1. A permit granted by the Secretary of the Interior under
§ 4 of the Act of March 3, 1901, to the State of Oklahoma to
open and establish a public highway over Indian allotted lands is
to be construed, in the absence of any governing administrative
ruling, statute, or Congressional policy to the contrary, as
authorizing the State to license the erection and maintenance of a
rural electric service line, a proper use of the highway under
state law. P.
318 U. S.
209.
2. The Indian allotted lands involved in this case were not
within a "reservation" as used in the Acts of February 15, 1901,
and March 4, 1911. P.
318 U. S.
215.
127 F.2d 349 affirmed.
Certiorari 317 U.S. 608, to review the affirmance of a judgment,
37 F. Supp. 347, dismissing a complaint.
Page 318 U. S. 207
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The United States sued the Oklahoma Gas and Electric Company in
the United States District Court asking a declaratory judgment that
the Company illegally occupies with its pole line certain Indian
land, and a mandatory injunction to terminate such occupation. The
case turns on whether permission to the State of Oklahoma to
establish a highway over allotted Indian land given under § 4
of the Act of March 3, 1901, [
Footnote 1] includes the right to permit maintenance of
rural electric service lines within the highway bounds.
The United States, at all relevant times, held title to half of
a quarter section of land in Oklahoma in trust for
She-pah-tho-quah, a Mexican Kickapoo Indian allottee thereof, and,
since her death, for her heirs. The State of Oklahoma applied to
the Secretary of the Interior "to grant permission in accordance
with § 4 of the Act of March 3, 1901 (31 Stat.L. 1058, 1084),
to open and establish a public highway" across the land in
question. The highway width was 80 feet, and it extended 2577 feet
on these lands, occupying 4.55 acres thereof. The State paid
therefor $1,275 as compensation to the heirs of She-pah-tho-quah,
and on January 20, 1928, the map of definite location was on behalf
of the Secretary endorsed
"Approved subject to the provisions of the Act of March 3, 1901
(31 Stat.L. 1058, 1084), Department regulations
Page 318 U. S. 208
thereunder, and subject also to any prior valid existing right
or adverse claim."
Section 4 of the Act of March 3, 1901, under which the
application was specifically made and granted, provides:
"That the Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized to
grant permission, upon compliance with such requirements as he may
deem necessary, to the proper State or local authorities for the
opening and establishment of public highways, in accordance with
the laws of the State or Territory in which the lands are situated,
through any Indian reservation or through any lands which have been
allotted in severalty to any individual Indian under any laws or
treaties but which have not yet been conveyed to the allottee with
full power of alienation."
Apparently the Secretary has never issued a regulation
applicable to this case.
Cf. 25 Code of Federal
Regulations § 261.1
et seq.
The highway was opened, and, in 1936, the Oklahoma State Highway
Commission, with statutory authority to act in the matter,
[
Footnote 2] granted respondent
the license under which it occupies a portion of the highway with
its rural electric service line. The license is in terms revocable
at will, provides for location of the poles 38 feet from the center
of the highway, and requires all lines to be kept in good repair.
The licensee assumes all liability for damage, and the license
recites that it is "granted subject to any and all claims made by
adjacent property owners as compensation for additional burden on
such adjacent and abutting property."
The Secretary considered this use of the property not warranted
by his permission to the State to establish a highway under §
4 of the Act of March 3, 1901. He demanded that the Company apply
to him under the Acts
Page 318 U. S. 209
of February 15, 1901 and March 4, 1911, [
Footnote 3] for permission to maintain its lines and,
when the Company refused, instituted this action. The District
Court dismissed the complaint, and the Circuit Court of Appeals for
the Tenth Circuit affirmed. 37 F. Supp. 347; 127 F.2d 349. The
question appeared important to the administration of Indian
affairs, and we granted certiorari. 317 U.S. 608.
It is not denied that, under the laws of Oklahoma, the use made
of the highway by respondent, the State's licensee, is a lawful and
proper highway use, imposing no additional burden for which a
grantor of the highway easement would be entitled to compensation.
