From an early period, Congress has accorded to the Executive a
large discretion about setting apart and reserving portions of the
public domain in aid of particular public purposes.
Section 2 of the Act of April 8, 1864, conferring power on the
Executive to set apart reservations for Indians, was a continuing
power, and was not exhausted by the first order establishing
reservations thereunder.
The extension of the Hoopa Valley Reservation made by Executive
Order of October 16, 1891, including a tract of country in
California one mile in width on each side of the Klamath River, was
lawfully established pursuant to the Act of 1864.
In view of the history of the case, the custom of the Klamath
Indians for whose benefit the Hoopa Valley Reservation was
established, the government ownership of the territory and its
acquisition from Mexico under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, as
well as the statutes, and decisions of the courts, of California to
the effect that the Klamath River is a nonnavigable stream,
held that such reservation included the bed of the Klamath
River.
What are navigable streams within the meaning of the local rules
of
Page 228 U. S. 244
property is for the determination of the states, and where a
state by statute enumerates the navigable streams within its
borders, those not enumerated are nonnavigable in law.
The prime requisites for the validity of a mining claim are
discovery of a valuable mineral deposit, an actual taking
possession thereof, and the performance of the requisite amount of
development work; where the record does not disclose facts showing
the existence of these elements, a finding cannot be supported that
valid rights against the government existed.
The creation and maintenance of a school district by the State
of California within the public domain and not in section 16 or 36
could not impair the right of the federal government to dispose of
that domain.
The words "sole and exclusive jurisdiction" as used in 2145,
Rev.Stat., do not mean that the United States must have sole and
exclusive jurisdiction over the Indian country in order that such
section may apply to it; those words are used in order to describe
the laws of the United States which by that section are extended to
the Indian country.
In re Wilson, 140
U. S. 578.
The term "Indian country," as used in §§ 2145, 2146, Rev.Stat.,
is not confined to lands to which the Indians retain their original
right of possession, but includes those set apart out of the public
domain as reservations for, and not previously occupied by, the
Indians.
The killing of an Indian by one not of Indian blood, when
committed upon an Indian reservation within the California, is
punishable, under §§ 2145 and 5339, Rev.Stat., in the federal
courts.
Hearsay evidence, with a few well recognized exceptions, is
excluded by courts that adhere to the principles of the common
law.
After reviewing numerous authorities,
held that, in
this case, the court properly excluded hearsay evidence relating to
the confession of a third party, then deceased, of guilt of the
crime with which defendant was charged.
In this country, there is a great and practically unanimous
weight of authority in the state courts against admitting evidence
of confessions of third parties made out of court and tending to
exonerate the accused.
The facts, which involve the validity of a conviction and
sentence of a white man for murder of an Indian on the Klamath
River within the Hoopa Valley Reservation, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 228 U. S. 252
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiff in error was convicted in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Northern District of California upon an
indictment for murder, and, having been sentenced to life
imprisonment, sues out this writ of error. The indictment charged
him with the murder of one Chickasaw, an Indian, within the limits
of an Indian reservation known as the Extension of the Hoopa Valley
Reservation, in the County of Humboldt, in the State and Northern
District of California. The evidence tended to show that Chickasaw,
who was an Indian and a member of the Klamath Tribe, was shot
through the body and mortally wounded while he was in or near the
edge of the water of the Klamath River at a place within the
exterior limits of the Extension.
The trial proceeded upon the theory that the crime was committed
within the riverbed and below ordinary high water mark -- a theory
favorable to the plaintiff in error in that it furnishes the basis
for one of the principal contentions made in his behalf. The
indictment does not allege, nor did the government undertake to
prove, that plaintiff in error was of Indian blood; there was
evidence tending to show that he was a white man, and the trial
judge instructed the jury in effect that this question was
immaterial. It was contended that the circuit court was without
jurisdiction, first, because the place of the commission of the
alleged offense was not within the limits of the Extension, of the
Hoopa Valley Reservation, but was upon the Klamath River, and
therefore outside of those limits, and secondly, because it did not
appear that the defendant was an Indian. These contentions, having
been overruled below, are renewed here, and some other
Page 228 U. S. 253
jurisdictional questions are raised. In addition, it is
contended that the circuit court erred in refusing to permit the
plaintiff in error to introduce evidence tending to show that one
Joe Dick, a deceased Indian, had confessed just before his death
that it was he who had shot and killed the Indian Chickasaw.
The bounds of the Hoopa Valley Reservation were first
established by executive order of President Grant, dated June 23,
1876, made under authority of "An Act to Provide for the Better
Organization of Indian Affairs in California," approved April 8,
1864, 13 Stat. 39, c. 48. The reservation, as thus delimited,
comprised a tract of country in Humboldt County, about 89,000 acres
in extent, lying on both sides of the Trinity River above its
junction with the Klamath. Exec.Ord.Ind.Reserv. (ed. 1912), p. 38;
1 Kappler, 815.
What is known as the Extension of the Hoopa Valley Reservation
was made by executive order of President Harrison, dated October
16, 1891, and included
"a tract of country one mile in width on each side of the
Klamath River, and extending from the present limits of the said
Hoopa Valley Reservation to the Pacific ocean,"
with a proviso to be mentioned hereafter. Exec. Ord. Ind.
Reserv. (1912 ed.), p. 39; 1 Kappler, 815. The extension as thus
described took in the original Klamath River Reservation
(established by President Pierce in 1855; Ex.Ord. Ind.Reserv. 1912,
p. 41), that extended along the river for a distance of 20 miles
from the ocean. This portion was, by Act of June 17, 1892, 27 Stat.
52, c. 120, opened to settlement, entry, and purchase. The
locus in quo is not within the part thus opened, but is at
a point higher up the river.
The indictment and conviction are based upon § 2145, Rev.Stat.,
providing that certain general laws of the United States as to the
punishment of crimes committed in any place within the sole and
exclusive jurisdiction of
Page 228 U. S. 254
the United States except the District of Columbia "shall extend
to the Indian country," and upon § 5339, Rev.Stat., which enacts
that any person who commits murder in any place under the exclusive
jurisdiction of the United States shall suffer death. These
sections, together with § 2146, Rev.Stat., and § 9 of an Act of
March 3, 1885, 23 Stat. 385, c. 341, being all pertinent to the
discussion that follows, are set forth in the margin. [
Footnote 1]
Page 228 U. S. 255
The record presents the following questions, and it will be
assumed that, in view of the course taken at the trial, they must
all be answered favorably to the government in order that the
conviction may be sustained.
