People v. Jondreau
People v. Jondreau
Opinion of the Court
William Jondreau is a full-blooded Chippewa Indian, living on the L’Anse Indian Beservation, and a member of the tribal council of that reservation.
On June 1, 1965, he was observed by an officer of the Michigan Department of Conservation to be fishing in the waters of the Keweenaw Bay on Lake Superior. When he came into shore, he was arrested for the illegal possession of four lake trout taken from the Keweenaw Bay.
The issues involved are extremely complex. They concern the interrelationship of the power of the Federal government to make treaties with the Indian tribes and the right of the state to set up nondiscriminatory game regulations. Both parties have raised several issues which may be summarized as follows:
Whether the Chippewa Indian Treaty of 1854 (10 Stat 1109 [1854]) gives the defendant, William Jondreau, the right to fish on Keweenaw Bay without regard to state fishing regulations?
7.
The interpretation of Indian treaties by the courts has varied greatly depending upon the precise wording of the treaties. Hence, a close examination of the treaty involved in this case is imperative.
“1st. For the L’Anse and Vieux De Sert bands, all the unsold lands in the following townships in the State of Michigan: Township fifty-one north range thirty-three west; township fifty-one north range thirty-two west; the east half of township fifty north range thirty-three west; the west half of township fifty-north range thirty-two west; and all of township fifty-one north range thirty-one west, lying west of Huron Bay.”
Article 11 of the treaty states:
“ * * # And such of them as reside in the territory hereby ceded shall have the right to hunt and fish therein, until otherwise ordered by the President.”
When Mr. Jondreau came ashore on June 1, 1965, he alleged he was within T 51 N, R 33 W. If a line were extended from the boundaries into the Bay, the area where he was fishing would have been within T 51 N, R 33 W. The people correctly contend that under Michigan law the boundaries of the township do not extend into the Great Lakes. People v. Bouchard (1890), 82 Mich 156. Thus, they assert, that Jondreau was not within T 51 N, R 33 W. They further assert that title to the waters and submerged lands in the Great Lakes vested in the State of Michigan when it became a State in 1837. Thus, they contend, that the Indians did not have title to the waters and submerged lands and, therefore, could not cede them to the United States government.
Defendant contends that the title to the waters and submerged lands did not pass to the State of Michigan in 1837 and, thus, were part of the ceded land under the treaty.
Both parties have done an excellent job of discussing in detail the numerous United States Su
Under Article 2, § 2, of the United States Constitution, the President has the power to make treaties, provided that two-thirds of the Senate concur. This, of course, was the procedure that was followed when the Chippewa Indian Treaty of 1854 was made.
Article 6 of the United States Constitution states in part:
“This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.”
Thus, as Judges of a state court, we are bound by this Chippewa Indian Treaty of 1854, and, to the extent that any state law or regulation conflicts with the treaty, the state law or regulation is invalid. We, therefore, must determine what was meant by the statement in the treaty “and such of them as reside in the territory hereby ceded shall have the right to hunt and fish therein, until otherwise ordered by the President.”
“The language used in treaties with the Indians should never be construed to their prejudice. * * * How the words of the treaty were understood by this unlettered people, rather than their critical meaning, should form the rule of construction.”
In Choctaw Nation v. United States (1886), 119 US 1 (7 S Ct 75, 30 L Ed 306), after quoting the above statement, the court said (p 28):
“The parties are not on an equal footing, and that inequality is to be made good by the superior justice which looks only to the substance of the right, without regard to technical rules framed under a system of municipal jurisprudence, formulating the rights and obligations of private persons, equally subject to the same laws.” (Emphasis added.)
See, also, Jones v. Meehan (1899), 175 US 1 (20 S Ct 1, 44 L Ed 49); United States v. Winans (1905), 198 US 371, 380, 381 (25 S Ct 662, 49 L Ed 1089); Kennedy v. Becker (1916), 241 US 556, 563 (36 S Ct 705, 60 L Ed 1166); and Menominee Tribe v. United States (1968), 391 US 404, 406 (fn 2) (88 S Ct 1705, 20 L Ed 2d 697).
The substance of the right to fish must have included the right to fish on the Keweenaw Bay. For the L’Anse band of Chippewa Indians (See Map, Appendix A), the fishing right on the Keweenaw Bay was clearly a valuable right. Any other construction of the treaty would make the right granted by the treaty without substance. The Indians did
II.
In the case of Worcester v. Georgia, supra, where the court struck down a state law which attempted to regulate certain actions of white persons and Indians, Chief Justice Marshall stated (p 561):
“The whole intercourse between the United States and this [Indian] nation, is, by our constitution and laws, vested in the government of the United States.” (Emphasis added.)
