Acting under the enrollment provisions of the Curtis Act of June
28, 1898, and the Creek Agreement of March 1, 1901, the Dawes
Commission was a
quasi-judicial tribunal, and enrollments
made by it and approved by the Secretary of the Interior are
presumptively correct, and, unless impeached by very clear evidence
of fraud, mistake, or arbitrary action, they are conclusive.
Whether or not a person alleged to be a member of the Creek
Nation was living on April 1, 1899, is one of the questions going
to the right of such person or his heirs to have his name enrolled
under § 28 of Agreement of March 1, 1901, which the Dawes
Commission was competent to decide; it is not a jurisdictional
question, and an incorrect determination of it does not necessarily
render the enrollment void.
Scott v. McNeal, 154 U. S.
34, distinguished.
In enrolling members of the Creek Tribe in 1901, the Dawes
Commission was authorized to presume that a person enrolled as a
member of the tribe on the tribal rolls of 1895 was living on April
1, 1899, in the absence of proof of his death before that day or of
circumstances indicating that he had died before the Commission
acted.
Page 244 U. S. 112
The evidence in the case examined, and found wanting in proof of
such arbitrary action on the part of the Dawes Commission as would
establish a mistake of law or fact warranting the impeachment of
its action in enrolling the Indian in whose name the allotment in
question was made and patented.
An attempt of the Secretary of the Interior to set aside the
enrollment and allotment of a deceased Creek Indian by striking his
name from the rolls without notice to his heirs is
ultra
vires and void.
When a Creek citizen dies after April 1, 1899, and an allotment
is afterwards made, and deeds issued, in his name, the title is
vested in his heirs by § 28 of the Agreement of March 1, 1901.
Skelton v. Dill, 235 U. S.
206-208.
Under the Creek Agreement of March 1, 1901, § 3, it was
permissible for the Dawes Commission to enroll tribal citizens and
make them allotments when they failed to make selections for
themselves.
Affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 244 U. S. 113
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the court:
This action was begun by the United States, in behalf of the
Creek Tribe of Indians, in the District Court of the United States
for the Eastern District of Oklahoma against Bessie Wildcat and
others, heirs of Barney Thlocco, a full-blood Creek Indian, to
obtain cancellation of the allotment certificate and deeds for his
allotment of 160 acres. The bill of complaint alleges that Thlocco
was a Creek Indian by blood; that he died at about the beginning of
the year 1899 and prior to April 1, 1899, and that he was not
entitled to be enrolled as a citizen of the Creek Nation, or to
receive an allotment of any part of its lands under the acts of
Congress; that, on or about May 24, 1901, the Commission to the
Five Civilized Tribes caused his name to be placed on the roll of
Creek citizens by blood which that Commission was then preparing;
that thereafter, on June 30, 1902, the Commission issued a
certificate of allotment in Thlocco's name, and homestead and
allotment patents purporting to convey the land allotted were
executed by the principal chief of the Creek Nation on March 11,
1903, and approved by the Secretary of the Interior on April 3,
1903; that thereafter, on December 13, 1906, the Secretary of the
Interior, by executive order, caused Thlocco's name to be stricken
from the roll of citizens by blood of the Creek Nation, and he is
not an enrolled citizen by blood or otherwise of the Creek Nation,
and is not now and has never been entitled to an allotment of land
therein because he has never been a lawfully enrolled citizen
thereof, and because he died prior to April 1, 1899, and that the
patents have never been delivered to Thlocco or to any other
person, but are in the possession of complainant through its
officers and agents. The bill
Page 244 U. S. 114
alleges that these instruments and proceedings constitute a
cloud upon the Creek Nation's title to the land, and that the
existence of this cloud hinders and delays complainant in the
performance of the duty imposed on it by law to allot and otherwise
dispose of the lands and to wind up the affairs of the Creek
Nation, and prays that the allotment certificate and patents be
declared void and of no effect as instruments of conveyance; that
the defendants be decreed to have no right, title, interest, or
estate in and to the land; that the title to the land be quieted in
complainant and the Creek Nation; that whatever cloud is cast upon
the title to the land by reason of the matters aforesaid be decreed
to be dissolved and the land decreed to be a part of the public and
unallotted tribal land of the Creek Nation, subject to disposition
by complainant in accordance with law; that the enrollment of
Barney Thlocco be cancelled, and that he, or any person claiming
by, through, or under him, including the defendants, be decreed not
to be entitled to participate in the disposition of the lands,
moneys, or other property of the Creek Nation, and that the
defendants be forever enjoined from asserting any claim of title
to, or interest in, the tract of land hereinbefore described
adverse to the complainant and the Creek Nation. It is alleged that
no hearing was held or investigation made by the Commission, and no
evidence of any kind was obtained or had by it on the question of
Thlocco's right to be enrolled; that no notice was given to the
Creek Nation that his name was about to be enrolled; that there was
no controversy, contest, or adverse proceeding of any kind before
the Commission in this respect, and that the Commission, in causing
Thlocco's name to be placed on the roll of Creek citizens by blood,
acted arbitrarily and summarily, and without knowledge,
information, or belief that he was living or dead on April 1, 1899,
and acted on a mere arbitrary and erroneous assumption wholly
unsupported by evidence or
Page 244 U. S. 115
information that he was living on that date and entitled to be
enrolled.
