While recognized by the United States as a distinct political
community, the Creek Nation leased a pasture, the lessees
undertaking to fence and pay rent. When nearly completed, the fence
was destroyed by the action of a Creek mob, participated in by the
Creek Treasurer, and thereafter one of the lessees, assignee of the
rest, sued the Creek Nation for the cost of the fence and of the
assignments and for the loss of the benefits of the lease.
Held that there was no cause of action, for a sovereignty,
on general principle, is not liable for injuries resulting from mob
violence or failure to keep the peace, and neither the wrong of the
Treasurer nor any duty under the lease created such liability here.
P.
248 U. S.
357.
The special Act of May 29, 1908, C. 216, 35 Stat. 444, 457,
authorized suit in the Court of Claims against the Creek Nation for
the adjudication of this claim, but it did not validate the claim
itself or permit that the United States be joined as a defendant.
P.
248 U. S.
358.
51 Ct.Clms. 125 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Creek or Muskogee Nation or Tribe of Indians had, in 1890, a
population of 15,000. Subject to the control of
Page 248 U. S. 355
Congress, they then exercised within a defined territory the
powers of a sovereign people, having a tribal organization, their
own system of laws, and a government with the usual branches,
executive, legislative, and judicial. The territory was divided
into six districts, and each district was provided with a
judge.{1}
In 1889, the Creek Nation enacted a statute which conferred upon
each citizen of the Nation, head of a family engaged in grazing
livestock, the right to enclose for that purpose one square mile of
the public domain without paying compensation. Inclosure of a
greater area was prohibited, but provision was made for
establishing, under certain conditions, more extensive pastures
near the frontiers to protect against influx of stock from
adjoining nations. The conditions prescribed were these: if the
district judge should receive notice from citizens of a desire to
establish such a pasture, he was required to call a meeting of
citizens to consider and act upon the subject, and if it appeared
that a majority of the persons of voting age in the neighborhood
thus to be protected favored its establishment, the district judge
was directed to let such pasture for three years (subject to
renewal) to citizens who would, by contract, bind themselves to
build a substantial fence around the pasture, and to pay at least
five cents per acre per annum for the grazing privilege.
In 1890, Turner and a partner formed, under the name of Pussy,
Tiger & Co., an organization consisting of themselves and 100
Creeks, with a view to securing such a pasture in the Deep Fork
district. They caused an election to be held and a contract to be
entered into by the district judge with Pussy, Tiger & Co.,
which covered about 256,000 acres. The fence required to enclose it
was
Page 248 U. S. 356
about 80 miles in length. Before its construction was begun,
dissatisfaction had already developed in the neighborhood, and,
from the time the fence was commenced, there were rumors of threats
by Indians to destroy it if built. The work was, however,
undertaken; the threats continued, and Turner and one of his
assignees secured from the United States Court in the Indian
Territory, First Judicial Division, an injunction restraining the
Creek District Judge for the Deep Fork District and L. C. Perryman,
the Principal Chief of the Nation, from interfering with or
damaging the fence. After it had been nearly completed, three bands
of Creek Indians destroyed the fence, cutting the wire and posts
and scattering the staples. It does not appear that either the
Creek judge or the chief or any other official of the Creek
government had any part in the destruction of the fence, except one
Moore, the Treasurer, whose only official duties seem to have been
"to receive and receipt for all national funds and to disburse the
same, as should be provided for by law."
More than $10,000 net expended in constructing the fence, and
$2,500 paid by Turner to the 100 Creek Indians associated with him
for the release of their grazing rights were lost, and large
profits which it was expected would be made through assignment of
pasturage rights to cattle raisers were prevented. Claims for
compensation were repeatedly presented by Turner to the Creek
Nation. Once its National Council voted to make compensation, but
Chief Perryman vetoed the action, and his veto was sustained.
Later, the Creek Supreme Court declared the fence a legal
structure, but still the Nation failed to make any compensation. On
March 4, 1906, the tribal organization was dissolved pursuant to
Act March 1, 1901, c. 676, § 46, 31 Stat. 861, 872. In 1908,
Congress provided, by § 26 of the Act of May 29, 1908, c. 216,
35 Stat. 444, 457, as follows:
"That the Court of Claims is hereby authorized to
Page 248 U. S. 357
consider and adjudicate and render judgment as law and equity
may require in the matter of the claim of Clarence W. Turner, of
Muskogee, Oklahoma, against the Creek Nation for the destruction of
personal property and the value of the loss of the pasture of the
said Turner, or his assigns, by the action of any of the
responsible Creek authorities, or with their cognizance and
acquiescence, either party to said cause in the Court of Claims to
have the right of appeal to the Supreme Court of the United
States."
