1. A second motion for new trial made by the United States, by
leave of the Court of Claims
held to have been filed under
Rule 91 of the Court of Claims, requiring leave of court, and not
under 28 U.S.C. § 282; Jud.Code, § 175. P.
299 U. S.
419.
2. The time within which application may be made to this Court
for review by certiorari does not commence to run until after
disposition of motion for a new trial seasonably filed and
entertained. P.
299 U. S.
421.
3. The Court of Claims is without jurisdiction to adjudicate
causes of action against the United States which were introduced
into the claimant's petition by amendment after the expiration of
the time for beginning suit as limited by the jurisdictional
statute. P.
299 U. S.
421.
4. A judgment of the Court of Claims may not be sustained as to
any item that was not included in a cause of action set up in a
petition filed within the time allowed by statute, or that was, by
the findings or otherwise, put upon a ground not alleged in a
petition so filed. P.
299 U. S.
422.
5. A judgment of the Court of Claims may not be upheld as to any
item that is not supported by definite findings of fact extending
to all essential issues and which, unaided by statements in the
court's conclusions of law or its opinion, are clearly sufficient
to entitle plaintiff to recover. P.
299 U. S.
422.
6. Under Acts of Congress authorizing suit in the Court of
Claims, to be commenced before a day prescribed, the Seminole
Nation filed, in time, a petition seeking recovery, with interest,
of tribal funds alleged to have been spent by the Government since
July 1, 1898, without authority from Congress and in violation of
its duty as trustee and of treaties and agreements with the tribe.
The petition was amended after the limitation period had
expired.
Held (pp.
299 U. S. 422
et seq.):
(1) That a judgment for the plaintiff could not be sustained
insofar as it included:
(a) Various items outside of the period alleged in the original
petition, or not shown by the findings to be included in any cause
of action alleged in the original petition to have accrued in that
period. Pp.
299 U. S. 425
et seq.
Page 299 U. S. 418
(b) Interest on a tribal fund, appropriated by Congress for the
purpose of making per capita payments, and alleged not to have been
disbursed to members or paid to the tribal treasurer, but not found
to have been disbursed or spent illegally. P.
299 U. S.
426.
(c) An amount, which was disbursed as
per capita
payments from capital previously set apart as a permanent school
fund.
(d) Amounts disbursed out of the principal of that fund for
education. Pp.
299 U. S.
430-431.
(2) Payments out of the Seminole school fund for equalization of
allotments not otherwise "authorized by law" were not permitted by
the Indian Appropriation Act of February 14, 1920, and their amount
was properly included in the judgment in this case. P.
299 U. S.
431.
7. In the process of liquidating the affairs of the Seminole
Nation, Congress, by § 18 of the Indian Appropriation Act of
May 25, 1918, authorized the Secretary of the Interior to make
per capita payments to enrolled Seminoles, or their lawful
heirs, out of the Seminole school fund, and the authority was not
confined to the particular fiscal year. P.
299 U. S.
428.
8. The Indian Appropriation Acts for the years 1922-1930,
authorizing the Secretary of the Interior to continue Seminole
schools with tribal funds, were passed by Congress with knowledge
that the fund, in pursuance of its authority, had been so depleted
that interest on the amount remaining in it would not meet even the
lessened requirements, and are to be construed as contemplating the
use of not merely the interest on the diminished school fund, but
of the principal also. P.
299 U. S.
431.
82 Ct.Cls. 135 reversed.
Certiorari to review a judgment allowing various claims of the
Seminole Nation in a suit against the United States.
