The object of the Indian Depredation Act is to enable citizens
whose property has been taken or destroyed by Indians belonging to
any band, tribe or nation in amity with the United States to
recover a judgment for their value both against the United States
and the tribe to which the Indians belong, and which by the act is
made responsible for the acts of marauders whom it has failed to
hold in check. If the depredations have been committed by the tribe
or band itself, acting in hostility to the United States, it is an
act of war for which there can be no recovery under the act.
Where a company of Apache Indians who were dissatisfied with
their surroundings left their reservation under the leadership of
Victoria, to the number of two or three hundred, became hostile,
and roamed about in Old and New Mexico for about two years,
committing depredations and killing citizens, it was held that they
constituted a "band" within the meaning of the act, that they were
not in amity with the United States, and that neither the
government nor the tribe to which they originally belonged were
responsible for their depredations.
This was a petition by the surviving partner of the firm of E.
Montoya & Sons against the United States and the Mescalero
Apache Indians for the value of certain livestock taken in March,
1880, by certain of these Indians, known as Victoria's Band.
The Court of Claims made the finding of facts set forth in the
margin.
*
Page 180 U. S. 262
Upon these findings of fact, the court decided as a conclusion
of law that the petition be dismissed. 32 Ct.Cl. 349. Claimant
appealed.
Page 180 U. S. 263
MR. JUSTICE BROWN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The first section of the Act of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 851, c.
538, vests the Court of Claims with jurisdiction to inquire
into
Page 180 U. S. 264
and finally adjudicate:
"First. All claims for property of citizens of the United States
taken or destroyed by Indians belonging to any band, tribe, or
nation in amity with the United States, without just cause or
provocation on the part of the owner or agent in charge, and not
returned or paid for."
To sustain a claim under this section, it is incumbent upon the
claimant to prove that the Indians taking or destroying the
property belonged to a band, tribe, or nation in amity with the
United States. The object of the act is evidently to compensate
settlers for depredations committed by individual marauders
belonging to a body which is then at peace with the government.
Page 180 U. S. 265
If the depredation be committed by an organized company of man
constituting a band in itself, acting independently of any other
band or tribe, and carrying on hostilities against the United
States, such acts may amount to a war for the consequences of which
the government is not responsible under this act or upon general
principles of law.
United States v. Pacific Railroad,
120 U. S. 227,
120 U. S.
234.
The North American Indians do not, and never have, constituted
"nations" as that word is used by writers upon international law,
although in a great number of treaties they are designated as
"nations" as well as tribes. Indeed, in negotiating with the
Indians, the terms "nation," "tribe" and "band" are used almost
interchangeably. The word "nation" as ordinarily used presupposes
or implies an independence of any other sovereign power more or
less absolute, an organized government, recognized officials, a
system of laws, definite boundaries, and the power to enter into
negotiations with other nations. These characteristics the Indians
have possessed only in a limited degree, and when used in
connection with the Indians, especially in their original state, we
must apply to the word "nation" a definition which indicates little
more than a large tribe or a group of affiliated tribes possessing
a common government, language, or racial origin, and acting, for
the time being, in concert. Owing to the natural infirmities of the
Indian character, their fiery tempers, impatience of restraint,
their mutual jealousies and animosities, their nomadic habits, and
lack of mental training, they have as a rule shown a total want of
that cohesive force necessary to the making up of a nation in the
ordinary sense of the word. As they had no established laws, no
recognized method of choosing their sovereigns by inheritance or
election, no officers with defined powers, their governments in
their original state were nothing more than a temporary submission
to an intellectual or physical superior, who in some cases ruled
with absolute authority and in others was recognized only so long
as he was able to dominate the tribe by the qualities which
originally enabled him to secure their leadership. In short, the
word "nation" as applied to the uncivilized indians is so much of a
misnomer as to be little more than a compliment.
