1. Mandamus is employed to compel performance of a ministerial
duty and also to compel action in matters involving judgment and
discretion, but not to direct the exercise of judgment or
discretion in a particular way nor to direct the retraction or
reversal of action already taken in the exercise of either. P.
281 U. S.
218.
2. When the duty of the Secretary of the Interior or other
executive officer, in the administration of statutes, is in a
particular situation so plainly prescribed as to be free from doubt
and equivalent to a positive command, it is regarded as being so
far ministerial that the performance may be compelled by mandamus.
Id.
3. But when the duty is not thus plainly prescribed, but depends
upon a statute or statutes the construction or application of which
is not free from doubt, it is regarded as involving the character
of judgment or discretion that cannot be controlled by mandamus.
Id.
4. The Act of January 14, 1889, provided,
inter alia,
that the money derived from the disposal thereunder of lands of the
Chippewa Indians in Minnesota, should, after making certain
deductions, be placed at interest in the Treasury of the United
States to the credit of those Indians; that part of the interest
should be paid annually to the Indians in equal shares per capita,
and the remainder be devoted, under the direction of the Secretary
of the Interior, to the establishment and maintenance of free
schools among them for their benefit, and that, at the expiration
of fifty years, the fund should be divided and paid to the Indians
and their issue then living, in equal shares. There were also
provisions permitting Congress to appropriate a part of the
principal to promoting civilization and support of the Indians and
permitting the Secretary of the Interior, during the first five
years, to expend interest money of Indians desirous of engaging in
farming, in the purchase of livestock, implements, seeds, etc. For
its guidance in fixing and paying the annuities, the Department
used the original census of the Indians, taken under the Act, and
supplementary rolls of its own, eliminating the names of all
enrolled Indians who died and adding the names of the living who
were entitled to participate and who
Page 281 U. S. 207
were omitted from the census by mistake or were born after it
was taken.
Held:
(1) That a ruling of the Secretary of the Interior placing the
children of an enrolled mixed-blood mother on the supplementary
rolls upon the ground that they were entitled to annuities
notwithstanding that she had abandoned her tribal relationship
before the children were born was a ruling made in the exercise of
a continuing administrative authority, and subject to be
reconsidered by his successor and revoked for the future if found
wrong.
United States v. Atkins, 260 U.
S. 220, distinguished. P.
281 U. S.
216.
(2) The questions whether the fund is a tribal fund and whether,
with the tribe still existing, the distribution of the annuities is
to be confined to members of the tribe (with exceptions not here
material) are questions involving the exercise by the Secretary of
the Interior of judgment and discretion as to which he cannot be
controlled by mandamus. P.
281 U. S. 221.
(3) The continued existence of the tribe, having been recognized
by Congress and by the Secretary of the Interior, is not open to
question in this case.
Id.
(4) The time fixed for the final distribution of the fund is so
remote that no one is now in a position to ask special relief or
direction respecting that distribution. P.
281 U. S. 222.
30 F.2d 989, reversed.
Supreme Court, D.C. affirmed.
Certiorari, 279 U.S. 833, to review a judgment of the court of
appeals of the District of Columbia, which reversed a ruling of the
Supreme Court of the District denying a writ of mandamus.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a petition for a writ of mandamus commanding the
Secretary of the Interior to restore the relators to
Page 281 U. S. 208
the supplemental rolls of the Chippewa Indians in Minnesota and
to pay to each of them a per capita share of all future
distributions, whether of interest or principal, made from the fund
created under § 7 of the Act of January 14, 1889, c. 24, 25
Stat. 642.
The writ was denied by the Supreme Court of the District of
Columbia, but that ruling was reversed by the Court of Appeals, 30
F.2d 989, and the matter is here for review on certiorari.
