There is no question of the authority of the United States to
devote the Indian lands involved in this action to irrigation
purposes.
Under the provisions of the Reclamation Act of June 17, 1902,
the Secretary of the Interior had power to acquire all rights and
property necessary therefor, including those of allottee Indians,
by paying for their improvements and giving them the right of
selecting other lands.
The restrictions on alienation of lands allotted to Indians
within the area of the Milk River Irrigation Project did not extend
to prohibiting an allottee Indian from selling his improvements to
the United States and selecting other lands so that the United
States could use the lands selected for purposes of an irrigation
project as provided by act of Congress.
In this case,
held that the mother of Indian minors
whose father was not an Indian was the natural guardian, and her
relinquishment of the original allotment on their behalf was proper
and binding.
196 F. 345 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the rights of allottee Indians and the
power of the government to purchase improvements and make new
allotments where the land allotted is needed for reclamation
purposes, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was an action in ejectment brought by the United
States in the United States Circuit Court for the
Page 237 U. S. 44
District of Montana, to recover certain lands in the Blackfeet
Indian Reservation. The defendants (now plaintiffs in error) other
than Henry Henkel are members of the Piegan Tribe of Indians. Henry
Henkel is the husband of Caroline Henkel, and the other defendants
to the action are their children. They lived together as a family
and occupied the lands in question, upon which they had constructed
certain buildings and improvements. On November 5th, 1906, Caroline
Henkel, for herself and two daughters, together with her two sons,
George Henkel and William Henkel, executed a document addressed to
the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, by which, describing themselves
as members of the Piegan Tribe of Indians, they undertook to
relinquish all claims to lands and buildings then occupied by them
on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation, Montana, comprising about 800
acres of land, the lands being situated at the foot of Lower St.
Mary Lake, and south of Swift Current Creek. The conditions of the
surrender of the lands for use in connection with the proposed St.
Mary reservoir of the United States Reclamation Service were that
they should be paid the sum of $7,500 for the improvements on such
selections, and be subsequently allowed to select allotments of
equal area, or as provided by law, from the unoccupied lands of the
Blackfeet Reservation in Montana. Henry Henkel, as husband and
father, concurred in the agreement, and indorsed his approval
thereon.
On February 15th, 1907, the price named in the instrument just
referred to, $7,500, was paid to Caroline Henkel, who, for herself
and two daughters, and George and William Henkel, for themselves,
relinquished to the United States all their right, title, and claim
in and to the lands and buildings then occupied by them on the
Blackfeet Indian Reservation, Montana, and located at the foot of
Lower St. Mary Lake, and south of Swift Current Creek, and released
the United
Page 237 U. S. 45
States from all claims for damages to all improvements of
whatsoever nature on the land. This receipt and release was also
agreed to by the husband, Henry Henkel.
These facts are set up in the complaint, and it is averred that,
pursuant to the Act of Congress of June 17, 1902, c. 1093, 32 Stat.
388, the government had made investigations of and surveys for an
irrigation project which was known as the Milk River Irrigation
Project, under and by virtue of which certain lands in the northern
part of the State of Montana were to be irrigated; that among other
works forming part of the system to be established, a dam was to be
built at the foot of the Lower St. Mary Lake, by which the lands
above mentioned and now in controversy were to be flooded, and that
the same were necessary for flooding in connection with the
reclamation project above referred to.
The defendants answered, admitting the execution and delivery of
the instrument above referred to, and the payment of the money, as
recited in the release and receipt. They averred that they were all
members of the Piegan Tribe of Indians, except Henry Henkel, and
had the right as such Indians to be upon the Blackfeet Indian
Reservation; that they had settled upon the lands in question more
than ten years before the beginning of this suit, which, since a
recent survey, were designated by congressional subdivisions, and
embraced the land in controversy, and ever since their settlement
upon said lands they had occupied the same in common as their home,
and since the passage of the Act of March 1, 1907, c. 2285, 34
Stat. 1035, opening the reservation to settlement, they had
selected such lands as their allotments under that act, the lands
being grazing in character. The answer sets out the selection of
each of the defendants entitled to allotments, and it is alleged
that each acquiesced in the selection made by the other. The answer
then avers that the allotting officers had refused to allot the
lands in
Page 237 U. S. 46
question to them, but that, under protest, William Henkel,
George Henkel, and Lizzie Henkel had been allotted lands elsewhere,
which lands they offered to surrender if the lands selected by them
should be allotted to them, the refusal to allot such lands, as the
answer avers, being based upon the instruments referred to in the
complaint. The answer averred that the lands were at all times
since the execution of these instruments worth more than the price
offered by the government, which sum the defendants offered to
return.
