|
|
|
Document:
State v. Meninock
The State of Washington, Respondent, v. George Meninock, Appellant. The State
of Washington, Respondent, v. Jim Wallehey, Appellant. The State of
Washington, Respondent, v. Al Barnhardt, Appellant. The State of Washington,
Respondent, v. A. J. Barnhardt, Appellant
No. 15984
Supreme Court of Washington
115 Wash. 528;
197 P. 641;
1921 Wash. LEXIS 765
April 22, 1921
PRIOR HISTORY:
[***1]
Consolidated appeals from judgments of the superior court for Benton county,
Truax, J., entered February 18, 1920, upon convictions for the violation of
laws relating to the taking of fish.
DISPOSITION: Affirmed.
HEADNOTES:
Indians (1) --
Indian
Treaty -- Right to
Fish Outside
Reservation --
Easement -- State
Regulation. The
reservation by the Yakima
Indians of
fishing rights at the usual and
accustomed places in the
territory ceded by them to the United States in the
Treaty of 1859 did not foreclose the power of the state, outside the land specially
granted to the Yakima Nation, to enact proper regulatory measures to protect
the propagation of
fish, applicable alike to the
Indians and the citizens of the state.
COUNSEL:
Francis A. Garrecht, for appellants.
The Attorney General and
G. W. Hamilton, for respondent.
JUDGES:
En Banc. Parker, C.J. Fullerton, Main, Tolman, and Mount, JJ., concur. Holcomb and
Bridges, JJ., dissent. Mackintosh, J. (dissenting).
OPINIONBY: PARKER
OPINION:
[*528]
[**641] These defendants are Yakima
Indians, maintaining their tribal relations and living upon the Yakima
Indian
reservation, in this state. They were separately charged, adjudged guilty,
[***2] and fined ten dollars each, in the superior court for Yakima county, for
fishing within four hundred feet below the Prosser dam in the Yakima river at Prosser
in that
[*529] county, in violation of certain provisions of our
fisheries code, the place of such
fishing being outside the Yakima
[**642]
Indian
reservation, but within the
territory ceded to the United States by the
Indians by the
treaty of 1859 between the United States and the Yakima nation of
Indians. 12 U.S. Stat. at L. 951. From the judgments of the superior court so
rendered, the defendants have each appealed to this court. The questions here
to be determined being the same in each case, by agreement of counsel they are
all presented together.
It is conceded that appellants would have been rightly
convicted but for the fact that they are Yakima
Indians, maintaining their tribal relations and residing upon the Yakima
Indian
reservation. It is argued in behalf of appellants, as it was in
State v. Towessnute, 89 Wash. 478, 154 P. 805, that they are immune from prosecution under our
fisheries code for
fishing in violation of its terms at the place in question; because of the provisions
of the
treaty of
[***3] 1859, and especially the provision found in article III thereof, reading as
follows:
"The
exclusive right of taking
fish in all the streams, where running through or bordering said
reservation, is further secured to said confederated
tribes and bands of
Indians, as also the right of taking
fish at all usual and
accustomed places, in common with citizens of the Territory, . . ."
It is conceded that the place in question is one of the
"accustomed places" of
fishing by the
Indians, within the
ceded territory. The problem here presented for solution is in principle exactly
that which was presented in
State v. Towessnute, supra, and decided adversely to the contentions made in behalf of appellants rested
upon this
treaty provision; and unless we are to overrule the decision rendered in that case,
plainly
[*530] it becomes controlling in these cases and calls for a decision of this court
affirming the judgments of the superior court here upon review. We are
constrained to adhere to the
conclusion reached in that case; to which there is found support, all but conclusive, in the
later decision of the supreme court of the United States in
Kennedy v. Becker, 241 U.S. 556,
[***4] 60 L. Ed. 1166, 36 S. Ct. 705, rendered a few months following the rendering of our decision in
State v. Towessnute. In
Kennedy v. Becker, there was drawn in question the validity of certain provisions of the
conservation law of the state of New York, as against certain
Indians, prohibiting the taking of
fish from the
waters of the state, at certain times and under certain conditions. The argument
there made in behalf of the
Indians, as in this case, was, that under a
reserved right in a grant of lands made by the
Indians to Robert Morris, which grant was required to be, and was, approved by the
Federal government, and became in substance a
treaty ceding
sovereign power over the lands, the
Indians were not subject to restriction under the
conservation law of New York, as other persons were. Justice Hughes, speaking for the
court, in holding that the right of
fishing
reserved in the
Indians under the terms of the grant did not limit the state in the exercise of its
sovereign power to
pass laws looking to the
conservation of
fish and
game, such as would restrict the
Indians' right to
fish at the place in question the same as the rights of other people, said:
"The convention
[***5] is in the form of an indenture by which (identifying the
tract as being part of that embraced in the Hartford Convention) these lands
were granted by the sachems, chiefs and warriors of the Seneca Nation to Robert
Morris 'his
heirs and assigns forever.' The lands--which were soon resold -- thus passed by the
conveyance into private
ownership
[*531] and were subject to the jurisdiction and
sovereignty of the State of New York. The grant contained the following
reservation which is in question here: 'Also, excepting and reserving to them, the said
parties of the first part and their
heirs, the privilege of
fishing and
hunting on the said tract of land hereby intended to be conveyed.'
