1. In an action by the United States on behalf of an emancipated
Indian against a county to recover money paid as taxes on the
Indian's nontaxable allotment, where the issue is whether the
payment was voluntary, the burden of proving it involuntary is on
the Government. P.
319 U. S.
477.
2. An Indian allotment was taxed by a county for a succession of
years, in part before and in part after the expiration of the
twenty-five year period during which the land was declared immune
to taxation. The Indian then, being emancipated, voluntarily made a
compromise with the county whereby the land was relieved of all the
taxes and of tax sales based thereon, upon payment by the Indian of
an amount less than the part of the taxes which had been laid after
the twenty-five year period had expired.
Held, that the
payment was not recoverable by the Government in a suit on behalf
of the Indian. P.
319 U. S.
477.
131 F.2d 936 reversed.
Certiorari, 318 U.S. 752, to review a judgment affirming and
expanding a Judgment of the District Court in a suit by the United
States to recover from the County money paid the County by an
Indian as taxes on the Indian's allotment of land.
Page 319 U. S. 475
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought by the government in a federal district
court to recover real estate taxes alleged to have been illegally
collected by Mahnomen County, Minnesota, from Isabelle Garden, an
Indian allottee. [
Footnote 1]
The suit, brought in 1940, seeks a refund of taxes for the years
1911 to 1927, inclusive. It is conceded that any limitation on the
County's power to tax expired in 1928 with the termination of the
twenty-five year trust described below. The District Court rendered
judgment against the County for the years 1911 to 1921, inclusive,
giving a total judgment of $405.97. On appeal by both the
government and the county, the Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed,
but gave an added judgment for the years 1922 through 1925. 131
F.2d 936.
In its petition for certiorari, the county claimed that Garden
was an emancipated Indian who had paid the taxes voluntarily, and
that hence the judgment granting a refund conflicts with
Ward
v. Love County, 253 U. S. 17. The
county also contended that it was wholly within an Indian
reservation; that it had long been dependent on taxation of
allotted lands; that, after the passage of the first Clapp
Amendment in 1906, 34 Stat. 325, 353, which emancipated the
Mahnomen County Indians and lifted "all restrictions as to sale,
incumbrance, or taxation for allotments," the County had assumed
that the Indians could voluntarily contribute to the support of
County institutions, and that, while the instant judgment is small,
the aggregate amount of such judgments which might be obtained in
similar actions would adversely affect the solvency of the County
and imperil the continuance of
Page 319 U. S. 476
County institutions. On these representations of the public
importance of the case, we granted certiorari. 318 U.S. 752.
In 1902, the Secretary of the Interior, acting under
Congressional authority, issued a patent to this Indian allottee,
agreeing to hold a tract of land in trust for twenty-five years
"for the sole use and benefit of the Indian," and then to convey
the land to her "discharged of said trust and free of all charge or
incumbrance whatsoever." [
Footnote
2] Indian land so held by the government has been said to be
exempt from all State taxation.
United States v. Rickert,
188 U. S. 432,
188 U. S.
436-438. The first and second Clapp Amendments, passed
in 1906 and 1907, [
Footnote 3]
lifted restrictions previously imposed upon the sale, encumbrance,
and taxation of the allotments of adult mixed-blood Indians, and in
addition declared that "the trust deeds heretofore or hereafter
executed by the Department for such allotments are hereby declared
to pass the title in fee simple." Garden is an adult mixed-blood
Indian, and has been an adult since 1911, when the first
controverted tax payment was made. These amendments evidence
"a legislative judgment that adult mixed-blood Indians are, in
the respects dealt with in the act, capable of managing their own
affairs, and, for that reason, they are given full power and
authority to dispose of allotted lands."
United States v. Waller, 243 U.
S. 452,
243 U. S. 462;
Baker v. McCarthy, 145 Minn. 167, 170, 176 N.W. 643.
Notwithstanding these acts, the County concedes, and we assume
arguendo, that it was without power to impose a tax upon
these allotted lands prior to 1928 against the consent of the
Indians.
Choate v. Trapp, 224 U.
S. 665. [
Footnote 4]
The
Page 319 U. S. 477
Clapp Amendment gives the consent of the United States to state
taxation, thus removing the barrier to taxation found to exist in
United States v. Rickert, supra; but, under
Choate v.
Trapp, the Indian, who has gained a "vested right" not to be
taxed, must also consent. Acceptance of
Choate v. Trapp
does not mean that an Indian, legislatively declared to be
competent to handle his own affairs, cannot voluntarily decide to
pay taxes for his own advantage and welfare. If, as the petitioner
argued and as the government does not deny, the capacity of the
County to provide schools, roads, and other necessary services
would have been seriously jeopardized, if not destroyed, by the
failure of the Indians to contribute to a tax fund, their newly
granted emancipation would have been of little value. In addition,
the market value of their lands would have been greatly reduced by
the complete inability of the County to secure funds essential to
the establishment of means of travel and communication and the
maintenance of an orderly society. Nothing that was said in
Choate v. Trapp or in any other decision of this Court
deprived an emancipated Indian of freedom voluntarily to pay taxes
in his own interest.
