Creek Nation v. United States
Creek Nation v. United States
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
These actions were originally brought in 1926 under special jurisdictional acts of 1924, which gave the Court of Claims jurisdiction over claims under “any treaty or agreement between the United States” and these tribes.
By the treaties of 1866,
The Indians allege that the railroads have not complied with the terms of the treaties and statutes, in that they have taken and held certain station reservations unnecessary for railroad purposes for their own benefit, that they have received rents and profits from the use of these lands, and that they have failed to pay the annual mileage charge.
It must be emphasized that this action is brought, not against the railroads which have committed the asserted
First. The Treaty of 1866. Article I of the Treaty provided:
“[The Creeks] also agree to remain at peace with all other Indian tribes; and, in return, the United States guarantees them, quiet possession of their country, and protection against hostilities on the part of other tribes. In the event of hostilities, the United States agree that the tribe commencing and prosecuting the same, shall, as far as may be practicable, make just reparation therefor.” (Emphasis added.)
The petitioners contend that the government failed to prevent the railroads from taking and holding station reservations later found to be unnecessary for railroad purposes, and that it thus became liable to the petitioners for breach of the guarantee of “quiet possession.”
The Court of Claims concluded that the guarantee of quiet possession applied only to protection from hostilities by other tribes. Such a conclusion receives support from a consideration of the circumstances of the time, for inter-tribal warfare was a dominant. danger. Some of the tribes had fought on each side in the Civil War, and strange new tribes were about to be settled on adjacent land. The turmoil of reconstruction called for military protection.
We conclude that, whether or not the guarantee is limited to military protection, this language did not obli
This conclusion does not mean that the United States in signing the treaty made an empty promise. The government undertook to use its military power to protect the Indians against military aggression, and in addition it un
Second. The Act of February 28, 1902. The petitioners rest on §§15 and 16 of the Act of 1902. Section 15 provides that the tribes through whose .land the roads were to be built should be compensated by the railroads for the land taken. The section established a system of valuation under judicial supervision and with a right of appellate review. These elaborate provisions provide an adequate method by which the tribes might protect their own interests, but contain no indication of any kind that the government should pay for the lands taken.
Section 16 provides that “where a railroad is constructed under the provisions of this Act there shall be paid by the railroad company to the Secretary of the Interior, for the benefit of the particular tribe or nation through whose lands any such railroad may be constructed, an annual charge of fifteen dollars per mile. ...” Petitioner contends that this direction to the Secretary to accept these payments made the government an insurer of their collection.
Variants of this statutory phrase were used generally in acts authorizing railroad construction after 1884. The Act of 1902, as has been noted, was the successor to the general railroad authorization act of 1899, which in 30 Stat. 990, § 5, required “such an annual charge as may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior, not less than fifteen dollars for each mile.” Other acts of the period varied in that the Secretary was directed to apportion the sum collected among several tribes according to their interests.
By the time of the adoption of the 1902 Act, the verbal formula used in § 16 was so familiar that it required no discussion in Congress. The clause seems first to have been used in an act of 1884, 23 Stat. 69, § 5, authorizing the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway to cross the Indian territory. The $15.00 charge was considered a tax, approximately equal to the taxes charged by neighboring states.
Considering § 16 in its relation to the other statutes of the period, many of which through minor variations gave wide discretion to the Secretary of the Interior, we conclude that the words of this section were a direction to the Secretary to make the facilities of his office available for the payment of a form of tax. It provides that the railroads shall pay the tax to the Secretary, but puts no mandatory duty on the Secretary to do the work of collecting. We cannot suppose from any evidence before us either of legislative history or administrative practice that the United States repeatedly assumed obligations to in
Third. The Act of 1906. Congress at one time planned to terminate the existence of the Five Civilized Tribes in 1906, and the Act of 1906 was introduced into the House of Representatives with the object of preserving Indian interests after tribal dissolution. In the course of discussion, Congress determined to continue the tribal existence, and the Act was amended to that effect before passage. The petitioners’ final reliance is on §§ 11 and 18 of this Act.
