The provision in the Treaty of June 15, 1838, with the New York
Indians, that the United States will set apart as a permanent home
for them the tract therein described in what afterwards became the
State of Kansas, was intended to invest a present legal title
thereto in the Indians, which title has not been forfeited and has
not been reinvested in the United States, and the Indians are not
estopped from claiming the benefit of such reservation.
It appears by the records of the proceedings of the Senate that
several amendments were there made to said treaty, including a new
article; that the ratification was made subject to a proviso, the
text of which is stated in the opinion of the Court, and that in
the official publication of the treaty, and in the President's
proclamation announcing it, all the amendments except said proviso
were published as part of the treaty, and it was certified that
"the treaty, as so amended, is word for word as follows," omitting
the proviso.
Held that it is difficult to see how the
proviso can be regarded as part of the treaty, or as limiting at
all the terms of the grant.
This was a petition by the Indians who were parties to the
Treaty of Buffalo Creek, New York, on January 15, 1838, 7 Stat.
550, to enforce an alleged liability of the United States for
Page 170 U. S. 2
the value of certain lands in Kansas set apart for these Indians
and subsequently sold by the United States, as well as for certain
amounts of money agreed to be paid upon their removal.
These claims were referred, under the Act of March 3, 1883,
known as the "Bowman Act," to the Court of Claims. That court
reported its findings to the Senate January 16, 1892, and
thereupon, on January 28, 1893, Congress passed an act to authorize
the Court of Claims to hear and determine these claims and to enter
up judgment as if it had original jurisdiction of the case, without
regard to the statute of limitations. There was a further provision
that from any judgment rendered by that court either party might
appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States.
The petition, which was filed on February 10, 1893, set forth,
as the substance of the treaty that the claimants ceded and
relinquished to the United States all their right, title, and
interest in and to certain lands of the claimants at Green Bay,
State of Wisconsin, and in consideration of such cession and
relinquishment, the United States, in and by the said treaty,
agreed and guarantied as follows:
First. To set aside as a permanent home for all of the claimants
a certain tract of country west of the Mississippi River, described
by metes and bounds, and to include 1,824,000 acres of land, the
same to be divided among the different tribes, nations, or bands of
the claimants in severalty, according to the number of individuals
in each tribe, as set forth in a certain schedule annexed to the
said treaty, and designated as "Schedule A," upon condition that
such of the claimants as should not accept, and agree to remove to
the country set apart for them within five years, or such other
time as the President might from time to time appoint, should
forfeit to the United States all interest to the lands so set
apart.
Secondly. The United States agreed to protect and defend the
claimants in the peaceable possession and enjoyment of their new
homes, and to secure their right to establish their own government,
subject to the legislation of Congress respecting trade and
intercourse with the Indians.
Page 170 U. S. 3
Thirdly. The United States agreed that the lands secured to the
claimants by the treaty should never be included in any state or
territory of the Union.
Fourthly. The United States agreed to pay to the several tribes
or nations of the claimants, hereinafter mentioned, on their
removal West, the following sums, respectively, namely: to the St.
Regis tribe, $5.000; to the Seneca nation, the income annually of
$100,000, being part of the money due said nation for lands sold by
them in New York, and which sum they authorized to be paid to the
United States; to the Cayugas, $2,500 in cash, and the annual
income of $2,500; to the Onondagas, $2,000 in cash, and the annual
income of $2,500; to the Oneidas, $6,000 in cash, and to the
Tuscaroras, $3,000.
Fifthly. The United States agreed to appropriate the sum of
$400,000, to be applied from time to time by the President of the
United States for the following purposes, namely, to aid the
claimants in removing to their new homes, and supporting themselves
the first year after their removal; to encourage and assist them in
being taught to cultivate their lands; to aid them in erecting
mills and other necessary houses; to aid them in purchasing
domestic animals and farming utensils, and in acquiring a knowledge
of the mechanic arts.
By a supplemental article, the St. Regis Indians were allowed to
remove to the said country if they so desired, but were exempted
from obligation so to do.
The Treaty of Buffalo Creek, having been duly assented to by all
the parties thereto, was afterwards, on, to-wit, the 4th day of
April, A.D. 1840, duly proclaimed, and, certain disputes thereunder
having arisen, it was afterwards modified in some particulars not
having reference to the matter of this claim, and as so modified
was again proclaimed, on, to-wit, the 26th day of August, 1842.
The petition further alleged that at the time of the making
Page 170 U. S. 4
of the Treaty of Buffalo Creek aforesaid, and for many years
prior thereto, the claimants owned and occupied valuable tracts of
land in the State of New York, and had improved and cultivated the
same and resided thereon, and from the products thereof chiefly
sustained themselves.
That the President of the United States never prescribed any
time for the removal of the claimants, or any of them, to the
lands, or any of them, set apart by the Treaty of Buffalo Creek,
and no provision of any kind was ever made for the actual removal
of more than about two hundred and sixty individuals of the
claimant tribes, as contemplated by the said treaty, and of this
number only thirty-two ever received patents or certificates of
allotment of any of the lands mentioned in the first article of the
said treaty, and the land allotted to those thirty-two was at the
rate of 320 acres each, or 10,240 acres in all.
That after the conclusion of the said Treaty of Buffalo Creek,
the United States surveyed and made part of the public domain the
lands at Green Bay ceded by the claimants, and sold or otherwise
disposed of and conveyed the same, and received the consideration
therefor.
That the lands west of the Mississippi River secured to the
claimants by the said Treaty of Buffalo Creek were set apart by the
United States and designated upon the land maps thereof as the "New
York Indian Reservation," and so remained until in or about the
year A.D. 1860, at which time the United States surveyed, and made
part of the public domain the lands aforesaid, and the same were
sold or otherwise disposed of by the United States, which received
the entire consideration therefor, and the said lands thereafter
were, and now are, included within the territorial limits of the
State of Kansas. The said lands at the time the same were so
appropriated by the United States were of great value, to-wit, of
the value of $1.25 per acre and upwards.
That the action of the United States in appropriating the said
lands as aforesaid was in pursuance of the proclamation of the
President, of date December 3 and 17, 1860, and grew
Page 170 U. S. 5
out of an order of the Secretary of the Interior of the 21st day
of March, A.D. 1859, and between the said last-mentioned date and
the proclamation of the said lands aforesaid, the claimants
employed counsel to protect and prosecute their claims in the
premises, and asserted that the United States had seized upon the
said lands contrary to the obligations of the said treaty, and
would not permit the said claimants to occupy the same or make any
disposition thereof, and the claimants have steadily since asserted
said claim in the premises.
That of the sum of $400,000, agreed by the Treaty of Buffalo
Creek to be appropriated by the United States for the purposes
aforesaid, only the sum of $20,477.50 was ever so appropriated,
except as hereinafter stated, and of this sum only $9,464.08 was
actually expended.
The petition further alleged that the Tonawanda band had been
paid $256,000 for their interest in the land, that settlement had
also been had with the Senecas, and that a special act had been
passed, authorizing the Court of Claims to find the facts and enter
up judgment, without interest, and that the statute of limitations
should not be pleaded as a bar to any recovery.
The petition concluded with a demand for a judgment for the
value of the lands, and for the amounts that were to be paid in
cash.
The Court of Claims found the facts stated in the margin,
*
Page 170 U. S. 6
together with others which are not deemed material to the
consideration of the case, and also found, as a conclusion of law
from these facts, that the petition should be dismissed, whereupon
the claimants appealed to this Court.
Page 170 U. S. 8
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
Page 170 U. S. 9
The facts in this case are somewhat complicated, but the real
question involved is whether the cessions of the Kansas lands to
these Indians ever took complete effect, or whether the failure, or
rather the refusal, of the Indians to remove to
Page 170 U. S. 10
the lands set apart for them within five years worked,
ipso
facto, under the third article of the treaty, a forfeiture of
their interest.
1. So far as concerns the legal aspects of the case, it is
Page 170 U. S. 11
unnecessary to inquire whether the government received from the
Indians an adequate consideration for its reservation to them of
the lands in Kansas. The findings upon this point are, in
substance, that some of the New York Indians, between
Page 170 U. S. 12
1810 and 1816, with the permission of the President, and with
some actual aid from the government in making explorations, bought
of the Menominee and Winnebago nations all their right, title, and
claim to about 500,000 acres of land in Wisconsin,
Page 170 U. S. 13
in consideration of $2,000, chiefly in goods. This purchase was
made for the benefit of the Six Nations, and the St. Regis,
Stockbridge, and Munsee tribes.
