Where Congress has passed an act giving the Court of Claims
jurisdiction over the claims of certain Indians against the United
States, and in an action brought under such act a fund leas been
created and the mode of distribution has been prescribed by the
court which established the amount of the fund, and such method has
been approved by this Court, its disposition in accordance with the
course prescribed by the courts must be held a finality. Where the
circumstances are as in the case at bar, any further relief must be
obtained from Congress, and cannot be given by the courts.
The jurisdiction of the Court of Claims, as of other courts,
extends beyond the mere entry of a judgment to an inquiry whether
the judgment has been properly executed.
On March 19, 1890, Congress passed an act, 26 Stat. 24, giving
to the Court of Claims jurisdiction to try all questions arising
out of treaty stipulations between the United States and the
Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and Indiana, unembarrassed by
reason of any estoppel supposed to arise from the joint resolution
of Congress approved April 18, 1866, or a receipt in full given by
certain Pottawatomie Indians under the provisions of that
resolution. Under the authority of this act, two petitions were
filed in the Court of Claims, one on April 14, 1890, in behalf of
"the Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and Indiana," no individuals
being named, by John Critcher, their attorney, his authority being,
as stated, an "agreement between said Critcher and the business
committee of said Indians, dated September 29, 1887," the other on
November 5, 1890, by Phineas Pam-to-pee and 1,371 other
Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and Indiana, by John B. Shipman,
their attorney. On January 8, 1891, these two cases were
consolidated, and on June 27, 1892, 27 Ct.Cl. 493, a judgment was
rendered against the United States for $104,626. The claimants in
each of the cases so consolidated
Page 187 U. S. 372
appealed to this Court, which on April 17, 1893, affirmed the
judgment.
148 U. S. 148 U.S.
691. On April 20, 1893, the mandate was filed in the Court of
Claims.
While the judgment determined the amount due from the United
States, it did not determine to how many or which of the various
individual plaintiffs, or in what proportion, the amount thus
adjudged to be due from the United States should be paid. The Court
of Claims, in its opinion, said (p. 414):
"Congress have recognized, by the very title of the act, a
claimant designated as the 'Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and
Indiana,' and under that generic head is to be determined the
aggregate right of such claimant, leaving the question of
distribution to that department of the government which by law has
incumbent on it the administration of the trust which in legal
contemplation exists between the United States and the different
tribes of Indians."
By this Court it was stated (p.
148 U. S.
703):
"How the moneys so awarded should be distributed among the
several claimants it is not easy for us to say. The findings of the
court below, and the contradictory statements of the several briefs
filed by the appellants, have left this part of this subject in a
very confused condition."
And, after quoting the language of the court below, we further
said:
"On the other hand, it is contended, with great show of reason,
by the petitioners who are represented in case No. 1, 125 (16,842
in the court below), that the question of what Indians are entitled
to participate in the fund is one of law, to be settled by the
court, and should not be left to clerical functionaries. Our
difficulty in disposing of this part of the subject is that we have
neither findings nor concessions that enable us to deal with it
intelligently."
"It is to be observed that the court below found as a fact
(
see finding 10) that the average proportion between the
Indians who removed west and those who remained was as 2,812 of the
former to 291 of the latter, and the court used that relative
proportion of numbers as a factor in computing the amount due the
petitioners. "
Page 187 U. S. 373
"The petitioners, however, number 1,371 in case No. 1,125, but
the number represented in No. 1,133 (16,473 in the court below) is
not precisely stated. It is alleged in the brief filed in behalf of
petitioners in case No. 1,125 that only 91 Indians are actually
represented in case No. 1,133, and that the other 200 Indians are
among those represented in case 1,125."
"But these facts are not found for us in any authoritative form.
Nor, indeed, would it seem that the court below was furnished with
information sufficient to enable it to define what Indians or what
number of Indians entitled to distribution are represented by the
respective attorneys or agents."
"Unable as we are to safely adjudicate this question as between
these classes of claimants, we can do no better than acquiesce in
the suggestion of the court below that it is one to be dealt with
by the authorities of the government when they come to distribute
the fund."
"As these petitioners no longer have any tribal organization,
and as the statutes direct a division of the annuities and other
sums payable, by the head, and as such has been the practice of the
government, perhaps the necessities of the situation demand that
the identification of each claimant entitled to share in the
distribution shall be left to the officers who are the agents of
the government in paying out the fund.
United States v. Old
Settlers, 148 U. S. 427."
On August 23, 1894, Congress passed an act, 28 Stat. 424, 450,
appropriating money for the payment of judgments of the Court of
Claims, including therein the amount of this judgment in favor of
the Pottawatomie Indians. On March 2, 1895, it passed a further
act, 28 Stat. 894, directing the Secretary of the Interior to
detail or employ an Indian inspector to take a census and prepare a
roll of the Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and Indiana who were
entitled to share in such judgment, and appropriated the sum of
$1,000 therefor. After an inspector had been appointed under this
act, and while he was engaged in taking the census, counsel for the
present petitioners, who was counsel for petitioners in the second
of the original suits, addressed a communication to the Secretary
of the Interior of date July 27, 1895, representing that such
census,
Page 187 U. S. 374
by reason of the basis upon which it was ordered, would omit
many Indians entitled to share in the judgment. Before any further
instructions could be given, and in August, 1895, the inspector
filed in the Interior Department his report and census. Acting upon
the suggestions made in the letter of counsel, a new inspector was,
on February 5, 1896, designated to examine and report upon the
claims of any parties other than those already upon the census
roll, and upon his report, of date March 14, 1896, making some
slight additions, payment of the entire amount of the judgment was
made, and made per capita, to all the individuals on the revised
list. Thereafter, and on April 22, 1899, these petitioners filed
their petition in the Court of Claims, alleging in substance that
they were entitled to participate in the sum awarded against the
United States, and, as they had not received their share of those
moneys, they prayed a judgment therefor. Upon a hearing, the Court
of Claims decided against them, and on May 20, 1901, entered a
judgment, 36 Ct.Cl. 427, dismissing their petition, from which
judgment this appeal was taken.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
There is an apparent hardship in the result of this litigation,
but one which we are constrained to believe the plaintiffs are
chiefly responsible for, and which can be relieved only by the
action of Congress. Two sets of claimants appeared in the former
suits, each represented by separate counsel, and, after a
consolidation, the litigation proceeded only so far as to determine
the fact of the liability of the government and the extent of that
liability, leaving undetermined the individuals entitled to share
in the amount awarded against the government, or the proper basis
of distribution between those so entitled. In the
Page 187 U. S. 375
first of the suits, ninety-one Indians were, it is said,
represented, while the petition in the second suit set forth the
names of 1,371 persons whose names and residences were given, and
who were alleged to be entitled to share in whatever money should
be awarded against the government. The Court of Claims, after
finding the amount that was due, in terms declared that it left
"the question of distribution to that department of the
government which by law has incumbent on it the administration of
the trust which in legal contemplation exists between the United
States and the different tribes of Indians."
