170 F. 302 | 8th Cir. | 1909
The complainant here and below claims that she has been unlawfully denied an allotment of land on the White Earth Indian reservation, and brings this suit under the act of February 6, 1901, c. 217, 31 Stat. 760, to have her right established and enforced. The facts out of which the controversy arises are as follows:
By treaty with the Chippewa Indians, bearing date March 19, 1867 (16 Stat. 719), the White Earth Indian reservation was set apart for their exclusive occupancy, and provision was also made that, whenever any member of the tribe should have 10 acres of land under cultivation, he should be entitled to a certificate granting to him the 40 acres of which the tract under cultivation was a part; and that, for each additional 10 acres so cultivated, an additional tract of 40 acres should be granted until he should have received in all 160 acres. January 14, 1889, a statute was passed commonly known as the “Nelson Act” (25 Stat. 642, c. 24), providing for the allotment of lands of the White Earth reservation to the Chippewa Indians in severalty. Every head of a family was to receive 160' acres. Others were to receive various quantities, either 40 or 80 acres. Under the treaty and this statute, title to numerous tracts was acquired. April 28, 1904, an act was passed commonly known as the “Steenerson Act” (33 Stat. 539, c. 1785 [U. S. Comp. St. Supp. 1907, p. 579]), which authorized the President to allot 160 acres of land to each Chippewa Indian residing on the White Earth reservation. It directed that, where any allot-
It is manifest that, for the making of allotments under the Stcencr-son act, considerable preliminary work was required. It was necessary for the agent first to ascertain the number of Indians entitled to its benefits, and then to compute the amount of unappropriated lands remaining on the reservation, and learn whether there was sufficient to make full allotments, or whether the land would need to be divided pro rata. Under date of June 7, 1904, the Secretary of the Interior gave direction to the Indian agent in charge of the White Earth reservation to proceed with the work of making allotments under the statute. In his letter of instructions he specified several bands of Indians residing, some of them on the reservation, and some of them in other parts of the state, who would be entitled to allotments, and directed that no member should receive an allotment unless he removed to, and took up his actual residence upon, the reservation. Under the previous statutes, rolls of the members of the tribe had already been made, and it was supposed that from these rolls it would be possible, in the main, for the agent to ascertain the Indians who were entitled to share in the benefits of the act. The direction contained also the following specific rule for the guidance of the agent:
“But in making these additional allotments, the usual rule and practice of this office must be observed, namely, the Indian must be in being at the time the allotment is made or assigned to him; in other words, no allotment can be made to a dead Indian.”
The instructions further stated:
“It will be necessary for you to first determine so far as you can, by computation, whether there will be land enough on the diminished reservation to give each Indian entitled thereto an allotment of 160 acres.”
Directions were then given for the making up of separate rolls for the additional allotments, and the letter closed with the following language:
“Should you need additional instructions upon any feature of the work, you should make request for the same.”
The agent promptly entered upon the preliminary work necessary for carrying out the instructions. Within a few days, however, June 27, 1904, he received a letter from the Indian Department stating that the Otter Tail band of the Chippewa Indians had made a claim of right to allotments under the Steenerson act, and the agent was directed to submit the question of their right to a council of the Chippewa Indians. This lie did, and reported the result, when the whole subject was referred to the Attorney General for his advice. In November or December following, this matter was settled by the department, and the agent then renewed the work of preparing the rolls and computing
Turning now to the facts upon which the complainant bases her right, Joseph Woodbury, her husband, was a Chippewa Indian, and, while living, possessed the qualifications of an allottee on the White Earth reservation. On August 20, 1904, he presented to the agent in charge of the reservation, in writing, a selection of a specific tract for an additional allotment of about 80 acres. He was informed by the agent that the application could not be received, as the preliminary work necessary for making the allotments had not been completed. •He was permitted, however, to leave the paper on file in the office. On September 2,1904, Woodbury died. The preliminary work for making the allotments was completed in the month of April, 1905, and public notice was then given that applications would be received on and after April 24th of that year. So far as the record shows, no application was made on behalf of-Woodbury at this time. Under date of November 8, 1905, a letter was written to the agent by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, stating that complaint had been made to him by an attorney, purporting to act on behalf of Woodbury, that the allotment had not been made pursuant to Woodbury’s application on August 20, 1904, and the commissioner directed that an allotment be made upon this application, notwithstanding Woodbury’s death. When the agent came to comply with this direction, he discovered that the land selected by Woodbury had already been allotted to another Indian. The attorney purporting to act for Woodbury thereupon selected the tract of land here in controversy, and asked that it be allotted in lieu of the first tract selected. Such an allotment was thereupon made. Under the statute, allotments did not take effect until they were approved by the Secretary of the Interior. Under date of August 1, 1906, the Secretary of the Interior, acting upon advice from the Attorney General, decided that the allotment to Woodbury was invalid upon two grounds: (1) That at the time it was made, Woodbury was dead. (2) That, at the time the original application was filed, the work of allotment had not commenced, and the application was therefore premature and insufficient to initiate any right in the land. Under date of September 5, 1906, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs reported this decision to the agent, and directed him to cancel the allotment, which he promptly did. Thereafter the complainant, Edith Woodbury, acting both as widow of Woodbury, and administratrix of his estate, made a further application- for the allotment of the land to her for her own use and the use of the heirs of the deceased. This application was denied, and the present suit was then brought.
The trial court dismissed the bill. We think its action was clearly-
Counsel for complainant further contends that as Woodbury ai the time of his death was a member of the tribe, and possessed of all the qualifications entitling him to an additional allotment, and as the only reason why his right had not ripened into an actual allotment was the preliminary administrative work necessary to carry out the project, this, being no fault of his, ought not to impair his right. The difficulty with this argument is that the delay was nobody’s fault. It must have been contemplated by Congress. Until the allotment was made, Woodbury’s right was personal — a mere Boat ■ — giving him no right to any specific property. This right, from its nature, wottld not descend to his heirs. They, as members of the tribe, were severally entitled to their allotments in their own right. To grant them the right of their ancestor, in addition to their personal right, would give them an unfair share of the tribal lauds. The motive underlying sttch statutes forbids such a construction. As the learned United States attorney says, in his able brief:
“It is well to remember that these Indian laws were -not enacted merely to create property rights for the enrichment of Indian families. They were designed to operate on the individual Indian in his lifetime, to the end that, they might mold and shape his life and habits somewhat after the manner and ways of civilization.”
The instructions for making the allotments approved by the President required that “the Indian must be in being at the time the allotment is made or assigned to him; in other words, no allotment can
“It is a well-established principle that when an individual, in the prosecution of a right, does everything which the law requires him to do, and he fails to attain his right by the misconduct or neglect of a public officer, the law will protect him.”
That principle, however, cannot be applied to the present case, because here there was no “misconduct or neglect of a public officer” which defeated Woodbury’s right. Hy-yu-tsi-mil-kin v. Smith, 194 U. S. 401, 24 Sup. Ct. 676, 48 L. Ed. 1039, presents another branch of the same controversy. From the opinion of the Supreme Court it appears clearly that the complainant’s right was there defeated by the wrongful act of the commissioners charged with the duty of making the allotments, and their misconduct is the very ground of granting relief to the complainant.
The decree 'of the trial court was clearly right, and it should be affirmed.