Page 299 U. S. 419
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
An Act of Congress approved May 20, 1924, 43 Stat. 133,
authorized the above-named court to adjudicate claims of the
Seminole Nation against the United States, declared all forever
barred unless suit be brought within five years, directed
adjudication of claims of the United States against that nation,
and gave right of review in this Court. A Joint Resolution of May
19, 1926, 44 Stat. 568, permitted plaintiff to bring separate suits
on one or more causes of action. Joint Resolution of February 19,
1929, 45 Stat. 1229, extended time for commencing suits to June 30,
1930. February 24, 1930, plaintiff filed its petition praying
judgment in respect of causes of action alleged to have arisen
after July 1, 1898. Plaintiff obtained leave and, September 19,
1934, filed an amended complaint containing allegations in respect
of the claims alluded to in the original petition and attempted to
set up other causes of action. But the period within which
defendant permitted suit had long since expired. On December 2,
1935, the court filed its special findings of fact, conclusions of
law, and opinion, and entered judgment in favor of plaintiff for
$1,317,087.21. 82 Ct.Cls. 135.
1. Plaintiff contends that the petition for the writ of
certiorari came too late, and that therefore this Court is without
jurisdiction. The petition was filed under 28 U.S.C. § 288(b).
Section 350 limits the time to three months after entry of
judgment. Defendant filed timely motion for new trial which was
overruled March 2, 1936. May 13, it applied for leave to file a
second motion for new trial. The application stated that it was
made pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 282, [
Footnote 1] and that the motion was attached to the
application. The court granted leave, and defendant, May 18, filed
its second motion for a new trial. The record does not include the
motion. After hearing argument, the
Page 299 U. S. 420
court, June 8, overruled the motion. July 8, defendant filed
petition for certiorari.
Plaintiff assumes that defendant's second motion for a new trial
was made under § 282, and argues that the running of time
allowed for filing petition for certiorari was not postponed until
the court disposed of that motion. But it does not appear that the
motion was, in fact, one authorized by § 282. Aside from mere
recital in the application for leave, there is nothing to indicate
that it was not one made under Rule 91 of the Court of Claims.
That rule declares:
"Whenever either party desires to question the correctness or
the sufficiency of the court's conclusions on its findings of fact
or to amend the same, the complaining party shall file a motion
which shall be known as a motion for a new trial. All grounds
relied upon for any or all of said objections shall be included in
one motion. After the court has announced its decision upon such
motion, no other motion for a new trial, except that provided by
United States Code, Title 28, section 282, shall be filed by the
same party unless by leave of court. Motions for new trial, except
as provided by section 175 of the Judicial Code (U.S.Code, Title
28, sec. 282), shall be filed within 60 days from the time the
judgment of the court is announced."
Section 282 provides:
"The Court of Claims, at any time while any claim is pending
before it, or on appeal from it, or within two years next after the
final disposition of such claim, may, on motion, on behalf of the
United States, grant a new trial and stay the payment of any
judgment therein upon such evidence, cumulative or otherwise, as
shall satisfy the court that any fraud, wrong, or injustice in the
premises has been done to the United States."
The rule expressly excepts motions under § 282 from those
for the filing of which leave of court must be obtained. The
statute plainly implies that, in accordance
Page 299 U. S. 421
with its terms, defendant may, as of right, apply for a new
trial. The record does not contain anything to indicate that it was
one made upon evidence, or otherwise in accordance with statute.
Cf. In re District of Columbia, 180 U.
S. 250,
180 U. S. 253. In
the absence of definite showing to that effect, it will not be held
that the United States applied for, or that the court entertained
and granted, an application for leave so expressly shown to be
unnecessary. On this record, it is reasonably to be inferred, and
we find, that the second motion was one filed in accordance with
the rule under which application for leave was necessary, and not
one authorized by the statute for the filing of which permission of
the court was not needed. It is clear that the three months'
period, § 350, did not commence to run until the court
disposed of that motion, and did not expire until long after the
defendant had filed its petition for this writ. It is well settled
that the time within which application may be made for review in
this Court does not commence to run until after disposition of
motion for a new trial seasonably filed and entertained.
Brockett v.
Brockett, 2 How. 238,
43 U. S. 240;
Texas Pacific Railway Co. v. Murphy, 111 U.
S. 488,
111 U. S. 489;
United States v. Ellicott, 223 U.
S. 524,
223 U. S. 539;
Citizens' Bank v. Opperman, 249 U.
S. 448,
249 U. S. 450;
Morse v. United States, 270 U. S. 151,
270 U. S.
153-154;
Gypsy Oil Co. v. Escoe, 275 U.