To this answer a demurrer was sustained by the court, and, the
plaintiffs in error electing to stand upon the answer, judgment was
rendered accordingly, awarding to the United States the possession
of the premises. The case was taken to the Circuit Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit, where the judgment of the lower court was
affirmed. 196 F. 345. The case is now here upon writ of error.
The contention of the plaintiffs in error, defendants below, is
that no statute of the United States has conferred authority upon
the government or its officers to acquire the lands described by
the relinquishment from the Henkels as above set forth. Such
action, it is contended, would amount to an act of bad faith upon
the part of the government toward these Indians, in view of their
established rights in these lands, and to permit the reclamation
statute of 1902 to have such effect, it is insisted, would be
virtually to permit it to repeal previous acts of Congress
disposing of these lands for the benefit of the Indians.
A consideration of these matters requires some examination of
the previous status of the Indians and what Congress has undertaken
to do by legislation in their behalf.
By the Act of February 8, 1887, c. 119, 24 Stat. 388, as amended
February 28, 1891, c. 383, 26 Stat. 794, authority was given to the
President, as to any reservation
Page 237 U. S. 47
which he should consider advantageous for agricultural or
grazing purposes, to allot, after survey thereof, "to each Indian
located thereon one-eighth of a section of land," and if the lands
allotted were valuable for grazing purposes only, to allot to each
a quarter-section of land. Allotments, which were to be set apart
under the provisions of the act were to be selected by the Indians,
heads of families selecting for their minor children, in such
manner as to embrace the improvements of the Indians making the
selection. Upon the approval of the allotments by the Secretary of
the Interior, patents were to issue therefor in the name of the
allottees, which patents should declare that the United States
would hold the lands thus allotted for the period of twenty-five
years, in trust for the sole use and benefit of the Indians to whom
allotted, and that conveyances of land set apart and allotted as
provided in the statute, or any contract concerning the same,
before the expiration of the time above mentioned, should be null
and void. In that act it was provided that nothing therein
contained should affect the power of Congress to grant the right of
way through any lands granted to an Indian for railroads, or other
highways or telegraph lines, for the public use, or to condemn such
lands to public uses upon making just compensation.
On September 28, 1895, an agreement was made with the Indians
(29 Stat. 353) which was approved by the Act of June 10, 1896, c.
398, 29 Stat. 357. Article V of that agreement provides as
follows:
"Since the situation of the Blackfeet Reservation renders it
wholly unfit for agriculture, and since these Indians have shown
within the past four years that they can successfully raise horned
cattle, and there is every probability that they will become
self-supporting by attention to this industry, it is agreed that,
during the existence of this agreement, no allotments of land
in
Page 237 U. S. 48
severalty shall be made to them, but that this whole reservation
shall continue to be held by these Indians as a communal grazing
tract upon which their herds may feed undisturbed, and that, after
the expiration of this agreement, the lands shall continue to be
held until such time as a majority of the adult males of the tribe
shall request in writing that allotment in severalty shall be made
of their lands,"
provided, however,
"That any member of the tribe may, with the approval of the
agent in charge, fence in such area of land as he and the members
of his family would be entitled to under the allotment act, and may
file with the agent a description of such land and of the
improvements that he has made on the same, and the filing of such
description shall give the said members of the tribe the right to
take such land when allotments of the land in severalty shall be
made."
While the Henkel family had occupied this 800-acre tract, it
does not appear that they had filed a description of the land and
improvements with the agent so as to give them the right to take
such land when allotment of the same should be made. Nevertheless,
they would have a strong equity for recognition in view of their
settlement upon the land and construction of improvements thereon,
and, but for the relinquishment relied upon in this case, they
might perfect their right to the allotment. It is to be noted,
however, that this agreement, in article VII, contains an important
recognition of a reserved right of the government to use the lands
upon compensation being made therefor for certain public
improvements. As it is therein provided,
"whenever, in the opinion of the President, the public interests
require the construction of railroads or other highways, telegraph
or telephone lines, canals and irrigating ditches, through any
portion of this reservation, right of way shall by and is hereby,
granted for such purposes, under such rules, regulations,
limitations, and restrictions
Page 237 U. S. 49
as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe, the compensation
to be fixed by said Secretary and by him expended for the benefit
of the Indians."
While the plaintiffs in error were thus occupying the lands
under this agreement and statute, the Reclamation Act of June 17,
1902, c. 1093, 32 Stat. 388, was passed. That act outlines a
comprehensive reclamation scheme, and provides for the examination
and survey of lands and for construction and maintenance of
irrigation works for the storage, diversion, and development of
water for the reclamation of arid and semiarid lands. Section VII
of that act provides (p. 389) --
"That where, in carrying out the provisions of this act, it
becomes necessary to acquire any rights or property, the Secretary
of the Interior is hereby authorized to acquire the same for the
United States by purchase or by condemnation."