The answer avers that Thlocco was living April 1, 1899, and
denies that the Commission acted arbitrarily and without evidence
in placing his name on the roll and allotting the lands to him, and
alleges that the Commission, in causing both these acts to be done,
was not guilty of any gross mistake of fact or of law, but acted
upon evidence satisfactory to it, and sufficient in law and in
fact. It further alleges that the Dawes Commission was vested with
jurisdiction to determine what persons were entitled to enrollment
as citizens of the nation, and entitle to allotment out of the
tribal lands, and that, its decision in that regard having been
approved by the Secretary of the Interior,
"said enrollment, allotment, and patent cannot be cancelled, nor
can the issue of fact upon which the Commission placed the name of
Barney Thlocco upon the approved Creek Roll be tried again, and
these defendants say that this Court is without authority of law to
reopen or retry the question of fact sought to be put in issue by
the United States."
Other defendants claimed an interest in part of the same
property under a subsequent allotment, and intervened for the same
relief as was asked by the United States.
Upon the trial of the case, the government offered to show by
witnesses and circumstances that Thlocco in fact died in January,
1899. Upon objection to this evidence by the defendants, the trial
court ruled that the question whether Thlocco was living on April
1, 1899, was one of the questions which the law submitted to the
Dawes Commission, and that its decision, placing Thlocco's name on
the tribal roll, could only be attacked upon the ground of fraud,
error of law, or gross mistake of fact, or upon the ground that the
Commission acted arbitrarily and wholly without evidence; that it
was not open to the government,
Page 244 U. S. 116
for the purpose of attacking the allotment certificate and deeds
to Thlocco, to retry the question of fact as to whether he was
living April 1, 1899.
At the conclusion of the trial, the government renewed its offer
of proof, to which objections were sustained on the ground just
stated. A decree was then entered dismissing the bill for the
reason that the government had failed to show that the Commission,
in enrolling Thlocco, acted arbitrarily and without evidence.
Appeal was then taken to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the
Eighth Circuit, which court certified certain questions of law to
this Court. Subsequently a writ of certiorari was issued, bringing
the whole case here. (Judicial Code, § 239.)
The government, in the brief filed in its behalf, reduces the
questions necessary to decide the merits of this appeal to two:
first, should the evidence offered by the government to show that
Thlocco died prior to April 1, 1899, have been admitted? Second,
should the judgment of the district court be reversed because the
enrollment of Thlocco and the allotment to him were made
arbitrarily and without evidence as to whether he was living or
dead on April 1, 1899?
