On the 4th day of June, 1891, the United States and the Wichita
and Affiliated Bands of Indians entered into an agreement whereby
the Indians ceded to the United States a tract of land which is
described in the opinion of the Court in this case, and the United
States agreed in consideration thereof that out of the territory so
ceded there should be allotted to each member of the Wichita and
Affiliated Bands of Indians in the Indian Territory, native and
adopted, one hundred and sixty acres of land in the manner and form
described in the agreement. This agreement was ratified by the
Indian Appropriations Act of March 2, 1895, which further conferred
jurisdiction upon the Court of Claims, to hear and determine the
claim of the Choctaws and the Chickasaws to a right, title
Page 179 U. S. 495
and interest in the lands so ceded, and to render judgment
thereon, with a right of appeal to this Court. Pursuant to that
act, this suit was brought. The Court of Claims, after reciting
that the lands in dispute were acquired by the United States "in
trust for the settlement of Indians thereon, and in trust and for
the benefit of said claimant Indians when the aforesaid trust shall
cease," that "the Wichita and Affiliated Bands of Indians were by
the United States located within the boundaries of the lands
hereinbefore described," that they "now number not more than one
thousand and sixty persons," and that the location of the Wichitas
and Affiliated Bands within said boundaries was "for the purpose of
affording them permanent settlement therein," adjudged that the
lands in dispute had been acquired and were held by the United
States in trust for the purpose of settling Indians thereon, and
that whenever that purpose was abandoned as to the whole or any
part thereof, then all the lands not so devoted to Indian
settlement should be held in trust by the United States for the
Choctaw and Chickasaw Indians exclusively. It was also adjudged
that the members of the Wichita and Affiliated Bands, not exceeding
one thousand and sixty, were equitably entitled to one hundred and
sixty acres of land each out of the lands in dispute and that the
same should be set apart to them by the United States, due regard
being had to any improvements made thereon by them respectively for
their permanent settlement. It was further adjudged that the
Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations were in law and equity entitled to
and were the owners of such of the lands ceded to the United States
by the Wichita and Affiliated Bands as remained, after satisfying
the provisions for the Wichitas and Affiliated Bands, and that, in
the event of the sale thereof by the United States, the Indian
plaintiffs should be entitled to and receive the proceeds of such
sale. This judgment being brought here on appeal, this Court, in
its opinion, carefully reviewed all the legislation, and all the
Indian treaties on the subject, and, as a result,
held
that, for the reasons given, the decree must be reversed with
directions to dismiss the petition of the Choctaw and Chickasaw
Nations, and to make a decree in behalf of the Wichita and
Affiliated Bands of Indians fixing the amount of compensation to be
made to them on account of such lands in the Wichita Reservation as
are not needed in order to meet the requirements of the act of
Congress of March 2, 1895, c. 188, and for such further proceedings
as may be consistent with law and with this opinion.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 179 U. S. 496
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the 4th day of June, 1891, an agreement was entered into
between commissioners on behalf of the United States and the
Wichita and Affiliated Bands of Indians, in the Indian Territory,
whereby those Indians did "cede, convey, transfer, relinquish,
forever and absolutely, without any reservation whatever," to the
United States "all their claim, title, and interest of every kind
and character" to the land embraced in the following boundary:
"Commencing at a point in the middle of the main channel of the
Washita [Wichita] River where the 98th meridian of west longitude
crosses the same, thence up the middle of the main channel of said
river to the line of 98�40' west longitude, thence on said
line of 98�40' due north to the middle of the channel of the
main Canadian River, thence down the middle [of the channel] of
said main Canadian River to where it crosses the 98th meridian,
thence due south to the place of beginning."
28 Stat. 876, 895, c. 188.
In consideration of that cession, it was agreed on behalf of the
United States that out of the territory ceded there should be
allotted to each member of the Wichita and Affiliated Bands of
Indians in the Indian Territory, native and adopted, one hundred
sixty acres of land in the manner and form described in the
agreement. It was provided that, upon the allotments' being made,
the titles should be held in trust for the allottees for a period
of twenty-five years, in the manner and to the extent provided for
in the Act of Congress of February 8, 1887, 24 Stat. 388, 389, c.
119, and at the expiration of that period, the titles should be
conveyed in fee simple to the allottees, or their heirs, free from
all encumbrances. 28 Stat. 876, 895, 896, c. 188.
This agreement recited that, in addition to the allotments
provided
Page 179 U. S. 497
for and the other benefits to be received, the Wichita and
Affiliated Bands of Indians claimed and insisted
"that further compensation, in money, should be made to them by
the United States, for their possessory right in and to the lands
above described in excess of so much thereof as may be required for
their said allotments."
And it was stipulated in the agreement that
"the question as to what sum of money, if any, shall be paid to
said Indians for such surplus lands shall be submitted to the
Congress of the United States, the decision of Congress thereon to
be final and binding upon said Indians; provided, if any sum of
money shall be allowed by Congress for surplus lands, it shall be
subject to a reduction for each allotment of land that may be taken
in excess of one thousand and sixty at that price per acre, if any,
that may be allowed by Congress."
Art. 5.
It was further stipulated in the agreement that
"there shall be reserved to said Indians the right to prefer
against the United States any and every claim that they may believe
they have the right to prefer, save and except any claim to the
tract of country described in the first article of this
agreement."
28 Stat. 876, 896, c. 188.
This agreement of 1891 was ratified by the act of Congress known
as the Indian Appropriation Act of March 2, 1895. 28 Stat. 876,
894, 897, c. 188.
By that act, it was, among other things, provided:
"The compensation to be allowed in full for all Indian claims to
these lands which may be sustained by said court in the scrip
hereinafter provided for shall not exceed one dollar and
twenty-five cents per acre for so much of said land as will not be
required for allotment to the Indians as provided in the foregoing
agreement, subject to such reduction as may be found necessary
under Article 5 of said agreement:
Provided, That no part
of said sum shall be paid except as hereinafter provided."
"That whenever any of the lands acquired by this agreement
shall, by operation of law or proclamation of the President of the
United States, be open to settlement, they shall be disposed of
under the general provisions of the homestead and townsite laws of
the United States: Provided, That, in addition to the
Page 179 U. S. 498
land office fees prescribed by statute for such entries, the
entryman shall pay one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre for
the land entered at the time of submitting his final proof: . . .
Provided, That said lands shall be opened to settlement
within one year after said allotments are made to the Indians."
"That sections 16 and 36, 13 and 33, of the lands hereby
acquired, in each township shall not be subject to entry, but shall
be reserved, sections 16 and 36 for the use of the common schools,
and sections 13 and 33 for university, agricultural college, normal
schools and public buildings of the territory and future State of
Oklahoma, and in case either of said sections or parts thereof is
lost to said territory by reason of allotment under this act or
otherwise, the governor thereof is hereby authorized to locate
other lands, not occupied, in quantity equal to the loss:
Provided, That the United States shall pay the Indians for
said reserved sections the same price as is paid for the lands not
reserved."
"That as fast as the lands opened for settlement under this act
are sold, the money received from such sales shall be deposited in
the Treasury subject to the judgment of the court in the suit
herein provided for, less such amount, not to exceed fifteen
thousand dollars, as the Secretary of the Interior may find due
Luther H. Pike, deceased, late delegate of said Indians, in
accordance with his agreement with said Indians, to be retained in
the Treasury to the credit and subject to the drafts of the legal
representative of said Luther H. Pike:
Provided, That no
part of said money shall be paid to said Indians until the question
of title to the same is fully settled."
"That as the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations claim to have some
right, title, and interest in and to the lands ceded by the
foregoing agreement [the agreement above referred to], which claim
is controverted by the United States, jurisdiction be and is hereby
conferred upon the Court of Claims to hear and determine the said
claim of the Choctaws and Chickasaws, and to render judgment
thereon, it being the intention of this act to allow said Court of
Claims jurisdiction so that the rights, legal and equitable, of the
United States and the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations and the Wichita
and Affiliated Bands of Indians in the premises, shall be fully
considered and determined, and
Page 179 U. S. 499
to try and determine all questions that may arise on behalf of
either party in the hearing of said claim: and the Attorney General
is hereby directed to appear in behalf of the government of the
United States, and either of the parties to said action shall have
the right of appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States. . .
.
And provided further, That nothing in this act shall be
accepted or construed as a confession that the United States admit
that the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations have any claim to or
interest in said lands or any part thereof. That said action shall
be presented by a single petition making the United States and the
Wichita and Affiliated Bands of Indians parties defendant, and
shall set forth all the facts on which the said Choctaw and
Chickasaw Nations claim title to said land. . . .
And
provided, That it shall be the duty of the Attorney General of
the United States, within ten days after the filing of said
petition, to give notice to said Wichitas and Affiliated Bands
through the agents, delegates. attorneys, or other representatives
of said bands, that said bands are made defendants in said suit, of
the purpose of said suit, that they are required to make answer to
said petition, and that Congress has, in accordance with Article 5
of said agreement,
adopted this method of determining their
compensation, if any."
It was also provided that the Court of Claims
"shall receive and consider as evidence in the suit everything
which shall be deemed by said court necessary to aid it in
determining the questions presented, and tending to shed light on
the claim, rights, and equities of the parties litigant, and issue
rules on any department of the government therefor if
necessary."
28 Stat. 876, 897, 898, c. 188.
Pursuant to the above act, the present suit was brought in the
Court of Claims by the Choctaw and Chickasaw Indians against the
United States and the Wichita and Affiliated Bands of Indians.
A diagram which was incorporated into the opinion of the Court
of Claims is here reproduced to show the land ceded by the Wichita
and Affiliated Bands of Indians. It is sufficiently accurate for
the purposes of the present discussion.
Page 179 U. S. 500
image:a
Page 179 U. S. 501
Tract 5, marked "Wichitas," is the particular land now in
dispute, containing, it is stated, 743,257.19 acres; and, with
tract 4, marked "Cheyennes and Arrappahoes," tract 6, marked
"Kiousas, Comanches, and Apaches," and tract 7, marked "Greer Co.,"
constituted what has been known as the "Leased District,"
containing, it is supposed, 7,713,239 acres. That District, it will
be observed from the diagram, did not extend west of the 100th
degree of west longitude.
It may be here remarked that, according to the census report for
1890, the Choctaws then numbered between 14,000 and 15,000 people,
of whom about 10,000 were Indians and about 4,500 were of African
descent; the Chickasaws about 7,000, of whom about 3,400 were
Indians and 3,700 were of African descent, and the Wichitas and
Affiliated Bands, known as Caddoes, Wacoes, Towacanies, Keechies,
Delawares, and Ionies, about 1,100 people, of whom not exceeding
175 were Wichitas and about one-half Caddoes.
The decree of the Court of Claims recited that, by the treaties
between the United States and the Choctaw Nation or tribe of
Indians, and between the United States and the Choctaw and
Chickasaw Nations or tribes of Indians, the lands in dispute and
other lands were acquired by the United States "
in trust
for the settlement of Indians thereon, and
in trust and
for the benefit of said claimant Indians when the
aforesaid trust shall cease;" that "the Wichita and Affiliated
Bands of Indians were by the United States located within the
boundaries of the lands hereinbefore described;" that they "now
number not more than 1,060 persons;" and that the location of the
Wichitas and Affiliated Bands within said boundaries was "for the
purpose of affording them permanent settlement therein."
It was then adjudged -- Mr. Justice Peelle dissenting -- that
the lands in dispute had been acquired and were held by the United
States in trust for the purpose of settling Indians thereon, and
that, whenever that purpose was abandoned as to the whole or any
part thereof then all the lands not so devoted to Indian settlement
should be held in trust by the United States for the Choctaw and
Chickasaw Indians exclusively.
Page 179 U. S. 502
It was also adjudged and decreed that the members of the Wichita
and Affiliated Bands, not exceeding 1,060 were equitably entitled
to 160 acres of land each out of the lands in dispute, and that the
same should be set apart to them by the United States, due regard
being had to any improvements made thereon by them respectively for
their permanent settlement.
It was further adjudged that the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations
were in law and equity entitled to, and were the owners of, such of
the lands ceded to the United States by the Wichita and Affiliated
Bands as remained, after satisfying the provisions for the Wichitas
and Affiliated Bands, and that in the event of the sale thereof by
the United States the Indian plaintiffs should be entitled to, and
receive, the proceeds of such sale.
From this decree the United States, the Wichita and Affiliated
Bands, and the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations severally appealed. 34
Ct.Cl. 17.
The fundamental question to be determined on these appeals
arises out of the treaty concluded April 28, 1866, between the
United States and the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations, 14 Stat. 769,
relating to the lands constituting what has been known as the
Leased District, north of Red River and between the 100th and 98th
degrees of west longitude -- the lands marked on the above map as
tracts 4, 5, 6, and 7. By that treaty, the Choctaws and the
Chickasaws, in consideration of the sum of $300,000,
ceded
to the United States the territory known as the Leased
District.
The government insists that this cession was absolute and
unaccompanied by any trust upon the termination or abandonment of
which the Indians would be entitled either to the territory ceded
or to the proceeds of its sale.
The Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations deny such to be the effect of
the treaty of 1866, and insist that the United States took the
lands
in trust to be used only for the settlement of
Indians, and that, on the abandonment of such trust the lands
reverted, or should be adjudged to have reverted, to the Choctaws
and Chickasaws.
The Wichita and Affiliated Bands of Indians contend that
Page 179 U. S. 503
they are entitled to compensation in money for all the lands
left in the territory in dispute after making the allotments
provided for in the agreement of 1891, and that it should have been
so adjudged.
The Choctaws also contend that they once owned, by transfer from
the United States, a vast body of lands west of the Leased District
for which they have never received anything, and that the treaty of
1866 must be interpreted in the light of that fact. What connection
such a fact, if it had any existence, could have with the
construction of the treaty of 1866 it is not easy to perceive. But
as the proposition just stated was the subject of much
consideration in the Court of Claims, and as it is earnestly
pressed upon our attention, we will first inquire whether the
Choctaws ever owned any lands west of the Leased District -- that
is, west of the 100th degree of west longitude -- and then bring
into view the circumstances leading up to the treaty of 1866 which,
it is argued, throw light on its interpretation. This being done,
we will examine the provisions of that treaty so far as they bear
upon the title to the particular lands in dispute.
I. By a treaty concluded August 24, 1818, an Indian tribe called
the Quapaws, in consideration of certain promises and stipulations,
did "cede and relinquish" to the United States all the lands within
the following boundaries:
"Beginning at the mouth of the Arkansaw River; thence extending
up the Arkansaw to the Canadian Fork, and up the Canadian Fork
to its source; thence south to Big Red River, and down the
middle of that river to the Big Raft; thence, a direct line, so as
to strike the Mississippi River, thirty leagues in a straight line,
below the mouth of the Arkansaw; together with all their claims to
land east of the Mississippi and north of the Arkansaw River,
included within the colored lines 1, 2, and 3 on the above map
* with the exception and
reservation following, that is to say: the tract of country bounded
as follows: beginning at a point on the Arkansaw River opposite the
present post of Arkansaw, and running thence, a due southwest
course, to the
Page 179 U. S. 504
Washita [Wichita] River; thence up that River to the Saline Fork
and up the Saline Fork to a point from whence a due north course
would strike the Arkansaw River at the Little Rock, and thence,
down the right bank of the Arkansaw to the place of beginning,
which said tract of land, last above designated and reserved, shall
be surveyed and marked off at the expense of the United States as
soon as the same can be done with convenience, and shall not be
sold or disposed of, by the said Quapaw tribe or nation, to any
individual whatever, nor to any state or nation, without the
approbation of the United States first had and obtained."
Art., 7 Stat. 176.
Observe in this boundary the words "extending up the Arkansaw to
the Canadian Fork, and up the Canadian Fork to its source." One of
the questions much discussed is whether the Quapaws owned and
really intended to cede lands situated as far west as the source of
the Canadian Fork or river -- that point being far west of the
100th degree of west longitude. Did the United States understand
that it acquired by the Quapaw treaty of 1818 lands as far west at
that time as the source of the Canadian Fork or river, which (as is
now known, but was not known in 1818) rises in the northeastern
part of New Mexico, 36� north latitude by 105� west
longitude, while the Red River rises in the Staked Plains and arid
table lands near the eastern border of New Mexico, about latitude
35� north and longitude 103�10' west? This question
cannot well be determined without referring to other documents
pertinent to the present inquiry.
By a treaty signed within a few months after the date of the
treaty with the Quapaws -- that is, on February 22, 1819 -- the
United States and Spain agreed:
"Art. 3. The boundary line between the two countries west of the
Mississippi shall begin on the Gulph of Mexico at the mouth of the
River Sabine, in the sea, continuing north, along the western bank
of that river, to the 32d degree of latitude; thence, by a line due
north, to the degree of latitude where it strikes the Rio Roxo of
Nachitoches, or Red River; then following the course of the Rio
Roxo westward,
to the degree of longitude 100 west from London
and 23 from Washington;
Page 179 U. S. 505
then crossing the said Red River, and running thence, by a line
due north, to the river Arkansas; thence, following the
course of the southern bank of the Arkansas, to its source, in
latitude 42 north, and thence, by that parallel of latitude, to the
South sea. The whole being as laid down in Melish's map of the
United States, published at Philadelphia, improved to the first of
January, 1818. But if the source of the Arkansas River shall be
found to fall north or south of latitude 42, then the line shall
run from the said source due south or north, as the case may be,
till it meets the said parallel of latitude 42, and thence along
the said parallel to the South sea. . . . The two high contracting
parties agree to cede and renounce all their rights, claims, and
pretensions to the territories described by the said line -- that
is to say the United States hereby cede to His Catholic Majesty and
renounce forever all their rights, claims, and pretensions to the
territories lying west and south of the above-described
line; and, in like manner, His Catholic Majesty cedes to the said
United States all his rights, claims, and pretensions to any
territories east and north of the said line; and, for himself, his
heirs and successors, renounces all claim to the said territories
forever."
8 Stat. 252, 254, 256.
We here remark that the words in this treaty
"then following the course of the Rio Roxo [Red River] westward,
to the degree of longitude 100 west from London and 23 from
Washington, then crossing the said Red River, and running thence,
by a line due north, to the river Arkansas"
indicate that, in the judgment of the United States at the time
the treaty with Spain was signed, the lands west of the 100th
degree of west longitude and south of the 42d parallel of latitude
constituted or should constitute part of the possessions of that
country.
The treaty with Spain, although signed in 1819, was not finally
ratified until February 19, 1821. But between the signing of that
treaty and its ratification, namely, on the 18th day of October,
1820, a treaty was concluded between the United States and the
Choctaw Nation whereby the latter ceded to the United States
certain lands east of the Mississippi River. The main object of
that treaty with the Choctaws was to exchange some of the lands
then occupied by them for "a country
Page 179 U. S. 506
beyond [west of] the Mississippi, where all who live by hunting
and will not work may be collected and settled together." The
second article of that treaty was in these words:
"For and in consideration of the foregoing cession on the part
of the Choctaw Nation, and in part satisfaction for the same, the
commissioners of the United States, in behalf of said states, do
hereby cede to said nation a tract of country west of the
Mississippi River situate between the Arkansas and Red Rivers, and
bounded as follows: beginning on the Arkansas River, where the
lower boundary line of the Cherokees strikes the same; thence up
the Arkansas to the Canadian Fork, and up the same
to its
source; thence
due south to the Red River; thence
down Red River, three miles below the mouth of Little River, which
empties itself into Red River on the north side; thence a direct
line to the beginning."
7 Stat. 210, 211.
Those who supervised the drawing of the treaty of 1820 evidently
did not closely scrutinize the provisions of the treaty with Spain
signed the year previous, for the line "up the same [Canadian Fork]
to its source, thence due south to the Red River" was in conflict
with the Spanish treaty of 1819, which fixed the dividing line,
running north and south, between the United States and Spain on the
100th degree of west longitude. This is clear from the use of the
words in the Choctaw Treaty of 1820, "up the Arkansas to the
Canadian Fork, and up the same to its source, thence due south to
the Red River." Or perhaps those who drew the treaty of 1820
assumed without inquiry that the source of the Canadian River was
not farther west than the 100th degree of west longitude, which the
treaty of 1819 designated as the dividing line between the United
States and Spain. As the westernmost point of the Canadian River or
Fork is 105� west, and the westernmost point of Red River is
about 103�10" west longitude, a line running up the Canadian
Fork "to its source, thence due south to Red River," was an
impossible line, for necessarily a line directly south from the
actual source of the Canadian River would never strike Red River,
while a line drawn from the actual source of the Canadian River to
the westernmost point of Red River would cross
Page 179 U. S. 507
the Canadian River several times, striking Red River about
longitude 103�10' west.
The difficulties arising from the conflicting description of
boundaries as given in the Quapaw, Spanish, and Choctaw treaties
above referred to seem to have been recognized when the United
States and the Choctaws, in execution or in further recognition of
the treaty of 1820, made another treaty on the 27th of September,
1830. 7 Stat. 333, 334.
By the latter treaty, it was provided:
"Art. 2. The United States, under a grant specially to be made
by the President of the United States, shall cause to be conveyed
to the Choctaw Nation a tract of country west of the Mississippi
River, in fee simple to them and their descendants, to inure to
them while they shall exist as a nation and live on it; beginning
near Fort Smith where the Arkansas boundary crosses the Arkansas
River, running thence to the source of the Canadian Fork,
if in
the limits of the United States, or to those limits; thence
due south to Red River, and down Red River to the west
boundary of the Territory of Arkansas; thence north along that line
to the beginning. The boundary of the same to be agreeably to the
treaty made and concluded at Washington City in the year 1825. The
grant to be executed so soon as the present treaty shall be
ratified."
"Art. 3. In consideration of the provisions contained in the
several articles of this treaty, the Choctaw Nation of Indians
consent and hereby cede to the United States the entire country
they own and possess east of the Mississippi River, and they agree
to remove beyond the Mississippi River early as practicable, and
will so arrange their removal that as many as possible of their
people, not exceeding one-half of the whole number, shall depart
during the falls of 1831 and 1832, the residue to follow during the
succeeding fall of 1833; a better opportunity in this manner will
be afforded the government to extend to them the facilities and
comforts which it is desirable should be extended in conveying them
to their new homes."
"Art. 4. The government and people of the United States are
hereby obliged to secure to the said Choctaw Nation of Red People
the jurisdiction and government of all the persons and
Page 179 U. S. 508
property that may be within their limits west, so that no
territory or state shall ever have a right to pass laws for the
government of the Choctaw Nation of Red People and their
descendants, and that no part of the land granted them shall ever
be embraced in any territory or state, but the United States shall
forever secure said Choctaw Nation from and against all laws except
such as from time to time may be enacted in their own national
councils, not inconsistent with the Constitution, treaties, and
laws of the United States, and except such as may and which have
been enacted by Congress, to the extent that Congress under the
Constitution are required to exercise a legislation over Indian
affairs. But the Choctaws, should this treaty be ratified, express
a wish that Congress may grant to the Choctaws the right of
punishing, by their own laws, any while man who shall come into
their nation and infringe any of their national regulations."
7 Stat. 333, 334.
It cannot be doubted that the purpose of Article 2 of the treaty
of 1830 was to provide for a special grant to the Choctaws of the
lands intended to be ceded to them by Article 2 of the treaty of
1820, and no others. It was as if the parties declared that the
words in the treaty of 1820, "thence up the Arkansas to the
Canadian Fork, and up the same to its source, thence due south to
the Red River," should be held to mean the same as the words in the
treaty of 1830, "thence to the source of the Canadian Fork, if in
the limits of the United States,
or to those limits,
thence due south to Red River." The treaty of 1830 plainly
imports the understanding of the parties at that time that whatever
might be the wording of the treaty of 1820, the United States had
not thereby intended to grant, and the Choctaws had not thereby
expected to receive, any lands at or near the source of the
Canadian Fork unless that point was within the limits of the United
States -- that both parties had in view at that time only lands
within the limits of the United States.
As the treaty of 1820 provided that the Choctaws should have
lands as far west as the source of the Canadian River, it is
suggested that the United States could not legally modify that
provision by the subsequent ratification in 1821 of the
Page 179 U. S. 509
treaty with Spain signed in 1819. But it was entirely competent
for the parties, without any new or valuable consideration
intervening, to rectify a mistake in the description of boundaries
and to agree, as in effect they did by the treaty of 1830, that the
words "to the Canadian Fork, and up the same to its source" in the
treaty of 1820 were to be interpreted as meaning "to the source of
the Canadian Fork, if in the limits of the United States, or to
those limits" -- thus relieving the United States from any
obligation to make a special grant to the Choctaws of lands which,
by the treaty with Spain, ratified in 1821, had been recognized as
part of Spanish territory. After the treaty of 1830, the line
"thence due south to the Red River" was to be taken as running from
a point on the dividing line between the United States and Spain,
the 100th degree of west longitude as established by the treaty of
1819-1821,
thence due south to that river.
In confirmation of the view we have taken of the treaty of 1830,
we may refer to the agreement made January 17, 1837, by which the
Choctaws assented to the formation by the Chickasaws of a district
"within the limits of
their country." 11 Stat. 573. In the
description of the boundaries of that district, which adjoins the
district of the Choctaws on the west, it appears that one of the
lines ran to a point ten or twelve miles above the mouth of the
south fork of the Canadian River,
"thence west along the main Canadian River to its source,
if in the limits of the United States,
or to those
limits, and thence due south to Red River, and down Red River
to the beginning."
Here was a repetition of the words of the treaty of 1830 and a
distinct recognition of the fact that the Choctaw country was not
to be regarded as embracing any lands not then, in 1837, within the
limits of the United States. It cannot be contended that any lands
west of the 100th degree of west longitude were within such limits
as then established.
