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The record discloses that the question now submitted and related questions have received the consideration of the Department on a number of occasions during the past 12 years.vision of lands and consolidation, as referred to above. However, in the meantime, the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs has formally requested that action be deferred in the matter until the committee has opportunity to further investigate the rights of the Indians; also it appears the view was informally expressed by members of the Sub-Committee of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs during its recent trip through the Southwest that before active steps are actually taken toward effecting the division and consolidation, that the validity of the railroad title under the original granting Act of July 27, 1866, supra, be formally passed upon by the Attorney General.
In so far as the immediate question is concerned, it first received careful consideration in 1919 when the Commissioner of the General Land Office by letter dated April 19 of that year, requested instructions concerning the survey of lands within the primary limits of the portion of the grant within the boundaries of this reservation. On April 26, 1919, the matter was submitted to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs with direction to report as to whether funds were available to cover the portion of the cost of the survey to be borne by the Government. On May 13, 1919, the Commissioner, in his reply, objected to the making of the survey and requested authority to prepare a letter to the Attorney General with the view to having steps taken through the courts to quiet any alleged claims of the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad Company and its successor in interest, the Santa Fe Pacific Railroad Company, to any land within the boundaries of the reservation on the ground that said lands were not within the grant to the railroad company; that they did not have the status of public lands within the meaning of the granting act; that they were subject to "other claims or rights", and that they were "reserved" from other disposition at that time owing to long-continued use and occupancy by the Indians. The record shows that the matter was carefully considered by the Department, after which, on October 2, 1919, the First Assistant Secretary advised the Commissioner of the General Land Office that the survey might properly proceed and that funds were available for paying the Government's share of the cost of the proposed survey.
In that letter it was stated:
Your letter was referred to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs for report, and in his reply of May 13, 1919, the position is taken that the lands in question were excepted from the railroad grant by reason of the prior use and occupancy of the Indians, notwithstanding the fact that the grant to the company and the definite location of the road were prior to the establishment of the Indian Reservation.Under date of October 20, 1919, the First Assistant Secretary made demand on the company to deposit in a proper United States depository the sum of $30,000, determined to be sufficient to pay the cost of field and office work involved in surveying unsurveyed lands in the reservation, under penalty of proceedings for forfeiture of the grant in the event of default.This matter has been given very careful consideration in connection with extensive memoranda subsequently prepared on the subject, and the conclusion reached that there is no such Indian claim as prevents the railroad grant from attaching to these lands; that the grant can be forfeited only by express Congressional action; that therefore the Executive order creating the Indian reservation did not deprive the railroad company of any rights to the lands; and that the claim of the railroad company can not be resisted on the ground of Indian use and occupancy prior to the grant. It has accordingly been determined that the survey of these lands may properly proceed.
On December 27, 1920, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs requested review of the case, and on January 26, 1920, the First Assistant Secretary advised him that the matter had been reviewed and that the unanimous conclusion of the officers of the Department was that "the railroad company has full, complete, and incontestable title to the odd numbered sections in this reservation and embraced in the grant limits." It was further stated that attention should now be directed to the consideration of the question of consolidating the lands into two parcels, for the Indians and the railroad company, respectively.
The survey of the lands was completed and on September 28, 1922, plats of survey were transmitted to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs for his information, covering eight townships within the reservation.
Subsequent consideration designed to promote the welfare of the Indians
led to the enactment of the act of February 20, 1925 (43 Stat. 954), authorizing
exchanges of Government and privately owned lands in the reservation with
a view to facilitating consolidation of railroad and Indian lands, respectively.
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As stated in the Assistant Commissioner's letter, suit was subsequently instituted by the United States in the District Court of the United States for the District of Arizona against the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company on behalf of the Indians, involving title to Peach Springs, situated in Secs. 2 and 3, T. 23 N., R. 11 W., G. & S. R. M., within the boundaries of the reservation. That suit was terminated by stipulation entered into by counsel for the respective parties, and judgment and decree were duly entered July 7, 1931. On July 15, 1931, the Attorney General advised that his Department was now closing its files with respect to this litigation.
It was decreed that the United States, for the use and benefit of the Walapai, or Hualapai, Indians, or tribe of Indians, owns absolute fee title to Secs. 2 and 3, subject only to the rights to be adjudged to the railway company to take and use water of Peach Springs, occurring in said sections, for railroad, domestic, and other uses and purposes, et cetera.
The First Assistant Secretary, on July 30, 1931, acknowledged receipt of the Attorney General's letter and requested advice as to the validity of the title of the railway company to the odd-numbered sections within the reservation.
It appears to be the intention to submit the matter formally for the opinion of the Attorney General, and request is now made as to my opinion of the validity of the railroad company's claim to the odd-numbered sections of land within the reservation under the granting act, and whether the Indians, through prior occupancy and possession of the lands, had a valid claim thereto which has never been extinguished. In effect, request is now made for a review of the departmental action heretofore taken.
The lands are claimed by the railroad company under the grant made by the act of July 27, 1866, supra, to the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad Company, of which the present claimant is successor in interest. The date of the definite location of the road was March 12, 1872. The Walapai, or Hualapai, Indian Reservation was established by Executive order of January 4, 1883. The order reads as follows:
EXECUTIVE MANSION,
It is hereby ordered that the following described tract of country, situated in the Territory of Arizona, be, and the same is hereby set aside and reserved for the use and occupancy of the Hualapai Indians, namely: Beginning at a point on the Colorado River five (5) miles eastward of Tinnakah Spring: thence south twenty (20) miles to crest of high mesa; thence south 40° east twenty-five (25) miles to a point of Music Mountains; thence east fifteen (15) miles; thence north 50° east thirty-five (35) miles; thence north thirty (30) miles to the Colorado River; thence along said river to the place of beginning, the southern boundary being at least two (2) miles south of Peach Spring, and the eastern boundary at least two (2) miles east of Pine Spring.All bearings and distances being approximate.
As the grant to the company and the definite location of the road were
prior to the establishment of the Indian reservation, the question submitted
is dependent on whether or not the lands in question were excepted from
the railroad grant by reason of prior use and occupancy of the Indians.
In so far as the record shows there was no treaty, act of Congress, or
order by administrative officers purporting to reserve these lands prior
to the date of the Executive order of January 4, 1883, other than that
dated July 8, 1881, issued by Major General Willcox, Department Commander,
setting aside, subject to the approval of the President, the area which
was afterwards included in the Executive order. It should also be stated
that the record discloses no cession of lands from these Indians to the
United States.
It appears from the reports of the Army officers and other sources that, at the time of the granting act, the Walapai Indians roamed the mountainous country of northwestern Arizona, including the lands afterwards embraced in the reservation. Efforts to place them under control met with vigorous resistance, but after operations covering several years, the Indians surrendered to the military authorities, and, in 1869, they were forcibly removed to a reservation on the lower Colorado River, created by act of Congress May 3, 1865 (13 Stat. 559). The reservation was unsuited to their wants and many of them died of disease, and, in 1875, they fled from the reservation and became wanderers and fugitives in the desolate mountain regions where they formerly roamed, part of which were later embraced in the Walapai Reservation. In July, 1881, the local military commander, at the request of the Indians, recommended to the Department Commander the creation of a reservation for their benefit as soon as practicable, and as a result the military order referred to was issued by the Department Commander.
Various affidavits secured in accordance with stipulation of counsel in
connection with the Peach
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Springs suit disclose some further information concerning the use of the waters of the springs on the reservation. It appears that, at the present time, there are only a few Indians on the reservation, most of them living at or near the Peach Springs station of the railway company. Most of them are living at the Walapai Indian School Reservation, a small reservation a few miles south, which was created on May 4, 1900, by President McKinley on lands conveyed by the railroad company.