S. 498. This Court has jurisdiction.
2. The jurisdiction of the lower court was limited to claims
sued on before the expiration of the period within which the United
States consented to be sued. It did not extend to any cause of
action which was not alleged in plaintiff's original petition. As
the United States may not be sued without its consent, causes of
action not alleged within the period allowed may not be enforced.
Finn v. United States, 123 U. S. 227,
123 U. S. 232.
The amended petition was not filed within the time allowed; no
cause of action was by it brought within the power of
Page 299 U. S. 422
the court.
Taylor Co. v. Anderson, 275 U.
S. 431,
275 U. S.
438-439;
Baltimore & O.S.W. R. Co. v.
Carroll, 280 U. S. 491,
280 U. S. 495.
The judgment may not be sustained as to any item that is not
included in a cause of action set up in the original petition or
that was by the findings of the lower court or otherwise put upon a
ground not there alleged.
Harrison v.
Nixon, 9 Pet. 483,
34 U. S. 503;
Boone v.
Chiles, 10 Pet. 177,
35 U. S. 209;
Garland v.
Davis, 4 How. 131,
45 U. S. 148.
It may not be upheld as to any item that is not supported by
definite findings of fact extending to all essential issues and
which, unaided by statements in the court's conclusions of law or
its opinion, are clearly sufficient to entitle plaintiff to
recover.
United States v. Esnault-Pelterie, 299 U.
S. 201,
299 U. S. 207.
The original petition is in paragraphs designated by Roman
numerals; the substance of each may be briefly shown:
I. Reference is made to the act conferring jurisdiction. II.
Plaintiff, for many years, was the owner of funds held in trust by
defendant; there existed various treaties and agreements between
plaintiff and defendant whereby the trust funds were to be managed
and invested by defendant and the interest thereon paid over to the
national treasurer of plaintiff. III. From and after passage of the
Act of June 28, 1898, 30 Stat. 495 (called the Curtis Act),
defendant impounded all funds of plaintiff, refused to further pay
them to plaintiff's national treasurer, and proceeded to disburse
them for various purposes. IV. The only authority given by that Act
for the disbursement of plaintiff's funds is § 19. [
Footnote 2] After that Act, Congress
passed others giving authority for the expenditure of plaintiff's
funds, but no subsequent act gave authority for the expenditure
Page 299 U. S. 423
of the funds hereinafter mentioned. VI. From
"July 1st, 1898, until the present time, defendant, in violation
of its duty as trustee of the funds of plaintiff, in violation of
the rights of plaintiff under its various treaties and agreements
with defendant, and without authority of Congress, has spent large
sums of the trust funds of plaintiff."
VII. At all times mentioned in the petition R.S. § 2097 was
in force. [
Footnote 3] VIII.
"Defendant has thus spent, in violation of law, a large amount of
the trust funds of plaintiff." The exact amount will be shown by
the books and records of defendant.
The prayer of the petition is that defendant be required to file
in this cause a statement showing its expenditures of plaintiff's
funds "during said period," the purposes for which, and dates when,
such expenditures were made, and the authority of law, if any,
which authorized defendant to make such expenditures; "that, if
necessary thereafter, plaintiff be permitted to amend this
petition," and that plaintiff have judgment against the defendant
in such sum or sums as shall appear to the court to have been
expended without authority of law, with interest at six percent
This petition does not include any cause of action that accrued
prior to July 1, 1898. Nor is recovery sought on mere failure of
defendant to pay plaintiff's funds to its national treasurer or to
the Seminoles
per capita. The gist of the petition is that
defendant disbursed funds of plaintiff for "various purposes" (par.
III), and in violation
Page 299 U. S. 424
of its duty as trustee and of plaintiff's rights under "treaties
and agreements" and, "without authority of Congress, has spent
large sums of the trust funds of plaintiff" (par. VI). The petition
extends to no amount not "thus spent" (par. VIII). It prays
statement by defendant only as to "expenditures" of plaintiff's
funds "during said period," and seeks judgment only for such sums
as appear to the court to have been "expended."
