While there are no general rules of law determining what
payments are chargeable against Indian annuities when annuities
which have been confiscated on account of an outbreak of the
annuitant Indians are restored, sums paid by the government for the
support of the annuitants on account of their destitution must be
taken into account, and, in this case, the restored annuities are
also chargeable with the amount of depredations during the outbreak
for which the Indian were liable under a treaty made subsequently
to that granting the annuity and before the outbreak.
This court affirms the judgment of the Court of Claims adjusting
the claim of the Sisseton and Wahpeton Band of Sioux Indians for
their confiscated annuities restored under acts of Congress and in
regard to which jurisdiction was conferred by the Act of June 21,
1906, c. 3504, 34 Stat 372.
42 Ct.Ct. 416 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a claim for annuities granted by the Treaty of July 23,
1851, but declared forfeited by the Act of February 16, 1863, c.
37, 12 Stat. 652, in consequence of a great outbreak and massacre
by the Indians. The claim is made
Page 208 U. S. 562
under the Act of June 21, 1906 (chap. 3504, 34 Stat. 372), the
material part of which is as follows:
"That jurisdiction be, and hereby is, conferred upon the Court
of Claims in congressional case numbered twenty-two thousand five
hundred and twenty-four, on file in said court, entitled 'The
Sisseton and Wahpeton Bands of Sioux Indians against the United
States,' to further receive testimony, hear, determine, and render
final judgment in said cause, for balance, if any is found due said
bands, with right of appeal as in other cases, for any annuities
which would be due to said bands of Indians under the Treaty of
July twenty-third, eighteen hundred and fifty-one (Tenth Statutes
at Large, page nine hundred and forty-nine), as if the act of
forfeiture of the annuities of said bands, approved February
sixteenth, eighteen hundred and sixty-three, had not been passed,
and to ascertain and set off against the amount found to be due to
said Indians, if any, all payments or other provisions of every
name or nature made to or for said bands by the United States, or
to or for any members thereof, since said act of forfeiture was
passed, which are properly chargeable against said unpaid
annuities."
"Upon the rendition of such judgment, and in conformity
therewith, the Secretary of the Interior is hereby directed to
determine which of said Indians now living took part in said
outbreak and to prepare a roll of the persons entitled to share in
said judgment by placing on said roll the names of all living
members of the said bands residing in the United States at the time
of the passage of this act, excluding therefrom the names of those
found to have participated in the outbreak, and he is directed to
distribute the proceeds of such judgment, except as hereinafter
provided, per capita to the persons borne on the said roll, and the
court shall consider the evidence now on file in said cause in
connection with such other evidence as may hereafter be adduced
therein."
The Act of June 21, 1906, was passed in pursuance and extension
of an earlier Act of March 3, 1901, c. 832, 31 Stat. 1078, which
gave the Court of Claims full jurisdiction to
Page 208 U. S. 563
report to Congress what members of these bands of Indians were
not concerned in the depredations of the outbreak, and to report
what annuities would now be due to the loyal members if the act of
forfeiture had not been passed. The court was
"further authorized to further consider, ascertain, and report
to Congress what lands, appropriations, payments, gratuities, or
other provisions have been made to or for said bands or to any of
the members thereof since said act of forfeiture was passed. . . .
And if said court shall find that said bands preserved their
loyalty to the United States, they shall ascertain and state the
amount that would be due to said Indians on account of said
annuities had said act of Congress of February sixteenth, eighteen
hundred and sixty-three, not been passed, stating in connection
therewith what credits should be charged against said annuities on
account of the lands, appropriations, payments, gratuities, or
other provisions as hereinbefore stated."
A petition was filed, but the court found that it was impossible
to determine what members of these bands remained loyal to the
United States, but that a large majority, if not all, aided and
abetted the massacres and depredation. 39 Ct.Cl. 172. Thereupon,
the later act was passed, referring to the above petition, and the
present supplemental petition was filed.
The Court of Claims stated the account and ordered a judgment
for the balance, from which both parties appeal. The account is as
follows:
CREDITS
By fifty installments of $73,600, treaty
July 23, 1851 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$3,680,000.00
By amount allowed to chiefs for removal and
subsistence by said treaty. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
275,000.00
By amount allowed to chiefs for manual labor
schools, etc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
30,000.00
------------- 3,985,000.00
DEBITS
Item.
1. To twelve installments of annuity, appropriated
under the Treaty of 1851 (10 Stat. 949) prior
to outbreak, less $104.66 returned to the Trea-
sury ($884,200-104.66),
Page 208 U. S. 564
$883.095.34, less $122,509.12 appropriated but
not paid at date of forfeiture . . . . . . . . $760,586.22
(
See p. 17, Senate Doc. 68, for various
statutes.)