This Court affirmed that decision, and in so doing, after saying
that there was nothing in the record which would enable them to
identify the claimants, added:
"Perhaps the necessities of the situation demand that the
identification of each claimant entitled to share in the
distribution shall be left to the officers who are the agents of
the government in paying out the fund."
Such being the final orders in the consolidated cases,
proceedings for ascertaining the individual beneficiaries were
rightfully had in accordance with the directions then made. It is
no argument against upholding that which was done to say that some
other and more satisfactory procedure might have been ordered.
Possibly it would have been better for the court to have appointed
a master and proceeded according to the rules of equity in
identifying the beneficiaries of the fund. However, it was not so
ordered, and both the claimants and the government were instructed
and concluded by the decision in respect to the method of
identification.
The mandate of this Court was filed in the Court of Claims on
April 20, 1893, and on August 23, 1894, Congress passed an act
appropriating money for the payment of the judgment. The fund
thereby became available for distribution. No action, so far as
appears, was taken in the Court of Claims or in the Indian
Department looking to an identification of the parties entitled to
this money until after March 2, 1895. Nearly two years had passed,
and no effort had been made by the petitioners to establish to the
satisfaction of the court or the officers of the Indian Department
their right to be counted among the distributees of this fund.
Obviously these petitioners,
Page 187 U. S. 376
whose names and places of residence were stated in the second of
the original petitions, could, if they had seen fit, have furnished
proofs of identification.
After the passage of the Act of March 2, 1895, appropriating
$1,000 for expenses, an inspector was detailed as agent to take a
census and prepare a list or roll. Then, for the first time, and
after he had commenced his work, do we hear of any action on the
part of these petitioners, and that action consisted wholly of a
single letter from their counsel to the Secretary of the Interior.
This was the scope of that letter which was of date July 27, 1895:
the instructions given to the agent were that, in taking the
census, he should be guided by a payroll made in 1866, upon which
there had been a
pro rata distribution of money awarded by
Congress, and to account for all the Indians whose names appeared
upon that roll, and also to enroll all who could furnish proof of
being their legal descendants. The letter was a protest against
these instructions, calling attention to the fact that there were
prior rolls, particularly those of 1843 and 1844, which should be
taken into account in preparing the new census or list. The writer
also attached a list of the names of some who, so far as
ascertained, were, he stated, heirs of persons named on one or
other of these rolls, and of other individuals who were also
entitled to enrollment. Apparently before any action was taken by
the department upon this protest, the agent had returned a list or
census roll of those found by him entitled to share in the
fund.
Nevertheless, the contention made in the letter of counsel
having been presented to the Secretary of the Interior, he ruled
that those persons should be enrolled who were on any of the rolls
made during the years from 1843 to 1866 or descended from one upon
those rolls. Thereupon a new agent was appointed, and directed to
ascertain what additions to the list returned by the first agent
should be made under the new rulings. The work of this agent was
not fruitful in results, as he only reported the names of two
persons entitled to be added to the list or roll. Thereafter one
was added by the Department, and upon the list thus completed, the
money was paid out per capita. The number to whom distribution was
made, being all included
Page 187 U. S. 377
in the completed list or roll, was 272. This distribution was
made during the month of November, 1896, according to the statement
of Chief Justice Nott, in delivering the opinion of the court,
although there is no specific finding to that effect. The report of
the second agent was dated March 14, 1896. No action appears to
have been taken by the petitioners intermediate this report in
March and the distribution in November; none, indeed, until the
filing of this petition on April 22, 1899, more than three years
after the report.
The fourth finding in the present suit contains this
statement:
"None of the Indians, parties in or represented by the present
suit, were paid as aforesaid. A large number of them, to-wit, 272,
whose names are set forth in schedule A annexed to claimants'
requests for findings, were descended from Indians whose names were
enrolled on the rolls of Indians in Michigan in the years 1843,
1844 and 1866."
But, in respect to this finding, it was stated by Chief Justice
Nott:
"The evidence now produced to establish the fact that 272 of the
present claimants are direct descendants of the Indians who were
upon the rolls in 1843 and 1844 is not altogether satisfactory to
the court, but, in the absence of countervailing testimony, it may
be said to present a
prima facie case."
So the case stands thus: Congress having referred to the Court
of Claims an inquiry whether anything was due to "the Pottawatomie
Indians of Michigan and Indiana" by reason of treaty stipulations,
nearly fifteen hundred individuals appeared in two suits,
subsequently consolidated, claiming that there was a large amount
due under those stipulations, and representing that they were the
parties entitled to the benefit thereof. The result of that
litigation was to determine that a certain amount was due to those
Indians, but, there being no evidence to identify the individuals
who came within the description and were entitled to share in the
amount found due, the judgment was simply for a recovery of such
amount, and it was specially directed that the identification of
the individuals entitled thereto should be left to the officers of
the Indian Department. After two years had passed without any
evidence being furnished by
Page 187 U. S. 378
individuals of their right to participate in the fund, Congress
directed the Secretary of the Interior to appoint an agent to
examine into the matter and prepare a proper roll or list. While
such agent was acting, a protest was made by the counsel in one of
those suits against the basis upon which he was preparing the roll.
Although that agent had finished his work, the Secretary of the
Interior accepted the suggestion of counsel, and directed a new
agent to examine and report any names which, upon the basis
suggested by counsel, should be added to the roll already prepared.
As the result of the reports of these two agents, a roll was
prepared containing the names of 272 persons, and the fund was
distributed among them.
There is nothing in the record in the way of finding, report, or
letter tending to show what efforts the first agent made in respect
to the matter of identification, what course he pursued or what
steps he took, and in respect to the second agent, all that is
disclosed is that which appears in his report, which details at
some length his various efforts to secure evidences of
identification of different individuals. In short, it must be
assumed, in the absence of any showing to the contrary, that the
officers of the government acted reasonably, fairly, and with all
needed diligence in discharging the duty imposed upon them. While
from the present findings it appears that they made a mistake, and
did not include all who ought to have been included as
beneficiaries, yet their instructions conformed to the suggestions
of counsel for petitioners, and there is nothing to show that they
did not make a full and honest effort to carry out those
instructions. Complaint therefore must be upon one of two grounds:
either that the proper course to pursue in the way of
identification was not taken -- but that objection comes too late,
for it was concluded by the prior decision -- or that, a mistake
having been made in the matter of identification, the government
must assume all the burden of the mistake, and pay a second time
that which it has once paid in pursuance of the directions of the
court. That is really the contention of the petitioners.
