Under § 9 of the Act of May 27, 1908, c.199, 35 Stat. 312,
providing
"that the death of any allottee . . . shall operate to remove
all restrictions upon the alienation of said allottee's land:
Provided, That no conveyance of any interest of any
full-blood Indian heir in such land shall be valid unless approved
by the court having jurisdiction of the settlement of the estate of
said deceased allottee,"
lands of a deceased full-blood allottee, descended to &
full-blood heir and not conveyed with the approval of such court,
are "restricted lands" in the sense of § 2 of the same act,
which provides that leases of "restricted lands" for oil, gas or
other mining purposes may be made, with the approval of the
Secretary of the Interior, under rules and regulations provided by
him, and not otherwise. P.
250 U. S. 238.
The fact that, by the proviso of § 9,
supra,
Congress authorized a state court -- practically as a federal
agency -- to sanction conveyances does not affect the force and
operation of the restrictions while they remain.
Id.
During the continuance of such restrictions, the duty to protect
the interests of the full-blood heir by supervising the collection,
care, and disbursement of royalties arising from an oil and gas
lease made under § 2, remains with the Secretary of the
Interior. P.
250 U. S.
239.
245 F. 330 reversed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 250 U. S. 236
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit to enjoin two representatives of the Secretary of
the Interior -- the Superintendent and the Cashier of the Five
Civilized Tribes -- from collecting future royalties on an oil and
gas lease of land allotted to a Creek Indians and to compel them to
surrender royalties already collected. In the district court, there
was a decree for the defendants, which the circuit court of appeals
reversed, one judge dissenting. 245 F. 330. The district court then
complied with the mandate by entering a decree for the plaintiffs,
and this the circuit court of appeals declined to disturb. 257 F.
990. Appeals from the decisions of the latter bring the case
here.
The questions to be considered are whether the land covered by
the lease is land from which restrictions on alienation have been
removed and whether the supervisory authority of the Secretary of
the Interior over the collection, care, and disbursement of the
royalties has terminated.
The land was part of the Creek tribal lands, and was allotted
under Act March 1, 1901, c. 676, 31 Stat. 861, and Act June 30,
1902, c. 1323, 32 Stat. 500, the allottee being a minor and an
enrolled Indian of the full blood. In 1912, while he was yet a
minor, the oil and gas lease was given by his guardian; the lease
being approved by the court having jurisdiction of his estate and
by the Secretary of the Interior. The allottee died in 1916, while
still a minor, and left his father, a full-blood Creek Indian, as
his only heir. Approximately $280,000 in royalties have accrued
under the lease -- part before and part since the allottee died.
These royalties have been collected by the defendants pursuant to
the terms of the lease and the regulations of the Secretary of the
Interior, and are being
Page 250 U. S. 237
held by them in trust under a provision in the regulations which
authorizes them to retain and care for such funds "until such time
or times as the payment thereof is considered best for the benefit
of said lessor, or his or her heirs." The plaintiffs are the
administrators of the estate of the deceased allottee.
By § 1 of the Act of May 27, 1908, c.199, 35 Stat. 312,
Congress declared that--
"all allotted lands of enrolled full-bloods, and enrolled
mixed-bloods of three-quarters of more Indian blood, including
minors of such degrees of blood, shall not be subject to
alienation, contract to sell, power of attorney, or any other
incumbrance prior to April twenty-sixth, nineteen hundred and
thirty-one, except that the Secretary of the Interior may remove
such restrictions, wholly or in part, under such rules and
regulations concerning terms of sale and disposal of the proceeds
for the benefit of the respective Indians as he may prescribe."
There was no such removal in this instance, and it is conceded
that, at the date of the lease and at the time of the allottee's
death, the alienation of the land was still restricted.
By § 2 of the same act Congress declared that:
"Leases of restricted lands for oil, gas or other mining
purposes . . . may be made, with the approval of the Secretary of
the Interior, under rules and regulations provided by the Secretary
of the Interior, and not otherwise."
The lease was given under this provision, and was to run for a
term of ten years and as much longer as oil or gas might be found
in paying quantity. It provided, conformably to the regulations,
that the Secretary of the Interior, through his representatives,
should supervise all operations under the lease, that the royalties
thereunder should be paid to his representatives, that, with
exceptions not material here, the regulations as then or thereafter
in force should be deemed part of the lease, and that, in the event
restrictions on alienation should be removed, the
Page 250 U. S. 238
supervision of the Secretary of the Interior over the lease
should be relinquished at once and all further royalties thereunder
should be paid to the lessor or the then owner of the lands.