Ward v. Love County, 253 U. S.
17,
253 U. S. 22,
assumed that the test of the right to recover a tax illegally
collected from an Indian is whether the tax was paid voluntarily,
and that the burden is upon one seeking recovery of the tax to
establish that the payment was made involuntarily. The issue before
us, therefore, is whether the government has sustained that
burden.
There is no allegation, stipulation, or finding by either court
that these taxes were involuntarily paid. Both courts below
erroneously assumed that the government's original obligation to
hold the land in trust and deliver it free of encumbrances permits
the government to maintain
Page 319 U. S. 478
this suit even though the Indian has willingly paid taxes.
1911-1921 taxes were evidently paid without protest, and there is
nothing in the record to permit a deduction that the payments were
involuntary. [
Footnote 5]
The 1922-25 taxes were discharged in somewhat different fashion.
The allottee became delinquent in the payment, and the lands were
sold to the State. Subsequently, in 1936, she made a compromise
arrangement with the State, for a period including not only the
years 1922-27, for which tax exemption is claimed, but also for the
years 1928-34, for which there is no conceivable claim of
exemption. This compromise, made in the form of purchase of two tax
certificates for the allottee, resulted in payment by Garden for
the entire 1922-34 period of less than the amount of the 1928-34
taxes. The compromise, made at a time when the Indian was fully as
free as any other citizen, was, in the words of the District Court,
a "voluntary action and election of the allottee to proceed in a
manner which she deemed wise and prudent." It resulted in a net
saving to the allottee of $66.42 for the taxable years 1928-1934.
[
Footnote 6] The voluntary
nature and the
Page 319 U. S. 479
fairness of the 1936 settlement are further indicated by the
fact that the County, in its answer to the complaint, has declared
its willingness to refund the sum paid in settlement in order that
it may relevy the taxes for the years 1928 and 1934, and thus
collect the taxes which Garden admittedly owed.
The allottee paid the 1911-21 taxes voluntarily, and settled the
balance of her taxes to her advantage in 1936. Neither Minnesota
law [
Footnote 7] nor federal
law [
Footnote 8] requires
that
Page 319 U. S. 480
a county refund taxes which an emancipated Indian has
voluntarily paid. The County is entitled to judgment in its
favor.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER and MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE concur in the
result.
[
Footnote 1]
The government's original complaint included additional claims
against Mahnomen and other counties, but these other claims are not
involved in the case as it reaches us.
[
Footnote 2]
24 Stat. 388, 389; 25 Stat. 642.
[
Footnote 3]
34 Stat. 325, 353; 34 Stat. 1034.
[
Footnote 4]
We do not consider whether
Choate v. Trapp is
controlling here. In that case, the government had patented land
with a provision that "the land should be nontaxable," and the
agreement with the Indians was held to be a contract which "having
been accepted by the state of Oklahoma in its Constitution upon
admission to statehood, was a limitation upon the taxing power of
the state."
Carpenter v. Shaw, 280 U.
S. 363,
280 U. S.
366.
[
Footnote 5]
In 1923, Garden sued in a state court for recovery of her
1911-1921 taxes. A demurrer was sustained in the trial court, and
no appeal was taken. The record does not show that she had made the
tax payments under protest, which would probably have entitled her
to recovery under state law according to the doctrine of
Warren
v. Mahnomen County, 192 Minn. 464, 257 N.W. 77. This action,
brought after the tax benefits had been enjoyed, is no indication
that she did not originally pay the taxes willingly in order to
enjoy the benefits of county government. We need not consider the
contention of the County that the 1923 action is
res
adjudicata. Cf. Bryan County v. United States, 123
F.2d 782.
[
Footnote 6]
The parties have entered the following stipulation as to the
payment of these taxes:
"That said taxes for the years 1922 and 1927, both inclusive,
were paid and discharged by the said allottee by the purchase by
her of State Assignment Certificate No. 76 in the amount of $33.22
covering the taxes for the years 1922 to 1925, both inclusive, and
State Assignment Certificate No. 232 in the amount of $145.93
covering taxes for the years 1926 to 1934, both inclusive, all
pursuant to Chapter 387 Laws of Minnesota for 1935, that the
aggregate for said State Assignment Certificates is the sum of
$179.15, and that the valid taxes for the years 1928 to 1934, both
inclusive, thereby discharged amounted to $245.57 without penalty
or interest, and that, therefore, said allottee effected a saving
of $66.42 plus penalty and interest by the purchase of said State
Tax Assignment Certificates."
