294 N.Y. 61 | NY | 1945
Relator is serving, in a New York State prison, a life sentence imposed on him by the Supreme Court of the State of New York on December 15, 1939, for the commission, at the city of Salamanca, in Cattaraugus County, New York, of a "felony murder" (Penal Law, § 1044, subd. 2; § 1045a). Almost the whole of the city of Salamanca, including the scene of the killing, is within the bounds of the Allegany Reservation of the Seneca Nation of Indians. Relator is not an Indian, nor was his victim, one Paul Balsiger. In this habeas corpus proceeding relator asserts that the Supreme Court of this State was without any jurisdiction of his offense, committed as it was on an Indian reservation. No such challenge to the jurisdiction was made during relator's trial or on his appeal to the Appellate Division from the judgment of conviction, which appeal resulted in an affirmance by that court (
The Allegany Reservation of the Seneca Indians is wholly within New York State, has an area of about forty-two square miles and extends along both sides of the Allegany River, north from the Pennsylvania border. It is a part of the much more extensive lands occupied by the Seneca nation before the American Revolution. Before our Federal Constitution was adopted, those Seneca lands were within the bounds of the State of New York. The Allegany Reservation was, accordingly, not created by the Federal Government out of United States Government lands within the State, and was never at any time territory of the United States. (Seneca Nation v. Christie,
Previous to the Geneseo Council, and in 1794, there had been entered into at Kon-on-daigua (Canandaigua, N.Y.) a treaty between the United States of America and "the Tribes of Indians called the Six Nations" (including the Seneca Nation). By it "peace and friendship" were to be "firmly established" forever, between the United States and the Six Nations. (7 U.S. Stat. 44.) The treaty contains a description by metes and bounds of the lands of the Seneca Nation, with an acknowledgment by the United States that the described lands were the property of that Nation, and a promise by our Government that the possession thereof by the Senecas would never be disturbed. The Senecas, on their part, covenanted that they would never claim any other lands within the boundaries of the United States. By article V the Senecas ceded to the United States the right to build a wagon road through part of their lands (not the Allegany Reservation) and the right of free passage through all the Seneca lands. Article VII of that Treaty of 1794 is one of relator's main reliances. By that article it was stipulated that, "lest the firm peace and friendship now established should be interrupted by the misconduct of individuals, * * * for injuries done by individuals on either side, no private revenge or retaliation shall take place; but, instead thereof, complaint shall be made by the party injured, to the other". If the depredation was by Indians, the complaint was to be made by the President, or a superintendent by him appointed, to the principal chiefs of the Six *68
Nations or any of them; if the "private injury" was by whites, then the complaint would go from the Indian Nation to the President, or his superintendent. Upon the entry of any such complaint, says article VII, "such prudent measures shall then be pursued as shall be necessary to preserve our peace and friendship unbroken; until the legislature (or great council) of the United States shall make other equitable provision for the purpose". Relator treats that last-quoted sentence as "provision * * * for future federal legislation which would cover the crime in question when committed within the Allegany Reservation". He says that the language "expressly excluded State laws from application to this Reservation". We cannot agree that it had any such meaning or effect, or that it referred at all to the question of what system of internal law should thereafter operate within the tribal lands. The Treaty was, in substance as well as form, a true treaty, made between the United States of America and the quasi-sovereign Six Nations. It was made not to set off lands to the Indians or to provide for their government, but as a treaty of peace to put an end to a state of war and guard against its recurrence. For this purpose, border raids or other incursions were to be treated as "international incidents", and diplomatic representations thereupon were to be made by the aggrieved signatory to the other. The Treaty of 1794 was one of a long series of actual treaties made between the United States and Indian tribes until the practice was abolished in 1871. (SeeSeneca Nation v. Christie, supra; James Turner v. TheAmerican Baptist Missionary Union, 5 McLean 344, 349; U.S. v.43 Gallons of Whiskey, etc.,
Of course, Congress had, from other sources, jurisdiction over the Indians and their lands and their affairs. By Federal Constitutional provision (art. 1, § 8) and perhaps exnecessitate (see Board of Comm'rs v. Seber,
Assuming that Congress could by statute take or keep for itself exclusive legislative control over the crime of murder, by whomever perpetrated, in the Allegany Reservation, where is there any such statute? Relator relies on United States Code, title 18, §§ 451 and 452, and United States Code, title 25, § 217. The first two of those sections (U.S. Code, tit. 18, §§ 451, 452), so far as important here, define, and provide for the *71