But the Government denies that the Act of March 3, 1901, providing
"for the opening and establishment of public highways, in
accordance with the laws of the State or Territory in which the
lands are situated," submits the scope of the highway use to state
law. Its interpretation gives the Act a very limited meaning, and
substantially confines state law to governing procedures for
"opening and establishment" of the highway. It offers as examples
of what is permitted to state determination whether a state or
county agency builds the road, whether funds shall be raised by
bond issue or otherwise, and the terms and specifications of the
construction contract. The issue is between this narrow view of the
State's authority and the broader one which recognizes its laws as
determining the various uses which go to make up the "public
highway," opening and establishment of which are authorized.
We see no reason to believe that Congress intended to grant to
local authorities a power so limited in a matter so commonly
subject to complete local control.
It is well settled that a conveyance by the United States of
land which it owns beneficially or, as in this case, for
Page 318 U. S. 210
the purpose of exercising its guardianship over Indians, is to
be construed, in the absence of any contrary indication of
intention, according to the law of the State where the land lies.
[
Footnote 4] Presumably
Congress intended that this case be decided by reference to some
law, but the Government has cited, and we know of, no federal
statutory or common law rule for determining whether the running of
the electric service lines here involved was a highway use. These
considerations, as well as the explicit reference in the Act to
state law in the matter of "establishment," as well as of
"opening," the highway indicate that the question in this case is
to be answered by reference to that law, in the absence of any
governing administrative ruling, statute, or dominating
consideration of Congressional policy to the contrary. We find more
of these.
Apparently the Secretary has never sought to solve the problem
of this case by an administrative ruling, and whether he might do
so is a question which the parties have neither raised nor
discussed, and upon which we intimate no opinion.
In construing this statute as to the incidents of a highway
grant, we must bear in mind that the Act contemplated a conveyance
to a public body, not to a private interest. There was not the
reason to withhold continuing control over the uses of the strip
that might be withheld wisely in a grant of indefinite duration to
a private grantee. It is said that the use here permitted by the
State is private and commercial, and so it is. But a license to use
the highway by a carrier of passengers for hire, or by a motor
freight line, would also be a private
Page 318 U. S. 211
and commercial use in the same sense. And it has long been both
customary and lawful to stimulate private self-interest and utilize
the profit motive to get needful services performed for the public.
The State appears to be doing no more than that.
This is not such a transmission line as might endanger highway
travel or abutting owners with no compensating advantage. It is a
rural service line, and to bring electric energy in to the
countryside is quite as essential to modern life as many other uses
of the highway. The State has granted nothing not revocable at
will, has alienated nothing obtained under the Act, has permitted
no use that would obstruct or interfere with the use for which the
highway was established, and has not purported to confer any right
not subsidiary to its own or which would survive abandonment of the
highway.
The interpretation suggested by the Government is not shown to
be necessary to the fulfillment of the policy of Congress to
protect a less-favored people against their own improvidence or the
overreaching of others; nor is it conceivable that it is necessary,
for the Indians are subjected only to the same rule of law as are
others in the State, and then only by permission of the Secretary,
subject to compliance with "such requirements as he may deem
necessary."
Oklahoma is spotted with restricted lands held in trust for
Indian allottees. Complications and confusion would follow from
applying to highways crossing or abutting such lands rules
differing from those which obtain as to lands of non-Indians. We
believe that, if Congress had intended this, it would have made its
meaning clear.
The Government relies, however, on the Acts of February 15,
1901, and of March 4, 1911, which it says require the Secretary's
consent to cross Indian land with electric lines regardless of the
prior grant of permission for the
Page 318 U. S. 212
highway. We believe that they are inapplicable to the land in
suit, and therefore need not determine what would be their effect
if they did apply.
