Judges: Field
Filed Date: 3/1/1886
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/15/2024
delivered the opinion of the court.
This case comes before us on appeal from the Court of Claims. It was brought to determine the right of the petitioners, called the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Indians, to a proportionate part of two funds held by the United States in trust for the Cherokee Nation. One of the funds was created by the treaty with the Nation made December 29, 1835, at New Echota, in Georgia, commuting certain annuities into the sum of $214,000. The other arose from sales of certain lands of the Nation lying west of the Mississippi River.
The suit by the petitioners was authorized by an act of Congress, and it is brought against the Unitéd'States and the Cherokee Nation. 22 Stat j>82, oh. 141. The United States, however, have no interest in the controversy, as they hold the funds merely as trustee. They stand neutral, therefore, in the litigation, although as a matter of form they have filed an answer traversing the allegations of the petition.
The general ground upon which the petitioners proceed and seek a recovery is, that the Cherbkee Indians, both those resid-' ing east and those residing west of the Mississippi, formerly constituted one people and composed the Cherokee Nation; that bywarious treaty stipulations with the United States they became divided into two branches, known as the Eastern Cherokees and the "Western Cherokees; and that the petitioners' constitute ¿’portion of the former, and -as such are.entitled to a proportionate share of the funds which- the United States hold ih trust for the Nation.
■This claim is resisted upon the ground that the .two branches, into which it is admitted the Nation was once - divided, -subsequently became reunited, and have ever since constituted one nation, known as the Cherokee Nation, and .that as such it pos
To determine the merits of the respective claims and pretensions of the parties, it will be necessary to give some account of the different treaties between the Cherokees and the United States, and to refer to the several laws passed by Congress to carry the treaties into effect, and accomplish the removal.of , the Indians from their former home east of the Mississippi to their present country west of that river.
When that portion of North America which is now embraced 'within thq limits -of the United States east of the Mississippi was discovered, it was occupied by different tribes'or bands of Indians. These people were destitute of the primary arts of civilization, and with a-few exceptions had no permanent-buildings, occupying only huts and tents. Their lands were cultivated in small patches and generally by women. The men were chiefly engaged "in hunting and fishing. From the chase 'came their principal fdod,.and the skins of. animals were their principal clothing. The different' tribes roamed over large tracts and claimed a right to, the country as their territory and hunting grounds. Of these tribes, the Cherokee Indians constituted one. of the largest and most powerful. They claimed the principal part of the country now. composing the States of North and South Carolina, (Georgia, Alabama, and Tennessee. Their title was treated by. the governments established by England; and' the governments succeeding them, as merely usufructuary, affording protection against individual encroachment, but always subject to'the control and disposition of those governments, at least so far an to prevent, without their consent, its acquisition by others. Such, superior right rested upon the claim asserted by England of prior discovery of the country, and was respected 'by other European nations. There was no nation,, therefore^ to oppose this assertion of superior right to control the disposition of thfe lands,-and to acquire the title of the Indians, except the Indians thelns'elves; and by treaties with them from time to time their .title and interest were ceded to the United States.
On the 2d of July, 1791, another treaty was made with the-Cherokees, in which, they were described as the “Cherokee Nation.” 7 Stat. 39. Its representatives were designated aá the “ Chiefs and warriors of the Cherokee Nation of Indians,” and the first article declared that “ there shall be perpetual . peace and friendship between all the citizens of the United States of America and all the individuals composing the whole Cherokee Nation of Indians.” And.the chiefs and warriors, “for themselves and all parts of the Cherokee Nation,”, ac-. knowledged themselves and the Cherokee Nation to be-under the' protection of the United States and of no other sovereign. The treaty also -renewed the agreement, on the part of the Cherokees, that the United States should have the sole and ex-