Page 180 U. S. 266
We are more concerned in this case with the meaning of the words
"tribe" and "band." By a "tribe" we understand a body of Indians of
the same or a similar race, united in a community under one
leadership or government and inhabiting a particular though
sometimes ill defined territory; by a "band," a company of Indians
not necessarily, though often, of the same race or tribe, but
united under the same leadership in a common design. While a "band"
does not imply the separate racial origin characteristic of a
tribe, of which it is usually an offshoot, it does imply a
leadership and a concert of action. How large the company must be
to constitute a "band" within the meaning of the act it is
unnecessary to decide. It may be doubtful whether it requires more
than independence of action, continuity of existence, a common
leadership, and concert of action.
Whether a collection of marauders shall be treated as a "band"
whose depredations are not covered by the act may depend not so
much upon the numbers of those engaged in the raid as upon the fact
whether their depredations are part of a hostile demonstration
against the government or settlers in general or are for the
purpose of individual plunder. If their hostile acts are directed
against the government or against all settlers with whom they come
in contact, it is evidence of an act of war. Somewhat the same
distinction is applicable here which is noticed by Hawkins in his
Pleas of the Crown, and other ancient writers upon criminal law, as
distinguishing a riot from a treasonable act of war. Thus, it is
said in Wharton on Criminal Law, section 1796, summing up the early
authorities (though never accepted as a definition of treason in
this country):
"That constructive levying of war, by the old English common
law, is where war is levied for the purpose of producing changes of
a public and general nature by an armed force, as where the object
is by force to obtain the repeal of a statute; to obtain the
redress of any public grievance, real or pretended; to throw down
all enclosures, pull down all bawdy houses, open all prisons, or
attempt any general work of destruction; to expel all strangers, or
to enhance the price of wages generally;"
but if these acts were directed against a particular individual,
they would amount to nothing more than an assault or riot.
Page 180 U. S. 267
While, as between the United States and other civilized nations,
an act of Congress is necessary to a formal declaration of war, no
such act is necessary to constitute a state of war with an Indian
tribe. In his concurring opinion in
Bas v.
Tingy, 4 Dall. 37, recognizing France as a public
enemy, Mr. Justice Washington recognized war as of two kinds:
"If it be declared in form, it is called solemn, and is one of
the perfect kind; because one whole nation is at war with another
whole nation, and all the members of the nation declaring war are
authorized to commit hostilities against all the members of the
other, in every place and under every circumstance. In such a war,
all the members act under a general authority, and all the rights
and consequences of war attach to their condition. But hostilities
may subsist between two nations more confined in its nature and
extent, being limited as to places, persons, and things, and this
is more properly termed imperfect war, because not solemn and
because those who are authorized to commit hostilities act under
special authority, and can go no farther than to the extent of
their commission. Still, however, it is public war, because it is
an external contention by force between some of the members of the
two nations, authorized by the legitimate powers."
Indian wars are of the latter class. We recall no instance where
Congress has made a formal declaration of war against an Indian
nation or tribe; but the fact that Indians are engaged in acts of
general hostility to settlers, especially if the government has
deemed it necessary to dispatch a military force for their
subjugation, is sufficient to constitute a state of war.
Marks
v. United States, 161 U. S. 297.
In determining the liability of the United States for the acts
of Indian marauders, the fifth and sixth sections of the Indian
Depredation Act should be considered as well as the first. By the
fifth section,
"the court shall determine in each case the value of the
property taken or destroyed at the time and place of the loss or
destruction, and, if possible, the tribe of Indians or other
persons by whom the wrong was committed, and shall render judgment
in favor of the claimant ant or claimants against the United
States, and against the tribe of Indians committing the wrong, when
such can be identified."
Of course, if the
Page 180 U. S. 268
tribe to whom the Indians belong cannot be ascertained, this
will not prevent a judgment against the United States, but if their
connection with a particular tribe can be established, judgment
shall also go against the tribe. By section six,
"the amount of any judgment so rendered against any tribe of
Indians shall be charged against the tribe by which, or by members
of which, the court shall find the depredation was committed, and
shall be deducted and paid"
from annuities or other funds due the tribe from the United
States, or from any appropriation for the benefit of the tribe.
