The Pueblo of Santa Rosa is a legal entity, with capacity to
maintain a suit to protect its rights in land claimed by it as a
grantee under the laws of Spain and Mexico. P.
249 U. S. 112.
Cherokee Nation v.
Georgia, 5 Pet. 1, distinguished.
This status of the Pueblo, if it did not previously exist,
resulted from a law of the Territory of New Mexico, and from acts
of Congress extending the laws of that territory over the region
acquired by the Gadsden Treaty, and over the Territory of Arizona,
when the latter was organized, and it was not affected by the
creation of the State of Arizona.
Id.
Assuming that these Indians are wards of the government, that
fact would not affect the capacity of the Pueblo to sue in the
District of Columbia, to restrain the Secretary of the Interior and
the Commissioner of the General Land Office from offering, listing,
etc., under the public land laws, lands in Arizona to which the
Pueblo allege perfect title under the laws of Spain and Mexico. P.
249 U. S.
113.
In such a suit, where the trial court dismissed the bill on
defendants' motion,
held, error for the court of appeals,
finding the bill made a case for the relief sought, to award a
permanent injunction, for defendants were entitled to answer to the
merits as if their motion had been overruled originally. P.
249 U. S.
114.
46 App.D.C. 411 reversed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 249 U. S. 111
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit to enjoin the Secretary of the Interior and the
Commissioner of the General Land Office from offering, listing, or
disposing of certain lands in southern Arizona as public lands of
the United States. The lands include the site of the Pueblo of
Santa Rosa and the surrounding territory, comprise some 460,000
acres, and are within the region acquired from Mexico under what is
known as the Gadsden Treaty of December 30, 1853. 10 Stat. 1031.
The suit is brought by the Pueblo of Santa Rosa, and its right to
the relief sought is based on two allegations which are elaborated
in the bill: one that, under the laws of Spain and Mexico, it had,
when that region was acquired by the United States, and under the
provisions of the treaty it now has, a complete and perfect title
to the lands in question, and the other that, in disregard of its
title, the defendants are threatening and proceeding to offer,
list, and dispose of these lands as public lands of the United
States. In the court of first instance, the bill was challenged by
a motion to dismiss in the nature of a demurrer, and the motion was
sustained. In the court of appeals, the case made by the
allegations in the bill was held to be one entitling the plaintiff
to the relief sought, and the decree of dismissal was reversed with
a direction that a permanent injunction be awarded.
Pueblo of
Santa Rosa v. Lane, 46 App.D.C. 411. The latter decision is
challenged here on two grounds: one, that the plaintiff is not a
legal entity, and has no capacity to maintain the suit, and the
other that, in any event, the defendant should not be subjected to
a permanent injunction without according them an opportunity to
answer the bill.
The plaintiff is an Indian town whose inhabitants are a simple
and uninformed people, measurably civilized and industrious, living
in substantial houses and engaged in agricultural and pastoral
pursuits. Its existence, practically
Page 249 U. S. 112
as it is today, can be traced back through the period of Mexican
rule into that of the Spanish kings. It was known then, as now, as
the Pueblo of Santa Rosa, and its inhabitants were known then, as
now, as Pueblo Indians. During the Spanish, as also the Mexican,
dominion, it enjoyed a large measure of local self-government, and
was recognized as having capacity to acquire and hold lands and
other property. With much reason, this might be regarded as
enabling and entitling it to became a suitor for the purpose of
enforcing or defending its property interests.
See School
District v. Wood, 13 Mass.193, 198; Cooley's Const.Lim., 7th
ed., p. 276; 1 Dillon, Munic.Corp., 5th ed., §§ 50, 64,
65. But our decision need not be put on that ground, for there is
another which arises out of our own laws and is, in itself,
sufficient. After the Gadsden Treaty, Congress made that region
part of the Territory of New Mexico, and subjected it to "all the
laws" of that territory. Act Aug. 4, 1854, c. 245, 10 Stat. 575.
