United States v. Sa-Coo-Da-Cot

27 F. Cas. 923, 1 Abb. 377
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Nebraska
DecidedMay 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 27 F. Cas. 923 (United States v. Sa-Coo-Da-Cot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Sa-Coo-Da-Cot, 27 F. Cas. 923, 1 Abb. 377 (circtdne 1870).

Opinion

DILLON, Circuit Judge.

The present attitude of this case is not a little singular. The one party asks, and the other party, acting under the advice of skillful counsel, does not resist a judgment which is the highest human laws or a human tribunal can inflict. It is the court alone which hesitates and deliberates.

In explanation of the course which the counsel for the defendants have taken in withdrawing all questions as to the jurisdiction of the e^urt, a reason has been given, which, for the honor of the people of the state, it is hoped can have no real foundation, viz.: that such is the strength of the tide of local feeling and prejudice against them and their Nation, that they prefer to take a sentence of death and trust to executive interposition, than to run the risk of illegal violence, if discharged from this, court, or turned over to the authorities of the state. The court gladly avails itself of this occasion to express its conviction that fears of this character are groundless.

As the defendants have been duly indicted and convicted, it is the duty of the court to pass judgment against them, if it has jurisdiction of the crime charged in the indictment. Whether it has jurisdiction is the only question remaining to be decided. Notwithstanding the withdrawal of the motion in arrest, it is still the duty of the court, before pronouncing the sentence of death, to be satisfied that it has cognizance of the offense which it is proceeding to punish. No act that a court can be called on to perform is more grave and solemn than to render a capital judgment. To the performance of such a duty, a judge is only reconciled by the consideration that it is not he who does it, but the law, of which he is simply the minister. But if the law invests him in the particular case with no such power, he may well deliberate, and must refuse to exercise it. If the court has no jurisdiction, therefore, it is its duty, on its own motion, to stay judgment, although this question may not be made, or may be waived by counsel.

With these preliminary considerations, which seemed proper to be stated, we proceed to examine the -question whether the courts of the United States have jurisdiction of the offense for which the defendants have been convicted.

The only allegations in the indictment made with a view to show the jurisdiction of the court are the following: “That the defendants are Indians belonging to the Pawnee tribe, which tribe are, and were, in charge of a United States Indian agent duly appointed by the United States, and were, and are, living upon an Indian reservation, known as the ‘Pawnee Reservation,’ within the state of Nebraska; that said defendants crossed the boundary line of said Indian reservation and entered into the county of Polk, in the state of Nebraska aforesaid, and then and there unlawfully,” &c., did kill and murder by shooting, as particularly described in the indictment, one Edward McMurty, a white inhabitant of the said state. Thus, it appears from the express averments of the indictment, that the place where the offense was committed was within the body of the county of Polk, in the state of Nebraska, and not within the limits of the Indian reservation. The proof, in this respect, corresponds with the allegations. The offense is alleged, and was shown to have been committed on May 8, 1869, which was after Nebraska had been admitted into the Union, and her organization as a state was fully perfected and in operation. The question is, whether the offense thus committed is one of which the courts of the United States have cognizance, or whether it is alone cognizable by the courts of the state of Nebraska. Within the territorial limits of the state just named is a body of people known as the Pawnee tribe of Indians, to which the defendants belong. This region has for many years been their home; but their occupancy is now restricted to a “reservation" of limited extent. Here they reside in a body, maintaining their tribal organization, under the superintendency of agents appointed by the government of the United States. They are already in the midst of a white population, but do not enjoy any of the political, nor many of the civil rights of the latter. They do not vote, are not taxed, and under the decision of the supreme court of the United States their property is not taxable by the state authorities. The ordinary state laws relating to taxation, schools, marriage, divorce, administration of estates, and the like, are not extended to, observed by, or enforced among them. As respects all their internal concerns, they are governed and regulated by the laws and customs of the tribe.

The inquiry is neither uninteresting nor unimportant, as to which, whether the general government or the state, has legislative control over this people; and if both, whether the power is concurrent, and if not, where is the boundary line, marking where the control of the one ends, and where that of the other begins. This inquiry it is our duty to answer, so far as the record in this case requires it. It is necessary .to examine into [925]*925the acts of congress, relating to offenses committed hy Indians, into the treaty stipulations of the United States with the Pawnees, and into the acts of congress respecting the powers and jurisdictions of the state of Nebraska. Nebraska was organized into a territory by the act of May 30, 1854 [10 Stat. 277], and hy that act (sections 4, 37) the rights of Indians therein are preserved unimpaired, and the authority of the United States to make regulations respecting them, their property and other rights, by treaty, law, or otherwise, retained. The Pawnee tribe then, as now, resided within the limits of the territory thus created. On September 24, 1857, the Pawnees ceded by treaty of that date their lands in the territory of Nebraska to the United States, reserving, however, “out of this cession a tract of country thirty miles long from east to west, and fifteen miles wide from north to south.” 11 Stat. 729. This is the reservation described in this indictment. The treaty provides that United States agents may reside on the reservation; that the government may build forts thereon; that the whites may open roads through it, but shall not reside thereon; that the Indians shall not alienate the lands, except to the United States; that all the offenders against the laws of the United States shall be delivered up, &c.; but it contains no stipulation as to the jurisdiction over it, or over the Indians residing thereon, when the territory shall be admitted as a state. On April 19, 1864 [13 Stat. 47], congress passed an act to enable the people of Nebraska to form a state constitution; in 1866 a state constitution was formed, and in 1867 [14 Stat. 391] congress passed an act for the admission of Nebraska, under its constitution, into the Union, “upon an equal footing with the original states, in all respects whatsoever.”

There is no exception in the state constitution, or in either of these acts of congress, of the Pawnee reservation or the Pawnee Indians, from the territorial or civil jurisdiction of the state. So' that we have before us the ease of Indians maintaining the tribal organization, which is recognized in the treaty by the general government, but living upon a reservation which is now within the limits of the state, and respecting which, or the Indians occupying it, there are no special provisions granting or retaining jurisdiction in favor of the United States, or withdrawing the Indians from the jurisdiction of the state.

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Bluebook (online)
27 F. Cas. 923, 1 Abb. 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-sa-coo-da-cot-circtdne-1870.