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Document:
Seufert Bros. Company v. Hoptowit et al.
Supreme Court of Oregon
193 Ore. 317;
237 P.2d 949;
1951 Ore. LEXIS 292
October 29, 1951, Argued
November 14, 1951
PRIOR HISTORY:
Appeal from Circuit Court, Wasco County. R. J. Green, Judge.
DISPOSITION: Reversed with directions.
COUNSEL:
Sam Van Vactor argued the cause for appellant. On the brief were Brown
& Van Vactor, of The Dalles.
Kenneth R. L. Simmons, of Billings, Montana, argued the cause for respondents. With him on the
brief was Maurice W. Seitz, of Portland.
George Neuner, Attorney General, and Cecil H. Quesseth, Assistant Attorney
General, both of Salem, filed a brief as amicus curiae, urging reversal.
JUDGES: Brand, Chief Justice, and Rossman, Lusk, Latourette and Tooze, Justices.
OPINIONBY: TOOZE
OPINION:
[*319]
[**950] This is a suit for an injunction, brought by Seufert Bros. Company, a
corporation, as plaintiff, against Ray Hoptowit, as defendant, to restrain
repeated
trespasses, and involves certain rights claimed by defendant, as a Yakima
Indian, under the provisions of the
treaty between the United States and the Yakima (Yakama)
tribe of
Indians, made June 9, 1855. The suit was dismissed, and plaintiff appeals.
Plaintiff is the owner in fee simple of certain lands bordering on the Columbia
river, in Oregon. These lands commence about three miles easterly from The Dalles,
in Wasco
[***2] county, and extend easterly for a considerable distance. At various points
along the
river where plaintiff has acquired this land there are situated
fishing holes
[**951] or
fishing places where, during the
fishing seasons, it has been the custom for the public to gather and
fish. A great majority of these
fishermen are
Indians. Most of these
fishing places
[*320] are old and
accustomed
fishing
stations of the Yakima
tribe of
Indians.
Plaintiff is a
fish canner and processor and, by virtue of its ownership of the land adjacent to
these
fishing places, has, for a number of years, enjoyed an advantage in the purchase of
fish over other competitive
buyers for the obvious reason that, because of its ownership of the lands, it had
easy -- and it might be said, prior -- access to the
fishermen along the
river; whereas other
fish
buyers had to either use the places of public access or wait until the
Indians had transported their
fish to the public road. The plaintiff has heretofore successfully maintained its
right to prevent its property being overrun and in the circuit court of Wasco
county in a prior case obtained injunctive relief.
Defendant Ray Hoptowit is a Yakima
Indian
[***3] and engaged in business as a commercial
fish
buyer, competing with plaintiff in the purchase of
fish. He purchases not only from
Indian
fishermen, but also from white
fishermen. Claiming special rights as an
Indian under the provisions of the Yakima
treaty, the defendant, despite the injunction mentioned, has commenced to go upon and
across plaintiff's lands without
permission to conduct his
fish buying operations. He drove trucks over plaintiff's land and at times set up
scales thereon, using plaintiff's land at will in pursuit of his occupation.
He claims that, as a member of the Yakima
tribe, in addition to the
reservation in the
treaty of the right to
fish and the right of
ingress and
egress for that purpose, the
treaty also impliedly gives him a right to use plaintiff's land for the purpose of
carrying on his business as a commercial
fish
buyer.
Digressing for the moment, it should be noted that, from time immemorial, these
fishing places in the
[*321] Columbia
river have annually produced untold numbers of
salmon. These
salmon are taken
while in the course of their travel from the Pacific ocean upriver to their
spawning grounds. It also should be noted that
salmon
[***4] have always been the principal item in the diet of the Yakima
Indian.
We are not here concerned with the right of defendant to go upon and across
plaintiff's lands for the purpose of
fishing at all usual and
accustomed places where the Yakima
tribe of
Indians was wont to
fish, for that right is firmly established.
U. S. v. Winans, 198 U.S. 371, 49 L. Ed. 1089, 25 S. Ct. 662. Neither are we concerned with the right of the
Indian to sell or trade the
fish which he may take from these usual and
accustomed places. Before the
treaty was adopted, he did sell and trade
fish which he caught, and his right to sell and trade
fish thereafter has not been
questioned, nor is it
questioned here.
The sole question for determination in this suit is whether the
treaty in question should be so construed as to vest in a member of the Yakima
tribe the
right to go upon and across plaintiff's lands for the sole purpose of
purchasing
fish as a commercial
fish
buyer. Defendant is not a fisherman himself, and, as heretofore noted, he buys
fish not only from
Indian
fishermen, but also from the whites.
To decide the question requires an interpretation of Article 3 of the
treaty of June 9, 1855, the
[***5] material portion of which reads 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 the citizens of the
Territory, and of
[*322] erecting temporary buildings for curing them * * *." (Italics ours.)
Under these provisions the
Indians
reserved the absolute and
exclusive right to take
fish in all the
streams, where running through or bordering upon the
reservation. They also
reserved the absolute right to take
fish at all their usual and
accustomed places
in
streams outside the
reservation and of erecting temporary buildings for curing them. An exercise of these
latter rights necessarily demanded that a right of
ingress and
egress be afforded
[**952] them over lands adjacent to such
fishing places; it was a right logically
incidental to those rights expressly
reserved; it was a right in the adjoining land, and a continuing right.