Under a similar permission given by the Secretary of War,
Page 170 U. S. 14
and on September 23, 1822, the Menominees, in consideration of
$3,000 in goods, made a similar cession of another tract,
containing about 5,000,000 acres, to the Stockbridge, Oneida,
Tuscarora, St. Regis, and Munsee nations. Both of these cessions
were approved by the President. Thereafter, some of the New York
Indians removed to and took possession of the lands in
Wisconsin.
It seems, however, that the Menominees were dissatisfied with
and repudiated the arrangement, and thereupon entered into two
treaties with the United States, by the first of which (August 11,
1827, 7 Stat. 303) they agreed to refer the matter to the
President, and by the second of which (February 8, 1831, 7 Stat.
342) protesting that they were under no obligations to recognize
any claim of the New York Indians to any portion of their country.
They agreed to set apart, as a home for the several tribes of the
New York Indians, about 500,000 acres of land, for which the United
States agreed to pay them $20,000, to be applied to their use. By
these treaties, a large quantity of other lands was also ceded by
the Menominees directly to the United States, three townships of
which were set aside for the Stockbridges, Munsees, and
Brothertowns.
It sufficiently appears from this statement that the Indians
were possessed of some sort of title or interest in a large
quantity of lands in Wisconsin, which the government was desirous
of acquiring, and for which it was willing to make a large cession
in the then unnamed, almost unknown, and wholly unsettled territory
which was subsequently admitted to the the Union as the State of
Kansas. The consideration was evidently treated as a valuable one,
and whether adequate or not, would have been sufficient to support
a deed between private
Page 170 U. S. 15
parties. Probably, however, the main inducement to the cession
was the agreement of the Indians to remove beyond the Mississippi,
and whether the agreement of the government to set apart for them a
permanent home in this territory was supported by any other
consideration which would be deemed a valuable one between private
parties is wholly immaterial, so far as the treaty obligations of
the government are concerned.
2. The first and one of the most important questions in the case
turns upon the nature of the title acquired by the Indians under
the treaty. Was it a grant
in praesenti, or merely an
agreement to set apart for the Indians at some future time the
lands in question, provided that they would remove thither within
the five years fixed by the third article of the treaty?
By the first article,
"the several tribes of New York Indians . . .
hereby cede
and relinquish to the United States all their right, title,
and interest to the lands secured to them at Green Bay,"
and, by the second article, "in consideration of the above
cession and relinquishment . . . the United States
agree to set
apart" a tract of country, containing 1,824,000 acres of land,
described by metes and bounds,
"as a permanent home for all the New York Indians, . . . to have
and to hold the same in fee simple to the said tribes or nations of
Indians, by patent from the President of the United States, issued
in conformity with the provisions of the third section"
of the Act of May 28, 1830,
"with full power and authority in the said Indians to divide
said lands among the different tribes, nations, or bands in
severalty, with the right to sell and convey to and from each
other."
By the third article,
"such of the tribes of the New York Indians as do not accept and
agree to remove to the country set apart for their new homes within
five years . . . shall forfeit all interest in the lands so set
apart to the United States."
The proper construction to be placed upon similar clause was the
subject of consideration by this Court in several cases before the
railroad land grant cases, and the conclusion reached that, if from
all the language of the statute or treaty
Page 170 U. S. 16
it was apparent that Congress intended to convey an immediate
interest, it will be construed as a grant
in
praesenti.
In the case of
Rutherford v.
Greene, 2 Wheat. 196, the State of North Carolina
passed an act in 1782 "for the relief of the officers and soldiers
in the Continental line," and in the fifth section enacted that
25,000 acres of land
"shall be allotted for, and given to, Major-General Nathaniel
Greene, his heirs or assigns, within the bounds of the land
reserved for the use of the army, to be laid off by the aforesaid
commissioners,"
and a further section (seventh) provided that the commissioners
should "grant certificates to such persons as shall appear to them
to have a right to the same." It was contended on the part of the
appellant that these words gave nothing; that they were in the
future, and not in the present, tense, and indicated an intention
to give in future, but created no present obligation on the state
nor present interest in General Greene. But it was held that, as
the act was to be performed in future, the words directing it were
necessarily in the future tense, and that although the land was
undefined, the survey afterwards made in pursuance of the act gave
precision to the title, and attached it to the land surveyed.
In reply to the argument that to make this an operative gift,
the words "are hereby given" should have been used, Mr. Chief
Justice Marshall observed:
"Were it even true that these words would make the gift more
explicit, which is not admitted, it surely cannot be necessary now
to say that the validity of a legislative act depends in no degree
on its containing the technical terms used in a conveyance. Nothing
can be more apparent than the intention of the legislature to order
their commissioners to make the allotment and to give the land,
when allotted, to General Greene."
This case was followed in
United States v.
Brooks, 10 How. 442, in which a treaty with the
Caddo Indians provided that certain persons
"
shall have their right to the said four leagues of
land reserved for them, and their heirs and assigns forever. The
said lands to be taken out of the lands ceded to the United States
by the said Caddo nation of Indians, as expressed in the treaty to
which these articles are supplementary,
Page 170 U. S. 17
and the four leagues of land
shall be laid off,"
etc. It was held that these words gave to the reservees a fee
simple to all rights which the Caddoes had in those lands, as fully
as any patent from the government could make one.
Fremont v. United
States, 17 How. 542, was a case of a Mexican grant
of a tract of land known as "Las Mariposas," within certain
undefined boundaries. The grant was of ten square leagues, subject
to certain conditions, and was to be made definite by a future
survey. The grant purported to convey a present and immediate
interest, in consideration of previous public services, and it was
decided to be
in praesenti, upon the authority of
Rutherford v.
Greene, 2 Wheat. 196, that the conditions were
conditions subsequent, but that noncompliance with them did not
amount to a forfeiture of the grant. Two members of the Court
dissented, being of opinion that the case was controlled by those
of
United States v.
Boisdere, 11 How. 63,
52 U. S. 96,
Glenn v. United
States, 13 How. 250,
54 U. S. 259,
and
Vilemont v. United
States, 13 How. 261.
In the cases arising under the railroad land grants of which
Schulenberg v.
Harriman, 21 Wall. 44, is a leading one, the
language of the granting clause was in the present tense,
"
there be, and hereby is, granted," etc., and it has
always been held that these grants were
in praesenti,
although the lands could not be identified until the map of the
definite location of the road was filed, when the title, which was
previously imperfect, acquired precision, and became attached to
the land. The doctrine of this case has been affirmed so many times
that the question is no longer open to argument here.
Lessieur v.
Price, 12 How. 59;
Leavenworth, Lawrence
&c. Railroad v. United States, 92 U. S.
733;
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co. v.
Kansas Pacific Railway, 97 U. S. 491;
Railway Company v. Alling, 99 U. S.
463,
99 U. S. 475;
St. Paul & Pacific Railroad v. Northern Pacific
Railroad, 139 U. S. 1;
Deseret Salt Company v. Tarpey, 142 U.
S. 241.
The same doctrine has also been applied to grants of swamp and
overflowed lands by the Acts of September 28, 1850, and June 10,
1852.
Railroad Company v.
Smith, 9 Wall. 95;
Wright v. Roseberry,
121 U. S. 488.
Page 170 U. S. 18
One or two cases which apparently hold a contrary doctrine are
readily reconcilable. That of
Heydenfeldt v. Daney Gold &
Silver Mining Co., 93 U. S. 634, arose
under the school land grant contained in the Act of March 21, 1864,
enabling the people of Nevada to form a state government. 13 Stat.
30. The seventh section of the act provided "that sections numbered
16 and 36 in every township . . .
shall be, and are hereby,
granted to said state." These words were held, under the
peculiar language of the act, not to constitute a grant
in
praesenti, but an inchoate and incomplete grant until the
premises were surveyed by the United States. and the survey
properly approved. "We do not seek," said the Court,
"to depart from this sound rule [in
Schulenberg v.
Harriman]; but in this instance, words of qualification
restrict the operation of those of present grant. . . . A grant,
operating at once, and attaching prior to the surveys by the United
States, would deprive Congress of the power of disposing of any
part of the lands in Nevada until they were segregated from those
granted. . . . Until the status of the lands was fixed by a survey
and they were capable of identification, Congress reserved absolute
power over them."
In
Hall v. Russell, 101 U. S. 503, the
language of the grant was "that
there shall be, and hereby
is, granted to every white settler or occupant of the public
lands," and it was held that, as the land was not identified and
the grantee was not named, there could not be a present grant.
