As the guardian of noncompetent Osage Indians, whose surplus
allotments are submitted to state taxation under the Act of June
28, 1906, c. 3572, 34 Stat. 539, the United States may maintain a
suit to protect such allottees as a class from being despoiled of
their property through arbitrary, excessive, and discriminating
taxes imposed upon them by the state tax officials in systematic
and intentional disregard of the state laws. P.
251 U. S.
132.
The proper officials of the United States (the United States
Attorney under direction of the Attorney General) have implied
authority to institute and conduct such a suit, and this is
recognized by the Act of March 2, 1917, c. 146, 39 Stat. 969, 983,
providing for an appraisement of the lands to ascertain the extent
of overassessment.
Id.
In such a case, the United States is not obliged to resort to
the remedies afforded to individuals by the state law for the
correction of mistakes committed in the tax proceedings, but may
invoke the equity jurisdiction to avoid a multiplicity of suits and
secure an adequate remedy for the Indians as a class. P.
251 U. S.
133.
254 F. 570 reversed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 251 U. S. 129
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Although the subject was fully stated in
McCurdy v. United
States, 246 U. S. 263,
nevertheless, to throw light on this case, we recall the facts
concerning the distribution of the land and funds of the Osage
Tribe of Indians made under the Act of Congress of June 28, 1906,
c. 3572, 34 Stat. 539.
Of the tribal land, there were reserved from allotment certain
parcels, some of which were used by the United States or the tribe
and others of which were used by individuals for the benefit of the
tribe. From the remainder, each member was allotted three tracts of
160 acres each, of which one was to be designated and held as a
homestead. Any land which remained was also to be allotted. The
funds in trust in the hands of the United States were divided
pro rata, to be held subject to the supervision of the
United States. The oil, gas, coal, and other mineral rights in all
the lands were reserved for the benefit of the tribe. The tract
selected as a homestead was made inalienable and nontaxable,
subject to the action of Congress. The land embraced by other than
the homestead allotment, called surplus land, was made inalienable
for a period of twenty-five years and nontaxable for three, subject
to the action of Congress. Power was conferred, however, on the
Secretary of the Interior to give to the allottee a certificate of
competency, upon receipt of which the surplus land held by such an
allottee become immediately alienable and taxable.
In September, 1917, the United States District Attorney for the
District of Oklahoma, by direction of the Attorney General,
commenced this suit in the name of the United States, for the
benefit of named noncompetent members of the Osage Tribe and of all
other members
Page 251 U. S. 130
in the same situation, to prevent the enforcement of state and
local taxes assessed against the surplus, although taxable, lands
of said Indians for the eight years between 1910 and 1917,
inclusive.
The defendants were the Board of County Commissioners of Osage
County, including the county clerk and county treasurer, officials
charged by the laws of the state with the enforcement of the taxes
which were assailed. After averring the existence of authority in
the United States, in virtue of its guardianship of the Indians and
as a result of the terms of the allotment act, to protect and
safeguard the interests of the Indians from the enforcement of the
illegal taxes complained of, the bill charged that the taxes in
issue were
"arbitrary, grossly excessive, discriminatory and unfair, and
were made in violation of the rights of the said Osage Indians
guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States and the
Constitution of the State of Oklahoma; . . . that the State Board
of Equalization arbitrarily and systematically increased the
assessments on such Indian lands for the year 1911 to an amount
approximately nearly double the original amount of such
assessments. . . ."
It was averred that the tax assessments made on the Indian lands
involved
"were made without an inspection or examination of the land; . .
. that the said appraisers in making such appraisements
discriminated against the lands of the Osage Indians as a class and
systematically overvalued the same and systematically undervalued
other property in said county; . . . that the assessments so made
by said assessors were made in such an arbitrary and capricious
manner as to amount to constructive fraud upon the taxpayers, and
that the overvaluations made by said assessors were so grossly
excessive as to justify the interference of a court of equity. . .
."
It was alleged that the assessments complained of were of such a
character that the
Page 251 U. S. 131
Secretary of the Interior had endeavored to have them corrected,
but without result; that, in consequence of his having called the
attention of Congress to the subject, the Act of March 2, 1917, c.
146, § 17, 39 Stat. 983, was passed authorizing an
appraisement by the said Secretary for the purpose of fixing the
extent of the overassessment, and that such appraisement, which had
been virtually completed, sustained the charges set forth in the
bill.
There was annexed to the bill a statement of the result of the
appraisement in 36 cases as compared with the assessments
complained of. In one case, it was alleged that the land of the
Indian was assessed at $20 an acre, although, by the affidavit of
the county clerk, it was shown that it was worth $3 per acre. In
another case, it was alleged that, for the purpose of taxation, the
land was shown to be overvalued by 119 percent. It was further
averred that an offer had been made through the Secretary of the
Interior to pay all the taxes assessed for all the years assailed
upon the basis of the assessment made as the result of the act of
Congress, but that the same had been refused, and that process for
the sale of the lands for delinquent taxes was immediately
threatened. The prayer was for relief by injunction as against the
illegal assessments, and for action by the court looking to a
payment of all delinquent taxes due by noncompetent Osage Indians
on the basis of the appraisement made under the act of
Congress.