When the Act of 1889 was passed, the Chippewa Indians in
Minnesota comprised eleven bands or tribes occupying ten distinct
reservations in that state in virtue of treaties or executive
orders. Collectively they were regarded as a single tribe, and
commonly called Chippewas of Minnesota. [
Footnote 1] They numbered about 8,300, and their
reservations contained approximately 4,700,000 acres. They were
tribal Indians, under the guardianship of the United States, and
held their reservations as tribal lands. The Act of 1889 was
directed to accomplishing their transition from the existing tribal
relation and dependent wardship to full individual emancipation,
with its incident rights and responsibilities, and, to that
end,
Page 281 U. S. 209
the act made provision for obtaining, through a commission, a
cession of all of their tribal lands, save portions of the White
Earth and Red Lake Reservations needed for allotments; for using
the unceded lands in making allotments in severalty, which were to
be held subject to prescribed restrictions against alienation,
incumbrance, and taxation during a period of twenty-five years, or
longer, if the President so directed, and for selling the ceded
lands and creating with the net proceeds an interest-bearing fund
which was to be held in the United States Treasury and expended for
the benefit of the Indians, as will appear later on.
The act required that the cession have the assent of two-thirds
of the male adults and have the approval of the President; directed
that the commission obtaining the cession make a census roll of
each band or tribe as a guide in ascertaining whether the requisite
number of Indians assented to the cession and in making
contemplated allotments and payments; required, with exceptions not
here material, that the Indians other than those on the Red Lake
Reservation be removed to the White Earth Reservation, there to
receive allotments, and directed that, after the completion of
necessary preliminaries, allotments be made to all of the Indians
as soon as practicable.
The contemplated cession was obtained from the Indians and was
approved by the President, March 4, 1890. The intended census rolls
were made and transmitted to the Secretary of the Interior. Several
provisions of the act have now been fully executed, and others are
still in process of administration. The fund created from the
proceeds of the sale of the ceded lands is a large one, and the
relators here are asserting a right to share in all future
distributions therefrom.
The provisions governing the creation and use of that fund are
embodied in § 7 of the act, and are here
Page 281 U. S. 210
quoted at length -- those which the parties emphasize being put
in italics:
"Sec. 7. That all money accruing from the disposal of said lands
in conformity with the provisions of this act shall, after
deducting all the expenses of making the census, of obtaining the
cession and relinquishment, of making the removal and allotments,
and of completing the surveys and appraisals, in this act provided,
be placed in the Treasury of the United States to the credit of all
the Chippewa Indians in the Minnesota as a permanent fund, which
shall draw interest at the rate of five percentum per annum,
payable annually for the period of fifty years, after the
allotments provided for in this act have been made, and which
interest and permanent funds shall be expended for the benefit of
said Indians in manner following:
One-half of said interest
shall, during the said period of fifty years, except in the cases
hereinafter otherwise provided, be annually paid in cash in equal
shares to the heads of families and guardians of orphan minors for
their use, and one-fourth of said interest shall, during the same
period and with the like exception, be annually paid in cash in
equal shares per capita to all other classes of said Indians, and
the remaining one-fourth of said interest shall, during the said
period of fifty years, under the direction of the Secretary of the
Interior, be devoted exclusively to the establishment and
maintenance of a system of free schools among said Indians, in
their midst and for their benefit, and at the expiration of the
said fifty years, the said permanent fund shall be divided and paid
to all of said Chippewa Indians and their issue then living, in
cash, in equal shares: Provided, That Congress may, in its
discretion, from time to time, during the said period of fifty
years, appropriate, for the purpose of promoting civilization and
self-support among the said Indians, a portion of said principal
sum, not exceeding five percentum thereof.
Page 281 U. S. 211
The United States shall, for the benefit of said Indians,
advance to them as such interest as aforesaid the sum of ninety
thousand dollars annually, counting from the time when the removal
and allotments provided for in this act shall have been made, until
such time as said permanent fund, exclusive of the deductions
hereinbefore provided for, shall equal or exceed the sum of three
million dollars, less any actual interest that may in the meantime
accrue from accumulations of said permanent fund;
the payments
of such interest to be made yearly in advance, and, in the
discretion of the Secretary of the Interior, may, as to
three-fourths thereof, during the first five years, be expended in
procuring livestock, teams, farming implements, and seed for such
of the Indians to the extent of their shares as are fit and desire
to engage in farming, but as to the rest, in cash, and
whenever said permanent fund shall exceed the sum of three million
dollars, the United States shall be fully reimbursed out of such
excess, for all the advances of interest made as herein
contemplated and other expenses hereunder."