"There cannot be a grant unless there is a grantee, and
consequently there cannot be a present grant unless there is a
present grantee. If, then, the law making the grant indicates a
future grantee, and not a present one, the grant will take effect
in the future, and not presently. In all the cases in which we have
given these words the effect of an immediate and present transfer,
it will be found that the law has designated a grantee qualified to
take, according to the terms of the law, and actually in existence
at the time."
In the case of
Rice v. Railroad
Co., 1 Black 358, the granting clause of the act
was in the present tense, but there was a further clause expressly
declaring that no title should vest nor
Page 170 U. S. 19
any patent issue till certain portions of the road had been
completed.
From this summary of cases it is evident that the language of
the granting clause is not conclusive, but the intent of Congress
must be gathered from the whole scope of the instrument, and the
facts to which it was intended to apply. Applying the principle of
the cases above cited to the one under consideration, we are of the
opinion that the grant in question was intended to invest a present
legal title in the Indians, for the following reasons:
First. There is no doubt that the cession by the Indians of
their interest in the Wisconsin lands, in the first article of the
treaty, was an absolute, unconditional, and immediate grant, and it
is improbable that the Indians would have consented, or that the
United States would desire, that they should accept from the
government a mere promise to set apart for them in the future the
tract in Kansas. If we are to adopt such a construction, it would
follow that the title of the Indians, not only to the tract in
Kansas, but to the lands in Wisconsin, was made dependent upon
their removal to their new home. While it might be reasonably
contended that their failure to remove should result in a
cancellation of the treaty, and a restoration to them of their
rights in the Wisconsin lands, that construction is precluded by
the language of the first article, which contains a present and
irrevocable grant of the Wisconsin lands, and puts it beyond their
power to revoke the bargain. The object of the treaty was evidently
to effect an exchange of lands in pursuance of the Act of May 28,
1830, c. 148, 4 Stat. 411, the third section of which provides
"that in the making of any such exchange or exchanges, it shall
and may be lawful for the President solemnly to assure the tribe or
nation with which the exchange is made that the United States will
forever secure and guaranty to them and their heirs or successors
the country so exchanged with them; and,
if they prefer
it, that the United States will cause a patent or grant to be
made and executed to them for the same,
provided always
that such lands shall revert to the United States if the Indians
become extinct or abandon the same. "
Page 170 U. S. 20
Second. The lands covered by the treaty were identified,
described by metes and bounds, and an appropriation was made to aid
in the immediate removal of the Indians to their new home. There
was no uncertainty as to the lands granted, or as to the identity
of the grantees, which in the case of
Heydenfeldt v. Daney
Mining Co., 93 U. S. 634, was
held to turn it into a grant
in futuro.
Third. While the granting clause is in the future tense, an
agreement to set apart, the
habendum clause is in the
present tense:
"To have and to hold the same in fee simple to the said tribes,
or nations of Indians, by patent from the President of the United
States, issued in conformity with the provisions of the third
section of the act entitled 'An act to provide for an exchange of
lands with the Indians residing in any of the states or
territories, and for their removal west of the Mississippi,'
approved on the 28th day of May, 1830, with full power and
authority in the said Indians to divide said land among the
different tribes, nations or bands, in severalty, with the right to
sell and convey to and from each other."
The object of the
habendum clause is said to be
"to set down again the name of the grantee, the estate that is
to be made and limited, or the time that the grantee shall have in
the thing granted or demised, and to what use."
Sheppard's Touchstone 74. It may explain, enlarge, or qualify,
but cannot contradict or defeat, the estate granted by the
premises, and where the grant is uncertain or indefinite concerning
the estate intended to be vested in the grantee, the
habendum performs the office of defining, qualifying or
controlling it. Jones on Real Prop. § 563; Devlin on Deeds, §
215.
In this case, if the
habendum clause were alone
considered, there could be no doubt whatever that the Indians would
take a present title to a fee simple. There is certainly no
conflict between the granting and
habendum clauses.
Admitting that the former, if standing alone, would engender a
doubt as to when the grant should take effect, the
habendum clause removes that doubt, and imports a present
surrender of a defined tract. The addition of the words "by a
patent from the President of the United States" is immaterial,
since it refers
Page 170 U. S. 21
and is intended to be construed in connection with the third
section of the Act of May 28, 1830, in which the issue of a patent
is merely spoken of as an optional or preferential method of
acquiring full title to the land.
Fourth. By Article X, a special provision was made for the
Senecas, by which the easterly part of the tract was set apart for
them, and a deed made by them of their New York lands to Ogden and
Fellows was recognized and approved of by the government, and the
consideration invested for their use. And by Article XIV, another
special tract of the lands granted was set off for the Tuscaroras,
who conveyed to the United States 5,000 acres of land in New York,
to be held in trust for them, and another deed to Ogden and Fellows
of lands in New York was assented to and sanctioned by the
government.
These proceedings, by which these tribes divested themselves of
their title to lands in New York, indicate an intention on the part
both of the government and the Indians that they should take
immediate possession of the tracts set apart for them in
Kansas.
3. There is, however, another consideration which must not be
overlooked in this connection, and which raises the only difficult
point in the interpretation of the treaty. It is found by the court
below (finding 10) that, when the treaty was laid before the Senate
for ratification, June 11, 1838, the third, fourth, fifth, sixth,
ninth, and nineteenth of the original articles were stricken out,
several others were amended by eliminating particular clauses, a
new article was added, as Article XV, and the ratification made
subject to the following condition:
"
Provided always, and be it further resolved (two-thirds of
the Senate present concurring), that the treaty shall have no
force or effect whatever, as it relates to any of said tribes,
nations or bands of New York Indians, nor shall it be understood
that the Senate have assented to any of the contracts connected
with it until the same, with the amendments herein proposed, is
submitted and fully and fairly explained by a commissioner of the
United States to each of said tribes or bands, separately assembled
in council, and they have given
Page 170 U. S. 22
their free and voluntary assent thereto, and if one or more of
said tribes or bands, when consulted as aforesaid, shall freely
assent to said treaty as amended, and to their contract connected
therewith, it shall be binding and obligatory upon those so
assenting, although other or others of said bands or tribes may not
give their assent, and thereby cease to be parties thereto,
provided further, that, if any portion or part of said
Indians do not emigrate the President shall retain a proper
proportion of said sum of four hundred thousand dollars, and shall
also deduct from the quantity of land allowed west of the
Mississippi such number of acres as will leave to each emigrant
three hundred and twenty acres only."
Now, if the above proviso (that, if any portion or part of said
Indians do not emigrate, the President shall . . . deduct from the
quantity of land allowed west of the Mississippi such number of
acres as will leave to each emigrant 320 acres only) be considered
a part of the treaty, and to be respected as such it would be
difficult to avoid the conclusion that the grant of Kansas lands
was not intended to that immediate effect, since the power to
deduct (differing in that respect from the power to
forfeit contained in the third article) would show an intention
that the grant, as a whole, should not take immediate effect, and
would imply that it was extended only to 320 acres to each
emigrant. If the allotment is to be treated as one of 320 acres for
each emigrant, and not of the entire tract, as specified in article
two, the residue, of course, belongs to the government.
But did this resolution ever become operative? It is not found
in the original, nor in the published copy of the treaty, nor in
the proclamation of the President, which recites that the Senate
did, by a resolution of the 11th of June, 1838,
"advise and consent to the ratification of said treaty with
certain amendments,
which treaty, as so amended, is word for
word as follows, to-wit:"
(Here follows a copy of the treaty as published in 7 Stat. 550.)
But no allusion is here made to the final resolution or its
proviso. This is the more remarkable as every other amendment made
by the Senate appears in the treaty as published, while no
reference whatever
Page 170 U. S. 23
is made to this, the reason probably being that the resolution
was mainly directory in its character, requiring that the treaty be
fully and fairly explained by the commissioner to each of the
tribes separately assembled in council, and that they should give
their free and voluntary assent thereto. The proviso may also have
been well considered as merely directory to the President, but in
any event it is difficult to see how it can be regarded as part of
the treaty, or as limiting at all the terms of the grant.