The relevant portion of § 11 of the Act is as follows:
“All revenues of whatever character accruing to the . . . Creek and Seminole tribes, whether before or after dissolution of the tribal governments, shall ... be collected by an officer appointed by the Secretary of the Interior under rules and regulations to be prescribed by him.”
The petitioner contends that under this section the government is liable for rents and profits on the station reservations allegedly wrongfully taken and wrongfully used by the railroads.
This language, like that of § 16 of the 1902 Act which it so closely resembles, does not make the government a guarantor that sums owing will be paid. The claim asserted is in essence one of damages for trespass, and assuming that the proceeds of a trespass action are to be considered “revenue,” the Secretary was surely entitled to discretion as to which trespass actions he might consider worth bringing. In so far as the petitioner contends that the railroads wrongfully took lands under pretense of right in their original grants under the statutes, the administrative machinery provided by the acts gave the tribes adequate redress through the courts at the time the land
That the Secretary’s duty to collect revenues and institute actions under the Act was discretionary is made clear by § 18:
“The Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized to bring suit i-n the name of the United States, for the use of the . . . Creek, or Seminole tribes, respectively . . . for the collection of any moneys or recovery of any land claimed by any of said tribes. . . .”
The petitioners contend that under this section the Secretary was obligated to bring suit for all damages suffered by the tribes for failure to pay sums owing under §§15 and 16 of the 1902 Act, for trespass and mileage taxes, for any breach of the treaty, and for rents and profits collected by the railroads. But the use of the word “authorized” in this context necessarily reserved to the Secretary the right to determine his own course of action. It must be remembered that the Secretary was traditionally given wide discretion in the handling of Indian affairs
That the government did not mean to assume an insurer’s responsibility for the payment of sums claimed by the Indians against the railroads is further shown by the fact that the Indians retained their own independent remedy for wrongs done them. The tribes have not yet been dissolved, and they have had, both as a general legal right
We are asked here to impose a liability on the government to these Indians for wrongs allegedly committed against the Indians by others. Appreciating the desire of Congress to recognize the “full obligation of this nation to protect the interests of a dependent people,” Tulee v. Washington, 315 U. S. 681, 685, we are unable to find in the words of the treaties or statutes upon which this action rests any such prodigal assumption by the government of other people’s liabilities as that for which the petitioners contend here.
Affirmed.
43 Stat. 133, 43 Stat. 139. See also the jurisdictional act of 1937, 50 Stat. 650.
14 Stat. 755 (Seminole), 785 (Creeks). The treaties are sufficiently similar so that hereafter reference will be made to the Creek treaty only.
The treaty was originally interpreted as permitting the construction of only two railroads through the Territory. Letter of the Seere
An Act regulating general construction of railroads through Indian lands was first adopted in 1899, 30 Stat. 990. The 1902 Act was more particularly directed at construction through the territory of the Five Civilized Tribes, of which petitioners are two.
Under an opinion of the Secretary of the Interior, the obligation to make this payment terminated upon the admission of Oklahoma as a state in 1907. 38 Decisions of Secretary of the Interior (Public Lands) 414.
“The treaties of 1866, and other treaties also, guarantee to the five civilized tribes the possession of their lands; but, without the moral and physical power which is represented by the Army of the United States, what are these treaties worth as a protection against the rapacious greed of the homeless people of the States who seek homesteads within the borders of the Indian Territory? If the protecting power of this Government were withdrawn for thirty days, where would the treaties be, and the laws of the Indians and the Indians themselves V’ Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs in 1 Report, Secretary of the Interior (1886), 81.
The only instance which has been called to our attention in which the United States specifically guaranteed to bring civil actions for the benefit of a tribe and insured payment for trespasses is the treaty of May 24, 1834, with the Chickasaws, 7 Stat. 450.