Section 3 of the act of July 27, 1866, supra, under which the railroad company bases its claim, reads in part as follows:
That there be, and hereby is, granted to the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad Company, its successors and assigns, for the purpose of aiding in the construction of said railroad and telegraph line to the Pacific coast, and to secure the safe and speedy transportation of the mails, troops, munitions of war, and public stores, over the route of said line of railway and its branches, every alternate section of public land, not mineral, designated by odd numbers, to the amount of twenty alternate sections per mile, on each side of said railroad line, as said company may adopt, through the Territories of the United States, and ten alternate sections of land per mile on each side of said railroad whenever it passes through any State, and whenever, on the line thereof, the United States have full title, not reserved, sold, granted, or otherwise appropriated, and free from preemption or other claims or rights, at the time the line of said road is designated by a plat thereof, filed in the office of the commissioner of the general land office;Section 2 of the act contains the following provision:
The United States shall extinguish, as rapidly as may be consistent with public policy and the welfare of the Indians, and only by their voluntary cession, the Indian title to all lands falling under the operation of this act and acquired in the donation to the road named in the act.While the rights of the natives as occupants were generally respected by the European nations when they took possession of the American continent, they all asserted the ultimate dominion and title to be in themselves. Johnson v. McIntosh (8 Wheat 543); Hayt v. United States (38 Ct. Claims, 355). The same principle has generally been followed in the policy of the United States with respect to the rights of Indians growing out of their occupancy of lands within its borders. It has been generally recognized, however, that this right may be extinguished by the Government, which holds the fee, leaving the fee unincumbered to pass to a grantee of the Government, but it has been regarded as sacred and something not to be taken from the Indians without their consent and then upon such consideration as may be agreed upon. Leavenworth, Lawrence & Galveston Railroad Company v. United States (92 U.S. 733), Johnson v. McIntosh, supra, United States v. Lindahl (221 Fed. 143), Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock (187 U.S. 553), Minnesota v. Hitchcock (185 U.S. 373, 385).
In the case of Leavenworth, Lawrence & Galveston Railroad Company v. United States, supra, it was held that where the right of an Indian tribe to the possession and use of certain lands as long as it may choose to occupy the same, is assured by treaty, a grant of them absolutely or cum onere by Congress to aid in the building of a railroad, violates an express stipulation, and a grant in general terms of "land", can not be construed to embrace them. This case involved a grant to the State of Kansas in aid of the construction of a railroad, and with respect to lands reserved for the Osage Indians, the court said:
But did Congress intend that it should reach these lands? Its general terms neither include nor exclude them. Every alternate section designated by odd numbers, within certain defined limits, is granted; but only the public lands owned absolutely by the United States are subject to survey and division into sections, and to them alone this grant is applicable. It embraces such as could be sold and enjoyed, and not those which the Indians, pursuant to treaty stipulations, were left free to occupy.The case of Minnesota v. Hitchcock, supra, involved lands claimed to be within a school grant to the State. The court decided in that case that the general scope of the legislation in these matters and the policy of the United States in respect to its public schools and also to the Indians sustained the contention that none of these Indian lands passed under the school grant to the State.
Whether this tract, which was known as the Red Lake Indian reservation, was properly called a reservation, as the defendant contends, or unceded Indian country, as the plaintiff insists, is a matter of little moment. Confessedly the fee of the land was in the United States, subject to a right of occupancy by the
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Indians. That fee the Government might convey, and whenever the Indian right of occupancy was terminated (if such termination was absolute and unconditional) the grantee of the fee would acquire a perfect and unburdened title and right of possession. At the same time, the Indians' right of occupancy has always been held to be sacred; something not to be taken from him except by his consent; and then upon such consideration as should be agreed upon.
*
*
*
*
*
Yet if it was necessary to determine the question we should have little doubt that this was a reservation within the accepted meaning of the term.* * * * *
Of course, when the Indian tribe has been removed by treaty from one body of land to an other the interest of the tribe in the land from which it has been removed ceases and the full obligation of the Government to the Indians is satisfied when the pecuniary or real estate consideration for the cession is secured to them. But in some instances, and this is one of them, the Indians have not been removed from one reservation to another, but the Government has proceeded upon the theory that the time has come when efforts shall be made to civilize and fit them for citizenship. Allotments are made in severalty, and something attempted more than provision for the material wants of the Indians. In construing provisions designed for their education and civilization as fully if not more than in construing provisions for their material wants, is it a duty to secure to the Indians all that by any fair construction of treaty or statute can be held to have been understood by them or intended by Congress.In the case of Northern Pacific Railway Company v. Winner (246 U.S. 283), it was held that lands opposite the line of the Northern Pacific Railway Company constituting an Indian reservation, when the line was definitely located, were not embraced in the grant of the odd-numbered sections made to the company by the act of July 2, 1864 (13 Stat. 365). On page 288, the court said:
That the reservation was in fact made and the lands exclusively devoted to the use of the Indians from the date of the agreement of August, 1877, is beyond controversy; that no objection was ever made by his superiors to the action taken by Colonel Watkins is equally clear, and to hold that, for want of a formal approval by the Secretary of the Interior, all of the conduct of the Government and of the Indians in making and ratifying and in good faith carrying out the agreement between them, even to the extent of protecting the reservation by military forces from intrusion, is without effect, would be to subordinate the realities of the situation to mere form, for the delay in the issuing of the formal Executive Order of the President under the circumstances can be attributed only to the exigencies of the public business;-by his representative, the Secretary of the Interior, he had approved the setting apart of the lands to the use of the Indians almost three years before. The judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals will be affirmed for the reason that the Spokane Indian Reservation was lawfully created prior to the filing of the plat of the line of the plaintiff company on October 4th, 1880.The cases hereinbefore cited, wherein it was held that the particular grant involved did not attach, concerned lands which had been reserved for the use of Indians, pursuant to treaty obligations, acts of Congress, or by proper administrative authority.
With respect to unreserved lands, it has been the established policy of the Government, in dealing with unreserved lands actually occupied and improved by individual Indians, prior to initiation of rights under the various public land laws, to appropriately protect the interests of such individual holders.
The caseof Cramer et al. v. United States (261 U.S. 219) held that lands definitely occupied by individual Indians were excepted from the Central Pacific grant of July 26, 1866 (14 Stat. 239), as lands "reserved * * *. or otherwise disposed of", and that such possessory rights, though not recognized by any statute or other formal governmental action of the time, were protected by the settled policy of the Government towards the Indians:
Unquestionably it has been the policy of the Federal Government from the beginning to respect the Indian right of occupancy, which could only be interfered with or determined by the United States. Beecher v. Wetherby, 95 U.S. 517, 525; Minnesota v. Hitchcock, 185 U.S. 373, 385. It is true that this policy has had in view the original nomadic tribal occupancy, but it is likewise true that in its essential spirit it applies to individual Indian occupancy as well; and the reasons for maintaining it in the latter case would seem to be no less cogent, since such occupancy being of a fixed character lends support to another well understood policy, namely, that of inducing the Indian to
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The court further stated that the rights of one who occupies part of a subdivision of public land without laying claim to or exercising dominion over the remainder, are confined to the part occupied.forsake his wandering habits and adopt those of civilized life. That such individual occupancy is entitled to protection finds strong support in various rulings of the Interior Department, to which in land matters this Court has always given much weight. Midway Co. v. Eaton, 183 U.S. 602, 609; Hastings & Dakota R. R. Co. v. Whitney, 132 U.S. 357, 366. That department has exercised its authority by issuing instructions from time to time to its local officers to protect the holdings of non-reservation Indians against the efforts of white men to dispossess them.
It is quiteclear that the question for decision in the Cramer case was not analogous to the one here presented. In that case the right of the Indian was based on occupancy of a specific tract and the improvement of same as an individual apart from any tribal relation. It is undoubtedly true that lands occupied by individual Walapais and improved by them prior to the date when the right of the railroad would otherwise attach, would be excluded from the grant. But there is no evidence of such individual occupancy present in this case as to any of the lands.
Nor was there at the time of the granting act or at the time of the date of definite location of the line, any existent reservation affecting the lands in question which had been set aside for their use by treaty, act of Congress or Executive order. In fact, at the date of definite location, there were no Indians inhabiting this region of the country. They were residing at that time on the reservation along the lower Colorado River, which had been created for them by act of Congress.
As a result of the conditions arising after their unauthorized return to this region, the reservation was created for their protection and welfare.
