12 Kan. 114 | Kan. | 1873
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The facts in this case are these: The defendant in error, being the owner in fee simple of a large tract of land situate in Miami county, purchased by him from reservees under the Treaty of June 5th, 1854, between the govern
I. The solution of the first question depends entirely upon the provisions of said treaty of June 5th, 1854. (10 U. S. Stat. at Large, 1092.) For, unless exempted by virtue of that treaty, they are taxable under the first section of the tax law, which declares that all property in this state, real and personal, not expressly exempted therefrom, shall be subject to taxation. (Gen. Stat., 1019, ch. 107, § 1.) That these lands, while they remained the property of the reservees, under the .treaty, were exempt, is settled by the decision of the supreme court of the U. S. in the case of the Miamis, 5 Wall., 760, reversing the judgment of this court, 3 Kas., 364. Did this exemption attach to the land, qualifying the estate, and inuring to the benefit of all subsequent holders of the title, or was it simply a personal privilege of the Indian owners? As preliminary to this inquiry, and assisting to a clear under
The special clause which is claimed to create the exemption recites'that “the lands so patented shall not be liable to levy, sale, execution, or forfeiture.” These words were construed by this court, in the case in 3 Kas., as referring simply to judicial proceedings; but the supreme court of the U. S. said that “such construction would be an' exceedingly narrow one, whereas enlarged rules of construction are adopted in reference to Indian treaties,” and decided that tax levies and sales were also prohibited by them. It appears therefore settled that the exemption is from seizure and sale under both judicial and tax proceedings. It would seem probable also, that a like rule of construction would extend the word “sale” to voluntary as well as forced sales, and that in the absence of all other legislation and restriction the Indian owner would thereby be restrained from a voluntary sale of his real estate. But it is unnecessary to determine this point, or press the suggestion. It is enough to keep within the limits of past decisions. The land is exempt from seizure and sale, whether for nonpayment of taxes, under an ordinary judgment, on a foreclosure of a mortgage, or in partition. That the parties to this treaty might well contemplate attaching such an exemption to the land, so long as it remained the property of its Indian owner, is obvious. It is in harmony with the whole spirit of the dealings of the government with the Indians. Its aim is to protect him in the enjoyment of his property, to secure him in its undisturbed possession, notwithstanding his ignorance, and in spite of the rapacity of his more intelligent white neighbors. Such an exemption is but significant of and in harmony with that purpose. But that the government should contemplate attaching this as a permanent exemption to the land, running with it long after it should pass out of the hands of the Indians who alone were sought to be protected, and placing a large body of land within the borders of Kansas, owned by her citizens, yet
“The constitution of the United States gives to congress the power to dispose of and make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory and other property of the United States. But under this provision of the constitution congress would have no power to dispose of the public lands in such a way that they would be exempt from state taxation after the government had disposed of them to individuals, and parted, with all control over them. We are not aware that the United States have claimed or attempted to exercise such a power. It is not a power expressly granted, nor is it a power necessary to be exercised in order to carry into effect any of the expressly delegated powers. The government can dispose of the public lands without exempting them in the hands of its vendees from state taxation. If this power exists, it is a power that might deprive the néw states of all revenue from real estate, and thus leave them without the means of supporting the state governments. No government can exist without revenue; there can be no revenue without taxation, and there can be no taxation without property. We claim, then, that the federal government under the constitution of the United States, has no power to dispose of the public lands, or to assent to the disposal of them to individuals in fee simple in such a way as to deprive the state of the exercise of its sovereign right to tax them. So long as the lands remain Indian lands, or so long as the government retains an iñterest in, or control over them, the state, by compact in the act of admission, is prohibited from exercising the taxing power in relation to them. But the moment the .title passes out of the government, and is vested in individuals, the lands become subject to all the laws of the jurisdiction where they are located.”
Certainly, if such a power exists, the purpose to exercise it will not be imputed to congress unless plainly demanded by the language they have used. At the time of this treaty the Miamis were in possession of about 500,000 acres in the eastern borders of the present state of Kansas, which they held by the ordinary Indian title, viz., a fee simple, but
It is earnestly insisted that the case of The State of New Jersey v. Wilson, 7 Cranch, 164, is decisive of this question. That case decides that a contract by a state to exempt certain lands from taxation is binding on the state, and cannot by it be broken, and the exemption withdrawn. The facts in that case were briefly these: In 1758 (before the adoption of the federal constitution,) a portion of the Delaware Indians who claimed a large body of lands in the colony of New Jersey, and who desired to join their friends in New York, entered into an agreement with the then colony of New Jersey, whereby it was stipulated that the Indians should surrender to the said colony, said lands, and in consideration of the same they were to receive in lieu thereof a body of lands south of the river Rariton, which were purchased for said Indians. And it was further provided “that the lands to be purchased for the Indians aforesaid shall not hereafter be subject to any tax, any levy, usage or custom to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding.” Afterward these Indians procured the enactment of a law allowing them to sell these lands, without any provision in the act in reference to their being taxable. Under this act the lands were sold to white men. And afterward, and .while such lands were held
The case of Armstrong v. The Treasurer of Athens County, reported in 10 Ohio, 235, is very much in point. In 1804, two townships of land were vested in the Ohio University for the sole use, benefit, and support of the university forever. The same act declared that the land in the two townships appropriated and vested as aforesaid, with the buildings which were or might be erected thereon, should forever be exempt from all state taxes. In 1826, the legislature authorized the trustees of the university to sell and convey in fee simple the land in said two townships. In pursuance to this statute the trustees sold the land, and the complainants became the purchasers from the trustees, and claimed to hold them exempt from state taxation. The supreme court of Ohio decided that the land was not exempt, a decison which was affirmed by the supreme court of the U. S. (16 Peters, 281.) In that case the land was declared by the act to be forever exempt. But the court say that this clause in the law must be taken in connection with other parts of the same relative to these lands; and when taken in this connection it seemed clear that it was not the intention of the legislature that the exemption should continue for any longer period than for the time the land should be vested in the corporation in trust for the purposes in the act specified. So in this case, in construing the Miami treaty, we must look at all its provisions, and determine the object the parties had in view. When we take this exemption-clause in connection with the other provisions of the treaty, it seems that it was not the intention of the parties that the exemption should continue for a longer' time than was necessary to protect the Indians in the use and occupancy of their homes. That when the lands should cease to be the homes of the Indians, and they had no further claim to the same, and the title to the land had become vested in fee simple in individuals, with the con
This question of exemption from taxation is further discussed in the cases of the Town of New Haven v. Sheffield, 30 Conn., 160; Brainard v. Town of Colchester, 31 Conn., 407; Lord v. Town of Litchfield, 10 Am. Law Register, 493. In the notes of Judge Redfield to this last case, on page 505 of the Register, he says that in the case of Brainard v. The Town of Colchester, above cited, the court makes “the true distinction upon this point of exemption of property from taxation — 1st, that it should receive a-strict construction, and not be extended further than the fair import of the words require; 2d, that when the exemption.is based upon the use to which the estate is conveyed, it shall not be construed as attaching to the land beyond the time of its appropriation to that use; 3d, that to attach a perpetual exemption of lands, or real estate, from taxation, it must form one of the elements of a contract or grant on the part of the state.”
The case before us seems to us to come fairly within the second rule laid down. The exemption was based upon the use by the Indians, and when that use ceased the exemption also ceased. The judgment of the district court will therefore be reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the views herein expressed.
[*Hon. Wilson Shannon, of Lawrence.]