The Act of February 15, 1901, "An Act relating to rights of way
through certain parks, reservations, and other public lands,"
[
Footnote 5] authorizes the
Secretary of the Interior
"to permit the use of rights of way through the public lands,
forest and other reservations of the United States, and the
Yosemite, Sequoia, and General Grant national parks, California,
for electrical plants, poles, and lines for the generation and
distribution of electrical power, and for telephone and telegraph
purposes . . . to the extent of . . . not to exceed fifty feet on
each side of the center line of such . . . electrical, telegraph,
and telephone lines and poles . . . :
Provided, That such
permits shall be allowed within or through any of said parks or any
forest, military, Indian, or other reservation only upon the
approval of the chief officer of the Department under whose
supervision such park or reservation falls and upon a finding by
him that the same is not incompatible with the public interest:
Provided further, That all permits given hereunder for
telegraph and telephone purposes shall be subject to the provision
of title sixty-five of the Revised Statutes of the United States,
and amendments thereto, regulating rights of way for telegraph
companies over the public domain:
And provided further,
That any permission given by the Secretary of the Interior under
the provisions of this Act may be revoked by him or his successor
in his discretion, and shall not be held to confer any right, or
easement, or interest in, to, or over any public land, reservation,
or park. [
Footnote 6] "
Page 318 U. S. 213
For all present purposes, the Act of March 4, 1911 is the same
as the above Act. [
Footnote
7]
Neither statute makes any reference whatever to lands allotted
to Indians in which the United States holds title in trust only to
prevent improvident alienation. Their general tenor, and
particularly the second proviso of the Act of February 15, 1901,
repel any inference that they
Page 318 U. S. 214
were intended to govern the grant of rights of way over such
lands. The effect of this proviso was to make any telephone or
telegraph company which availed itself of the Act subject, as to
Government business, to the rates set by the Postmaster General,
and to make "all the . . . lines, property, and effects" of such a
company subject to purchase by the Government at a value to be
ascertained by an appraisal of five persons, two selected by the
Postmaster General, two by the company, and one by the four so
chosen. [
Footnote 8] It is
rather difficult to believe that Congress ever intended to exact
such conditions as part of the price of running a line across land
in which the Government is interested only to the extent of holding
title for the protection of an individual Indian allottee. It is
particularly difficult in the context of the Acts, for, if such
were the intent, it was defeated by giving an option to obtain the
same rights by condemnation under state law and free of such
restrictions. § 3 of the Act of March 3, 1901. [
Footnote 9]
The Government seeks to repel the force of these implications by
asserting that the word "reservation" as employed in these Acts
includes such land.
Section 4 of the Act of March 3, 1901, authorizes permission to
run a highway
"through any Indian reservation or through any lands which have
been allotted in severalty to any individual Indian under any laws
or treaties but which have not been conveyed to the allottee with
full power of alienation."
The Act, in § 3, also refers to lands "allotted in
severalty," after already employing the word "reservation." If it
included allotted lands without these words, Congress was employing
language to no discernible purpose. We think Congress employed this
language in the Act of March 3, 1901, to a purpose and with a clear
distinction between reservations and allotted lands. Section
Page 318 U. S. 215
3 made allotted lands, but not reservations, subject to
condemnation for any public purpose; § 4 made both
reservations and allotted lands subject to highway permits by the
Secretary. We think that the almost contemporaneous Act of February
15, 1901, in authorizing permits for electric companies through
reservations, but not allotted lands, meant just what it said.
We have no purpose to decide anything more than the case before
us. We do not say that "reservation" may never include allotted
lands; all we hold is that, if there is a distinction in fact, that
distinction is carried into the Act. So we turn to the question
whether these particular allotted lands were in fact within or
without a "reservation."
She-pah-tho-quah, the allottee, was of the Kickapoo Tribe. In
earlier times, the Kickapoo Tribe occupied a treaty reservation in
Kansas. [
Footnote 10] They
became torn by internal dissensions. One faction remained on the
old reservation in Kansas and received allotments there. [
Footnote 11] Others migrated,
chiefly in 1852 and 1863, to Mexico, and located on a reservation
set apart for them by that Government. The Oklahoma Kickapoos
comprise those who left Mexico, mostly in 1873, and returned to the
United States. Ten years later, a reservation was established for
them by Executive Order in what was then Indian Territory, now
Oklahoma.
