23 Kan. 672 | Kan. | 1880
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiifs, claiming to be the owners of an undivided half-interest in a tract of land in Wyandotte county, brought their action in the district court of that county to assert that right. The case was tried by the court, without a
The facts are these: The land was patented to Nancy Bluejacket, a Shawnee Indian, whose Indian name was Wahna-so, and patented under the treaty of May 10, 1854. She died unmarried, and both parties hereto claim to be the heirs, or to hold under heirs. The plaintiffs and Mary Rogers, under whom defendants claim, bore the same blood relationship to her, the plaintiffs being the children of a sister, and Mary Rogers the daughter of a brother. Under the Kansas law of descents, the plaintiffs would shore equally with Mary Rogers in the inheritance. But it also appears that the mother of plaintiffs was married to a Wyandotte, and lived with that tribe, and that her husband, the father of plaintiffs, received land and annuities as a member of that tribe, while the father and mother of Mary Rogers were both Shawnees. In other words, Mary Rogers was a full-blooded Shawnee, and plaintiffs were half-bloods only. It further appears that in 1868 the Shawnee council established a rule of descents, which would cast the entire inheritance upon* members of the tribe to the exclusion of all others, and that after the death of Nancy Bluejacket, they declared that Mary Rogers was her sole heir. In other words, the case stands thus: If this land descended in accordance with the Kansas law of inheritance, plaintiffs are entitled to recover; if by the law of the Shawnee nation, they have no interest in the property. Which law prevails? We think this question is fully answered by the decision of the supreme court of the United States, the court of last resort in such questions, in the case of The Kansas Indians, 5 Wall. 737, a case which went up on error from this court, and in which the treaty of 1854, under which this land was patented, was the very matter under consideration. In that case the court says:
“The treaty of 1854 left the Shawnee people a united 'tribe, with a declaration of their dependence on the national government for protection, and the vindication of their rights. Ever since this, their tribal organization has remained as*674 it was before. They have elective chiefs, and an elective council, meeting at stated periods, keeping a record of their proceedings, with powers regulated by custom, by which they punish offenses, adjust differences, and exercise a general oversight over the affairs of the nation. This people have their own customs and laws, by which they are governed. Because some of those customs have been abandoned, owing to the proximity of their white neighbors, may be an evidence of the superior influence of our race, but. does not tend to prove that their tribal organization is not preserved. There is no evidence in the record to show that the Indians with separate estates have not the same rights in the tribe as those whose estates are held in common. Their machinery of government, though simple, is adapted to their intelligence and wants, and effective, with faithful agents to watch over them. If broken into, it is the natural result of Shawnees and whites owning adjoining plantations, and living and trafficking together as neighbors and friends. But the action of the political department of the government settles, beyond controversy, that the Shawnees are as yet a distinct people, with a perfect tribal organization. Within a very recent period, their head-men negotiated a treaty with the United States, which, for some reason not explained in the record, was either not sent to the senate, or, if sent, not ratified, and they are under the charge of an agent who constantly resides with them. While the general government has a superintending care over their interests, and continues to treat with them as a nation, the state of Kansas is estopped from denying their title to it. She accepted this status when she accepted the act admitting her into the Union. Conferring rights and privileges on these Indians cannot affect their situation, which can only be changed by treaty stipulation, or a voluntary abandonment of their tribal organization. As long as the United States recognizes their national character, they are under the protection of treaties and the laws of congress, and their property is withdrawn from the operation of state laws.”
This decision was in 1866. - Since then it is not pretended that there has been any treaty changing their relations to the government, or releasing tribal control of persons or property. Unless, then, within that decision, there has been a voluntary abandonment of tribal organization, (and that question is one to be conclusively settled by the political department of the
It appears that sometime in 1872 the bulk of the Shawnee tribe moved away from Kansas, to the Indian territory, and occupied a part of the Cherokee reservation that since then the government has had no separate agent for that tribe, and that they have not only been domiciled among the Cherokees, but to some extent under the control of the Cherokee council and united with the Cherokees. As one witness expressed it, “ The Cherokee laws govern us as to general police regulations and crime. The Shawnee council act as to ownership of property.” If the question were one of fact for original determination in the courts, it might be difficult to hold from the testimony, that a distinct, independent tribal organization remained. But, as we have seen, that question is for the political branch of the government, and the courts follow its ruling. Now it appears that the agent for the Cherokees acts as agent for the Shawnees; that he convenes their council; that that council acts upon questions of property and heirship, and that its acts thereon are received and recognized in the interior department at Washington; and that since the decease of Nancy Bluejacket and the decision of the
The judgment will be affirmed.
I think the foregoing opinion follows the decision of the supreme court of the United States in the case of The Kansas Indians, 72 U. S. (5 Wall.) 737, and that the opinion is right if the decision which it follows is right; therefore I concur.