They were petitioners in one of the original suits, and contend
that they were entitled to share in the fund, and that, as
Page 187 U. S. 379
the full amount awarded by the court and appropriated by
Congress has already been paid to others, they are entitled to a
judgment against the government for that which ought to have been
paid to them out of the prior appropriation. The Court of Claims
finds that of these petitioners 272 ought to have been placed upon
the census roll, and were entitled to a share in the fund. The
failure to receive their share may be a hardship to these
petitioners, but it must be remembered that the method of
ascertaining those entitled was prescribed by the court and pursued
by the government. Having been so pursued, that fund must be
considered as properly distributed.
This is not an ordinary judgment at law in which the plaintiff
entitled to receive and the defendant bound to pay are both named,
and in which the absolute duty is cast upon the defendant to see
that the right party is paid, but a case in which the amount of a
fund for distribution was determined, and directions made for
ascertaining the beneficiaries of that fund. The debtor and the
beneficiaries were each interested in the question of
identification, and both bound by the conclusion reached in respect
thereto if the directions were fully complied with.
To what would any other ruling result? The finding which,
evidently from the opinion of Chief Justice Nott, was not very
clearly established, that 272 in addition to those already paid
were entitled to a part of the fund, does not include other
claimants, and if these petitioners should obtain a judgment
against the United States, other petitioners might come forward
with like claim, and so the government be compelled to pay over and
over again, although it had made one payment in compliance with the
directions of the court. Further, if there were really more
beneficiaries entitled to share in this fund than those who
actually received payment, those who were paid received each too
much and should return the overplus, and the amount of that
overplus would be constantly increased as in successive actions
there were added further beneficiaries, for the distribution was,
as stated, per capita -- a mode of distribution contended for by
the petitioners. Petitioners seem to assume that, although the
government took the course prescribed by the court in ascertaining
the individuals entitled to
Page 187 U. S. 380
share in that fund, it assumed all the risk of mistake, however
made, and that they could wait until after the government had acted
and made the distribution, and that no responsibility rested upon
them to furnish evidences of their title. For reasons stated, we
cannot assent to this view. Where a fund has been created, and the
mode of distribution prescribed by the court which established the
amount of the fund, its disposition in accordance with the course
prescribed by the court must be held a finality, and in the case at
bar any further relief must be obtained from Congress, and cannot
be given by the courts.
It is suggested, though not by counsel, that the Court of Claims
had no jurisdiction to entertain this action, and, that therefore
our order should be to reverse the judgment and remand the case
with instructions to dismiss for want of jurisdiction. The basis of
this suggestion is the contention that the Act of March 19, 1890,
simply gave to the Court of Claims jurisdiction to determine the
sum due the Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and Indiana, without
the power to identify the particular individuals entitled to share
in the amount found due, and it is said that this was so decided in
the prior case. We do not so understand that decision. The act, so
far as material, reads as follows:
"Whereas, representatives of the Pottawatomie Indians of
Michigan and Indiana, in behalf of all the Pottawatomie Indians of
said states, make claim against the United States on account of
various treaty provisions which, it is alleged, have not been
complied with: Therefore,"
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the
Court of Claims is hereby authorized to take jurisdiction of and
try all questions of difference arising out of treaty stipulations
with the said Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and Indiana, and to
render judgment thereon; power is hereby granted the said court to
review the entire question of difference
de novo, and it
shall not be estopped by the joint resolution of Congress, approved
twenty-eighth July, eighteen hundred and sixty-six, entitled 'Joint
Resolution for the relief of certain
Page 187 U. S. 381
Chippewa, Ottawa and Pottawatomie Indians,' nor by the receipt
in full given by said Pottawatomies under the provisions of said
resolution, nor shall said receipt be evidence of any fact except
of payment of the amount of money mentioned in it."
Two suits were commenced in the Court of Claims, as heretofore
stated, and by that court consolidated. In one, a certain number of
individuals were named as petitioners. In the other, it was
admitted that ninety-one persons were represented by their
authorized attorney, as appeared by agreement between the attorney
and their business committee. The court, after consolidating the
two actions, proceeded to determine the amount due, and made no
finding as to the individuals entitled to share in such amount; but
such identification was for want of sufficient evidence to enable
the court to determine the question. This is apparent from the
opinion of that court in the present case, for it is said by Chief
Justice Nott in delivering that opinion:
"It is unfortunate for some of the claimants in the present suit
that the evidence upon which they now rely was not before the court
then. . . . The court deemed itself bound by the action of the
government in recognizing the parties represented by the former
suit [that is, one of the two suits consolidated], and accordingly
rendered judgment for them; but the court did not undertake to
determine who the then existing individual claimants were who were
entitled to participate in the distribution."
Again, after quoting from the opinion of this Court, he
said:
"At this point, if the former case had been a similar suit in
chancery between ordinary litigants, it would have been referred to
a master or referee to ascertain and report as to the individual
claimants entitled to recover, and the final decree would not have
been entered until a coming in and confirmation or correction of
the master's report. The Secretary of the Interior, however, seems
to have inferred from language in the opinions of the two courts
that he was authorized to proceed and ascertain who those Indians
were, and to prescribe the methods for so ascertaining and
determining the amount to be distributed to each individual
claimant."
And, after referring
Page 187 U. S. 382
to a plea in behalf of these individual claimants on account of
their ignorance, added,
"but the former case, in which the court might have exercised
the discretion of a court of equity, and allowed parties to come in
even after the decree and assert their rights, is closed; the
judgment therein has been satisfied; the claimants stand directly
upon their legal rights, and there cannot be one law for the
intelligent and another for the ignorant."
And this Court, in its opinion, used the language quoted in the
preliminary statement of fact. It is obvious from these quotations
from the opinions that both the Court of Claims and this Court
understood that the act gave jurisdiction not only to ascertain the
amount due, but also to identify the individuals entitled to share
therein, and that the failure to find the latter resulted from a
lack of evidence -- a lack the plaintiffs endeavor in this action
to supply.
But even if the language of the prior opinions of the Court of
Claims and this Court can be tortured into a different
construction, still there can be no question of the jurisdiction of
the Court of Claims over the present action. The jurisdiction of a
court is not exhausted by the mere entry of a judgment. It always
has power to inquire whether that judgment has been executed, and
the contention here is -- and it is the basis of this suit -- that
the judgment which was rendered in the prior suit has not been
executed. It would be an anomaly to hold that a court having
jurisdiction of a controversy, and which renders a judgment in
favor of A against B, had no power to inquire whether that judgment
has been rightly executed by a payment from B to C. If the Court of
Claims had no authority to inquire into the execution of its
judgment, it was shorn of a part of the ordinary jurisdiction of a
court. The question what is essential in order to confer
jurisdiction in this Court over the judgments of the Court of
Claims was exhaustively examined by Chief Justice Taney in
Gordon v. United States, reported in 117 U.S. 697, and
that judgment has been more than once referred to by this Court as
conclusive of the questions therein considered.
