17 F. 75 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1883
On June 25, 1855, a treaty was negotiated with “the confederated tribes and bands of Indians residing in middle Oregon, ” at Wasco, Oregon, and ratified by the senate, March 8, 1869. 12 St. 963. Among these tribes were the Wascoes, belonging to the country about the Dalles of the Columbia. The treaty provided for the cession to the United States of the country belonging to these tribes, and the establishment of a reservation therein for their “exclusive use,” commonly called “the Warm Spring reservation,” to which they were to remove within a year from the ratification of the treaty.
" If you believe the testimony of Thomas himself, then you ought to find the defendant guilty,,because upon that testimony he is, and was at the date of the disposition to him of the liquor in question, an Indian under the charge of the Indian agent at the Warm Spring reservation.”
To this instruction there was an exception, and counsel for the defendant now contend that it was erroneous, and therefore the motion for a new trial ought to be allowed.
But it may be said that, for the purpose of this case, the Indian should not only be under the charge of an agent potentially, but also as a matter of fact, and that whenever an Indian is allowed to be much or most of his time away from the reservation, doing for himself, he is not to be considered as under the charge of an agent. The fact that the Indian was off the reservation when lie obtained the liquor from the defendant is rather suggested than asserted as some kind of an excuse for the act. But the defendant was not obliged or induced to sell this Indian liquor because he was not upon the reservation. It is a well-known fact that the Indians of Oregon, as a rule, belong to some reservation by virtue of treaty stipulations, and are actually or potentially under the charge of an agent; and whoever disposes of spirituous liquor to any one of them does so prima facia in violation of law. As was said by Mr. Justice Miller, in U. S. v. Holliday, 8 Wall. 415:
“ The policy of the act is the protection of those Indians who are, by treaty or otherwise, under the pupilage of the government, from the debasing influence of the use of spirits; and it is not easy to perceive why that policy should not require their preservation from this, to them, destructive poison, when they are outside of á reservation, as well as within it. The evil effects are the same in both eases.”
If it is admitted that this Indian was a member of the Wasco tribe at the dale of the treaty of 3855, ho was within its operation, and subject in law to the charge of the agents residing at the Warm Spring reservation since its ratification, unless his tribal relation has
It does not appear that the tribal relation of Thomas has been dissolved by any act of the government, or that it has in any way consented to or acquiesced in any such purpose on his part.' And, without such consent, we do not think the relation can be dissolved, as against the United States, after being recognized by it. But in the absence of any law or regulation made or authorized by congress to that effect, mere absence from the reservation, however prolonged, is not proof of such consent, because it may occur without the approval of the government, and it may take place with the consent of the agent for some lawful purpose, and with intent to return.
It may be admitted that an Indian who had separated from his tribe before the government took cognizance of it, as such, by treaty or otherwise, and did not return thereto, or claim or enjoy, at the hands of the government, any right or privilege as a member of such ■ tribe, is not under the charge of an agent, within the meaning of section 2139 of the Revised Statutes. But in the case at bar, although the Indian was apparently separated from his tribe at the date and ratification of the treaty of 1855, by the act of his father, yet soon after coming to man’s estate he voluntarily went upon the reservation therein provided for, and claimed and was allowed the privileges of such a reservation, as a member of the Wasco tribe of Indians, where he has since remained quite half the time, including a period so late as the last winter, and still keeps his stock there. Indeed, the absence of this Indian from this reservation since 1868 is probably owing to the fact that he is thereby enabled to get whisky from the defendant and others engaged in that business.
Under the circumstances, we are clearly of the opinion that Thomas is under the charge of the Indian agent at Warm Spring; since 1868, at least, when he went to live upon that reservation. The motion for a new trial is therefore overruled, and the defendant ordered1 to appear for sentence.
See Forty-three Gallons of Cognac Brandy, 11 Fed. Rep. 47, and note, 51, S. C. 14 Fed. Rep. 531, and note, 540