One of the regulations prescribed by the Secretary deals with
the payment to lessors, their guardians, heirs, etc., of moneys
collected as royalties by his representatives and specially
authorizes the latter, as before indicated, to withhold such
payment in whole or in part for such time as may be in accord with
the best interests of the lessor or his heirs. It is under this
regulation that the royalties already collected are being retained.
The record indicates that a considerable portion of them has been
invested in interest-bearing bonds of the United States, but, as
the propriety of this is not called in question, it may be passed
without further notice.
By the Act of 1908, which imposed the restrictions on alienation
and contained the leasing provision, Congress further declared, in
§ 9:
"that the death of any allottee . . . shall operate to remove
all restrictions upon the alienation of said allottee's land:
Provided, that no conveyance of any interest of any
full-blood Indian heir in such land shall be valid unless approved
by the court having jurisdiction of the settlement of the estate of
said deceased allottee."
In the absence of the proviso it would be very plain that, on
the death of the allottee, all restrictions on the alienation of
the land allotted to him were removed. But the proviso is there,
and cannot be disregarded. It obviously limits and restrains what
precedes it. In exact words, it puts full-blood Indian heirs in a
distinct and excepted class and forbids any conveyance of any
interest of such an heir in such land unless it be approved by the
court named. In other words, as to that class of heirs, the
restrictions are not removed, but merely relaxed or qualified to
the extent of sanctioning such conveyances as receive the court's
approval. Conveyances
Page 250 U. S. 239
without its approval fall within the ban of the restrictions.
That the agency which is to approve or not is a state court is not
material. It is the agency selected by Congress, and the authority
confided to it is to be exercised in giving effect to the will of
Congress in respect of a matter within its control. Thus, in a
practical sense, the court, in exercising that authority, acts as a
federal agency, and this is recognized by the supreme court of the
state.
Marcy v. Board of Commissioners, 45 Okl. 1.
Plainly, the restrictions have the same force and operate in the
same way as if Congress had selected another agency, exclusively
federal, such as the Superintendent of the Five Civilized
Tribes.
In cases presenting the question whether lands inherited from
allottees by full-blood Indian heirs are freed from restrictions by
§ 9, and thus brought within another provision in the same act
declaring that land "from which restrictions have been of shall be
removed" shall be taxable and subject to other civil burdens, the
supreme court of the state and the federal court of that district
have both held that, under the proviso, such land remains
restricted in the hands of the full-blood heirs, and so is not
within the taxing provision.
Marcy v. Board of Commissioners,
supra; United States v. Shock, 187 F. 870.
Entertaining a like view of the proviso, we conclude that the
land covered by the lease is still restricted land.
As to the other question, this is the situation:
Under the Act of 1908, as already shown, leases of "restricted
lands" for oil and gas mining may be made with the approval of the
Secretary of the Interior under regulations prescribed by him, "and
not otherwise." The present lease was made and approved under that
provision. The land was then restricted, and the restrictions have
not since been removed. Thus, the event which the regulations and
the lease declare shall terminate the supervision by the Secretary
of the Interior of the
Page 250 U. S. 240
collection, care, and disbursement of the royalties has not
occurred. Nor has the occasion for some supervision disappeared.
The heir is a full-blood Indian, as was the allottee, and is
regarded by the act as in need of protection, as was the allottee.
In the absence of some provision to the contrary, the supervision
naturally falls to the Secretary of the Interior. Rev.Stats.
§§ 441, 463;
West v. Hitchcock, 205 U. S.
80,
205 U. S. 85.
And see Catholic Bishop of Nesqually v. Gibbon,
158 U. S. 155,
158 U. S. 166.
There is nothing to the contrary in the leasing provision or in any
other of which we are aware. True, it is possible under the proviso
in § 9 for the heir, if the court approves, to sell and convey
his interest in the land. But that has not been done, and it well
may be that the heir will remain the owner until the restrictions
expire in regular course -- April 26, 1931. There is nothing in the
proviso indicating that it is intended in the meantime to take from
the Secretary or to commit to the court the supervision of matters
pertaining to the lease or the royalties. A purpose to do that
doubtless would be plainly expressed.
In this situation, we think the authority of the Secretary of
the Interior to supervise the collection, care, and disbursement of
the royalties has not terminated.
Criticism is made of some of the regulations, but all that are
material here seem to be well within the limits of the Secretary's
authority, and the acts of his representatives in respect of the
lease and the royalties, so far as questioned here, seem to be well
within the regulations.
It results that the original decree in the district court was
right and should stand, and that the second decree in that court
and those in the circuit court of appeals must be reversed.
Decrees reversed.