It is an important fact in this connection that, prior to the
treaty of 1830, the United States of America and the United Mexican
states, by the treaty between them of January 12, 1828, recognized
the boundaries of the respective countries to be as fixed by the
treaty of 1819-1821. 8 Stat. 372, 374. And
Page 179 U. S. 510
this position was maintained, for by a treaty concluded in 1838
between the United States and the Republic of Texas, the latter
recognized as binding upon it the treaty made in 1828 with the
United Mexican states. Treaties and Conventions (1776-1887), p.
1079. And in the settlement made in 1850 between the United States
and the State of Texas, the latter agreed that its boundary on the
north should commence at the point at which
the meridian of 100
degrees west from Greenwich is intersected by the parallel of
36�30' north latitude, and run from that point west to the
meridian 103 degrees west from Greenwich, then due south to the 32d
degree of north latitude, thence on that parallel to the Rio Bravo
del Norte, and thence with the channel of that river to the Gulf of
Mexico. 9 Stat. 446, c. 49;
United States v. Texas,
162 U. S. 1,
162 U. S. 39.
It is said that the United States made a gift to Texas of the
lands west of the 100th degree of west longitude, but that it could
not give away lands previously ceded by the treaty of 1820 to the
Choctaws. We have already shown that the United States and the
Choctaws substantially stipulated in the treaty of 1830 that the
lands to be transferred to the Choctaws in consideration of the
transfer by the Choctaws of lands east of the Mississippi River
were only such as were within the limits of the United States. But
we add, as a fact of significance, that in 1842, the special grant
provided for by the treaty of 1830 to be made to the Choctaws
described one of the lines of the lands granted to those Indians as
"running thence to the source of the Canadian Fork,
if in the
limits of the United States, or to those limits, thence due
south to the Red River." This grant was accepted by the Choctaws,
and we find no evidence in the record tending to show that they at
that time or at any time prior thereto claimed that the United
States was under any obligation to transfer to them, or to
compensate them for any lands west of the 100th degree of west
longitude which the United States had recognized to be within the
limits of Spain. There is no suggestion even in the petition in
this case that the treaty of 1830 did not properly express the
intention of the parties as to the lands to be transferred to the
Choctaws.
II. Proceeding in our examination of the facts supposed to
Page 179 U. S. 511
throw light upon the meaning of the treaty of 1866, we find
that, in 1854, for the first time, the Choctaws, acting under some
influence not explained by the record, insisted that their country
extended west of the 100th degree of west longitude. In a letter
dated July 11, 1854, and addressed to the Commissioner of Indian
Affairs by Choctaw delegates, it was said:
". . . We shall therefore have to demand the immediate removal
of the several bands of Texas and other Indians who have settled
within our limits, and if this demand be not complied with, we will
remove them ourselves, using force if necessary. The government
must look to the consequences, whatever they may be. Our country
extends
west to the headwaters of the Canadian, about the 103d
degree of west longitude, and we are prepared to maintain our
rights to a boundary that far west by facts and evidence which
cannot be disputed. In the compromise with Texas in 1850, that
portion of our country west of the 100th degree of west longitude
was assigned to that state in direct and palpable violation of our
rights. We must demand to be repossessed of this portion of our
country, and if this is not done, our people will take possession
of it and leave the government to settle with Texas and the Indians
upon it for such damages as they claim."
Under date of April 9, 1855, the United States agent for the
Choctaws, acting under instructions from the Commissioner of Indian
Affairs, asked the Choctaw delegates, then in Washington, for a
conference -- submitting to them certain interrogatories to be
answered in writing --
"for the purpose of ascertaining what arrangements, if any, can
be made with them, having in view the adjustment of all differences
between their tribe and the Chickasaw tribe of Indians, the
government of the United States, and the permanent settlement of
the Wichita and other bands of Indians in the Choctaw country."
The Choctaw delegates, in reply, said, among other things:
"Respecting the Wichita and other bands of Indians who have
intruded themselves within the limits of our country, we have to
remark they are, as you know, a nuisance, and we had far rather be
rid of them altogether. In our communication to the acting
Commissioner of Indian Affairs of the 11th of July
Page 179 U. S. 512
last, we demanded their removal, as we had a right to do, but we
are not aware that any order has been given on the subject. We have
had it in contemplation to renew this demand, and if not complied
with, to remove them by force, if necessary. We and our people
have, however, as we have ever had, every disposition to comply
with the policy and wishes of the government, and if it be an
object of importance to it to have these Indians accommodated with
a home within the boundaries of our country, though such an
arrangement would be greatly repugnant to out inclinations and
feelings, we would consent to it on fair and reasonable terms if it
can be made a part of a just and equitable adjustment of all the
matters involved in the existing controversy between the Choctaws
and the government; otherwise, we could not take the serious
responsibility of encountering the prejudices and opposition of our
people to the measure."
The Chickasaw delegates, with whom a conference was also sought,
said, under date of April 14, 1855:
"In regard to the third point, they have only to say that, in
conjunction with the Choctaws, they are willing to enter into an
arrangement with the United States government for the permanent
settlement of the Wichita and other bands of Indians in the Choctaw
country upon terms just, fair, and safe for both the Choctaws and
Chickasaws."
Under date of April 21, 1855, the Secretary of the Interior
wrote to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs:
"If you have any plan for the settlement of these difficulties,
or if the Choctaws will submit a distinct offer, as the terms on
which they will settle with the Chickasaws and provide for the
Wichitas and other Indians within the limits of the Choctaw
country, the Department will give it prompt consideration, and with
every disposition to award to them and the Chickasaws such degree
of favor as may not be incompatible with the rights and interests
of the United States."
On the 24th of April, 1855, the Choctaw delegates wrote to the
Indian agent:
"2. We will agree to provide, in the same convention or
supplemental treaty that the government shall have the permanent
use of a limited portion of the western
Page 179 U. S. 513
part of our country, for the accommodation of the Wichita and
other bands of Indians, for a fair and just consideration, the
amount to depend, of course, upon the extent of country required
for the purpose. The Commissioner of Indian Affairs, in his letter,
requires you to ascertain our terms for the use of that portion of
our country west of the 98th degree of west longitude, and also for
that west of the 99th degree. We are unwilling to lease, for the
purpose mentioned, any portion of our country east of the 99th
degree; but for the lease of that west of that degree we will
consent, in behalf of our people, to take the sum of $400,000."
Two days later, April 26, 1855, the Commissioner of Indian
Affairs thus wrote to the Indian agent:
". . . You will also ascertain upon what terms the Choctaws will
arrange with the United States for the use of their country west of
98� west longitude for the Wichitas and such other bands of
Indians as the government may desire to settle permanently west of
that degree of longitude, also upon what terms the right to settle
said Indians west of 99� west longitude can be obtained, and
report to this office with the least delay possible."
On the day last named the Indian agent sent a letter to the
Commissioner, enclosing "a proposition for the lease of the Choctaw
possessions west of the 99th degree of west longitude to the
government, for the permanent settlement of the Wichita and other
bands of Indians within the Choctaw country."
Under date of April 27, 1855, the Secretary of the Interior
wrote to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs:
"As I have heretofore said, I have every disposition to act
towards these Indians in a spirit of the utmost liberality
consistent with the just rights and interests of the United States,
and, all things considered, am disposed to think the proposition
for the permanent accommodation of the Wichita and other Indians,
and the amount demanded therefor, worthy of your consideration, and
you are authorized to enter into negotiations with the Choctaws on
that basis. I think, however, that notwithstanding their claim to
an extent of country west of the 100th meridian of longitude is
regarded by the Department as without any foundation in law or
equity,
it might prevent further trouble
Page 179 U. S. 514
in regard to it to insert an Article in the supplemental
treaty or convention now to be held requiring the Choctaws to
relinquish and abandon all right or claim to the same."
Under date of May 2, 1855, the Indian agent wrote to the Choctaw
delegates:
"In view of the probability that an arrangement will be effected
between the Choctaw and Chickasaw tribes restricting the western
boundary of the 'Chickasaw district' to the 98� of west
longitude, west from Greenwich, I desire to ascertain whether you
will agree, the Chickasaws assenting, to lease the country between
98� and 100� west longitude and between Red and
Canadian Rivers to the United States for the permanent settlement
of the Wichita and other bands of Indians within the territorial
limits of the Choctaw Nation, and if so, upon what terms,
it
being understood that the Choctaws shall relinquish and quitclaim,
in favor of the United States, whatever interest they may have in
the country lying west of the 100� of west
longitude."
On the 3d of May, 1855, the Choctaw delegates wrote to the
Indian agent:
"In our communication to you of the 9th ultimo, we referred to
the prejudices and opposition of our people to the location of the
Indians referred to within the limits of our country, and our
repugnance to such an arrangement, but we stated that we had every
disposition to comply with the policy and wishes of the government
on the subject, and that, if the measure were one of importance to
it, we would take the responsibility and consent to it on fair and
reasonable terms. In our subsequent communication of the 24th
instant, we stated our unwillingness to lease for that purpose, any
portion of our country east of the 99� of west longitude,
but that we would agree to lease that west of that degree, for the
sum of $400,000. On further consideration of the subject, however,
since the receipt of your letter, we have concluded, in the same
spirit of accommodation, to agree to comply with the wishes of the
government by leasing to it the further portion of our country
between the 98� and 100� of west longitude. The
question of the total relinquishment of any portion of our
territorial rights is one of even greater delicacy and difficulty.
We have fully acquainted you with the grounds of our
Page 179 U. S. 515
claim to title
to the headwaters of the Canadian River,
extending as far west as at least to the 103� of west
longitude. We believe our title to be perfectly valid and
good, but as it is questioned, if not disputed, by the government,
west of the 100� of west longitude, and we are anxious to
put at rest all questions of controversy with it, we will
relinquish and quitclaim to it our rights west of that degree of
longitude on fair and equitable terms. The extent of country
involved is large, we know it to be valuable, and we believe the
acquisition of our title to it to be important to the government;
still we have no disposition to be exorbitant. As a consideration
for the whole arrangement, we would consent to take eight hundred
thousand dollars -- one-half thereof for the lease of the country
between the 98� and 100� west longitude, and the
other half for the relinquishment of our right west of the latter
degree. The above proposition has reference to the arrangement as a
whole. Were it to be confined only to the lease of the portion of
the country between the two degrees of longitude mentioned, we
should for obvious reasons feel constrained to ask not less than
six hundred thousand dollars therefor."
On May 4, 1855, the Indian agent wrote to the Choctaw
delegates:
"If the Choctaws will propose to lease to the United States the
territory west of 98� and east of 100� west longitude
(the Chickasaws assenting), and couple with it a relinquishment of
all claims west of 100� west longitude, the government will
agree to pay them $600,000."
Under date of June 7, 1855, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs
wrote to the Acting Secretary of the Interior:
". . . After consultation with the Secretary of the Interior,
and with his concurrence, Agent Cooper was instructed verbally to
inform the delegation that if they would accept the sum of $600,000
for the lease of the country between the two degrees,
and the
relinquishment west of the 100�, the government would
give that sum. The delegation assented to this proposition, and
agreed to take the sum of $600,000 for the lease of the territory
within the two degrees mentioned, and the relinquishment of their
claims to the country west of the 100th degree. The Chickasaw
delegation also assented and agreed to the terms of
Page 179 U. S. 516
the lease, and the question was settled, as I supposed; but both
delegations now contend that the United States shall be restricted,
in the number of bands of Indians to be located in the country
leased, to such as are now residing in it. With such a limitation
on the use of the country, the lease would be of little value, and
I have therefore declined to assent to the limitation which the
Indians desire to impose, and have claimed that the government must
be left free to locate such Indians as it may desire within the
ceded country . . . The delegations propose, as a compromise,
that the Choctaws quitclaim to the country west of
100�, and that they and the Chickasaws will
lease
the country between 99� and 100� for the
permanent settlement of any Indians whom the government may desire
to locate therein, for the sum of $600,000."
Under date of June 14, 1855, the Choctaw delegates thus
addressed the Commissioner of Indian Affairs:
"The lease we had consented to agree to was a limited one,
viz., for the permanent settlement, within the country
leased, of the Wichita and several alien tribes and bands now in
our country, the government to have the control of them, but we
still to retain jurisdiction over the country itself, with the
right of settlement therein by Choctaws and Chickasaws as
heretofore, as expressed and provided for in the convention. If the
government had the unrestricted right to bring in any and all
Indians it pleased, the whole district might soon be filled up with
a discordant, restless, and predatory population which would
endanger the frontier settlements of the Choctaws and Chickasaws,
deprive us practically of our jurisdiction, and necessarily exclude
Choctaws and Chicakasaws from settling within the district if they
so desired. Such an arrangement would be a virtual sale of that
portion of our country, to which we could under no circumstances
submit. Moreover, the consideration offered would be entirely
inadequate. We had agreed to relinquish our claims to territory
west of the 100� of west longitude, embracing at least six
and a half millions of acres. The district desired to be leased
contains quite seven millions more, so that, practically, the
government would have acquired from us some thirteen and a half
Page 179 U. S. 517
millions of acres of land, for the certainly insufficient sum of
$600,000."