(1) Was the Extension of the Hoopa Valley Reservation lawfully
established?
(2) Does it include the bed of the Klamath River?
(3) Is the place of the homicide, for particular reasons to be
mentioned, not a part of the reservation?
(4) Is the Extension (if lawfully established) "Indian country"
within the meaning of § 2145, rev. Stat?
(5) Is the Killing of an Indian by one who is not of Indian
blood, when committed upon an Indian reservation within the State
of California, punishable in the federal courts?
(6) Was the evidence offered to show an alleged confession by
Joe Dick properly excluded?
1. It is contended in behalf of the plaintiff in error that the
authority conferred upon the Executive by Congress in the Act of
April 8, 1864 (13 Stat. 39, c. 48), was exhausted in the creation
by President Grant of the Hoopa Valley Reservation in 1876. Section
2 of that act provides as follows:
"SEC. 2.
And be it further enacted, That there shall be
set apart by the President, and at his discretion, not exceeding
four tracts of land, within the limits of said state, to be
retained by the United States for the purposes of Indian
Reservations, which shall be of suitable extent for the
accommodation of the Indians of said state, and shall be located as
remote from white settlements as may be found practicable, having
due regard to their adaptation to the purposes for which they are
intended;
Provided, That at least one of said tracts shall
be located
Page 228 U. S. 256
in what has heretofore been known as the northern district; . .
.
and Provided, further, That said tracts to be set apart
as aforesaid may, or may not, as in the discretion of the President
may be deemed for the best interests of the Indians to be provided
for, include any of the Indian Reservations heretofore set apart in
said state, and that in case any such reservation is so included,
the same may be enlarged to such an extent as, in the opinion of
the President, may be necessary in order to its complete adaptation
to the purposes for which it is intended."
The terms of this enactment show that Congress intended to
confer a discretionary power, and from an early period Congress has
customarily accorded to the Executive a large discretion about
setting apart and reserving portions of the public domain in aid of
particular public purposes.
Wolcott v. Des Moines
Co., 5 Wall. 681,
72 U. S. 688;
Grisar v.
McDowell, 6 Wall. 363,
73 U. S. 381;
In re Wilson, 140 U. S. 575,
140 U. S. 577;
Spalding v. Chandler, 160 U. S. 394,
160 U. S. 404.
See also United States v. Leathers, 6 Sawy. 17, 21;
United States v. Martin, 14 F. 817, 821;
McFadden v.
Mountain View Co., 97 F. 670, 673;
Gibson v.
Anderson, 131 F. 39, 41;
United States v. Grand Rapids
&c. R. Co., 154 F. 131, 135; 17 Ops.Atty.Gen. 258; Act of
February 8, 1887 (24 Stat. 388, c. 119), referred to in
In re
Wilson, 140 U. S. 575.
We have made a somewhat exhaustive examination of the history of
the Indian reservations of California, and what has been done by
the executive and legislative departments of the federal government
respecting them, and as a result we are convinced, first, that the
situation of Indian affairs in that state in the year 1864 was such
that Congress could not reasonably have supposed that the President
would be able to accomplish the beneficent purposes of the
enactment if he were obliged to act, once for all, with respect to
the establishment of the several new reservations that were
provided for, and were left
Page 228 U. S. 257
powerless to alter and enlarge the reservations from time to
time in the light of experience. To mention but one obstacle that
must have been within the contemplation of Congress, the Klamath
and Hoopa or Trinity Indians were at war with the forces of the
United States at the time of the passage of the Act of 1864, and
had been so for some years. Indian Report, 1864, pp. 123, 127, 130,
133-138. Secondly, beginning shortly after its passage and
continuing for a period of at least thirty years thereafter,
Congress and the Executive practically construed the Act of 1864 as
conferring a continuing authority upon the latter, and a large
discretion about exercising it.
Congress itself recognized the Hoopa Valley Reservation as
lawfully existing at least as early as July 27, 1868 (15 Stat. 221,
c. 248), when it appropriated money "to pay the settlers of Hoopa
Valley for their personal property left upon the Hoopa Valley
Reservation at the time the government took possession," and
also
"for removing the Indians from Smith's River Reservation to
Hoopa Valley and Round Valley Reservations . . . , and the Smith
River Reservation is hereby discontinued,"
and again, in the following year (Act of April 10, 1869, 16
Stat. 37, c. 16), when it appropriated money for the pay of a
miller upon the Hoopa Valley Reservation, and "to supply a
deficiency for removing the Indians from Smith's River Reservation
to Hoopa Valley and Round Valley Reservations." Yet no formal
executive order had as yet been made setting aside the Hoopa Valley
Reservation or fixing its bounds, and its status as a reservation
rested upon a mere public notice given by the superintendent of
Indian affairs for California, under date August 21, 1864, to the
effect that, under the Act of April 8, 1864, and under instructions
from the Interior Department, he had located a reservation in the
Hoopa Valley, and that settlers should not make further
improvements upon their
Page 228 U. S. 258
places (Rep.Ind.Comm'r, 1864, p. 123, 138; Exec.Ord.Ind.Reserv.,
1912, p. 38; 1 Kappler 815).
In the year following President Harrison's order, the Extension
was reported upon by the Indian agent to the Commissioner of Indian
Affairs as being occupied by the Lower Klamath Tribe. House
Executive Documents, 2d Sess., 52d Cong., 1892-1893, Vol. 13
(Indian Report), p. 230. And a similar report was made in the year
1894. House Executive Documents, 3d Sess., 53d Cong., 1894-1895,
Vol. 15 (Indian Report), p. 117. These reports were officially
communicated by the Secretary of the Interior to Congress, and
there is nothing to show any disapproval of the status of the
Extension as an Indian reservation.
