When the enabling act admitting a state into the Union contains
no exclusion of jurisdiction as to crimes committed on an Indian
reservation by others than Indians or against Indians, the state
courts are vested with jurisdiction to try and punish such crimes.
United States v. McBratney, 104 U.
S. 621, to this point affirmed and followed.
The provision in the enabling act of Montana that the "Indian
lands shall remain under the absolute jurisdiction and control of
the Congress of the United States" does not affect the application
of this general rule to the State of Montana.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 164 U. S. 241
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error was indicted, tried, convicted, and
sentenced to death for the crime of murder, alleged to have been
committed on the Crow Indian reservation. He moved to arrest the
judgment on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction to try an
offense committed on the Crow reservation by other than an Indian,
as such crime was exclusively cognizable by the proper court of the
State of Montana. The refusal to arrest the judgment on account of
this asserted want of jurisdiction is one of the errors pressed
upon our attention, and our opinion on the subject will render it
unnecessary to consider the other assignments.
The indictment does not state, nor does the record affirmatively
show, that the accused and the deceased were negroes, but that fact
is conceded both by counsel for the prisoner and the government,
and upon such concession, the case, as to jurisdiction, was
determined below and is here presented for consideration.
Irrespective, however, of the admission of counsel as to the race
to which the accused and the deceased belonged, the question of
jurisdiction arises on the record, since if, as matter of law, the
reservation was not within the sole and exclusive jurisdiction of
the United States, as the indictment fails to charge that the crime
was committed by an Indian, it necessarily follows that if the
court had jurisdiction only to punish such a crime, the want of
jurisdiction appears upon the face of the record. It is clear that
if the accused was an Indian, the court below had jurisdiction
under the Act of March 3, 1885, which, among other things,
authorizes the punishment of any Indian committing the offense of
murder within the boundaries of any state of the United States, and
within the limits of any Indian reservation, according to the laws
and before the tribunals of the United States.
United States v.
Kagama, 118 U. S. 375. The
assertion of jurisdiction in the courts of the United States over
the crime of murder
Page 164 U. S. 242
perpetrated by one not an Indian against one not an Indian is
based on the fact that the offense was committed on an Indian
reservation. The contention as to want of jurisdiction rests upon
the proposition that, the Indian reservation being within the
state, the courts of the state had alone cognizance of crimes
therein done by other than Indians. To determine these conflicting
contentions requires a brief examination of the legislation
organizing the Territory of Montana, and which provided for the
admission of that state into the Union.
The Territory of Montana was organized by the Act of May 26,
1864, c. 95, 13 Stat. 85. Subsequently, in 1868, the Crow Indian
reservation was created, 15 Stat. 649, the land of which it was
composed being wholly situated within the geographical boundaries
of the Territory of Montana. The treaty creating this reservation
contained no stipulation restricting the power of the United States
to include the land embraced within the reservation in any state or
territory then existing, or which might thereafter be created. The
law to enable Montana and other states to be admitted into the
Union was passed February 22, 1889, 25 Stat. 676, c. 180. This act
embraced the usual provisions for a convention to frame a
constitution, for the adoption of an ordinance directed to contain
certain specified agreements, and provided that, upon the
compliance with the ordained requirements and the proclamation of
the President so announcing, the state should be admitted on an
equal footing with the original states. The question then is has
the State of Montana jurisdiction over offenses committed within
its geographical boundaries by persons not Indians, or against
Indians, or did the enabling act deprive the courts of the state of
such jurisdiction of all offenses committed on the Crow Indian
reservation, thereby divesting the state
pro tanto of
equal authority any jurisdiction over its citizens usually enjoyed
by the other states of the Union?
In
United States v. McBratney, 104
U. S. 622, this Court held that where a state was
admitted into the Union and the enabling act contained no exclusion
of jurisdiction as to crimes committed on an Indian reservation by
others than
Page 164 U. S. 243
Indians or against Indians, the state courts were vested with
jurisdiction to try and punish such crimes. The Court there
said:
"The Act of March 3, 1875, c. 139 [the enabling act, which
provided for the admission of the State of Colorado] necessarily
repeals the provisions of any prior statute or of any existing
treaty which are clearly inconsistent therewith.