While the available information bearing upon the question of use and occupancy of the lands now embraced in the reservation prior to the time of the grant to the railroad company is meager and consists principally of the statements in the reports of the military authorities, it appears sufficient to support the conclusion of the Department heretofore reached. There is nothing to show that, prior to the time of the removal of the Indians from northwestern Arizona to the reservation created for them on the lower Colorado, there was such use and occupancy of the lands subsequently embraced in the reservation, separate and apart from the vast area of the public domain, to impress upon them the status of Indian lands. In any event, the fee was in the United States, and it was within the power of the Congress to transfer such lands without restriction, to terminate any right which they might have to further use and occupy the lands and to provide other lands for their use and occupancy. In my view, their removal to the reservation provided for their use by act of Congress under the circumstances disclosed by the reports, extinguished any right which they might have acquired to use and occupy any of these lands, and they became subject to disposition under the public land laws, unburdened with any title based on aboriginal occupancy.
Viewed in its most favorable light, the information does not, in my opinion, establish an Indian title growing out of use and occupancy of the area which would defeat the grant to the railroad company. The lands were unoccupied public lands of the United States at the date of the definite location of the road on March 12, 1872, and, in consequence, the grant of the alternate or odd-numbered sections within that area attach as of that date. United States v. Southern Pacific Railroad Company (146 U.S. 570); Southern Pacific Railroad Company v. United States (183 U.S. 519). The rights of the Indians in lands within the boundaries of the reservation date from the Executive order of January 4, 1883, when the lands were set aside for their use and occupancy. The map of the definite location having been filed long prior to the creation of the reservation, it therefore appears that the views expressed in the letter of the First Assistant Secretary to the Commissioner of the General Land Office, dated October 2, 1919, to the effect that there was no such Indian claim as prevented the railroad grant from attaching to these lands, was correct. Furthermore, in subsequent legislation-act of February 20, 1925 (43 Stat. 954),-Congress gave tacit recognition to the rights of the railroad company to lands within the reservation under its grant when it authorized the Secretary to divide and consolidate the respective holdings of the Indians and private parties, in order that the Indian lands might be embraced in a large, compact body for their exclusive use and benefit.
E. C. FINNEY,
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ALASKAN REINDEER ACQUISITION
The Honorable,
The Secretary
of the Interior.
DEAR MR. SECRETARY:
I have been requested to render an opinion in regard to the procedure to be followed in cases that have been brought to the attention of the General Reindeer Superintendent at Nome, Alaska, involving the acquisition of female reindeer by traders in settlement for bills incurred by the native owners.
It is not practicable to formulate a satisfactory opinion on the general question, as the facts and circumstances of each particular case might be determinative of the procedure to be followed. The correspondence submitted with the request relates to a case about ten years old where female deer were turned over to a trader in satisfaction of bills incurred under most distressful circumstances. I could not recommend any action at this late date to recover the animals (or the value thereof) which were transferred to procure medical aid and sustenance for the immediate need of the natives. In such a case I think the long delay and the circumstances of the transaction would justify the presumption that the disposal was sanctioned by the property authority, or that the transaction should be condoned at this time and permitted to rest undisturbed.
I do not find any restrictions in the regulations on the sale of male reindeer owned by the natives except as provided under contract with each apprentice, but there has always been a restriction on the sale of female reindeer. The last regulation, by order of October 2, 1929, provides:
Female reindeer may be disposed of by a native of Alaska to any person upon the written approval in each instance of the General Supervisor of the Alaska Reindeer Service or his agent, provided each individual native owner must at all times retain at least 100 female deer for breeding purposes; reports of sales, transfers and slaughter shall be made to the General Supervisor on forms provided by him.I think this regulation may be enforced in a proper case by bringing suit to recover the animals illegally transferred, or the value thereof. But I am of the opinion that this regulation has application only in respect to animals concerning which the Government is authorized to act in behalf of the natives who may, in such connection, be regarded as wards of the Nation. The law as embodied in section 39, title 48, U.S. Code, contemplates that when practicable the reindeer owned by the United States shall be turned over to the natives, or to the missions, to be held and used under such conditions as the Secretary of the Interior shall prescribe. In respect to any such animals so turned over to the natives, as well as the increase of such animals, it is doubtless within the province of the Secretary of the Interior to control the disposal thereof by regulations. It may be, however, that natives in some instances have acquired female reindeer by their own labor or funds which could not be traced to a Government source, but which were obtained altogether independently of the Government. In such case it does not appear that the Government would have jurisdiction to interfere with any transfer thereof by the native, as I am not aware of any provision of law whereby any Government agency has been constituted general guardian for the natives so as to place any and all of their private property under control of the Government.
Furthermore, I do not believe that the regulation as drawn would be applicable to a case where a native sells a male reindeer and with the proceeds buys a female reindeer, or where he trades a male reindeer for a female reindeer. He is permitted to dispose of male reindeer without restriction, except as may be provided by contract with apprentices, and it follows that he may do as he pleases with that which he receives in return for such transfer. I see no reason, however, why the regulation could not be amended to meet such a situation if deemed advisable from an administrative point of view.
E. C. FINNEY,
TAXATION
OF MINERAL PRODUCTION-
FIVE TRIBES
53 I.D. 502
M-26672 September 22, 1931.
The Honorable,
The Secretary
of the Interior.
MY DEAR MR. SECRETARY:
You have requested my opinion as to the right of the State of Oklahoma
under section 3 of the act of May 10, 1928 (45 Stat. 495), to tax the royalty
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interests of members of the Five Civilized Tribes in the oil and gas produced from their restricted lands. Said section 3 reads:
That all minerals, including oil and gas, produced on or after April 26, 1931, from restricted allotted lands of members of the Five Civilized Tribes of Oklahoma, or from inherited restricted lands of full-blood Indian heirs or devisees of such lands, shall be subject to all State and Federal taxes of every kind and character the same as those produced from lands owned by the other citizens of the State of Oklahoma; and the Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized and directed to cause to be paid, from the individual Indian funds held under his supervision and control and belonging to the Indian owners of the lands, the tax or taxes so assessed against the royalty interest of the respective Indian owners in such oil, gas, and other mineral production.The above provision of law is free from ambiguity. In so far as it was within the power of Congress to so provide, the plain effect is to subject to both Federal and State taxation on and after April 26, 1931, all minerals produced from the restricted lands of members of the Five Civilized Tribes, including the royalty interests of the Indian owners. Bearing in mind, however, that it is beyond the power even of Congress to invade or impair vested rights, it becomes important, in determining whether the statute is effective to accomplish the plainly expressed purpose, to consider the rights of these Indians with regard to the taxability of their lands under prior legislation and treaties negotiated with them.
The Five Civilized Tribes embrace the Choctaws, the Chickasaws, the Cherokees, the Creeks, and the Seminoles. Each of these tribes originally owned in common extensive areas of land in what is now the State of Oklahoma, which lands were allotted in severalty to the enrolled members of the tribes through agreements negotiated by a commission created for that purpose. (See sections 15 and 16, act of March 3, 1893, 27 Stat. 645.) Separate agreements were negotiated with each tribe but all were substantially the same in general outline and purpose, and provided in the main for relinquishment by the members of all claims to tribal property, in consideration of which they were to receive allotments of land in severalty subject to certain specified conditions.
Part of the lands so allotted to each number was to be designated as a homestead and the remainder surplus.Exemption from taxation in varying degrees was granted as to certain lands in each agreement. The original Choctaw and Chickasaw agreement (section 29 of the act of June 28, 1898, 30 Stat. 495, 507, as modified by the act of July 1, 1902, 32 Stat. 641), provided that "all the lands allotted shall be nontaxable while the title remains in the original allottee but not to exceed 21 years from date of patent". Section 13 of the Cherokee agreement set forth in the act of July 1, 1902 (32 Stat. 716), declared that "during the time said homestead is held by the allottee the same shall be non-taxable and shall not be liable for any debt contracted by the owner thereof while so held by him". Section 7 of the original Creek agreement (act of March 3, 1901, 31 Stat. 861, 863), and section 16 of the supplemental agreement (act of June 30, 1902, 32 Stat. 500), provided that the lands allotted as homestead "should remain non-taxable" for 21 years from the date of the deed therefor. The original Seminole agreement ratified by the act of July 1, 1898 (30 Stat. 567, 568), provided that each allottee should designate one tract of 40 acres "which shall by the terms of the deed be made inalienable and nontaxable as a homestead in perpetuity."