But, further, the Hoopa Valley Reservation was only one of four
that were authorized by the Act of 1864. Other reservations
established thereunder were known as the Tule River, Round Valley,
and Mission Reservations. Upon the question of practical
construction, the action taken by the Executive and by Congress
respecting these is as significant as that taken with respect to
the Hoopa Valley Reservation itself. A sufficient summary of their
history is given in Crichton v. Shelton, 33 L.D. 205, 209, 213. The
executive orders respecting them are to be found in
Exec.Ord.Ind.Reserv. 1912, pp. 43, 55, 61, etc. It will be seen
that Presidents Grant, Hayes, Garfield, Arthur, Cleveland, and
Harrison, successively, acted with respect to one or more of these
reservations upon the theory that the Act of 1864 conferred a
continuing discretion upon the Executive; orders were made for
altering and enlarging the bounds of the reservations, restoring
portions of their territory to the public domain, and abolishing
reservations once made, and establishing others in their stead, and
in numerous instances Congress in effect ratified such action. In
view of all this, we feel bound to hold that President Harrison's
order of October
Page 228 U. S. 259
16, 1891, extending the Hoopa Valley Reservation, was within the
authority of the Act of 1864.
2. Does the reservation include the bed of the Klamath River?
The descriptive words of the order are "a tract of country one mile
in width on each side of the Klamath River and extending," etc. It
seems to us clear that, if the United States was the owner of the
riverbed, a reasonable construction of this language requires that
the river be considered as included within the reservation. Indeed,
in view of all the circumstances, it would be absurd to treat the
order as intended to include the uplands to the width of one mile
on each side of the river, and at the same time to exclude the
river. As a matter of history, it plainly appears that the Klamath
Indians established themselves along the river in order to gain a
subsistence by fishing. The reports of the local Indian agents and
superintendents to the Commissioners of Indian Affairs abound in
references to fishing as their principal subsistence, and the river
is described as running in a narrow canyon through a broken
country, the Indians as dwelling in small villages close to its
banks. (Indian Reports 1856, p. 238; 1857, p. 391; 1858, p.
286-287; 1859, p. 437; 1861, p. 147; 1864, p. 122; 1866, p. 238;
1885, p. 264; 1888, p. 10; 1892, p. 230; 1894, p. 117,
and
see 33 L.D. 216.)
Upon the question of government ownership, it is a matter of
history that the entire territory in question was a part of the
public domain that was transferred by Mexico to the United States
in the year 1848 by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, 9 Stat. 922;
United States v. Kagama, 118 U. S. 375,
118 U. S.
381.
By Act of September 9, 1850, 9 Stat. 452, c. 50, California was
admitted into the Union "on an equal footing with the original
states in all respects whatever." By § 3 of the same act, it was
provided
"that the said State of California is admitted into the Union
upon the express
Page 228 U. S. 260
condition that the people of said state, through their
legislature or otherwise, shall never interfere with the primary
disposal of the public lands within its limits, and shall pass no
law and do no act whereby the title of the United States to, and
right to dispose of, the same shall be impaired or questioned, . .
. and that all the navigable waters within the said state shall be
common highways, and forever free as well to the inhabitants of
said state as to the citizens of the United States, without any
tax, impost, or duty therefor."
It is insisted that the Klamath is a navigable river, and there
is evidence in the record tending to show that the stream is
navigable in fact at certain seasons, from Requa (near its mouth)
up to and above the
locus in quo. But, in the view we take
of the present case, the question of its navigability, in fact or
in law, is immaterial except as it bears upon the title of the
United States to the bed of the stream. The present question is
whether that bed was a part of an Indian reservation, and that
depends upon the question of ownership. The jurisdiction to punish
the plaintiff in error for the murder of an Indian upon the
reservation depends upon other considerations, as will appear
hereafter.
In passing upon the effect of the act admitting Alabama into the
Union, this Court held, in
Pollard v.
Hagan, 3 How. 212, that the state had the same
rights, sovereignty, and jurisdiction over the navigable waters as
the original states, and could exercise all the powers of
government which belong to and may be exercised by them, excepting
with respect to control over public lands owned by the United
States, and that the title of the navigable waters, and the soil
beneath them, was in the state, and subject to its sovereignty and
jurisdiction. In
Genesee Chief v.
Fitzhugh, 12 How. 443, it was settled that, for
purposes of admiralty jurisdiction, the tidal test, prevailing in
England for determining what is navigable
Page 228 U. S. 261
water, is not applicable to this country. In
Barney v.
Keokuk, 94 U. S. 324,
94 U. S. 338,
it was held that it is for the states to establish for themselves
such rules of property as they may deem expedient with respect to
the navigable waters within their borders and the riparian lands
adjacent thereto. The Court, speaking through Mr. Justice Bradley,
said (94 U.S.
94 U. S.
338):
"The confusion of navigable with tide water, found in the
monuments of the common law, long prevailed in this country
notwithstanding the broad differences existing between the extent
and topography of the British island and that of the American
continent. It had the influence for two generations of excluding
the admiralty jurisdiction from our great rivers and inland seas,
and under the like influence it laid the foundation in many states
of doctrines with regard to the ownership of the soil in navigable
waters above tidewater at variance with sound principles of public
policy.
Whether, as rules of property, it would now be safe to
change these doctrines where they have been applied, as before
remarked, is for the several states themselves to determine. If
they choose to resign to the riparian proprietor rights which
properly belong to them in their sovereign capacity, it is not for
others to raise objections. In our view of the subject, the
correct principles were laid down in
Martin v.
Waddell, 16 Pet. 367;
Pollard v.
Hagan, 3 How. 212, and
Goodtitle v.
Kibbe, 9 How. 471. These cases related to
tidewater, it is true, but they enunciate principles which are
equally applicable to all navigable waters. And since this Court,
in the case of
The Genesee Chief v.
Fitzhugh, 12 How. 443, has declared that the Great
Lakes and other navigable waters of the country, above as well as
below the flow of the tide, are, in the strictest sense, entitled
to the denomination of navigable waters and amenable to the
admiralty jurisdiction, there seems to be no sound reason for
adhering to the old rule as to the proprietorship of the beds and
shores of such waters.
It properly belongs
Page 228 U. S. 262
to the states by their inherent sovereignty, and the
United States has wisely abstained from extending (if it could
extend) its survey and grants beyond the limits of high water. The
cases in which this Court has seemed to hold a contrary view
depended, as most cases must depend, on the local laws of the
states in which the lands were situated."
The doctrine thus enunciated has since been adhered to.