The government in effect concedes the merit of the argument that
the 1936 settlement was a fair and voluntary compromise, but seeks
to avoid its force by an assumption that the two tax certificates
are to be treated in different fashion. As the stipulation makes
clear, Certificate Number 76 formally covers the years 1922-25, and
No. 232 covers the years 1926-34. In view of the substantial
benefit received by the allottee from the compromise, the
government has waived its claim for any refund for the years
1926-27, but it apparently assumed that Certificate No. 76 was
unrelated to this compromise. However, both Certificates were
purchased at the same time, both covered the same lands, and each
would be worthless without the other, since the Minnesota law under
which the arrangement was made is aimed at the settlement of all
delinquent taxes. C. 387, Minn.Laws 1935; Minn.Stat. (Henderson,
1941), §§ 280.11-280.13;
cf. Security Trust Co. v.
Von Heyderstaedt, 64 Minn. 409, 67 N.W. 219. The reason for
the use of two certificates, one for the years prior to 1925 and
the other for the years thereafter, may have resulted from the fact
that the Minnesota statute applies different standards of value to
compromises of taxes delinquent prior to 1925 and those delinquent
thereafter. As is indicated by the stipulation, the transaction for
the two certificates was considered as a unit, and is in fact one
compromise, termed by the trial judge a settlement for a "lump
sum."
[
Footnote 7]
Falvey v. Board of County Commissioners, 76 Minn. 257,
79 N.W. 302;
Warren v. Mahnomen County, supra.
[
Footnote 8]
Ward v. Love County, supra; Carpenter v. Shaw,
280 U. S. 363.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY, dissenting.
I dissent because the Court today takes too narrow a view of our
obligations to our Indian citizens -- obligations engendered by a
history marked at times with trespass, depredation, and corruption,
and by the concomitant necessity of aiding and protecting a people
once dependent and unlearned in our ways during their difficult
period of transition from that situation to the assumption of civic
responsibilities and assimilation into the mass of our
citizenry.
The assumptions which the opinion of the Court makes regarding
the tax status of Isabelle Garden's allotted land but state the
applicable law. The land which she received in 1902 under a trust
patent, issued pursuant to the Nelson Act, 25 Stat. 642, and the
General Allotment Act, 24 Stat. 388, was exempt from state and
local taxation for a period of 25 years, or until 1928.
United
States v. Rickert, 188 U. S. 432;
Board of Commissioners v. Seber, 318 U.
S. 705. Since the tribe to which she belonged gave up
its extensive holdings after assurances that the forthcoming
allotments would be nontaxable for 25 years, [
Footnote 2/1] this tax exemption was a vested right of
which she could not be deprived without her consent.
Choate v.
Trapp, 224 U. S. 665;
Ward v. Love County, 253 U. S. 17;
Carpenter v. Shaw, 280 U. S. 363.
Consequently, although Isabelle Garden, upon reaching her majority
in 1911 became emancipated
Page 319 U. S. 481
by virtue of the Clapp Amendments of 1906 and 1907, 34 Stat.
353, 1034, that legislation did not disturb her vested tax
exemption.
The Court's reliance upon
Ward v. Love County,
253 U. S. 17, as
the basis for its decision with regard to the 1911-21 taxes paid by
Isabelle Garden is unwarranted. In that case, it was assumed that
an emancipated Indian possessing a vested tax exemption could not
recover back taxes illegally assessed but voluntarily paid. 253
U.S. at
253 U. S. 22.
But that case did not hold, as the Court now asserts that it did,
that the burden was on the Indian claimant to establish the
involuntary character of the payment. Still less, since the United
States was not a party, did it consider what the rights of the
United States would be should it bring suit on behalf of the
Indian. That is the instant question, and, while it is ordinarily
true that the burden of demonstrating the illegality of a collected
tax and compliance with the statutory requirements for refund are
upon the taxpayer seeking recovery, strong reasons of policy
suggest an opposite rule should prevail in this case. While
"emancipated" upon attaining twenty-one, Isabelle Garden was an
Indian "just emerging from a state of dependency and wardship,"
Ward v. Love County, supra, at p.
253 U. S. 23,
and the United States had the right, if not the duty, to enforce
for her benefit its guarantee of tax immunity even though she was a
citizen, the restrictions on her property were removed, and she was
otherwise emancipated from a wardship status.
Cf. Cramer v.
United States, 261 U. S. 219,
261 U. S. 232;
Heckman v. United States, 224 U.
S. 413,
224 U. S. 437;
United States v. Minnesota, 270 U.