United States v. Reily, 290 U. S.
33,
290 U. S.
35-36.
In 1891, however, these restless people negotiated a sale of
their reservation to the Government,
"except the commissioners insist on the Indians taking lands in
allotment, while the Indians insist in taking an equal amount of
land as a diminished reservation, the title to be held in common.
[
Footnote 12]"
This disagreement was submitted to the Secretary
Page 318 U. S. 216
of the Interior, and he decided that the "Indians take their
lands in allotment, and not to be held in common." [
Footnote 13] The Kickapoo Tribe thereupon,
on September 9, 1891 did "cede, convey, transfer, and relinquish,
forever and absolutely, without any reservation whatever, all their
claim, title, and interest" to the reservation lands. [
Footnote 14] In consideration, each
of the Kickapoos, estimated at about 300 in number, was allotted 80
acres of such land with a per capita cash payment. [
Footnote 15] The transaction was ratified
and carried out on the part of the United States, and the land
acquired by the United States was opened to settlement. [
Footnote 16] Thus, the Kickapoo
reservation was obliterated, the tribal lands were no more, and
only individual allotments survived. We think it clear that the
term "reservation," as used in the statutes in question, had no
application to such lands.
It is true that the opinion in
United States v. Reily,
supra, at
290 U. S. 35,
used the term "Kickapoo Reservation" to describe a region of
Oklahoma as of a time subsequent to the dissolution. It is clear
from the context of the opinion, however, that this term was used
in a geographical, and not a legal, sense, much as one still speaks
of the Northwest Territory. Congress has frequently referred to the
"Kickapoo Reservation" in Kansas. [
Footnote 17] And it has often, usually in the same
statute, referred to the Kickapoo Indians of Oklahoma; but never
since the dissolution has it referred to a Kickapoo Reservation as
existing in
Page 318 U. S. 217
Oklahoma. [
Footnote 18]
If descriptive nomenclature has any weight in this case, we think
that the usage of Congress preponderates.
The dissolution of the reservation distinguishes the situation
before us from that before the court relating to allotted lands
within the Tulalip Reservation,
United States v.
Celestine, 215 U. S. 278;
allotted lands within the Yakima Reservation,
United States v.
Sutton, 215 U. S. 291;
those within the Colville Reservation,
United States v.
Pelican, 232 U. S. 442, and
the many situations in which the departmental rulings have held
that the phrase "Indian, or other reservation" includes individual
allotments. [
Footnote
19]
On the argument, inquiry was made of counsel whether a
consistent departmental practice existed in reference to grants of
permission to electric companies to maintain lines along
established highways. Both have called attention to a few instances
of applications and grants or of assurances none was necessary said
to favor their respective positions. [
Footnote 20] We find no consistent departmental
Page 318 U. S. 218
practice which can be said to amount to an administrative
construction of the Acts in question.
The judgment below is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS dissent.
[
Footnote 1]
31 Stat. 1058, 1084, 25 U.S.C. § 311.
[
Footnote 2]
69 Oklahoma Stat. (1941) § 57.
[
Footnote 3]
31 Stat. 790, 43 U.S.C. § 959; 36 Stat. 1235, 1253, 43
U.S.C. § 961. These are set out and discussed
infra,
pp.
318 U. S. 213
et seq.
[
Footnote 4]
Grand Rapids & Indiana R. Co. v. Butler,
159 U. S. 87;
Whitaker v. McBride, 197 U. S. 510;
Oklahoma v. Texas, 258 U. S. 574,
258 U. S.
595-596;
see Brewer-Elliott Oil & Gas Co. v.
United States, 260 U. S. 77,
260 U. S. 88-89;
United States v. Oregon, 295 U. S. 1,
295 U. S. 28;
cf. Board of Commissioners v. United States, 308 U.
S. 343.
[
Footnote 5]
H.R. Rep. No. 1850, 56th Cong., 1st Sess., indicates that the
title of the Act, referring to public lands, was advisedly
chosen.