District of
Columbia v. Eslin, 183 U. S. 62;
District of Columbia v. Barnes, 187 U.S. 637. In that
opinion, he said (p. 702):
Page 187 U. S. 383
"The inferior court, therefore, from which the appeal is taken,
must be a judicial tribunal authorized to render a judgment which
will bind the rights of the parties litigating before it, unless
appealed from, and upon which the appropriate process of execution
may be issued by the court to carry it into effect. And Congress
cannot extend the appellate power of this Court beyond the limits
prescribed by the Constitution, and can neither confer nor impose
on it the authority or duty of hearing and determining an appeal
from a commissioner or auditor, or any other tribunal exercising
only special powers under an act of Congress; nor can Congress
authorize or require this Court to express an opinion on a case
where its judicial power could not be exercised, and where its
judgment would not be final and conclusive upon the rights of the
parties, and process of execution awarded to carry it into
effect."
"The award of execution is a part, and an essential part, of
every judgment passed by a court exercising judicial power. It is
no judgment, in the legal sense of the term, without it. Without
such an award, the judgment would be inoperative and nugatory,
leaving the aggrieved party without a remedy. It would be merely an
opinion, which would remain a dead letter, and without any
operation upon the rights of the parties, unless Congress should at
some future time sanction it and pass a law authorizing the court
to carry its opinion into effect. Such is not the judicial power
confided to this Court in the exercise of its appellate
jurisdiction, yet it is the whole power that the court is allowed
to exercise under this act of Congress."
It follows from these considerations that the Court of Claims
not only had jurisdiction to find the amount due from the United
States to the Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and Indiana, and
render judgment therefor, but also to inquire into the question
whether that judgment had been duly and properly executed.
The judgment is
Affirmed.
Page 187 U. S. 384
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, dissenting:
It results from the findings of the court below that the
petitioners in that court who are appellants, apart from the
question of their laches, are entitled to the relief which they
seek. This was conceded by the court below in the conclusion of law
which it drew from the findings of fact, was not challenged by the
government in the argument at bar, and is, besides, not now
questioned by this Court in its opinion. But the lower court held,
and this Court now affirms such conclusion, that, because of their
laches, the petitioners are cut off from obtaining that judicial
relief to which they would otherwise be entitled. In other words,
it is decided that, although the power exists in the court to grant
relief, its duty is not to exert its lawful powers to that end
because the petitioners have so neglected their rights that they
are not entitled now to enforce them. From this conclusion I am
constrained to dissent because, in my opinion, there is no power in
the court to entertain jurisdiction, and therefore no right in it
to decide the question of laches. In other words, I think the
plaintiffs on error must be relegated to Congress for relief not
because they have lost their right to redress in the courts by
their neglect, but because the wrong which they have suffered is
one which can only be remedied by Congress, the courts being
without jurisdiction over the subject matter. Whilst both in the
opinion of the court and in my view, the plaintiffs in error can
only obtain relief at the hands of Congress, there is a serious
difference in the grounds upon which the conclusion proceeds, for
manifestly it is one thing to refer the plaintiffs to Congress
because they have lost their rights by neglect, and another to
refer them to Congress because that body alone has power over the
subject. Because of the difference between these views and the
effect which this difference may have on the rights of the parties
when their claim for relief is presented to Congress, I deem it my
duty to state quite fully the reasons for my dissent.
The history of this controversy was stated in the opinion in
Pam-to-pee v. United States, 148 U.
S. 691. For the
Page 187 U. S. 385
purpose of present clearness, however, the salient facts are
again recapitulated.
On the 26th and 27th of September, 1833, by a treaty and
articles supplementary thereto, the United Nation of Chippewa,
Ottawa, and Pottawatomie Indians ceded certain lands in Michigan
and Illinois to the United States, and agreed to remove within
three years west of the Mississippi. 7 Stat. 431, 442. Among other
payments to be made on account of the cessions, there was to be
paid to the Indians, under the treaty proper, the sum of $280,000,
and, under the articles supplementary, $40,000, in twenty annual
installments of $14,000 and $2,000, respectively.
Appended to the articles supplementary was a provision wherein
it was recited:
"As, since the signing of the treaty, a part of the band
residing on the reservations in the Territory of Michigan have
requested, on account of their religious creed, permission to
remove to the northern part of the peninsula of Michigan, it is
agreed that, in case of such removal, the just proportion of all
annuities payable to them under former treaties and that arising
from the sale of the reservation on which they now reside shall be
paid to them at 1'Arbre Croche."
7 Stat. 445.
Only a portion of the Indians embraced by the provision just
quoted removed from their reservations to the northern part of
Michigan. The others dispersed throughout Michigan, and a few
settled in Indiana.
From the year 1843 to the year 1865, inclusive, payments were
made to the Pottawatomie Indians who had not removed west, and who
were deemed to be entitled to the annuity benefits stipulated in
the articles supplementary signed on September 27, 1833. These
payments were made at the Mackinac agency, and it would seem that
the payments embraced Indians who had not removed to the northern
part of Michigan, but who had located elsewhere in Michigan and
Indiana. A schedule showing the dates of payments, the names of the
agents who made them, and the number of Indians to whom the
aggregate sums were paid is annexed in
Page 187 U. S. 386
the margin.
* The amounts
which were paid, as stated in the schedule, embraced sums deemed to
be due under an annuity of $16,000, arising from a treaty made on
July 27, 1829, and the annuity of $2,000, mentioned in the articles
supplementary of September 27, 1833.
By a treaty signed in June, 1846, 9 Stat. 853, all the Indians
(Chippewas, Ottawas, and Pottawatomies) embraced in the treaty of
1833 who had removed to the west and retained their tribal
organization were designated as the Pottawatomie Nation.
In accordance with a joint resolution of July 28, 1866, 14 Stat.
370, the sum of $39,000 was paid to the Chippewa, Ottawa, and
Pottawatomie Indians in Michigan and Indiana. This sum was paid to
the "chiefs, headmen, heads of families, and individuals without
families" of the Indians in question, within the Mackinac agency,
there being 230 persons falling within the classes above
designated, each one of the distributees receiving
Page 187 U. S. 387
an equal share -- that is, $169.50. The money thus paid was
receipted for as in full and complete satisfaction of all payments
of every kind and nature, past, present, or future, in favor of the
persons to whom the payment was made and those by them represented,
against the United States or the Pottawatomie Nation of Indians.