Packer v. Bird, 137 U. S. 661,
137 U. S. 669;
Hardin v. Jordan, 140 U. S. 371,
140 U. S. 382;
Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 1,
152 U. S. 40,
152 U. S. 58;
St. Anthony Falls Water Power Co. v. Water Commissioners,
168 U. S. 349,
168 U. S. 358;
Scott v. Lattig, 227 U. S. 229,
227 U. S.
243.
The question of the navigability in fact of nontidal streams is
sometimes a doubtful one. It has been held in effect that what are
navigable waters of the United States, within the meaning of the
Act of Congress, in contradistinction to the navigable waters of
the states, depends upon whether the stream in its ordinary
condition affords a channel for useful commerce.
The
Montello, 20 Wall. 430;
Leovy v. United
States, 177 U. S. 621,
177 U. S. 632;
United States v. Rio Grande, 174 U.
S. 690,
174 U. S. 698;
South Carolina v. Georgia, 93 U. S.
4,
93 U. S. 10;
The Parsons, 191 U. S. 17,
191 U. S.
28.
But it results from the principles already referred to that what
shall be deemed a navigable water within the meaning of the local
rules of property is for the determination of the several states.
Thus, the State of California, if she sees fit, may confer upon the
riparian owners the title to the bed of any navigable stream within
her borders.
Now, a California Statute of April 23, 1880, c. 122, Laws 1880,
p. 136. [
Footnote 2] declared
the Klamath River to be navigable from its mouth to the Town of
Orleans Bar, which is above the
locus in quo. But this was
repealed by Act of February 24, 1891, c. 14, and by an Act of March
11, 1891, c. 92 (Political Code, § 2349), an enumeration was made
of all
Page 228 U. S. 263
the navigable rivers of the state. This is held by the Supreme
Court of that state to be exclusive, so that no other rivers are
navigable under the laws of California.
Cardwell v. Sacramento
County, 79 Cal. 347, 349. The Klamath River is not among those
thus enumerated, and it must therefore be treated as not navigable
in law. And it will be observed that it was thus placed in the
category of nonnavigable streams prior to President Harrison's
order of October 16, 1891, by which the Extension of the Hoopa
Valley Reservation was established.
In the important case of
Lux v. Haggin (1886), 69 Cal.
255, 335, 337, the Supreme Court of California, after pointing out
that, upon the admission of that state into the Union "upon an
equal footing" with the original thirteen states, she became seised
of all the rights of sovereignty, jurisdiction, and eminent domain
which those states possessed, and that, under § 3 of the Act of
admission (9 Stat. 452, c. 50), the lands of the United States not
reserved or purchased for fortifications, etc., are held as are
held the lands of private persons, with the exception that the
state cannot interfere with the primary disposal of them nor tax
them, and that the navigable waters are common highways, free to
the inhabitants of the state and to citizens of the United States,
proceeded to declare that whether this act did or did not operate
as an immediate transfer of the property in nonnavigable rivers to
the federal government, the legislature of the state, on April 13,
1850, passed an act adopting the common law of England, so far as
not repugnant to or inconsistent with the Constitution of the
United States or the Constitution or laws of the State of
California, as the rule of decision in all courts of the state, and
that, in view of the subsequent judicial history of the state, this
act must be held to have operated at least from the admission of
the state into the Union, as a transfer to all riparian
proprietors, including the United States, of the property of the
state,
Page 228 U. S. 264
if any she had, in the nonnavigable streams and the soil beneath
them. The authority of this decision was recognized in
Packer
v. Bird, 137 U. S. 669.
We are not able to find that the doctrine declared in it has since
been departed from by the courts of the state.
It thus appears, from the course of legislation and adjudication
by the appropriate authorities of California, not only that the
Klamath River has been placed in the category of nonnavigable
streams, but that the title of the United States to the bed of it
where it runs through the public lands has been distinctly
recognized. In short, by the acts of legislation mentioned, as
construed by the highest court of the state -- (a) the Act of 1850,
adopting the common law, and thereby transferring to all riparian
proprietors (or confirming in them) the ownership of the
nonnavigable streams and their beds, and (b) the Acts of February
24 and of March 11, 1981, declaring in effect that the Klamath
River is a nonnavigable stream -- California has vested in the
United States, as riparian owner, the title to the bed of the
Klamath, if in fact it be a navigable river. If in fact it be
nonnavigable, it is obvious that the same result flows from the
mere adoption of the common law.
From this it results that whether the river be or be not
navigable in fact, the riverbed is to be deemed as included within
the Extension of the Hoopa Valley Reservation.
3. But the order establishing the Extension as a reservation
(Exec.Ord.Ind.Reserv. 1912, p. 39, 1 Kappler, 815) contained the
proviso
"[t]hat any tract or tracts included within the above described
boundaries, to which valid rights have attached under the laws of
the United States, are hereby excluded from the reservation as
hereby extended."
Upon the trial, a certified copy of a notice of the location of
a "mining claim" filed October 20, 1888, in the recorder's office
of Humboldt County, was introduced in
Page 228 U. S. 265
evidence, wherein notice was given by eight persons named
therein
"that the undersigned, having complied with the requirements of
Chapter A of Title 32 of the Revised Statutes of the United States,
and the local customs, laws, and regulations, have located twenty
acres each of placer mining ground situated in the County of
Humboldt and State of California, and described as follows."
Then followed a description showing exterior limits conforming
to legal subdivisions of the public lands, and from other evidence
it appeared that the land thus claimed bordered upon, but did not
include, the river at the
locus in quo. There is no other
evidence respecting this mining claim or location excepting the
testimony of a witness to the effect that there was "a mine" in the
vicinity of the Indian village where the crime occurred, the
character or location of the mine not being otherwise
described.
It is doubtful whether there is any evidence that would have
supported a finding that the crime was committed elsewhere than
within the riverbed. Waiving this point, however, we will consider
the effect of the mining location, upon the theory that the crime
may have occurred within the limits of the claim.
By § 2329, Rev.Stat., placer claims are "subject to entry and
patent, under like circumstances and conditions, and upon similar
proceedings, as are provided for vein or lode claims." By §
2330,
"two or more persons, or associations of persons, having
contiguous claims . . . may make joint entry thereof; but no
location of a placer claim, made after the ninth day of July,
eighteen hundred and seventy, shall exceed one hundred and sixty
acres for any one person or association of persons, which location
shall conform to the United States surveys."
