54 P. 187 | Or. | 1898
delivered the opinion.
This is an appeal from a decree restraining the defendant George W. Harpér, United States Indian agent for the Umatilla Indian reservation, and his co-defendants,
By a treaty between the United States and the Walla Walla, Cayuse and Umatilla tribes of Indians, concluded on June 9, 1855 (12 Stat. 945), the several tribes ceded to the United States all the land formerly occupied by them except a particularly described portion thereof in what is now Umatilla County, which it was stipulated should be set apart as a residence for the exclusive use of such Indians, and, for the purposes contemplated, should “be held and regarded as an Indian reservation.” Soon after the conclusion of this treaty, the several tribes went on the land set apart and reserved for them, and have ever since continued to live thereon under the charge and control of Indian agents appointed by the general government from time to time to supervise their affairs. By the allotment act of March 3, 1885 ( 23 Stat. 340), it is provided that the lands set apart as therein required “ shall thereafter constitute the reservation for said Indians, and within which the allotments herein provided for shall be made,” and that the president shall cause patents to issue to the allottees, “which shall be of the legal effect, and declare that the United States does and will hold the land thus allotted, for the period of twenty-five years, in trust for the sole use and benefit of the Indian to whom such allotment shall have been made, or in' case of his decease, of liis heirs according to the laws of the State of Oregon, add that at the expiration of said period the United States will convey the same by patent to said Indian, or his heirs as aforesaid, in fee, discharged of said trust and freed of all charge or incumbrance whatsoever.” It is also declared that “if any conveyance is made of the land set apart and allot
But it is urged that the leases of Indian 'lands are sometimes secured by fraud and imposition, and are often imprudently entered into by the allottee, and therefore public injury and individual hardship will ensue if the secretary of the interior, who has general charge and supervision of Indian affairs, has no authority to cancel and annul such a contract when made by the wards of the government, and to summarily eject the lessee from the land. But a sufficient answer to this contention is that no such power has been conferred upon him, and that the courts of the country are constituted for the purpose of administering appropriate relief in such cases. And the assumption of a power not conferred by law finds no justification in the fact that a mischief may be thereby suppressed, or a particular right maintained. If, in the administration of Indian affairs, such a power ought to have been vested in the secretary of the interior over contracts of leasing made by the allottees, congress
Aeeirmed .