Despite the receipt in full thus given, the Indians to whom the
payment in question had been made continued to assert a claim
against the United States on account of what was alleged to be
still due to them under treaty stipulations. Finally, by the Act of
March 19, 1890, 26 Stat. 24, the Court of Claims was authorized
"to take jurisdiction of and try all questions of difference
arising out of treaty stipulations with the said Pottawatomie
Indians of Michigan and Indiana, and to render judgment
thereon."
It was provided that the payment of $39,000 heretofore referred
to should not be given the finality which its terms imported, and
appellate jurisdiction over any judgment which might be rendered
was conferred upon this Court. The second section of the act reads
as follows:
"SEC. 2. That said action shall be commenced by a petition
stating the facts on which said Pottawatomie Indians claim to
recover, and the amount of their claims, and said petition may be
verified by a member of any 'Business Committee' or authorized
attorney of said Indians as to the existence of such facts, and no
other statements need be contained in said petition or
verification."
Under this act, two petitions were filed in the Court of Claims.
The first of these petitions was entitled
The Pottawatomie
Indians of Michigan and Indiana v. The United States; the
second was entitled
Phineas Pam-to-pee and 1,371 other
Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and Indiana v. The United
States. The right asserted in both of these petitions was
based on the averment that the petitioners were entitled to recover
a stated sum from the United States because they had not received
their due proportionate share of the annuities or other sums due
the Pottawatomie Nation of Indians. However, although both the
petitions substantially stated the same facts as constituting the
cause of action, the amount claimed in each petition was widely
different. This arose from the fact that, in the first
petition,
Page 187 U. S. 388
it was asserted that about 300 of the Indians who had not
removed west were entitled to their proportionate share of the
tribal annuities under the articles supplementary to the treaty of
1833, it being alleged that those who had removed west were about
4,000 in number. The claim was that the distribution should proceed
upon that basis, whilst in the second petition it was asserted that
the Indians who had not removed west were 1,200 in number, and that
distribution should be made in the ratio that 1,200 bore to 4,000,
the latter being the number of Indians asserted to have gone west.
Although, however, there was a difference in the claims of the two
petitions as to the amount of the indebtedness owing by the United
States, in both petitions, recovery was only sought of an aggregate
sum as due to the Pottawatomie Indians in Michigan and Indiana
entitled to take under the articles supplementary to the treaty of
1833, and in neither petition was there any allegation as to the
proportionate sum of the total amount claimed to which any
particular Indian was entitled, nor did either petition purport to
state the representative capacity in which any particular Indian
was entitled to take his share of the whole fund, if any.
The two petitions referred to were consolidated and heard
together. The Court of Claims decided that there was due to the
Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and Indiana, after deducting
payments made, the sum of $104,626, and entered judgment for that
sum. 27 Ct.Cl. 403, 421.
The "just proportion" which the court thus found to be due to
the Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and Indiana, in the aggregate,
entitled to share in the funds of the Pottawatomie Nation, was
arrived at first by ascertaining from various reports the number of
Indians who had moved west under the treaty of 1833, and then by
ascertaining the number of Indians entitled to share who had
remained in Michigan. This latter number was arrived at by
averaging the number of such Indians as shown by various payments
made from 1843 to and including 1866, as manifested in the schedule
of such payments heretofore excerpted or referred to.
The court was of opinion that, under the jurisdictional act
of
Page 187 U. S. 389
1890, it could only find and decree the aggregate amount due all
the Indians entitled to participate in the fund found due, and that
it was not incumbent upon it to determine who were the particular
Indians entitled to take such aggregate amount and the distributive
share to which each particular Indian was entitled. It said:
"Congress have recognized by the very title of the act a
claimant designated as the 'Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and
Indiana,' and under that generic head is to be determined the
aggregate right of such claimant, leaving the question of
distribution to that department of the government which by law has
incumbent on it the administration of the trust which in legal
contemplation exists between the United States and the different
tribes of Indians."
On appeal, this Court affirmed that judgment of the Court of
Claims,
148 U. S. 691.
After determining that there was no error in the judgment under
review insofar as it fixed the aggregate amount due, the question
was then considered whether it was the duty of the court to
ascertain what particular Indian was entitled to share in the fund,
and the amount of his or her distributive share. On this subject,
after quoting approvingly the reasoning of the Court of Claims by
which that court sustained its action under the jurisdictional act
of 1890 in finding only the aggregate amount due and leaving the
distribution of the fund to the executive officers of the
government, and after pointing out that the suit was brought to
recover only such aggregate amount, and that there was no finding
made by the court below which would justify a decree distributing
the fund, the Court said (p.
148 U. S.
705):
"Unable as we are to safely adjudicate this question as between
these classes of claimants, we can do no better than acquiesce in
the suggestion of the court below that it is one to be dealt with
by the authorities of the government when they come to distribute
the fund."
"As these petitioners no longer have any tribal organization,
and as the statutes direct a diversion of the annuities and other
sums payable by the head, and as such has been the practice of the
government, perhaps the necessities of the situation demand
Page 187 U. S. 390
that the identification of each claimant entitled to share in
the distribution shall be left to the officers who are the agents
of the government in paying out the fund.
United States v. Old
Settlers, ante, 148 U. S. 427."
By the Deficiencies Appropriation Act of August 23, 1894, 28
Stat. 424, c. 307, various sums were appropriated "for payment of
judgments of the Court of Claims," one item reading as follows: "To
the Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and Indiana, $104,626.00." In
the Indian Department Appropriations Act of March 2, 1895, 28 Stat.
876, c. 188, was contained the following, italics not in the
original (p. 894):
"
Miscellaneous"
"
* * * *"
"That the Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized and
directed to detail or employ an Indian inspector to take a census
of the Pottawatomie Indians of Indiana and Michigan who are
entitled to a certain sum of money appropriated by Congress to
satisfy a judgment of the Court of Claims in favor of said Indians.
And for the purpose of making the payment to the Pottawatomie
Indians of Indiana and Michigan of the $104,626, appropriated
by the last Congress to satisfy a judgment of the Court of Claims,
there is hereby appropriated the sum of one thousand dollars."
In the Indian Department Appropriations Act of August 15, 1894,
28 Stat. 286, c. 290, there was appropriated $6,243.90 as the
amount due certain Pottawatomie Indians of Indiana and Michigan for
their proportion due June 30, 1893, June 30, 1894, and June 30,
1895, of the perpetual annuities ($22,300.00) . . . as ascertained
by the judgment of the Supreme Court of the United States
pronounced in the case of the Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and
Indiana against the United States, on April 17, 1893, and which
annuities were not embraced in the judgment aforesaid.
