OPINION
Appellants, Lawrence and Nellie Fry, are members of the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation (the Tribe). They appeal from a judgment of the district court holding that thеir income derived from logging operations on Reservation land is not exempt from federal income taxation. We affirm.
Kettle Falls Lumber Company, a non-Indian concern, contracted with the Tribe to cut timber from unallotted lands of the Reservation. 1 Lawrence Fry, in turn, was hired by Kettle Falls as a logging subcontractor, but Fry himself had no direct contractual relаtionship with the Tribe. The majority of Fry’s employees were Indians. Fry and his wife paid income taxes on the income derived from this logging operation and then sued for a refund. 2 The district court granted the Commissioner’s motion for summary judgment. This appeal followed.
At the outset, appellants concede that the general rule is that Indians, like other United States citizens, are subject to federal income taxation unless exempted by treaty or statute.
Squire v. Capoeman,
In
Stevens v. C.I.R.,
Appellants acknowledge that, since allotted lands are not here at issue, the exemption construed in Squire and Stevens does not, by its terms, apрly. They also admit their inability to cite a statutory or treaty exemption which does specifically apply to them or their activities. Nevertheless, they still seek an exemption, basing their argument on an analogy to Squire and Stevens. Basically, appellants maintain that, since the income which the Tribe itself directly derives from the logging operations on tax-exempt land is exempt from federal income taxation, their income too should be shielded. This argument is without merit.
First, appellants here fail to point to any treaty or statute which, in the first instance, exempts the tribal lands from federal taxation. Second, even if we assume that the Reservation lands concerned are tax-exempt, 6 appellants cannot shоw that their income derives “directly” from those lands. While the Tribe’s income from appellants’ logging operations may indeed be said to derive directly from its ownership of the unallotted Reservation lands, appellants’ income derives from a сontract entered into between them and Kettle Falls, whose income in turn derives from a contract between it and the Tribe.
In both
Squire
and
Stevens,
the income which was held to be exempt to the аllottee was from operations conducted
on his own allotted land.
Indeed, in
Stevens,
the Tax Court had held taxable income derived from the ranching and farming of land which was leased from
other
allottees by Stevens, and he did not appeal that ruling.
See
Appellants, however, are not to be deterred. Recognizing that the link between their income and tax-exempt Indian land is probably too tenuous to meet the test of precedent in this area, they advance a bold variant on their basic argument. They suggest that we read Squire and Stevens, not as turning on the construction of a statutоry exemption, but rather as standing for the broader proposition that income derived by an Indian from activities which directly benefit other Indians is tax-exempt. They bring their own case within suсh a rule by pointing both to the benefit which the Tribe obtains in having its timber logged and to that which their Indian employees enjoy through employment.
It is true that both
Squire
and
Stevens
contain language to the effect that ambiguities in treaties and statutes are to be resolved in favor of Indians. See
“[the Supreme] Court has repeatedly said that tax exemptions are not granted by implication. ... It has applied that rule to taxing acts affecting Indians as to all others. . . .”
Mescalero Apache Tribe
v.
Jones,
The exemption construed in
Squire
and
Stevens
was intended to provide the allottee with unencumbered land when he became competent.
See Squire,
Appellants can point to no treaty or act of Congress that grants an exemption which is applicable to their case. Accordingly, the general rule of tаxability controls, and the judgment of the district court must be
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Reservation land is divided into two classes: land allotted to individual Indians for the use and benefit of the allotee; and common tribal lаnd used for the benefit of the entire community ....
C.I.R. v. Walker,
. It appears that Mrs. Fry was not involved in the logging venture which produced the income at issue here. Her status as taxpayer and appellant apparently derives from the fact that, although filing separately during the relevant years, she reported a portion of the subject income on her tax returns.
. For recent Supreme Court cases which delineate the rules governing
state
taxation of Indians and their activities, see
Moe v. Salish & Kootenai Tribes,
. A noncompetent Indian is one who holds allotted lands only under a trust patent and may not dispose of his property without the approval of the Secretary of the Interior. It does not denote mental incapacity.
Stevens
v.
C.I.R.,
. We have been called upon to construe the Act in contexts other than taxation as well.
See, e. g., United States v. Southern Pacific Transp. Co.,
. Indian tax appellants seem regularly to call upon appellate courts to make this unsupported assumption.
See, e. g., C.I.R. v. Walker,
. We are aware that any tax on appellants’ income may be said to indireсtly tax the Tribe itself—depending, of course, on the ability of appellants to shift the burden—and to that extent undercuts the tribal land’s assumed tax exemption. Such a nexus does not meet thе requirement that the impact be “direct”.
Compare Agua Caliente Band of Mission Ind. v. County of Riverside,
. As appellants assert, a policy argument can be made that noncompetent Indians should be exеmpt from federal taxation on income derived from services performed on the reservation where they live for the benefit of the Tribe, notwithstanding that they were paid by an outside contractor. Such policy considerations, however, are matters to be determined by the Congress and not by the courts.
. Although the point was not pressed here, it appears that appellants also argued below that it is “unconstitutional” for the Federal Government to tax the income of Indians. Such a contention is, of course, foreclosed by
Squire
itself.
See
The Government also relies upon Choteau v. Burnet,283 U.S. 691 ,51 S.Ct. 598 ,75 L.Ed. 1353 , but that case also is not controlling, since it held only that a competent Indian, who had unrestricted control over lands and income therefrom, was not exempt from income tax solely because of his status as an Indian.
. See notes 7 & 8 supra.