Section X of the same act provides --
"The Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized to perform
any and all acts . . . necessary and proper for the purpose of
carrying the provisions of this act into . . . effect."
In 1902, preliminary surveys for the Milk River Reclamation
Project were begun by the Reclamation Service, and the boundaries
of the St. Mary Dam and its right of way for flooding area were
outlined. On February 28, 1903, the Secretary of the Interior, on
recommendation of the director of the service, withdrew, under the
terms of the reclamation act, a strip of land one-half mile wide
around lower St. Mary Lake and on each side of the river, after
which construction was authorized and a large amount of work has
since been done.
The authority of the Congress of the United States to devote
these lands to irrigation purposes is unquestioned. As a matter of
fact, it might, if it saw fit, remove the Indians therefrom and
devote the land to such uses.
Page 237 U. S. 50
Recognizing the injustice of arbitrary appropriations to other
uses, no effort has been made to take these lands without
compensation to the Indians for the improvements which they have
made, and they have been given the right to select other lands in
place of those released. The reclamation projects undertaken by the
government are very extensive and cover many states, and they must
involve in their construction the flooding of lands in connection
with dams designed to hold water for such purposes, and must
necessarily include much territory which is included in Indian
reservations. This situation was, of course, well known to Congress
when it passed the reclamation act, and we cannot doubt, in view of
the broad authority conferred by §§ VII and X, above
quoted, that it was the purpose of Congress to give the Secretary
of the Interior the right to acquire such rights as are here
involved when necessary for reclamation purposes. In carrying out
the purposes of the act, the Secretary of the Interior is
authorized to acquire any rights or property necessary for that
purpose, and to acquire the same either by purchase or by
condemnation. He is specifically authorized to perform any and all
acts necessary and proper for the purpose of carrying into effect
the provisions of the act. Authority could hardly have been
conferred in more comprehensive terms, and we do not believe it was
the intention of Congress, because of the Indians' right of
selection of lands under the circumstances here shown, to reserve
such lands from the operation of the act. To do so might defeat the
reclamation projects which it was evidently the purpose of Congress
to authorize and promote. The Secretary of the Interior, in
interpreting this act, dealt fairly with the Indians insofar as
this record shows, paid them for the improvements they had put upon
the lands, and gave them the right to select other lands which
might be open to allotment, of equal area, as provided by law, from
the unoccupied lands
Page 237 U. S. 51
of the Blackfeet Indian Reservation. In so doing, we think he
acted within his authority, and was executing the purposes intended
by the act of Congress to which we have referred.
The circuit court of appeals in its decision laid emphasis upon
the case of
Williams v. First National Bank, 216 U.
S. 582, in which this Court recognized the right of one
Indian to surrender and relinquish to another Indian a preference
right to an allotment of a tract of land. In that case, it was held
that one Indian might sell his improvements and holdings to another
Indian for allotment, and lay his own on other land which he might
find vacant, or which he might, in turn, purchase from another
Indian, and the circuit court of appeals held that, this being so,
as a matter of course, and for stronger reasons, an Indian might
relinquish his rights to the United States, and that restrictions
had been placed upon the power of the Indians to alienate their
lands or convey their rights of possession only for their
protection, and not for the purpose of restricting their right to
deal with the United States or to relinquish their rights to the
government, citing
Lykins v. McGrath, 184 U.
S. 169, and
Jones v. Meehan, 175 U. S.
1. Without questioning the correctness of this
reasoning, we think the purpose of the United States to acquire any
property necessary for the reclamation project embraced such
transactions as the Secretary had in this case with the Indians,
and the action which he took under the authority conferred by that
act wholly justified all that was done in the premises.
As to the contention that the daughters for whom the mother
signed are not bound by the release: the mother undertook to act
for them as minors, and there is nothing to indicate that they were
not such, as there is no allegation in the answer to which the
demurrer was sustained that they were adults, and therefore capable
of acting for themselves. The references to the regulations of
the
Page 237 U. S. 52
Interior Department, which are called to our attention by the
government, show that that Department has uniformly required the
interest of minors to be represented by the natural guardian, which
in this case was the mother. There is no court to which they could
have applied for the judicial appointment of a guardian, and we see
no reason to question the legality of the practice of the
Department in this respect. A communication from the Acting
Commissioner of Indian Affairs, attached to the government's brief,
declares that that office and the Interior Department have
uniformly held that the natural guardian could execute valid
relinquishments in behalf of minor children, and we see no reason
why this authority should be questioned.
We reach the conclusion that the court of appeals did not err in
affirming the judgment of the circuit court, and its judgment is
accordingly
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS took no part in this decision.