One of those laws provided that the inhabitants of any Indian
pueblo having a grant or concession of lands from Spain or Mexico,
such as is here claimed, should be a body corporate, and as such
capable of suing or defending in respect of such lands. Laws New
Mex. 1851-52, pp. 176, 418. If the plaintiff was not a legal entity
and juristic person before, it became such under that law, and it
retained that status after Congress included it in the Territory of
Arizona, for the act by which this was done extended to that
territory all legislative enactments of the Territory of New
Mexico. Act Feb. 24, 1863, c. 56, 12 Stat. 664. The fact that
Arizona has since become a state does not affect the plaintiff's
corporate status or its power to sue.
See Kansas Pacific R. Co.
v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co., 112 U.
S. 414.
The case of
Cherokee Nation v.
Georgia, 5 Pet. 1, on which the defendants place
some reliance, is not in point.
Page 249 U. S. 113
The question there was not whether the Cherokee Tribe had the
requisite capacity to sue in a court of general jurisdiction, but
whether it was a "foreign state" in the sense of the judiciary
article of the Constitution, and therefore entitled to maintain an
original suit in this Court against the State of Georgia. The Court
held that the tribe, although uniformly treated as a distinct
political society capable of engaging in treaty stipulations, was
not a "foreign state" in the sense intended, and so could not
maintain such a suit. This is all that was decided.
The defendants assert with much earnestness that the Indians of
this pueblo are wards of the United States -- recognized as such by
the legislative and executive departments -- and that, in
consequence, the disposal of their lands is not within their own
control, but subject to such regulations as Congress may prescribe
for their benefit and protection. Assuming, without so deciding,
that this is all true,
* we think it has
no real bearing on the point we are considering. Certainly it would
not justify the defendants in treating the lands of these Indians
-- to which, according to the bill, they have a complete and
perfect title -- as public lands of the United States and disposing
of the same under the public land laws. That would not be an
exercise of guardianship, but an act of confiscation. Besides, the
Indians are not here seeking to establish any power or capacity in
themselves to dispose of the lands, but only to prevent a
threatened disposal by administrative officers in disregard of
their full ownership. Of their capacity to maintain such a suit we
entertain no doubt. The existing wardship is not an obstacle, as is
shown by repeated decisions of this Court,
Page 249 U. S. 114
of which
Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock, 187 U.
S. 553, is an illustration.
In view of the very broad allegations of the bill, the accuracy
of which has not been challenged as yet, we have assumed in what
has been said that the plaintiff's claim was valid in its entirety
under the Spanish and Mexican laws, and that it encounters no
obstacle in the concluding provision of the sixth article of the
Gadsden Treaty, but no decision on either point is intended. Both
involve questions not covered by the briefs or the discussion at
the bar, and are left open to investigation and decision in the
further progress of the cause.
Of course, the court of appeals ought not to have directed the
entry of a final decree awarding a permanent injunction against the
defendants. They were entitled to an opportunity to answer to the
merits just as if their motion to dismiss had been overruled in the
court of first instance. By the direction given, they were denied
such an opportunity, and this was a plain and prejudicial
error.
Our conclusion is that the decrees of both courts below should
be reversed, and the cause remanded to the court of first instance
with directions to overrule the motion to dismiss, to afford the
defendants an opportunity to answer the bill, to grant an order
restraining them from in any wise offering, listing or disposing of
any of the lands in question pending the final decree, and to take
such further proceedings as may be appropriate and not inconsistent
with this opinion.
Decree reversed.
*
See Chouteau v.
Molony, 16 How. 203,
57 U. S. 237;
United States v.
Ritchie, 17 How. 525,
58 U. S. 540;
United States v.
Pico, 5 Wall. 536,
72 U. S. 540;
United States v. Sandoval, 231 U. S.
28;
Cherokee Nation v. Hitchcock, 187 U.
S. 294,
187 U. S. 307;
Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock, 187 U. S. 553,
187 U. S. 568;
Tiger v. Western Investment Co., 221 U.
S. 286,
221 U. S. 310
et seq.