The power to make treaties is vested by the Constitution in the
President and Senate, and while this proviso was adopted by the
Senate, there is no evidence that it ever received the sanction or
approval of the President. It cannot be considered as a legislative
act, since the power to legislate is vested in the President,
Senate, and House of Representatives. There is something, too,
which shocks the conscience, in the idea that a treaty can be put
forth as embodying the terms of an arrangement with a foreign power
or an Indian tribe, a material provision of which is unknown to one
of the contracting parties, and is kept in the background, to be
used by the other only when the exigencies of a particular case may
demand it. The proviso never appears to have been called to the
attention of the tribes, who would naturally assume that the treaty
embodied in the Presidential proclamation contained all the terms
of the arrangement. It is true that the proclamation recites that
the Senate did on March 25, 1840, resolve that the treaty,
"together with the amendments proposed by the Senate of the 11th of
June, 1838, have been satisfactorily acceded to and approved of by
said tribes," but, as the proclamation purported to set forth the
treaty "word for word" as so amended, of course, the amendments
referred to were those embodied in the treaty as published in the
proclamation.
The case of
Doe v. Braden,
16 How. 635, relied upon by the government in this connection, is
not in point. In this case, in the ratification by the King of
Spain of the treaty by which Florida was ceded to the United
States, it was admitted that certain grants of land in Florida were
annulled
Page 170 U. S. 24
and declared to be void, and it was held that a written
declaration annexed to a treaty at the time of its ratification was
as obligatory as if the provision had been inserted in the body of
the treaty itself. The question in the case was whether the king
had power to annul the grant, which was considered a political, and
not a judicial, question; but, as the annulling clause was inserted
in the ratification and published in both countries as part of the
treaty, there was no question whatever of concealment.
4. Assuming that the Indians took an immediate title to the
lands reserved for them in Kansas, we are next to inquire whether
such title has been legally forfeited. By the third article of the
treaty, it was further agreed
"that such of the tribes of the New York, indians as do not
accept and agree to remove to the country set apart for their new
homes within five years, or such other time as the President may
from time to time appoint, shall forfeit all interest in the lands
so set apart to the United States."
Acting in pursuance of the treaty, and of the assumed right of
forfeiture, the government surveyed, and made part of the public
domain, the lands at Green Bay ceded by the claimants, and sold or
otherwise disposed of, and conveyed the same and received the
consideration therefor, except a reservation of about 65,000 acres
to the Oneidas. The lands west of the Mississippi (the Kansas
lands) were, after the Treaty of Buffalo Creek, surveyed and made a
part of the public domain, and sold or otherwise disposed of by the
United States, which received the consideration therefor, and these
lands were thereafter, and now are, included within the territorial
limits of the State of Kansas.
In the view we have taken of the the granting clauses of this
treaty, the provisions of the third article created a condition
subsequent, upon a breach of which the government might declare a
forfeiture, but had not power by simple executive action to
reenter, take possession of the lands, and sell them. A distinction
is drawn by the authorities between the case of a private grantor,
who may reenter in the case of the breach of a condition
subsequent, and the government, which can
Page 170 U. S. 25
only repossess itself of lands by legislative or judicial
action. The distinction was first clearly drawn by this Court in
the case of
United States v.
Repentigny, 5 Wall. 211,
72 U. S. 267,
in which the Court said:
"We agree that, before a forfeiture or reunion with the public
domain could take place, a judicial inquiry should be instituted,
or, in the technical language of the common law, office found, or
its legal equivalent. A legislative act, directing the possession
and appropriation of the land, is equivalent to office found. The
mode of asserting or of assuming the forfeited grant is subject to
the legislative authority of the government. It may be after
judicial investigation, or by taking possession directly under the
authority of the government, without these preliminary
proceedings."
Practically the same language was used with reference to a grant
of lands in aid of a railroad in
Schulenberg
v. Harriman, 21 Wall. 44,
88 U. S. 63; in
Farnsworth v. Minnesota & Pacific Railroad,
92 U. S. 49, and in
Van Wyck v. Knevals, 106 U. S. 360. In
St. Louis, Iron Mountain &c. Railway Co. v. McGee,
115 U. S. 469, it
was said:
"That legislation, to be sufficient [for that purpose], must
manifest an intention by Congress to reassert title and resume
possession. As it is to take the place of a suit by the United
States to enforce a forfeiture, and a judgment therein establishing
the right, it should be direct, positive, and free from all doubt
or ambiguity."
See also Pacific Railway Co. v. United States,
124 U. S. 124. As
there is no pretense that any such action as is contemplated by
these cases was ever taken, it necessarily follows that if an
estate in fee simple vested in the Indians, the proceedings
subsequently taken would not revest the title in the
government.
5. But even if it were conceded that the rights of the Indians
were subject to forfeiture by executive action, it is by no means
certain that the contingency ever happened which authorized such
forfeiture, or, if a forfeiture did result, it was not waived by
the subsequent action of Congress. A condition, when relied upon to
work a forfeiture, is construed with great strictness. The grantor
must stand on his legal rights, and any ambiguity in his deed, or
defect in the evidence
Page 170 U. S. 26
offered to show a breach, will be taken most strongly against
him and in favor of the grantee. A condition will not be extended
beyond its express terms by construction. The grantor must bring
himself within these terms to entitle him to a forfeiture. Jones on
Real Prop. §§ 678, 679.
It will be observed that the forfeiture is conditioned not upon
the actual removal of the Indians to the Kansas reservation, but
upon their accepting and agreeing to removal within five years or
such other time as the President might from time to time appoint.
The tribes for whom the Kansas lands were intended as a future home
were the Senecas, Onondagas, Cayugas, Tuscaroras, Oneidas, St.
Regis, Stockbridges, Munsees, and Brothertowns, residing in the
State of New York.
Of these, the Senecas, and certain of the Cayugas and Onondagas
residing among them, expressly agreed, in Article X, "to remove
from the State of New York to their new homes within five years,
and to continue to reside there."
By Article XIII, the Oneidas also agreed to remove as soon as
they could make satisfactory arrangements for the purchase of their
lands at Oneida.
By Article XIV, the Tuscaroras also agreed to accept the country
set apart for them, and to remove there within five years, and to
continue to reside there.
In a supplemental treaty made with the St. Regis Indians on
February 13, 1838, it was agreed that any of them who wished to do
so should be at liberty to remove to Kansas at any time thereafter
within the time specified in the treaty, but the government should
not compel them to remove.
It thus appears that, as to three of these tribes, there has
been a technical performance so far as a forcible removal was
concerned.
It further appears from the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth
findings that the President never fixed any time for their removal,
as was contemplated in the third article; that many of the Indians
protested against any removal; that the Onondagas officially
declared they would not remove; that:
"After the amended treaty had been assented to, the Senecas, the
Cayugas and the Onondagas residing with
Page 170 U. S. 27
them, and the Tuscaroras continued to protest against the
treaty; the Senecas asserting that their declaration of assent was
invalid, and that they would never emigrate but on compulsion, and
requesting (as did also some Onondaga chiefs) that no appropriation
be made to carry the treaty into effect. These protests were
continued even after the treaty was ratified, and until the treaty
of May 20, 1842, was made. More than five years from the
ratification of the Treaty of Buffalo Creek, the Tuscarora chiefs
declared that the tribe would not part with its reservation, nor
remove from it, whatever a few individuals might do."
It further appeared that:
"No provision was made for the actual removal of more than about
260 individuals of the claimant tribes. Of this number, only 32
ever received patents or certificates of allotment of the lands
mentioned in the first article of the treaty, and the amount
allotted to those 32 was at the rate of 320 acres each, or 10,240
acres in all."
"In 1845, Abram Hogeboom represented to the government of the
United States that a number of the New York Indians, parties to the
treaty of 1838, desired to remove to the Kansas lands, and upon
such representation, and in conformity with such desire, said
Hogeboom was appointed special agent of the government to remove
the said Indians to Kansas."
"The sum of $9,464.08 of an amount appropriated by Congress was
expended in the removal of a party of New York Indians, under
Hogeboom's direction, in 1846."
"From Hogeboom's muster roll, in the Indian office, it appears
that 271 were mustered for emigration. The roll shows that, of this
number, 73 did not leave New York With the party; 191 only arrived
in Kansas, June 15, 1946; 17 other Indians arrived subsequently; 82
died, and 94 returned to New York."
"It does not appear that any of the 32 Indians to whom
allotments were made settled permanently in Kansas."
It is further found that:
"A council of the Senecas, the Cayugas and Onondagas living with
them, and the Tuscaroras was called by the Indian
Page 170 U. S. 28
Commissioner, to be held at Cattaraugus, June 2, 1846, to learn
the final wishes of the Indians as to emigration. The commissioner
who was sent on the part of the United States reported that the
meeting was well attended. but that the chiefs were unanimous in
the opinion that scarcely any Indians who wished to emigrate
remained."
In these findings lie the main strength of the defense.