We have made this extended reference to the correspondence
between the Indians and the officers of the United States for the
purpose not only of showing that the Choctaws had no claim, legal
or equitable, to territory west of the 100th degree of west
longitude, but of indicating the situation and relations of the
parties when the treaty of 1855, to be presently referred to, was
concluded.
The facts above stated, so far as they relate to lands west of
the 100th degree of west longitude, may be thus summarized:
1. By the treaty of 1818, two of the boundary lines of the tract
of country ceded by the Quapaws to the United States were described
as extending "up the Arkansaw to the Canadian Fork, and up the
Canadian Fork to its source; thence south to Big Red River."
2. By the treaty signed in 1819, the dividing line between the
United States and Spain, running north from Red River, was
established on the
100th degree of west longitude.
3. In 1820, before the treaty of 1819 was ratified, the United
States made a treaty with the Choctaw Nation ceding certain
territory, two of the lines of which were described by the treaty
of 1820 as extending "up the Arkansas to the Canadian Fork, and up
the same
to its source, thence due south to the Red
River." But those were impossible lines, because the source of the
Canadian River or fork was at the 105th degree of west longitude,
while the source of Red River was at the 103d degree of west
longitude, and a line running due south from the source of the
Canadian River would not strike Red River.
4. When the treaty of 1830 was made with the Choctaws, the fact
was recognized that the United States had apparently ceded to the
Choctaws lands west of the 100th degree of west longitude, which,
by the previous treaty with Spain signed in 1819 and ratified in
1821, had been recognized as within Spanish territory. But that the
United States might not appear to cede or agree to cede lands
outside of its limit, the treaty of 1830 corrected or qualified the
description in the treaty of 1820 of the line running up the
Canadian Fork to its source by using
Page 179 U. S. 518
the words "if in the limits of the United States, or to those
limits; thence due south to Red River." This change in the wording
of the treaty of 1820 was recognized by the agreement between the
Choctaws and Chicakasaws of 1837, and was confirmed by the Choctaws
when they accepted the special grant executed in 1842.
5. It does not appear that the Choctaws made any claim between
1830 and 1854 to have derived by cession from the United States any
title to lands west of the dividing line between the United States
and Spain -- that is, west of the 100th degree of west longitude --
or that the Choctaws complained during that period that any lands
ceded to them by the treaty of 1820 were wrongfully or illegally
recognized by the treaty of 1819 as belonging to Spain.
6. In 1854-1855, the Choctaws for the first time asserted title
to lands west of the 100th degree of west longitude, as far west at
least as the 103d degree. This claim was disputed by the United
States, and pronounced by the Secretary of the Interior to be
wholly without any foundation in law or equity, although that
officer deemed it wise that the new treaty then (1855) contemplated
to be made should embrace a relinquishment by the Choctaws to the
United States of any interest they might have in lands west of the
100th degree of west longitude.
7. The Choctaws expressed their willingness to make a treaty
leasing to the United States certain territory in their country
east of the 100th degree of west longitude and relinquishing any
and all claim to lands west of that degree.
III. Such was the situation when the parties entered upon
negotiations resulting in another treaty. We allude to the treaty
of June 22, 1855, upon some of the provisions of which much stress
has been placed by the parties.
The preamble to that treaty recites:
"Whereas the political connection heretofore existing between
the Choctaw and Chickasaw tribes of Indians has given rise to
unhappy and injurious dissensions and controversies among them
which render necessary a readjustment of their relations to each
other and to the United States, and whereas the United States
desire that the Choctaw Indians
shall relinquish
Page 179 U. S. 519
all claim to any territory west of the 100th degree of west
longitude, and also to make provision for the permanent
settlement within the Choctaw country of the Wichita and certain
other tribes or bands of Indians, for which purpose the Choctaws
and Chickasaws are willing to
lease, on reasonable terms,
to the United States, that portion of their common territory which
is west of the 98th degree of west longitude [that is, the
territory between the 98th and 100th degrees of west longitude],
and whereas the Choctaws contend that, by a just and fair
construction of the treaty of September 27, 1830, they are of right
entitled to the net proceeds of the lands ceded by them to the
United States under said treaty, and have proposed that the
question of their right to the same, together with the whole
subject matter of their unsettled claims, whether national, or
individual against the United States, arising under the various
provisions of said treaty, shall be referred to the Senate of the
United States for final adjudication and adjustment, and whereas it
is necessary, for the simplification and better understanding of
the relations between the United States and the Choctaw Indians,
that all their subsisting treaty stipulations be embodied in one
comprehensive instrument. Now therefore"
etc.
The boundaries of "the Choctaw and Chickasaw country," as
established by Article 1 of this treaty, were as follows:
"Beginning at a point on the Arkansas River one hundred paces
east of old Fort Smith, where the western boundary line of the
State of Arkansas crosses the said river, and running thence due
south to Red River; thence up Red River to the point
where the
meridian of one hundred degrees west longitude crosses the same;
thence north along said meridian, to the main Canadian River,
thence down said river to its junction with the Arkansas River,
thence down said river to the place of beginning,"
and pursuant to the Act of Congress approved May 28, 1830, 4
Stat. 411, c. 148, the United States forever secured and guaranteed
the lands embraced within those limits to the members of the
Choctaw and Chickasaw tribes, their heirs and successors, to be
held in common, so that each and every member of either tribe
should have an equal and undivided interest in the whole, subject,
however, to the condition that no part thereof
Page 179 U. S. 520
should ever be sold without the consent of both tribes, and that
the land should revert to the United States if the Indians and
their heirs became extinct or abandoned the same.
It will be observed that "the Choctaw and Chickasaw country," as
thus established, embraced no lands west of the 100th degree of
west longitude.
Article 2 of the treaty established the boundary of the
Chickasaw district -- the district marked on the
179 U.
S.
By Article 3, it was provided that
"the remainder of the country held in common by the Choctaws and
Chickasaws shall constitute the Choctaw district, and their
officers and people shall at all times have the right of safe
conduct and free passage through the Chickasaw district."
This territory is designated on the
179 U.
S.
Article 4 provided that the government and laws then in
operation, and not inconsistent with the treaty, should remain in
full force within the limits of the Chickasaw district until the
Chickasaws should adopt a constitution.
Article 5 secured to the members of either tribe the right
freely to settle within the jurisdiction of the other, and have all
the rights, privileges, and immunities of citizens thereof, except
that no member of either tribe should participate in the funds
belonging to the other tribe.
Article 6 provided for the surrender of fugitives from justice
of either tribe.
Article 7 secured to each tribe the unrestricted right of
self-government, and, with certain exceptions not necessary to be
here stated, full jurisdiction over persons and property within
their respective limits.
Article 8 provided that, in consideration of the foregoing
stipulations, and immediately upon the ratification of the treaty,
there should be paid to the Choctaws, in such manner as their
national council should direct, out of the national fund of the
Chickasaws held in trust by the United States, the sum of
$150,000.
Articles 9 and 10 are the important parts of the treaty of
Page 179 U. S. 521
1855 so far as the present litigation is concerned. We therefore
give them here in full:
"Art. 9. The Choctaw Indians do
hereby absolutely and
forever quitclaim and relinquish to the United States all
their right, title, and interest in and to any and
all lands
west of the 100th degree of west longitude, and the Choctaws
and Chickasaws do hereby lease to the United States all that
portion of their common territory west of the 98th degree of west
longitude for the
permanent settlement of the Wichita and
such other tribes or bands of Indians as the government may desire
to locate therein, excluding, however, all the Indians of New
Mexico, and also those whose usual ranges at present are north of
the Arkansas River and whose permanent locations are north of the
Canadian River, but including those bands whose permanent ranges
are south of the Canadian, or between it and the Arkansas, which
Indians shall be subject to the exclusive control of the United
States under such rules and regulations, not inconsistent with the
rights and interests of the Choctaws and Chickasaws, as may from
time to time be prescribed by the President for their government;
Provided, however, the territory so leased shall remain
open to settlement by Choctaws and Chickasaws as heretofore."
"Art. 10.
In consideration of the foregoing
relinquishment and lease, and as soon as practicable after the
ratification of this convention, the United States will pay to the
Choctaws the sum of six hundred thousand dollars, and to the
Chickasaws the sum of two hundred thousand dollars, in such manner
as their general councils shall respectively direct."
11 Stat. 611, 612, 613.
The treaty of 1855 contains other articles, but they do not
affect the determination of the present issues, and therefore we
need not advert to them.
The lands described in this treaty as having been leased to the
United States constituted what is called the "Leased District," no
part of which, as we have seen, was west of the 100th degree of
west longitude.
There can be no doubt as to the meaning and scope of the treaty
of 1855. In order simply to avoid future dispute, the United States
desired the relinquishment by the Choctaw Nation
Page 179 U. S. 522
of all claim to any territory west of the 100th degree of west
longitude, and, in addition, it obtained a lease of the territory
between the 98th and 100th degrees of west longitude for the
permanent settlement of the Wichita and certain other tribes or
bands of Indians, the right being reserved to the Choctaws and
Chickasaws to settle on the leased territory as theretofore. The
consideration for the "relinquishment
and lease" was
$800,000. It is immaterial to inquire as to the value placed by the
Indians or by the United States upon the relinquishment and lease
respectively. The Indians accepted for both the aggregate amount
named. It is idle, therefore, to contend that the Indians had any
claim upon the United States, after the treaty of 1855, for lands
west of the 100th degree of west longitude. The treaty closed that
dispute forever, if it had not been closed by previous treaties and
by the special grant of 1842 made pursuant to Article 2 of the
treaty of 1830, and which, as we have said, estopped the Indians
from claiming any lands not within the limits of the United States.
As to the lands the control of which was acquired by the lease
embodied in the treaty of 1855, it may be assumed that the United
States did not then desire to obtain the fee, but took the lands
for specifically defined objects, upon the accomplishment of which
the Indians could insist as a condition of the lease.
After the treaty of 1855, it was not possible for the Choctaws
to assert any claim to lands west of the 100th degree of west
longitude, and as to the lands between that and the 98th degree of
west longitude, the United States held them under a permanent lease
given in 1855, which practically divested the Choctaws of all
interest in the territory constituting the Leased District except
that they could settle in it if they so desired.
IV. Subsequently to the making of the treaty of 1855, and until
the Civil War intervened, the relations between the United States
and these Indians were, so far as the record discloses, entirely
harmonious. But their relations changed when that war opened and
the Choctaws and Chickasaws cooperated with the confederate forces,
making war upon Indians adhering to the United States. As early as
February 7, 1861, the General Council of the Choctaw Nation passed
resolutions declaring that
Page 179 U. S. 523
in the event of a permanent dissolution of the Union, the
natural affections, education, institutions and interests of its
people indissolubly bound them to the confederate states, Reb.Rec.
Series I, Vol. 1, p. 682, and on the 25th of May, 1861, the
Legislature of the Chickasaws passed resolutions declaring that in
the war then opening, the confederate states were their natural
allies, and called upon the neighboring Indian nations to cooperate
with them in the defense of the territory they inhabited "from
northern invasion by the Lincoln hordes and Kansas robbers."
Reb.Rec. Series I, Vol. 3, p. 585.
The Civil War having ended, a council was held in September,
1865, at Fort Smith, Arkansas, which was attended by D. N. Cooley,
Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and others named by the President.
There were also in attendance representatives of the Choctaws,
Chickasaws, Creeks, Cherokees, Seminoles, Osages, Senecas,
Shawnees, Quapaws, Wyandottes, Wichitas, and Comanches. What was
said at that meeting by the commissioners on behalf of the United
States is supposed to have some bearing upon the present issues. An
address was made by Chairman Cooley to the Indian delegates, the
substance of which was printed in a newspaper, and was as
follows:
"Brothers: after considering your speeches made yesterday, the
commissioners have decided to make the following reply and
statement of the policy of the government. Brothers: we are
instructed by the President to negotiate a treaty or treaties with
any or all of the nations, tribes, or bands of Indians in the
Indian Territory, Kansas, or of the plains west of the Indian
Territory and Kansas. The following-named nations and tribes have
by their own acts, by making treaties with the enemies of the
United States at the dates hereafter named, forfeited all right to
annuities, lands, and protection by the United States. The
different nations and tribes having made treaties with the rebel
government are as follows,
viz: the Creek Nation, July 10,
1861; Choctaws and Chickasaws, July 12, 1861; Seminoles, August 1,
1861; Shawnees, Delawares, Wichitas, and affiliated tribes,
residing in leased territory, August 12, 1861; the Comanches of the
Prairie, August 12, 1861; the Great Osages, October 2, 1861; the
Senecas, Senecas and Shawnees
Page 179 U. S. 524
(Neosho agency), October 4, 1861; the Quapaws, October 4, 1861;
the Cherokees, October 7, 1861. By these nations having entered
into treaties with the so-called confederate states, and the
rebellion being now ended, they are left without any treaty
whatever, or treaty obligation for protection by the United
States."