The Cherokee
Tobacco, 11 Wall. 616. Whenever, upon the admission
of a state into the Union, Congress has intended to except out of
it an Indian reservation or the sole and exclusive jurisdiction
over that reservation, it has done so by express words.
The
Kansas Indians, 5 Wall. 737;
United States v.
Ward, supra, 1 Wool. 17. The State of Colorado, by its
admission into the Union by Congress upon an equal footing with the
original states in all respects whatever, without any such
exception as has been made in the treaty with the Ute Indians and
in the act establishing a territorial government, has acquired
criminal jurisdiction over its own citizens and other white persons
throughout the whole of the territory within its limits, including
the Ute reservation, and that reservation is no longer within the
sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the United States. The courts of
the United States have therefore no jurisdiction to punish crimes
within that reservation unless so far as may be necessary to carry
out such provisions of the treaty with the Ute Indians as remain in
force. But that treaty contains no stipulation for the punishment
of offenses committed by white men against white men."
United States v. McBratney is therefore decisive of the
question now before us unless the enabling act of the State of
Montana contained provisions taking that state out of the general
rule, and depriving its courts of the jurisdiction to them
belonging, and resulting from the very nature of the equality
conferred on the state by virtue of its admission into the Union.
Such exception is sought here to be evolved from certain provisions
of the enabling act of Montana which were ratified by an ordinance
of the convention which framed the constitution of that state. The
provision relied on is as follows:
Page 164 U. S. 244
"Second. That the people inhabiting the said proposed State of
Montana do agree and declare that they forever disclaim all right
and title to the unappropriated public lands lying within the
boundaries thereof, and to all lands lying within said limits owned
or held by any Indian or Indian tribes, and that until the title
thereto shall have been extinguished by the United States, the same
shall be and remain subject to the disposition of the United
States, and said Indian lands shall remain under the absolute
jurisdiction and control of the Congress of the United States; that
the lands belonging to citizens of the United States residing
without the said State of Montana shall never be taxed at a higher
rate than the lands belonging to residents thereof; that no taxes
shall be imposed by the said State of Montana on lands or property
therein belonging to or which may hereafter be purchased by the
United States or reserved for its use. But nothing herein contained
shall preclude the said State of Montana from taxing as other lands
are taxed any lands owned or held by any Indian who has severed his
tribal relations and has obtained from the United States, or from
any person a title thereto, by patent or other grant, save and
except such lands as have been or may be granted to any Indian or
Indians under any act of Congress containing a provision exempting
the lands thus granted from taxation, but said last-named lands
shall be exempt from taxation by said State of Montana so long and
to such extent as such act of Congress may prescribe."
The words in the foregoing provisions upon which the argument is
based are the following: "And said Indian lands shall remain under
the absolute jurisdiction and control of the Congress of the United
States." This language has been considered in several cases in the
courts of the United States with somewhat contradictory results.
United States v. Ewing, 47 F. 809;
United States v.
Partello, 48 F. 670;
Truscott v. Cattle Co., 73 F.
61.
As equality of statehood is the rule, the words relied on here
to create an exception cannot be construed as doing so if by any
reasonable meaning they can be otherwise treated.
Page 164 U. S. 245
The mere reservation of jurisdiction and control by the United
States of "Indian lands" does not of necessity signify a retention
of jurisdiction in the United States to punish all offenses
committed on such lands by others than Indians or against
Indians.
It is argued that, as the first portion of the section in which
the language relied on is found disclaims all right and title of
the state to
"the unappropriated public lands lying within the boundaries
thereof and of all lands lying within said limits, owned or held by
an Indian or Indian tribes, and until the title thereof shall be
extinguished by the United States, the same shall be and remain
subject to the disposition of the United States,"
therefore the subsequent words "and said lands shall remain
under the absolute jurisdiction and control of the United States"
are rendered purely tautological and meaningless unless they
signify something more than the reservation of authority of the
United States over the lands themselves and the title thereto. This
argument overlooks not only the particular action of Congress as to
the Crow reservation, but also the state of the general law of the
United States as to Indian reservations at the time of the
admission of Montana into the Union.