It thus appears that a part had accepted and agreed to remove;
that a few had actually removed; that others had stipulated that
they should not be compelled to remove, and still others protested
against the treaty, and refused to remove. If the acceptance and
signing of the treaty is not to be considered, in itself, as an
acceptance and agreement to remove -- as to which we express no
opinion -- there was a technical compliance with the conditions of
Article III by a part of the Indians, and a flat refusal upon the
part of others. But, after all, a mere agreement to accept and
remove, though probably sufficient to prevent a legal forfeiture,
was of no practical value, and would have availed the government
nothing, except as it might have justified a forcible removal, had
the government elected to take that course. No provision was made
as to the manner in which the removal was to be effected, but from
the dependent character of the Indians, and from the appropriation
of $400,000 made for that purpose, it is evident that it was
contemplated that the removal should be made by the government
itself. It was so held by this Court in
Fellows v.
Blacksmith, 19 How. 366, and we see no reason to
question the propriety of that ruling. Whether the government could
have removed them forcibly was not decided in that case, and is not
in this.
The difficult point in the case, in its equitable aspect, is
whether the protests of the Indians and their final refusal to
remove in 1846 do not estop them from claiming the benefit of the
reservation made for them. This is the main defense in the case.
Upon the other hand, no time was fixed by the President for their
removal; no formal notice was ever given them to remove; but at
various times, and particularly at the council held at Cattaraugus,
June 2, 1846, called by the commissioners
Page 170 U. S. 29
to learn the final wishes of the Indians as to emigration, the
chiefs of the four tribes present were unanimous in the opinion
that scarcely any Indians who wished to emigrate remained. This
action constitutes practically the only claim of forfeiture. There
is no finding that the other five tribes did refuse. The practical
application which counsel seek to make of this partial refusal is
to justify the government not only in appropriating the Kansas
lands, but, inferentially, in failing to make any other
compensation to the Indians for the seizure and sale of the
Wisconsin lands. In view of this, it seems to us that, to justify a
forfeiture, it should appear that the repudiation was as formal, as
broad, and as unequivocal as the acceptance; that the President
should have fixed a time for the removal, and should at least have
made a formal tender of performance. If it be said that,
considering the number of the tribes and the character of the
individuals he was dealing with, this was impracticable, it may
also be said that the government had undertaken to negotiate a
treaty with them severally and collectively, and, if it sought to
enforce a forfeiture of rights originating in such treaty, it
should have given formal notice to that effect, that the Indians
might understand that they were risking the loss of all
compensation for their Wisconsin lands by refusing to emigrate.
But, however this may be, we think the fact that the government
never insisted upon this as an estoppel, and never treated the
Indians as having lost their rights in the Kansas lands, is a
sufficient answer to the claim of abandonment. After their refusal
at the council in 1846, nothing appears to have been done until
1854, when Kansas had begun to feel the impress of a sudden and
large immigration from the East, and an act (Act of May 30, 1854,
c. 59), known as the "Kansas-Nebraska Act" was passed, creating the
Territory of Kansas, in which Congress defined the limits of the
new territory, 10 Stat. 277, 284, and, after giving the boundary
lines, which included the New York Indian lands --
"
Provided that nothing in this act contained shall be
construed to impair the rights of person or property now
Page 170 U. S. 30
pertaining to the Indians in said territory so long as such
rights shall remain unextinguished by treaty between the United
States and such Indians, or to include any territory,
which by
treaty with any Indian tribe, is not, without the consent of
said tribes, to be included within the territorial limits or
jurisdiction of any state or territory; but all such territory
shall be excepted out of the boundaries and constitute no part of
the Territory of Kansas until said tribes shall signify their
assent to the President of the United States to be included within
the said Territory of Kansas."
The thirty-seventh section of the same act (page 200)
provides--
"That all treaties, laws and other engagements made by the
government of the United States with the Indian tribes inhabiting
the territories embraced within this act shall be faithfully and
rigidly observed notwithstanding anything contained in this
act."
Even if the first clause of this proviso be limited to the
Indians then "in said territory," of whom only 32 were New York
Indians, the second clause is subject to no such limitation, and
applies to treaties "with any Indian tribe." The reference here is
evidently to the Treaty of Buffalo Creek, and is a distinct
recognition of the subsisting validity of such treaty, and a
promise on the part of Congress that it shall be faithfully and
rigidly observed, "notwithstanding anything contained in this act,"
and, we may add, notwithstanding the refusal of the Indians to
emigrate, and the now claimed forfeiture of their rights.
Some steps were taken to effect a settlement with the Indians,
and on November 5, 1857, a treaty was entered into with the
Tonawandas in which, after reciting the treaty of 1838, the
surrender of 500,000 acres of lands in Wisconsin, the agreement to
set apart the lands in Kansas, the Tonawandas relinquished their
interest in the Kansas lands, the United States agreeing to pay
them therefor the sum of $256,000. 11 Stat. 735. But the Tonawandas
were but one of the nine tribes which participated in the treaty,
and there seems to have been no reason why their claim should
have
Page 170 U. S. 31
been recognized in preference to others who stood upon the same
footing. Upon the theory of the government, there was no reason why
this treaty should have been entered into at all. It was clearly a
recognition of the fact that the Tonawandas had rights which, in
the 19 years which had elapsed since the treaty was made, they had
not forfeited.
But this is not all. In the eleventh section of the Sundry Civil
Appropriation Act of March 3, 1859, c. 82, 11 Stat. 425, a
provision was made for the issue of patents to Indians who were
entitled to separate selection of lands in Kansas, with a proviso
that
"nothing herein contained shall be construed to apply to the New
York Indians, or to affect their rights under the treaty made with
them in 1838 at Buffalo Creek."
If this was not a recognition of the fact that the Indians still
had rights, it certainly shows that their alleged rights had been
made the subject of consideration and were not repudiated or
denied.
But it seems that the matter did not rest here, for in the same
month in which the last above act was passed, namely, March 21,
1859, the Secretary of the Interior directed the New York Indian
reservation in Kansas to be surveyed, with a view of allotting a
half section each to such of the New York Indians as had removed
there under the treaty, after which the residue was to become
public domain, and in December, 1860, the President proclaimed the
reservation to be a part of the public domain.
Notwithstanding this, however, in the Act of January 28, 1861,
c. 20, 12 Stat. 126, admitting Kansas to the Union as a state, it
was provided that nothing should be so construed as to impair the
rights of person or property pertaining to the Indians in said
territory so long as such rights should remain unextinguished by
treaty. It may be said that the provisos in this act applied only
to the Indians in said territory, but even if it be so limited, the
provision in the Act of March 3, 1859, clearly applies only to the
New York Indians, whose rights under the treaty were recognized. Up
to the time these acts were passed, certainly, there had been no
denial of the right of the Indians to these lands, and no action on
the
Page 170 U. S. 32
part of the government indicating an intent to insist upon the
forfeiture of such right. Every legislative expression tended
towards an acknowledgment of the fact that their claim was
unimpaired.
Our attention has also been called to certain documents
emanating from the executive and legislative departments of the
government, some of which tend to strengthen the idea that these
departments never intended to treat the action of the Indians as a
forfeiture of their grant, and acquiesced in the justice of the
claims the Indians now make, and have already made under the Treaty
of Buffalo Creek. It is insisted by the Attorney General that, as
these document are not referred to in the findings of fact by the
court below, this Court cannot consider them; but, as they are
documents of which we may take judicial notice, we think the fact
that they are not incorporated in the findings of the court will
not preclude us from examining them with a view of inquiring
whether they have the bearing claimed.
Jones v. United
States, 137 U. S. 202,
137 U. S.
214.
While it is ordinarily true that this Court takes notice of only
such facts as are found by the court below, it may take notice of
matters of common observation, of statutes, records, or public
documents which were not called to its attention, or other similar
matters of judicial cognizance.
As indicating the views of the executive in regard to the
justice of the Indians' claims, a treaty was concluded September 2,
1863, with the New York Indians who had moved to Kansas under the
treaty of 1838, for the purpose of extinguishing their title to
lands in that state. This treaty was based on the Treaty of
November 5, 1857, with the Tonawandas, and was sent to the Senate
for ratification; but action was suspended upon it "until a treaty
could be concluded with all the New York Indians to arrange all
matters between them and the United States which required
adjustment." Ex.Doc. Y. p. 2, 40th Cong., 3d Sess.
