35 F. 403 | N.D. Cal. | 1888
It is not denied that the claimant traded with the Indians residing on what has been known as the “ Klamath River Reservation” in this state. The question to be considered is, is the land so known “Indian country” within the meaning of the section referred to. The Klamath Indian reservation was created by executive order, dated
Assuming that the various reserves known as “Mission Indian Reserves” were made under the provisions of the act of April 8, 1864, and constitute one reservation, it would seem that the authority conferred upon the president by that act has been exhausted. That authority was as we have seen, to set apart “not exceeding four tracts of land to he retained by the United States for the purposes of Indian reservations.” It is evident that among these the former Klamath reservation, considered to be “nearly worthless,” was not included. The lands of that reservation thus became subject to the provisions of the third section of the act relative to the disposition to be made of the “several Indian reservations in California which shall not be retained for the purposes of Indian reservations, under the provisions of the preceding section of this act.” In the communication addressed to the district attorney by J. D. C. Atkins, commissioner of Indian affairs, ho states that he does not find that any steps were ever taken to sell the Klamath reservation as an abandoned reservation, under the third section of the act of April 8,1864, “nor has the general land-office ever been advised of the relinquishment of the same.” But in the case of the appeal of John McCarthy from the decision of the general land-office suspending his pre-emption filing on a tract of land within the Klamath reservation, tho secretary of the interior sustained the decision of the land-office, and states that the Klamath reservation has been regarded as an Indian reservation since the passage of tho act of April 8,1864, limiting the Indian reservations in California to four, and that various allotments within its limits have recently been made;” and he quotes his letter of March 26, 1883, to the commissioner of Indian affairs, in which he stated that “when the selections within said reservations were all made he would consider the question of restoring the remainder of the lands to the public domain.” It is evident that
Such being, in my judgment, the iegal status of these lands, the question arises: Can a person who has traded with Indians on the Klamath river be prosecuted-under the provisions of section 2133, which forbid the introduction of goods “into the Indian country,” or trading with the Indians therein? The nature of the trade carried on by the claimant is not disputed. He has not resided on the reservation lands, and has made no settlement therein. At the proper season, he }jroceeds with his vessel to the river, and employs the Indians to fish ior him, supplying them with seines and other appliances. He pays them “in trade,” furnishing them with various articles composing the cargo of his vessel. They are-set forth in the libel of information, several hundred in number, and their condemnation is prayed for. They consist in great part of articles-suited-to the wants of the Indians: tea, coffee, boots, shoes, overalls, hickory shirts, medical stores, etc. The vez-y intelligent officer in charge-of the Hoopa reservation, and who exercises sozne care and supervision over the Klamath Indians, stated to the court that he knew of no grounds of public policy or of consideration for the welfare of the Indians opposed to the traffic carried on by the claimant. The Indians are enabled to find employment, and receive in retuzm for their labor supplies, the use of and taste for which must tend to promote their civilization, and their gradual renuneiatiozr of the habits and modes- of living of savages. The offense of which the claimant is accused is thus purely technical; nor is the suppression of the traffic demanded by any consideration of policy, morals, or humanity. Whether he has committed any offense must therefore be determined on technical grounds. Assuming that trading with Indians on a reservation constitutes trading with Indians in an Indian country, my opinion is, that the Klamath lands are not such a res