3 Indian Terr. 243 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1900
This is an action brought in equity n the United States court at Muskogee, Ind. T., to enjoin J. George Wright, United States Indian inspector for the Indian Territory, and J. Blair Shoenfelt, United States Indian agent for the Five Civilized Tribes, from collecting from plaintiffs, who are all noncitizens of the Creek Nation, and attorneys at law residing in the Creek Nation, and practicing law in said court, an occupation tax imposed on them by virtue of the laws of the Creek Nation, which, among other things, provides that a tax of $25 per annum shall be collected from each lawyer residing and practicing his profession in the Creek Nation who is not a citizen of the Creek or Seminole Nation. To the complaint the following demurrer was filed: “Come now the said defendants, by Pliny L. Soper, United States attorney for the Northern district of the Indian Territory, and demur to the complaint of plaintiffs, and for ground therefor state (1) that the court has no jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action; (2) that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against these defendants, or for which any equitable relief may be granted.” The court below sustained this demurrer and, plaintiffs refusing to plead further, the cause was dismissed. Exceptions to the sustaining of 'the demurrer and dismissal of the complaint were duly saved, and the cause regularly appealed to this court.
We fully agree with these opinions, and hold, therefore, that unless since the rati fication of the treaty of 1856 there has been a treaty entered into, or an act of Congress passed, repealing it, the Creek Nation had the power to impose this condition or occupation tax, if it may be so called, upon attorneys at law (white men) residing and practicing their profession in the Indian Territory. And inasmuch as the government of the United States, in the treaty, had declared that all persons not authorized by its terms to reside in the Creek Nation should be deemed to be intruders, and had obligated itself to remove all such persons from the Creek Nation, the remedy to enforce this provision of the treaty was a removal by the United States from the Creek Nation of the delinquent as an intruder. Whether the Creek Nation, since the establishment of courts in the Indian Territory, and the passage of the so-called “Curtis Bill,” could
The contention that the Creek Nation is not now an Indian reservation is not tenable. Whatever effect tíre Curtis bill may have upon the Creeks, it has not yet been carried into operation so far as it changes their title to their lands, or their tribal relations to the United States. The mere fact that the Creeks are at some future time to hold their lands in severalty, instead of in the name of the nation, or in common, is not incompatible with, and does not change, the legislation which gives to them the exclusive right of occupancy of their country; nor can it be successfully maintained that because the United States at one time bought from the tribe of Indians who first occupied that country, thereby extinguishing the then Indian title to this land, and afterwards sold it to the Creeks, giving to them a fee-simple title thereto, therefore it is not in possession of the Creeks as an Indian reservation. When the government, in 1825, bought the lands from the Osages, who occupied them under the “original Indian title,” they became a part of the public domain, subject to be appropriated by the government and set aside for Indian reservations, or for any other purpose which it might designate. And by the act of Congress of May 28, 1830 ( 4 Stat. 411), Congress authorized the President to set it apart for the reception of such tribes of Indians as might be willing to exchange for it the lands where they then resided, and remove upon them. The statute is as follows: “That it shall and may be lawful' for the President of the United States to cause so much of any territory belonging to the United States, west of the river Mississippi, not included in state or organized territory, and to which the Indian title
We agree with the authorities, and hold that attorneys at law are not relieved from the payment of the amount required by the Creek statute for the privilege of remaining and practicing their profession in the Creek Nation because of the fact that they are lawyers. On the whole case we therefore hold that a lawyer who is a white man and not a citizen of the Creek Nation, is, pursuant to their statute, required to pay for the privilege of remaining and practicing his profession in that nation the sum of $25; that, if he refuse the payment thereof, he becomes, by virtue of the treaty, an intruder, and that in such a case the government of the United States may remove him from the nation; and that this duty devolves upon the interior department. Whether the interior department or its Indian