[
Footnote 6]
31 Stat. 790, 43 U.S.C. § 959.
[
Footnote 7]
36 Stat. 1235, 1253, 43 U.S.C. § 961, providing:
"That the head of the department having jurisdiction over the
lands be, and he hereby is, authorized and empowered, under general
regulations to be fixed by him, to grant an easement for rights of
way, for a period not exceeding fifty years from the date of the
issuance of such grant, over, across, and upon the public lands,
national forests, and reservations of the United States for
electrical poles and lines for the transmission and distribution of
electrical power, and for poles and lines for telephone and
telegraph purposes, to the extent of twenty feet on each side of
the center line of such electrical, telephone and telegraph lines
and poles, to any citizen, association, or corporation of the
United States, where it is intended by such to exercise the right
of way herein granted for any one or more of the purposes herein
named:
Provided, That such right of way shall be allowed
within or through any national park, national forest, military,
Indian, or any other reservation only upon the approval of the
chief officer of the department under whose supervision or control
such reservation falls, and upon a finding by him that the same is
not incompatible with the public interest:
Provided, That
all or any part of such right of way may be forfeited and annulled
by declaration of the head of the department having jurisdiction
over the lands for nonuse for a period of two years or for
abandonment."
See 40 L.D. 30, 31:
"It will be observed that this act, which authorizes the
granting of easements for electrical power transmission, and
telephone and telegraph lines for stated periods not to exceed 50
years, follows, as closely as is possible in the accomplishment of
its purposes, the language of the act of February 15, 1901 (31
Stat. 790), which authorizes mere revocable permits or licenses for
such lines, and for other purposes. This act therefore merely
authorizes additional or larger grants, and does not modify or
repeal the act of 1901, and should be construed and applied in
harmony with it."
See also 46 Cong.Rec. 4014-4015.
[
Footnote 8]
Comp.Stat. (1901) §§ 5266, 5267.
[
Footnote 9]
31 Stat. 1083, 1084, 25 U.S.C. § 357.
[
Footnote 10]
Treaties of October 24, 1832, 7 Stat. 391; May 18, 1854, 10
Stat. 1078.
[
Footnote 11]
Treaty of June 28, 1862, 13 Stat. 623.
[
Footnote 12]
27 Stat. 560.
[
Footnote 13]
27 Stat. 561.
[
Footnote 14]
27 Stat. 557.
[
Footnote 15]
27 Stat. 558-559.
[
Footnote 16]
27 Stat. 562-563, 29 Stat. 868.
[
Footnote 17]
28 Stat. 909; 30 Stat. 590, 909, 943; 33 Stat. 213, 1074, 1254;
35 Stat. 80, 791; 36 Stat. 275, 1064; 37 Stat. 524; 38 Stat. 87,
590; 39 Stat. 133, 977; 40 Stat. 571; 41 Stat. 13, 66, 419, 523; 42
Stat. 57.
[
Footnote 18]
30 Stat. 77, 937; 33 Stat. 203, 1057; 34 Stat. 363. 1043; 35
Stat. 88, 802; 36 Stat. 280, 1069; 37 Stat. 529; 38 Stat. 93, 596;
39 Stat. 145, 982; 40 Stat. 578; 41 Stat. 20, 425, 1039, 1240; 42
Stat. 573, 1195; 43 Stat. 409, 708, 1160.
[
Footnote 19]
27 L.D. 421; 35 L.D. 550; 40 L.D. 30; 42 L.D. 419; 45 L.D. 563;
49 L.D. 396; 51 L.D. 41.
[
Footnote 20]
The Government calls attention to permits given as to allotments
within the Yakima and Colville reservations, which are inapplicable
under our view of the case. Also to one permit to this respondent
for a transmission line across a Kickapoo allotment within the
boundaries of a previously authorized highway, and one to it not
within a highway. Respondent sets up correspondence in 1922, 1927,
1929, and 1930 claimed to indicate a contrary practice. None of
this material is part of the record, and it is incomplete, and in
no sense satisfactory establishment of a basis for any
conclusion.