Following this case, the courts retreated from this position for almost a century. State laws which limited the rights of Indians under the various treaties were upheld as valid exercises of the police power. However, in recent years, the courts have again accorded Indians full rights under the treaties. Thus, while the court stated in Ward v. Race Horse (1896), 163 US 504, 507, 509, 513 (16 S Ct 1076, 41 L Ed 244):
“The power of a State to control and regulate the taking of game cannot be questioned. * * # To suppose that the words of the treaty intended to give to the Indian the right to enter into already established States and seek out every portion of unoccupied government land and there exercise the right of hunting, in violation of the municipal law, would be to presume that the treaty was so drawn as to frustrate the very object it had in view. * * * ‘the States have full power to regulate within their limits matters of internal police * # # >»
“ * * * we [are] of the opinion that the clause is fully satisfied by considering it a reservation of a privilege of fishing and hunting upon the granted lands in common with the grantees, and others to whom the privilege might be extended, but subject nevertheless to that necessary power of appropriate regulation, as to all those privileged, which inhered in the sovereignty of the State over the lands where the privilege was exercised.”
these views have, however, been limited by implication in recent years by United States Supreme Court decisions. For example, in Tulee v. Washington (1942), 315 US 681 (62 S Ct 862, 86 L Ed 1115), the court held that the State could not require a fishing license fee without violating a treaty made in 1859 (12 Stat 951 [1859]). Likewise, in Menominee Tribe v. United States, supra, the court held that an act of Congress in 1954 did not terminate by implication the Wolf River Treaty of 1854 (10 Stat 1064 [1854]). The court held that valuable hunting and fishing rights given by a treaty were not easily extinguished without a specific statement on the subject. These cases, while not directly on point, do demonstrate a decisive trend in the decisions of the Federal courts toward granting Indians expanded rights under the various treaties. See, also, Metlakatla Indian Community v. Egan (1962), 369 US 45 (82 S Ct 552, 7 L Ed 2d 562); Makah Indian Tribe v. Schoettler (CA9, 1951), 192 F2d 224, and Maison v. Confederated Tribes of Umatilla Indian Reservation (CA9, 1963), 314 F2d 169.
Both parties have done an exceedingly fine job of analyzing in great detail the numerous cases dealing with Indian treaties. While these cases are instructive, they are not binding for two reasons:
People v. Chosa (1930), 252 Mich 154, involved an identical fact situation. Chosa and Attikons, members of the L’Anse band of Chippewa Indians, were convicted of violating fish and game laws. This Court affirmed. The Court stated (p 160):
“The treaties evidently established a servitude of the right to hunt and fish on the ceded land in favor of the Indians and against the exclusive dominion of private ownership, but they provided no immunity from operation of game laws, as against the State.” (Emphasis added.)
The people cite Chosa as determinative of the decision in this case. If Chosa is good law, then undoubtedly the people are correct. We believe that Chosa no longer states the applicable law. When Chosa was decided in 1930, our Court properly relied on the governing authorities as of that date. However, through the passage of time, the foundations upon which Chosa rested are no longer sustained as valid.
Chosa rested on two basic premises. Defendant Chosa had argued that the clause giving the President the power to abrogate the treaty was the only limit on the hunting and fishing rights. The Court answered, at p 160:
“As a restriction on operation of State game laws, it would be foreign to our system of government in providing control of sovereign powers of the State by an officer of another sovereignty.”
A somewhat similar conflict between state laws and the Federal treaty power arose in the case of Missouri v. Holland (1920), 252 US 416 (40 S Ct 382, 64 L Ed 641, 11 ALR 984). In 1916, the United States had made a treaty with Great Britian (39 Stat 1702 [1916]) for the protection, by closed hunting seasons and in other ways, of migratory birds in the United States and Canada. It bound each country to take the necessary measures for carrying out the treaty. Thereupon, Congress prohibited (Act of July 3, 1918, ch 128, 40 Stat 755 [1918]) killing, capturing, or selling any of the migratory birds designated by the terms of the treaty, except as permitted by regulations made by the Secretary of Agriculture. The State of Missouri filed a bill in equity to prevent Holland, a United States game warden, from attempting to enforce this act and the regulations made pursuant to it. The state claimed it was an unconstitutional interference with the rights reserved to the state by the Tenth Amendment and that the acts of the defendant invaded the sovereign powers of the state as owner of the wild birds. Mr. Justice Holmes, in upholding the treaty and the act passed pursuant thereto, stated (p 434):
“No doubt it is true that as between a State and its inhabitants the State may regulate the killing and sale of such birds, but it does not follow that its authority is exclusive of paramount powers. # * * Valid treaties of course ‘are as binding within the territorial limits of the States as they
Thus, under the treaty power, the President may make determinations that affect the powers normally reserved to the state.