Id., 295. An appropriation of $2,081.30 for the proportion
of the perpetual annuities due the Pottawatomie Nation for the year
ending June 30, 1896, was made by the Indian Department
Appropriations Act of March 2, 1895, 28 Stat. 876, 885, c. 188. It
was recited, as in the previous statute, that the amount of the
perpetual annuities
Page 187 U. S. 391
had been ascertained by the judgment of this Court on April 17,
1893. By a proviso, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs was
directed
"to withhold from distribution among the said Indians so much of
any moneys due them by the United States as may be found justly and
equitably due for legal services rendered, and to pay the same on
account of the prosecution and recovery of the moneys
aforesaid."
In the Indian Department Appropriations Act of June 10, 1896, 29
Stat. 321, c. 398, there was appropriated to pay the same Indians
$2,081.30 as their proportion of the perpetual annuities for the
year ending June 30, 1897, and also the sum of $41,626.00, as a
"final settlement by capitalizing their proportion of the perpetual
annuities in question." Reference was made to the judgment of this
Court as in the prior appropriation acts.
The action of the Secretary of the Interior in respect to the
disbursement of the moneys so appropriated is summarized in finding
of facts numbered III made by the Court of Claims in this action.
It reads as follows:
"In June, 1895, the Secretary of the Interior ordered and
directed that a census of the Indians be made under the act 2d
March, 1895, 28 Stat. 894, c. 188. The census roll was prepared
under instructions of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, dated
June 8, 1895 -- approved by the Secretary of the Interior June 15,
1895 -- by John W. Cadman, and is known as the 'Cadman census
roll.' While the agent was so engaged in taking the census, John B.
Shipman, Esq., attorney of record in the case of
Pam-to-pee v.
United States, addressed a communication to the Secretary of
the Interior, dated July 27, 1895, representing that such census,
by reason of the manner in which it was being taken, would omit
many Indians entitled to be paid under the judgment of the court.
Before further instructions were given by the Secretary of the
Interior, the agent, Cadman, in August, 1895, made and returned and
filed in the Interior Department the census so made by him."
"After this roll had been prepared, many applications for
enrollment were received by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs,
based upon the statement that, while such applicants were not on
the roll of 1866, they were on prior rolls from 1843 to 1866,
Page 187 U. S. 392
or were the descendants of such persons. The question was then
submitted to the Secretary of the Interior for an opinion as to
whether the rolls from 1843 to 1866 should be considered in
connection with the enrollment of those who were entitled to
participate in the distribution of the $104,626 awarded by the
Court of Claims."
"On January 10, 1896, the Secretary of the Interior made his
final decision in regard to the Indians who should be enrolled and
paid under the judgment of this Court and the appropriation of
Congress. Marcus D. Shelby, a special Indian agent, was designated
by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs to examine and report upon
the claims of the several parties alleging to be descendants of the
Pottawatomie Indians of Indiana and Michigan, who were permitted by
supplemental clause to the treaty of September 27, 1833, to remain
east, and for whom the Court of Claims rendered a decision in their
favor of $104,626, June 27, 1892. The instructions given to the
agent by the Commissioner were dated February 5, 1896. The agent so
designated proceeded to Michigan and reported the result of his
investigation, bearing date of March 14, 1896. The report so made
was accepted by the Secretary of the Interior as substantially
correct, and the amount appropriated by Congress in satisfaction of
the judgment of this Court, 28 Stat. 450, c. 307, as well as other
funds appropriated to pay the Indians upon treaties mentioned in
the petitions in said suits (the sum paid being $118,554.52), paid
to the persons upon the roll made by Cadman, after adding thereto
two names on the recommendation of Shelby in closing his report as
persons mentioned on the census roll of 1866. Later, one more was
added by the Department. The money was paid to the Indians as
communal owners. That is to say, it was paid
pro rata to
every living member of that portion of the tribe entitled to
participate in the fund, and not
per stirpes. "
Page 187 U. S. 393
The report of agent Shelby was made a part of the findings of
the court. The manner in which he proceeded to ascertain who were
entitled to be added to the Cadman roll was thus summarized in the
opinion below:
"His report to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, March 14,
1896, shows that he traveled through the country where these
Indians resided or were supposed to reside, and notified them, so
far as he could, to appear and prove their cases. In his report, he
said:"
"I found these people very badly scattered, and as they do not
frequent post offices, the notices prepared for me to be posted in
the various post offices to give them notice of my coming were of
but little value. In nearly every instance, on reaching the
vicinity of these Indians, I had to take teams and drive to their
homes. I got, however, the newspapers to publish the principal
points I would visit."
"A number appeared, some of whom claimed because their
ancestors' names were on the rolls of 1843 and 1844, others because
they had Pottawatomie blood in their veins. All of these applicants
were rejected for various reasons, some because their proof was
insufficient, some because they or their forefathers had allied
themselves with other Indian tribes, some because their fathers'
names had been erroneously placed, in the opinion of Indian agents,
upon the former rolls and had been dropped from subsequent
rolls."
There was no finding that any notice had been given to Mr.
Shipman of the movements of agent Shelby, nor was it found that any
of the Indians whose names were furnished by Mr. Shipman to the
Secretary of the Interior ever had actual notice of the
investigation which the representative of the Secretary of the
Interior made, intermediate the receipt of the instructions of
February 5, 1896, and the return of Shelby to Washington in the
early part of the following month.
On April 22, 1899, the present action was instituted in the
Court of Claims, the petition being filed on behalf of Phineas
Pam-to-pee and 362 other named Indians, alleged to be a portion of
the Indians in whose favor the judgment for $104,626 was rendered.
The proceedings in the prior actions were set out, and the passage
of the various appropriating acts to which
Page 187 U. S. 394
allusion has already been made was averred, as also that
distribution had been made of the greater part of the funds among
273 Indians, while nothing had been paid to the petitioners.
Judgment was prayed for such proportionate amount of the various
funds as the evidence might show the petitioners were entitled to,
to be "allotted and awarded to them severally."
After issue joined, the cause was tried and the Court of Claims
filed findings of facts and conclusions of law. Finding III has
heretofore been set out. Finding IV reads as follows:
"None of the Indians, parties in or represented by the present
suit, were paid as aforesaid. A large number of them, to-wit, 272,
whose names are set forth in schedule A annexed to claimants'
request for findings, were descended from Indians whose names were
enrolled on the rolls of Indians in Michigan in the years 1843,
1844, and 1866. A portion of the Indians who remained in Michigan
as coming within the exemption of the treaty of September 27, 1833,
were represented in both petitions in the cases of
The
Pottawatomie Indians v. The United States and the Pam-to-pee
Indians v. The United States."
The Court of Claims thus expressly found that a large number of
the Indians, claimants in this suit, had received nothing in the
distribution made by the Secretary of the Interior, although some
of these Indians were parties to or represented in the consolidated
case, and were also represented by Mr. Shipman before the Secretary
of the Interior, and were entitled to share in such distribution.