In the negotiations resulting in the cession the commission
construed the clauses providing for annual payments of one-half of
the interest "in equal shares to the heads of families and
guardians of orphan minors" and of one-fourth of the Interest "in
equal shares per capita to all other classes of said Indians" as
meaning that three-fourths of the interest should be paid annually
to the Indians in equal shares per capita, and the Secretary of the
Interior, in laying the cession before the President for his
approval, pronounced that construction reasonable, and declared it
should be adhered to. H.R.Ex.Doc. No. 247, 51st Cong., 1st Sess.,
pp. 5, 6, 24. For several years, payments under those clauses were
made on that basis. Then the Secretary of the Treasury submitted to
the Comptroller the question whether that basis of payment properly
could be continued, and the
Page 281 U. S. 212
Comptroller, after observing that the clauses were obscurely
worded, ruled that the construction given to them by the commission
had become the true construction through its adoption in actual
practice, and should be respected accordingly. 3 Comp. Dec. 158.
All subsequent payments have been made, as the prior ones were, in
accordance with that construction.
Manifestly, some preliminary steps would need to be taken before
the interest annuities could be rightly paid. The number of Indians
entitled to participate would need to be ascertained so that the
per capita share to be paid to each could be calculated, and those
so entitled would need to be listed so that the paying tellers
would know whom to pay. From the beginning, these practical needs
have been met by taking the commission's census rolls as a primary
guide, eliminating the names of Indians dying after those rolls
were made, making supplemental rolls of Indians erroneously omitted
from the census rolls and of Indian children entitled to
participate but born after the census was taken, and using the two
sets of rolls -- appropriately brought up to date and made to
include only persons in being at the time -- as a correct basis for
the necessary calculation and listing.
This general statement will open the way for a better
appreciation of the special facts and contentions in the present
case.
Mary Blair, a full-blood Chippewa woman, was a member of the
White Earth band in Minnesota, and as such was included in the
census rolls and given an allotment on the White Earth Reservation.
Sarah Cogger, a daughter of Mary Blair, is of mixed Chippewa and
white blood. She was born in 1892, after the census rolls were
made, was enrolled on the supplemental rolls soon after her birth,
and was recognized as a member of the White Earth band up to the
time of her marriage. In 1909, she was married to Mall Kadrie, a
Syrian by birth but a
Page 281 U. S. 213
naturalized citizen of the United States. After her marriage,
she abandoned her tribal relations, and ever since has resided with
her husband among white people -- for several years in Canada and
Syria, and during the later years at International Falls and St.
Paul in Minnesota. She was paid a per capita share in all interest
annuities distributed after her enrollment and before her
abandonment of the tribal relations, and has received a like share
in all subsequent annuities -- these later payments to her being in
accord with the statutes which save to such an Indian her personal
right to share in annuities, tribal funds, etc., as though her
tribal relations were maintained. [
Footnote 2]
The nine relators are minor children of Sarah and Mall Kadrie,
and were born, the first four in Canada and the others at
International Falls and St. Paul in Minnesota, after their mother
had abandoned her tribal relations and was permanently residing
with her husband among white people. So, while all of the relators
have a minor fraction of Minnesota Chippewa blood, they were born
of parents having no tribal relations then or since, and have lived
only in white communities.
At their mother's request, following their respective births,
the first three of these children were placed on the supplemental
rolls and shared in some of the interest annuities. A like request
on behalf of the fourth child led to an inquiry which brought
attention to the mother's marriage to a white man, her abandonment
of the tribal relations, and the birth of the four children in
Canada, where the parents were then residing. With these facts
before it, the Indian Bureau, in 1916, declined to enroll the
fourth child, and cancelled the prior enrollment of the first
three. Paragraph 4 of § 324 of the Regulations of the Indian
Bureau, as amended April 1, 1905, was
Page 281 U. S. 214
cited as the applicable administrative rule in such matters.
That paragraph reads:
"All children born to annuitants either before or since the last
preceding payment, who have not already been enrolled, should be
enrolled with their parents. This includes cases where the mother
is an Indian woman married to a white man, and such woman and her
issue are recognized by the tribe as belonging thereto, and where
the family so founded identifies itself and affiliates with the
tribe of which the mother is a recognized member. When an Indian
woman, by her marriage with a white man has, in effect, withdrawn
from the tribe and is no longer identified with the tribal
community and interests, the offspring of such a marriage are not
entitled to share in annuities or other benefits as Indians, and
must not be enrolled."