While the amended petition came too late to bring in any
additional cause of action or to change grounds on which plaintiff
rested its suit, it will be taken into account to the extent that
it usefully gives plaintiff's statement of details of causes of
action alleged in the original petition and for comparison with the
court's special findings of fact. It describes thirteen claims; ten
of these are in whole or in part included in the judgment. The
following statement shows: (1) paragraphs of the amended petition;
(2) amounts claimed in each; (3) items identified by arabic numbers
used in the opinion below; (4) amounts of items considered; (5)
findings identified by Roman numerals; (6) amounts included in the
judgment; (7) amounts excluded below.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)
III $63,353.42 1 $61,563.42 IV $61,563.42
4 1,790.00 VII 1,790.00
IV 304,551.28 2 150,000.00 V $150,000.00
3 154,551.28 VI 154,551.28
V 90,597.20 5 3,097.20 IX 3,097.20
750.00 750.00
57,500.00 57,500.00
[29,250.00]* 29,250.00*
VI 15,000.00
6 15,000.00 X 15,000.00
VII 10,000.00
7 10,000.00 XI 9,068.24 931.76
Page 299 U. S. 425
VIII 864,702.58
8 864,702.58 XII 864,702.58
IX 154,455.30
9 154,455.30 XIII 154,455.30
X 66,247.37
10 51,460.08 XIV 51,460.08
11 3,909.96 XIV 3,909.96
12 4,348.74 XV 4,348.74
[6,528.59]** 6,528.59**
XI 178,533.42
13 178,533.42 XVI 1,350.55 177,182.87
------------- ------------- ------------- ----------
$1,747,440.57 $1,747,440.57 $1,317,087.27 $430,353.30
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Not dealt with in the opinion. This amount is made up of a
duplication of $26,750, interest for 1899-1909 excluded from
consideration because considered in item 8, plus seeming error of
$2,500 in calculation of judgment allowed.
** Not dealt with in the opinion. This amount apparently was not
claimed in proposed findings of fact, although claimed in amended
petition,
i.e., included in claim for $66,247.37.
-----
The lower court disallowed all of items all of items 2, 6, and
10 and parts of 5, 7, and 13. Plaintiff has not asked review.
Defendant's prayer for reversal does not extend to any part of
items 11, 12, or 13.
Items 1, 4, and 7 are by the amended petition indicated to be
outside the period alleged in the original petition -- from July 1,
1898, to the time of the commencement of the suit. The findings
fail to show that any part of these amounts is included in any
cause of action alleged in the original petition to have accrued in
that period. All of these items must be deducted from the
judgment.
Item 3, $154,551.28, is a part of $304,551.28 first described in
the amended petition. Of that amount, $150,000 (item 2) was
disallowed. The amount included in the judgment rests on special
finding VI, which is to the effect that, commencing with the Act of
July 26, 1866 (14 Stat. 263, 264), up to and including the Act of
April 30, 1908 (35 Stat. 91), Congress annually appropriated
$25,000, being the interest at 5 percent on the $500,000 fund
provided in the Eighth article of the Treaty of Aug. 7, 1856 (11
Stat. 702) for the purpose of making per capita payments, and that
the United States disbursed the sums thus appropriated for the
years involved, either by direct payment per capita to members
Page 299 U. S. 426
of the tribe or by cash payment to the treasurer of the Seminole
Nation, except interest in years between 1867 and 1879, inclusive,
the total of which is $92,051.28, and interest in the years 1907 to
1909, inclusive, amounting to $62,500, and that these items of
interest were neither disbursed to members of the tribe nor paid to
the treasurer.
But defendant's retention or other disposition of the amounts of
interest in years between 1867 and 1879 is not shown by the
findings to have been within the period covered by the original
petition. For that reason, $92,051.28 must be deducted. And, for
another reason, all of item 3 must be eliminated from the judgment.
The finding merely shows that defendant did not pay or disburse the
amount included in that item to the national treasurer or to
members of the tribe. That is not enough. The suit is not to
recover money withheld, but only for that illegally disbursed or
spent by defendant.