U. S. v. Winans, supra. Though the right
reserved was to take
fish at these places
"in common with citizens of
[***6] the
Territory," nevertheless, the
Indians enjoyed a special privilege over the citizens of the
territory, in that they
"were secured in its enjoyment by a special provision of means for its exercise."
U. S. v. Winans, supra.
It is well established that, in
construing a
treaty between the United States and
Indians, the courts will construe it liberally in favor of the
Indians, and in the sense in which its provisions would
naturally be understood by the
Indians. However, despite this rule of liberal construction,
treaties cannot be rewritten or expanded beyond their clear terms, and the obvious,
palpable meaning of their words cannot be disregarded, in order to achieve the
asserted understanding of the parties.
Shoshone Indians v. U. S., 324 U.S. 335, 353, 65 S Ct 690, 89 L. Ed. 985;
Choctaw Nation v. U. S., 318 U.S. 423, 432, 63 S Ct 672, 87 L. Ed. 877;
Tulee v. State of Washington, 315 U.S. 681, 62 S Ct 862, 86 L. Ed. 1115;
Seufert Bros. Co. v. U. S., 249 U.S. 194,
[*323] 39 S Ct 203, 63 L. Ed. 555;
U. S. v. Winans, supra; 42 CJS,
Indians, 684,
§ 25 b.
As was said in
Choctaw Nation v. U. S., supra, at page 431:
"Of course,
treaties are construed
[***7] more liberally than private agreements, and to ascertain their meaning we may
look beyond the written words to the history of the
treaty, the
negotiations, and the practical construction adopted by the parties. * * * Especially is
this true in interpreting
treaties and agreements with the
Indians; they are to be construed, so far as possible, in the sense in which the
Indians understood them, and 'in a spirit which generously recognizes the full
obligation of this nation to protect the interests of a dependent people.' * *
* But even
Indian
treaties cannot be rewritten or expanded beyond their clear terms to remedy a claimed
injustice or to achieve the asserted understanding of the parties."
Though a Yakima
Indian has a right to
fish in the
"usual and
accustomed places," in common with the public, and may not be charged a
license fee by the state for an exercise of the privilege, yet this right is
not wholly unrestricted and free from all state regulation. The state has the
power
"to impose on
Indians, equally with others, such restrictions of a purely regulatory nature
concerning the time and manner of
fishing outside the
reservation as are necessary for the conservation of
[***8]
fish."
Tulee v. State of Washington, supra.
It will be noted that the
reservation in the
treaty refers to the
"taking of
fish" at all usual and
accustomed places. What is meant by
"taking
fish"? The first part of the
reservation indicates an answer to this question. It is there provided that the
Indians shall have
"the
exclusive right of taking
fish in
all the
streams," etc. (Italics ours.) One takes
fish in a
[*324]
stream by some method of
fishing, not by purchase. In 36 CJS,
Fish, 829,
§ 1,
"fishing" is defined as follows:
"To be employed
in taking
fish as by
angling or drawing a net; a pursuit consisting, not of a single act, but of
many acts, according to the nature of the
fishing. It is not the isolated act alone either of surrounding the
fish by the net, or of
taking them out of the
water and obtaining manual custody of them; it is a continuous process beginning
from the time when the preliminary preparations are being made for
the taking of the
fish and extending down to the moment when they are finally reduced to actual and
certain possession." (Italics ours.)
See also
Johnson v. Hoy, 151 Or 196, 47 P2d 252.
In the several decisions
[***9] of the United States Supreme Court
construing this same Yakima
treaty provision, it appears that that court has treated the words
"taking
fish" as synonymous with
"fishing," for it uses the terms indiscriminately.
Tulee v. State of Washington, supra;
Seufert Bros.
[**953]
Co. v. U. S., supra;
U. S. v. Winans, supra.
In the
negotiations between the
Indians and the United States commissioners leading up to the signing of the
treaty, there was no mention of anything other than
"fishing" or the
"right to
fish." A transcript of those proceedings was admitted in evidence in this case. An
examination thereof discloses but comparatively few references to
fish or
fishing, though the
negotiations commenced on Monday, May 28, 1855, and continued daily, except Sunday, until
the
treaty was signed on June 9. The references to
"fish" and
"fishing" are as follows:
"June 2nd. Saturday.
"Gen'l Palmer Said. * * * they say this land was not made for you alone, the
air that we breathe,
[*325] the
water that we drink, was made for all. The
fish that come up the
rivers, and the beasts that roam through the forests and the plains, and the fowls of
the air, were alike made
[***10] for the white man and the red man.
"June 4th * * *
"Gov. Stevens said: * * * There is plenty of
Salmon on these
Reservations.
"June
5th, Tuesday
"Gov. Stevens said: * * * This is a large
reservation. The best
fisheries on the Snake
River are on it; there are the
fisheries on the Grande Ronde
river. There are
fisheries on the Os-ker-wa-wee, and the other
streams. There are cumash grounds here at this place (pointing to the large cumash
grounds of the Nes Perses). We feel if we put you on this
Reservation our agent can visit you all and take care of you all.