The Act of July 27, 1866, 14 Stat. 292, § 7, authorizing the construction of a railroad through the Indian country provided for a jury trial to determine the fair price. See, for example of the liberal construction given a similar provision in 23 Stat. 73, Cherokee Nation v. Southern Kansas Ry. Co., 135 U. S. 641, 651-653. Another act passed in 1866, 14 Stat. 289, § 8, provided that the railroad should be constructed “with the consent of the Indians, and not otherwise.”
Note, for example, in the Congressional discussion of the bill authorizing construction of the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway, an Oklahoma railroad not directly involved here, the debate over the amount of land necessary for sidings. 15 Cong. Rec. 4715-4718 (1884).
The experience of one of the first of the two roads authorized under the treaty is revealing of the manner in which the use of the Indian lands was supervised: The Atlantic & Pacific Railroad was authorized to build a line by an 1866 Act, 14 Stat. 292. In 1871, after small parts of the line had been completed, it was ordered to cease work by the Secretary of the Interior and was not allowed to continue until it had posted a bond for the protection of Indian interests. See discussion in Atlantic & Pacific R. Co. v. Mingus, 165 U. S. 413, 417. Failure to complete the road resulted in an 1886 Act taking the lands previously granted back into the public domain, 24 Stat. 123, and the road was ultimately completed by the St. Louis & Oklahoma City Ry. Co. under an 1896 special act, 29 Stat. 69. Section 2 of that Act provides for reversion to the tribes of lands not used for railroad purposes.
Letter, Secretary of the Interior, May 21, 1870, supra, note 3,
Whether added obligations in connection with this section were assumed by the United States in the 1906 Act is considered below.
See, e. g., the act authorizing construction of the Kansas & Arkansas Valley Railroad, 24 Stat. 73, § 5 (1886), or the act authoriz
The act authorizing construction of a railroad through the Papago (Arizona) reservation provided: “Such compensation as may be fixed by the Secretary of the Interior be paid to him by the said railroad company, to be expended by him for the benefit of the said Indians.” 22 Stat. 299 (1882).
See discussion in the House of Representatives, 15 Cong. Rec. 4723-4727. For an analysis of the nature of this tax see the Opinion of the Secretary of the Interior, sUpra, note 5.
See for example § 15 of the 1902 Act.
Coben, Handbook of Federal Indian Law, “The Range of Administrative Powers,” 100 et seq.
The Oklahoma properties of the St. Louis & San Francisco Railway Co. were held by 25 different corporations between 1866 and 1916. The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, not directly involved in this action, is the descendant of 64 railroads with Oklahoma holdings.
Cherokee Nation v. Southern Kansas Ry. Co., 135 U. S. 641; Cherokee Nation v. Hitchcock, 187 U. S. 294; Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock, 187 U. S. 553. Cf. Lane v. Pueblo of Santa Rosa, 249 U. S. 110, and United States v. Candelaria, 271 U. S. 432.
Cf. Heckman v. United States, 224 U. S. 413, 446; United States v. Osage County, 251 U. S. 128; Sunderland v. United States, 266 U. S. 226.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
As a people our dealings with the Indian tribes have been too often marked by injustice, neglect, and even ruthless disregard of their interests and necessities. As a nation we have incurred moral and political responsibilities toward them and their descendants, which have been requited in some measure by treaties and statutes framed for the protection and advancement of their interests. Those enactments should always be read in the light of this high and noble purpose, in a manner that will give full scope and effect to the humane and liberal policy that has been adopted by the Congress to rectify past wrongs.
Each railway company whose road was constructed under the Act of 1902
We have held that the Government in its relations with the Indian tribes occupies the position of a fiduciary, that the relationship is similar to that of guardian and ward, and that the duties and responsibilities of the United States toward its wards require a generous interpretation.
Choctaw Nation v. United States, 119 U. S. 1, 27-28; Seminole Nation v. United States, 316 U. S. 286, 296-97.
Act of February 28, 1902, 32 Stat. 43.
§§ 11 and 18 of the Act of April 26, 1906, 34 Stat. 137, 141, 144.
Act of May 20, 1924, 43 Stat. 133 (Seminole), and Act of May 24, 1924, 43 Stat. 139 (Creek).
See Note 1, ante.
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