In 1919, the Secretary of the Interior, following an opinion
given by the solicitor for that Department, ruled that Mrs.
Kadrie's children were entitled to share in the interest annuities.
The children born up to that time were then placed on the
supplemental rolls, and those born thereafter were enrolled soon
after birth. All then shared for a time in the annuities. In 1927,
a succeeding Secretary of the Interior, adopting and applying an
opinion given by a succeeding solicitor, held that these children
were not entitled to share in the interest annuities, and
accordingly directed that their enrollment be cancelled and no
further payment be made to them.
The two solicitors differed sharply. The first was of opinion
that the Act of 1889 should be construed and given effect as if it
were a conventional deed of trust, and, with this as a premise, he
concluded that the fund established under § 7 is not a tribal
fund, but one held for designated Indian beneficiaries as
individuals, and that the beneficiaries comprise, first, all
Indians now living who were included in the census rolls as
members
Page 281 U. S. 215
of the tribe, and secondly, all living lineal descendants of any
Indian so enrolled, regardless of whether the descendant is or ever
was a member, and even though he was born of parents neither of
whom was a member at the time. And, as the Kadrie children are
lineal descendants (grandchildren) of Mary Blair, who was included
in the census rolls as a member, that solicitor regarded them as
entitled to share in the distributions. [
Footnote 3] The second solicitor was of opinion that
the act is to be construed and given effect as an exertion by
Congress of its authority over the affairs and property of tribal
Indians under the guardianship of the United States; that the fund
established under § 7 is a tribal fund derived from the sale
of tribal lands, and is held and being administered as such by the
United States; that the tribe has not been dissolved, but is
recognized by Congress as still existing; that, in this situation,
the right to share in the interest annuities depends upon existing
tribal membership, save in exceptional instances where Congress has
provided otherwise, and that the Kadrie children, all of whom were
born of a white father and after their mother had separated from
the tribe and was permanently living among white people, are
without tribal
Page 281 U. S. 216
membership and not within any exceptional provision permitting
other than existing members to share in such annuities. This
solicitor rested his opinion in part upon the general rule that, in
the absence of provision to the contrary, the right of individual
Indians to share in tribal property, whether lands or funds,
depends upon tribal membership, is terminated when the membership
is ended, and is neither alienable nor descendible. [
Footnote 4]
In the present petition, the relators assert that the decision
of the Secretary of the Interior in 1927, although given after
notice and hearing, is void in that the then Secretary was without
power to reconsider and revoke the decision of his predecessor in
1919 on the same matter, and they further assert that the decision
in 1927 is otherwise wrong, in that it rests upon untenable rulings
to the effect that the fund established under § 7 is a tribal
fund, and is held and being administered as such by the United
States, that the tribe has not been dissolved, and that the right
to share in the annuities from the fund is confined to members of
the tribe save in exceptional instances which do not include the
relators. Upon these grounds, the relators seek a writ of mandamus
directing, in substance, that the Secretary of the Interior put
aside the decision of 1927 and restore and give effect to that of
1919.
If, at the time of the decision in 1927, the Secretary of the
Interior was without power to reconsider and revoke the decision of
1919, it well may be that the relators would be entitled to the
relief by mandamus which they seek. [
Footnote 5] But there was no such want of power. The
decision
Page 281 U. S. 217
in 1919 was not a judgment pronounced in a judicial proceeding,
but a ruling made by an executive officer in the exertion of
administrative authority. That authority was neither exhausted nor
terminated by its exertion on that occasion, but was in its nature
continuing. Under it, the Secretary who made the decision could
reconsider the matter and revoke the decision if found wrong, and
so of his successor. The latter was charged, no less than the
former had been, with the duty of supervising the payment of the
interest annuities and of causing them to be distributed among
those entitled to them and no others, and, if he found that
individuals not so entitled were sharing in the annuities by reason
of a mistaken or erroneous ruling of the former, his authority to
revoke that ruling and stop further payments under it was the same
as if it had been his own act. [
Footnote 6] The power and duties of such an office are
impersonal and unaffected by a change in the person holding it.