The grant of nontaxable land to the Choctaws and Chickasaws thus extended to both the homestead and surplus allotments, but the nontaxable grant in the case of the Creeks, the Cherokees and the Seminoles was confined to the homestead allotment, no provision being contained in the agreements with these three tribes for the exemption of the surplus allotments from taxation. In addition to the provision for tax exemption, however, each agreement imposed restrictions against the alienation of the allotted lands, both homestead and surplus, the effect of which was to withdraw the lands from State taxation during the period of restrictions. See Carpenter v. Shaw(280 U.S. 363, 366), United States v. Rickert (188 U.S. 432), United States v. Shock (187 Fed. 870).
The periods of restriction fixed in the allotment agreements were not identical, but were subsequently made uniform by the acts of April 26, 1906 (34 Stat. 137), and May 27, 1908 (35 Stat. 312). The periods of restriction as fixed by these acts would have expired in the absence of further legislation by Congress on April 26, 1931. By reason of these restrictions against alienation, all of these lands, including the surplus allotments of the Cherokees, the Creeks and the Seminoles, were exempt from taxation for a period coextensive with the period of restrictions against alienation in addition to the specific provisions contained in the allotment agreements for the nontaxability of specified lands for stated periods.
For the purpose of this opinion, therefore, the lands of these Indians
must be divided into two
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classes. First, those lands to which an exemption from taxation has attached by the express provisions of the allotment agreements, and second, those lands to which the exemption from taxation attached, not by virtue of a grant of nontaxable land made by the original allotment agreement, but as an incident of the restrictions against alienation.
As to the lands embraced in the first class, the Supreme Court of the United
States in Choate v. Trapp (224 U.S. 665), has held,
with respect to the grant of nontaxable land made by the Choctaw and Chickasaw
agreement hereinbefore referred to, that such grant conferred upon the
allottees property rights within the protection of the fifth amendment
to the Federal Constitution and hence not subject to repeal or impairment
by later congressional legislation. To the same effect in
Gleason
v.
Wood
(224 U.S. 679), involving Choctaw lands; English v. Richardson
(224 U.S. 680), involving Creek lands and Carpenter v. Shaw, supra.
In the Carpenter v. Shaw case, decided January 6, 1930, the State of Oklahoma
had undertaken under section 9814, Comp. Stats. Okla., 1921, to impose
a tax of three per cent upon the gross value of the royalty interests of
certain Choctaw Indians of less than half blood in oil and gas produced
from lands granted to them as nontaxable under the original allotment agreement.
The restrictions against alienation had been removed by the act of May
27, 1908, supra, with the declaration
that such lands should thereupon become subject to taxation. In addition
to this, section 3 of the act under consideration had expressly provided
for the taxation by the State of such royalty interests. Notwithstanding
all this, the Supreme Court held that the tax sought to be imposed was
not a tax on oil and gas severed from the realty, but was a tax upon the
right reserved in the Indians as lessors and owners of the fee and was
forbidden by the tax exemption provision contained in the allotment
agreement.
In so holding the Court said:
Whatever was the meaning of the present exemption clause at the time of its adoption must be taken to be its effect now, since it may not be narrowed by any subsequently declared intention of Congress. Choate v. Trapp, supra. Having in mind the obvious purpose of the Atoka Agreement to protect the Indians from the burden of taxation with respect to their allotments and this applicable principle of construction, we think the provision that "the lands allotted shall be non-taxable while the title remains in the allottees" can not be taken to be restricted only to those taxes commonly known as land or real estate taxes, but must be deemed at least to embrace a tax assessed against the allottees with respect to a legal interest in their allotment less than the whole, acquired or retained by them by virtue of their ownership.Upon the principle stated and applied in the foregoing decisions, I am clearly of the opinion that all of the lands allotted to the members of the Five Civilized Tribes, made nontaxable by the provisions of the agreements under which the allotments were made, continue to be exempt in the hands of the Indian allottees from all forms of State taxation during the period provided for in such agreements, irrespective of subsequent legislation by Congress purporting to subject them to taxation, including section 3 of the act of May 10, 1928.Where a Federal right is concerned we are not bound by the characterization given to a State tax by State courts or legislatures, or relieved by it from the duty of considering the real nature of the tax and its effect upon the Federal right asserted. Choctaw Gulf R. Co. v. Harrison, supra; Galveston, H. & S.A.R. CO. v. Texas,210 U.S. 217, 227. We think it plain that the tax imposed on the royalty interest of the present petitioners is not a tax on oil and gas severed from the realty, but is, by its very terms, a tax upon the right reserved in them as lessors and owners of the fee. The tax is imposed on the "royalty interest * * * except such interests of the State of Oklahoma or such royalty interests as are exempted from taxation under the laws of the United States" and is made "a lien on such interest." It is in lieu of all other taxes "upon any property rights attached to or inherent in the right" to the specified minerals and "upon the mining rights and privileges for the minerals aforesaid belonging to or appertaining to the land."
It sufficiently appears, were that controlling, that numerous decisions of the Oklahoma courts since the Atoka agreement have treated the royalty interest of the lessor as a right attached and incident to his ownership or reversionary interest in the land. Barnes v. Keys, 36 Okla. 6; Strawn v. Brady, 84 Okla. 66; Harris v. Brady, 136 Okla. 274; compare Rich v. Doneghy, 71 Okla. 204, and see Parker v. Riley, 250 U.S. 66. But even if this did not appear to be the case, an interest commonly so regarded and practically so associated with the use and enjoyment of the allotted lands could not, under the rule of liberal construction rightly invoked by the petitioners, be deemed excluded from the benefits of the exemption granted by section 29.
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As to the lands embraced in the second class, that is, those exempt from taxation as an incident of the restrictions against alienation, it is to be observed that at the time of the passage of the act of May 10, 1928, the restrictions and likewise the exemption from taxation would have terminated on April 26, 1931. Thereafter the lands would have been freely alienable, and likewise subject to taxation in the absence of some provision to the contrary by Congress. The restrictions against alienation by reason of which this class of lands was protected from taxation, did not constitute a vested property right but were in the nature of personal disabilities to be continued or dropped at the will of Congress. As stated by the Supreme Court in Choate v. Trapp, supra, "the right to remove the restriction was in pursuance of the power under which Congress could legislate as to the status of the ward and lengthen or shorten the period of disability."
By section one of the act under consideration Congress did extend the restrictions against alienation for an additional period of 25 years, but in so doing that body saw fit to depart from its usual policy of relieving the lands from taxation by declaring in section three that all mineral production from the lands, including the royalty interest of the Indian owners should be subject to state and Federal taxation. In so far as the lands to which no vested right of immunity from taxation has attached are concerned, the legislation providing for the tax invaded no right of the Indians and was unquestionably a proper exercise of the plenary power possessed by Congress over the subject matter. See in this connection opinion of the Attorney General rendered November 4, 1921 (33 Ops. Atty. Gen. 60), upholding the validity of section 5 of the act of March 3, 1921 (41 Stat. 1251), authorizing the State of Oklahoma to tax the oil and gas production from Osage Indian lands, including the royalty interest of the Osage Tribe. In my opinion, therefore, the royalty interests of the Indians in the oil and gas produced from this class of lands became subject to taxation by the State of Oklahoma under the provisions of section 3 of the act of May 10, 1928, on and after April 26, 1931.