"Under the terms of the treaties with the United States and the
law of Congress of July 5, 1862, all these nations and tribes
forfeited and lost all their rights to annuities and lands. The
President, however, does not desire to take advantage of or enforce
the penalties for the unwise actions of these nations. The
President is anxious to renew the relations which existed at the
breaking out of the rebellion. We, as representatives of the
President, are empowered to enter into new treaties with the proper
delegates of the tribes located within the so-called Indian
Territory and others above named living west and north of the
Indian Territory. Such treaties must contain substantially the
following stipulations: 1. Each tribe must enter into a treaty for
permanent peace and amity with themselves, each nation and tribe,
and with the United States. 2. Those settled in the Indian
Territory must bind themselves, when called upon by the government,
to aid in compelling the Indians of the plains to maintain peaceful
relations with each other, with the Indians in the territory, and
with the United States. 3. The institution of slavery, which has
existed among several of the tribes, must be forthwith abolished,
and measures taken for the unconditional emancipation of all
persons held in bondage, and for their incorporation into the
tribes on an equal footing with the original members, or suitably
provided for. 4. A stipulation in the treaties that slavery or
involuntary servitude shall never exist in the tribe or nation
except in punishment of crime. 5. A portion of the lands hitherto
owned and occupied by you must be set apart for the friendly tribes
now in Kansas and elsewhere on such terms as may be agreed upon by
the parties and approved by the government or such as may be fixed
by the government. 6. It is the policy of the government, unless
other arrangements be made, that all the nations and tribes in the
Indian Territory be formed into one consolidated government,
Page 179 U. S. 525
after the plan proposed by the Senate of the United States in a
bill for organizing the Indian Territory. 7. No white person except
officers, agents, and employees of the government, or of any
internal improvement authorized by the government, will be
permitted to reside in the territory unless formally incorporated
with some tribe according to the usages of the band."
"Brothers: you have now heard and understand what are the views
and wishes of the President, and the commissioners, as they told
you yesterday, will expect definite answers from each of you upon
the questions submitted. As we said yesterday, we say again, that
in any event, those who have always been loyal, although their
nations may have gone over to the enemy, will be liberally provided
for and dealt with."
The committee on the part of the Choctaws and Chickasaws, in
reply to the proposition submitted by the commissioners of the
United States as the basis of new treaties, said:
"We are pleased to learn that you propose to renew your previous
relations with us, and we are willing to go into negotiations for
the making of a new treaty with the United States, and as a basis
of this new treaty accept Articles 1st and 7th. In reference to the
requirements of the Article 2, we desire to say that we wish as far
as possible to avoid coming in conflict with our red brethren,
should any of them be so unfortunate as to get into conflict with
the United States authorities. We are willing to guarantee all our
influence in favor of peace in all its bearings with our red
brethren, and will not object to any of our citizens' volunteering
in any war in which the United States may become involved, for the
aiding of the United States. We are willing to enter into
negotiations for the settlement of all the points contained in the
3d and 4th Articles. On certain terms, on which we can doubtless
agree with you, we are willing to admit the settlement of other
tribes within our territory, as proposed in the 5th Article. We are
willing to submit the territorial bill referred to in the 6th
Article for the consideration of our respective general councils,
and for this purpose request a copy of that bill for the principal
chief of the Choctaw Nation and for the governor of the
Chickasaw
Page 179 U. S. 526
Nation. We accept Article 7, and are willing to have the
provisions thereof incorporated into the treaty. We are also
willing to incorporate a provision that no individual shall be
proscribed, or any act of forfeiture or confiscation passed against
those who remain friendly to the United States, and that they shall
enjoy equal privileges with other members of the nation."
Among the documents in the record is a draft of a treaty between
the United States and the Choctaw and Chickasaw tribes which, it
was stated, was submitted by the United States commissioners at the
council held at Fort Smith. It is said in the opinion of the Court
of Claims -- and we think correctly -- that this treaty was never
agreed upon or executed. It need not therefore be set out here.
The reports, official and unofficial, of what was said and done
before and at the Fort Smith council show that the persons in
attendance there were aware of the exact situation. They separated
with the expectation or understanding that the matters then under
consideration were to be further discussed and a conclusion reached
in Washington in the spring of 1866 at which place delegates from
the Indian tribes would attend.
In 1866, the negotiations between the United States and the
Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations were resumed at Washington. The
result was the treaty concluded April 28, 1866. 14 Stat. 769. The
respective rights of the Choctaws and Chickasaws and of the United
States, as involved in the present case, depend upon the
construction of that treaty.
It is to be taken as beyond dispute that, when the parties
entered upon the negotiations resulting in that treaty, neither
overlooked the fact that the Choctaws, by the treaty of 1855, had
forever quitclaimed any claim they had to territory west of the
100th degree of west longitude. Nor could either have forgotten
that the United States had, by the same treaty, acquired the
control of the Leased District, without limit as to time, for the
permanent settlement of certain Indians, excluding other Indians.
Bearing these facts in mind, let us see what was effected by the
treaty of 1866.
By Article 1, permanent peace and friendship were established
between the United States and those nations, the Choctaws and
Page 179 U. S. 527
Chickasaws binding themselves respectively to use their
influence and to make every exertion to induce Indians of the
plains to maintain peaceful relations with each other, with other
Indians, and with the United States.
By Article 2, the Choctaws and Chickasaws covenanted and agreed
that neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, otherwise than in
punishment of crime whereof the parties had been duly convicted in
accordance with laws applicable to all members of the particular
nation, should ever exist in those nations.
Article 3 -- the important part of that treaty -- was in these
words:
"The Choctaws and Chickasaws, in consideration of the sum of
three hundred thousand dollars, hereby
cede to the United
States
the territory west of the 98� of west longitude,
known as the Leased District, provided that the said
sum shall be invested and held by the United States at an
interest not less that five percent,
in trust for the said
nations until the legislatures of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations
respectively shall have made such laws, rules, and regulations as
may be necessary to give all persons of African descent resident in
the said nations at the date of the treaty of Fort Smith, and their
descendants, heretofore held in slavery among said nations, all the
rights, privileges, and immunities, including the right of
suffrage, of citizens of said nations, except in the annuities,
moneys, and public domain claimed by, or belonging to, said nations
respectively, and also to give to such persons who were residents
as aforesaid, and their descendants, forty acres each of the land
of said nations on the same terms as the Choctaws and Chickasaws,
to be selected on the survey of said land, after the Choctaws and
Chickasaws and Kansas Indians have made their selections as herein
provided, and immediately on the enactment of such laws, rules, and
regulations, the said sum of three hundred thousand dollars shall
be paid to the said Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations in the proportion
of three-fourths to the former and one-fourth to the latter -- less
such sum at the rate of one hundred dollars per capita as shall be
sufficient to pay such persons of African descent before referred
to as within ninety days after the passage of such laws, rules, and
regulations shall elect to remove and actually remove from the said
nations respectively.
Page 179 U. S. 528
And should the said laws, rules, and regulations not be made by
the legislatures of the said nations respectively, within two years
from the ratification of this treaty, then the said sum of three
hundred thousand dollars shall cease to be held in trust for the
said Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations, and be held for the use and
benefit of such of said persons of African descent as the United
States shall remove from the said territory in such manner as the
United States shall deem proper, the United States agreeing, within
ninety days from the expiration of the said two years, to remove
from said nations all such persons of African descent as may be
willing to remove, those remaining or returning after having been
removed from said nations to have no benefit of said sum of three
hundred thousand dollars or any part thereof, but shall be upon the
same footing as other citizens of the United States in the said
nations."
The Choctaws and Chickasaws further agreed in the same treaty
(Art. 4) that
"all negroes not otherwise disqualified or disabled shall be
competent witnesses in all civil and criminal suits and proceedings
in the Choctaw and Chickasaw courts, any law to the contrary
notwithstanding, and they fully recognize the right of the freedmen
to a fair remuneration on reasonable and equitable contracts for
their labor, which the law should aid them to enforce. And they
agree on the part of their respective nations that all laws shall
be equal in their operation upon the Choctaws, Chickasaws, and
negroes, and that no distinction affecting the latter shall at any
time be made, and that they shall be treated with kindness and be
protected against injury, and they further agree that, while the
said freedmen now in the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations remain in
said nations respectively, they shall be entitled to as much land
as they may cultivate for the support of themselves and families,
in cases where they do not support themselves and families by
hiring, not interfering with existing improvements without the
consent of the occupant, it being understood that, in the event of
the making of the laws, rules, and regulations aforesaid, the forty
acres aforesaid shall stand in place of the land cultivated as last
aforesaid."
By Articles 30 and 43 it was provided:
Page 179 U. S. 529
"Art. 30. The Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations will receive into
their respective districts east of the 98th degree of west
longitude, in the proportion of one-fourth in the Chickasaw and
three-fourths in the Choctaw Nations, civilized Indians from the
tribes known by the general name of the Kansas Indians, being
Indians to the north of the Indian Territory, not exceeding ten
thousand in number, who shall have in the Choctaw and Chickasaw
Nations, respectively, the same rights as the Choctaws and
Chickasaws, of whom they shall be the fellow citizens, governed by
the same laws and enjoying the same privileges, with the exception
of the right to participate in the Choctaw and Chickasaw annuities
and other moneys, and in the public domain, should the same or the
proceeds thereof be divided per capita among said Choctaws and
Chickasaws, and among others the right to select land as herein
provided for Choctaws and Chickasaws, after the expiration of the
ninety days during which the selections of land are to be made as
aforesaid by said Choctaws and Chickasaws, and the Choctaw and
Chickasaw Nations pledge themselves to treat the said Kansas
Indians in all respects with kindness and forbearance, aiding them
in good faith to establish themselves in their new homes, and to
respect all their customs and usages not inconsistent with the
constitution and laws of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations
respectively. In making selections after the advent of the Indians
and the actual occupancy of land in said nation, such occupancy
shall have the same effect in their behalf as the occupancies of
Choctaws and Chickasaws, and after the said Choctaws and Chickasaws
have made their selections as aforesaid, the said persons of
African descent mentioned in the third Article of the treaty shall
make their selection as therein provided, in the event of the
making of the laws, rules, and regulations aforesaid, after the
expiration of ninety days from the date at which the Kansas Indians
are to make their selections as therein provided, and the actual
occupancy of such persons of African descent shall have the same
effect in their behalf as the occupancies of the Choctaws and
Chickasaws."
"Art. 43. The United States promise and agree that no white
person, except officers, agents, and employees of the
government
Page 179 U. S. 530
and of any internal improvement company, or persons traveling
through, or temporarily sojourning in, the said nations, or either
of them, shall be permitted to go into
said territory
unless formally incorporated and naturalized by the joint action of
the authorities of both nations into one of the said nations of
Choctaws and Chickasaws according to their laws, customs, or
usages; but this Article is not to be construed to affect parties
heretofore adopted, or to prevent the employment temporarily of
white persons who are teachers, mechanics, or skilled in
agriculture, or to prevent the legislative authorities of the
respective nations from authorizing such works of internal
improvement as they may deem essential to the welfare and
prosperity of the community, or be taken to interfere with or
invalidate any action which has heretofore been had in this
connection by either of the said nations."
By Article 46 it was provided:
"Of the moneys stipulated to be paid to the Choctaws and
Chickasaws under this treaty for the
cession of the Leased
District, and the admission of the Kansas Indians among them, the
sum of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars shall be advanced and
paid to the Choctaws, and fifty thousand dollars to the Chickasaws,
through their respective treasurers, as soon as practicable after
the ratification of this treaty, to be repaid out of said moneys or
any other moneys of said nations in the hands of the United States,
the residue, not affected by any provision of this treaty, to
remain in the Treasury of the United States at an annual interest
of not less than five percent, no part of which shall be paid out
as annuity, but shall be annually paid to the treasurer of said
nations, respectively, to be regularly and judiciously applied,
under the direction of their respective legislative councils, to
the support of their government, the purposes of education, and
such other objects as may be best calculated to promote and advance
the welfare and happiness of said nations and their people
respectively."
"Art. 51. It is further agreed that all treaties and parts of
treaties inconsistent herewith be, and the same are hereby,
declared null and void."
14 Stat. 769-781.
It is unnecessary to refer to any other provisions of the
Treaty
Page 179 U. S. 531
of April 28, 1866, for none of them throws any light on the
present inquiry.
The lands in dispute, being tract 5 and marked Wichitas on the
above
179 U. S.
constitute a part of the Leased District which was
ceded
to the United States by the third section of the treaty of 1866.
That is admitted. Did that treaty make an absolute, unconditional
cession to the United States of these lands, free of any trust,
express or implied? Or, stating the question in another form, is it
consistent with that treaty to hold, as the court below did, that
the lands were ceded to the United States in trust that the lands
themselves, or, if they were appropriated or taken by the United
States, their value, should be paid to the Indians whenever they
ceased to be used exclusively for the settlement of Indians
thereon?
