173 Ct. Cl. 912 | Ct. Cl. | 1965
delivered the opinion of the court:.
The Seneca Nation, in the third of three cases under the Indian Claims Commission Act, 25 U.S.C. § 70a, involving the transfer of Indian land to others than the United States,
The earlier history of the Seneca region of New York is
About 1858 or 1859, the State of New York took by eminent domain a segment of 47.25 acres within this Reservation, to help in the construction of a state dam and canal system. Between 1863 and 1872, the state appropriated an additional 3.7 acres of the reservation for similar purposes. These takings were both made without any contemporaneous consent or, approval from Congress or from any federal officer or agency. New York paid $1,396.04 for the larger tract (including interest), a sum which appellant accepted without protest. There is no record of the payment, if any, for the 3.7 acres.
Appellant does not say that the price paid by New York for the 50 acres carved from the Oil Spring Reservation was inadequate or inequitable.
The Indian Claims Commission disallowed this contention on the broad and controversial ground that the Trade and Intercourse Act is inapplicable to transfers to the State of New York,
The first is that, if federal consent was needed under the Trade and Intercourse Act, such approval has been given. All agree that appellant would have no complaint if assent had been given at the time of the appropriations.
The second ground of our affirmance is that, even if we were to assume that federal consent was needed and has never been given, we could not find that the Indian Claims Commission Act subjected the United States to liability for failing to take steps to recover the appellant’s land. The compensation paid by New York has not been attacked, nor is there any serious challenge (in this suit) to the New York view that, under its law, land taken for public use does not revert to the former owner upon abandonment of that use. There is, moreover, no evidence that the Senecas ever complained (prior to the commencement of these proceedings) to the Federal Government about the takings or sought to have the United States recapture the tracts or their value for the Nation. Even if we were to postulate that the United States had a special responsibility with respect to this land, we could not find a breach of obligation in a mere failure to move independently to set aside an equitable transfer which this beneficiary never brought to the Government’s attention and about which it never complained to the fiduciary. Appellant is not an infant or an incompetent, but an organized Indian tribe which took its own steps to protect its interests. Unlike its relationship to'some'other Indian groups, the. Federal Government was not in constant supervision over the Seneca Nation’s affairs and transactions. The standard of “fair and honorable dealings” did not require the United States, under these conditions, to take action on its own, under penalty of having to pay appellant (which has already .received just compensation) for the appropriated tract. “The measure of accountability depends, whatever the label, upon the whole complex of factors and elements which should be taken into consideration. The real question is: Did the Federal Government do whatever it was required to, in the circumstances * * *.? That is the standard.” The Oneida Tribe of Indians v. United States, 165 Ct. Cl. 487, 494 (1964), cert. denied, 379 U.S. 946. In this case, it has not been shown to our satisfaction that the Federal Government failed to do “whatever it was required to, in the circumstances.”
Affirmed.
The other two cases are The Six Nations v. United States, Appeal No. 8-63, ante, p. 899 and The Seneca Nation of Indians v. United States, Appeal No. 14-63, post, p. 917, both decided this day.
By stipulation, the record in Seneca Nation v. United States, Appeal No. 14-63, is part of the record herein. The record in that appeal incorporates the record in Appeal No. 8-63.
Appellant does not base any part of its case on the lack of proof that it was paid for these 3.7 acres.
In contrast, Seneca Nation v. United States, Appeal No. 14-63, post, p. 917, and The Six Nations v. United States, Appeal No. 8-63, ante, p. 893, stress the alleged inadequacy of the consideration paid for the lands there inyolved. See, also, fn. 3, supra.
The coverage of the Trade and Intercourse Act is discussed, generally, in Part II of the opinion in Seneca Nation v. United States, Appeal No. 14-63. As there indicated, two circuits have held the Act applicable to condemnations by the state, while the New York Court of Appeals and two district courts have taken the other position.
It is settled that the United States could sanction and approve the condemnation of these Indian lands. Cf. Cherokee Nation v. Southern Kansas Ry., 135 U.S. 641 (1890); Seneca Nation v. Brucker, 262 F. 2d 27 (C.A.D.C., 1958), cert. denied, 360 U.S. 909 (1959). If the Trade and Intercourse Act applies, it does not bar the use of eminent domain but merely requires federal assent.
Appellant’s demand for reverter had been made in 1924.