A further question arising out of an apparent conflict between sections 3 and 4 of the act of May 10, 1928, remains to be considered. The latter section as amended by the act of May 24, 1928 (45 Stat. 733). reads:
That on and after April 26, 1931, the allotted, inherited, and devised restricted lands of each Indian of the Five Civilized Tribes in excess of one hundred and sixty acres shall be subject to taxation by the State of Oklahoma under and in accordance with the laws of that State, and in all respects as unrestricted and other lands; Provided, That the Indian owner of restricted land, if an adult and not legally incompetent, shall select from his restricted land a tract or tracts, not exceeding in the aggregate one hundred and sixty acres, to remain exempt from taxation, and shall file with the Superintendent of the Five Civilized Tribes a certificate designating and describing the tract or tracts so selected; Provided further, That in cases where such Indian fails, with two years from date hereof, to file such certificate, and in cases where the Indian owner is a minor or otherwise legally incompetent, the selection shall be made and certificate prepared by the Superintendent for the Five Civilized Tribes; and such certificate, whether by the Indian or by the Superintendent for the Five Civilized Tribes, shall be subject to approval by the Secretary of the Interior; and, when approved by the Secretary of the Interior shall be recorded in the office of the Superintendent for the Five Civilized Tribes, and in the county records of the county in which the land is situated; and said lands, designated and described in the approved certificates so recorded, shall remain exempt from taxation while the title remains in the Indian designated in such approved and recorded certificate, or in any full-blood Indian heir or devisee of the land: Provided, That the tax exemption shall not extend beyond the period of restrictions provided for in this Act: And provided further, That the tax-exempt land of any such Indian allottee, heir, or devisee shall not at any time exceed one hundred and sixty acres.In section 3 Congress provided without qualification that all minerals produced from the restricted lands of these Indians should be subject to both State and Federal taxation. Section 4 declares that on and after April 26, 1931, all of such restricted lands, exclusive of 160 acres to be selected and designated by each Indian as therein provided shall be subject to taxation by the State of Oklahoma in accordance with the laws of that State and in all respects as unrestricted and other lands. As to the 160 acres so selected and designated, it was declared also without qualification that the same was to remain exempt from taxation "while the title remains in the Indian designated in such approved and recorded certificate or in any full-blood heir or devisee of the land." Under this latter provision, standing alone, it is clear that the designated 160-acre tract would be protected from the mineral
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production tax as well as other forms of taxation. To so hold, however, is to reduce to mere surplusage the provisions of section 3 relating to the mineral production tax, inasmuch as the only lands remaining upon which that section could operate would be those in excess of the designated 160 acres, the taxation of which for all purposes, including the mineral production tax, was expressly provided for in section 4. No further provision for the taxation of the excess lands was necessary and hence it is obvious that section 3 was designated to accomplish some further purpose. That purpose, I think, was to subject to taxation on and after April 26, 1931, the mineral production from all of the restricted lands of these Indians, including the 160 acres designated under the provisions of section 4 above. In enacting said section 4, particularly the clause exempting designated lands from taxation, Congress doubtless had in mind the granting of an exemption from what is commonly known as land or real estate taxes as distinguished from a mineral tax such as provided for in section 3. Under this view, which harmonizes the two sections and gives effect to both and is thus in accord with well established rules of statutory construction (see 25 R.C.L., section 247, page 1006, and cases there cited), the lands designated as tax exempt under the provisions of section 4 above would be exempt from all forms of State taxation exclusive of the mineral production tax, to which production tax they would be subject save where protected therefrom by the doctrine announced in Choate v. Trapp, and Carpenter v. Shaw, supra.
E. C. FINNEY,
OSAGE FUNDS-FEDERAL SUPERVISION
The Honorable,
The Secretary
of the Interior.
DEAR MR. SECRETARY:
February 5, 1930, the Circuit Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit, in Blackbird v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue (38 Fed. 2d 976), held that the in come of a restricted full-blood member of the Osage Tribe of Indians, derived from tribal sources, was not subject to taxation under the various Federal revenue acts. Under this decision, according to informal advice received by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, a refund of certain moneys representing taxes paid upon the income of Martha Washington To-Wah-e-he, is about to be made by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. It is expected that the money so refunded will be forwarded to the Superintendent of the Osage Indian Agency at Pawhuska, Oklahoma, and the Commissioner of Indian Affairs desires to know whether such moneys may be regarded as restricted funds; that is, subject to governmental control and supervision. At his suggestion, you request my opinion in the matter.
Martha Washington To-wah-e-he is not a member of the Osage Tribe, but is a restricted member of the Cherokee Tribe in Oklahoma, enrolled upon the final rolls of that tribe as a half-blood under the name of Martha Washington Axe. She was legally married to To-wah-e-he, a full-blood Osage, who died testate August 4, 1916, leaving a valid will, under the provisions of which the wife, Martha, succeeded to his entire estate. This estate consisted, among other property, 1 1/2 shares in the Osage tribal income derived chiefly from leases of mineral deposits underlying the Osage reservation, which income is distributable quarterly pro rata among the enrolled members of the tribe, the shares of deceased members being paid to their heirs or devisees as the case may be. See act of June 28, 1906 (34 Stat. 539), as amended March 3, 1921 (41 Stat. 1249), and February 27, 1925 (43 Stat. 1008).
The amount of the anticipated refund is not stated, nor is it shown when and by whom the income taxes were paid. This information is not regarded as essential, however, inasmuch as we are here concerned only with the status of moneys refunded on account of taxes paid upon the interest acquired by Martha Washington To-wah-e-he under the will of her deceased husband in the quarterly distributions of the Osage tribal income. The status of the moneys refunded, that is, whether restricted or unrestricted, is determined, of course, by the statusof the income from which paid. Such income in the hands of the testator clearly would have been restricted, he being a restricted full-blood Osage, but whether subject to like restrictions in the hands of his devisee, Martha, depends upon the operation of the will as effecting a removal of restrictions from Martha's interest in the quarterly distributions as and when made.
The will was made and approved under authority of section 8 of the act of April 18, 1912 (37 Stat. 86), which reads:
That any adult member of the Osage Tribe of Indians not mentally incompetent may dispose of any or all of his estate, real, personal. or mixed, including trust funds, from which
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The Supreme Court of the United States in La Motte v. United States (254 U.S. 570), held that a devise of a direct or inherited restricted Osage allotments made pursuant to section 8 above, operates as a conveyance of the land free from all restrictions, and this notwithstanding the fact that the devisees were themselves restricted members of the Osage Tribe. That the same principle would apply to funds passing under such will appears to have been recognized by the Court in the following language:restrictions as to alienation have not been removed, by will, in accordance with the laws of the State of Oklahoma: Provided, That no such will shall be admitted to probate or have any validity unless approved before or after the death of the testator by the Secretary of the Interior.
This provision is broadly written, is in terms applicable to restricted lands and funds, and enables the Indian to dispose of all or any part of his estate by will, in accordance with the state law, if his will be approved by the Secretary. True, it does not say that a disposal by an approved will shall put an end to existing restrictions, but that is an admissible, if not the necessary, conclusion from its words.In Yarhola v. Duling (207 Pac. 293) the Supreme Court of Oklahoma specifically ruled that restricted funds devised by will passed to an Indian devisee free from restrictions, saying:
The next question for consideration is whether the funds sought to be loaned, being acquired by Yarhola by will, are unrestricted. The Supreme Court of the United States in the case of La Motte v. U.S., 254U.S. 570, 41 Sup. Ct. 204, 65 L. Ed. 410, held in substance that the devisee of restricted land by will, approved according to the act of Congress, operates as a conveyance of the land free from restrictions. By applying the same principle to restricted funds that were devised by will, executed in accordance with an act of Congress, the devisee would take the same free of restrictions. See,also, McKinney v. Bluford, supra,and Barlow v. Soldofsky, supra.We think the position of the defendant is well taken, and the probate attorney in his official capacity has no authority to appear in this case, nor did he have such right or authority to appear in the county court in his official capacity, for the reason the funds were unrestricted and not under the supervision or control of any agency of the United States.It appears from the record at hand that the doctrine announced in the foregoing decisions has been repeatedly invoked and followed by this Department with respect to the income of the Indian under consideration. August 9, 1926, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, in a letter approved by the Assistant Secretary of the Interior on August 11, 1926, ruled upon authority of the La Motte decision that the funds of Martha Washington To-wah-e-he were unrestricted and directed the Superintendent of the Osage Indian Agency to turn over to Martha's legal guardian the funds then on hand or thereafter accruing to her credit. This decision was adhered to in a letter signed by the Commissioner on August 27 and approved by the Assistant Secretary of the Interior on September 2, 1926. Again, on October 24, 1930, the Department considered the question and advised the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, in a decision signed by the Assistant Secretary of the Interior, that the funds accruing to Martha were not subject to governmental control and supervision, and that the duty of the Department with respect thereto was a purely ministerial one of making payments to her as and when due. In that decision the Department, referring to the La Motte case, said:
That decision, to be sure, dealt with lands, but the ruling announced appears toapply with equal force to funds. The authority to dispose of both classes of property is conferred by the same statute and if the effect of the will is to remove restrictions as to the one, the same result logically follows as to the other.The uniform holding of the Department over a period of years has thus been that the funds here involved are unrestricted and in accordance therewith all such funds have been released to the Indian or her duly appointed guardian for disposition by them free from governmental control and supervision.
