after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
There is nothing, on the face of the complaint above set forth to show either the еxistence of any question involving the construction or application of the Federal Constitution, or that the constitutionality of any law of the United States, or the validity or construction of any treaty made under its authority, was drawn in question. This must appear in the complaint by the statement in legal and logical form, such as good pleading requires.
Arbuckle
v.
Blackburn,
But it is now urged that the entire beneficial use or ownership of the property taxed is in tribal Indians, and that it is, therefore, not subject to taxatiоn by or under state authority; also that the property is made use of by. the Federal Government, and' that it is one of the means and instrumentalities adopted by it through' which it cаrries out its governmental purposes, and such property is, therefore, not subject to be taxed by the State. .:
That the entire beneficial use or ownership of the property taxed is in tribal Indians, while the legal title only is in plaintiff, is not alleged in the complaint, and such a conclusion does not follow from the allegations to be found in that pleading. It is true that the property of Indians living in the tribal state, and so recognized by the Government, is withdrawn from the operation of state laws and is exempt from taxation thereunder.
The Kansas
Indians,
Nor is there any merit in the proposition that the plaintiff is made use of by the Government of the United States, and is one of the means used by it to carry out its obligations to the Indians, under the Constitution or laws of the United States, and that therefore the propеrty of the plaintiff which is thus used is not subject to state taxation. No such averment of fact is to be found in the pleading; nor does any such conclusion arise from the faсts which appear therein". ■ The Government may lease a building from a private owner for the purpose of better carrying op its governmental duties, and yet the building is not *130 such an instrumentality of government as prevents its taxation by or under state authority. Congress has not constituted this corporation an agency of its own for the. purpose of discharging any duties which the Government may owe to the Indians. It has, as the complaint avers, made in the past some appropriations from time to time to the corporation, to aid it in its own work among the Indians, but that is far from constituting the corporation an agency.of its own, to carry into effect its own governmental powers, granted by the Constitution or by law. And even such appropriations ceased years ago.
The case, in short, is one of that class where we have frequently held that the. claim of a Federal question must have some foundation of plausibility,
St. Joseph &c. R. R.
v.
Steele,
The Circuit Court was right in refusing jurisdiction, and its judgment dismissing the complaint oh account of the lack thereof, is
■ Affirmed.