In addition, from the facts found concerning the investigation made
by agent Shelby prior to the distribution referred to, the court
below expressed the opinion that the investigation by agent Shelby
"was hurried, and, to the judicial mind, unsatisfactory." Moreover,
the court, considering the judgment rendered in the previous
consolidated case and the acts of Congress making the appropriation
to pay the judgment of $104,626, arrived at the conclusion that
"there is not a line in the judgment of this Court or in any
statute of Congress which empowered or authorized the Secretary to
dispose of the fund." It was decided that the suit must be
dismissed because the petitioners had been guilty of such laches in
pressing their claims after the appropriation was made and whilst
the distribution
Page 187 U. S. 395
was pending, as to debar them from all right to relief at the
hands of the court.
It is difficult for me to determine precisely on what ground the
theory of laches was predicated. In one aspect of the opinion
below, it would seem to have been rested upon the theory that, as
the distribution of the money was a judicial act, and not an
administrative one, it was incumbent on the petitioners to have
invoked the power of the court to control the Secretary of the
Interior, and compel him to distribute the money rightfully; on the
other, that, although the petitioners had formally notified the
Secretary of their claims, they were nevertheless guilty of laches
because they did not foresee that that officer would distribute the
money without notice to them, and after an investigation which the
court itself finds to have been wholly unsatisfactory to the
judicial mind.
In the argument at bar, the error which was committed in the
distribution in question as shown by the facts found by the court
below is not disputed. On the contrary, in addition to the error in
the distribution so shown, it is expressly conceded that the
distribution was, besides, fundamentally wrong because it was made
on an illegal basis. Thus it is said in the brief on behalf of the
United States:
"It appears from the record in this case that the judgment was
distributed not
per stirpes, but
per capita. That
is to say, all the Indians discovered were allowed to participate
equally in the fund, irrespective of the generation to which they
belonged. The son of an Indian who appeared on one of the payrolls
was allowed only the same amount which each of, say, five
grandchildren of an Indian on one of the payrolls was allowed. They
should have taken by representation. The aggregate of the five
shares of the five grandchildren mentioned should have equaled the
share of the son of the original payee. The consequence is that the
whole judgment was distributed on a wrong basis. The payments
became due to individuals at various times. The record discloses no
reason why the estate of the individual to whom such payment was
due is not entitled to the whole of such payment."
"If any one on the payrolls at the time the annuities became
Page 187 U. S. 396
due died without heirs who could inherit, there is no reason why
this share should not escheat. It is perfectly evident that a mere
enumeration of the Indians, and an equal division among them, does
not fulfill the requirements of the situation."
The deduction which the government makes from the admission just
quoted being that the petitioners are not entitled to relief,
because relief cannot be administered without making parties
defendant all those to whom the distribution was made, and securing
an entire readjustment and settlement of the rights of all
parties.
This Court now affirms the judgment of the court below. In
effect, the application of the rule of laches made by the lower
court is approved, and the decisive result of the laches is
additionally sustained by the conclusion that, although it was not
shown that any notice was served upon the petitioners prior to the
distribution made by the Secretary of the Interior, the presumption
that the officers of the government discharged their duty raises
the legal inference that, before making the payment, such full and
fair investigation had been made by the executive officers as
warranted the paying out of the money in the manner in which it was
disbursed. This Court now, moreover, holds that, as the judgment in
the consolidated case, although it only found the amount due to the
Pottawatomie Indians in Michigan and Indiana as a body, had
remitted the question of what Indians were entitled to such gross
sum to the proper executive department of the government, the
executive officers who made the distribution in effect acted under
the order of the court.
The jurisdiction to entertain the action can alone be predicated
upon the following considerations: first, the act of Congress of
1890, by the authority of which the original judgment in the
consolidated case was rendered, or upon the judgment thus rendered,
or second, the appropriation made by Congress to pay such judgment
and the acts of Congress in connection therewith.
By section 1066 of the Revised Statutes, it is provided that the
jurisdiction of the Court of Claims
"shall not extend to any claim against the government . . .
growing out of or dependent on any treaty stipulation entered into
. . . with
Page 187 U. S. 397
the Indian tribes."
Clearly, therefore, aside from the jurisdiction conferred by the
act of 1890, there was no power in the courts to consider and
determine the question of the proper distribution of the funds due
the Pottawatomie Nation of Indians, or to fix the just proportion
to which the Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and Indiana were
entitled. Now the act of 1890, which conferred jurisdiction on the
Court of Claims to determine the sum due the Pottawatomie Indians
of Michigan and Indiana out of the tribal funds, was susceptible of
being construed in one of two ways: first, that it alone delegated
the power to determine the aggregate amount of the just proportion
of the tribal funds due to the Indians in question, or that it
conferred such authority and, in addition, imposed the duty of
ascertaining the particular Indians who were entitled to share in
the distribution when the total sum for distribution was judicially
determined. That the statute embraced only the first power -- that
is, of fixing the aggregate amount -- seems to me to conclusively
result from the judgment rendered by the Court of Claims and
affirmed by this Court. It cannot be doubted that the Court of
Claims expressly decided that the authority conferred by the act of
1890 related only to determining the aggregate amount, and not to
the ascertainment of the particular persons entitled to share in
the same and the amount they were respectively entitled to take.
True, this Court, in its opinion in
148 U. S. 148 U.S.
691, referred to the absence of evidence as to who where entitled
to the distributive shares, and the impossibility of rendering a
decree on that subject, yet it nevertheless, in affirming the
judgment, expressly approved the conclusion of the Court of Claims
limiting the judgment to the determination of the aggregate amount
and leaving the distribution of that sum, when Congress should
thereafter appropriate therefor, to the action of the executive
officers of the government.
It follows that the jurisdictional power conferred by the act of
1890 was exhausted by the decree of affirmance, and the subsequent
distribution of the gross sum when the appropriation had been made
was solely a matter within the jurisdiction of Congress and the
administrative officers of the government.
Page 187 U. S. 398
That such was the legislative conception of the effect of the
judgment of affirmance rendered by this Court is conclusively shown
by the appropriation to pay the money, and the other legislative
acts concerning that sum and other sums awarded to the Indians in
question, since such acts treat of the ascertainment of the
individuals entitled to the gross amount found due as a purely
administrative question, with no intimation whatever that it was
conceived that the administrative discretion which the acts imposed
was subject to be reviewed and controlled by the judicial branch of
the government. To repeat, the jurisdiction under the act of 1890
having been exhausted, and the judgment fixing the aggregate sum
having expressly remitted the distribution to the administrative
branch of the government, it follows that no support for the
jurisdiction over the present suit, either in the Court of Claims
or in this Court, can be founded upon the act of 1890 or the
judgment rendered thereunder. Did then jurisdiction arise from the
act of Congress appropriating the sum necessary to pay the judgment
referred to, or from the other appropriation acts to which
reference has heretofore been made?