By § 2331, placer claims upon surveyed lands, and conforming to
legal subdivisions, require no further survey or plat, and no such
location shall include more than 20 acres for each individual
claimant. By § 2332, where such persons
Page 228 U. S. 266
or associations have held and worked their claims for a period
equal to the time prescribed by the statute of limitations for
mining claims by the local law, evidence of such possession and
working shall establish a right to a patent in the absence of
adverse claim. The circumstances, conditions, and proceedings
referred to in § 2329 are those set forth in the preceding
sections, beginning with § 2318. The chief requirements are the
discovery of a valuable mineral deposit within the limits of the
claim (§§ 2318-2320); the claimants must be citizens of the United
States, or must have declared their intention to become such (§§
2319, 2321); "the location must be distinctly marked on the ground,
so that its boundaries can be readily traced" (§ 2324), and a
certain amount of work must be done in accordance with local
regulations, and
"on each claim located after the tenth day of May, 1872, and
until a patent has been issued therefor, not less than one hundred
dollars' worth of labor shall be performed or improvements made
during each year."
(§ 2324.)
The prime requisites are the discovery of a valuable mineral
deposit, an actual taking possession thereof, and the performance
of the requisite amount of development work.
Erhardt v.
Boaro, 113 U. S. 527,
113 U. S. 535;
Black v. Elkhorn Mining Co., 163 U.
S. 445,
163 U. S. 450;
Chrisman v. Miller, 197 U. S. 313,
197 U. S.
321.
The history of the legislation of Congress upon the subject, and
the effect thereof, are referred to in numerous decisions of this
Court, among them:
Belk v. Meagher, 104 U.
S. 279,
104 U. S. 284;
St. Louis Smelting Co. v. Kemp, 104 U.
S. 636,
104 U. S. 649;
Gwillim v. Donnellan, 115 U. S. 45,
115 U. S. 50;
Del Monte Mining Co. v. Last Chance Mining Co.,
171 U. S. 55,
171 U. S. 75,
etc.
See also Jennison v. Kirk, 98 U. S.
453,
98 U. S. 457;
Chambers v. Harrington, 111 U. S. 350,
111 U. S. 353;
Hammer v. Garfield Mining Co., 130 U.
S. 291,
130 U. S. 299;
Dahl v. Raunheim, 132 U. S. 260;
Clipper Mining Co. v. Eli Mining Co., 194 U.
S. 220,
194 U. S.
227.
Page 228 U. S. 267
Of course, under this legislative scheme, a mining claim may be
abandoned by failure to do the required development work.
Chambers v. Harrington, 111 U. S. 350,
111 U. S. 353;
Black v. Elkhorn Mining Co., 163 U.
S. 445,
163 U. S. 450;
Erhardt v. Boaro, 113 U. S. 527,
113 U. S.
535.
The evidence in the record is altogether too meager and
indefinite to furnish support for a finding that, at the time of
the executive order of October 16, 1891, or at any time, valid
rights had attached to the placer claim above referred to.
Next, it appears from the evidence that, prior to October, 1891,
the board of supervisors of Humboldt County created a school
district which included within its bounds the place where the
homicide occurred, and that, after October, 1891, the county
created, out of the district mentioned, a second school district
which included the place in question. It was in evidence that this
school district was maintained by the county, and not by the
government, down to the time of the trial herein. From this it is
argued that the state and county had assumed jurisdiction over the
land on each side of the Klamath River for school purposes before
the enlargement of the Hoopa Valley Reservation, and that the state
still exercises the right to maintain a school there.
But we are clear that the creation and maintenance of such a
school district by the state could not in any wise impair the title
of the United States to the lands included in such district, or
limit the authority of the United States over such lands when set
apart for an Indian reservation. The act of admission, September 9,
1850; 9 Stat. 452, c. 50, § 3, provided:
"That the said State of California is admitted into the Union
upon the express condition that the people of said state, through
their legislature or otherwise, shall never interfere with the
primary disposal of the public lands within its limits, and shall
pass no law and do no act whereby the title of
Page 228 U. S. 268
the United States to, and right to dispose of, the same, shall
be impaired or questioned,"
etc. By Act of March 3, 1853, 10 Stat. 246, c. 145, § 6,
Congress granted to the state for the purposes of public schools
sections 16 and 36 in each township. And by Act of July 23, 1866,
14 Stat. 220, c. 219, § 6, Congress gave to the state
"the right to select for school purposes other lands in lieu of
such sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections as were settled upon prior
to survey, reserved for public uses, covered by grants made under
Spanish or Mexican authority, or by other private claims,"
etc. It affirmatively appears, however, that the
locus in
quo was not within either the sixteenth or thirty-sixth
section, and it does not appear that it was selected by the state
as "lieu" lands. Therefore the existence of the state school
district is without present significance. For, as was pointed out
in the
Wilson case, 140 U.S. p.
140 U. S. 578,
the words "sole and exclusive jurisdiction," as employed in § 2145,
Rev.Stat., do not mean that the United States must have sole and
exclusive jurisdiction over the Indian country in order that that
section may apply to it; the words are used in order to describe
the laws of the United States, which, by that section, are extended
to the Indian country.
4. It is contended for plaintiff in error that the term "Indian
country" is confined to lands to which the Indians retain their
original right of possession, and is not applicable to those set
apart as an Indian reservation out of the public domain, and not
previously occupied by the Indians.
Secs. 2145 and 2146 are found in Title XXVIII of the Revised
Statutes, which title relates to Indians, and within c. 4, the
subtitle of which is "government of Indian Country." Section after
section in that chapter contains provisions of law applicable only
to Indian country, and yet the act contains no definition of that
term. In the Indian intercourse Act of 1834, 4
Page 228 U. S. 269
Stat. 729, c. 161, the first section defined the "Indian
country" for the purposes of that act. But this section was not
reenacted in the Revised Statutes, and it was therefore repealed by
§ 5596, Rev.Stat.
Ex Parte Crow Dog, 109 U.
S. 556,
109 U. S. 561;
United States v. LeBris, 121 U. S. 278,
121 U. S. 280;
Clairmont v. United States, 225 U.