2. To amount paid to the chiefs for removal and
subsistence, and for manual labor schools
under the treaty of 1851 . . . . . . . . . . . 305,000.00
3. To amount appropriated and unpaid at date of
forfeiture act, but forfeited and afterwards
expended for damages growing out of the out-
break of 1862-3 (12 Stat. 652, c. 37). . . . . 122,509.12
4. To one-half of $100,000 advance annuity appro-
priated February 16, 1863 (12 Stat.
652, c. 37). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50,000.00
5. To one-half amount paid to scouts and soldiers
of the four bands (26 Stat. 1038, c. 543; 27
Stat. 624, c. 209; 28 Stat. 889, c. 188) . . . 103,176.65
6. To one-half amount expended for damages and
for support, but not for removal . . . . . . . 807,824.71
(
See p. 20, Senate Doc. 68, for various
statutes.)
7. To amount paid for support, etc., under the
treaty of February 19, 1867. . . . . . . . . . 464,953.40
(See p. 17, Senate Doc. 68, for various
statutes making the appropriations.)
8. To amounts paid under agreement of December
12, 1889 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 581,978.37
---------- $3,196,028.47
-------------
Leaving a balance due of $788,971.53
The amount of the unpaid annuities is not in dispute, but the
questions raised by the appeals concern the items of set-off, and
involve the principle upon which they are to be charged. The
Indians contend that only sums specially charged by Congress
against annuities come into the account, while the United States
goes to the opposite extreme. We agree with the Court of Claims
that the contention of the Indians, at least, must be rejected, for
the reason stated by it, that, if it was correct, Congress did not
need the help of the court -- the figures were patent. Furthermore,
the language of the act implies that the court is called upon for
an active exercise of judicial reason,
Page 208 U. S. 565
and to do something that has not yet been done. It is "to set
off" all payments to said bands or to any members thereof since the
acts of forfeiture which are properly chargeable against the unpaid
annuities. The result is assumed to be uncertain, as the judgment
is to be for the balance, if any is found due.
There are no general rules of law established for deciding what
payments properly are chargeable against Indian annuities. The fact
that, payments of certain kinds, or gratuities, have been granted
in time of peace in addition to annuities is not conclusive. There
had been an Indian war. The United States, in passing these acts,
was doing what it pleased. In the earlier statute, it plainly
indicated that the most sweeping deductions, including gratuities,
were to be made from its possible bounty. In the later one, it
qualified the deduction of payment by the words, "which are
properly chargeable against said unpaid annuities," it is true. But
the careful particularity of the direction to set off "all payments
or other provisions of every name and nature," even if qualified as
to the bands as well as to the particular members to whom some
payments properly left out of consideration had been made, shows
that large set-offs still were expected. It is said that the court
was to proceed "as if the act of forfeiture had not been passed."
But that was only in ascertaining the amount of annuities that
would be due in that case, and in rendering a judgment that
otherwise would be unauthorized. Those words do not require the
court to treat all payments upon the fiction that nothing had
happened, or to give them a different complexion from that which
they had when they were made. Common sense, the then recent
decision of the Court of Claims as to the general conduct of the
bands, and the position of the words in the section show that they
could have had no such intent.
It follows from what we have said and from a consideration of
the nature of the payments and the circumstances, which the Court
of Claims rightly considered, as well as from the treaties and acts
of Congress, that the claimants properly were charged with their
share of payments on account of depredations. On
Page 208 U. S. 566
general grounds of fairness, such payments are properly
chargeable against the sum that the United States, by its
condonation, consented to pay. Congress, as well as the court, is
of that opinion, for the appropriation of the annuities to the
indemnification of persons whose property had been destroyed by the
Indians was declared just, and two-thirds of the sums payable then
and the next year were applied to that end by the forfeiture act of
February 16, 1863. 12 Stat. 652, c. 37. In this connection, the act
is as important as ever it was.
See further Act of March
3, 1885, c. 320. 23 Stat. 344. Again, by a treaty of June 19, 1858,
Art. 6, 12 Stat. 1037, 1039, later than that granting the
annuities, which was made in 1851, the Indians had agreed that, in
case of depredation, it should be paid for out of their moneys in
the hands of the United States. The effect of this treaty as
against those breaking it is not to be got rid of by dignifying
their acts with the name of war, while at the same time the court
is asked to treat all that was done by the United States as if
there had been unbroken peace. The successful party to a war is apt
to demand indemnity, and when that party is doing an act of grace
and restoring annuities forfeited because of damage done, it is
absurd to ask that it should leave consideration of the charge for
damage out of account. Some further arguments of detail may be
passed unnoticed by reason of the general point of view from which
we regard the case. We may add here that, as we do not go behind
the findings of fact,
McClure v. United States,
116 U. S. 145;
District of Columbia v. Barnes, 197 U.
S. 146,
197 U. S. 150,
there has been some waste of energy in arguing from public
documents of which we are asked to take notice, and that we see no
reason to revise the finding that the claimants should be charged
with half the total payments of which their share is to be set
off.
