo Reservation in Oklahoma. Continuously thereafter he made the latter place his residence and home. He was residing there in 1929 when his mother died, in 1930 when he made the conveyance to the defendant, and in 1931 when this suit was begun.

In turning to the Act of June 21, 1906, it will be helpful to have in mind the conditions existing when it was enacted. At one time the Kickapoos were a single tribe occupying a treaty reservation in Kansas; 4 but through dissensions and migrations they had come in 1906 to comprise three separate communities or tribes having distinct places of abode. One tribe was still located on the old treaty reservation in Kansas and had been given allotments there. 5 Another was located in the Republic of Mexico on a reservation set apart for them by that government. In the main this tribe comprised Kickapoos who had separated from the Kansas tribe and settled in Mexico, some in 1852 and others in 1863. 6 There were also later accessions as will appear presently. A third tribe *36 was located in Oklahoma and chiefly comprised Kickapoos who had left the Mexican tribe and returned to the United States, mostly in 1873. 7 A reservation in Oklahoma (then the Indian Territory) was established for them by executive order in 1883. 8 The lands in this reservation were allotted among the members of this tribe in 1894, 9 the allotment to which this suit relates being one which was madé then. Some of the allottees on this reservation removed to Mexico and established a residence with the Mexican tribe; and some of the allottees of neighboring Oklahoma tribes, such as Shawnees,' Delawares, Caddos and Wichitas, did likewise. Not infrequently allottees who had gone to the Mexican tribe gave up their residence there and returned to Oklahoma. The migration to and from the Mexican tribe, while intermittent, was continuing when the Act of June 21, 1906, was passed. The part of that act which is material here reads as follows:

“All restrictions as to sale and incumbrance of all lands, inherited and otherwise, of all adult Kickapoo Indians, and of all Shawnee, Delaware, Caddo, and Wichita Indians who have heretofore been or are now known as Indians of said tribes, affiliating with said Kickapoo Indians now or hereafter nonresident in the United States, who have been allotted land in Oklahoma or Indian Territory are hereby removed: Provided, That any such Indian allottees who is a nonresident of the United States may lease his allotment without restriction for a period not exceeding five years: Provided further, That the parent or the person next of kin having the care and custody of a minor allottee may lease the allotment of said *37 minor as herein provided, except that no such lease shall extend beyond the minority of said allottee.”

In any view of the act its words are not happily chosen. They are wanting in clarity and lend themselves to ambiguity. Both administrative officers and courts have found need for resorting to interpretation and construction when applying the act.

In Johnson v. United States, 283 Fed. 954, many conveyances—some by original allottees and some by heirs of such allottees—were assailed by the United States as made in violation of the restriction on alienation, and the defendant relied upon the act as having removed the restriction. Because of the varying facts relating to the several conveyances the act was considered from different angles. The principal question, common to all of the conveyances, was whether the main provision and the two provisos were inconsistent and mutually destructive. The District Court had held that they were, and therefore that the act was ineffective.. But the Circuit Court of Appeals disapproved that view and, after observing that if reasonably possible the act should be so construed that the main provision and the provisos could stand together, came to the following conclusion [p. 955]:

“The purview discloses plainly and clearly a legislative intention to remove restrictions under given conditions; . . . when the whole paragraph is read with a view of sustaining it in all'its parts the word ‘ otherwise,’ in the second line, seems to be in contradistinction to allotment, so that it was clearly intended that all restrictions as to sale and incumbrance of lands, inherited or otherwise acquired (except allotments of surviving allottees), were removed under the conditions named.”

In other words, that court construed the main provision removing restrictions under given conditions as not relating to lands acquired by direct personal allotment but only to those acquired in other ways, such as inheritance, *38

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Bluebook (online)
290 U.S. 33, 54 S. Ct. 41, 78 L. Ed. 154, 1933 U.S. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-reily-scotus-1933.