S. 551,
225 U. S. 557.
Under these decisions, the definition as contained in the Act of
1834 may still
"be referred to in connection with the provisions of its
original context which remain in force, and may be considered in
connection with the changes which have taken place in our
situation, with a view of determining from time to time what must
be regarded as Indian country where it is spoken of in the
statutes."
With reference to country that was formerly subject to the
Indian occupancy, the cases cited furnish a criterion for
determining what is "Indian country." But "the changes which have
taken place in our situation" are so numerous and so material that
the term cannot now be confined to land formerly held by the
Indians, and to which their title remains unextinguished. And, in
our judgment, nothing can more appropriately be deemed "Indian
country," within the meaning of those provisions of the Revised
Statutes that relate to the regulation of the Indians and the
government of the Indian country, than a tract of land that, being
a part of the public domain, is lawfully set apart as an Indian
reservation.
5. Is the killing of an Indian by a person not of Indian blood,
when committed upon an Indian reservation within the limits of a
state, cognizable in the federal courts?
It is insisted by plaintiff in error that § 9 of the Act of
March 3, 1885 (set forth in full in the marginal note, above),
which declares that
"all such Indians committing any of the above crimes [including
murder] against the person or property of another Indian or other
person within the boundaries of any State of the United States, and
within the limits of any Indian reservation, shall be
Page 228 U. S. 270
subject to the same laws, tried in the same courts and in the
same manner, and subject to the same penalties, as are all other
persons committing any of the above crimes within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the United States,"
constitutes the only legislation of Congress providing for
punishing the crime of murder when committed upon an Indian within
the limits of an Indian reservation. The argument is that this act
operated to repeal § 2145, Rev.Stat., which extended to the Indian
country certain general laws of the United States as to the
punishment of crimes. This argument is plainly untenable. The Act
of 1885, of itself, provides for the punishment of crimes committed
by Indians only. So far from impliedly repealing § 2145, Rev.Stat.,
it manifestly repeals in part the limitation that was imposed by §
2146 upon the effect of § 2145.
It was pointed out by this Court in
Ex Parte Crow Dog
(1883),
109 U. S. 556,
109 U. S. 571,
that
"the provisions now contained in §§ 2145 and 2146 of the Revised
Statutes were first enacted in § 25 of the Indian Intercourse Act
of 1834, 4 Stat. 733, c. 161. Prior to that, by the Act of 1796, 1
Stat. 469, c. 30, and the Act of 1802, 2 Stat. 139, c. 13, offenses
committed by Indians against white persons, and by white persons
against Indians, were specifically enumerated and defined, and
those by Indians against each other were left to be dealt with by
each tribe for itself, according to its local customs. The policy
of the government in that respect has been uniform."
The point decided was that certain general expressions in the
treaty with the Sioux Indians made in 1868 had not the effect of
impliedly repealing the express limitation contained in § 2146. As
a result, Crow Dog went unpunished by the federal authority for the
murder of Spotted Tail, another Indian. And this no doubt was one
of the causes that led to the enactment of § 9 of the Act of March
3, 1885, 23 Stat. 385, c. 341, as was pointed out in
United
States v. Kagama, 118 U. S. 375,
Page 228 U. S. 271
118 U. S. 383,
where § 9 was sustained as valid and constitutional in both its
branches, namely, that which provides for the punishment of the
crimes enumerated when committed by Indians within the territories
and that which provides for the punishment of the same crimes when
committed by an Indian on an Indian reservation within a state of
the Union,
and see In re Wilson, 140 U.
S. 575,
140 U. S.
578.
Section 2145, Rev.Stat., in connection with § 5339, plainly
includes within its terms the offense of murder committed against
the person of an Indian within an Indian reservation by a person
not of Indian blood, but it is contended that the admission of
California into the Union "on an equal footing with the original
states," without any express reservation by Congress of
governmental jurisdiction over the public lands contained within
her borders, conferred upon the state undivided authority to punish
crimes committed upon those lands, even when set apart for an
Indian reservation, excepting crimes committed by the Indians.
Reference is made to the cases of
United States v.
McBratney, 104 U. S. 621, and
Draper v. United States, 164 U. S. 240,
where it was held, in effect, that the organization and admission
of states qualified the former federal jurisdiction over Indian
country included therein by withdrawing from the United States and
conferring upon the states the control of offenses committed by
white people against whites, in the absence of some law or treaty
to the contrary. In both cases, however, the question was reserved
as to the effect of the admission of the state into the Union upon
the federal jurisdiction over crimes committed by or against the
Indians themselves. 104 U.S.
104 U. S. 624;
164 U.S.
164 U. S. 247.
Upon full consideration, we are satisfied that offenses committed
by or against Indians are not within the principle of the
McBratney and
Draper cases. This was in effect
held, as to crimes committed by the Indians, in the
Kagama
case,
Page 228 U. S. 272
118 U. S. 375,
118 U. S. 383,
where the constitutionality of the second branch of § 9 of the Act
of March 3, 1885, 23 Stat. 385, c. 341, was sustained upon the
ground that the Indian tribes are the wards of the nation. This
same reason applies -- perhaps
a fortiori -- with respect
to crimes committed by white men against the persons or property of
the Indian tribes while occupying reservations set apart for the
very purpose of segregating them from the whites and others not of
Indian blood.
The result is that, in our opinion, the offense with which the
plaintiff in error was charged was punishable in the federal courts
under §§ 2145 and 5339, Rev.Stat.
6. The only remaining question arises out of the exclusion by
the trial judge of testimony offered by the plaintiff in error for
the purpose of showing that one Joe Dick, an Indian, since
deceased, had confessed that it was he who had shot Chickasaw.
Since the circumstances of the crime, as detailed in the evidence
for the government, strongly tended to exclude the theory that more
than one person participated in the shooting, the Dick confession,
if admissible, would have directly tended to exculpate the
plaintiff in error. By way of foundation for the offer, plaintiff
in error showed at the trial that Dick was dead, thereby accounting
for his not being called as a witness, and showed in addition
certain circumstances that, it was claimed, pointed to him as the
guilty man,
viz., that he lived in the vicinity and
therefore presumably knew the habits of Chickasaw; that the human
tracks upon a sand bar at the scene of the crime led in the
direction of an acorn camp where Dick was stopping at the time,
rather than in the direction of the home of the plaintiff in error,
and that beside the track there was at one point an impression as
of a person sitting down, indicating, as claimed, a stop caused by
shortness of breath, which would be natural to Dick, who was shown
to have been a sufferer from consumption.
