delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action to recover compensation for some 5% million acres of land allegedly taken from the petitioner tribe in 1879 and 1884. The suit was initiated under the Act of June 3, 1920, 41 Stat. 738, permitting petitioner to submit to the Court of Claims any claims arising from the asserted failure of the United States to pay money or property due, without regard to lapse of time or statutes of limitation. The Court of Claims denied recovery, 94 Ct. Cls. 150, and we brought the case here on certiorari.
The facts as found by the Court of Claims are as follows:
In 1868 the United States and the Sioux Tribe entered into the Fort Laramie Treaty (15 Stat. 635). By Article II of this treaty, a certain described territory, known as the Great Sioux Reservation and located in what is now South
The eastern boundary of the Great Sioux Reservation, as constituted by the Ft. Laramie Treaty, was the low water mark on the east bank of the Missouri River.
1
The large tract bordering uрon and extending eastward from the east bank of the river remained a part of the public domain open to settlement and afforded easy access to the Reservation. As a result, great numbers of white men “infested” the region for the purpose of engaging in the liquor traffic. Anxiety over this development led the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, on January 8,1875, to suggest to the Secretary of the Interior that he request the President to issue an executive order withdrawing from sale and setting apart for Indiаn purposes a certain large tract of the land along the eastern bank of the Missouri River. In the Commissioner’s letter to the Secretary of the Interior, and in the latter’s letter of January 9th to the President, the reason advanced for the proposed executive order was that it was “deemed necessary for the suppression of the liquor traffic with the Indians upon the Missouri River.” On
On March 13,1875, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs addressed another letter to the Secretary of the Interior. In it he recommended that the Secretary request the President to withdraw from sale and set apart for Indian purposes another tract of land bordering the Great Sioux Reservation, this time to the north and northeast. The reason given was similar to that for which the first order had been sought: “viz: the suppression of the liquor traffic with Indians at the Standing Rock Agency.” As a “further reason for said request” the Commissioner stated that “the Agency buildings, as now located at Standing Rock, are outside the reservation as defined by [the Fort Laramie] treaty . . . but are included in the tract proposed to be withdrawn.” The Secretary forwardеd the Commissioner’s report to the President with his concurrence, repeating that the “enlargement of the Sioux reservation in Dakota” was “deemed necessary for the suppression of the liquor traffic with the Indians at the Standing Rock Agency.” On March 16, 1875, the President issued a second executive order describing the tract
In mid-May of 1875 the Secretary of War transmitted to the Secretary of the Interior a letter from the officer in command of the Southern District of the Military Department of Dakota in which it was pointed out that a small tract of land along the eastern bank of the Missouri River opposite the southern corner of the Sioux Reservation was still open to settlement and afforded “a very nice point for whiskey sellers and horse thieves.” Upon the basis of this letter, the Commissioner recommended to the Secretary of the Interior and the Secretary recommended to the President the issuance of still a third executive order withdrawing the described tract from settlement. On May 20,1875, the executive order was issued in the same form as its two predecessors.
Finally, upon a similar complaint from the Acting Agent of the Standing Rock Agency that a small piece of land to the north of the reservation was being used as a base of operations by persons selling liquor and ammunition to the Sioux Indians, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and the Secretary of the Interior recommended a further order to “effectually cut off these whiskey dealers.” In his letter to the Secretary dated November 24, 1876, the Commissioner stated: “It is not proposed to interfere with the vested rights, or the legitimate business of any settler who may be upon this tract.” The President issued a fourth executive order in the usual form on November 28, 1876. On December 13, 1876, the Commissioner notified the agent at Standing Rock that the order had bеen issued, and added that it was “not intended to interfere with the vested rights of any settlers upon this tract or with the legitimate business pursuits of any person lawfully residing within its limits.”
Three weeks later, however, upon reconsideration, the Commissioner informed the Secretary that, in his opinion, the lands included in the executive orders of 1875 and 1876 might be “restored to the public domain, and the interests of the Indians still be protected.” In explanation he stated:
“These lands were set apart for the purpose, as alleged, of preventing illegal liquor traffic with the Indians. At the time said lands were set apart there was no law providing a punishment for thе sale of liquor to Indians, ‘except to Indians in the Indian country/ but, by the Act of February 27,1877, (19 Stat. 244) persons who now engage in liquor traffic with Indians, no matter in what locality, are liable to a penalty of $300, and two years imprisonment, and, therefore, the necessity for so large a reservation for the protection of these Indians in this respect does not now exist.”
2
One additional event remains to be noted. In the Indian Appropriation Act for 1877, approved August 15,1876 (19 Stat. 176,192), Congress provided:
“. . . hereafter there shall be no аppropriation made for the subsistence of said Indians [i. e., the Sioux], unless they shall first agree to relinquish all right and claim to any country outside the boundaries of the permanent reservation established by the treaty of eighteen hundred and sixty-eight [the Fort Laramie treaty] for said Indians; and also so much of their said permanent reservation as lies west of the one hundred and third meridian of longitude [the western boundary set by the Fort Laramie treaty had been the 104th meridian], and shall also grant right of way over said reservation to the country thus ceded for wagon or other roads, from convenient and accessible points on the Missouri River . . .”
On September 26, 1876—a date subsequent to the first three of the four executive orders setting apart additional
Petitioner’s position is that the executive orders of 1875 and 1876 were effective to convey to the Tribe the same kind of interest in the lands affected as it had acquired in the lands covered by the Fort Laramie Treaty, that the executive orders of 1879 and 1884 restoring the lands to the public domain deprived petitioner of this interest, and that it is entitled to be compensated for the fair value of the lands as of 1879 and 1884. The Government defends on several grounds: first, that, in general, the President lacked authority to confer upon any individual or group a compensable interest in any part of the public domain; second, that, even if he had the power to convey such a compensable interest, the President did not purport to do so in this case; and third, that, in any event, by the treaty of 1876 the Sioux relinquished whatever rights they may have had in the lands covered by the first three of the four executive orders.
Section 3 of Article IV of the Constitution confers upon Congress exclusively “the power to dispose of and make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory or other property belonging to the United States.” Nevertheless, “from an early period in the history of the government it has been the practice of the President to order, from time to time, as the exigencies of the public service required, parcels of land belonging to the United States to be reserved from sale and set apart for public uses.”
Grisar
v.
McDowell,
The Government therefore does not deny that the executive orders of 1875 and 1876 involved here were effective to withdraw the lands in question from the public domain. It contends, however, that this is not the issue presented by this case. It urges that, instead, we are called upon to determine whether the President
Although there are abundant signs that Congress was aware of the practice of establishing Indian reservаtions by executive order, there is little to indicate what it understood to be the kind of interest that the Indians obtained in these lands. However, in its report in 1892 upon a bill to restore to the public domain a portion of the Colville executive order reservation, the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs expressed the opinion that under the executive order “the Indians were given a license to occupy the lands described in it so long as it was the pleasure of the Government they should do sо, and no right, title, or claim to such lands has vested in the Indians by virtue of this occupancy.” 12
Petitioner argues that its position finds support in § 1 of the General Allotment Act of February 8,1887, 13 which provides:
“That in all cases where any tribe or band of Indians has been, or shall hereafter be, located upon any reservation created for their use, either by treaty stipulation or by virtue of an act of Congress or executive order setting apart the same for their use, the President of the United States be, and, he hereby is, authorized ... to cause said reservation ... to be surveyed . . . and to allot the lands in said reservation in severalty to any Indian located thereon . . .”