From what has already been stated, it would seem that a negative
answer must be given to this question. In view of the terms of
§ 1066 of the Revised Statutes, I think it is clearly
requisite that the intention of Congress to commit to the courts
the ultimate regulation and control of a distribution
prima
facie intended to be made or expressly directed to be made
among unascertained beneficiaries by the executive officers of the
government should be plainly made to appear before it should be
held that such authority was conferred on the judiciary. Now there
had been no claims presented to Congress on behalf of Pottawatomie
Indians seeking individual relief, but the claims urged were on
behalf of the whole body of Pottawatomie Indians in Michigan and
Indiana, who asserted the nonpayment of their just proportion of
the tribal annuities. On twenty-four different occasions during as
many years, Congress, through the Interior Department, had
ascertained and determined who were the individuals constituting
the Pottawatomie Indians of Michigan and Indiana entitled to a
just
Page 187 U. S. 399
proportion of tribal annuities, and neither in the
jurisdictional act of 1890 nor in any of the appropriating acts was
language used importing that it was deemed that a necessity existed
for a judicial ascertainment of the particular individuals who
might possess a right to share in the "just proportion" referred
to. The various acts in which the appropriations in question were
embodied made provision for numerous other appropriations, in
compliance with stipulations embodied in treaties made with sundry
Indian tribes, and, as in the particular appropriating paragraphs
in question payments were merely directed to be made to
unascertained individuals constituting a body of Indians, there was
certainly no clearly implied or expressed intention that the
payments should be subject to the ultimate control of the courts,
or that the disbursement of the funds should be under any other
direction or control than that of the Secretary of the Interior,
who had made prior payments of a similar character upon his own
ascertainment of the individual beneficiaries. As a matter of fact,
also, a contrary intent is clearly manifested in several of the
appropriating paragraphs. Thus, in the Act of March 2, 1895, 28
Stat. 894, c. 188, the duty is expressly imposed on the Secretary
of the Interior to take a census of the Indians who were entitled
to the fund appropriated by the previous Congress to pay the
judgment of $104,626, thus implying that there had not been any
provision in the judgment of the Court of Claims or of this Court
for the ascertainment of such individual beneficiaries, and $1,000
was appropriated "
for the purpose of making the payment,"
obviously to those who, by a proper performance of the duty imposed
on the Secretary of the Interior, should be found to be embraced
within the class. So also, in the same act, 28 Stat. 885, the
absolute control which Congress deemed it was exercising for the
distribution of the sums found due to the Indians as a body was
evinced in the direction to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs
"to withhold from distribution among the said Indians so much of
any moneys due them by the United States as may be found justly and
equitably due for legal services rendered, and to pay the same on
account of the prosecution and recovery of the moneys
aforesaid."
Bearing in mind that the appropriated
Page 187 U. S. 400
sums in question, though a "just proportion," were in fact
tribal funds, and that the expenditure of tribal funds is
peculiarly regulated by Congress and committed to the Indian
Department, Rev.Stat. sec. 2086
et seq., it seems to me
beyond reasonable controversy that Congress intended that the
ascertainment of the particular beneficiaries entitled to the funds
and the distribution among them should be performed solely by its
own agencies.
The decision in
United States v. Weld, 127 U. S.
51, is not an authority opposed to the views just
expressed. In that case, a judgment had been rendered by the Court
of Commissioners of Alabama Claims in favor of certain claimants,
and they had received a portion of such judgment. The amount of the
gross fund due all claimants had been fixed in the statute, what
should be deducted had been specifically declared, and it had also
been explicitly provided that the balance which would necessarily
result should be distributed to the judgment creditors. The holding
of this Court was simply that creditors whose claims against the
fund had been adjudicated by the commission provided for in the
statute possessed a right to sue in the Court of Claims to recover
their share of a portion of the fund which had been improperly
retained by the Treasury Department.
Being of opinion that the judgment below should be reversed for
want of jurisdiction, and that the sole remedy of the petitioners
lies in an appeal to the fairness and sense of justice of the
legislative branch of the government, it would, of course, be out
of place for me to discuss the grounds upon which the laches is
held to apply. It is manifest, however, that the reasoning by which
I have been led to the conclusion that the court was without
jurisdiction, if sound, is in absolute conflict with the theory
that laches can be imputed to the petitioners because they did not
invoke the aid of the court below to control the discretion to
distribute the money vested in the Secretary of the Interior by the
acts of Congress making the appropriations. This ground of laches
being put out of view, the only other theory upon which it can be
rested is that, although the petitioners formally presented their
claim to the Secretary of the Interior and called his attention to
their rights,
Page 187 U. S. 401
they yet lost them because they did not foresee that that
officer would, without notice, proceed to distribute the money to
the wrong persons and upon a basis which the government now,
whether advisedly or not I need not consider, declares to have been
absolutely unjust and illegal.
I am authorized by MR. JUSTICE McKENNA to say that he joins in
this dissent.
*
Year Name No. paid Amount
1843 Robert Stuart . . . . . . . . . . . . . 253 $1,587.50
1844 " . . . . . . . . . . . . . 269 1,587.50
1845 Wm. A. Richmond . . . . . . . . . . . . 217 1,587.50
1846 " . . . . . . . . . . . . 204 1,587.50
1847 " . . . . . . . . . . . . 244 1,587.50
1848 " . . . . . . . . . . . . 260 1,587.50
1849 Chas. P. Babcock . . . . . . . . . . . . 260 1,587.50
1850 " . . . . . . . . . . . . 218 1,587.50
1851 Wm. Sprague . . . . . . . . . . . . 229 1,587.50
1852 " . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 214 1,587.50
1853 Henry C. Gilbert . . . . . . . . . . . . 219 1,587.50
1854 " . . . . . . . . . . . . 236 1,587.50
1855 " . . . . . . . . . . . . 236 1,587.50
1856 " . . . . . . . . . . . . 221 1,587.50
1857 A.N. Fitch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 229 1,587.50
1858 " . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 234 1,587.50
1859 " . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 253 1,587.50
1860 " . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 236 1,587.50
1861 De Witt C. Leach . . . . . . . . . . . . 235 1,587.50
1862 " . . . . . . . . . . . . 247 1,587.50
1863 " . . . . . . . . . . . . 246 1,587.50
1864 " . . . . . . . . . . . . 242 1,587.50
1865 Richard M. Smith, principal in currency $1,587.50
" gold premium in currency 692.24 232 2,279.74