It is not altogether easy to reconcile the language of these
sections, which seem to contemplate that the government may be
liable for depredations committed by a tribe, with that of section
1 under which the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims is limited to
the acts of "Indians belonging to any band, tribe, or nation, in
amity with the United States," but the main objects of sections 5
and 6 would seem to be to impose upon the tribes the duty of
holding their members in check or under control, and for a failure
so to do to fix upon the tribe the responsibility for the acts of
individual members acting in defiance of the authority of their
tribe or band, upon the same principle that, by sundry statutes in
England and in several of the United States, the hundred or the
municipality is made responsible in damages for the acts of
rioters. Like the English statutes too, many of the Indian treaties
provide that if the property be restored or the guilty members be
delivered up for punishment, no pecuniary indemnity shall be
required. On the other hand, if the marauders are so numerous and
well organized as to be able to defy the efforts of the tribe to
detain them, in other words, to make them a separate and
independent band, carrying on hostilities against the United
States, it would be obviously unjust to hold the tribe responsible
for their acts. It can hardly be supposed that Congress would
impose a liability upon tribes in amity with the United States for
the acts of an independent band, strong enough to defy the
authority of the tribe, although it would not be inequitable to
hold the tribe liable for individual members whom it was able, but
had failed, to control.
Gauged by these considerations, it is clear that the Court
of
Page 180 U. S. 269
Claims was justified in its ultimate finding that Victoria's
band was, at and long before the occurrence complained of,
"known and recognized as a band separate and distinct in its
organization and action from the several tribes, then at peace, to
which its members had formerly belonged, and that the band as thus
constituted was not in amity with the United States."
Conceding that the accuracy of this ultimate finding may be
reviewed by this Court by a reference to the special facts found as
a basis for such finding (
United States v. Pugh,
99 U. S. 265), in
our opinion, those facts amply support the finding.
It appears that, prior to 1876, the Chiricahua Apache Indians,
who numbered from three to five hundred warriors of a particularly
savage type, were living on a reservation of their own in Arizona,
and that during that year, the department determined to remove
these Indians and locate them upon another reservation, where they
could be more easily restrained from hostile acts. A part of them
resisted, and about four hundred, under the leadership of Victoria,
began roaming about Old and New Mexico, committing depredations and
killing citizens. These hostile demonstrations continued until
December, 1878, soon after which Victoria made an offer of
surrender on a condition that was not performed, and in the
following spring he again took the field, pursued by the military
forces into Arizona, and subsequently escaped into Mexico. Soon
thereafter he was indicted in New Mexico for murder and horse
stealing, when he went west and began marauding, destroying
property, and killing citizens, and so continued during the latter
part of the winter and early spring of 1880. The operations against
them continued until they were driven by the troops across the Rio
Grande River, where a severe engagement ensued and a number of
Indians, including a son of Victoria, were killed. The band appears
to have been of sufficient strength and consequence to have been
made the object of a military expedition, which operated upon both
sides of the Mexican line, and finally resulted in a battle in
Mexico in the autumn of 1880, where Victoria and most of his
followers were killed. The Indians constituting this band seem to
have belonged to different tribes of Apaches, and were about
two
Page 180 U. S. 270
hundred in number at the time this depredation was committed.
They were evidently carrying on hostile acts against the settlers
and military authorities of the United States, and the court
expressly finds that such acts were "without the consent of the
several tribes from which the members of the band came and to which
they had previously belonged;" that they were denominated in
various reports of military officers to the Secretary of War as
"Victoria's band," and under that name were pursued for two years
or more by the military authorities for their acts of war and
hostility against the United States, until driven out of the
country and destroyed. The property in question was stolen and
driven away or destroyed by certain Mescalero Apache Indians, who
were at that time allied with Victoria's band for the purpose of
hostility and was as aforesaid, and the band so constituted was not
in amity with the United States, although the Mescalero tribe,
which was then upon its reservation about one hundred miles distant
from the scene of the depredation, and to which the Mescaleros who
committed the depredation had belonged before they joined
Victoria's band, was in amity with the United States.