It is to be observed that the La Motte case was decided in
January, 1921, prior to the enactment of the act of March 3, 1921 (41 Stat.
1249), which, as amended by the act of February 27, 1925 (43 Stat. 1008),
places definite and specific restrictions upon the expenditure and disbursement
of funds flowing to members of the Osage Tribe, whether accruing to them
in their own right, or as heirs or devisees of deceased members. As to
them, of course, the principle announced in the
La Motte case no
longer applies. But, as hereinbefore pointed out, Martha Washington To-wah-e-he
is not a
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member of the Osage Tribe, and the enactments referred to contain no specific provision for the provision of the income of Indians such as she. Ordinarily, this omission might not be regarded as necessarily fatal, as the power of the Secretary with respect to the Indians and their property is not always dependent upon express congressional authority. Rainbow v. Young (161 Fed. 835); Territory of Alaska v. Annette Island Packing Company (289 Ped. 671); United States v. McDaniel (7 Pet. 1). As a restricted member of the Cherokee Tribe, Martha may properly be regarded as in need of protection and it might well be urged that in the absence of some provision to the contrary, supervision naturally falls to the Secretary of the Interior. See in this connection Parker v. Richards (250 U.S. 235). It must be admitted, however, that had Congress intended to invest the Secretary with supervision over the income devised to Indians not members of the Osage Tribe, it would have been easy to so provide. Not having done so, it may be reasonably inferred that no such supervision was intended. The Department has uniformly so construed the law, and that construction not only is entitled to the most respectful consideration (see United States v. Moore,95 U.S. 763), but must be recognized as reasonably supported by the decisions in La Motte v. United Statesand Yarhola v. Duling, supra.
While the matter is not free from difficulty, I am of the opinion under the circumstances presented that the funds in question can not be properly regarded as subject to governmental supervision and control.
E. C. FINNEY,
The Honorable,
The Secretary
of the Interior.
DEAR MR. SECRETARY:
Upon a recommendation of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs you have requested my opinion relative to the right of the Secretary of the Interior to delegate to a subordinate in the field certain action required under section 4 of the act of June 7, 1924 (43 Stat. 475, 476). For convenience the law in question is quoted as follows:
That no part of the sum provided for herein shall be expanded for construction on account of any lands in private ownership until an appropriate repayment contract in accordance with the terms of this Act and, in form approved by the Secretary of the Interior, shall have been properly executed by a district organized under State law, embracing the lands in public or private ownership irrigable under the project, and the execution thereof shall have been confirmed by decree of a court of competent jurisdiction, which contract, among other things, shall contain an appraisal approved by the Secretary of the Interior, showing the present actual bona fide value of all such irrigable lands fixed without reference to the proposed construction of said San Carlos Dam, and shall provide that until one-half the construction charges against said lands shall have been fully paid, no sale of any such lands shall be valid unless and until the purchase price involved in such sale is approved by the Secretary of the Interior, and shall also provide that upon proof of fraudulent representation as to the true consideration involved in any such sale, the Secretary of the Interior is authorized to cancel the water right attaching to the land involved in such fraudulent sale; and all public lands irrigable under the project shall be entered subject to the conditions of this section which shall be applied thereto.The question requiring decision involves similar laws connected with the Kittitas project in the State of Washington under construction by the Bureau of Reclamation, pursuant to the act of June 17, 1902 (32 Stat. 388), the Vale, Owyhee and Baker projects in Oregon, and the Sun River project in Montana.
The act of June 7, 1924, supra, appropriated $5,500,000 for the construction of Coolidge Dam in the canyon of the Gila River near San Carlos, Arizona. One of the provisions of the act required an appraisal of all land to be irrigated from the water stored and that "until one-half the construction charges against said land have been fully paid, no sale of any such lands shall be valid unless and until the purchase price involved in such sale is approved by the Secretary of the Interior."
An employee of the field, Office of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs,
has recommended that the Chief Clerk and Special Disbursing Agent on the
San Carlos project be given authority to approve the purchase price involved
in the land sales made on the project, and the question arises whether
the Secretary of the Interior can delegate the authority
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OCTOBER 20, 1931 |
given to him by Congress to a subordinate living in the vicinity of the land.
The general rule is, that an agent in whom is imposed trustor confidence, or who is required to exercise discretion or judgment may not entrust the performance of his duties to another without the consent of his principal, and since nearly all acts of agency involve discretion, the one clothed with authority to act for a principal must ordinarily perform the act himself and can not without the principal's consent, delegate it to another; or as is frequently stated, an agent can not delegate powers calling for the exercise of discretion, skill or judgment, or to do acts that are not merely clerical, mechanical or ministerial in their nature. It has been held that an agent appointed to lease or sell real estate can not delegate such authority. Where an agent is employed to do acts which do not call for the exercise of judgment or discretion or where he has exercised his discretion and determined upon the propriety of the act, he may delegate to a subagent the execution of the merely mechanical, clerical or ministerial acts involving no judgment or discretion.
In carrying out the law of Congress the Secretary of the Interior is the administrative agent, and the ordinary rules of agency apply forcefully to him. The relation of an agent to his principal is ordinarily that of a fiduciary, and as such it is his duty in all dealings concerning or affecting the subject matter to act with the utmost good faith and loyalty for the furtherance and advancement of the interest of his principal.
Where authority has been delegated by Congress to the head of a Department or to some assistant, the courts and the Comptroller General have held strictly to the necessity of direct authority being exercised by the officer who receives the grant. Hajdamacha v. Karmuth (23Fed. (2d) 958; Midland Oil Company v. Turner(179 Fed. 74, 76).
There is a line of cases regarding the appointment and discharge of employees which hold in effect, that the power to appoint and remove being discretionary in character, such authority being vested in the head of a Department, it can not be delegated (26 Comp. Decs. 444); Burnap v. United States (252 U.S. 512; 4 Comp. Gen. 675). In the case of Low-Kwai v. Backus (229 Fed. 481), it is said that where the statute provides that if the Secretary of Commerce and Labor is satisfied that an alien is subject to deportation, he shall cause such alien to be taken into custody, etc. held that under the statute it is the Secretary who must be satisfied that the alien is subject to deportation, and where the Secretary apparently was not satisfied of such fact, he had no authority to authorize the Commissioner of Immigration to satisfy himself on this point and thus decide the question committed by Congress to the Secretary. Harris v. San Diego Flume Company (25 Pac. 758).
On March 13, 1928, the Assistant Secretary had under consideration the authority vested in the Secretary of the Interior pursuant to section 4 of the act of March 15, 1894 (28 Stat. 312). This act provides:
The Commissioner of Indian Affairs is authorized to advertise in the spring of each year for bids, and enter into contracts, subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, for goods and supplies for the Indian Service required for the ensuing fiscal year * * *.The Assistant Secretary decided that the language used in the statute did not appear to be susceptible of the construction that such approval by the Secretary or an officer authorized to act in his stead can be waived or delegated to another, and that advance authority to enter into contracts under the law would not meet its requirement. It was also decided that to give validity to such contract it must be approved by the Secretary or an officer designated by him under authority of law to perform such duty. The duty thus imposed can not be otherwise delegated (4 Comp. Gen. 675).
It is my opinion that the Secretary of the Interior can not delegate to anyone the approval of the purchase price involved in a sale of land on the San Carlos project, Arizona, as provided in the act of June 7, 1924, supra.
There are some decided cases that point to a method of simplifying the action to be taken under the act. The difficulty encountered in administration is no reason for evading the law. It must be concluded that some delay will occur in making a report and transmitting it to the Secretary of the Interior, but expeditious action should be expected.
