Very v. Whiteshield

124 N.W.2d 694, 1963 N.D. LEXIS 125
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1963
Docket8092
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 124 N.W.2d 694 (Very v. Whiteshield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Very v. Whiteshield, 124 N.W.2d 694, 1963 N.D. LEXIS 125 (N.D. 1963).

Opinion

TEIGEN, Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the ■district court, juvenile division, dismissing .a proceeding for the termination of parental rights of Indian parents to their eight minor ■children. All of the persons involved in the proceedings are of Indian blood and are •enrolled as such on the records of the Indian Bureau, United States Department of Interior. They reside upon Indian land, the title of which is held in trust by the United States of America and has not been extinguished. The allotment is located within the Devils Lake Sioux Indian Reservation within the County of Benson and State of North Dakota. The order dismissing was made on the ground that the court was ■without jurisdiction.

The proceedings were commenced by the ■service of a summons issued upon the petition of the Juvenile Commissioner for Benson County. Personal service thereof was admitted by the parents of the minor children. The parents, through their attorney, moved to dismiss the proceeding upon the ground that the petition upon its face showed that the court had no jurisdiction of the persons or subject matter of these -proceedings. The petition sets forth, in addition to the identities, relationships and cause, the pertinent facts which classify the respondent parents and their children as •described in the first paragraph of this opinion.

The sole issue for determination in this appeal is whether the juvenile court, referred to as the district court, juvenile division, has jurisdiction over Indian parents and their children residing upon the Fort Totten Indian Reservation to terminate the parental rights and transfer the care, control, and custody of the minor children in accordance with the statute, or to take such other action as may be appropriate in the circumstances.

Chapter 27-16, N.D.C.C., establishes and provides the jurisdiction and duties of the juvenile court. It provides the district court shall have original jurisdiction in cases coming under the provisions of the chapter but the court, for convenience, shall be called “the juvenile court.” Upon the establishment of the grounds, reasons, and causes alluded to in Section 27-16-34, N.D. C.C., it has jurisdiction to transfer the care, control, and custody of children within its jurisdiction to the Director of the Division of Child Welfare of the Public Welfare Board, to a licensed child-placing agency, or to some suitable adult person named by the court and, in the exercise of such jurisdiction, the court may terminate all rights of the parents with reference to such children. The chapter invokes the equity jurisdiction of the district court. State ex rel. City of Minot v. Gronna, 79 N.D. 673, 59 N.W.2d 514. Thus the court exercises its civil jurisdiction.

In recent cases decided prior to the 1958 amendment of Section 203 of the North Dakota Constitution, Chapter 430 of the Session Laws of 1959, and the effective date of Chapter 242 of the Session Laws of 1963, dealing with jurisdiction over civil causes arising on Indian country, it was held that North Dakota courts had no jurisdiction over a person alleged to have committed a crime under the State’s laws against one who is an Indian allegedly committed on an Indian reservation. State v. Kuntz (N.D. 1954), 66 N.W.2d 531, and State v. Lohnes (N.D.1955), 69 N.W.2d 508. It was also held that the State courts have jurisdiction *696 over a civil matter arising between two Indians sounding in tort which was alleged to have occurred on an Indian reservation. Vermillion v. Spotted Elk (N.D.1957), 85 N.W.2d 432.

Public Law 280 of the 83rd Congress, Chapter 505 of United States Statutes at Large, Vol. 67, pages 588 to 590, was approved in 1953. Sections 6 and 7 of said Act provide as follows:

“Sec. 6. Notwithstanding the provisions of any Enabling Act for the admission of a State, the consent of the United States is hereby given to the people of any State to amend, where necessary, their State constitution or existing statutes, as the case may be, to remove any legal impediment to the assumption of civil and criminal jurisdiction in accordance with the provisions of this Act: Provided, That the provisions of this Act shall not become effective with respect to such assumption of jurisdiction by any such State until the people thereof have appropriately amended their State constitution or statutes as the case may be.
“Sec. 7. The consent of the United States is hereby given to any other State not having jurisdiction with respect to criminal offenses or civil causes of action, or with respect to both, as provided for in this Act, to assume jurisdiction at such time and in such manner as the people of the State shall, by affirmative legislative action, obligate and bind the State to assumption thereof.”

In Vermillion v. Spotted Elk, supra, we held that the compact between the United States and the State of North Dakota, created by Section 4 of the Enabling Act and the disclaimer in Section 203 of the North Dakota Constitution, did not constitute a reservation by the United States of exclusive jurisdiction of civil causes of action, not involving lands, between Indians residing on reservations within the boundaries of the State and that Public Law 280, giving the consent of the United States to the acceptance of civil and criminal jurisdiction by any State not having such jurisdiction, has no application to States which have, assumed and exercised jurisdiction prior to> the enactment thereof without intervention! by the United States. The court said that Section 22 of Article I, Constitution of' North Dakota, providing that courts in this. State shall be open to every man for any injury done him in his lands, goods, person: or reputation, shall have remedy by due process of law and right and justice administered without sale, denial or delay, applied to Indians and, as citizens of the-United States and residents of North Dakota, they have a constitutional right to the-use of the courts. The case further held' that the compact between the United States., and the State of North Dakota, created' by the Enabling Act and the disclaimer in Section 203 of our Constitution, has reference only to Indian lands and that the provisions of the compact cannot be held to be a reservation by the United States of jurisdiction in civil cases not involving land.. However, by the amendment of Section 203'. of the North Dakota Constitution in 1958,. and the passage of Chapter 242 of the Session Laws of 1963, the people and the legislature of the State have taken affirmative action which amounts to a complete disclaimer of jurisdiction over civil causes of' action which arise on an Indian reservation,, except upon acceptance by the Indian citizens of the reservation in the manner provided by the legislative enactment.

Section 203 of the North Dakota Constitution was amended in 1958 to read as follows :

* * *
“Second.

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Bluebook (online)
124 N.W.2d 694, 1963 N.D. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/very-v-whiteshield-nd-1963.