As it appears that the Mescaleros who committed the depredation
were a part of Victoria's band, operating with them, and that such
band was carrying on a war against the government as an independent
organization, we think they were the band -- the unit --
contemplated by the act, and not the Mescalero tribe then living in
peace upon their reservation near Fort Stanton, although the
particular marauders in question had belonged to that tribe before
they joined Victoria's band. If the Mescalero tribe were held
responsible for their acts, it would follow that every tribe
members of which allied themselves with Victoria and shared in his
acts of hostility would be pecuniarily liable for all damages
inflicted by a band over whom they could have no control. Such
consequences would be so inequitable we cannot suppose them to have
been contemplated by Congress.
The judgment of the Court of Claims is
Affirmed.
*
"
Finding of Facts"
"1. At the time of the depredation hereinafter found, Estanislao
Montoya, Desiderio Montoya, and Eutimio Montoya were partners,
doing business in Socorro County, New Mexico, under the name and
style of E. Montoya & Sons, and were at the time, and long
prior thereto, citizens of the United States, residing at San
Antonio, in said county and territory."
"Thereafter, and long prior to the passage of the Act of March
3, 1891, 26 Stat. 851, the said Estanislao and Desiderio Montoya
died, leaving the claimant herein surviving."
"2. On the 12th of March, 1880, the said firm of E. Montoya
& Sons were the owners of the horses, mules, and other
livestock described in the petition, then being herded and cared
for by their agents at a place called Nogal, about 8 miles west of
San Antonio, which were stolen by Indians in the manner set forth
in finding 3. Said stock was at the time and place reasonably worth
more than three thousand dollars ($3,000)."
"3. Prior to 1876, the Chiricahua Apache Indians were living on
what was known as the Chiricahua reservation, in southeastern
Arizona, and numbered from 300 to 500 warriors. They had been a
terror to the community and surroundings, and had met with success
in their engagements with the troops of the United States Army.
Report Commissioner Indian Affairs, 1876, p. 10."
"In 1876, an effort was made by the authorities having charge of
Indian affairs to remove said Indians and locate them on the San
Carlos reservation, where they could be more certainly restrained
from hostile acts, but they resisted, and the result was that only
322 Indians, of whom 42 were men under Chief Taza, were removed
thither. Of those remaining, 140 went to the Warm Springs agency in
New Mexico, and about 400, including Victoria, became hostile, and
roamed about in Old and New Mexico, committing depredations and
killing citizens. Report Secretary Interior, 1875, p. 711, and
ib., 1876, p. 4."
"Later, these Indians were aided in their acts of hostility by
Apache Indians from the Warm Springs agency (Report Secretary
Interior, 1877, p. 416), and from this time until December, 1878,
they continued their hostile acts."
"In February, 1879, Victoria, a Chiricahua, who had previously
rebelled against being placed on the San Carlos reservation, came
near the military post of Ojo Caliente with 22 followers and agreed
to surrender on condition that Nama's band, then at Mescalero, be
allowed to join him, but only a few of that band surrendered, and
in April following, Victoria, with his followers, escaped and went
to the San Mateo Mountains. Report Secretary Interior, 1879, p.
100."
"The military forces pursued him into Arizona, where he
recruited his forces from the members of his tribe then being held
as prisoners of war at the San Carlos reservation, and he
subsequently escaped into Old Mexico. Record of Engagements with
Hostile Indians, by General Sheridan, p. 84."