In the case reported in 19 Comp. Decs. 628 it is said that the head of
a Department may, in writing, authorize advertisement in general terms
and at the same time direct some subordinate official to select the medium
for the same (13 Comp. Dec. 446; 18 Comp. Dec. 531; 2 Comp. Gen. 459).
The case in 19 Comp. Dec., had under consideration Sec. 3828, Revised Statutes,
which is the act of June 15, 1870 (16 Stat. 308). This statute inhibited
the publication of any advertisement or notice in any newspaper whatever
except in pursuance of a written authority for such publication from the
head of such Department. The decisions under this statute indicate that
if the action required by the statute relative to the San Carlos
project can be reduced to mechanical, clerical or ministerial acts by a
field officer, there can be no legal objec-
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NOVEMBER 3, 1931 |
tion to his designation to perform such acts. In the law first quoted, the important grant of power by Congress to the Secretary is the approval of the purchase price involved in the sale of land on the project prior to the time when more than one-half of the construction charge remains unpaid. If a plan can be devised whereby the Secretary of the Interior can exercise his judgment and discretion in a general way, and fix a maximum price for lands of similar quality, it is believed that approval could be given by the field employee to all sales of land made at a price equal to or less than the maximum designated.
On the San Carlos project the lands prior to cultivation and improvement were similar in character and quality. The cost of a Government water right (the construction charge) will be equal for each acre, so it might be assumed that a maximum price could be fixed on appropriate appraisal duly approved by the Secretary of the Interior. Authority could then be delegated to a field agent to approve all sales where the consideration for the transfer did not exceed the price fixed in such approved appraisal.
The judgment and discretion reposed in the Secretary of the Interior by the act of Congress must be exercised by him, but he can delegate to another the ministerial or clerical act involved in approving the sale of the land.
E. C. FINNEY,
EFFECT OR
LEGALITY OF A FEE SIMPLE PATENT APPLIED
FOR PRIOR
TO BUT ISSUED SUBSEQUENT TO
ALLOTTEE'S
DEATH
The Honorable,
The Secretary
of the Interior.
DEAR MR. SECRETARY:
Upon request of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs there has been referred to me for an opinion "supplemental" to the Solicitor's opinion approved March 30, 1922, as to the effect or legality of a fee simple patent issued on an Indian allotment during the trust period in the name of the allottee who made application therefor but who died prior to the time such patent was issued.
The case involved in the Solicitor's opinion of March 30, 1922, was that of Tony Blackbird, a Sioux Indian, who received an allotment on which the usual 25-year trust patent issued. Prior to the expiration of the trust period he applied for a fee simple patent which was issued but before this was done the allottee had died. The fact of the prior death of the allottee was not known when the patent was issued and upon ascertaining the fact patent was not "delivered" but was retained in the Indian Office. However, interested parties obtained a certified copy of the patent and had the same recorded, Conveyances to third parties from the widow and children of the deceased allottee were also placed of record against the land involved as well as mortgages or other incumbrances. The Solicitor held that the question as to whether under the circumstances the fee simple patent issued in the name of Tony Blackbird was void or voidable was one for the courts to determine; that the Secretary of the Interior is without power to cancel a fee simple patent once issued and placed of record, this being an exclusive function of the courts.
The particular case involved in the Indian Office request for opinion is that of Catrina Chavez, a Shoshone Indian, who applied for fee simple patent June 4, 1918, and died November 1, 1918, leaving a husband and several children. It not being known at the time that she had died a fee simple patent was issued in her name December 11, 1919. The local court set apart the real property of the estate to the husband who on the same date deeded the land to his attorney.
In connection with the present request for opinion the Indian Office refers to the act of February 26, 1927 (44 Stat. 1247) which was passed after the Solicitor's opinion in the Blackbird case and was amended by the act of February 21, 1931 (46 Stat. 1205). Said act of February 26, 1927, which authorizes the cancellation under certain conditions of fee simple patents to Indians for allotments held in trust by the United States provides:
That the Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized, in his discretion, to cancel any patent in fee simple issued to an Indian allottee or to his heirs before the end of the period of trust described in the original or trust patent issued to such allottee, or before the expiration of any extension of such period of trust by the President, where such patent in fee simple was issued without the consent or an application therefor by the allottee or by his heirs: Provided, That the patentee has not mortgaged or sold any part of the land described in such patent: Provided also, That upon cancellation of such patent in fee simple the land shall have the same status as though such fee patent had never been issued.
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR |
NOVEMBER 20, 1931 |
The amendatory act of 1931 contains practically the same language as follows:
Where patents in fee have been issued for Indian allotments, during the trust period, without application by or consent of the patentees, and such patentees or Indian heirs have sold a part of the land included in the patents, or have mortgaged the lands or any part thereof, etc.The authority to cancel a fee simple patent under the prescribed conditions contained in the act of 1927 is expressly limited to a case where the patent was issued without the consent or an application by the allottee. For this reason the provisions of the act are not applicable to the facts of the instant case where an application was actually made by the allottee for a fee simple patent. The present case is controlled not by the act of February 26, 1927, or the amendatory act of 1931, but by section 2448, Revised Statutes, which provides:
Where patents for public lands have been or may be issued, in pursuance of any law of the United States, to a person who had died or who hereafter dies before the date of such patent, the title to the land designated therein shall inure to and become vested in the heirs, devisees, or assignees of such deceased patentee as if the patent had issued to the deceased person during his life.The courts hold that the provisions of the above section are applicable to Indian allotments. Crews v. Burcham (1 Black 352, 356); United States v. Chase (245 U.S. 89, 101); and Larkin v. Paugh (276 U.S. 431, 438-9). It was held in the latter case:
We conclude that by reason of this statute the fee simple patent to Greyhair, although issued 19 days after his death, operated to invest his "heirs, devisees or assignees" with the title, and divest the United States of it, "as if" the patent had been issued to him "during life." Of course those who received the title, whether heirs, devisees or assignees, took it as though it came from him, and not as if they were the immediate grantees of the United States. See Harris v. Bell 254 U.S. 103, 108. The statute leaves no room for doubt on this point.My opinion is that the fee simple patent in the case presented by the Indian Office was legally issued and that the situation presented by that office is not controlled by the act of February 26, 1927, or the amendatory act of February 21, 1931, authorizing the Secretary under certain conditions to cancel fee simple patents, but by the provisions of section 2448, Revised Statutes.With the issue of the patent, the title not only passed from the United States but the prior trust and the incidental restriction against alienation were terminated. This put an end to the authority theretofore possessed by the Secretary of the Interior by reason of the trust and restriction-so that thereafter all questions pertaining to the title were subject to examination and determination by the courts, appropriately those in Nebraska, the land being there. Brown v. Hitchcock, 173 U.S. 473;Lanev. Mickadiet, 241 U.S. 201, 207, et seq.
E. C. FINNEY,
FINAL ROLLS
OF THE CROW INDIAN TRIBE
OF MONTANA
PREPARED UNDER ACT OF
JUNE 4,
1920 (41 STAT. 751)
The Honorable,
The Secretary
of the Interior.
MY DEAR MR. SECRETARY:
Upon recommendation of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs my opinion is requested on certain questions arising in connection with the final rolls of the Crow Indian Tribe in Montana, prepared under the provisions of the act of June 4, 1920 (41 Stat. 751), entitled "An Act to provide for the allotment of lands of the Crow Tribe, for the distribution of tribal funds and for other purposes."
The original reservation of the Crow Tribe was reduced in area by cessions
made under three successive acts of Congress, each of which provided for
allotments in severalty to the Indians and disposal of the unallotted lands
under the public land laws. Bills were subsequently introduced in Congress,
some looking to the reopening to public entry of the remaining tribal lands
and others for the pro-rating instead of such lands among the members of
the Crow Tribe. None of these bills was enacted and the matter culminated
in the above act of June 4, 1920, section 1 of which authorizes the allotment
of lands in severalty to the members of the Crow Tribe as follows:
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OPINIONS OF THE SOLICITOR |
NOVEMBER 20, 1931 |
Section 3 of the act provides:* * * one hundred and sixty acres to the heirs of every enrolled member, entitled to allotment, who died unallotted after December 31, 1905, and before the passage of this Act; next, one hundred and sixty acres to every allotted member living at the date of the passage of this Act, who may then be the head of a family and has not received allotment as such head of a family; and thereafter to prorate the remaining unallotted allottable lands and allot them so that every enrolled member living on the date of the passage of this Act and entitled to allotment shall receive in the aggregate an equal share of the allottable tribal lands for his total allotment of land of the Crow Tribe. Allotments made hereunder shall vest title in the allottee subject only to existing tribal leases, which leases in no event shall be renewed or extended by the Secretary of the Interior after the passage of this Act, * * *.
