The Act of January 30, 1897, 29 Stat. 506, c. 109, in regard to
sale of liquor to the Indians and introduction of liquor into
Indian country, repealed, as far as inconsistent therewith, the Act
of July 23, 1892, 27 Stat. 260, c. 234.
An indictment under the Act of January 30, 1897 for introducing
liquor into Indian country cannot be sustained if the offense
alleged was committed on land within a state and which had been
completely withdrawn from the reservation, and the Indian title
thereto surrendered so as not then to be Indian country. Under such
circumstances, the district court of the United States has no
jurisdiction.
Although that portion of the Act of 1834 which defined Indian
country was repealed by § 5596 Rev.Stat., it may still be
referred to in connection with the portion of the act remaining in
force in order to determine what must be regarded as Indian country
when spoken of in the statutes.
A cession by Indians may be qualified by a stipulation in the
treaty that the ceded territory, although within the boundaries of
a state, shall retain its original status of Indian country so far
as the introduction therein of liquor is concerned.
The title to that part of the Flathead Reservation in Montana
included within the right of way of the Northern Pacific Railway
Company has been completely withdrawn from the Reservation and the
Indian title thereto extinguished and therefore is no longer Indian
country within the meaning of the Act of January 30, 1897.
The facts, which involve the construction of federal statutes
relative to introduction of liquor to allottee Indians and on
allotments to Indians, are stated in the opinion.
Page 225 U. S. 553
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error was indicted by the grand jury of the
United States for the District of Montana for introducing
intoxicating liquor into the Flathead Indian Reservation. It
appeared upon the trial in the district court that he lived on the
reservation, and at the time of the alleged offense was returning
to his home from Missoula on a train of the Northern Pacific
Railway Company, intending to leave the train at Ravalli. A special
officer of the Interior Department boarded the train at Arlee, and,
finding a pint of whisky on the person of the plaintiff in error at
once arrested him and took him back to Missoula. Both Arlee and
Ravalli are points within the exterior limits of the reservation,
which is crossed by the right of way of the railway company.
The jury rendered a verdict of guilty, whereupon it was urged by
motion in arrest of judgment that the court was without
jurisdiction. The motion was denied and the defendant was sentenced
to imprisonment for sixty
Page 225 U. S. 554
days and to the payment of a fine of $100. The case comes here
on writ of error, the district judge certifying the question of
jurisdiction. The conviction was had under the Act of January 30,
1897, c. 109,
* 29 Stat. 506,
which provides:
"That any person who shall sell, give away, dispose of,
exchange, or barter any malt, spirituous, or vinous liquor,
including beer, ale, and wine, or any ardent or other intoxicating
liquor of any kind whatsoever . . . to any Indian to whom allotment
of land has been made, while the title to the same shall be held in
trust by the government, or to any Indian a ward of the government,
under charge of any Indian superintendent or agent, or any Indian,
including mixed bloods, over whom the government, through its
departments, exercises guardianship, and any person who shall
introduce or attempt to introduce any malt, spirituous, or vinous
liquor, including beer, ale, and wine, or any ardent or
intoxicating liquor of any kind whatsoever into the Indian country,
which term shall include any Indian allotment, while the title to
the same shall be held in trust by the government, or while the
same shall remain inalienable by the allottee without the consent
of the United States, shall be punished by imprisonment for not
less than sixty days, and by a fine of not less than one hundred
dollars for the first offense and not less than two hundred dollars
for each offense thereafter:
Provided, however, That the
person convicted shall be committed until fine and costs are
paid."
We are not here concerned with that portion of the statute which
penalizes selling or giving intoxicating liquors to the Indians
described, or with the authority of Congress to protect the Indian
wards of the Nation.
Page 225 U. S. 555
The indictment charged that the plaintiff in error "did, then
and there, wrongfully and unlawfully introduce" a quantity of
intoxicating liquor "into the Flathead Indian Reservation, in the
state and district of Montana," the said reservation "being an
Indian country." The offense alleged was the introduction of the
liquor into the reservation, and not "attempting to introduce."
The Flathead Indian Reservation was established by the Treaty of
July 16, 1855, between the United States and the confederated
tribes of the Flathead, Kootenay, and Upper Pend d'Oreilles
Indians. 12 Stat. 975. It comprised a district now included within
the boundaries of the State of Montana. The Enabling Act of 1889,
under which the state was formed, required the adoption of an
ordinance, irrevocable in the absence of the consent of the United
States, providing: "That the people inhabiting" the proposed
state
"do agree and declare that they forever disclaim all right and
title to the unappropriated public lands lying within the
boundaries thereof, and to all lands lying within said limits,
owned or held by any Indian or Indian tribes, and that, until the
title thereto shall have been extinguished by the United States,
the same shall be and remain subject to the disposition of the
United States, and said Indian lands shall remain under the
absolute jurisdiction and control of the Congress of the United
States."