The case of
United States v. Atkins, 260 U.
S. 220, relied on by the relators, is not in point. It
involved an enrollment by a special commission under a statute
providing that the enrollment, when approved by the Secretary of
the Interior, should be "final," and entitle the person enrolled to
an allotment. The Secretary approved, and, in usual course, an
allotment was made and a patent issued. Thereafter, the enrollment
was drawn in question in a suit brought to cancel the patent. This
Court held that the statute was intended to make the enrollment,
when approved by the Secretary, conclusive of the individual's
existence, membership, etc., and unimpeachable
Page 281 U. S. 218
except for such fraud or mistake as would afford ground for
avoiding a judgment in adversary proceedings. There is no like
provision in the Act of 1889. Nor does it contain any mention of
supplemental rolls. They are administrative devices intended to
safeguard and facilitate the distribution of the annuities. No
doubt they are intended to be evidential of the right to share
therein, but there is no basis for holding them conclusive or not
subject to revision.
As the decision of the Secretary in 1927 was made in the
exercise of lawful authority, it becomes necessary to examine the
complaint that the decision on the merits is wrong. In doing so,
there is need for having in mind the limited scope of the remedy
here invoked.
Mandamus is employed to compel the performance, when refused, of
a ministerial duty, this being its chief use. It also is employed
to compel action, when refused, in matters involving judgment and
discretion, but not to direct the exercise of judgment or
discretion in a particular way, nor to direct the retraction or
reversal of action already taken in the exercise of either.
[
Footnote 7]
The duties of executive officers, such as the Secretary of the
Interior, usually are connected with the administration of statutes
which must be read and in a sense construed to ascertain what is
required. But it does not follow that these administrative duties
all involve judgment or discretion of the character intended by the
rule just stated. Where the duty in a particular situation is so
plainly prescribed as to be free from doubt and equivalent to a
positive command, it is regarded as being so
Page 281 U. S. 219
far ministerial that its performance may be compelled by
mandamus, unless there be provision or implication to the contrary.
[
Footnote 8] But where the duty
is not thus plainly prescribed, but depends upon a statute or
statutes the construction or application of which is not free from
doubt, it is regarded as involving the character of judgment or
discretion which cannot be controlled by mandamus. [
Footnote 9]
A reference to three of the cases just cited will serve to
illustrate the application of this doctrine in instances where
mandamus is sought for the purpose of controlling a secretary in
the discharge of duties of the latter class. In
Riverside Oil
Co. v. Hitchcock, mandamus was sought as a means of compelling
the Secretary of the Interior to retract a decision theretofore
given and to make another along different lines. This Court, after
pointing out that the Secretary's duty in the matter was not formal
or ministerial, said:
"The court has no general supervisory power over the officers of
the Land Department, by which to control their decisions upon
questions within their jurisdiction. If this writ were granted, we
would require the Secretary of the Interior to repudiate and
disaffirm a decision which he regarded it his duty to make in the
exercise of that judgment which is reposed in him by law, and we
should require him to come to a determination upon the issues
involved directly opposite to that which he had reached, and which
the law conferred
Page 281 U. S. 220
upon him the jurisdiction to make. Mandamus has never been
regarded as the proper writ to control the judgment and discretion
of an officer as to the decision of a matter which the law gave him
the power and imposed upon him the duty to decide for himself. The
writ never can be used as a substitute for a writ of error. Nor
does the fact that no writ of error will lie in such a case as
this, by which to review the judgment of the Secretary, furnish any
foundation for the claim that mandamus may therefore he
awarded."
In
Knight v. Lane, where a proposed adjustment of a
controversy between Indians over an allotment had been approved by
the Secretary in one decision and afterwards disapproved in
another, it was said:
"Inasmuch as the decision of the Secretary, revoking his prior
approval of the proposed adjustment, was not arbitrary or
capricious, but was given after a hearing, and in the exercise of a
judgment and discretion confided to him by law, it cannot be
reviewed, or he be compelled to retract it, by mandamus."
And, in Lane v.