Page 228 U. S. 273
Hearsay evidence, with a few well recognized exception, is
excluded by courts that adhere to the principles of the common law.
The chief grounds of its exclusion are that the reported
declaration (if in fact made) is made without the sanction of an
oath, with no responsibility on the part of the declarant for error
or falsification, without opportunity for the court, jury, or
parties to observe the demeanor and temperament of the witness, and
to search his motives and test his accuracy and veracity by
cross-examination, these being most important safeguards of the
truth where a witness testifies in person, and as of his own
knowledge; and, moreover, he who swears in court to the
extrajudicial declaration does so (especially where the alleged
declarant is dead) free from the embarrassment of present
contradiction, and with little or no danger of successful
prosecution for perjury. It is commonly recognized that this double
relaxation of the ordinary safeguards must very greatly multiply
the probabilities of error, and that hearsay evidence is an unsafe
reliance in a court of justice.
One of the exceptions to the rule excluding it is that which
permits the reception, under certain circumstances and for limited
purposes, of declarations of third parties, made contrary to their
own interest, but it is almost universally held that this must be
an interest of a pecuniary character, and the fact that the
declaration alleged to have been thus extrajudicially made would
probably subject the declarant to a criminal liability is held not
to be sufficient to constitute it an exception to the rule against
hearsay evidence. So it was held in two notable cases in the House
of Lords --
Berkeley Peerage Case (1811), 4 Camp. 401;
Sussex Peerage Case (1844), 11 Cl. & Fin. 85, 103,
109, 8 Eng.Reprint 1034, 1042, recognized as of controlling
authority in the courts of England.
In this country, there is a great and practically unanimous
weight of authority in the state courts against
Page 228 U. S. 274
admitting evidence of confessions of third parties, made out of
court, and tending to exonerate the accused. Some of the cases are
cited in the margin. [
Footnote
3] A few of them (
West v. State, 76 Ala. 98;
Davis
v. Commonwealth, 95 Ky.19, and
People v. Hall, 94
Cal. 595, 599), are precisely in point with the present case, in
that the alleged
Page 228 U. S. 275
declarant was shown to be deceased at the time of the trial. In
West v. State, the defendant offered to prove by a witness
that he heard one Jones say on his deathbed that he had killed
Wilson, the deceased. The supreme court sustained the ruling of the
trial judge, excluding the evidence. In
Davis v.
Commonwealth, the offer excluded was to prove by a witness
that one Pearl confessed to him on his deathbed that he had killed
the person for whose murder Davis was on trial. The Court of
Appeals of Kentucky affirmed the conviction. In
People v.
Hall, it appeared that defendant and one Kingsberry were
arrested together for an alleged burglary, attempted to escape,
were fired upon and wounded by one of the captors; that a physician
was sent for to treat them, and that Kingsberry died from the
effects of his wound before any complaint was filed against either
of the parties.
"In his own behalf, the defendant offered to prove that, after a
careful examination, the physician was satisfied that Kingsberry's
wounds were necessarily fatal, and that he so informed him at the
time; that Kingsberry admitted to the physician that he fully
realized that he was mortally wounded and was on the point of
death, and had given up all hope of ever getting well; that he was
conscious of death, and that thus having a sense of impending
death, and without hope of reward, he made a full, free, and
complete confession to said physician in relation to this alleged
crime, stating that he himself had planned the entire scheme, and
that said Hall had nothing to do with it and was not connected with
the guilt, and was in all respects innocent of any criminal act or
intent in the matter."
This evidence was excluded, and the Supreme Court of California
sustained the ruling, saying:
"The rule is settled beyond controversy that, in a prosecution
for crime, the declaration of another person that he committed the
crime is not admissible. Proof of such declaration is mere hearsay
evidence, and is always excluded, whether
Page 228 U. S. 276
the person making it be dead or not"
(citing cases that are among those included in the note).
We do not consider it necessary to further review the
authorities, for we deem it settled by repeated decisions of this
Court, commencing at an early period, that declarations of this
character are to be excluded as hearsay.
Mima Queen and Child v.
Hepburn (1813), 7 Cranch 290,
11 U. S. 295,
was a suit in which the petitioners claimed freedom, and certain
depositions were rejected by the trial court as hearsay. This
Court, speaking through Chief Justice Marshall, said:
"These several opinions of the court [meaning the trial court]
depend on one general principle, the decision of which determines
them all. It is this: that hearsay evidence is incompetent to
establish any specific fact, which fact is in its nature
susceptible of being proved by witnesses who speak from their own
knowledge. . . . It was very justly observed by a great judge
[
Footnote 4] that"
"all questions upon the rules of evidence are of vast importance
to all orders and degrees of men; our lives, our liberty, and our
property are all concerned in the support of these rules, which
have been matured by the wisdom of ages, and are now revered from
their antiquity and the good sense in which they are founded."
"One of these rules is that 'hearsay' evidence is in its own
nature inadmissible. That this species of testimony supposes some
better testimony which might be adduced in the particular case is
not the sole ground of its exclusion. Its intrinsic weakness, its
incompetency to satisfy the mind of the existence of the fact, and
the frauds which might be practiced under its cover combine to
support the rule that hearsay evidence is totally inadmissible. . .
. The danger of admitting hearsay evidence is sufficient to
admonish courts of justice against lightly yielding to the
Page 228 U. S. 277
introduction of fresh exceptions to an old and well established
rule, the value of which is felt and acknowledged by all. If the
circumstance that the eyewitnesses of any fact be dead should
justify the introduction of testimony to establish that fact from
hearsay, no man could feel safe in any property, a claim to which
might be supported by proof so easily obtained. . . . This Court is
not inclined to extend the exceptions further than they have
already been carried."
This decision was adhered to in
Davis v.
Wood (1816), 1 Wheat. 6,
14 U. S. 8;
Scott v.
Ratliffe (1831). 5 Pet. 81,
30 U. S. 86;
Ellicott v.
Pearl (1836), 10 Pet. 412,
35 U. S.
436-437;
Wilson v.