In pursuance of this policy, the President, in May, 1864,
directed a commissioner to proceed to the State of New York for the
purpose of negotiating a treaty with the New York
Page 170 U. S. 33
Indians. These Indians had been previously notified, on April
26, 1864, by the Secretary of the Interior, that he deemed it
proper to advise them, through their agent, "that it is the desire
of the government to extinguish their title to a tract of land in
Kansas ceded to them by the Treaty of January 15, 1838," and that a
treaty had already been made for that purpose with the fragments of
bands of these Indians residing in Kansas. Ex.Doc. No. 1, 38th
Cong., 2d Sess., p. 188.
The treaty with the Indians living in New York was not
concluded, but in his annual report to Congress the Secretary of
the Interior, on December 6, 1864, spoke of the efforts to
extinguish the title of these Indians to the Kansas lands, and
considered their claims as "being undeniable and just."
Ibid.
This opinion was reiterated by the Commissioner of Indian
Affairs on December 5, 1866, in his annual report. (P. 61.)
In November, 1868, the President again attempted to negotiate a
treaty or treaties with the Senecas and other New York Indians,
with reference to "their claims arising under the treaties of 1838
and 1842." Ex.Doc. Y, p. 10, 40th Cong., 3d Sess. And thereafter, a
treaty was concluded, December 4, 1868, according to the
instructions issued to the commissioner appointed to negotiate it,
by which the United States agreed to pay the sum of $320 to each
Indian, including half-breeds, of the Six Nations in New York and
Wisconsin.
Ibid., p. 1.
The commissioner appointed to negotiate this treaty reported to
the Indians, in council, that
"the reason why the New York Indians had not been removed to
their Kansas reservation was because squatters had obtained
possession of their lands, and the United States was unable to
drive them off and keep them off."
Ibid., p. 10.
This treaty, however, was not ratified by Congress, owing,
presumably, to the passage of a general law which denied the right
of any Indian tribe or nation to be recognized as an independent
nation for treatymaking purposes. Act of March 3, 1871, c. 120, 16
Stat. 544, 566.
In a communication dated January 29, 1884, addressed to
Page 170 U. S. 34
the Secretary of the Interior for transmission to the Senate,
the Commissioner of Indian Affairs reviewed the claims of the New
York Indians under the treaty of 1838, and adhered to the opinions
of his predecessors, in that there was a failure on the part of the
government to provide homes for those who went to Kansas, and that
no consideration had been given the New York Indians for the
cession of the 500,000 acres of Wisconsin lands. He referred to the
settlement with the Tonawandas, and stated that he saw "no reason
why the other tribes should not receive the same relief."
While none of these documents are of great importance in
themselves, they serve to indicate very clearly that in the mind of
the executive and departmental officers the rights of the Indians
under the Treaty of Buffalo Creek were continuously recognized as
just claims against the government.
We are at loss to understand upon what theory this can be
considered an abandoned claim. If the evidence pointed in that
direction, the argument would come with better grace if the
government had not itself received the full consideration
stipulated by the treaty (so far as such consideration was a
valuable one) for the Kansas lands, and had neglected to render any
account of the same. Of course, if the legal title passed to these
Indians, something else than a failure to assert such title is
necessary to divest it. But, however this may be, the court finds
(finding 17) that, after the order of the Secretary of the Interior
of 1859, and before the proclamation of the President of said lands
as part of the public domain in December, 1860,
"some of the New York Indians employed counsel to protect and
prosecute their claims in the premises, asserting in the powers of
attorney that the United States had seized upon the said lands
contrary to the obligations of said treaty, and would not permit
the said Indians to occupy the same, or make any disposition
thereof. The said Indians have since asserted their said
claims."
How long, or how frequently, or in what manner the Indians
continued to assert their claims, does not appear; but it seems
that, on June 21, 1884, their claims, together with the vouchers,
papers, proofs, and documents appertaining thereto, were referred
to the
Page 170 U. S. 35
Court of Claims for an investigation and finding of facts. To
create an abandonment, there must not only be an omission to
prosecute, but an intent to forego, of which there is no evidence
in this case. Indeed, it is not altogether clear that the
government did not waive this point in the act of 1893, conferring
jurisdiction upon the Court of Claims to enter judgment, when it
declared that the statute of limitations should not be pleaded as a
bar to recovery.
The appropriation of these lands by the government is probably
explicable by the fact that an enormous emigration to Kansas was at
that time in progress, for the avowed purpose of preventing the
establishment of slavery in the territory, that the pressure of
population for land was very great, that the territory was almost
in the throes of civil war, that the negotiation of a new treaty
with nine different tribes would be attended with considerable
delay, that but few of the Indians had actually removed and resided
in Kansas, and that the Secretary of the Interior assumed (what
undoubtedly the facts had some tendency to show) that the grant had
lapsed by the failure of the Indians to emigrate, and therefore
considered himself fully justified in taking possession of the
lands, and settling with the Indians in a future treaty. The claim
of the Tonawandas was actually settled. Congress, in the act of
1861 admitting Kansas, provided for the subsequent extinguishment
of Indian titles, but a great civil war then intervened, and for
several years absorbed the attention of Congress, and the matter
does not seem to have been resuscitated until after the lapse of
about twenty years, when Congress referred the case to the Court of
Claims, with an express waiver of the statute of limitations. We do
not perceive in all this an intention on the part of the Indians to
abandon their claims, or any indication on the part of Congress
that it considered it abandoned.
6. But little need be said considering the cash payments to be
made under the ninth, twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth articles
of this treaty. Most, if not all, of these payments were to be made
upon the actual removal of these Indians to the West, and, as this
contingency never happened, the
Page 170 U. S. 36
amounts never became due. The same ruling applies to the
appropriation of $400,000 in the fifteenth article, which was made
to aid in removing the Indians to their new homes, supporting them
the first year after their removal, and for other incidental
purposes contingent upon their removal.
The judgment of the Court of Claims is therefore reversed,
and the case remanded, with instructions to enter a new judgment
for the net amount actually received by the government for the
Kansas lands, without interest, less the amount of lands upon the
basis of which settlement was made with the Tonawandas, and other
just deductions, and for such other proceedings as may be
necessary, and in conformity with this opinion.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, and MR. JUSTICE BREWER
dissented.
*
1. In 1780, the Six Nations of New York Indians consisted of the
following nations or tribes: Senecas, Cayugas, Onondagas, Oneidas,
Tuscaroras, and Mohawks. The Mohawks soon after withdrew to Canada,
relinquishing to New York all claim to lands in that state.
The court decide that the Indians described in the
jurisdictional act sending this case to this Court as "the New York
Indians, being those Indians who were parties to the Treaty of
Buffalo Creek, New York, on the 15th of January, 1838," were the
following: Senecas, Onondagas, Onondagas residing on the Seneca
reservation, Onondagas at Onondaga, Cayugas, Cayugas residing on
the Seneca reservation, Cayuga Indians residing in the State of New
York, Tuscaroras, Tuscaroras residing in the State of New York,
Oneidas residing in New York at Green Bay (Wisconsin), and in the
Seneca reservation, Oneidas, St. Regis, St. Regis in New York, the
American party of the St. Regis residing in the State of New York,
Stockbridges, Munsees, Brothertowns.
2. Some of the New York Indians between 1810 and 1816 petitioned
the President of the United States for leave to purchase
reservations of their Western brethren, with the privilege of
removing to and occupying the same without changing their existing
relations and treaties with the government or their right to the
annuities promised in those treaties. February 12, 1816, the
Secretary of War, by authority of the President, gave his
permission. In 1820 and 1821, defendants aided some ten Indians,
representing plaintiffs, in exploring certain parts of Wisconsin
with a view to making arrangements with the Indians residing there
for a portion of their country, to be inhabited by such of the Six
Nations as might choose to emigrate thither. Among the petitioners
for leave to purchase reservations were the Onondagas, Senecas,
Cayugas, and Oneida nations of New York Indians.
August 18, 1821, the Menominees and Winnebago nations, in
consideration of $2,000, chiefly in goods, ceded, released, and
quitclaimed all their right, title, and claim in certain lands near
Green Bay, Wisconsin, amounting to about 500,000 acres, to the Six
Nations, and the St. Regis, Stockbridge, and Munsee tribes,
reserving the right of fishing, and the right to occupy
"a necessary proportion of the lands for the purposes of
hunting, provided that in such use and occupation no waste or
depredation should be committed on lands under improvement."
The President's approval of the arrangement found in the Treaty
of August 18, 1821, was signified February 19, 1822, as
follows:
"The within arrangement, entered into between the Six Nations,
the St. Regis, Stockbridge, and Munsee nations, of the one part,
and the Menominees and Winnebagoes, of the other, is approved, with
the express understanding that the lands thereby conveyed to the
Six Nations, the St. Regis, Stockbridge, and Munsee nations, are to
be held by them in the same manner as they were previously held by
the Menominees and Winnebagoes."