In August, 1908, Turner, having acquired all the rights of his
associates, filed a petition in the Court of Claims against the
Creek Nation and the United States as trustee of Creek funds,{2} to
recover the amount lost, which he alleged to be the sum of
$105,698.03. The Court of Claims dismissed the petition (51
Ct.Clms. 125), and the case comes here by appeal.
The claimant contends that, by the general law, the Creek Nation
is liable in damages for the action of the mob which resulted in
the destruction of the property and prevented him from securing the
benefits of the contract entered into between him as grantee and
the Creek Nation, and that, if the substantive right did not
already exist, it was created by the act which conferred
jurisdiction upon the Court of Claims to hear and adjudicate the
controversy.
First. No such liability existed by the general law.
The Creek Nation was recognized by the United States as a distinct
political community, with which it made treaties and which within
its own territory administered its internal affairs. Like other
governments, municipal as well as state, the Creek Nation was free
from liability
Page 248 U. S. 358
for injuries to persons or property due to mob violence or
failure to keep the peace.
Compare Louisiana v. Mayor of New
Orleans, 109 U. S. 285,
109 U. S.
287-291;
South v.
Maryland, 18 How. 396;
Murdock Grate Co. v.
Commonwealth, 152 Mass. 28, 31. Such liability is frequently
imposed by statute upon cities and counties (
see City of
Chicago v. Pennsylvania Co., 119 F. 497), but neither Congress
nor the Creek Nation had dealt with the subject by any legislation
prior to 1908. The fundamental obstacle to recover is not the
immunity of a sovereign to suit, but the lack of a substantive
right to recover the damages resulting from failure of a government
or its officers to keep the peace. And the participation in the
injuries of an officer acting not
colore officii, but in
open and known violation of the law, cannot alter the case. The
claimant's contention that the defendant owed to the claimant, as
its own grantee, a greater duty than it owed to other persons in
the territory to protect him against mob violence finds no support
in reason or authority.
Second. The special act of May 29, 1908, did not impose
any liability upon the Creek Nation. The tribal government had been
dissolved. Without authorization from Congress, the Nation could
not then have been sued in any court; at least without its consent.
The Court of Claims is "authorized to consider and adjudicate and
render judgment as law and equity may require." The words of the
act which follow merely identify the claims which the court is
authorized to consider. Authority to sue the Creek Nation is
implied, but there is nothing in the act which even tends to
indicate a purpose to create a new substantive right.
Compare
United States v. Mille Lac Chippewas, 229 U.
S. 498,
229 U. S. 500;
Green v. Menominee Tribe, 233 U.
S. 558,
233 U. S. 568;
Thompson v. United States, 246 U.
S. 547. The act simply provides a forum for the
adjudication of such rights as Turner may have against the Creek
Nation.
Page 248 U. S. 359
Third. The United States objected also to the
jurisdiction of the court over it. Neither the special act nor any
general statute authorized suit against the United States. As it
cannot be sued without its consent, the United States was
improperly joined as a party defendant, although in the capacity of
trustee for the Creek Nation.
Compare Green v. Menominee Tribe,
supra.
It is not necessary to consider the many other objections urged
against the petition. The Court of Claims properly dismissed it,
and the judgment is
Affirmed.
Treaty of June 14, 1866, Art. X, 14 Stat. 785, 788; Report of
the Commissioner of Indian Affairs for 1888, p. 113; for 1889, p.
202; for 1890, pp. 89, 90; for 1891, vol. 1, pp. 240, 241.
On November 18, 1915, the sum of $1,325,167.16 was held by the
United States in trust for the Creek Nation of Indians. In addition
thereto, approximately $1,110,000.00 of the tribal funds of the
Nation were on deposit in the Oklahoma state and national banks, on
April 10, 1916, under the provisions of Act March 3, 1911, c. 210,
§ 17, 36 Stat. 1058, 1069.