Opinion
This is an appeal from a judgment involving the jurisdiction of the State of California (State) to regulate fishing by Indians on the Klamath River Reservation.
In September of 1969, a California game warden seized five gill nets owned by Raymond Mattz, a Klamath River Indian. The Department of Fish and Game, through its director, petitioned the Superior Court of Del Norte County for authority to sell or destroy the nets. Mattz intervened in the action, claiming that the Fish and Game Code was not applicable to Indians fishing on their reservation. When the petition was first heard, the trial court found that the Klamath River Reservation, at the place where the nets were seized, was not Indian country and, therefore, the gill nets prohibited by the Fish and Game Code were subject to seizure. On certiorari, the United States Supreme Court in
Mattz
v.
Arnett
(1973)
The trial court concluded that the State may not regulate fishing by Indians on the Klamath River Reservation due to the fact that the federal government in transferring jurisdiction over Indian reservations to the State of California exempted the fishing rights here involved. The court ordered the nets returned to Mattz and the State has appealed.
Mattz “is a Yurok, or Klamath River, Indian who, since the age of nine, regularly fished, as his grandfather did before him, with dip, gill, and trigger nets, at a location called Brooks Riffle on the Klamath River. . .. The nets were stored near Brooks Riffle, approximately 200 feet from the river, and within 20 miles of the river’s mouth.” (
The property on which the nets were found is owned by a private logging company. Although an 1892 Act of Congress opened the reservation land for settlement, the resulting ownership by non-Indians did not terminate the reservation but was “completely consistent with continued reservation status.”
(Mattz
v. Arnett,
supra,
at p. 497 [
The land on which the nets were found is a part of what will be referred to as the Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation. The Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation is composed of three sections, as illustrated by the map below, which is included as an appendix to the opinion in Mattz v. Arnett, supra, following page 506 [37 L.Ed.2d page 108],
*457 Map of Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation, California *
Scale: 1 inch = 12 miles
*458
The nets were found on the portion of Indian land known as the Klamath River Reservation, a 2-mile wide strip of land extending from the mouth of the Klamath River on the Pacific Ocean for approximately 20 miles inland. The land was originally reserved for Indian use in 1855. By Act of March 3, 1853 (10 Stat. 238) the President was authorized to make reservations in the State of California for Indian purposes, and the Klamath River Reservation was made by presidential executive order two years later. In 1876, the 12-mile square area known as the Original Hoopa Valley Reservation was formally set aside by another executive order and in 1891 was extended to include the Klamath River Reservation and also a 30-mile strip in between these areas referred to on the map as the “Connecting Strip.” The Supreme Court in
Mattz
v.
Arnett
explained that the reservations had been consolidated as one because an act passed in 1864 (13 Stat. 39) had authorized the President to set apart no more than four tracts for Indian reservations in California and by 1891, four reservations had already been so set apart. (
Mrs. Brooks, intervener’s mother, testified that her family fished with gill nets for their own personal use without State interference until the 1940’s. During her girlhood, in the early years of the century, most of the Indians on the lower 20 miles of the river made their living by commercial fishing. Her son, however, fishes only for the subsistence of his family. Fish is a staple of his family’s diet and, according to intervener’s testimony, he can only catch sufficient fish for his family’s needs by means of gill nets.
The State makes no effort to limit gill netting by Indians elsewhere on the Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation, i.e., on the connecting strip or the original Hoopa Indian Reservation. (See Fish & G. Code, § 12300.) On the Klamath River Reservation, the only method of taking fish that has been permitted is angling. In 1933, the State enacted Fish and Game Code section 429.8 (now § 7155) providing that Yurok Indians could obtain a permit to fish on the Klamath for subsistence without regard to seasons, and under certain conditions not permitting gill netting. According to the testimony at trial, there has never been an application for a section 7155 permit. The Indians continue gill netting and suffering occasional arrests and confiscation of nets.
*459 We agree with the trial court that the State did not acquire jurisdiction to regulate the fishing rights here involved by the transference of jurisdiction over Indian reservations to California. In 1953, jurisdiction over Indian reservations and over Indians on such reservations was transferred from the federal government to California by the passage of Public Law 280 (67 Stat. 588, 18 U.S.C. § 1162; 28 U.S.C. § 1360.) Public Law 280 provides, however, that its application shall not “deprive any Indian or any Indian tribe, band, or community of any right, privilege or immunity afforded under any Federal treaty, agreement, or statute with respect to hunting, trapping, or fishing or the control, licensing, or regulation thereof.”
The State takes the position that the asserted fishing rights here were not based on a treaty, statute or agreement but on executive order because the reservation itself was created by executive order. The Attorney General cites the case of
Sioux Tribe
v.
U.S.
(1942)
Here the creation of the reservation can be traced to congressional authority, i.e., the' Act of March 3, 1853 (10 Stat. 238) by which the President was “ ‘authorized to make five military reservations from the public domain in the State of California or the Territories of Utah and New Mexico bordering on said State, for Indian purposes.’ ” (See
Mattz
v.