Second, our Court in Ghosa relied on the fact that Indians were United States citizens and, thus, subject to all state laws. The Court stated (p 162):
“When one becomes a citizen of the United States, he casts off both the rights and obligations of his former nationality and takes on those which pertain to other citizens of the country. 11 C. J. p 786.
“Both because of the new citizenship and by the express terms of the statute under which the allotments were made, defendants became subject to the laws of the State, civil and criminal.”
This contention was rejected by the United States Supreme Court in Puyallup Tribe v. Department of Game of Washington (1968), 391 US 392 (88 S Ct 1725, 20 L Ed 2d 689). Mr. Justice Douglas, speaking for the Court, stated (p 398):
“The right to fish ‘at all usual and accustomed’ places may, of course, not be qualified by the State, even though all Indians born in the United States are now citizens of the United States.” (Emphasis added.)
Thus, the foundations upon which Ghosa rested have not stood the test of time. We think the better view is expressed by the court in State v. Arthur (1953), 74 Idaho 251 (261 P2d 135), which involved the prosecution of members of the Nez Perce Tribe of Indians for having killed deer out of season on national forest lands. The deer were within the
“If the right exists in the State to regulate the killing of game upon open and unclaimed lands ceded by the Nez Perce Indians to the United States, it follows that such right is to be exercised under the police power of this state. Generally stated, the police power under the American constitutional system has been left to the states. * * # That the State has and may exercise such power generally is not the question * * * .
“[T]he statute of any state enacted pursuant to its police power which conflicts with any treaty of the United States constitutes an interference with matters that are within the exclusive scope of federal power and, hence, cannot be permitted to stand. 16 CJS, Constitutional Law, § 196, page 565; the treaty being superior to a particular state law and regulation, though the state law and regulation involved is otherwise within the legislative power of the state, the rights created under the treaty cannot thus be destroyed.”
At pages 264, 265, the court further stated:
“One of the primary purposes of licensing in reference to fishing and hunting is to conserve wild life; the law is essentially a regulatory act rather than a revenue act. * * * While both fishing and hunting are primarily sport and recreation for most fishermen and hunters, this is not so with respect to the Indians; they have always fished and hunted to
“We are not here concerned with the wisdom of the provisions of the treaty under present conditions nor with the advisability of imposing upon the Indians certain regulatory obligations in the interest of conserving wild life; that is for the Federal Government, the affected tribe, and perhaps the State
While this case is not binding upon our Court, we believe that it expresses the proper balance between the rights of the Chippewa Indians and the police powers of the state under the treaty of 1854.
The people point out the fact that unlimited fishing rights could deplete our limited national resources. They rely on Puyallup, supra, where the court held that the state could provide regulations that were reasonably necessary for the conservation of fish. In an age of growing awareness of the need to preserve and protect our environment, this is an important consideration. However, unlike the treaty of 1855 considered in the Arthur case, the Chippewa Indian Treaty of 1854 does provide a safeguard. Under Article 11, the President may issue an order limiting or extinguishing the hunting and fishing rights of the Indians. The four fish involved in this case will not upset the ecological balance. However, if in the future the number of fish being taken does constitute such a threat, we are convinced that the President would take appropriate action.
We, therefore, overrule People v. Chosa, supra, and hold that the game regulations are invalid as applied to the defendant Jondreau and other Indians who are protected by the Chippewa Indian Treaty of 1854.
Judgment reversed.
The possession of trout out of season has been made illegal pursuant to a State Conservation Commission order promulgated under authority of MCLA § 308.201 (Stat Ann 1967 Rev § 13.1568
See, e.g., Whitney v. Robertson (1888), 124 US 190 (8 S Ct 456, 31 L Ed 386), and Cooper v. Aaron (1958), 358 US 1 (78 S Ct 1401, 3 L Ed 2d 5).
Concurring Opinion
(concurring). I agree with and have endorsed the opinion Justice Swainson has prepared, yet would step a bit farther.
In the majestic phrasing of the Doxology, the supremacy clause
Today we find definitely that this same treaty of 1854 provided and now provides “a specific condition of enjoyment of the reservation” which to this day tolerates no challenge by Michigan and the courts of Michigan. No like finding, and no opposing finding, was made by the Ghosa Court. Irrelevant reasons only were assigned for refusal to support the treaty-stipulated right of Ghosa and Attikons to hunt and fish on the reservation. See pages 160 and 161 of Ghosa’s report.
In that setting People v. Chosa was released to our books a little over 40 years ago. This Court attempted then in contravention of the treaty and the supremacy clause to interpose subordinate interests of the state, and the never exercised revocatory power of the President, to block the enforcement of that treaty. This was something more than judicial error. It was pure nullity.
There is no occasion for overrulement or distinguishment of Ghosa. It never became law in the first
Article 6(2), Constitution of the United States.
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