The boundary of 'the hunting grounds was from time to time changed by subsequent treaties, and by each' succeeding one their extent was reduced; in Consideration of which a larger quantity of goods was promised to the Nation; and. the annuity was increased until, in the year 1805, it amounted to. $10,000. 7 Stat. 43, 62, 93. This annuity was regularly paid to the Cherokee Nation, as represented by. the Indians occupying territory east of the Mississippi River, until the treaty of July 8, 1811. 7 Stat. 156. That treaty originated from a division in opinion among the Cherokees as to their mode of- life, which existed when the first treaty with the United States was made, in'l785, and which had from that time increased. There were numerous settlements or towns within the territory allotted to the Indians. Those who occupied the upper towns, which were mostly in the State of North Carolina, desired to engage in the pursuits of agriculture and civilized life, whilst those who occupied the lower towns, in the valley of the Mississippi, desired to continue “ the hunter life,” and, owing to the scarcity of game where they lived, to remove across the Mississippi River to' vacant lands of the United States. As early as 1808 a deputation from the upper and lower towns, authorized by the Cherokee Nation, came to Washington to declare to the President their desires and inform him of the Impracticability of uniting the whole Nation in the pursuits of civilized' life, and to request the establishment of a division line between the two classes of towns'. The treaty of '■817, which was made with “the chiefs, head men, and warriors of the Cherokee Nation east of the Mississippi River, and the chiefs, head men, and warriors of the Cherokees on the Arkansas River,” recites the action of this deputation
■ The treaty recites that, relying 'upon these promises of the President, the Cherokees explored the country on the west side of the Mississippi, and made choice of the country on the Arkansas and White Rivers, and settled upon lands of the "United States to which no other tribe of Indians had any just claim, and that they had duly notified the President thereof, and of their desire for a full and complete ratification-of his promise. To that end, as notified by him, they had sent, their agents with full powers to execute a treaty, relinquishing to the United States their right, title and interest to all lands belonging to them as part of the Cherokee Nation, “which-they had left and which they were about to leave, proportioned to their numbers, including with those now on" the Arkansas those who were about to remove thither.” The treaty then proceeds to recite that, to carry into effect in good faith the promises of the President, and to promote a continuation of friendship with their brothers on the Arkansas River, and for that purpose.to malee an equal distribution of the annuities secured by the United States 'to the whole Cherokee1 Nation, its articles were agreed upon. These were, in substance, that the chiefs, head men, and warriors of the whole Cherokee Nation - ceded to the United States certain lands lying east of
On the 27th of February, 1819, another treaty was made with the Cherokee Nation, 7 Stat. 195, represented by its chiefs and head men. By it a further cession" of lands was made to the United States, and it was agreed that the annuity to the Nation '■ should be paid as follows: two-thirds' to the Cherokees east of the Mississippi, and one-third to the Cherokees west of that river. This apportionment was based upon an estimate, that those who had emigrated and those who were enrolled for emigration constituted one-third of the Nation, instead of upon a census to be taken as mentioned in the treaty of 1817. The annuity thus_divided was regularly paid as stipulated until commuted by the treaty of December, 1835, of which we shall presently speak.
On the 6th of May, 1828, a treaty" was made with the chiefs and head men of the Cherokee Nation of Indians west of the Mississippi.,. 7 Stat. 311. This was the first time the Cherokees west of the river were recognized ás so far a distinct and sepa
From this time until the treaty of New Echbta, concluded December 29, 1835, 7 Stat. 478, the Cherokees were divided into two branches, so far constituting distinct political bodies that the United States had separate negotiations with each; and'on the 14th February, 1833, by a treaty with the chiefs
In the' meantime — from the treaty of 1828 until the treaty of New Echota — the Cherokees remaining east of the Mississippi were subjected'to harassing and vexatious legislation from the-States within, which they resided. The United States had, as early as 1802, agreed with Georgia, in consideration of her cession of western lands, to extinguish the Indian title to lands within the State. North Carolina claimed that the United States were under a' similar obligation to extinguish the Indian title to lands within her limits, in consideration of a like cession of western lands, although there was ho positive agreement to that effect. And with the extinguishment of their title, it was expected that the Indians themselves would be removed to territory beyond the bounds of those States. At the time the treaty of 1828 was made, a great deal of impatience had been exhibited by the people of those States at the little progress made in the extinguishment of the Indian title, and at the continued presence of the Indians. Severe and oppressive laws were passed by Georgia in order to compel them to leave; and, though less severity was practised in North Carolina towards the Indians in that State, an equally pronounced desire for their departure was expressed. Angry and violent disputes between them and the white people in both States, but more particularly in Georgia, were of frequent occurrence. See case of Cherokee Nation v. State of Georgia, as reported in a separate volume by Richard Peters in 1831; also a1 document called “ The Public Domain,” prepared by -the Public Land Commission, and published as Ex. Doc. 47 of H. of R., 46th Cong., 3d Session;-and Doc. No. 71 of H. of R., 23d Cong.; 1st Session.