There was much discussion at the bar as to the principles that
should govern the court when determining the scope and effect of a
treaty between the United States and Indian tribes. All agree that,
as a general rule, in the interpretation of written instruments,
the intention of the parties must control, and that such intention
is to be gathered from the words used, the words being interpreted
not literally nor loosely, but according to their ordinary
signification. If the words be clear and explicit, leaving no room
to doubt what the parties intended, they must be interpreted
according to their natural and ordinary significance. If the words
are ambiguous, then resort may be had to such evidence, written or
oral, as will disclose the circumstances attending the execution of
the instrument and place the court in the situation in which the
parties stood when they signed the writing to be interpreted.
To what extent, if at all, have these rules been enlarged or
modified when the instrument to be interpreted is a treaty between
the United States and Indian tribes? In
The Kansas
Indians, 5 Wall. 737,
72 U. S. 760,
it was said that enlarged rules of construction have been adopted
in reference to Indian treaties, citing as the words of Chief
Justice Marshall in
Worcester v.
Georgia, 6 Pet. 515,
31 U. S. 563,
31 U. S. 582
(but which were in fact the words of Mr. Justice McLean in his
concurring opinion in that case) the following:
"The language used in treaties with the Indians
Page 179 U. S. 532
should never be construed to their prejudice. If words be made
use of which are susceptible of a more extended meaning than their
plain import, as connected with the tenor of the treaty, they
should be considered as used only in the latter sense."
Mr. Justice McLean further said: "How the words of the treaty
were understood by this unlettered people, rather than their
critical meaning, should form the rule of construction." In
United States v. Kagama, 118 U. S. 375,
118 U. S.
383-384, the Indian tribes in this country are spoken of
as wards of the nation, communities dependent for their food and
their political rights, as well as for protection, on the United
States. And in
Choctaw Nation v. United States,
119 U. S. 1,
119 U. S. 28, it
was said that the relation between the United States and the Indian
tribes was that of superior and inferior, and that the rules to be
applied in the case then before the court were those that govern
public treaties, which, even in case of controversies between
nations equally independent, were not to be interpreted as rigidly
as documents between private persons governed by a system of
technical law, "but in the light of the larger reason and the
superior justice that constitute the spirit of the law of nations."
In
Jones v. Meehan, 175 U. S. 1,
175 U. S. 11, it
was said that a treaty between the United States and an Indian
tribe must be construed not according to the technical meaning of
its words to learned lawyers, but in the sense in which they would
naturally be understood by the Indians.
But in no case has it been adjudged that the courts could, by
mere interpretation or in deference to its view as to what was
right under all the circumstances, incorporate into an Indian
treaty something that was inconsistent with the clear import of its
words. It has never been held that the obvious palpable meaning of
the words of an Indian treaty may be disregarded because, in the
opinion of the court, that meaning may in a particular transaction
work what it would regard as injustice to the Indians. That would
be an intrusion upon the domain committed by the Constitution to
the political departments of the government. Congress did not
intend, when passing the act under which this litigation was
inaugurated, to invest the Court of Claims or this Court with
authority to determine
Page 179 U. S. 533
whether the United States had, in its treaty with the Indians,
violated the principles of fair dealing. What was said in
The Amiable
Isabella, 6 Wheat. 1,
19 U. S. 71-72, is
evidently applicable to treaties with Indians. Mr. Justice Story,
speaking for the Court, said:
"In the first place, this Court does not possess any
treatymaking power. That power belongs by the Constitution to
another department of the government, and to alter, amend, or add
to any treaty by inserting any clause, whether small or great,
important or trivial, would be on our part an usurpation of power,
and not an exercise of judicial functions. It would be to make, and
not to construe, a treaty. Neither can this Court supply a
casus omissus in a treaty, any more than in a law. We are
to find out the intention of the parties by just rules of
interpretation applied to the subject matter, and, having found
that, our duty is to follow it as far as it goes, and to stop where
that stops -- whatever may be the imperfections or difficulties
which it leaves behind. . . . In the next place, this Court is
bound to give effect to the stipulations of the treaty in the
manner and to the extent which the parties have declared, and not
otherwise. We are not at liberty to dispense with any of the
conditions or requirements of the treaty, or to take away any
qualification or integral part of any stipulation, upon any notion
of equity or general convenience, or substantial justice. The terms
which the parties have chosen to fix, the forms which they have
prescribed, and the circumstances under which they are to have
operation rest in the exclusive discretion of the contracting
parties, and whether they belong to the essence or the modal parts
of the treaty, equally give the rule to judicial tribunals."
So, in
Beecher v. Wetherby, 95 U. S.
517,
95 U. S. 525,
which involved the question whether the fee to certain lands was in
the United States, with the right of occupancy only in certain
Indians, this Court said:
"It is to be presumed that in this matter the United States
would be governed by such considerations of justice as would
control a Christian people in their treatment of an ignorant and
dependent race. Be that as it may, the propriety or justice of
their action towards the Indians with respect to their lands is a
question of governmental policy, and is not a matter
Page 179 U. S. 534
open to discussion in a controversy between third parties
neither of whom derives title from the Indians. The right of the
United States to dispose of the fee of lands occupied by them has
always been recognized by this Court from the foundation of the
government."
The same principle was announced in
United States v. Old
Settlers, 148 U. S. 427,
148 U. S. 468.
That suit was brought under an act of Congress authorizing the
Court of Claims to pass upon a claim preferred by an Indian tribe,
the intention of Congress, as stated in the act, being
"to allow the said Court of Claims unrestricted latitude in
adjusting and determining the said claim, so that the rights, legal
and equitable, both of the United States and of said Indians, may
be fully considered and determined."
In that case, it was sought to have the claimants relieved of
certain provisions of a treaty because of fraud and duress alleged
to have been practiced by the United States. But this Court
said:
"There is nothing in the jurisdictional Act of February 25,
1889, inconsistent with the treaty of 1846 (or any other), and
nothing to indicate that Congress attempted by that act to
authorize the courts to proceed in disregard thereof.
Unquestionably a treaty may be modified or abrogated by an act of
Congress, but the power to make and unmake is essentially political
and not judicial, and the presumption is wholly inadmissible that
Congress sought in this instance to submit the good faith of its
own action or the action of the government to judicial decision, by
authorizing the stipulations in question to be overthrown upon an
inquiry of the character suggested and the act does not in the
least degree justify any such inference."
In the Jurisdictional Act of March 2, 1895, 28 Stat. 876, 898,
c. 188, Congress authorized suit to be brought in the Court of
Claims, so that the rights, legal and equitable, of the United
States and of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations, and the Wichita
and Affiliated Bands of Indians in the premises "shall be fully
considered and determined, and to try and determine all questions
that may arise on behalf of either party," taking care, however, to
add that nothing in the act
"shall be accepted or construed as a confession that the United
States admit that
Page 179 U. S. 535
the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations have any claim to or interest
in said lands or any part thereof."
It is thus clear that the Court of Claims was without authority
to determine the rights of parties upon the ground of mere justice
or fairness, much less, under the guise of interpretation, to
depart from the plain import of the words of the treaty. Its duty
was to ascertain the intent of the parties according to the
established rules for the interpretation of treaties. Those rules,
it is true, permit the relations between Indians and the United
States to be taken into consideration. But if the words used in the
treaty of 1866, reasonably interpreted, import beyond question an
absolute, unconditional cession of the lands in question to the
United States free from any trust, then the court cannot amend the
treaty or refuse to carry out the intent of the parties, as
gathered from the words used, merely because one party to it held
the relation of an inferior and was politically dependent upon the
other, or because in the judgment of the court the Indians may have
been overreached. To hold otherwise would be practically to
recognize an authority in the courts not only to reform or correct
treaties, but to determine questions of mere policy in the
treatment of the Indians which it is the function alone of the
legislative branch of the government to determine.
It is said in the present case that the interpretation of the
treaty in accordance with the views of the United States would put
the government in the attitude of having acquired lands from the
Indians at a price far below their real value. Even if this were
true, it would not authorize the Court, in determining the legal
rights of the parties, to proceed otherwise than according to the
established principles of interpretation, and out of a supposed
wrong to one party, evolve a construction not consistent with the
clear import of the words of the treaty. If the treaty of 1866,
according to its tenor and obvious import, did injustice to the
Choctaws and Chickasaws, the remedy is with the political
department of the government. As there is no ground to contend in
this case that that treaty, if interpreted according to the views
of the government, was one beyond the power of the parties to make,
it is clear that, even if the United States did not deal generously
with the Choctaws and Chickasaws
Page 179 U. S. 536
in respect of the lands in dispute -- and we do not mean to say
that there is any ground whatever for so contending -- the wrong
done must be repaired by Congress, and cannot be remedied by the
courts without usurping authority that does not belong to them.
Looking now at the treaty of 1866, we are unable to concur in
the interpretation placed upon it by the Court of Claims. In our
opinion, its words plainly and obviously import a cession to the
United States of the territory constituting the Leased District
unaccompanied by any condition in the nature of a trust, express or
implied, except that the
money to be paid by the United
States in consideration of the cession was to be invested and held
by the United States "in trust" for certain specified objects. The
declaration of a trust touching the money, and the failure to
accompany the cession of the lands with any declaration of a trust
in respect to them, manifestly shows that there was an intention to
pass to the United States an absolute title to the lands, and to
abrogate the existing lease. The words in Article 3 of the
treaty,
"the Choctaws and Chickasaws, in consideration of the sum of
three hundred thousand dollars, hereby cede to the United States
the territory west of the 98� of west longitude
known as the Leased District,"
and the words in Article 46, "of the moneys stipulated to be
paid to the Choctaws and Chickasaws under this treaty
for the
cession of the Leased District," so clearly exclude the idea
of trust in reference to the lands that a different meaning cannot
be attached to them without doing violence to the words used by the
parties. It cannot be doubted, as we have heretofore said, that
during the negotiations resulting in the treaty of 1866, the
parties well knew that the territory constituting the Leased
District was held by the United States not absolutely or in fee,
but under lease, for the permanent settlement thereon of the
Wichita and certain other tribes or bands of Indians. The treaty of
1855 shows that upon its face. Now there is nothing whatever in the
treaty of 1866 that evinces a purpose to preserve the relations of
lessor and lessee in respect to the lands constituting the Leased
District. On the contrary, the relations of the parties having been
disturbed or destroyed by the Civil War, there was
Page 179 U. S. 537
a manifest purpose, not to renew and continue the relations of
lessor and lessee, but to have the territory in question ceded
absolutely to the United States.
It is said that the treaty of 1866, if interpreted in the light
of what occurred at the Fort Smith council held in September, 1865,
shows that the parties expected and intended that the lands ceded
should be accompanied with a trust in reference to the use of the
Leased District for the settlement of Indians. We cannot assent to
this view. The persons at that council who represented the United
States stated that the new Indian treaties to be made must contain
certain stipulations. But no one of those stipulations had specific
reference to the lands constituting the Leased District. It is true
that, of the stipulations mentioned by Commissioner Cooley at the
Fort Smith Council, the fifth declared that
"a portion of the lands hitherto owned and occupied by you [the
Indians] must be set apart for the friendly tribes now in Kansas
and elsewhere, on such terms as may be agreed upon by the parties
and approved by the government, or such as may be fixed by the
government,"
and that, by the seventh, it was provided that
"no white person, except officers, agents, or employees of the
government, or of any internal improvement authorized by the
government, will be permitted to reside in the territory unless
formally adopted into some tribe according to the usages of the
band."
But those stipulations had no reference to the Leased District
then held by the United States under the treaty of 1855 for the
permanent settlement of Indians. The reference in the fifth and
seventh proposed stipulations related, so far as the Choctaws and
Chickasaws were concerned, to lands "owned and occupied by them" --
that is, to the territory, respectively, of the Choctaws and
Chickasaws east of the 98th degree of west longitude, which was
controlled by them and in which their laws and usages prevailed.
Those nations did not then occupy the Leased District, but did own
and occupy lands east of that district, and in that territory,
their laws and usages controlled.
The treaty of 1866 contains no word or clause qualifying or
limiting the absolute cession made by Article 3 of the territory
constituting the Leased District. If the parties to it intended
Page 179 U. S. 538
that the lands constituting that district should continue to be
held and used by the United States as they were then held and used
under the treaty of 1855 -- that is, under lease -- the treaty of
1866 would not have declared, without qualification, that the
Choctaws and Chickasaws "
hereby cede" to the United States
the territory known as the Leased District, and omitted all words
that would, under the most liberal interpretation, either import a
continuation of the lease then existing or any trust connected with
the territory ceded. It is a fact not without significance that one
of the persons attesting the treaty of 1866 as a witness was an
eminent lawyer who was of counsel for the Choctaws and Chickasaws
during the negotiations at Washington resulting in that treaty. In
the view we take of the matter, we cannot suppose that he advised
the Indians that the treaty made any other than an unconditional
cession of the territory known as the Leased District.
If the Indians intended, so far as they were concerned, to pass
an absolute unencumbered title to the United States, it would, we
think, have been impossible to employ language more appropriate to
that object than is to be found in the treaty of 1866. Our
convictions upon this point are so decided that we feel constrained
to say that, if some of the parties had not been Indians, it would
never have occurred to anyone that the cession of territory made by
that treaty was attended by conditions in the nature of a trust.