"The right thus
reserved was not an
exclusive right. Those to whom the lands were
ceded, and their
grantees, and all persons to whom the privilege might be given, would be entitled to
hunt and
fish upon these lands, as well as the
Indians of this
tribe. And, with respect to this non-exclusive right of the latter, it is important
to observe the exact nature of the controversy. It is not disputedthat these
Indians
reserved the stated privilege both as against their
grantees and all who might become
[***6] owners of the
ceded lands. We assume that they retained an
easement, or
profit
a prendre, to the extent defined; that is not questioned. The right asserted in this
case is against the state of New York. It is a right sought to be maintained
in derogation of the
sovereignty of the state. It is not a claim for the vindication of a right of private
property against any injurious discrimination, for the
regulations of the state apply to all persons equally. It is the denial with respect to
these
Indians, and the exercise of the privilege
reserved, of all state power of control or reasonable
regulation as to lands and
waters otherwise admittedly within the jurisdiction of the state.
"It is not to be doubted that the power to preserve
fish and
game within its borders is inherent in the
sovereignty of the state (Geer v. Connecticut, 161 U.S. 519, 40 L. Ed. 793, 16 S. Ct. 600;
Ward v. Racehorse, 163 U.S. 504, 507, 41 L. Ed. 244, 16 S. Ct. 1076),
subject of course to any valid exercise of authority under the provisions of
the Federal Constitution. It is not denied --save as to the members of this
tribe--that this
inherent power extended over the
locus in quo and to all
[***7] persons attempting there to
hunt or
fish, whether they are owners of the lands or others. The contention for the
plaintiffs in error must, and does, go to the extent of insisting that the
effect of the
reservation
[*532] was to maintain in the
tribe
sovereignty
quoad hoc. As the plaintiffs in error put it: 'The land itself became thereby subject to
a joint property
ownership and the dual
sovereignty of the two peoples, white and red, to fit the case intended,
[**643] however infrequent such situation was to be.' We are unable to take this view.
It is said that the state would regulate the whites and that the
Indian
tribe would regulate its members, but if neither could exercise authority with
respect to the other at the
locus in quo, either would be free to destroy the subject of the power. Such a duality of
sovereignty instead of maintaining in each the essential
power of
preservation would in fact deny it to both.
"It has frequently been said that
treaties with the
Indians should be construed in the sense in which the
Indians understood them. But it is idle to suppose that there was any actual
anticipation at the time the
treaty was made of the conditions now
[***8] existing to which the legislation in question was addressed. Adopted when
game was plentiful--when the cultivation contemplated by the whites was not
expected to interfere with its abundance--it can hardly be supposed that the
thought of the
Indians was concerned with the necessary exercise of
inherent power under modern conditions for the
preservation of wild life. But the existence of the
sovereignty of the state was well understood, and this conception involved all that was
necessarily implied in that
sovereignty, whether fully appreciated or not. We do not think that it is a proper
construction of the
reservation in the
conveyance to regard it as an attempt either to reserve sovereign prerogative or so to
divide the
inherent power of
preservation as to make its competent exercise impossible. Rather are we of the opinion
that the clause is fully satisfied by
considering it a
reservation of a privilege of
fishing and
hunting upon the granted lands in common with the
grantees, and others to whom the privilege might be extended, but subject nevertheless
to that necessary power of appropriate
regulation, as to all those privileged, which inhered in the
sovereignty of the state over
[***9] the lands where the privilege was exercised. This was clearly recognized in
[*533]
United States v. Winans, 198 U.S. 371, 384, 49 L. Ed. 1089, 25 S. Ct. 662, where the court in sustaining the
fishing rights of the
Indians on the Columbia River, under the provisions of the
treaty between the United States and the Yakima
Indians, ratified in 1859, said (referring to the authority of the state of
Washington): 'Nor does it' (that is, the right of 'taking
fish at all usual and
accustomed places') 'restrain the state unreasonably, if at all, in the
regulation of the right. It only fixes in the land such
easements as enable the right to be exercised.'"
These observations of the learned justice, it seems to us, leave
little to be said in support of our
conclusion reached in
State v. Towessnute. Counsel for appellants invoke the law as announced in the later decision of
the supreme court of the United States in
Seufert Bros. Co. v. United States, 249 U.S. 194, 63 L. Ed. 555, 39 S. Ct. 203. That case did not, however, call for any inquiry touching the exercise of the
sovereign power of a state to
pass laws looking to the
conservation of
fish and
game such as our
fisheries
[***10] code and the New York
conservation law. That decision, like the decision in
United States v. Winans, 198 U.S. 371, 49 L. Ed. 1089, 25 S. Ct. 662, considered only a
reserved right as against the private
ownership of the land in question. We are quite convinced that the judgments of
conviction rendered against appellants
must be affirmed. A further discussion of the questions involved would be but
to repeat and elaborate upon what is said in
State v. Towessnute.
The judgments are affirmed.
DISSENTBY: MACKINTOSH
DISSENT: Mackintosh, J. (dissenting)
No argument based upon the theory that the state has a right, in exercising the
protection of its
game and
fish, to violate a solemn
treaty made with
Indian
tribes, can receive the
[*534] sanction of my conscience or my reason. I am unalterably of the opinion that
the decision of this court in the
Towessnute case is incorrect, and that the majority opinion in the instant case,
following that decision, is wrong.
I have no patience with the violation of plain
treaty provisions based in fact upon the strength of the violator and the weakness of
the violated, but supported in theory by ingenious reasons and excuses. Such
conduct
[***11] is more fittingly engaged in by the Hun than by the civilized.
My inclination would be to go more extensively into an argument on this
question were it not for the fact that the legislature of this state, in
session in the present year, passed an act (Laws of 1921,
p. 173, ch. 58) recognizing the injustice of the
Towessnute decision and seeking to keep faith with the Yakima Nation. I content myself,
therefore, with merely dissenting from the majority opinion.
|
|