As to the first question, an understanding of certain
legislation is necessary to its answer. By the Act of Congress of
June 10, 1896, 29 Stat. 339, the Commission to the Five Civilized
Tribes, more commonly known as the Dawes Commission, was authorized
to hear and determine applications for citizenship in any of the
Five Civilized Tribes. By that act, the rolls of citizenship of
those tribes as they then existed were confirmed, and the
Commission commanded in determining applications for citizenship to
"give due force and effect to the rolls, usages, and customs of
each of said nations or tribes." It was provided by the Act of June
7, 1897, 30 Stat. 84, that the term "rolls of citizenship" should
mean
"the last authenticated rolls of each tribe which have been
approved by
Page 244 U. S. 117
the council of the nations, and the descendants of those
appearing on such rolls,"
and certain others specified who had been lawfully added to the
rolls. By the Curtis Act of June 28, 1898, 30 Stat. 495, the
Commission was authorized and directed to make correct rolls of the
citizens by blood of the Creek Tribe, eliminating from the tribal
rolls such names as might have been placed thereon by fraud or
without authority of law, enrolling such only as might have lawful
right thereto, and their descendants born since such rolls were
made. It was provided that the Commission should make such rolls
descriptive of the persons thereon, so that they might be
identified thereby, and the Commission was authorized to take a
census of each of said tribes, or to adopt any other means by them
deemed necessary to enable them to make such rolls, with the right
of access to all rolls and records of the several tribes, and with
authority to administer oaths, examine witnesses, and send for
persons and papers. The rolls so made, when approved by the
Secretary of the Interior, were to be final, and the persons whose
names were found thereon, with their descendants thereafter born to
them, with such persons as might intermarry according to tribal
laws, were alone to constitute the several tribes which they
represented. By § 28 of the Creek Agreement of March 1, 1901,
31 Stat. 861, 870, it was provided that all citizens who were
living on the 1st day of April, 1899, entitled to be enrolled under
the above provisions of the Curtis Act, should be placed upon the
rolls to be made by the Dawes Commission under that act, and
provision was made for allotment to the heirs where any such
citizen had died since that time. "The rolls so made by said
Commission," the act continues,
"when approved by the Secretary of the Interior, shall be the
final rolls of citizenship of said tribe, upon which the allotment
of all lands and the distribution of all moneys and other property
of the tribe shall be made, and to no
Page 244 U. S. 118
other persons."
This agreement was ratified by the Creek Council May 25, 1901,
32 Stat.1971.
The legislation which we have outlined indicates the purpose of
Congress to make provision for the partition of the lands belonging
to the Creek Nation among the members of the tribe, and to that end
it authorized the Dawes Commission to make investigation and
determine the names of such as were entitled to be on the rolls of
citizenship and to participate in the division of the tribal lands.
This purpose, indicated in the Curtis Act of 1898, was emphasized
by the so-called Creek Agreement of 1901, subsequently ratified by
the tribe. In that act, the Commission was authorized to
investigate the subject, and its action, when approved by the
Secretary of the Interior, was declared to be final. There was thus
constituted a
quasi-judicial tribunal whose judgments
within the limits of its jurisdiction were only subject to attack
for fraud or such mistake of law or fact as would justify the
holding that its judgments were voidable. Congress, by this
legislation, evidenced an intention to put an end to controversy by
providing a tribunal before which those interested could be heard
and the rolls authoritatively made up of those who were entitled to
participate in the partition of the tribal lands. It was to the
interest of all concerned that the beneficiaries of this division
should be ascertained. To this end, the Commission was established
and endowed with authority to hear and determine the matter.
A correct conclusion was not necessary to the finality and
binding character of its decisions. It may be that the Commission,
in acting upon the many cases before it, made mistakes which are
now impossible of correction. This might easily be so, for the
Commission passed upon the rights of thousands claiming membership
in the tribe and ascertained the rights of others who did not
appear before it, upon the merits of whose standing the
Commission
Page 244 U. S. 119
had to pass with the best information which it could obtain.
When the Commission proceeded in good faith to determine the
matter and to act upon information before it, not arbitrarily, but
according to its best judgment, we think it was the intention of
the act that the matter, upon the approval of the Secretary, should
be finally concluded, and the rights of the parties forever
settled, subject to such attacks as could successfully be made upon
judgments of this character for fraud or mistake.
We cannot agree that the case is within the principles decided
in
Scott v. McNeal, 154 U. S. 34, and
kindred cases, in which it has been held that, in the absence of a
subject matter of jurisdiction, an adjudication that there was such
is not conclusive, and that a judgment based upon action without
its proper subject being in existence is void. In
Scott v.