While the dependent character of the Indians makes it the duty of
the court to closely scrutinize the provisions of the treaty and to
interpret them "in the light of the larger reason and the superior
justice that constitute the spirit of the law of nations,"
Choctaw Nation v. United States, 119 U. S.
1,
119 U. S. 28, the
Court must take care, when using its power to ascertain the
intention of the parties, not to disregard the obvious import of
the words employed, and thereby, in effect, determine questions of
mere governmental policy. We may repeat that if wrong was done to
the Indians by the treaty of 1866, interpreted as we have indicated
-- and we are not to be understood as expressing the opinion that
they were not under all the circumstances fairly dealt with -- the
wrong can be repaired by that branch of the government having full
power over the subject.
Page 179 U. S. 539
It is said that the interpretation placed by us upon the
Choctaw-Chickasaw Treaty of 1866 is inconsistent with that placed
by the United States upon the treaties made in the same year with
the Seminoles and the Creeks -- all of which treaties contemplated
a new policy for the Indian country and for the Indians. Let us see
what are the facts in relation to those treaties.
The preamble of the treaty with the Seminoles (which was
concluded March 21, 1866, and proclaimed August 16, 1866, 14 Stat.
755), recited:
"Whereas existing treaties between the United States and the
Seminole Nation are insufficient to meet their mutual necessities,
and whereas the Seminole Nation made a treaty with the so-called
Confederate States, August 1, 1861, whereby they threw off their
allegiance to the United States and unsettled their treaty
relations with the United States, and thereby incurred the
liability of forfeiture of all lands and other property held by
grant or gift of the United States, and whereas a treaty of peace
and amity was entered into between the United States and the
Seminole and other tribes at Fort Smith, September 10, 1865,
whereby the Seminoles revoked, cancelled and repudiated the said
treaty with the so-called Confederate States, and whereas the
United States, through its commissioners, in said treaty of peace,
promised to enter into treaty with the Seminole Nation to arrange
and settle all questions relating to and growing out of said treaty
with the so-called Confederate States, and whereas the United
States, in view of said treaty of the Seminole Nation with the
enemies of the government of the United States, and the consequent
liabilities of said Seminole Nation, and in view of its urgent
necessities for more lands in the Indian Territory, requires a
cession by said Seminole Nation of a part of its present
reservation, and is willing to pay therefor a reasonable price,
while at the same time providing new and adequate lands for
them."
And by the 3d Article of that treaty, it was provided:
"
In compliance with the desire of the United States to
locate other Indians and freedmen thereon, the Seminoles cede
and convey to the United States their entire domain, being the
tract of land ceded to the Seminole Indians by the Creek Nation
under the provisions of Article first, Treaty
Page 179 U. S. 540
of the United States with the Creeks and Seminoles made and
concluded at Washington, D.C., August 7th, 1856. In consideration
of said grant and cession of their lands, estimated at 2,169,080
acres, the United States agree to pay said Seminole Nation the sum
of $325,362, said purchase being at the rate of fifteen cents per
acre. The United States having obtained by grant of the Creek
Nation the westerly half of their lands, hereby grant to the
Seminole Nation the portion thereof hereafter described, which
shall constitute the national domain of the Seminole Indians."
The treaty concluded with the Creeks June 14, 1866, and
proclaimed August 11, 1866, 14 Stat. 785, contained a preamble
similar to the one in the treaty with the Seminoles, and which, in
addition, stated that "the United States
require of the
Creeks a portion of their land whereon to settle other Indians."
And, by the 3d Article of that treaty, it was provided:
"
In compliance with the desire of the United States to
locate other Indians and freedmen thereon, the Creeks hereby
cede and convey to the United States, to be sold to and used as
homes for such other civilized Indians as the United States may
choose to settle thereon, the west half of their entire domain, to
be divided by a line running north and south; the eastern half of
said Creek Lands being retained by them shall, except as herein
otherwise stipulated, be forever set apart as a home for said Creek
Nation, and in consideration of said cession of the west half of
their lands, estimated to contain 3,250,560 acres the United States
agree to pay the sum of thirty cents per acre, amounting to
$975,168, in the manner hereinafter provided."
By the Indian appropriation Act of March 2, 1889, c. 412, 25
Stat. 980, 1004, the sum of $1,912,942.02 was appropriated
"to pay in full the Seminole Nation of Indians for all the
right, title, interest, and claim which said nation of Indians may
have in and to certain lands ceded by Article 3"
of the above treaty with the Seminoles. And by an Act approved
March 1, 1889, c. 317, 25 Stat. 757, 759, Congress appropriated
$2,280,875.10 to pay the Creek Nation for the lands ceded by the
treaty of 1866 with them, the agreement with those Indians which
was the basis of the above act reciting, among other things,
that
Page 179 U. S. 541
the United States desired that "all of said ceded lands may be
entirely freed from any limitation in respect to the use and
enjoyment thereof."
Now it is argued that, if the interpretation placed by the
United States upon the treaty of 1866 with the Choctaws and
Chickasaws is accepted, the result will be that the general
government has been more liberal towards the Seminoles and Creeks
than it has been with the Choctaws and Chickasaws. But that cannot
constitute a reason why the Court should depart from the ordinary
signification of the words used in the treaty with the Choctaws and
Chickasaws. If Congress chose to adopt one course towards the
Seminoles and Creeks and a different course towards the Choctaws
and Chickasaws, it is not for the judiciary to defeat the will of
the legislative branch of the government by giving to an Indian
treaty a meaning not justified by its words.
Apart from this last view, we find clauses in the treaties with
the Seminoles and Creeks which are not in the treaty with the
Choctaws and Chickasaws, and which throw light upon the refusal of
the United States to make an appropriation to the latter tribes on
account of the particular lands here in question. In the treaties
of 1866 with the Seminoles and Creeks, respectively, by which they
ceded certain lands to the United States, it is expressly stated
that the cession was made "in compliance with the desire of the
United States to locate other Indians and freedmen thereon." No
such words are found in the treaty of cession concluded with the
Choctaws and Chickasaws. When the United States concluded the
treaty of 1866 with the Choctaws and Chickasaws, it did not need a
cession of the lands here in question in order simply to locate
Indians and freedmen on them. It already had, by the treaty of
1855, a perpetual lease of those lands for the settlement of
Indians. What it needed, perhaps what it required -- at any rate,
what it obtained -- was an unqualified cession of the territory,
unaccompanied by any declaration as to the use intended to be made
of it or by any words qualifying the absoluteness of the title
passed to the United States. It took an absolute cession, without
any declaration as to the uses to which the territory ceded was to
be devoted.
Page 179 U. S. 542
It may be that other considerations than those referred to
caused the use of the words in the treaties with the Seminoles and
Creeks that are not to be found in the treaty with the Choctaws and
Chickasaws. But in our judgment, the words of the treaty of 1866
with the Choctaws and Chickasaws so clearly import a cession of
title without limitation as to the uses to which the ceded
territory was to be devoted that the claim of those Indians can
derive no support from the transactions between the United States
and the Seminoles and Creeks.
But the Choctaws and Chickasaws lay great stress on the
following paragraph in section 15 of the Indian Appropriation Act
of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 989, 1025, c. 543:
"And the sum of $2,991,450 be, and the same is hereby,
appropriated out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise
appropriated, to pay the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations of Indians
for all the right, title, interest, and claim which said nations of
Indians may have in and to certain lands now occupied by the
Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indians under executive order, said lands
lying south of the Canadian River and now occupied by the said
Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indians, said lands have been ceded in trust
by Article 3 of the Treaty between the United States and said
Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations of Indians which was concluded April
28, 1866, and proclaimed on the 10th day of August of the same
year, and whereof there remains, after deducting allotments as
provided by said agreement, a residue ascertained by survey to
contain 2,393.160 acres, three-fourths of this appropriation to be
paid to such person or persons as are or shall be duly authorized
by the laws of said Choctaw Nation to receive the same at such time
and in such sums as directed and required by the legislative
authority of said Choctaw Nation, and one-fourth of this
appropriation to be paid to such person or persons as are or shall
be duly authorized by the laws of said Chickasaw Nation to receive
the same at such times and in such sums as directed and required by
the legislative authority of said Chickasaw Nation, this
appropriation to be immediately available and to become operative
upon the execution, by the duly appointed delegates of said
respective nations specially authorized thereto by law, of releases
and conveyances
Page 179 U. S. 543
to the United States of all the right, title, interest, and
claim of said respective nations of Indians in and to said land
(not including Greer County, which is now in dispute), in manner
and form satisfactory to the President of the United States, and
said releases and conveyances, when fully executed and delivered,
shall operate to extinguish all claim of every kind and character
of said Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations of Indians in and to the
tract of country to which said releases and conveyances shall
apply."
It is argued that the words in the above paragraph
"said lands have been ceded in trust by Article 3 of the treaty
between the United States and said Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations of
Indians, which was concluded April 28, 1866"
must be taken as an admission by the United States in 1891 that
the cession made by the treaty of 1866 was not intended to be
absolute and unconditional, but in trust to be used for the
settlement of Indians, upon the abandonment of which object by the
United States the ceded lands reverted to the Indians.
There would be force in this contention if it appeared that the
legislative and executive branches of the government had adhered to
the declaration in the Act of March 3, 1891. But such is not the
fact. For at the next session of Congress, President Harrison, by
special message dated February 18, 1892, called attention to the
above paragraph and, among other things, said:
"If this section had been submitted to me as a separate measure,
especially during the closing hours of the session, I should have
disapproved it, but as the Congress was then in its last hours, a
disapproval of the general Indian appropriation bill of which it
was a part would have resulted in consequences so far-reaching and
disastrous that I felt it my duty to approve the bill. But as a
duty was devolved upon me by the section quoted,
viz., the
acceptance and approval of the conveyances provided for, I have
felt bound to look into the whole matter, and in view of the facts
which I shall presently mention, to postpone any executive action
until these facts could be submitted to Congress."
After referring to some matters that have no connection with the
inquiry as to the meaning of the treaty of 1866 with the
Page 179 U. S. 544
Choctaws and Chickasaws, the President proceeded:
"After a somewhat careful examination of the question, I do not
believe that the lands for which this money is to be paid were, to
quote the language of section 15 of the Indian appropriation bill,
already set out,"
"ceded in trust by Article 3 of the treaty between the United
States and said Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations of Indians, which was
concluded April 28, 1866,"
"etc. It is agreed that the treaty contained no express
limitation upon the uses to which the United States might put the
territory known as the Leased District. The lands were ceded by
terms sufficiently comprehensive to have passed the full title of
the Indians. The limitation upon the use to which the government
might put them is sought to be found in a provision of the treaty
by which the United States undertook to exclude white settlers, and
in the expressions found in the treaties made at the same time with
the Creeks and other tribes of the purpose of the United States to
use the lands ceded by those tribes for the settlement of friendly
Indians. The stipulation as to the exclusion of white settlers
might well have reference solely to the national lands retained by
the Choctaw and Chickasaw tribes, and the reason for the
nonincorporation in the treaty with them of a statement of the
purpose of the government in connection with the use of the lands
is well accounted for by the fact that as to these lands the
government had already, under the treaty of 1855, secured the right
to use them perpetually for the settlement of friendly Indians.
This was not true as to the lands of the other tribes referred to.
The United States paid to the Choctaws and Chickasaws $300,000, and
the failure to insert the words that are called words of limitation
in this treaty points, I think, clearly to the conclusion that the
commissioners on the part of the government, and the Indians
themselves, must have understood that this government was acquiring
something more than a mere right to settle friendly Indians, which
is already possessed, and something more than the mere release of
the right which the Choctaws and Chickasaws had under the treaty of
1855 to select locations on these lands if they chose. Undoubtedly
it was the policy of this government for the time to hold these and
the adjacent lands as Indian country, and many of
Page 179 U. S. 545
the expressions in the proclamations of my predecessors and in
the reports of the Indian Bureau and of the Secretary of the
Interior mean this and nothing more. This is quite different from a
conditional title which limits the grant to a particular use, and
works a reinvestment of full title in the Indian grantors when that
use ceases. But those who hold most strictly that a use for Indian
purposes, where it is expressed, is a limitation of title "
brk:
seem to agree that the United States might pass a fee absolute
to other Indian tribes in the lands ceded for their occupancy.
Certainly it was not intended that, in settling friendly Indians
upon these lands, the government was to be restrained in its policy
of allotment and individual ownership. If, for an adequate
consideration by treaty, the United States placed upon these lands
other Indian tribes, it was competent to give them patents in fee
for a certain and agreed reservation. This being so, when the
policy of allotment is put into force, the compensation for the
unused lands should certainly go to the occupying tribe, which, in
the case supposed, had paid a full consideration for the whole
reservation. It will hardly be contended that in such case this
government should pay twice for the lands. . . . It is right also,
I think, that Congress, in dealing with this matter, should have
the whole question before it, for the declaration of Indian title
contained in this item of appropriation extends to a very large
body of land, and will involve very large future appropriations.