"* * *
"You will be allowed to pasture your animals on land not claimed or occupied by
settlers, white men. You will be allowed to go on the roads, to take your
things to market, your horses and cattle.
You will be allowed to go to the usual
fishing places and
fish in common with the whites, and to get roots and berries and to kill game on land not occupied by the
whites; all this outside the
Reservation.
"* * * They take
Salmon and
catch whale and make oil.
"* * *
"The Young Chief said: * * * The
Salmon comes up the
stream -- that is all.
"Gen. Palmer Said: * * *
You will be
allowed to go and
catch
fish and
[***11] dig roots the same as the whites * * *.
"Pee-Pee-Mox-Mox said * * * I said to Gen. Palmer that I desired
permission to get
fish there while I lived * * *.
"Gen. Palmer said: That we have agreed that Pee-Pee-Mox-Mox shall have the
privilege of building
[*326] a house at the mouth of the Yakima and catching
fish for five years.
"Saturday, June 9th
"* * * Gov. Stevens said * * * They have their
reservation and
fishing
stations which they well know and which I understand is satisfactory.
"* * * You will not be called according to the paper to move on the
Reservation for two or three years; then is secured to you
your right to
fish * * *.
"Gov. Stevens. * * * that he can
catch
fish at any of the
fishing
stations * * *." (All
italics ours.)
It is clear from the foregoing that the parties had in mind a right to
fish, no more, no less. This right was secured to the
Indians by express
reservation in the
treaty. No suggestion was
made of a
right to purchase and sell
fish
commercially. There is a vast difference between
"fishing" and
"purchasing
fish." To write into this
treaty by implication a provision such as defendant contends for would, in effect,
amount to judicial
[***12] legislation; it would require a rewriting of the provisions in question that
would expand the same beyond their clear terms. The language of the
treaty is clear and understandable. The chief concern of the
Indian was that he not lose his right to
fish at his usual and
accustomed places off the
reservation. This right was secured to him, and with it every other
incidental right necessary to its enjoyment, though such
incidental rights be implied. The implied rights are based
[**954] directly upon and grow out of the express right
reserved. No right may be implied that does not have as its basis some express
provision in the
treaty itself. The rule is well stated in
Byers v. Wa-Wa-Ne, 86 Or 617, 634, 169 P 121, as follows:
"Under any rule of construction, if it is proposed to base on the
treaty such a right as that contended
[*327] for by the government, there must be found in the
treaty something from which the right can be implied. The
treaty may be read in the light of the circumstances under which it was negotiated
and ratified. Consideration may be given to the purposes in view and to the
situation of the parties, but unless the implication of these
water
[***13] rights is found in the
treaty when read in the light of these purposes and circumstances, the rights
contended for must be held to be nonexistent."
There is nothing in this
treaty upon which the right of access to plaintiff's lands for the purpose of
carrying on the business of a commercial
fish
buyer may be based. The right to
"take
fish in the
streams," that is,
"to
fish," cannot form the basis for such an implied right of access, because the right
of
fishing does not embrace the
right to purchase and sell
commercially.
We have given
consideration to the several decisions cited by defendant, and we have given
particular attention to the so-called
water right cases growing out of
Indian
treaties; however, we do not find anything therein which, in our opinion, would justify
a conclusion such as defendant contends for in the instant case.
U. S. v. Powers, 305 U.S. 527, 59 S Ct 344, 83 L. Ed. 330;
Alaska Pacific Fisheries v. U. S., 248 U.S. 78, 39 S Ct 40, 63 L. Ed. 138;
Winters v. U. S., 207 U.S. 564, 28 S Ct 207, 52 L. Ed. 340;
U. S. v. Hibner, 27 F2d 909;
U. S. v. Parkins, 18 F2d 642;
Skeem v. U. S., 273 F 93;
Conrad Inv. Co. v. U. S., 161 F 829.
[***14]
We hold that the defendant, as a commercial
fish
buyer, though a Yakima
Indian, does not have any right of
ingress or
egress upon, over, or across plaintiff's lands, without plaintiff's
permission, and that his acts in going upon and across such lands to purchase
fish
[*328] for commercial purposes constitute unlawful
trespasses.
In the trial court, as well as here, defendant urged the contention that the
Oregon courts lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate the issues in this case,
because it is claimed the United States is an indispensable party to this suit.
However, it is unnecessary for us to discuss this question. Upon the oral
argument defendant's counsel frankly conceded that, should this court construe
the
treaty provision in question contrary to defendant's contention, no jurisdictional question
would be involved. We have decided the issue against defendant.
Defendant admits repeated
trespasses upon plaintiff's lands, and that he
intends to continue such acts unless restrained. Equity should and will
intervene to prevent a continuance thereof.
Bennett v. City of Salem, 192 Or 531, 235 P2d 772, 779.
The decree is reversed and this cause remanded with directions
[***15] to enter a decree in favor of plaintiff in accordance with the prayer of its
complaint.
Neither party to recover costs herein.
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