McNeal, it was held that a probate court had no jurisdiction
to appoint an administrator of a living person and to sell property
in administration proceedings after finding that he was in fact
dead. In that case, it was held that a sale of the property of a
living person by order of the probate court, without notice to him,
necessarily deprived him of due process of law by selling his
property without notice and by order of a court which had no
jurisdiction over him in any manner. The notice in such cases to
his next of kin, the court held, was not notice to him, and to make
an order undertaking to deprive such person of his property would
be to take it by a judgment to which the living person was not a
party or privy, and it was held that jurisdiction did not arise
from the mere finding of the court that the person whose property
was thus taken was in fact deceased. In the present case, the
government had jurisdiction over these lands. It had the authority
to partition them among the members of the tribe.
Shulthis v.
McDougal, 170 F. 529, 534;
McDougal v. McKay,
237 U. S. 372,
237 U. S.
383.
Page 244 U. S. 120
For this purpose, it determined to divide the lands among those
living on April 1, 1899, and constituted a tribunal to investigate
the question of membership and consequent right to share in the
division. We think the decision of such tribunal, when not
impeached for fraud or mistake, conclusive of the question of
membership in the tribe, when followed, as was the case here, by
the action of the Interior Department confirming the allotment and
ordering the patents conveying the lands, which were in fact
issued. If decisions of this character may be subject to annulment
in the manner in which the government seeks to attack and set aside
this one, many titles supposed to be secure would be devested many
years after patents issued, upon showing that the decision was a
mistaken one. The rule is that such decisions are presumably based
upon proper showing, and that they must stand until overcome by
full and convincing proof sufficient, within the recognized
principles of equity jurisdiction in cases of this character, to
invalidate them.
Maxwell Land-Grant Case, 121 U.
S. 325,
121 U. S.
379-381;
Colorado Coal & Iron Co. v. United
States, 123 U. S. 307.
As to the second contention, that the Commission acted
arbitrarily and without evidence of the fact that Thlocco was
living on April 1, 1899, there is no attack upon the finding of the
Commission for fraud, and this record shows an earnest attempt to
conform the rolls to the requirements of the law.
Thlocco's name appeared on the Tribal Rolls of 1890 and 1895 and
on a census card made by a clerk of the Commission in 1897.
An enrolling clerk with the Dawes Commission testified that he
entered the name of Barney Thlocco upon the census card on May 24,
1901; that, at that time, there were a great many names on the old
rolls unaccounted for, and the party went to Okmulgee to get them
to come out and get them enrolled; that a great many were brought
in;
Page 244 U. S. 121
that Thlocco was one of those who were unaccounted for at that
time, and the witness could not say whether his name was taken from
the old census roll or whether someone appeared and asked for his
enrollment; that, after Thlocco's name was listed, there was some
investigation upon the question as to whether or not he was living
or dead on April 1, 1899, but the Commission would have to be
satisfied or have information of some kind that he was living on
that date; that the Commission knew that Thlocco was dead in 1901,
and it apparently was satisfied that he was living on April 1,
1899; that they would ask town kings and town warriors when they
came in and anybody else if they knew this or that about the
applicants; that, because of a discrepancy between the ages of
Thlocco on the census cards, they must have had some information
other than the old census card; that the invariable custom and
practice was never to fill out one of the cards until they had some
information from some source with reference to the question as to
whether the applicant was living or whether he had died prior to
April 1, 1899; that the Commission never arbitrarily listed any
name; that no name was listed solely because it was on the Roll of
1895, but some particular individual evidence was required outside
of that roll; that, before the new rolls were sent to Washington,
the clerks and the chairman of the Commission would get together
and go over every one of them.