That the Secretary of the Interior shall, as speedily as possible, after the passage of this Act, prepare a complete roll of the members of the Crow Tribe who died unallotted after December 31, 1905, and before the passage of this Act; also, a complete roll of the allotted members of the Crow Tribe who six months after the date hereof are living and are heads of families but have not received full allotments as such; also, a complete roll of the unallotted members of the tribe living six months after the approval of this Act who are entitled to allotments. Such rolls when completed shall be deemed the final allotment rolls of the Crow Tribe, on which allotment of all tribal lands and distribution of all tribal funds existing at said date shall be made.From casual examination it might appear that conflict exists between the provisions of sections 1 and 3 of the act of June 4, 1920, as to the various classes of allottees provided for therein, but a careful analysis of the situation made in the Solicitor's Opinion of November 22, 1921 (48 L.D. 479), in the case of Big Lark, a Crow Indian, shows that it is possible to reconcile or harmonize the two provisions. Section 11 of the same act after providing, among other expenditures, for the purchase of seed, animals, machinery, tools, implements, and other equipment for sale to individual members of the tribe, further provides:
That after said sums have been reserved and set aside, together with a sufficient amount to pay all other expenses authorized by this Act, the balance of such consolidated fund, and all other funds to the credit of the tribe or placed to its credit thereafter, shall be distributed per capita to the Indians entitled.The foregoing was the situation so far as the present inquiry is concerned as it existed under the act of June 4, 1920, and before any further congressional legislation had been enacted. It was said, among other things, in the Solicitor's Opinion of November 22, 1921, supra, with respect to the finality of the rolls of the Crow Tribe as provided for in that act:
Here, however, a different situation obtains, for clearly there is no authority to add to "the final rolls of the Crow Tribe" any children born after December 4, 1920. Again, under our other acts, the lands remaining after completion of the allotment work, either become subject to public sale and entry, or else remain Indian tribal property subject to future disposition by Congress. Here theoretically at least, no allottable lands are to remain, as they must be prorated in such manner as to give members of the tribe living on a certain date an equal share.The act of May 19, 1926 (44 Stat. 566), provided for the allotment of lands to living children on the Crow Reservation, including lands theretofore opened to entry. Section 1 of the act reads as follows:Administrative officers being without power to alter or amend existing law, we can not change the requirements of the act in this respect. * * *
That the Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized to allot lands in severalty to children of the Crow Tribe, now living, not heretofore allotted, from any suitable lands belonging to the tribe now available for allotments, or which may became available, including any Crow lands heretofore opened to entry and sale.This section was amended by the act of May 2, 1928 (45 Stat. 482), by adding after the words "including any Crow lands opened to entry and sale" the following: "and to allot land to children hereafter born so long as there are lands of said tribe available for allotment purposes." Except for this addition the provisions of said section 1 remain the same.
The act of June 4, 1920, supra, was amended by
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR |
NOVEMBER 20, 1931 |
the act of May 26, 1926 (44 Stat. 658), the title of which is "An act to amend sections 1, 5, 6, 8 and 18 of an act approved June 4, 1920." The provisions of sections 5, 6, 8 and 18 have no decisive bearing in connection with the present inquiry. Section 1 of the act of 1920 is repeated verbatim in the amendatory act of May 26, 1926, the amendment consisting of the following addition thereto:
Providedfurther, That any allottee classified as competent may lease his or her allotment or any part thereof and the allotments of minor children for farming and grazing purposes. Any adult incompetent Indian with the approval of the superintendent may lease his or her allotment or any part thereof and the allotments of minor children for farming and grazing purposes. The allotments of orphan minors shall be leased by the superintendent. Moneys received for or on behalf of all incompetent Indians and minor children shall be paid to the superintendent by the lessee for the benefit of said Indians. No lease shall be made for a period longer than five years. All leases made under this section shall be recorded at the Crow Agency.The questions submitted by the Indian Office for opinion are the following:
1. Should the distribution of funds accruing from any source subsequent to six months after June 4, 1920, be limited to Indians whose names appear on the final rolls prepared under Section 3 of the Act of June 4, 1920?The questions involve the right of Crow children born since the closing of the final rolls, as provided for in the act of 1920, to participate in the distribution of the funds of the tribe. The act of May 19, 1926,supra, expressly authorizes allotments of land to Crow children born after the closing of the prior rolls, but nothing is said therein as to the right of the children to share in the distribution of tribal funds. It has been contended that such children are entitled to share in all the funds accruing to the tribe subsequent to December 4, 1920, the date the prior rolls became final and also all future accruals, on the theory that the act of 1920 contemplated that the rolls provided for therein were intended to be final only as to allotments of lands and the distribution of tribal funds "existing at that date"-December 4, 1920; in other words the contention being that as section 3 of the act of June 4, 1920, specifies that the distribution of all tribal funds "existing" six months after the date of the act should be paid to those on the final rolls and makes no provision for the distribution thereof, Congress must have intended when that section is taken in connection with section 11 of the act that such funds should be distributed in accordance with the usual practice as to per capita payments under a fluctuating roll, that is, eliminating the deaths and adding the births.2. Should the names of after-born children living at the date of payment be added to the roll so that they will participate therein?
3. Should the names of all enrollees who may have died before payment of any such subsequent accruals be eliminated from the roll?
However, a different view is possible under the legislation, that is, that Congress meant what it said in the act of 1920 in declaring the rolls of the tribe to be final and that the intention of the subsequent legislation was to limit the right of afterborn children to allotments of land only-it was not also the intention that they share in the distribution of funds as fixed by section 3 of said act. If the theory advanced were following the adding of the names of new-born children and striking off the names of enrolled members who have died would virtually require a new roll at the time each payment is made. To adopt such a course would clearly be inconsistent with the declared finality of the rolls in the act of 1920, a course that could only be justified in accordance with express legislation. Besides, as the disposal of the bulk of the Crow property is controlled by the provisions of the act of June 4, 1920, declaring the rolls final, it is unlikely that Congress would provide a different method for the disposition of the comparatively small remaining property, thus necessitating two different rolls.
Section 3 of the act of 1920 which declares: "Such rolls when completed
shall be deemed the final allotment rolls of the Crow Tribe, on which allotment
of all tribal lands and distribution of all tribal funds existing at
said date shall be made," and section 11 of said act which declares:
"That after said sums have been reserved and set aside, together with a
sufficient amount to pay all other expenses authorized by this act, the
balance of such consolidated funds, and all other funds to the credit of
the tribe or placed to its credit thereafter, shall be distributed
per capita to the Indians entitled, "were left undisturbed by the
amendatory act of May 26, 1926, supra; consequently said sections
remain conclusive and exclusive in the absence of subsequent legislation
to the contrary as to who are entitled to share in the distribution of
the tribal funds and the expression "to the Indians entitled" can
refer to none other than those whose names appear on the final rolls provided
for in the act of 1920. Of course funds would thereafter
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OPINIONS OF THE SOLICITOR |
NOVEMBER 28, 1931 |
accrue and this fact is recognized in section 11. This section taken in connection with section 3 would itself seem to carry an explanation of the provision "to the Indians entitled," that is, after providing in section 3 which declares: "Such rolls when completed shall be deemed the final allotment rolls of the Crow Tribe, on which allotment of lands and the distribution of all tribal funds existing at such date shall be made," it was evidently realized that there would be accruals of funds thereafter, hence the provision in section 11-"and all other funds to the credit of the tribe or placed to its credit thereafter, shall be distributed per capita to the Indians entitled," which necessarily means the Indians appearing on the final rolls. It must be borne in mind that at the time of the act of 1920 not even the allotment of lands, much less the distribution of tribal funds to afterborn children was in contemplation. The act of May 26, 1926, as stated, left unchanged sections 3