Item 5 -- $90,597.20 -- as described in the amended petition, is
interest on the permanent school fund provided for in the third
article of the Treaty of March 21, 1866 (14 Stat. 756). The
judgment includes $3,097.20 of that item on account of interest for
the years 1867-1874. But it is not shown that any cause of action
accrued in respect of that sum after July 1, 1898. The item also
includes $750, a part of the interest for 1907 found not to have
been paid by defendant to the tribal treasurer. But, as shown
above, mere failure so to pay is not sufficient to constitute any
cause of action alleged in the original petition. The balance of
item 5 includes $57,500 payments to the tribal treasurer before the
passage of the Curtis Act and before commencement of the period
covered by the original petition. They must be excluded. The
remainder of this item is also a part of item 8 about to be
considered.
See opinion below, 82 Ct.Cls. 154.
Item 8 -- $864,702.58 -- is based on a claim which is described
in the amended petition in substance as follows:
Page 299 U. S. 427
After the passage of the Curtis Act, defendant impounded all the
funds of plaintiff, and assumed full administrative control over
the disbursement of same. Notwithstanding
"the plain inhibition in said § 19 that no payments
thereafter should be made to 'the tribal governments or to any
officer thereof for disbursement,' yet, in violation of said
section, the defendant illegally disbursed the amounts hereinafter
set forth, derived from"
stated sources. [
Footnote 4]
"Therefore, the defendant is liable to the plaintiff in the amount
of $864,702.58 for the violation of said § 19 of said Act of
June 28, 1898."
This claim is not included in the original petition. It states
defendant refused to make payments to the tribal treasurer. Finding
XII shows that defendant did pay to the treasurer all the amounts
included in the item. The original petition not only failed to lay
foundation for the claim, but in effect excluded every part of it.
The item is included in the judgment on a basis of fact directly
opposed to the allegations of the original petition relied on by
plaintiff until long after the expiration of the period within
which the United States permitted suit in respect of it. The
plaintiff is not entitled to recover any part of the item.
3. Item 9 is $154,455.30. Unlike the items considered above, it
may be held sufficiently alleged in the original petition. The
amended petition, par. IX, gives details as follows: the Original
Seminole Agreement ratified by Act of July 1, 1898, 30 Stat. 567,
provides that $500,000
Page 299 U. S. 428
of the funds belonging to the Seminoles shall be set apart as a
permanent school fund and be held by the United States at 5 percent
interest. The school fund was established March 6, 1906. Defendant,
in violation of the agreement and without authority of law
"disbursed from the principal thereof the amount of $154,455.30."
Therefore, that amount "is due the Seminole Nation from the
defendant." As to it, the court found that the Secretary of the
Interior did disburse from the principal of the permanent school
fund in 1920 and 1921 "per capita payments" amounting to
$32,445.56; in 1921 "equalization of allotments," $490.22; in each
of the years 1922 to 1930, payments for "Education" amounting in
all to $121,519.52. In its opinion, the court said:
"That Congress had the power to change the terms of the
agreement and authorize these payments, is well established,
[
Footnote 5] but we find no act
of Congress that either in express terms or by necessary
implication authorizes any of them. It must therefore be held that
they were illegally made and that the Seminole 'permanent school
fund' -- a trust fund -- was unlawfully depleted thereby. The
plaintiff is entitled to recover the sum claimed."
Congress contemplated at least as early as 1898, at the time of
the passage of the Curtis Act and the ratification of the Seminole
Agreement, that the tribal government was soon to be terminated.
The Act of March 3, 1903, § 8, 32 Stat. 1008, declared that it
should not continue after March 4, 1906. Congress, by Joint
Resolution March 2, 1906, 34 Stat. 822, continued tribal existence
and tribal government until all tribal property and its proceeds
should be distributed among individual members. The Act of April
26, 1906, § 28, 34 Stat. 148, continued tribal existence and
government for all authorized
Page 299 U. S. 429
purposes until otherwise provided by law. By acts passed in 1906
and 1908, Congress directed the Secretary of the Interior to take
possession of all buildings used for governmental, school, or other
tribal purposes, together with the furniture and land pertaining
thereto, and to sell the same and deposit the proceeds to the
credit of the Seminoles. [
Footnote
6] Liquidation of Seminole property and distribution of its
proceeds per capita went forward under direction of Congress.