S. 181,
270 U. S. 194.
To hold that the United States is foreclosed by action which
Isabelle Garden may have taken or failed to take in ignorance of
her legal rights is to hinder the United States in the performance
of its considered policy of protection and to deprive her
indirectly of that which she could not directly be deprived -- her
vested tax
Page 319 U. S. 482
exemption. Without legal right, the County placed her tax-exempt
property upon its tax rolls immediately upon her reaching
adulthood, assessed it, and she paid the taxes under circumstances
not fully disclosed. In this situation, it is only fair to put the
burden on the County, whose unauthorized action brought it about,
of establishing that she paid the taxes of her own free will with
full knowledge of her legal rights. A contrary rule fails to take
into account the long and not altogether creditable history of our
relations with the Indians, and the obligations we owe to those
people to protect them in their rights.
Apart from the question of burden of proof, however, I cannot
agree with the opinion of the Court. The crucial issue with regard
to the 1911-21 taxes is assumed to be the voluntary or involuntary
character of those payments. The trial court admittedly made no
findings on this issue, and, in the absence of such findings, the
proper procedure would be to remand the case to the trial court.
Cf. Seminole Nation v. United States, 316 U.
S. 286,
316 U. S. 300.
But, if we are to decide the case here by indulging in
presumptions, I think the only tenable assumption is that the
payments were made under compulsion. Isabelle Garden's land was
assessed immediately after she became twenty-one, and she ran the
risk of losing it unless she paid the taxes. The record shows that
some of the Indians originally included in this action who failed
to pay their taxes did lose their allotments. On the record, it
cannot be said with certainty that Isabelle Garden paid the taxes
for any other purpose than to prevent her allotment from being sold
for unpaid taxes. This is borne out by the fact that she herself
brought suit in 1923 to recover the 1911-21 taxes. [
Footnote 2/2] Suggested
Page 319 U. S. 483
reasons for finding that the payments were voluntary are without
substance. Isabelle Garden did not have to pay those taxes for the
privilege of managing her allotment as she wished. That right was
hers under the Clapp Amendments, which were competent to remove the
restrictions upon her land, but not the vested tax immunity.
Cf. Choate v. Trapp, supra, p.
224 U. S. 673.
And there is nothing in the record, apart from argument contained
in the County's unsuccessful motion for a new trial, to support the
assumption that she voluntarily paid the taxes to enjoy the
benefits of County government. Payments made under circumstances
such as this, where an exempt Indian runs the risk of losing her
allotment unless the taxes are paid, should not be considered
voluntary payments.
Cf. Ward v. Love County, supra, p.
253 U. S. 23;
Carpenter v. Shaw, 280 U. S. 363,
280 U. S. 369.
Finally, I cannot assent to the proposition that, since Isabelle
Garden settled her taxes for 1922 through 1934 for less than the
amount she owed for taxes validly assessed for the period beginning
in 1928, when her land became taxable, the United States cannot
recover for her the amounts she paid to discharge the 1922-25
taxes. Those taxes were discharged in 1936 by the purchase of State
Assignment Certificate No. 76. At the same time, the taxes for
1926-34 were discharged by the purchase of another assignment
certificate. The fact, unexplained by the stipulation, that two
certificates were used to discharge the taxes suggests that there
was no relation between the discharge of the 1922-25 taxes and the
settlement of the admittedly due taxes for 1928-34. But, even if a
relation is assumed, the United States should still be allowed to
recover the amount paid for Assignment
Page 319 U. S. 484
Certificate No. 76. Isabelle Garden probably would have been
able to compromise her 1928-34 taxes even more advantageously if
the County had not asserted its unwarranted claims for the years
1922-25, during which period the property was still tax-exempt.
That is sufficient to warrant recovery of the amount paid for
Assignment Certificate No. 76 in discharge of the 1922-25 taxes.
[
Footnote 2/3]
[
Footnote 2/1]
House Ex Doc. 247, 51st Cong., 1st Sess. (Ser. No. 2747), pp.
93, 103, 104, 138 (1890).
See also Morrow v. United
States, 243 F. 854.
[
Footnote 2/2]
This unsuccessful suit is no bar to the present action by the
United States. The interest of the United States in having its
obligations and policies respected cannot be defeated by judgments
in actions to which it is not a party.
United States v.
Candelaria, 271 U. S. 432,
271 U. S.
443-444;
Sunderland v. United States,
266 U. S. 226,
266 U. S. 232;
Privett v. United States, 256 U.
S. 201,
256 U. S. 204;
Bryan County v. United States, 123 F.2d 782.
[
Footnote 2/3]
This analysis also indicates that the portion of the assignment
certificate covering the period 1926-34 which discharged the taxes
levied for 1926 and 1927 should be returned. The Government,
however, presses no claim for these amounts here.