punishment of murders "committed within or on any lands * * * under the exclusive or concurrent jurisdiction [of the United States]". We find no ground whatever for a holding that the Allegany Reservation was ever "under the exclusive or concurrent jurisdiction" of our Federal Government. Ultimately, relator's opposing argument stands or falls on his own construction of the Treaty of 1794, a construction which we have rejected in preceding paragraphs of this opinion and which has never in practice been accepted by any branch of either the New York State or the United States Governments. In the other statute (U.S. Code, tit. 25, § 217) urged upon us by relator as empowering the United States courts alone to deal with murders done on reservations, the language is that, with exceptions not here relevant, "the general laws of the United States as to the punishment of crimes committed in any place within the sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the United States * * * shall extend to the Indian country." Relator says that the Allegany Reservation, including the city of Salamanca, is "Indian country." Without passing squarely on the point, we conclude that there is some basis for it. "Indian country", archaic as the phrase now sounds, still seems to comprehend any unceded land, such as a reservation, occupied by an Indian tribe — any place to which the Indian title has not been extinguished. (Donnelly v. UnitedStates, supra; Bates v. Clark,
In Mulkins v. Snow (
In an earlier paragraph of this opinion we stated, as one of the bases for our conclusion herein, that there is a Federal statute which makes applicable to the city of Salamanca, the general laws of the State of New York. That enactment (18 U.S. Stat. 330, ch. 90) was passed by Congress in 1875. It provides (§ 8) as to Salamanca (then a village) and several other named villages in the Allegany Reservation that "all municipal laws and regulations of said State [New York] may extend over and be in force within said villages". From the historical background of the statute, the setting of the quoted language therein, and from subsequent authoritative interpretation given it by the New York Legislature, it is plain to us that "all municipal laws and regulations of said State" means all the internal, domestic laws of the State. Our arrival at that conclusion has not been a hasty or incautious one, conscious as we are that the United States Circuit Court of Appeals has, in United States v. Forness
(
We agree with the Circuit Court of Appeals that "municipal laws" has two meanings. Broadly and classically it means the laws pertaining to the internal government of a State or nation. (See 1 Blackstone Comm. 44; People v. Tiphaine, 3 Parker Cr. Rep. 241, 244.) In its more modern and narrower connotation it means those laws which pertain to towns, cities and villages and their local governments. Intrinsically the words may have either of those meanings. But historical research, we believe, establishes that the broader and older intendment must have been the one used by Congress. The statute was passed because of a pressing difficulty. Long before 1875, Salamanca and several other villages of white men had sprung up on the Allegany Reservation, and the white settlers and several railroad companies who built their lines through the Reservation lands, had made their improvements on the faith of land leases from the Indians. Although confirmed by act of the New York Legislature, those leases were declared invalid *75
by the New York courts. (See Ryan v. Knorr, 19 Hun 540.) Thereupon the Legislature of this State passed and transmitted to Congress a resolution (L. 1875, p. 819) requesting the latter body to pass some law "for the relief of said white settlers." Soon thereafter, Congress on February 19, 1875, enacted the law we are here construing. After providing for appropriate validation of the leases, the statute in its last paragraph, says this: "That all laws of the State of New York now in force concerning the laying out, altering, discontinuing, and repairing highways and bridges shall be in force within said villages [including Salamanca], and may, with the consent of said Seneca Nation in council, extend to, and be in force beyond, said villages in said reservations, or in either of them; and all municipal laws and regulations of said State may extend over and be in force within said villages: Provided, nevertheless, That nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize the taxation of any Indian, or the property of any Indian not a citizen of the United States." The best possible clue to the meaning of "all municipal laws and regulations of the State" as used in the Act is found in the action taken by our State Legislature, after Congress had acceded to its request by passing the statute above described. Apparently the new leases authorized by the Federal Act were entered into in 1880. In 1881, our Legislature, undoubtedly as a sequel to that passage of the Federal Act, put on our statute books chapter 188 of the Laws of that year, now section 71 of our State Indian Law, wherein, changing the word "municipal" to "general" it directed that "all the general laws of this state are extended over and shall apply to the same [the villages of Salamanca et al.]". From that day until the Forness case (supra) was decided, no one has ever expressed a doubt, as far as any record shows, that the word "municipal" as used by Congress and the word "general" as used by our Legislature, meant exactly the same thing, and that both words included and envisaged the whole State system of laws for the internal government of the residents of the villages, and not merely minor local ordinances, or State laws dealing with the details of village government. Such a use of the phrase "municipal law" was technically and scientifically correct for the result intended. The Act of 1875 was an act of cession *76
in the sense that it ceded to the State such governmental jurisdiction as the National Government or the Seneca Nation might otherwise have or been thought to have, over the white villages. (Incidentally such cessions or relinquishments of Federal control over the government of Indian lands are not unusual and are considered legal even in contravention of treaties, see Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock,
Relator argues that the specific reference in the above quoted 1875 Congressional statute to State laws concerning highways and bridges shows that the later-used term "municipal laws" had no application to State laws. On the contrary, we think that the statute itself shows why the highway and bridge laws were separately mentioned, i.e., because the Seneca nation in council was to have the right to extend those laws to the whole reservation.
The order should be affirmed.
LEHMAN, Ch. J., LOUGHRAN, LEWIS, CONWAY, THACHER and DYE, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed.