16 N.W.2d 752 | Minn. | 1944
Lead Opinion
The Hunter allotment is in one of the organized townships of Itasca county and is part of the lands ceded to the United States under the Act of January 14, 1889 (
The question presented by these stipulated and admitted facts is whether a tribal Indian can be prosecuted by the state for shooting game out of season for consumption by himself and family where the shooting occurs within the limits of the reservation of his tribe, upon ceded lands, not allotted to or occupied by him, but allotted to a deceased Indian of the same tribe, no fee-simple patent having been issued to the latter or his heirs.
The state bases its argument in support of the affirmative of this proposition mainly upon the premise that an Indian cannot assert personal immunity from state prosecution unless such immunity is expressly extended by treaty or federal statute. But the premise is false. The fallacy arises out of a failure to distinguish between jurisdiction over members of Indian tribes and jurisdiction over other persons in Indian country. The jurisdiction of the state, it is true, does extend over Indian country within its borders except as limited by Indian treaties or federal laws (State v. Cloud,
The admission of a state into the Union, even without an express reservation by congress of governmental jurisdiction over the public lands within its borders, does not qualify the former federal jurisdiction over tribal Indians so as to withdraw from the United States authority to punish crimes committed by or against Indians on an Indian reservation (Donnelly v. United States, supra), or so as to make tribal Indians amenable to state laws for crimes committed on their reservation. United States v. Kagama, supra; 27 Am. Jur., Indians, § 47. Whatever rights a state acquires by its Enabling Act are subordinate to the Indians' prior right of occupancy. United States v. Thomas,
So far as treaty provisions are concerned, it is conceded that the treaty whereby the Leech Lake Reservation was established (Treaty of February 22, 1855,
The traditional right of Indians to hunt in the Indian country was recognized by congress as early as 1834. In that year congress enacted a law regulating trade and intercourse with Indian tribes (Act of June 30, 1834, c. 161, § 8,
"Every person, other than an Indian, who, within the limits of any tribe with whom the United States has existing treaties, hunts, or traps, or takes and destroys any peltries or game, except for subsistence in the Indian country, shall forfeit all the traps, guns, and ammunition in his possession, used or procured to be used for that purpose, and all peltries so taken; and shall be liable in addition to a penalty of five hundred dollars." R. S. § 2137,
By expressly limiting the offense thereby created to persons other than Indians, this statute impliedly excluded Indians. 2 Lewis's Sutherland, Statutory Construction (2 ed.) § 491; Horack's Sutherland, Statutory Construction, § 4915; Cohen v. Gould,
Article VII of the 1855 treaty expressly provides:
"The laws which have been or may be enacted by Congress, regulating *434
trade and intercourse with the Indian tribes, to continue and be in force within and upon the several reservations provided for herein * * *."
If express treaty or statutory authorization be necessary to establish the Chippewa's right to hunt upon their reservation, Article VII read in conjunction with the Act of 1834, as amended, provides the necessary recognition and authority. And, unless it be held that the trust allotment here involved was not "Indian country" within the meaning of the act of congress, the right of Chippewa tribal Indians to hunt upon any allotted lands "within and upon the several reservations" provided for by the treaty would seem to follow.
The state attempts to by-pass the quoted provisions of the 1834 act and the 1855 treaty by asserting that trust allotments such as here involved cannot be considered as being "Indian country" within the meaning of the act, § 1 of which limited "Indian country" to specifically named territory (including what is now Minnesota), "to which the Indian title has not been extinguished." Were such definition still in the act, the correctness of the state's position might be conceded. But congress, in enacting the Revised Statutes, failed to include such section, thereby repealing it. R. S. § 5596; Donnelly v. United States,
The Supreme Court of the United States, notwithstanding the repeal of § 1 of the 1834 act, continued for many years to use and apply the old statutory definition. Bates v. Clark,
The Donnelly and Pelican decisions have been repeatedly followed and applied, and, in fact, extended. United States v. Nice,
It is, therefore, definitely established that the allotment here involved was Indian country within the meaning of R. S. § 2137,
In 1885, congress enacted what was originally known as the Seven Crimes Act (Act of March 3, 1885, c. 341, § 9,
The fact situation in the case before us differs from that in State v. Cloud,
It follows that the fact that defendant had no allotment of his own did not defeat his right to claim immunity from prosecution under the state laws for shooting game upon the trust allotment of another Indian within the limits of his reservation. If the laws of the state are to be extended, in part or in whole, to tribal Indians upon their reservations, it must be by statutory definition of the term "Indian country" restricting its present meaning, or by a special act such as congress recently enacted to apply to the state of Kansas. See, Act of June 8, 1940,
Reversed.
Addendum
The authorities cited in the original opinion furnish adequate answers to all questions raised in the state's application for reargument. *438
Further discussion is added only because of the state's insistence that we overlooked certain language of the Nelson Act (
The language called to our attention is in § 1 of the act:
"* * * the acceptance and approval of such cession and relinquishment by the President of the United States * * * shall operate as a complete extinguishment of the Indian title without any other or further act or ceremony whatsoever for the purposes and upon the terms in this act provided."
This is followed by provisions in § 3 for the removal of the Indians from Leech Lake and other reservations to the White Earth Reservation, with this important proviso, which the state has either overlooked or disregarded, though here decisive:
"* * * That any of the Indians residing on any of said reservations may, in his discretion, take his allotment in severalty under this act on the reservation where he lives at the time of the removal herein provided for is effected, instead of being removed to and taking such allotment on White Earth Reservation."
The lands here involved were allotted to John Hunter in conformity to allotment act of 1887, infra, as amended, under the express authority of the quoted proviso from the Nelson Act, and, under the decision in United States v. Pelican,
The act of congress under consideration in the Pelican case (
"* * * The exceptions were made by Congress in order to care for the Indians residing on that portion of the reservation. Every such Indian was entitled to select therefrom eighty acres which was to be allotted to the Indian in severalty (§ 4). The titles to the lands, selected were to 'be held in trust for the benefit of the allottees, respectively, and afterwards conveyed in fee simple to the allottees or their heirs,' " as provided in the Acts of February 8, 1887 (
"The evident purpose of Congress was to carve out of theportion of the reservation restored to the public domain thelands to be allotted and reserved, as stated, and to make therestoration effective only as to the residue." (Italics supplied.)
By parity of reasoning, the "complete extinguishment of the Indian title," referred to in the Nelson Act, was "effective only as to the residue" of the Leech Lake Reservation remaining after the Indians residing thereon had taken their allotments in severalty. And, as held in the Pelican case (
State v. Bush,
We pointed out in our original decision that we were confronted with a federal question upon which the federal decisions were controlling and suggested to the state a possible solution of the problems involved. We repeat again the language of Mr. Justice Black *440
in United States v. McGowan,
"* * * Congress alone has the right to determine the manner in which this country's guardianship over the Indians shall be carried out."
Application denied.
MR. JUSTICE MAGNEY took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.