"James Monroe"
"February 19, 1822."
The $2,000 above mentioned was thus paid: in goods, $900 from
the Stockbridges, $400 from the Oneidas, $200 from the Tuscaroras;
in cash, $500. The Senecas subsequently denied that they had any
title to any lands in Wisconsin. It does not appear that the
Cayugas or Onondagas claimed any interest in the lands prior to
1860.
3. Permission to secure an extension of the cession in the
preceding finding recited was given by the Secretary of War, and
thereafter, on September 23, 1822, the Menominees, in consideration
of $3,000 in goods, made a similar cession of another tract
containing at least 5,000,000 acres, rather undefined (adjoining
the above), to the Stockbridge, Oneida, Tuscarora, St. Regis, and
Munsee nations, the releasees promising, however, that the
releasors should "have the free permission and privilege of
occupying and residing upon the lands" in common with the
former.
The President's approval was given March 13, 1823, as
follows:
"The foregoing instrument is approved, so far as it conveys to
the Stockbridge, Oneida, Tuscarora, St. Regis, and Munsee tribes or
nations of Indians that portion of the country therein described
which lies between Sturgeon Bay, Green Bay, Fox river; that part of
the former purchase made by said tribes or nations of Indians of
the Menominee and Winnebago Indians on the 8th of August, 1821,
which lies south of Fox River and a line drawn from the
southwestern extremity of said purchase to the head of Sturgeon
Bay, and no further, that quantity being deemed sufficient for the
use of the first before-mentioned tribes and nations of Indians. It
is to be understood, however, that the lands, to the cession of
which to the tribes or nations aforesaid the government has
assented, are to be held by them in the same manner as they were
held by the Menominees previous to concluding and signing the
aforegoing instrument, and that the title which they have acquired
is not to interfere in any manner whatever with the lands
previously acquired or occupied by the government of the United
States or its citizens."
October 27, 1823, the Secretary of War officially notified the
releasees that the President distinctly wished them to understand
that, by this partial sanction, he did not mean to interfere with
nor in any manner invalidate their title to all the lands which
they had thereby acquired, including those not confirmed by the
government, but, on the contrary, he considered their title to
every part of the country conveyed to them by the releasors as
equally valid as against them, and that what they had done was with
the full assent of the government.
Of the consideration above mentioned, $1,000 were paid by the
Stockbridges and Munsees, while $1,000 were to be paid by the
Oneidas, Tuscaroras, and St. Regises, in one year from September
23, 1822, and $1,000 in two years from that date. Of the two latter
amounts, $1,000 appears to have been paid by the United States out
of the funds of the St. Regises about 1825, while $950 were paid by
the Brothertown tribe September 18, 1824, in consideration of
which, the releasees, by an agreement with the Brothertowns, under
date of January 8, 1825, ceded to them a small separate tract, by
metes and bounds, and, after reserving to themselves, for each
tribe of the releasees, a similar tract from out the country
purchased from the releasors, granted to the Brothertowns an equal
undivided part of all the remaining portion of said purchase. It
does not appear whether the Oneidas and Truscaroras paid any part
of the above consideration.
4. The grants set forth in findings 2 and 3 include the lands
subsequently ceded by the Menominees to the United States by the
Treaties of August 11, 1827, and February 8, 1831.
5. Thereafter, some New York Indians belonging to the Oneida,
St. Regis, Stockbridge, Munsee, and Brothertown tribes removed to,
and took possession of the lands in Wisconsin.
Later, and after 1832, another small portion of the New York
Indians removed to the Wisconsin or Green Bay lands.
March 14, 1840, the Senecas denied ownership of Wisconsin lands,
stating that they determined to have no other home than that of
their fathers, where they then resided, and in May and September
following, in petitions to the President, the Senate, and the House
of Representatives, their council denied that they were parties to
the treaty.
6. It does not appear that application was made by the tribes or
bands, or any of them, to the government, for removal to the Kansas
lands provided for in the Buffalo Creek Treaty, except as hereafter
appears in these findings.
It does not appear that any substantial number of Indians wished
to go to Kansas, other than those who made up the Hogeboom party,
infra.
7. In the year 1838, at the time of the negotiation of the
Treaty of Buffalo Creek, the Senecas, the Onondagas, the Oneidas,
the Cayugas, the Tuscaroras, and the St. Regises each possessed a
reservation of land in the State of New York, on which members of
the tribes resided, and the right of occupancy of which was secured
to them by treaty stipulations. The Cayuga Indians had no separate
reservation of their own in the State of New York, but made their
home with, and resided upon the reservation and lands possessed by,
the Seneca nation. This they did with the consent of the Senecas,
and a portion of the Onondagas did the same.
(The eighth finding is immaterial.)
9. For many years prior to the Treaty of Buffalo Creek (of
1838), these nations or tribes of Indians had improved and
cultivated their lands, on which they resided, and from the
products of which they chiefly sustained themselves.
The Treaty of Buffalo Creek, as printed in the seventh volume of
the Statutes at Large, contains a misprint on the third line of
page 556. The word "Oneidas" is in the original treaty "Onondagas;"
the whole line reading, "Onondagas residing on the Seneca
reservation."
10. Extract from Executive Journal of June 11, 1838:
"The Senate resumed as in Committee of the While in the
consideration of the treaty with the New York Indians and the
article supplemental thereto."
"On motion of Mr. Wright, and by unanimous consent, the question
was taken on agreeing to the amendments reported from the Committee
on Indian Affairs, and determined in the affirmative, yeas 33."
"
* * * *"
"No further amendments having been made, the treaty was reported
to the Senate, and the amendments were unanimously concurred
in."
"Mr. White then submitted the following resolution of
ratification, embracing the amendments as reported from the
committee, and adopted by the Senate:"
"
Resolved (two-thirds of the senators present
concurring), that the Senate advise and consent to the
ratification of the Treaty made and concluded at Buffalo Creek, in
the State of New York, the 15th day of January, in the year of our
Lord 1838, by Ransom H. Gillett, a commissioner on the part of the
United States, and the chiefs, headmen, and warriors of the several
tribes of the New York Indians, assembled in council, with the
following amendments."
"(Here follows a series of amendments striking out original
articles 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, and 19, striking out particular words and
clauses from other articles, inserting new article 15, and
concluding as follows:)"
"
Resolved, further (two-thirds of the senators present
concurring), that the Senate advise and consent to the
ratification of the supplemental article to the Treaty concluded at
Buffalo Creek, in the State of New York, January 15, 1838, which
was made at the council house of St. Regis on the 13th day of
February, 1838,
provided, the chiefs and headmen of the
St. Regis Indians, residing in New York, will in general council
accept of and adopt the aforesaid treaty, as modified by the
preceding resolution of ratification:"
"
Provided always, and be it further resolved (two-thirds of
the Senate present concurring), that the treaty shall have no
force or effect whatever as it relates to any of said tribes,
nations, or bands of New York Indians, nor shall it be understood
that the Senate have assented to any of the contracts connected
with it, until the same, with the amendments herein proposed, is
submitted and fully and fairly explained by a commissioner of the
United States to each of said tribes or bands, separately assembled
in council, and they have given their free and voluntary assent
thereto, and if one or more of said tribes or bands, when consulted
as aforesaid, shall freely assent to said treaty as amended, and to
their contract connected therewith, it shall be binding and
obligatory upon those so assenting, although other or others of
said bands or tribes may not give their assent, and thereby cease
to be parties thereto,
provided further that if any
portion or part of said Indians do not emigrate, the President
shall retain a proper proportion of said sum of four hundred
thousand dollars, and shall also deduct from the quantity of land
allowed west of the Mississippi such number of acres as will leave
to each emigrant three hundred and twenty acres only."
"The Senate proceeded, by unanimous consent, to the
consideration of said resolutions."
" On the question to agree thereto,"
" It was determined in the affirmative -- Yeas, 33, Nays 2"
"
* * * *"
"Ordered, that the secretary lay this resolution before the
President of the United States."
"
* * * * "
Proclamation of the Treaty of Buffalo
Creek
"Martin Van Buren, President of the United States of America, to
All and Singular to Whom These Presents shall Come, Greeting:"
"Whereas, a treaty was made and concluded at Buffalo, in the
State of New York, on the fifteenth day of January, one thousand
eight hundred and thirty-eight, by Ransom H. Gillet, a commissioner
on the part of the United States, and the chiefs, headmen, and
warriors of the several tribes of the New York Indians, assembled
in council;"
"And whereas, the Senate did, by a resolution of the eleventh of
June, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-eight, advise and
consent to the ratification of said treaty, with certain
amendments, which treaty, so amended, is word for word as follows,
to wit. . . ."