The treaty of New Echota was made to put an end to those troubles and to secure the' reunion of the divided nation. It recites as-motives to it.s negotiation, among other things, that the Cherokees were anxious to make some arrangement with the Government of the United States, whereby the difficulties
The treaty also recited the cession to the Cherokee Nation by previous treaties of the -7,000,000 acres,' and the guarantee of a perpetual outlet west of these lands, and a free and unmolested use. of all the country, so far as the sovereignty of the United States and their right to the .soil extended; and also that it was apprehended by the Cherokees that in this cession there was not a sufficient quantity of - land for the accommodation of the whole nation, and, therefore; the United States agreed, in consideration of $500,000, to convey by patent to the Indians and their descendants an additional tract of 800,000 acres,-and that the land previously ceded, including the outlet, should be embraced in the same patent. (Art. 2.) They also agreed to remove the Indians to their new home, and to subsist them one year after their arrival there, except that such persons and families, as in the opinion of “ the emigrating agent ” were capable of subsisting and removing themselves, should be permitted to do so, and should be allowed for all claims for the same $20 for each member of their families; and, in lieu of ■ their one year’s rations, should be paid the sum of $33.33, if they preferred it. (Art. 8.)
It was also agreed that, after deducting the amount which should be actually expended for the payment for improvements,
■ By the eleventh article, “ the Cherokees, believing it will be for the interest of their people to have all their funds and annuities under their own direction and future disposition,” agreed to commute their permanent annuity of $10,000 for the sum of $214,000, the same'to be invested by the President of the United States as part of' the general fund of the nation.
In the following year .Congress made the requisite appropriation for the commutation, and, according to the tenth article of the treaty, the money was invested “ for the benefit of the whole Cherokee Nation,” which had removed, or should subsequently remove, to the-lands, assigned to it west of the Mississippi. This is one of the funds of which the petitioners, claim ■ a part, in proportion to; their numbers as compared with the citizens of the Cherokee Nation living west of the Mississippi on the territory ceded. The provisions of the treaty as to the ■ investment, custody and distribution’ of the income of this fund, and all other funds belonging to the nation, remained in force until the treaty of July 19, 1866. The interest was paid over annually to the agents of the Cherokee Nation authorized to receive the same, and was .subject to application by its council to such purposes as they deemed best for the general interests of,. their people. The treaty of 1866,.Article 23,14 Stat. 799, 805,'
Immediately after the ratification ’of the treaty of 1835 • measures were taken by the government to secure its execution, and commissioners were appointed to adjust claims for improvements and to facilitate the emigration of the 'Indians. But emigration proceeded slowly. Great reluctance to go was manifested by large- numbers, and at last it became necessary to make a display of force to compel their removal. Major-General Scott was sent to the country-with troops, and instructed to remove all the Indians except such as were entitled to remain and become citizens *under the twelfth- article of-the treaty. The number that remained'Was between eleven and twelve hundred. They were without organization or a collective name:' They ceased- to be part of the Cherokee Nation, and henceforth they became citizens of and were subject to the laws.of the State in which they resided. The name of the Eastern Cherokees accompanied those who emigrated^ to distinguish them from those who had preceded them and who were called old .settlers.
After the reunion of the Cherokee people on their lands west of the Mississippi, resulting from the execution of the treaty, and on the 12th of July, 1839, the following act of union between the Eastern and Western Cherokees was' •adopted:
“ Act of Union between the Eastern cmd Western Gherolcees.
“ Whereas our fathers have existed as a separate and distinct nation, in the possession and exercise of the essential and appropriate attributes of sovereignty, from a period' extending*304 into antiquity, beyond the records and memory of man; and whereas, these attributes, with the rights and franchises which-they involve, remain still in full force and virtue, as do also the national and social relation of the Cherokee people to each other and to the body politic, excepting in those particulars Avhich have grown out of the provisions-of the treaties of 1817 and 1819 between the TJnited States and the Cherokee Nation, under which a portion of our people removed to this country and became a separate community (but the force of circumstances have recently compelled the body of the Eastern Cherokees to remove to this country, thus bringing together again the two branches of the ancient Cherokee family), it has become essential to the general welfare that a union should be formed and a system of government matured adapted to their present condition, and providing equally for the protection of each individual in the enjoyment of all his -rights :
“ Therefore we, the people composing the Eastern and “Western Cherokee Nation, in national convention assembled, by virtue of our original unalienable rights, do hereby solemnly and mutually agree to form ourselves into one body politic, under the style and title of the Cherokee Nation.