"On the 30th June following, Victoria, with 13 men, came into
the Mescalero reservation, where there were at the time a few Gila,
Mimbres, and Mogollen Apaches, known as Southern Apaches, and at
his request the families of those Indians (Chiricahuas) who had
been kept on the San Carlos reservation were sent for."
"Victoria was soon thereafter indicted in New Mexico for murder
and horse stealing, and he became fearful of arrest and conviction
therefor and suddenly left the reservation (in July), taking with
him those he had brought and also all the Southern Apaches on that
reservation. Report Secretary Interior, 1879, p. 100."
"They went west and began marauding, destroying property, and
killing citizens, and so continued during the latter part of winter
and early spring of 1880 within 40 miles of the Mescalero
reservation, Victoria in the meantime using his influence to induce
the Mescaleros to join his forces, and by April, 1880, some 200 to
250, of whom 50 or 60 were men, left their reservation and joined
him. Report Secretary of Interior, 1880, p. 251. They continued
their warfare until driven by the troops under Colonel Hatch,
United States Army, across the Rio Grande River into the San Andres
Mountains in April, 1880, where he had a severe fight with them,
and several of his men were wounded and a number of Indians,
including a son of Victoria, were killed. They finally retreated
into Mexico."
"Under the leadership of Victoria, they again crossed and
recrossed the line to and from the United States, but were driven
out twice by the forces under Colonel Grierson, United States Army,
and their forces diminished, until finally the few remaining were
driven by General Buell some time after October 1, 1880, into
Mexico, where Victoria and nearly all of his followers were killed.
Report Secretary of War, 1880, pp. 86 and 118."
"During all the period of hostilities as aforesaid, Victoria had
under him a minority of the Chiricahua tribe of Apache Indians. At
his solicitation, he was reenforced from time to time during said
period by a minority or the Indians from the Mescalero and Southern
Apache tribes; besides he had under him a number of unknown Indians
from Mexico, making in all about 200 Indians in his band at the
time of the depredation hereinafter found."
"These Indians were allied together under the name of Victoria's
band for the purpose of aiding Victoria and his followers in their
hostile and warlike acts against the citizens and the military
authorities of the United States."
"The alliance thus formed, as well as the hostile acts committed
by the band, were without the consent of the several tribes from
which the members of the band came and to which they had previously
belonged."
"From the reports referred to in the foregoing findings, and
also in the various reports of military officers and the Secretary
of War, embodied in the report of the latter officer for 1879 and
1880, it appears that the Indians under Victoria, from whatever
tribes, were recognized or referred to under the name of Victoria's
band, and under that name were operated against for two years or
more by the military authorities for their acts of war and
hostility against the United States, until driven out of the
country and destroyed as aforesaid."
"On the 12th of March, 1880, the property set forth in finding 2
was stolen and driven away or destroyed by the Mescalero Apache
Indians, who were at the time allied with Victoria's band for the
purpose of hostility and war as aforesaid, and that said band so
constituted was not at the time of said depredation in amity with
the United States."
"But the Mescalero tribe, then on their reservation near Fort
Stanton, about 100 miles distant from the scene of the depredation,
and to which the Mescaleros who committed the depredation had
belonged before they joined Victoria's band, was in amity with the
United States."
"Said property was taken without any just cause or provocation
on the part of the owners or their agents in charge, and has never
been returned or paid for in whole or in part."
"4. Upon the foregoing findings of fact, the court finds the
ultimate fact, so far as it is a question of fact, that the
depredation set forth in finding 3 was committed by Indians
belonging to a war party or hostile band, known as Victoria's band,
of Apache Indians, which was at and long before that time known and
recognized as a band, separate and distinct in its organization and
action from the several tribes, then at peace, to which its members
had formerly belonged, and that the band as thus constituted was
not in amity with the United States at the date of said
depredation."
"5. The claim which is the subject of this suit was presented to
the defendant Indians in council on or before June 8, 1880, by S.
A. Russell, agent for the Mescalero Apache Indians, under the
direction of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs."