delivered the opinion of the court:
The defense in this case rests upon certain facts, which are thus summarized by the special agent of the Interior Department who investigated the case:
“The claimant is intermarried with the Sioux, and has lived the greater part of his life with them and in their country. He now resides at the Pine Bidge Agency, where his family are enrolled as members of the Sioux Nation, but personally he does not participate in the distribution of rations or annuity goods. He is one of the old ‘mountaineers,’ or ‘men of the country,’ as they were called, who claim to have been adopted by the Sioux and to have been legally incorporated into that nation by the Sioux treaty of 1868; and it was by virtue of this adoption and incorporation that he was living at the Whetstone Agency at the time that he claims that his cattle were killed.”
The position of the defendants upon this point is that a “squaw man,” being one who has been adopted into an Indian tribe, can not maintain an action for the loss of property taken by the tribe of which he was at the time a member. . On the part of the claimant it has been argued at great length and with great earnestness that a citizen of the United States, though adopted by and living with an Indian tribe, still remains a citizen, subject to the criminal laws of the United States (United States v. Rogers,
It is contended by the counsel for the claimant that the testimony of the claimant somewhat modifies the statement of the agent. This testimony'shows that he was employed in 1868 by General Auger, one of the Peace Commissioners, to accompany the Commission as interpreter; that at the close of their negotiations he was directed to select a place for the new
The Sioux treaty, 25th April, 1868 (15 Stat. L., 635, art. 1), provides, on the one hand, that “ if bad men among the whites, or among other people subject to the authority of the United States, shall commit any wrong upon the person or property of the Indians” the United States will, among other things, “reimburse the injured person for the loss sustained,” and, on the other hand, that “if bad men among the Indians shall commit a wrong or depredation upon the person or property of anyone — white, black, or Indian — subject to the authority of the United States and at peace therewith, the person injured shall be reimbursed for his loss from the annuities or other moneys due or to become due to them.” The terms “white, black, or Indian” are certainly comprehensive enough to include a “squaw man,” and it must be conceded that if a “squaw man” is a citizen of the United States that fact is sufficient to give the court jurisdiction of his case. ■ The benefits of this jurisdiction are restricted to those who are citizens and withheld from those who are aliens; yet it does not follow that every claimant who is a citizen is a claimant who can maintain a liability against the United States.
The general purpose of the Indian indemnity acts, as has been said frequently, was to keep the peace. They contemplate that the Indians shall be responsible for what Indians do within the white man’s territory and that the Government will be responsible for what white men do within the Indian’s territory. They make an exception in the case of a white man lawfully and temporarily within the Indian Territory, but the exception proves the rule, and leaves it clearer that the responsibility of the Indians, within the intent and meaning of all the statutes, is for the wrongs which they do outside of their own people and proper habitat.
The term “Indian” in the provision above quoted has no more signification than the terms “white” and “black.” If the person whose property was taken was a person “ subject to the authority of the United States,” as distinguished from being a person subject to the authority of the Sioux Nation, it was immaterial whether he was “ white,” or “ black,” or “ Indian.” In a somewhat remarkable case, United States v. Perryman (
The court does not intend to define a “ squaw man” within the intent of the Indian treaties nor to determine what are his rights and privileges, nor to decide whether by becoming a “ squaw man” he extinguishes the rights and privileges of an American citizen. It places the decision in this case entirely upon the fact of domicile. The principle which governs it is that when a citizen of the United States carries his property voluntarily into the Indian country, makes the home of the Indians his home, casts in his lot as a resident with them, he becomes subject, so far as his property is involved, to the risks of a natural-born Indian, and to that extent must be' considered as one of the tribe. The Indians as a tribe are not liable to him merely because he is a citizen of the United States; and the United States do not guarantee him against losses which result from his having voluntarily carried his property within the area of the Indians’ tribal jurisdiction.
The judgment of the court is that the petition be dismissed.