“ In view of the union' now formed, and for the purpose of making satisfactory adjustment of all unsettled business which may have arisen before the consummation of this union, we agree that such business shall be settled according to the provisions of the respective laws under which it originated, and the courts of the Cherokee Nation shall be governed in their decisions accordingly. Also, that the delegation authorized by the Eastern Cherokees to make arrangements with Major-General Scott for their removal to this country shall continue in charge of that business, with their present powers, until it shall be finally closed; and, also, that all rights and titles to public Cherokee lands on the east or west of the River Missis- - sippi, with all other public interests which may have vested in either branch of the Cherokee family, whether inherited from our fathers or derived from any other source, shall henceforward-vest entire and Unimpaired in the Cherokee Nation as constituted by this union.
*305 “Given under our bands, at Illinois camp grounds, this twelfth day of July, 1838.
“ By order of the national convention.
“ GEORGE LOWRY,
“ President of the Eastern Oherokees.
his
“ GEORGE x GUESS,
mark.
“ President of the Western Oherokees.”
On the 6th of Septémber following they adopted a constitution of government, in which they recited that the Eastern and Western Oherokees had become reunited in one body politic, under the style and title of the Cherokee Nation. The second clause of its first article is as follows :
“ The lands of the Cherokee Nation shall remain common property; but the improvements made thereon, and in the possession of the citizens of the nation,t^re the exclusive and indefeasible property of the citizens respectively. who made, or may rightfully be in possession of, them: Provided, that the citizens of the nation, possessing exclusive and. indefeasible right to their improvements, as expressed in this article, shall possess no right or power to dispose of their improvements in any manner whatever to the United States, individual States, or to individual citizens thereof; and that whenever any citizen shall remove with his effects out of the limit of this nation and become a citizen of any other government, all his rights and privileges as a citizen of this nation shall cease : Provided, nevertheless, that the national council shall have power to readmit by law to all the rights of citizenship any such person or persons who may at any time desire to return to the nation, on memorializing the national council for such readmission.”
But notwithstanding this declared reunion of the divided Oherokees, there was much bitter feeling between the old settlers and the new-comers, leading to violent contests, and causing, in many instances, great loss of property and life. The new-comers, being the more numerous, claimed to control the government of the coufitry, and endeavored to compel the old
It declared that all difficulties and differences existing between the several parties of the Cherokee Nation were settled arid adjusted, and that they should, as far as possible, be for
The treaty also declared that the lands occupied by the Cherokee Nation should be secured to the. whole Cherokee people for their common use and benefit, and that a patent should be issued for the same, including the eight hundred thousand acres purchased, together with an outlet west, thus recognizing that all the lands ceded by the United States for the benefit of the Cherokees west of the Mississippi belonged to the entire Nation, and not to any of the factions into which the Nation was divided. The treaty also made provision for the adjustment and payment of the claims of different parties. The 9th Article is as follows:
“ The United States agree to make a fair and just settlement of all moneys due to the Cherokees and subject to the per capita division under the treaty of 29th December, 1835, which said settlement shall exhibit all money properly expended un-' der said treaty, and shall embrace all sums paid for improvements, ferries, spoliations, removal, and subsistence and commutation therefor, debts and claims upon' the Cherokee Nation of Indians, for the additional quantity of land ceded to said nation; and the several sums provided in the several articles of the treaty to be invested as the general funds of the nation; and also all sums which may be hereafter properly allowed and paid under the provisions of the treaty of 1835. The aggregate of which said several sums shall be deducted from the sum of six million six hundred and forty-seven thousand and sixty-seven dollars, and the balance thus found to be due shall be paid over per capita in equal amounts to all those individuals, heads of families, or their legal representatives, entitled*308 to receive the sam'e under the treaty of 1835 and the supplement of 1836, being all those Cherokees residing east at the date of said treaty and the supplement thereto.”
By the treaty of July 19, 1866, 14 Stat. 799, provision was made for the settlement of friendly Indians on certain unoccupied lands of the Cherokees west of the Mississippi, and for the sale of their interest, and also for the sale of other lands belonging to them in the State of Kansas, and the investment of the proceeds in registered stocks of the United States for the benefit of the Cherokee Nation. Under it, and pursuant to other laws, sales were made of the lands mentioned, and also of other lands west of the Mississippi ceded to the Cherokees under the different treaties, to which we have referred, and the proceeds have been duly invested, as required by article twenty-third of the treaty. The investment constitutes one of the funds of which the petitioners seek a proportionate part.