We pass to the items of the account. Item 1 of the debits is
admitted to be correct, except that the court twice deducted
$104.66, once expressly, the second time in the $122,509.12 from
the gross debits, $883,200. The item should be $760,690.88.
We perceive no reason for questioning item 2.
Page 208 U. S. 567
Items 3 and 4 are disposed of by what we have said. The United
States admits a repetition of the mistake mentioned under item 1 in
item 4.
Item 5 is disputed only as charging one-half, instead of one
sixth, alleged to be the fair proportion, upon evidence properly
not reported, and found by the Court of Claims to be untrustworthy.
As we have said, we see no reason for not accepting the conclusion
of the Court of Claims.
Item 6 needs mention only because it embraces expenditures for
support, which, it is said, by the general practice would be
granted alongside of the annuities were they running. The question
of damages has been disposed of. The other will be dealt with in
connection with item 7.
Item 7 is one of the chief objects of the claimants' attack. By
the Treaty of February 19, April 22, 1867, 15 Stat. 505, the
claimants ceded rights of way to the United States, and the United
States, in consideration of the cession, the services of the
friendly bands, and the forfeiture of their annuities, purported to
set aside for them certain reservations. This was by Articles 2-4.
Article 6 was as follows:
"And further, in consideration of the destitution of said bands
of Sisseton and Wahpeton Sioux, parties hereto, resulting from the
confiscation of their annuities and improvements, it is agreed that
Congress will, in its own discretion, from time to time, make such
appropriations as may be deemed requisite to enable said Indians to
return to an agricultural life,"
etc. Payments under Article 6 make up item 7. It is argued that
the Indians already owned the land set aside for them, that there
was no consideration for their grant except the promise in Article
6 that the destitution of the Indians was not a consideration to
the United States, and hence again that the promise should be set
against the cession, and that they ought not to be charged with
this sum. But, without going outside the record for other matters
of dispute, it is enough to say that the question is not as to the
facts, but as to the assumption and purport of the document. The
treaty makes the assignment of the reservation,
Page 208 U. S. 568
be it better or worse, the consideration for the cession by the
Indians, and the agreement in Article 6 a gratuitous promise
induced by consideration of the Indians' want. The words "in
consideration of" do not import a technical consideration, such as
is needed in a private bargain not under seal, but the inducement
that led Congress to make the promise. It indicates the only
inducement, and a different one cannot be substituted in its place
on the ground that assumpsit would not lie on the one named.
By the words of the treaty, then, the sixth article promised the
payments in question because the claimants were in want because
their annuities had been confiscated. Or, striking out the middle
term and looking to the result, the payments were made because the
annuities had been confiscated -- that is to say, so far as
appears, they would not have been made except for that cause. But
if so, then when the annuities are restored, the sums paid on the
footing that the annuities were lost must be taken into the
account. It does not matter whether the Indians had a demand in
conscience against the United States for their cession or not, or
whether or not such demands were settled by subsequent treaties --
the sum stood on its own ground and must be dealt with on the
footing on which it was paid. If further argument is necessary, one
might be drawn from the reference to House Document 1953, Fiftieth
Congress, First Session, in Article 3 of the agreement of December
12, 1889, ratified by the Act of March 3, 1891, c. 543, § 26,
26 Stat. 1037 -- an act not repealed by those under which this suit
is brought. But, as this document is not made part of the report
and is said not to have been before the Court of Claims, we do not
care to invoke for this or other purposes a help that the decision
does not seem to us to need.
As to the payments for support charged in item 6, they are to be
considered in the light of the act of forfeiture and the attitude
of Congress indicated in Article 6 of the treaty just discussed.
The Indians were in the position of people having no recognized
claim. They were dependents because of the
Page 208 U. S. 569
forfeiture. Payments made for their support in such
circumstances cannot be compared to those that may have been made
to tribes in good standing. It is mere conjecture to inquire
whether similar allowances might have been granted if they had kept
the peace. They were made, in fact, because, by reason of the
forfeiture, the Indians must be supported or starve. The
considerations that apply to Article 6 apply, although it must be
admitted less strongly, to other payments for support and the like.
The act of 1901 cannot be left wholly out of sight in construing
that of 1906, and, as has been said, that act contemplated that
every gratuity should be brought in. We are not prepared to
overrule the decision of the Court of Claims on this point.
Item 8 is not disputed. There are some further matters of detail
which we do not discuss, but have not failed to consider. Upon the
whole case and in view of the cross-appeal of the United States, we
are of opinion that, under the judgment below, the claimants came
off as well as they reasonably could expect. If we were to follow
the claimants outside the record, some of the questions raised by
the United States might be serious; but, as the case stands, we are
of opinion that the judgment should be affirmed, with the
correction mentioned under item 1.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA dissents.