Act of February 22, 1889, c. 180, 25 Stat. 676, 677.
By the Act of July 2, 1864, c. 217, § 2, 13 Stat. 365, 367,
Congress granted a right of way through the public lands to the
Northern Pacific Railroad Company for the construction of a
railroad and telegraph as proposed, "to the extent of two hundred
feet in width on each side of said railroad," including all
necessary ground for station buildings, workshops, etc. It was
provided that the United States should
"extinguish, as rapidly as may be consistent with public policy
and the welfare of the said
Page 225 U. S. 556
Indians, the Indian titles to all lands falling under the
operation of this act, and acquired in the donation to the [road]
named in this bill."
On July 5, 1882, the railroad company filed a map of definite
location, showing its line of railroad across the southwestern part
of the Flathead reservation. Thereupon, on September 2, 1882, the
confederated tribes above mentioned entered into an agreement with
the United States by which, after reciting the grant by Congress of
the right of way, the treaties with the Indians, and the filing of
the map of definite location, the Indians surrendered and
relinquished to the United States
"all the right, title, and interest which they now have under
and by virtue of the aforesaid treaty of July sixteenth, eighteen
hundred and fifty-five, in and to all that part of the Jocko (or
Flathead) Reservation situate in the Territory of Montana, and
described as follows, namely: a strip of land not exceeding two
hundred feet in width, that is to say, one hundred feet on each
side of the line laid down on the map of definite location
hereinbefore mentioned, wherever said line runs through said
reservation."
In consideration of the "surrender and relinquishment of lands
as aforesaid," amounting in the aggregate to 1,430 acres, the
United States agreed to pay to the Indians the sum of $16,000.
Ex.Doc. No. 15, 48th Cong. 1st sess.
Thus, by the grant of Congress, the railroad company obtained
the fee in the land constituting the "right of way" (
Buttz v.
Northern Pacific R. Co., 119 U. S. 56,
119 U. S. 66;
Northern Pacific R. Co. v. Townsend, 190 U.
S. 267,
190 U. S.
271), and by virtue of the agreement between the United
States and the Indians, this land was freed from the Indians right
of occupancy. As the government states in its brief: "Beyond
question, the Indian land title in this strip had been entirely
extinguished."
The question, then, is whether a person having intoxicating
liquor in his possession on a railroad train running
Page 225 U. S. 557
on this strip can be deemed to have introduce the liquor "into
the Indian country" within the meaning of the Act of 1897. Was the
strip "Indian country," so that the district court of the United
States can be said to have had jurisdiction of the alleged
offense?
The Act of June 30, 1834, c. 161, 4 Stat. 729, thus defined "the
Indian country."
"That all that part of the United States west of the
Mississippi, and not within the states of Missouri and Louisiana,
or the Territory of Arkansas, and also that part of the United
States east of the Mississippi River, and not within any state to
which the Indian title has not been extinguished, for the purposes
of this act, be taken and deemed to be the Indian country."
This portion of the Act of 1834 was not reenacted in the Revised
Statutes, though other parts of the statute were, and hence was
repealed by § 5596 of the revision. But, as has frequently
been stated by this Court, the definition may still
"be referred to in connection with the provisions of its
original context, which remain in force, and may be considered in
connection with the changes which have taken place in our
situation, with a view of determining from time to time what must
be regarded as Indian country where it is spoken of in the
statutes."
Ex Parte Crow Dog, 109 U. S. 556,
109 U. S. 561;
United States v. LeBris, 121 U. S. 278,
121 U. S.
280.
The proper criterion to be applied was considered in
Bates
v. Clark, 95 U. S. 204, where
Mr. Justice Miller, delivering the opinion of the Court, said
(
id., pp.
95 U. S.
207-208):
"Notwithstanding the immense changes which have since taken
place in the vast region covered by the Act of 1834, by the
extinguishment of Indian titles, the creation of states, and the
formation of territorial governments, Congress has not thought it
necessary to make any new definition of Indian country. Yet, during
all this time, a large body of laws has been in existence
Page 225 U. S. 558
whose operation was confined to the Indian country, whatever
that may be. . . ."
"The simple criterion is that, as to all the lands thus
described, it was Indian country whenever the Indian title had not
been extinguished, and it continued to be Indian country so long as
the Indians had title to it, and no longer. As soon as they parted
with the title, it ceased to be Indian country, without any further
act of Congress, unless by the treaty by which the Indians parted
with their title, or by some act of Congress, a different rule was
made applicable to the case."