By § 5, provision was made for issuance of patents to the allottees, by which the United States promised to hold the lands in trust for the allottees and their heirs for 25 years,
“An erroneous idea seems to have grown up, that the Indian allotment act [of 1887] and its amendments have given additional sanctions to executive reservations, and operated to confer titles upon the Indians occupying them they did not before possess ... At the time of the enactment оf this statute, there were fifty-six executive reservations, embracing perhaps from 75,000,000 to 100,-000,000 acres of the public lands, in which the Indians had no right or claim of title and which could be extinguished by act of the President. It would be preposterous to place such a construction upon the language of this ' act as would divest the United States of its title to these lands.” 14
This statement by the Committee which reported the general Allotment Act of 1887, made within five years of its passage, is virtually conclusive as to the significance
Perhaps the most striking proof of the belief shared by Congress and the Executive that the Indians were not entitled to compensation upon the abolition of an executive order reservation is the very absence of compensatory payments in such situations. It was a common practice, during the period in which reservations were created by executive order, for the President simply to terminate the existence of a reservation by cancelling or revoking the order establishing it. That is to say, the procedure followed in the case before us was typical. No compensation was made, and neither the Government nor the Indians suggested that it was due.
15
It is true that on several of the many occasions when Congress itself abolished executive order reservations, it provided for a measure of compensation to the Indians. In the Act of July 1, 1892, restoring to the public domain a large portion of the Col-ville rеservation,
16
and in the Act of February 20, 1893, restoring a portion of the White Mountain Apache Indian Reservation,
17
Congress directed that the proceeds
We conclude therefore that there was no express constitutional or statutory authorization for the conveyance of a compensable interest to petitioner by the four executive orders of 1875 and 1876, and that no implied Congressional delegation of the power to do so can be spelled out from the evidence of Congressional and executive understanding. The orders were effective to withdraw from sale the lands affected and to grant the use of the lands to the petitioner. But the interest which the Indians received was subject to termination at the will of either the executive or Congress and without obligation to the United States. The executive orders of 1879 and 1884 were simply an exercise of this power of termination, and the payment of compensation was not required.
Affirmed.
Notes
The Great Sioux Reservation also included two small theretofore existing reservations located on the east bank of the river. They are of no consequence so far as the present dispute is concerned.
Letter from Commissioner to Secretary of the Interior, dated June 27, 1879.
This treaty was ratified by the Act of February 28, 1877 (19 Stat. 254).
The Pre-emption Act of May 29,1830, excluded from its provisions “any land, which is reserved from sale by Act of Congress, or by order of the President.” 4 Stat. 420,421. “Lаnds included in any reservation, by any treaty, law, or proclamation of the President” were excluded from the operation of the Pre-emption Act of September 4, 1841. 5 Stat. 453, 456.
Cohen, Handbook of Federal Indian Law (1941) 299; Department of the Interior, Executive Orders Relating to Indian Reservations, Vol. I, p. 79.
By § 27 of the Act of June 30,1919, Congress declared that thereafter “no public lands of the United States shall be withdrawn by Executive Order, proclamation, or otherwise, for or as an Indian reservation except by Act of Congress.” 41 Stat. 3, 34. In 1927, Congress added a provision that any future changes in the boundaries of executive order reservations should be made by Congress alone. § 4, 44 Stat. 1347.
See 14 Op. A. G. 181 (1873). But cf. 17 Op. A. G. 258 (1882).
This question is an open one. It is true that language appearing in two decisions of this Court suggests that the tribal title to a reservation is the same whether the reservation has been created by statute or treaty or by executive order.
Re Wilson,
Annual Report of Commissioner of Indian Affairs (1872), H. R. Exec. Doc., 42d Cong., 3d Sess., Vol. III, No. 1, part 5, p. 472.
Id. (1878), H. R. Exec. Doc., 46th Cong., 3d Sess., Vol. IX, No. 1, part 5, p. 486; id. (1880), H. R. Exec. Doc., 46th Cong., 3d Sess., Vol. IX, No. 1, part 5, p. 96.
Id. (1886), H. R. Exec. Doc., 49th Cong., 2d Sess., Vol. 8, No. 1, part 5, p. 88.
S. Rep. No. 664, 52d Cong., 1st Sess., p. 2.
24 Stat. 388.
S. Rep. No. 664, 52d Cong., 1st Sess., p. 2.
See, e. g., Department of the Interior, Executive Orders Relating to Indian Reservations, Vol. I, pp. 5, 6, 21, 30, 37, 43, 44, 48-50; Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Indian Affairs on S. 1722 and S. 3159, 69th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 104-105.
27 Stat. 62, 63.
27 Stat. 469, 470.