Their claim, however, rests upon no solid foundation. The lands from the sales of which the proceeds were derived belonged to the Cherokee Nation as a political body, and not to its individual members. They were held, it is true, for the common benefit of all the Cherokees, but that does not mean that each member had such an interest, as a tenant in common, that he could claim a pro rata proportion of the proceeds of sales made of any part of them. He had a right to use parcels of the lands thus held by the Nation, subject to such rules as. its governing authority might prescribe; but that right neither prevented nor qualified the legal power of that authority to cede the lands and the title of the Nation to the United'States. Our government, by its treaties with the Cherokees, recognized them as a distinct political community, and so far independent as to justify and require negotiations with them in that character. Their treaties of cession must, therefore, be held not only to convey the common property of the Nation, but to 41-vest the interest therein of each of its members. Such was substantially the language, and such the decision of the Attorney General of the United States in a communication made to the President in 1845, with reference to the treaty of New Eohota. “ The Executive of the United States,” he said, “ must, there
Whatever rights, therefore, the Cherokees in North Carolina, who refused to join their countrymen in the removal to the lands ceded to them west of the Mississippi, can claim in the funds arising from sales of portions of such lands, or in the fund created by a commutation of the annuities granted upon cessions of. the lands of the Cherokee Nation, must depend entirely upon the treaties out of'which those funds originated. They have as yet received nothing from either of them, and they can claim nothing by virtue of the fact that the lands of the Nation, which its authorities ceded to the United States, were held for the common benefit of all the Cherokees. All public property of a nation is supposed to be held for the common benefit of its people; their individual interest is not separable from that of the Nation.
The Cherokees in North Carolina dissolved their connection with their Nation when they refused to accompany the body of it on its removal, and they have had no separate political organization since. Whatever union they have had among themselves has been merely a social or business one. It was formed in 1868, at the suggestion of an officer of the Indian office, for the purpose of enabling them to transact business with the Government with greater convenience. Although its articles are drawn in the form of a constitution for a separate civil government, they have never been recognized as a separate Nation by the United States; no treaty has been made with them; they can pass no laws; they are citizens of that State and bound by its laws. As well observed by the Court
Nor is the band, organized as it now is, the successor of any organization recognized by any treaty or law of the United States. Individual Indians who refused to remove west, and preferred to remain and become citizens of the States in which they resided, were promised certain moneys, but there is no evidence that the petitioners have succeeded to any of their rights. ' The original claimants have probably all died, for fifty years have elapsed since the treaty of 1835 was made, and no transfer from them or their legal representatives is shown. But assuming that the petitioners properly represent all rightful demands of the Cherokees living in North Carolina when the treaty was made, what were those demands ? As designated by articles twelve and fifteen of the treaty, these Cherokees were to receive “ their due portion of all the personal benefits accruing under the treaty, for their claims, improvements, and per capita.” The term “ claims ” had reference to demands for spoliations' of their property which existed prior to the treaty. The improvements were those made on the property ceded. By per capita was meant the proportionate amount, given to each Cherokee east not choosing to emigrate, of the money received on the cession of the lands east of the Mississippi, after deducting certain expenditures mentioned in article, fifteen. "Whatever may have remained for the per capita distribution, of the $5,000,000 received forvthe lands after the deductions mentioned, it is plain that it constituted no portion of the moneys that formed the fund of which the petitioners seek by this suit a proportionate part. By the treaty of 1846 certain sums were allowed in addition to the $5,000,000 specified in the treaty of 1835, and from the whole amount certain items, other than those three designated, were to be deducted, and the balance was to be paid over per capita in equal amounts to all the individuals, heads of families, or their legal representatives entitled to receive it under that treaty. But this change in no respect affects the case.
The per capita money and removal and subsistence money - had not been paid when the treaty of 1846 was made, but the Court of Claims finds that since then they have been paid. The claim now presented by the Cherokees of North Carolina to a share of the commuted, annuity fund of $214,000, and of the' fund created by sales of lands west .of- the Mississippi ceded to the Cherokee Nation, resting, as it does, upon the designation in the treaties of the lands originally possessed by the Cherokees.and ceded to the United States, or subsequently acquired by them from the United States, as “ the common property of the nation,” or as held for the “common use and benefit” of the Cherokee people, has no substantial foundation. If Indians in that State, or in any other State eást of the Mississippi,' wish to enjoy the benefits of the common property of the Cherokee. Nation, in whatever form it may exist, they must, as held ■ by the Court of Claims, comply with "the constitution and laws of the Cherokee Nation and be readmitted to citizenship ak there provided. They cannot live out of its Territory, evade the obligations and burdens of citizenship; and at the same time ..enjoy the benefits of the funds'and common property of the Nation. Those funds and that property were dedicated by the constitution of the Cherokees, and were intended by the treaties with the United States, for the benefit of the united Nation,