Mickadiet, mandamus was sought as a
means of preventing the Secretary from reconsidering, after notice
and hearing, a prior decision determining who were the heirs of a
deceased Indian and sustaining the Indian's adoption of a child not
related to him. The mandamus was refused on the ground that the
Secretary's judgment and discretion in determining such heirships
could not be thus controlled; and, in disposing of an argument
similar to one which is advanced here, the court said:
"But it is said that the purpose of the statute was to give the
recognized heir a status which would entitle him to enjoy the
allotted land, and not to leave all his rights of enjoyment open to
changing decisions which might be made during the long period of
the trust term, and thus virtually destroy the right of property in
favor of the heir which it was the obvious purpose of the statute
to protect. But,
Page 281 U. S. 221
in last analysis, this is a mere argument seeking to destroy a
lawful power by the suggestion of a possible abuse."
It is apparent that, with the question of the Secretary's
authority resolved against the relators, the only question open in
this proceeding is whether the decision of 1927 was given is the
discharge of a ministerial duty controllable by mandamus or of a
duty requiring the exercise of judgment or discretion not thus
controllable.
The questions mooted before the Secretary and decided by him
were whether the fund is a tribal fund, whether the tribe is still
existing, and whether the distribution of the annuities is to be
confined to members of the tribe, with exceptions not including the
relators. These are all questions of law the solution of which
requires a construction of the Act of 1889 and other related acts.
A reading of these acts shows that they fall short of plainly
requiring that any of the questions be answered in the negative,
and that, in some aspects, they give color to the affirmative
answers of the Secretary. That the construction of the acts insofar
as they have a bearing on the first and third questions is
sufficiently uncertain to involve the exercise of judgment and
discretion is rather plain. The second question is more easily
answered, for not only does the Act of 1889 show very plainly that
the purpose was to accomplish a gradual, rather than an immediate,
transition from the tribal relation and dependent wardship to full
emancipation and individual responsibility, but Congress in many
later acts -- some near the time of the decision in question -- has
recognized the continued existence of the tribe. [
Footnote 10] This recognition was respected
by the Secretary,
Page 281 U. S. 22
and is not open to question here. [
Footnote 11] With the tribe still existing, the criticism
by counsel for the relators of the Secretary's decision in other
particulars loses much of its force.
The time fixed for the final distribution is as yet so remote
that no one is now in a position to ask special relief or direction
respecting that distribution.
From what has been said, it follows that the case is not one in
which mandamus will lie.
Judgment of court of appeals reversed.
Judgment of Supreme Court affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
These Indians formerly were part of the Chippewa or Ojibway
Nation of the Great Lakes region. The Nation comprised many
subordinate bands or tribes, some of which came to be permanently
located in Canada and others in Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and
perhaps other states. The bands or tribes which came to be seated
in Minnesota have latterly been designated as the Chippewas of
Minnesota by way of distinguishing them from those seated
elsewhere. Treaties, September 24, 1819, 7 Stat. 203; June 16,
1820, 7 Stat. 206; August 5, 1826, 7 Stat. 290; July 29, 1837, 7
Stat. 536; October 4, 1842, 7 Stat. 591; February 22, 1855, 10
Stat. 1165; March 11, 1863, 12 Stat. 1249; October 2, 1863, 13
Stat. 667; May 7, 1864, 13 Stat. 693; March 19, 1807, 16 Stat. 719;
House Doc. Vol. 61, 59th Cong., 1st Sess. pp. 277-280; History of
Ojibway Nation, Copway, pp. 170-171; Minn.His.Soc.Cols. Vol. 5, pp.
37-40, 507-509; also Vol. IX, pp. 55-56.
[
Footnote 2]
Acts March 3, 1875, c. 131, § 15, 18 Stat. 420; February 8,
1887, c. 119, § 6, 24 Stat. 390; August 9, 1888, c. 818,
§ 2, 25 Stat. 392.
[
Footnote 3]
The solicitor said:
"The ancestor must be found to have been of the tribal
membership at the time of the creation of the trust. . . . His
descendants (whether children or grandchildren) take an interest
not as tribal members, but as of the ancestor's blood, his blood
entitling him and them alike, because it was tribal blood."
