Lands opposite the line of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company
constituting an Indian reservation when the line was definitely
located were not embraced in the grant of odd numbered sections
made to the company by the Act of July 2, 1864, c. 217, 13 Stat.
365. A reservation of public lands for and exclusively devoted to
the occupancy of a tribe of Indians, made under the direction and
with the approval of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and
expressly or tacitly approved by the Secretary of the Interior,
held valid and effectual to exclude the lands from the
Northern Pacific grant, although not formally sanctioned by the
President until after the railroad had filed its plat of definite
location.
230 F. 591 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit is one in ejectment by the Northern Pacific Railway
Company to recover possession of eighty acres of land (the title to
64,000 acres depends upon the decision), and it is here on writ of
error to review the judgment of the circuit court of appeals
affirming that of the district court in favor of the defendant.
Page 246 U. S. 284
The principles of law applicable to the case are few and well
settled, and the decision of it depends upon the interpretation to
be given to stipulated facts.
The plaintiff in error is the successor in interest to the
Northern Pacific Railroad Company, and the defendant in error,
substituted for the deceased defendant, George F. Wismer, claims to
own the land in controversy by virtue of a homestead entry made in
1910, upon which a patent was issued in 1913.
By act of Congress dated July 2, 1864, 13 Stat. 365, there was
granted to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company, for the purpose
of aiding in the construction of its line to the Pacific Coast,
twenty alternate odd-numbered sections of land per mile on each
side of the railroad line, which it should locate and adopt, within
the boundaries of any territory, and ten alternate odd-numbered
sections per mile on each side of the railroad line, which it
should adopt, within the boundaries of any state. The grant
embraces only lands to which
"the United States have full title, not reserved, sold, granted,
or otherwise appropriated, and free from preemption or other claims
or rights at the time the line of said road is definitely
fixed."
On October 4, 1880, the Railroad Company definitely located the
position of its line opposite the land in controversy, and filed a
plat thereof, as required by law, and it is claimed that, upon the
filing of this plat, the company became entitled to the lands
granted, including those of the defendant in error, as of July 2,
1864, the date of the granting act of Congress.
The claim of the defendant in error, which prevailed in each of
the lower courts, is that the land in controversy was reserved or
otherwise appropriated, within the meaning of the terms of the
grant to the railroad company of 1864, quoted above, at the time
this part of the line of the railroad was definitely located, for
the reason that it was then within an Indian reservation, or was
subject to an
Page 246 U. S. 285
Indian claim, which prevented the grant attaching to it, by
virtue of the following facts, which we condense from the
stipulation between the parties.
Prior to August 16, 1877, bands of Indians of the Spokane and
other tribes occupied, for hunting and fishing, the extensive
territory now comprising the eastern part of the State of
Washington in which they had not then ceded to the United States
any part of their rights. In the spring of that year, certain of
these Indian tribes commenced hostilities against the white
settlers which resulted in war with the United States, in which
they were urging the Spokane tribe, then at peace, to join.
On May 7, 1877, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs directed Col.
E. C. Watkins, an Indian inspector in charge of all agencies in
Washington Territory, to give his "special attention" to the
subject of gathering the roving Indians "upon permanent
reservations," with the result that, on August 16, 17, 18, 1877, a
council was held at Spokane Falls, Washington, between the chiefs
and headmen of the Spokane tribe of Indians and Col. Watkins,
acting "in his official capacity as Indian inspector, representing
the Department of the Interior," and Gen. Frank Wheaton and Capt.
M. C. Wilkinson, of the United States Army, representing the
Department of War.
It is expressly stipulated "that, for the purpose of collecting
the said Indians belonging to the said tribe (the Spokane tribe) on
a reservation," and of inducing them to establish homes and to
engage in agricultural pursuits, to extinguish their title "to all
other lands not within the said reservation" and to remain at peace
with the United States, the agreement following was signed by the
representatives of the government of the United States and the
chiefs and headmen of the tribe who attended the council,
viz.:
"IN COUNCIL AT SPOKANE FALL, W.T., August 18th, 1877. "
Page 246 U. S. 286
"We, the undersigned chiefs and headmen of the Spokane Tribe of
Indians, for ourselves and our people, hereby agree to accept the
following described land for our reservation: beginning at the
source of the Chimokan Creek in Washington Territory, thence down
said creek to the Spokane River, thence down said river to the
Columbia River, thence up the Columbia River to the mouth of
Nimchin Creek, thence easterly to the place of beginning."
"And we do further agree to go upon the same by the first of
November next, with a view of establishing our permanent homes
thereon and engaging in agricultural pursuits. We hereby renew our
friendly relations with the whites, and promise to remain at peace
with the government and abide by all laws of the same, and obey the
orders of the Indian Bureau and the officers acting
thereunder."