On April 11, 1882, c. 74, 22 state. 42, Congress confirmed an
agreement submitted by the Crow Indians for the sale of a portion
of their reservation and for the survey and division in severalty
of the agricultural lands remaining in the reservation as thus
reduced. The act, however, provided that the title to be acquired
by the allottees was not to be subject to alienation, lease, or
incumbrance, either by voluntary conveyance of the grantee or his
heirs or by the judgment, order, or decree of any court, but should
remain inalienable, and be not subject to taxation, for the period
of twenty-five years, and until such time thereafter as the
President might see fit to remove the restriction.
The policy thus applied to the Crow reservation subsequently
became the general method adopted by Congress to deal with Indian
reservations. In February, 1887, by a general law, Congress
provided
"for the allotment of lands in severalty to Indians on the
various reservations, and to extend the protection
Page 164 U. S. 246
of the laws of the United States and the territories over the
Indians, and for other purposes."
Act of February 8, 1887, c. 119, 24 Stat. 388. The act in
question contemplated the gradual extinction of Indian reservations
and Indian titles by the allotment of such lands to the Indians in
severalty. It provided in section 6
"that upon the completion of said allotments and the patenting
of said lands to said allottees, each and every member of the
respective bands or tribes of Indians to whom allotments have been
made shall have the benefit of and be subject to the laws, both
civil and criminal, of the state or territory in which they may
reside."
But the act at the same time put limitations and restrictions
upon the power of the Indians to sell, encumber, or deal with the
lands thus to be allotted. Moreover, by section 4 of the act of
1887, Indians not residing on a reservation or for whose tribe no
reservation had been provided were empowered to enter a designated
quantity of unappropriated public land, and to have patents
therefor, the right, however, of such Indian to sell or encumber
being regulated by provisions like those controlling allotments in
severalty of lands comprised within a reservation. From these
enactments it clearly follows that, at the time of the admission of
Montana into the Union and the use in the enabling act of the
restrictive words here relied upon, there was a condition of things
provided for by the statute law of the United States, and
contemplated to arise, where the reservation of jurisdiction and
control over the Indian lands would become essential to prevent any
implication of the power of the state to frustrate the limitations
imposed by the laws of the United States upon the title of lands
once in an Indian reservation, but which had become extinct by
allotment in severalty, and in which contingency the Indians
themselves would have passed under the authority and control of the
state.
It is also equally clear that the reservation of jurisdiction
and control over the Indian lands was relevant to, and is
explicable by, the provisions of section 4 of the act of 1887,
which allowed nonreservation Indians to enter on and take patents
for a certain designated quantity of public land. Indeed,
Page 164 U. S. 247
if the meaning of the words which reserved jurisdiction and
control over Indian lands contended for by the defendant in error
were true, then the State of Montana would not only be deprived of
authority to punish offenses committed by her own citizens upon
Indian reservations, but would also have like want of authority for
all offenses committed by her own citizens upon such portion of the
public domain, within her borders, as may have been appropriated
and patented to an Indian under the terms of the act of 1887. The
conclusion to which the contention leads is an efficient
demonstration of its fallacy. It follows that a proper appreciation
of the legislation as to Indians existing at the time of the
passage of the enabling act by which the State of Montana was
admitted into the Union adequately explains the use of the words
relied upon, and demonstrates that, in reserving to the United
States jurisdiction and control over Indian lands, it was not
intended to deprive that State of power to punish for crimes
committed on a reservation or Indian lands by other than Indians or
against Indians, and that a consideration of the whole subject
fully answers the argument that the language used in the enabling
act becomes meaningless unless it be construed as depriving the
State of authority to it belonging in virtue of its existence as an
equal member of the Union. Of course, the construction of the
enabling act here given is confined exclusively to the issue before
us, and therefore involves in no way any of the questions fully
reserved in
United States v. McBratney, and which are also
intended to be fully reserved here.
Our conclusion is that the Circuit Court of the United States
for the District of Montana had no jurisdiction of the indictment,
but,
"according to the practice heretofore adopted in like cases,
should deliver up the prisoner to the authorities of the State of
Montana to be dealt with according to law."
United States v. McBratney, supra, and authorities
there cited.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for
proceedings in conformity to this opinion.