The clerk who made out the census card in 1897 testified that,
as chief clerk of the Commission, he helped in the enrollment; that
a notation on the census card, "died in 1900," was in his
handwriting, but that he did not know who had given him the
information or what use was made of the notation, except that it
was intended that, when the Commission came to pass on that name
for final record on the roll, an inquiry should be made as to when
Thlocco died or whether he was dead, and get the proper
affidavit
Page 244 U. S. 122
and death proof; that the Commission did not arbitrarily enroll
any Creek citizen without evidence, and that, in every single case,
if the applicant did not appear, someone who was regarded as
reliable appeared for him and gave evidence until the Commissioner
was satisfied that he belonged on the roll; that, whenever any
question was raised by the Creek Nation or its attorney with
reference to the right to enrollment, or for any reason as to
whether the applicant was living or dead, there was generally
testimony taken in those cases; that, with reference to those
people whose names up to March, 1901, had not been accounted for,
there were lists of these made and sent to the various town kings,
and various inquiries were made that way and report came back; that
sometimes the party addressed came in and gave verbal testimony,
and if it seemed clear to the Commission it was probably not
reduced to writing; that, if there was any question with reference
to the matter, it probably was reduced to writing; that the
Commission had to be satisfied from the records; that the
Commission never passed upon a card until it was completed; that
the information may have been picked up piecemeal over a year or
two, but the Commission was satisfied that the party was entitled
to enrollment, and the records were made up for the purpose of the
information of the Commission, and to show such information as was
necessary to enable the Commission to reach a decision.
One of the enrolling clerks at Okmulgee testified that, if
information was present that a name was entitled to go on the
rolls, the roll was completed at Okmulgee; that, if the Commission
did not have this information they did not complete it; that the
fact that Barney Thlocco's card was completed at Okmulgee indicated
that the party who wrote the card was satisfied that Thlocco was
living on April 1, 1899, and satisfied from evidence; that there
was in all cases some evidence as to whether the citizen
Page 244 U. S. 123
was living or dead on April 1, 1899, before the rolls were
recommended to the Secretary of the Interior.
The acting chairman of the Dawes Commission testified that they
did not, to his knowledge, ever enroll any man without taking some
evidence, information, or eliciting knowledge from some source
other than the tribal rolls that he was entitled to be enrolled,
and it was never permitted to be done; that the purpose was to find
out whether a man was entitled to enrollment, and one of the
factors in that determination was whether he died prior or
subsequent to April 1, 1899; that he always ascertained that fact
before he enrolled the applicant, and always satisfied his mind on
that subject by evidence outside of the roll; that every name sent
in to the Department of the Interior as a name to be enrolled and
which had been enrolled as a member of the Creek Tribe had been
investigated by some member of the Commission at some place, and by
evidence outside of the rolls, and a determination had been reached
that that person was entitled to enrollment; that he undoubtedly
satisfied himself from an examination of Thlocco's card whether
Thlocco was living on April 1, 1899; that, in securing information,
the Commission had the assistance of the best men in the tribes as
well as its own field parties; that, when he would take the card,
he would have the card and the clerk would have the schedule, and
he went over it several times with the clerks, and would find out
from the clerk all the information the clerk had with reference to
that card several times.
It is true, as set forth in the certificate upon which this case
was originally sent here, in view of § 28 of the original
Creek Agreement, providing that no person except as therein
provided should be added to the rolls of citizenship of the tribe
after the date of the agreement, and no person whomsoever should be
added to the rolls after the ratification of the agreement, which
was ratified on May 25, 1901, that the tribe assembled at
Okmulgee,
Page 244 U. S. 124
its capital, some days before that date for the purpose of
considering and acting upon the agreement, and that there was great
activity sometime before the ratification upon the part of the
Dawes Commission and its officers and clerks to complete the
enrollment of the tribe, and it is shown that Thlocco's enrollment
card was made out at Okmulgee on the 24th day of May, 1901 -- the
last day before the ratification of the agreement. It is also true
that, in the testimony as adduced in this record, there was, as
naturally would be the case, a lack of recollection as to the
details which attended the enrollment of Thlocco. But there is
evidence, to which we have already alluded, showing the practice of
the Commission to make inquiries and investigations and to
ascertain the facts as to the persons enrolled, and that no person
was enrolled without information that was deemed satisfactory at
that time. The Commission had before it the tribal rolls of 1890
and 1895. The latter roll was made out some six years before the
action of the Commission, and, in the absence of proof of Thlocco's
death or some circumstances to give rise to the conclusion that he
was not still living, the Commission might well indulge the
presumption that he was still alive.
Fidelity Mut. Life Assn.
v. Mettler, 185 U. S. 308,
185 U. S.
316.