On August 23, Col. Watkins reported the result of the Council to
his superior officer, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and sent
him a copy of the executed agreement, with his recommendation that
the territory described therein should be set apart and reserved
for the Spokane tribe.
Immediately after the signing of this agreement and prior to
November 14th of the same year, Col. Watkins, still "acting in his
official capacity, located such of the Spokane Indians as were not
already residing thereon, upon said reservation" described in the
agreement, and on November 26, 1877, he reported this action to his
superior, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, who communicated it
to the Secretary of the Interior, with his approval, on December
29, 1877, who, in turn, communicated it to the United States Senate
on January 23, 1878.
The Indians remained at peace with the United States, and
continued in the use and occupancy of the lands described in the
agreement and claimed the same "as their reservation" until the
year 1910.
Page 246 U. S. 287
The encroachment of squatters upon the land thus reserved
resulted in an order by Brig. Gen. Howard on September 3, 1880,
directing that the military force under his command should protect
the territory described in the agreement of August, 1877, against
settlement by others than the Spokane Indians until survey of the
land should be made or until further instructions.
On January, 18, 1881, President Hayes, by executive order,
formally set aside and reserved the territory described in the
agreement of August, 1877, for the use and occupancy of the Spokane
Indians.
The Indians occupied the reservation until after the Act of May
29, 1908, was passed (35 Stat. 458) directing that the Secretary of
the Interior should cause allotments to be made, under the
allotment laws, to all Indians having tribal rights and belonging
to the Spokane Indian reservation who had not theretofore received
allotments, and providing that the surplus agricultural lands
should be opened for settlement and entry under the homestead laws,
and that the net proceeds derived from the sale of such lands
should be deposited in the United States Treasury to the credit of
the Indians of the Spokane Reservation. It was under the provisions
of this act that the decedent of the defendant in error obtained
his patent.
This summary of the stipulated facts points to the inevitable
decision of the case.
The Commissioner of Indian Affairs, under the direction of the
Secretary of the Interior, was charged with the management of all
Indian affairs and matters arising out of Indian relations
(Rev.Stats. §§ 441, 463, 2058, 2149), and clearly he
commissioned Col. Watkins in advance to treat with the Spokane
tribe for the setting apart to them of a permanent reservation
through an agreement such as that of August, 1877. The plaintiff in
error concedes, as it must, that if the Secretary of the Interior
approved the action taken by Col. Watkins prior to the filing
Page 246 U. S. 288
of the plat of its line on October 4, 1880, the reservation must
be considered as lawfully established, and the lands thereby
removed beyond the scope of the grant to the railroad company.
Wilcox v.
Jackson, 13 Pet. 498,
38 U. S. 512;
Wolsey v. Chapman, 101 U. S. 755,
101 U. S. 769;
Wood v. Beach, 156 U. S. 548;
United States v. Mid West Oil Co., 236 U.
S. 459;
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co. v.
United States, 244 U. S. 351,
244 U. S. 357.
And reservations made by heads of bureaus, such as the Commissioner
of the General Land Office or the Commissioner of Indian Affairs,
in the administration of the matters committed to their charge
stand upon the same footing where the Secretary of the Interior is
informed of their action and where, as in this case, he either
expressly or tacitly approves the same.
Spencer v.
McDougal, 159 U. S. 62.
Such being the law, we cannot doubt that the sound inference
from the stipulated facts as we have stated them is that, with full
understanding of the situation, the Secretary of the Interior and
the Commissioner of Indian Affairs approved the action of Col.
Watkins not later, certainly, than the sending of his report to the
Senate on January 23, 1878, which was almost three years prior to
the filing of the railway company's plat, and that the executive
order of the President on January 18, 1881, simply continued and
gave formal sanction to what had been done before.
That the reservation was in fact made and the lands exclusively
devoted to the use of the Indians from the date of the agreement of
August, 1877, is beyond controversy; that no objection was ever
made by his superiors to the action taken by Col. Watkins is
equally clear, and to hold that, for want of a formal approval by
the Secretary of the Interior, all of the conduct of the government
and of the Indians in making and ratifying and in good faith
carrying out the agreement between them, even to the extent of
protecting the reservation by military
Page 246 U. S. 289
forces from intrusion, is without effect would be to subordinate
the realities of the situation to mere form, for the delay in the
issuing of the formal executive order of the President under the
circumstances can be attributed only to the exigencies of the
public business; by his representative, the Secretary of the
Interior, he had approved the setting apart of the lands to the use
of the Indians almost three years before.
The judgment of the circuit court of appeals will be affirmed
for the reason that the Spokane Indian reservation was lawfully
created prior to the filing of the plat of the line of the
plaintiff company on October 4, 1880.
Affirmed.