"And whereas, the Senate did on the 25th of March, one thousand
eight hundred and forty, resolve"
"that in the opinion of the Senate, the treaty between the
United States and the Six Nations of New York Indians, together
with the amendments proposed by the Senate of the eleventh of June,
1838, have been satisfactorily acceded to and approved of by said
tribes, the Seneca tribe included, and that in the opinion of the
Senate, the President is authorized to proclaim the treaty as in
full force and operation:"
"Now therefore be it known that I, Martin Van Buren, President
of the United States of America, do, in pursuance of the
resolutions of the Senate of the eleventh of June, one thousand
eight hundred and thirty-eight, and twenty-fifth day of March, one
thousand eight hundred and forth, accept, ratify, and confirm said
treaty and every article and clause thereof."
"In testimony whereof, I have caused the seal of the United
States to be hereunto affixed, having signed the same with my hand.
"
"Done at this City of Washington this fourth day of April, one
thousand eight hundred and forty, and of the Independence of the
United States the sixty-third."
"M. Van Buren"
"By the President:"
"[Seal]"
"John Forsyth,"
"
Secretary of State"
11. The President of the United States never prescribed any time
for the removal of the claimants, or any of them, to the lands, or
any of them, set apart by the Treaty of Buffalo Creek, further than
is shown in these findings.
Many of the Indians have protested against any removal. The
Onondagas have officially declared that they would not remove, and
treaties subsequent to that of 1838 appear in the statutes in
relation to this subject matter. The Tuscaroras still occupy their
reservation in New York.
After the amended treaty had been assented to, the Senecas, the
Cayugas and the Onondagas residing with them, and the Tuscaroras,
continued to protest against the treaty, the Senecas asserting that
their declaration of assent was invalid and that they would never
emigrate but on compulsion, and requesting, as did also some
Onondaga chiefs, that no appropriation be made to carry the treaty
into effect. These protests were continued even after the treaty
was ratified, and until the treaty of May 20, 1842, was made. More
than five years from the ratification of the Treaty of Buffalo
Creek, the Tuscarora chiefs declared that the tribe would not part
with its reservation, nor remove from it, whatever a few
individuals might do. The Indian protests against the treaty were
based upon the following allegations: (a) that the treaty had been
brought about by corrupt means operating upon Indians of influence
in their tribes, and put in motion by an agent of the preemption
owners; (b) that a considerable majority of the Indians wished to
remain in New York.
After the treaty of May 20, 1842, was ratified, the lands and
improvements on the Buffalo Creek reservation in New York were
appraised, and the Indians thereon gradually withdrew to the
Cattaraugus and Alleghany reservations in New York.
12. Prior to November 24, 1845, some of the New York Indians had
applied to the Indian office for the proper steps to be taken for
their emigration. It was not deemed expedient to enter into any
arrangements for this purpose until the department believed that a
sufficient number to justify the expenditure incident to the
appointment of an agent was prepared to remove.
No provision was made for the actual removal of more than about
260 individuals of the claimant tribes, as contemplated by the
Treaty of Buffalo Creek, and as shown below. Of this number, only
32 ever received patents or certificates of allotment of the lands
mentioned in the first article of the treaty, and the amount
allotted to those 32 was at the rate of 320 acres each, or 10,240
acres in all.
In 1845, Abram Hogeboom represented to the government of the
United States that a number of the New York Indians, parties to the
treaty of 1838, desired to remove to the Kansas lands, and upon
such representation, and in conformity with such desire, said
Hogeboom was appointed special agent of the government to remove
the said Indians to Kansas.
The sum of $9,464.08 of an amount appropriated by Congress was
expended in the removal of a party of New York Indians under
Hogeboom's direction in 1846.
From Hogeboom's muster roll in the Indian office, it appears
that 271 were mustered for emigration. The roll shows that of this
number, 73 did not leave New York with the party; 191 only arrived
in Kansas, June 15, 1846; 17 other Indians arrived subsequently; 82
died, and 94 returned to New York.
It does not appear that any of the thirty-two Indians to whom
allotments were made settled permanently in Kansas.
13. A council of the Senecas, the Cayugas and Onondagas living
with them, and the Tuscaroras was called by the Indian
Commissioner, to be held at Cattaraugus, June 2, 1846, to learn the
final wishes of the Indians as to emigration. The commissioner who
was sent on the part of the United States reported that the meeting
was well attended, but that the chiefs were unanimous in the
opinion that scarcely any Indians who wished to emigrate remained.
The commissioner also reported that he held an enrollment for two
full days, but that only seven persons requested to be enrolled for
emigration, and these vouched for five more as wishing to go.
14. The United States, after the conclusion of the Treaty of
Buffalo Creek, surveyed and made part of the public domain the
lands at Green Bay ceded by the claimants, and sold or otherwise
disposed of and conveyed the same, and received the consideration
therefor, except as in these findings shown to the contrary. The
reservation to "the first Christian and Orchard parties of Oneida
Indians," which was set aside for them by defendants at Green Bay,
Wisconsin, contained 65,540 acres, all of which has been allotted
in severalty, and reserved for school purposes, except 84.08
acres.
The Stockbridge Indians acquired a reservation in Wisconsin of
11,803 acres, some of which has been allotted in severalty. (9
Stat. 955; 11 Stat. 663, 679; 16 Stat. 404.) The United States
never acquired any lands in the State of New York from the Indians
of that state. The lands ceded in that state by the Indians thereof
were ceded for consideration to the state, or to the Ogden Land
Company, so called. There may have been some small cessions to
individuals, but there were none to the United States.
15. Upon the ratification of the Oneida Treaty of February 3,
1838, the present Oneida reservation in Wisconsin was surveyed,
containing about 65,000 acres. After the ratification of the Treaty
of Buffalo Creek, the United States surveyed, made part of the
public domain, and sold or otherwise disposed of the tract at Green
Bay, the Indian title to which had been ceded by that treaty,
except the said Oneida reservation. This was treated as if it had
been the reservation excepted from the cession in article 1 of that
treaty, which latter reservation was never surveyed, and the bounds
of which, as given in the said article, are not the same as those
of the former reservation, although the two reservations cover, for
the most part, the same ground, and are of about the same area.
The lands west of the Mississippi secured to the claimants by
the Treaty of Buffalo Creek have been since that treaty surveyed,
and made a part of the public domain, and sold or otherwise
disposed of by the United States, which received the consideration
therefor, and the said lands were thereafter, and now are, included
within the territorial limits of the State of Kansas. The price
realized by the United States for such of said lands as were sold
was at the rate of $1.34 per acre, while the cost of surveying,
etc., the same was at the rate of about 12 cents per acre, making
the net price realized by the United States about $1.22 per
acre.
16. By treaty with the Tonawanda band of the Senecas, numbering
650 individuals, the United States, November 5, 1857, in
consideration of certain releases of claims under the treaties of
1838 and 1842, agreed to pay and invest, and did pay and invest,
for said band, the sum of $256,000.
The sum of $256,000 was equivalent to $1 per acre for the lands
in Kansas to which the Tonawandas would have been entitled had they
all emigrated under the Treaty of Buffalo Creek, and also to a part
of the sum of $400,000 proportioned to their numbers as compared
with the whole number of New York Indians, according to the
schedule in the treaty. A portion of the fund, all of which was
paid and invested as agreed, was applied to the purchase in fee of
7,549.73 acres of the Tonawanda reservation in New York for the
tribe's benefit, and the Tonawandas still reside thereon.
17. After March 21, 1859, an order of the Secretary of the
Interior was made which directed that the tract of land in Kansas
territory known as the "New York Indian Reserve" be surveyed, with
a view of allotting a half-section each to such of the New York
Indians as had removed there under treaty provisions, after which
the residue was to become public domain. Thirty-two New York
Indians were found to be resident on the land, and allotments were
made to them. After this, and before the proclamation of the
President of said lands as part of the public domain (December 3
and 17, 1860), some of the New York Indians employed counsel to
protect and prosecute their claims in the premises; asserting in
the powers of attorney that the United States had seized upon the
said lands contrary to the obligations of said treaty, and would
not permit the said Indians to occupy the same or make any
disposition thereof. The said Indians have since asserted their
said claims.
(The remaining findings are deemed to be immaterial.)