[
Footnote 7] And, by May 25,
1918, when the Congress passed the act making appropriations for
the Bureau of Indian Affairs for the fiscal year ending June 30,
1919, under which defendant claims that the per capita payments
here in question were made, the need of a permanent school fund had
almost ended. At the hearing upon that measure before the House
Committee on Indian Affairs, [
Footnote 8] the Bureau, through the Assistant
Commissioner, reported that one of the two Seminole Academies had
already ceased to exist, that the other was still used, but that
public school privileges were within the reach of almost every
pupil, and that the fund was not needed for the support of any
other school. It was on the recommendation of the Bureau that
Congress included in § 18 of this act a clause specifically
authorizing the Secretary of the Interior to pay to the enrolled
members of the Seminole Tribe entitled to share in its funds, or to
their lawful heirs, out of the Seminole school fund not to exceed
$100 per capita and directed payment to be made under rules and
regulations prescribed by the Secretary. [
Footnote 9]
Page 299 U. S. 430
The act, like earlier ones [
Footnote 10] and those making appropriations for fiscal
years ending, respectively, June 30, 1920, and 1921, [
Footnote 11] contained a proviso
directing that, in the specified fiscal year, no money shall be
expended from tribal funds without specific appropriation by
Congress except "[e]qualization of allotments, per capita and other
payments authorized by law. . . ." By regulations promulgated June
17, 1918, par. 14, the Secretary required disbursements to continue
"until all claims are paid or until further orders of the
Department."
Plaintiff does not claim that § 18 of the appropriation act
of 1918 did not specifically authorize the use of the principal to
make the per capita payments here in question. But it contends
authority so to use that fund ceased with the fiscal year ending
June 30, 1919. The payments authorized constituted a distribution
looking to the ultimate disposition of all tribal property. The
provision expressed no limitation in respect of the time
Page 299 U. S. 431
within which they were to be made. The occasion and purpose of
the enactment tend strongly to negative any implication that
Seminoles entitled to participate in the distribution would be
barred if the Secretary failed to cause payments to be made them
within the fiscal year. The provisos contained in the appropriation
acts for the fiscal years 1920 and 1921 during which the per capita
payments in controversy were made reasonably may be deemed
sufficient to authorize them. Weight is to be given to the
Secretary's regulations, par. 13, which declared that all suspended
or withheld payments were
"to be disbursed at such times and in such amounts as the best
interest of the persons, to whom such suspended or withheld
payments are due, may demand."
Plaintiff's contention that it is entitled to recover upon the
ground that the per capita payments were not made within time
allowed therefor is without merit. The amount of the per capita
payments must be eliminated from the judgment.
As to the amount of $490.20 paid out of the school fund for
"equalization of allotments," the defendant relies upon a provision
in the appropriation act of February 14, 1920, § 18, 41 Stat.
427, declaring:
"That hereafter no money than be expended from tribal funds . .
. without specific appropriation . . . except as follows:
Equalization of allotments . . . and other payments authorized by
law to individual members of the respective tribes."
But defendant fails to show that the excepted payments were
"authorized by law." This amount was properly included in the
judgment.
As to the sum of $121,519.52 made up of payments from 1922
through 1930 for "Education," the sole question is whether Congress
authorized the use of the principal of the permanent school fund
for that purpose. The appropriation acts applicable to these years
authorized the Secretary of the Interior to continue Seminole
Page 299 U. S. 432
schools from the tribal funds. [
Footnote 12] It must be assumed that, when enacting these
measures, Congress took into account the fact that the Seminole
school fund, in pursuance of its authority, had been so depleted
that interest on the amount remaining in it would not meet even the
lessened requirements. Its failure to limit expenditure for
education to interest on the permanent fund and adherence to
substantially the same form of words yearly throughout the entire
period sufficiently indicate the intention of Congress that
disbursements for that purpose were not limited to the interest,
and that principal was to be used. The inclusion of that amount in
the judgment cannot be sustained.
The judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded to the
lower court with directions for further proceedings in accordance
with this opinion.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE STONE took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
R.S. § 1088; Judicial Code, § 175, Act of March 3,
1911, 36 Stat. 1141.
[
Footnote 2]
"That no payment of any moneys on any account whatever shall
hereafter be made by the United States to any of the tribal
governments or to any officer thereof for disbursement, but
payments of all sums to members of said tribes shall be made under
direction of the Secretary of the Interior by an officer appointed
by him, and per capita payments shall be made direct to each
individual in lawful money of the United States, and the same shall
not be liable to the payment of any previously contracted
obligation."
30 Stat. 502.
[
Footnote 3]
"No funds belonging to any Indian tribe with which treaty
relations exist shall be applied in any manner not authorized by
such treaty, or by express provisions of law; nor shall money
appropriated to execute a treaty be transferred or applied to any
other purpose, unless expressly authorized by law."
25 U.S.C. § 122.
[
Footnote 4]
Treaty of August 7, 1856, Funds . . . . . . . . . .
$212,500.00
Treaty of March 21, 1866, Funds . . . . . . . . . .
29,750.00
Act of March 2nd, 1899 (30 Stat. 933) Funds . . . .
622,156.87
Indian Moneys, Proceeds of Labor Fund . . . . . . . 295.71
-----------
$864,702.58
[
Footnote 5]
Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock, 187 U.
S. 553,
187 U. S.
564-567.
[
Footnote 6]
Act April 26, 1906, §§ 15-17, 34 Stat. 143; Act April
30, 1908, 35 Stat. 71.
[
Footnote 7]
Act March 3, 1911, § 17, 36 Stat. 1070; Joint Res. Aug. 22,
1911, 37 Stat. 44; Act June 30, 1913, § 18, 38 Stat. 95; Act
March 2, 1917, § 18, 39 Stat. 983, 984.
[
Footnote 8]
House Committee Hearings, Indian Appropriation Bill, December,
1917, p. 286.
[
Footnote 9]
". . . That the Secretary of the Interior be, and he is hereby,
authorized to pay to the enrolled members of the Seminole Tribe of
Indians of Oklahoma entitled under existing law to share in the
funds of said tribe, or to their lawful heirs, out of the Seminole
school fund, or any moneys belonging to said tribe in the United
States Treasury or deposited in any bank or held by an official
under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of the Interior, not to
exceed $100 per capita: Provided, That said payment shall be made
under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior
may prescribe: Provided further, That, in cases where such enrolled
members, or their heirs, are Indians who belong to the restricted
class, the Secretary of the Interior may, in his discretion,
withhold such payments and use the same for the benefit of such
restricted Indians."
Act May 25, 1918, § 18, 40 Stat. 580.
[
Footnote 10]
Indian Appropriation Acts for the fiscal years beginning July 1,
1912: Act Aug. 24, 1912, 37 Stat. 531; Act June 30, 1913, 38 Stat.
95; Act Aug. 1, 1914, 38 Stat. 600; Joint Res. March 4, 1915, 38
Stat. 1228; Act May 18, 1916, 39 Stat. 148; Act March 2, 1917, 39
Stat. 985.
[
Footnote 11]
Act June 30, 1919, § 18, 41 Stat. 23; Act Feb. 14, 1920,
§ 18, 41 Stat. 427, 428.
[
Footnote 12]
Act March 3, 1921, § 18, 41 Stat. 1243; Act May 24, 1922,
42 Stat. 575; Act Jan. 24, 1923, 42 Stat. 1196; Act June 5, 1924,
43 Stat. 398; Act March 3, 1925, 43 Stat. 1148; Act May 10, 1926,
44 Stat. 460; Act Jan. 12, 1927, 44 Stat. 948; Act March 7, 1928,
45 Stat. 216; Act March 4, 1929, 45 Stat. 1577.