Simpson (1850), 9 How. 109,
50 U. S. 121;
Hopt v. Utah (1884),
110 U. S. 574,
110 U. S. 581.
And see United States v. Mulholland, 50 F. 413, 419.
The evidence of the Dick confession was properly excluded.
No error appearing in the record, the judgment is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER concurs in the result.
*
See also p.
228 U. S. 708,
post.
[
Footnote 1]
"
EXTRACTS FROM REVISED STATUTES"
"SEC. 2145. Except as to crimes the punishment of which is
expressly provided for in this title, the general laws of the
United States as to the punishment of crimes committed in any place
within the sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the United States,
except the District of Columbia, shall extend to the Indian
country."
"SEC. 2146. The preceding section shall not be construed to
extend to crimes committed by one Indian against the person or
property of another Indian, nor to any Indian committing any
offense in the Indian country who has been punished by the local
law of the tribe, or to any case where, by treaty stipulations, the
exclusive jurisdiction over such offenses is or may be secured to
the Indian tribes respectively."
"SEC. 5339. Every person who commits murder . . . within any
fort, arsenal, dockyard, magazine, or in any other place or
district of country under the exclusive jurisdiction of the United
States . . . shall suffer death."
"
ACT OF MARCH 3, 1885, SEC. 9"
"That, immediately upon and after the date of the passage of
this act, all Indians committing against the person or property of
another Indian or other person any of the following crimes, namely,
murder, manslaughter, rape, assault with intent to kill, arson,
burglary, and larceny, within any territory of the United States,
and either within or without an Indian reservation, shall be
subject therefor to the laws of such territory relating to said
crimes, and shall be tried therefor in the same courts and in the
same manner, and shall be subject to the same penalties, as are all
other persons charged with the commission of said crimes,
respectively, and the said courts are hereby given jurisdiction in
all such cases, and all such Indians committing any of the above
crimes against the person or property of another Indian or other
person within the boundaries of any State of the United States, and
within the limits of any Indian reservation, shall be subject to
the same laws, tried in the same courts and in the same manner, and
subject to the same penalties, as are all other persons committing
any of the above crimes within the exclusive jurisdiction of the
United States."
[
Footnote 2]
See p.
228 U. S. 708.
post.
[
Footnote 3]
Alabama:
Smith v. State, 9 Ala. 990, 995;
Snow v.
State, 54 Ala. 138;
Snow v. State, 58 Ala. 372, 375;
Alston v. State, 63 Ala. 178, 180;
West v. State,
76 Ala. 98;
Owensby v. State, 82 Ala. 63, 64.
California:
People v. Hall, 94 Cal. 595, 599.
Georgia:
Lyon v. State, 22 Ga. 399, 401;
Daniel v.
State, 65 Ga.199, 200;
Kelly v. State, 82 Ga. 441,
444;
Delk v. State, 99 Ga. 667, 671;
Lowry v.
State, 100 Ga. 574;
Robison v. State, 114 Ga. 445,
447.
Indiana:
Bonsall v. State, 35 Ind. 460, 463;
Jones
v. State, 64 Ind. 473, 485;
Hauk v. State, 148 Ind.
238, 262;
Siple v. State, 154 Ind. 647, 650.
Kansas:
State v. Smith, 35 Kan. 618, 621.
Kentucky:
Davis v. Commonwealth, 95 Ky.19.
Louisiana:
State v. West, 45 La.Ann. 928, 931.
Maryland:
Munshower v. State, 55 Md. 11, 19.
Massachusetts:
Commonwealth v. Chabbock, 1 Mass. 144;
Commonwealth v. Felch, 132 Mass. 22;
Commonwealth v.
Chance, 174 Mass. 245, 251.
Missouri:
State v. Evans, 55 Mo. 460;
State v.
Duncan, 116 Mo. 288, 311;
State v. Hack, 118 Mo. 92,
98.
New York:
Greenfield v. People, 85 N.Y. 75, 87;
People v. Schooley, 149 N.Y. 99, 105.
North Carolina:
State v. May, 15 N.C. (4 Dev.) 328,
332;
State v. Duncan, 28 N.C. (6 Ired.) 236, 239;
State v. White, 68 N.C. 158;
State v. Haynes, 71
N.C. 79, 84;
State v. Bishop, 73 N.C. 44, 46;
State v.
Beverly, 88 N.C. 632.
Oregon:
State v. Fletcher, 24 Or. 295, 300.
Tennessee:
Wright v. State, 17 Tenn. (9 Yerg.) 342,
344;
Rhea v. State, 18 Tenn. (10 Yerg.) 258, 260;
Peck
v. State, 86 Tenn. 259, 267.
Texas:
Wood v. State (Tex.Crim.App.) 26 S.W. 625.
Vermont:
State v. Marsh, 70 Vt. 288;
State v.
Totten, 72 Vt. 73, 76.
[
Footnote 4]
The reference is to the opinion of Lord Kenyon, Ch.J., in
The King v. Eriswell (1790), 3 T. R. 721.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, dissenting:
The confession of Joe Dick, since deceased, that he committed
the murder for which the plaintiff in error was tried, coupled with
circumstances pointing to its truth, would have a very strong
tendency to make anyone outside of a court of justice believe that
Donnelly did not commit the crime. I say this, of course, on the
supposition that it should be proved that the confession really was
made, and that there was no ground for connecting Donnelly with
Dick. The rules of evidence in the main are based on experience,
logic, and common sense, less hampered by history than some parts
of the substantive
Page 228 U. S. 278
law. There is no decision by this Court against the
admissibility of such a confession; the English cases since the
separation of the two countries do not bind us; the exception to
the hearsay rule in the case of declarations against interest is
well known; no other statement is so much against interest as a
confession of murder; it is far more calculated to convince than
dying declarations, which would be let in to hang a man (
Mattox
v. United States, 146 U. S. 140),
and when we surround the accused with so many safeguards, some of
which seem to me excessive; I think we ought to give him the
benefit of a fact that, if proved, commonly would have such weight.
The history of the law and the arguments against the English
doctrine are so well and fully stated by Mr. Wigmore that there is
no need to set them forth at greater length. 2 Wigmore, Evidence §§
1476, 1477.
MR. JUSTICE LURTON and MR. JUSTICE HUGHES concur in this
dissent.