It must be assumed that, in the Act of 1897, Congress used the
words "Indian country" in the accepted sense. And this is confirmed
by the provision bearing witness to the policy which had been
adopted looking to the dissolution of tribal relations and the
distribution of tribal property in separate allotments. Thus, the
act provides that the term
"'Indian country' shall include any Indian allotment while the
title to the same shall be held in trust by the government, or
while the same shall remain inalienable by the allottee without the
consent of the United States."
United States v. Sutton, 215 U.
S. 291;
Hallowell v. United States,
221 U. S. 317,
221 U. S.
323-324.
That the effect of a cession by the Indians might be qualified
by a stipulation in the treaty that the ceded territory, although
within the boundaries of a state, should retain its original status
of Indian country so far as the introduction into it of
intoxicating liquors was concerned, was decided in
United
States v. Forty-three Gallons of Whisky, 93 U. S.
188. But, as was pointed out in
Bates v. Clark,
supra, that decision proceeded upon the hypothesis that, "when
the Indian title is extinguished, it ceases to be Indian country
unless some such reservation takes it out of the rule." The same
principle of decision was recognized in
Dick
v.
Page 225 U. S. 559
United States, 208 U. S. 340.
There, the plaintiff in error had been convicted of introducing
intoxicating liquor into the Nez Perce Indian Reservation within
the State of Idaho. The offense was committed, if at all, in the
village of Culdesac, which, although within the boundaries of the
reservation, as established before Idaho was admitted into the
Union, was at the time specified in the indictment, an organized
village of that state. The lands upon which the village was located
were part of those ceded to the United States by an agreement with
the Indians in which it was stipulated that the ceded lands, as
well as those retained, should be subject for the period of
twenty-five years to all federal laws prohibiting the introduction
of intoxicants into the Indian country. It was held that this was a
valid stipulation, based upon the treatymaking power of the United
States and upon the power of Congress to regulate commerce with the
Indians, and was
"not inconsistent, in any substantial sense, with the
constitutional principle that a new state comes into the Union upon
entire equality with the original states."
Upon this ground, the judgment of conviction was affirmed.
While the
Dick case was thus found, owing to the
stipulation in the agreement, to be within the exception, the Court
explicitly recognized the rule which governs in the absence of a
different provision by treaty or by act of Congress. The Court
said:
"If this case depended alone upon the federal liquor statute
forbidding the introduction of intoxicating drinks into the Indian
country, we should feel obliged to adjudge that the trial court
erred in not directing a verdict for the defendant, for that
statute, when enacted, did not intend by the words 'Indian country'
to embrace any body of territory in which at the time, the Indian
title had been extinguished, and over which and over the
inhabitants of which (as was the case of Culdesac) the
jurisdiction
Page 225 U. S. 560
of the state, for all purposes of government, was full and
complete.
Bates v. Clark, 95 U. S.
204;
Ex Parte Crow Dog, 109 U. S.
556,
109 U. S. 561."
In the present case, there was no provision, either in the
treaty with the Indians or by act of Congress, which limited the
effect of the surrender of the Indian title. We have been referred
to certain statements made by the representative of the United
States in the course of the negotiations with the Indians which
preceded their agreement, but these were of an informal character,
and cannot be regarded as qualifying the agreement that was
actually made. The Indian title or right of occupation was
extinguished, without reservation, and the relinquished strip came
under the jurisdiction of the then territory, and later under that
of the State of Montana. It was not "unappropriated public land,"
or land "owned or held by any Indian or Indian tribe." Enabling
Act,
supra.
To repeat, the plaintiff in error was not charged with
"attempting to introduce" the liquor into Indian country, but with
the actual introduction. If having the liquor in his possession on
the train on this right of way did not constitute such
introduction, it is immaterial, so far as the charge is concerned,
whether or not he intended to take it elsewhere. Nor is it
important that the plaintiff in error was an Indian. The statute
makes it an offense for "any person" to introduce liquor into
Indian country.
Our conclusion must be that the right of way had been completely
withdrawn from the reservation by the surrender of the Indian
title, and that, in accordance with the repeated rulings of this
Court, it was not Indian country. The district court therefore had
no jurisdiction of the offense charged, and the judgment must be
reversed.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, with
directions to quash the indictment and discharge the
defendant.
* This repealed, so far as it was inconsistent, the Act of July
23, 1892, c. 234, 27 Stat. 260, which amended § 2139 of the
Revised Statutes.