On motion, the court dismissed the bill on the ground
"that the lands involved were by the act of Congress, approved
June 28, 1906, declared subject to taxation, and that the plaintiff
has no interest in said lands, and has no duty or authority to
contest the taxes thereof, or the sale of said lands for unpaid
taxes. . . ."
On appeal, the decree was affirmed on the ground that, as the
state law afforded adequate means to the United States and the
noncompetent Indians to correct errors in assessing
Page 251 U. S. 132
taxes, if any, there was no basis for invoking relief from a
court of equity.
The argument here is exclusively directed to two grounds, the
one enforced by the trial court and the other sustained by the
court below. The first, however, is in argument here expanded into
two points of view, since it challenges not only the authority of
the officers of the United States to bring the suit, but the power
of the United States to authorize them to do it. So far as the
latter aspect is concerned, it proceeds upon the assumption that,
by the Act of 1906, the United States exhausted its power as the
protector and guardian of the Osage Indians, and as to them had no
longer any mission or authority whatever. We pass from this
contention without further notice, as it is so obviously opposed to
the doctrine upon the subject settled from the beginning and so in
conflict with the terms of the act of Congress that nothing more
need to be said concerning it. As to the first point of view, the
proposition is this: that, as the Act of 1906 subjected the surplus
lands to taxation, it therefore brought them under the taxing laws
of the state, and it is insisted that, having been so brought, it
results that, until Congress otherwise provides, there exists no
lawful authority in an officer of the United States to act in the
name of the United States for the purpose of attacking the legality
of a tax levied upon said lands under the laws of the state. But,
although the premise upon which the argument proceeds be admitted
-- that is, that in subjecting the lands to state taxation, it was
the purpose of Congress to subject them to the methods of levying
and collecting the taxes provided by state law, including the
remedial processes for the correction of errors, we fail to
understand what relation that concession can have to the case in
hand, since, on the face of the pleadings, the action taken by the
United States was not to frustrate the act of Congress by
preventing the operation of the state
Page 251 U. S. 133
law, but to prevent the systematic violation of the state law
committed for the purpose of destroying the rights created by the
act of Congress. The argument therefore disregards the foundation
for the relief sought, and the proceeds upon the assumption that
the exertion of power to prevent a perversion of state laws made to
defeat the rights which the act of Congress gave is to be treated
as a violation of the act of Congress and a refusal to apply the
state law.
Certain is it that, as the United States, as guardian of the
Indians, had the duty to protect them from spoliation, and
therefore the right to prevent their being illegally deprived of
the property rights conferred under the act of Congress of 1906,
the power existed in the officers of the United States to invoke
relief for the accomplishment of the purpose stated. Indeed, the
act of Congress of 1917, providing for the appraisement of the
lands in question, by necessary implication, if not in express
terms, treated the power of the officers of the United States to
resist the illegal assessments as undoubted.
And the existence of power in the United States to sue which is
thus established disposes of the proposition that, because of
remedies afforded to individuals under the state law, the authority
of a court of equity could not be invoked by the United States.
This necessarily follows because, in the first place, as the
authority of the United States extended to all the noncompetent
members of the tribe, it obviously resulted that the interposition
of a court of equity to prevent the wrong complained of was
essential in order to avoid a multiplicity of suits (
see Union
Pacific Ry. Co. v. Cheyenne, 113 U. S. 516;
Smyth v. Ames, 169 U. S. 466,
169 U. S. 517;
Cruickshank v. Bidwell, 176 U. S. 73,
176 U. S. 81;
Boise Artesian Water Co. v. Boise City, 213 U.
S. 276,
213 U. S. 283;
Greene v. Louisville & Interurban R. Co., 244 U.
S. 499,
244 U. S.
506); in the second place, because, as the wrong relied
upon was not a mere mistake or error
Page 251 U. S. 134
committed in the enforcement of the state tax laws, but a
systematic and intentional disregard of such laws by the state
officers for the purpose of destroying the rights of the whole
class of noncompetent Indians who were subject to the protection of
the United States, it follows that such class wrong and disregard
of the state statute gave rise to the right to invoke the
interposition of a court of equity in order that an adequate remedy
might be afforded (
Cummings v. National Bank, 101 U.
S. 153;
Reagan v. Farmers' Loan & Trust
Co., 154 U. S. 362,
154 U. S. 390;
Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Backus, 154 U.
S. 421;
Courter v. Louisville & Nashville R.
Co., 196 U. S. 599;
Raymond v. Chicago Traction Co., 207 U. S.
20;
Greene v. Louisville & Interurban R.
Co., 244 U. S. 499,
244 U. S.
507). In fact, the subject is fully covered by the
ruling in
Union Pacific Railway Co. v. Weld County,
247 U. S. 282.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings in conformity
with this opinion.