Arnett, supra,
*460
The State argues that this conclusion is contrary to the legislative intent and that the language “treaty, agreement, or statute” must be strictly construed to exclude fishing rights on reservations created by executive order even where the ultimate authority is statutory. The United States Supreme Court in
Metlakatla Indians
v.
Egan
(1962)
The Attorney General takes the position that he has now unveiled legislative history which indicates that congressional intent. For one thing, the State points out that Congress rejected the words “law, treaty, or agreement” in favor of “statute, treaty, or agreement.” The Attorney General’s position is that the intent of Congress was to exempt only those fishing rights expressly given to the Indians by the requisite instrument, whether it be statute, treaty, or agreement, and not to exempt rights which can only be inferred from a treaty, agreement, or statute. The choice of words, however, to designate the source of the protected right ordinarily would indicate nothing as to whether only an “expressed” right rather than an “inferred” right will be protected. As evidence of legislative intent, however, the Attorney General has offered a memorandum written on February 18, 1954, by the Assistant Commissioner of Indian Affairs to the California Area Director of the Bureau of Indian *461 Affairs (BIA), which explained the reason for the language used as follows: “By recommending that the words ‘federal law, treaty or agreement’ be changed to ‘Federal treaty, agreement or statute,’ it was intended to make clear that the rights, privileges or immunities to be preserved or protected were those which the Indians expressly reserved in treaties or agreements with the United States or which were expressly granted to Indians in a Federal statute.” (Italics added.)
The Attorney General also draws the court’s attention to letters from the years 1953-1954 from various persons within the BIA generally stating that there were no California Indian hunting and fishing rights granted by treaty, agreement, or statute. It is respondent’s position on these documents that, while it is true that an administrative interpretation as to the meaning of a statute is to be given respect, it is far from conclusive.
(County of Marin
v.
United States
(1958)
Public Law 280 does not state that fishing rights derived from treaty, agreement, or statute will only be protected if the right was
expressly
granted. No reason appears why the manner in which the right was granted would make it more or less worthy of protection and it is concluded that no such limitation should be read into Public Law 280. It has been decided several times that the creation of a reservation “for Indian purposes” encompasses the right to hunt, and fish on the reservation without further specification. (See
Menominee Tribe
v.
United States
(1968)
Since the Indians on the Klamath River Reservation had fishing rights derived from Congress, State qualifications of those traditional rights was precluded by force of the Supremacy Clause.
(Antoine
v.
State of Washington
(1975)
Because of the conclusion that the fishing rights here derived from statute within the meaning of Public Law 280, it is unnecessary to consider the State’s lengthy argument that there were no fishing rights derived from an “agreement” within the meaning of Public Law 280 and unnecessary to consider the dictum to this effect in
Elser
v.
Gill Net Number One
(1966)
The Attorney General also contends that even if reservation status was not terminated by the Act of 1872, the State could at least regulate fishing on reservation lands owned by non-Indians. This does not appear to be the consequence of opening a portion of the reservation to settlement by non-Indians. (See
Seymour
v.
Superintendent
(1962)
The case of
Antoine
v.
State of Washington, supra,
involved an attempt by the State of Washington to regulate hunting by Indians on land which had once been a reservation but which had been ceded to the United States by the Indians. The Indians, however, had retained hunting rights through agreement ratified by Congress. The court held that the supremacy clause precluded state qualification of those rights. In a concurring opinion, Mr. Justice Douglas remarked: “An effort is made to
*463
restrict these hunting rights to public lands, not to tracts ceded by this Agreement and taken up by private parties. The Agreement, however, speaks only of the ceded tract, not the ultimate disposition of the several parts of it. We would strain hard to find an implied exception for parcels in the ceded tract that ended up in private ownership. . . . Whether the result would be different if the contest were between the owner of the private tract and the Indian is a question that need not be reached. We have here only an issue involving the power of a State to impose a regulatory restraint upon a right which Congress bestowed on these Indians.” (
The State finally argues that the State has a right under its police power to qualify the Indian fishing rights on the reservation in the interest of conservation and contends that section 7155 is a proper conservation measure. The State relies upon two cases involving Indian fishing rights wherein the United States Supreme Court has narrowly construed the fishing rights to permit state regulation of the rights in the interest of conservation.
(Puyallup Tribe
v.
Dept. of Game
(1968)
This court in
Donahue
v.
Justice Court, supra,
The judgment is affirmed.
Scott, J., and Devine, J., * concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 26, 1975, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 23, 1975.
Notes
United States Department of Interior, General Land Office 1944.
The order was deemed necessary for the suppression of the liquor traffic with the Indians. (
The trial court’s conclusion that the Legislature passed section 7155 in the mistaken belief that Klamath River Reservation was no longer a reservation is reasonable. The State took the position in Mattz v. Arnett that the reservation had been terminated in 1892 when Congress opened the area to settlement. The legislative motive, however, does not appear to be relevant to the validity of the legislation.
Retired Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