It is true that the methods followed by the Commission may not
have been the most satisfactory possible of determining who were
entitled to enrollment as living persons on April 1, 1899, but it
must be remembered that there were many persons whose right to
enrollment was being considered, and the Commission in good faith
made an honest endeavor to keep the names of persons off the rolls
who were not entitled to appear as members of the tribe upon the
date fixed by Congress. We think the testimony very far from
showing such arbitrary action on the part of the Commission in
placing Thlocco's name on the rolls as would establish that mistake
of law or fact
Page 244 U. S. 125
which is essential to the impeachment of the action of the
Commission. This action was brought fourteen years after the
enrollment of Thlocco, and the allotment to him, based on such
enrollment, should not be disturbed except for good and sufficient
reasons.
It is not contended by the government that the subsequent action
of the Secretary in striking Thlocco's name from the rolls had the
legal effect to accomplish that purpose. Such is the contention of
the interveners. The testimony shows that Thlocco was enrolled by
the Commission on May 24, 1901, that the allotment was made and the
certificate therefor issued on June 30, 1902, and that patents were
recorded in the office of the Commission on April 11, 1903, the
allotment certificate issued in the name of Thlocco. On August 25,
1904, the Commission transmitted to the Secretary of the Interior a
communication from the Creek attorney in the nature of a motion to
reopen the matter. On September 16, 1904, the Secretary of the
Interior ordered further investigation, and directed that notice be
given to the heirs of Thlocco of the hearing. The heirs of Thlocco
were not found, and no notice was given them of the proposed
hearing. On October 10, 1906, the Commission reported that the
testimony showed that Thlocco died before April 1, 1899, and
recommended that his name be stricken from the roll. On December
13, 1906, the Secretary directed that Thlocco's name be stricken
from the roll, and requested the Attorney General to take action to
set aside the allotment deeds. We think this action entirely
ineffectual to annul the previous action of the government in
placing Thlocco's name upon the roll and issuing in his name the
certificate and patents as we have stated. Such action could not be
legally taken without notice to the heirs, and was void and of no
effect.
Garfield v. United States, 211 U.
S. 249;
Knapp v. Alexander-Edgar Lumber Co.,
237 U. S. 162,
237 U. S. 169.
In
Lowe v.
Fisher, 223
Page 244 U. S. 126
U.S. 95, the Secretary of the Interior, in striking names from
the roll of Cherokee citizens, acted after notice and opportunity
to be heard.
The fact that Thlocco was dead at the time deeds were issued in
his name would not prevent the title from vesting in his heirs.
Section 28 of the Act of March 1, 1901, 31 Stat. 861, provides
that,
"if any such citizen has died since that time [April 1, 1899] or
may hereafter die before receiving his allotment of lands and
distributive share of all the funds of the tribe, the lands and
money to which he would be entitled, if living, shall descend to
his heirs according to the laws of descent and distribution of the
Creek Nation, and be allotted and distributed to them
accordingly."
The effect of this provision is to vest title in the heirs by
operation of law.
Skelton v. Dill, 235 U.
S. 206,
235 U. S.
207-208.
As to the contention that the lands were not selected by
Thlocco, and that he was one of those arbitrarily placed upon the
rolls, we think it was within the authority of the Commission to
enroll members of the tribe who for any reason refused to make
selections, for the statute (§ 3, 31 Stat. 861, 862) provides
that
"all lands of the said tribe, except as herein provided, shall
be allotted among the citizens of the tribe by said Commission so
as to give each an equal share of the whole in value, as nearly as
may be, in manner following: there shall be allotted to each
citizen one hundred and sixty acres of land -- boundaries to
conform to the government survey -- which may be selected by him so
as to include improvements which belong to him."
While citizens were thus permitted to make their selections for
the purpose of retaining improvements, it seems clear that, in case
any citizen failed to avail himself of this right, it was
permissible for the Commission to make the allotment.
We think the district court rightly ruled that the government
had not offered evidence competent to impeach
Page 244 U. S. 127
the validity of the Commission's action, and thus to invalidate
the title subsequently conveyed by the patent to Thlocco with the
approval of the Interior Department.
It follows that the decree of the district court dismissing the
bill should be
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.