Also:
"Sarah Kadrie and her children are 'issue' of her mother, a
full-blood Chippewa Indian duly enrolled, and, as such, they will
be entitled at the expiration of the trust period, to share in the
distribution of the trust fund, and meanwhile they are equally
entitled to share in the annuities arising from that fund. Those
rights they have not forfeited either by acquiring foreign
citizenship or by abandoning, or failing to acquire, residence on
the Indian reservation or with the tribe."
[
Footnote 4]
Cherokee Nation v. Hitchcock, 187 U.
S. 294,
187 U. S. 307;
Gritts v. Fisher, 224 U. S. 640,
224 U. S. 642;
Sizemore v. Brady, 235 U. S. 441,
235 U. S. 446;
La Roque v. United States, 239 U. S.
62,
239 U. S. 66;
Oakes v. United States, 172 F. 305, 307.
[
Footnote 5]
United States v. Schurz, 102 U.
S. 378,
102 U. S.
402-403;
Noble v. Union River Logging R. Co.,
147 U. S. 165,
147 U. S. 171;
Garfield v. Goldsby, 211 U. S. 249,
211 U. S.
261-262.
[
Footnote 6]
West v. Standard Oil Co., 278 U.
S. 200,
278 U. S. 210;
Beley v. Naphtaly, 169 U. S. 353,
169 U. S. 364;
Knight v. U.S. Land
Association, 142 U. S. 161,
142 U. S.
181-182;
New Orleans v. Paine, 147 U.
S. 261,
147 U. S. 266;
Greenameyer v. Coate, 212 U. S. 434,
212 U. S. 442;
Parcher v. Gillen, 26 L.D. 34, 43;
Aspen Consolidated
Mining Co. v. Williams, 27 L.D. 1, 10-11.
And see Pearsons
v. Williams, 202 U. S. 281,
202 U. S.
284-285.
[
Footnote 7]
Commissioner of Patents v.
Whiteley, 4 Wall. 522,
71 U. S. 534;
United States ex rel. v. Black, 128 U. S.
40,
128 U. S. 48;
Riverside Oil Co. v. Hitchcock, 190 U.
S. 316,
190 U. S.
321-325;
Louisiana v. McAdoo, 234 U.
S. 627,
234 U. S. 633;
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Waste Merchants' Assn.,
260 U. S. 32,
260 U. S.
34.
[
Footnote 8]
Roberts v. United States, 176 U.
S. 221,
176 U. S. 231;
Lane v. Hoglund, 244 U. S. 174,
244 U. S. 181;
Work v. McAlester-Edwards Co., 262 U.
S. 200,
262 U. S. 208;
Work v. Lynn, 266 U. S. 161,
266 U. S. 168,
et seq.; Wilbur v. Krushnic, 280 U.
S. 306.
[
Footnote 9]
Riverside Oil Co. v. Hitchcock, 190 U.
S. 316,
190 U. S.
324-325;
Ness v. Fisher, 223 U.
S. 683,
223 U. S. 691;
Knight v. Lane, 228 U. S. 6,
228 U. S. 13;
Lane v. Mickadiet, 241 U. S. 201,
241 U. S.
208-209;
Alaska Smokeless Coal Co. v. Lane,
250 U. S. 549,
250 U. S. 555;
Hall v. Payne, 254 U. S. 343,
254 U. S. 347;
Work v. Rives, 267 U. S. 175,
267 U. S.
183-184.
And see United States ex rel. v.
Hitchcock, 205 U. S. 80,
205 U. S. 86.
[
Footnote 10]
Acts of August 1, 1914, c. 222, 38 Stat. 592; May 18, 1910, c.
125, 39 Stat. 135; March 2, 1917, c. 146, 39 Stat. 979; May 25,
1918, c. 86, 40 Stat. 572; June 30, 1919, c. 4, 41 Stat. 14;
February 14, 1920, c. 75, 41 Stat. 419; November 19, 1921, c. 133,
42 Stat. 221; January 30, 1925, c. 114, 43 Stat. 798; February 19,
1926, c. 22, 44 Stat., P. 2, 7; March 4, 1929, c. 705, 45 Stat.
1584.
[
Footnote 11]
United States v.
Holliday, 3 Wall. 407,
70 U. S. 419;
United States v. Rickert, 188 U.
S. 432,
188 U. S. 445;
Tiger v. Western Investment Co., 221 U.
S. 286,
221 U. S.
315.