The Choctaw and Chickasaw Leased District, embracing the lands in
the Indian Territory between the 98th and 100th degrees of west
longitude and extending north and south from the main Canadian
River to the Red River, including Greer County, contains, according
to the public surveys, 7,713,239 acres, or, excluding Greer County,
6,201,663 acres. This Leased District is occupied as follows: Greer
County, by white citizens of Texas, 1,511,576 acres. The United
States is now prosecuting a case in the courts to obtain a judicial
declaration that this county is part of the Indian country. If a
decision should be rendered in its favor, the claim of the Choctaws
and Chickasaws to be paid for these lands at the rate named in this
appropriation would at once be presented. . . . Under the treaty of
1855 the Choctaws and Chickasaws quitclaimed
Page 179 U. S. 546
any supposed interest of theirs in the land west of the 100th
degree. The boundary between the Louisiana purchase and the Spanish
possessions by our treaty of 1819 with Spain was, as to these
lands, fixed upon the 100th degree of
brk:
west longitude. Our treaty with the Choctaws and Chickasaws,
made in 1820, extended their grant to the limit of our possessions.
It follows, of course, that these lands were included within the
boundaries of the State of Texas, when that state was admitted into
the Union, and the release of the Choctaws and Chickasaws, whatever
it was worth, operated for the benefit of the State of Texas, and
not of the United States. The lands became public lands of that
state. For the release of this claim, and for the lease of the
lands west of the 98th degree, the government of the United States
paid the sum of $800,000. In the calculations which have been made
to arrive at the basis of the appropriations under discussion, no
part of this sum is treated as having been paid for the lease. I do
not think that this is just to the United States. It seems probable
that a very considerable part of this consideration must have
related to the leased lands, because these were the lands in which
the Indian title was recognized and the treaty gave to the United
States a permanent right of occupation by friendly Indians. The sum
of $300,000, paid under the treaty of 1866, is deducted, as I
understand, in arriving at the sum appropriated. It seems to me
that a considerable proportion of the sum of $800,000 previously
paid should have been deducted in the same manner. I have felt it
may duty to bring these matters to the attention of Congress for
such action as may be thought advisable.
The President's message having been referred by the Senate to
its Committee on Indian Affairs, that Committee made a report
accompanied by the following resolution:
"
Resolved, That for reasons set forth in the report of
the Committee on Indian Affairs upon the President's message of
February 18, 1892, upon the appropriation of March 3, 1891, for
payment to the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations for their interest in
the Cheyenne and Arapahoe reservation in the Indian Territory,
submitted with this resolution, it is the opinion of the Senate
that there is no sufficient reason for interference in the due
execution
Page 179 U. S. 547
of the law referred to."
Congr.Rec. 52 Cong. 1st Sess. Vol. 23, pt. 5, p. 4093. The
resolution was adopted, and one of similar import was adopted by
the House of Representatives.
But on the 15th day of December, 1892, the House of
Representatives passed the following resolution:
"
Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives,
That the Secretary of the Treasury be, and he is hereby, directed
to retain and cover back into the Treasury $48,800 of the
appropriation made by Congress to pay the Choctaw and Chickasaw
tribes of Indians for their interest in lands of the Cheyenne and
Arapahoe reservation, dated March 3, 1891, which amount has been
ascertained, by a recount of the allottees of said Cheyennes and
Arapahoes to be by that amount more than is due the said Choctaws
and Chickasaws upon the purchase and settlement for their said
interest."
The Senate amended that resolution by adding thereto this
proviso:
"
Provided, however, That neither the passage of the
original act of appropriation to pay the Choctaw and Chickasaw
tribes of Indians for their interest in the lands of the Cheyenne
and Arapahoe reservation, dated March 3, 1891, nor of this
resolution shall be held in any way
to commit the government to
the payment of any further sum to the Choctaw and Chickasaw Indians
for any alleged interest in the remainder of the lands situated in
what in commonly known and called the 'Leased District.'"
In this amendment the House concurred, and on January 18, 1893,
the resolution as amended was approved by the President. Congr.Rec.
52d Cong.2d Sess. vol. 24, pt. 1, pp. 173, 379, 868; 27 Stat.
753.
Then followed the act of 1895, 28 Stat. 876, 898, c. 188, under
which the present suit was instituted, and which related to the
lands in the Leased District covered by the agreement of June 4,
1891, with the Wichita and Affiliated Bands of Indians -- the lands
in dispute. That act contained the proviso that nothing in it
"shall be accepted or construed
as a confession that the
United States admit that the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations have any
claim to or interest in said lands or any part thereof."
It thus appears that, while the majority of the members of the
two Houses of Congress at one time were apparently of the opinion
that the cession made by the treaty of 1866 with
Page 179 U. S. 548
the Choctaws and Chickasaws was encumbered with a trust that the
lands be used only for purposes connected with the settlement of
Indians, the head of the Executive Department of the government in
1892 was of opinion that no such trust existed or was intended.
Evidently the legislative branch of the government, when it came to
deal with the lands occupied by the Wichita and Affiliated Bands of
Indians, under the treaty of 1855, declined to apply the rule
adopted in the act of 1891 in reference to the lands in the Leased
District occupied by the Cheyennes and Arapahoes, and intended by
the act of 1895 to leave the whole question as to the legal and
equitable rights of the United States and of the Choctaw and
Chickasaw Nations in the lands now in dispute to be determined by
the courts. In other words, the rights of the parties are to be
determined by the rules established for the interpretation of such
instruments as the treaty of 1866, giving due weight to every fact
proper to be considered in ascertaining the intention of the
parties. In this view, we cannot hold that the above declaration in
the Act of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 989, 1025, c. 543, that the
cession made by the treaty of 1866 was attended by a trust is
sufficient to defeat such interpretation of the treaty as is
required by its words when reasonably interpreted or interpreted in
the sense in which they were naturally understood by the Indians
when they assented to the treaty.
V. We come to the material questions arising upon the appeal of
the Wichita and Affiliated Bands of Indians.
We have seen in the statement of the case that, by the agreement
of June 4, 1891, between the United States and the Wichita and
Affiliated Bands of Indians (ratified by the act of Congress of
March 2, 1895, 28 Stat. 876, 895, 896, 897, c. 188), the latter
ceded to the United States, without any reservation whatever, all
their claim and title in and to the lands embraced in tract 5 on
the above
179 U. S.
known as the Wichita Reservation. That agreement shows that, in
addition to the allotment of lands therein provided for, the
Wichita and Affiliated Bands insisted that further compensation in
money should be made to them by the United States for their
possessory right in and to the above lands in excess of that
required for the allotments.
Page 179 U. S. 549
And it was agreed that the question "as to what sum of money, if
any, shall be paid to said Indians for such surplus lands" should
be submitted to Congress, its decision thereon "to be final and
binding upon said Indians," provided, if any sum of money was
allowed by Congress for surplus lands, it should be subject to a
reduction of each allotment of land that was taken in excess of the
one thousand and sixty at that price per acre, if any, that might
be allowed by Congress. It was further stipulated in the agreement
of 1891
"that there shall be reserved to said Indians the right to
prefer against the United States any and every claim that they may
believe they have the right to prefer, save and except any claim to
the tract of country described in the first Article of this
agreement --"
the tract numbered 5 and marked "Wichitas."
The relief asked by the Wichita and Affiliated Bands was that
the petition of the Choctaws and Chickasaws be dismissed, and that
it be decreed that they were entitled to the proceeds of the sale
of all the lands involved in this case, to be paid to them from
time to time after being deposited in the Treasury as required by
the act of 1895.
The Court of Claims having decided that the Choctaws and
Chickasaws were entitled to such of the lands of the Wichita
Reservation as remained after making the allotments required by the
act of 1895, the only relief given by the decree to the Wichita and
Affiliated Bands was to adjudge that the members of those tribes
were each entitled to 160 acres of land out of the lands in
dispute, to be set apart for them by the United States, having due
regard to any improvements made thereon by them respectively, for
their permanent settlement. Of this decree the United States does
not complain, but the Choctaws and Chickasaws do complain of it so
far as it assigned 160 acres of laid to each member of the Wichita
and Affiliated Bands.
Under the views we have expressed, the Choctaws and Chickasaws
have had no interest in the particular lands in dispute since the
absolute cession made by them to the United States in the treaty of
1866. They have therefore no concern in the questions that have
arisen between the United States and the Wichita and Affiliated
Bands of Indians as to the disposition
Page 179 U. S. 550
of those lands. And as the United States does not complain of
the decree in favor of the latter Indians awarding to each 160
acres of land, the only question that remains to be considered
arises on the appeal of the Wichita and Affiliated Bands -- namely
whether the court below erred in not decreeing those Indians to be
entitled to the proceeds of the sale of such of the lands in
question as may be left after making the allotments in severalty
required by the act of Congress.
The question last stated does not require any extended
discussion; indeed, we are relieved of the necessity of discussing
it, for the United States at the present hearing concedes that the
removal of the Wichita and Affiliated Bands from their former
habitations and their permanent settlement upon the Wichita
Reservation invested them with a full right of occupancy of the
lands in dispute and with all the incidents of such right, and that
each member of those tribes is now entitled to receive 160 acres in
severalty, and "also the proceeds of the balance of the land
whenever such sales are made as authorized by the jurisdictional
act." "If this were all," say the representatives of the
government, "that the Wichita and Affiliated Bands claimed, the
United States would indorse the appeal of these Indians, instead of
opposing it." The government itself suggests -- and we recognize
its right under all the circumstances of this case to ask -- that
the decree as to the Wichita and Affiliated Bands be reversed and
set aside and the cause remanded with directions that, in addition
to the dismissal of the petition of the Choctaw and Chickasaw
Nations, and ordering the allotment of 160 acres of land in the
Wichita Reservation to each member of those tribes, they have the
benefit of the proceeds of the sale of such lands in the Wichita
Reservation as are not needed for the purposes indicated in the act
of Congress.
To what compensation are the Wichita and Affiliated Bands
entitled on account of the lands not needed for the allotments
required by the act of Congress? Upon this question this Court does
not feel bound to express any opinion. The agreement of 1891
between the United States and the Indians shows that the question
of the amount of money, if any, to be paid to the Indians on
account of the surplus lands was in dispute, and was
Page 179 U. S. 551
left to the determination of Congress, whose action, it was
agreed, should be final and binding on the Indians, and then by the
act of Congress that question was referred to the Court of Claims,
with a right of appeal to this Court. But Congress did not indicate
any rule for the guidance of the Court of Claims in fixing the
amount due the Indians. It only declared that the compensation
allowed in the present suit should not exceed $1.25 per each acre
of land not required for the allotments in severalty. This implied
that, in the judgment of Congress, a less amount might suffice to
meet the legal and equitable rights of the Indians and the ends of
justice. For the purpose of fixing that compensation, should the
surplus lands be valued as of the date the Indians were located on
the Reservation, or of the date the agreement of 1891 was ratified
by Congress, or of the date when this suit was brought, or of the
date when the allotments are all made? Upon these points, the act
of Congress is silent. The decree in the present suit should
declare that the Wichita and Affiliated Bands are entitled to
compensation in money for such of the lands as are not needed to
meet the requirements of the Act of March 2, 1895, 28 Stat. 894,
897, c. 188, leaving the amount to be fixed upon such evidence as
may be adduced by the parties, but not, in any event, exceeding the
limit prescribed by Congress.
The United States insists that it should be made a condition of
any decree recognizing the right to compensation on account of the
surplus lands, that the Wichita and Affiliated Bands should execute
a release to the United States of all right, title, interest, and
claim of every nature whatsoever in and to any lands within the
limits of the United States except those allotted to them. This
view cannot be adopted, because the pleadings do not inform the
Court of the existence of any claims of that kind; indeed, the
pleadings could not properly embrace any claim to lands, or to the
proceeds of any lands, except those within the Wichita Reservation.
The court below could not make any decree in reference to claims
that have not been referred to it by Congress. It is manifest that,
while Article 6 of the agreement of 1891 between the United States
and the Wichita and
Page 179 U. S. 552
Affiliated Bands of Indians reserved the right of the latter to
prefer against the United States any and every claim they believed
they had the right to make, the only suit authorized by the
jurisdictional act of 1895 was one that would determine the claim
of the Choctaws and Chickasaws of an interest
in the particular
lands here in dispute, and the claim of the Wichita and
Affiliated Bands to be compensated in money for their possessory
right
in such lands. No suit was authorized by that act
that would embrace any and every claim that the Wichita and
Affiliated Bands might elect to prefer against the United
States.
For the reasons given, the decree must be reversed with
directions to dismiss the petition of the Choctaw and Chickasaw
Nations, and to make a decree in behalf of the Wichita and
Affiliated Bands of Indians fixing the amount of compensation to be
made to them on account of such lands in the Wichita Reservation as
are not needed in order to meet the requirements of the act of
Congress of March 2, 1895, c. 188, and for such further proceedings
as may be consistent with law and with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
* A map which accompanied the treaty of 1818.