|
|
|
Document:
Seufert Bros. v. U.S.
SEUFERT BROTHERS COMPANY
v. UNITED STATES, AS TRUSTEE AND GUARDIAN OF THE CONFEDERATED TRIBES AND BANDS OF
THE YAKIMA INDIANS AND NATIONS, ET AL.; UNITED STATES, AS TRUSTEE AND GUARDIAN
OF THE CONFEDERATED TRIBES AND BANDS OF THE YAKIMA INDIANS AND NATIONS, ET AL.
v.
SEUFERT BROTHERS COMPANY
Nos. 187, 188
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
249 U.S. 194;
39 S. Ct. 203;
1919 U.S. LEXIS 2245;
63 L. Ed. 555
Argued January 29, 30, 1919
March 3, 1919
PRIOR HISTORY:
[***1]
APPEALS FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON
SYLLABUS: The right secured to the Yakima Indians, through their
treaty of June 9, 1855, Art. III, 12 Stat. 25, of taking
fish at all usual and
accustomed places, in common with citizens of the United States, and of
erecting
temporary buildings for
curing them, extends to places in Oregon on the
south side of the
Columbia River, where these Indians
habitually fished before and since the
treaty, even though beyond the limits of the Yakima cession and within the region
covered by the similar provision in favor of the Walla-Walla and Wasco
tribes. (12 Stat. 37.) P. 196.
This provision is not to be construed technically and strictly as an exception
from the general cession made by the Yakimas of lands north of the
river, but must be given effect in accordance with the broad terms used, as
understood by the Indians. P. 198.
233 Fed. Rep. 579, affirmed.
THE case is
stated in the opinion.
COUNSEL:
Mr. H. S. Wilson, with whom
Mr. A. S. Bennett was on the briefs, for
Seufert Brothers Co.
Mr. Assistant Attorney General Brown, with whom
Mr. Leonard Zeisler was on the brief, for the United States,
[***2] as trustee, etc.,
et al.
JUDGES: White, McKenna, Holmes, Day, Van Devanter, Pitney, McReynolds, Brandeis,
Clarke
OPINIONBY: CLARKE
OPINION:
[*195]
[**204]
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE delivered the opinion of the court.
As trustee and guardian of the Yakima Indians, the Government of the United
States instituted this suit in the Federal District Court for the District of
Oregon to
restrain defendant, a corporation, its officers, agents and employees, from interfering
with the
fishing rights in a described locality on the
south side and bank of the
Columbia River, which it was alleged were secured to the Indians by Article III of the
treaty between them and the United States, concluded June 9, 1855, and ratified by
the Senate on March 8, 1859 (12 Stat. 25).
The District Court granted in part the relief prayed for and found as follows:
That the
"following described portion of the
south bank of the
Columbia river in the county of Wasco, state and district of Oregon, was at the time of the
treaty, always has been, and now is, one of the usual and
accustomed
fishing places belonging to and possessed by the
Confederated
Tribes and Bands of Indians known as the Yakima Nation." And
[***3] the court further decreed that the rights and privileges to
fish in common with citizens of the United States reserved by said Yakima Nation
and guaranteed by the United States to it in the
treaty of June 9, 1855, applied to all the usual and
accustomed
fishing places on the
south bank or shore of the
Columbia River, in the
decree described.
An appeal from the
decree granting an injunction brings the case here for review.
As stated by counsel for the appellant the most important question in the case
is this,
"Did the
treaty with the Yakima
tribes of Indians, ceding to the United States the lands occupied by them, on the
north side of the
Columbia River in the
Territory of Washington," and reserving to the Indians
"the right of taking
fish at all usual and
accustomed places, in common with citizens of the
Territory" give them the right to
fish in the country of another
[*196]
tribe on the south or Oregon side of the
river? The appeal requires the construction of the language quoted in this
question, and the circumstances incident to the making of the
treaty are important.
Fourteen
tribes or bands of
confederated Indians, which, for the purposes of the
treaty were considered
[***4] as one nation under the name of Yakima Nation, at the time of the making of
the
treaty occupied an extensive area in the
Territory, now State, of Washington, which is described in the
treaty, and was
bounded on the south by the
Columbia River. By this
treaty the Government secured the relinquishment by the Indians of all their rights
in an extensive region, and in consideration therefor a described part of the
lands claimed by them was set apart for their exclusive use and benefit as an
Indian reservation, and in addition
fishing privileges were reserved to them by the following provision in Article III:
"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, and of
erecting
temporary buildings for
curing them."
This
treaty was one of a group of eleven
treaties
negotiated with the Indian
tribes of the northwest between December 26, 1854, and July 16, 1855,
inclusive. Six of these were concluded between June 9th and July 16th,
inclusive, and one
[***5] of these last, dated June 25th, was with the Walla-Walla and Wasco
tribes,
"residing in Middle Oregon," and occupying a large area,
bounded on the north by that part of the
Columbia River in which the
fishing places in controversy are located (12 Stat. 37). This
treaty contains a provision for an
Indian reservation and one saving
fishing rights very similar in its terms to that of the Yakima
treaty, viz:
"That the
exclusive right of taking
fish in the
streams running through and
[*197]
bordering said
reservation is hereby secured to said Indians; and at all other usual and
accustomed stations, in common with citizens of the United States, and of
erecting suitable houses for
curing the same."
These
treaties were
negotiated in a group for the purpose of freeing a great
territory from Indian claims, preparatory to opening it to settlers, and it is obvious
that with the
treaty with the
tribes inhabiting Middle Oregon in effect, the United States was in a position to
fulfill any agreement which it might make to secure
fishing rights in, or on either bank of, the
Columbia River in the part of it now under consideration, -- and the
treaty was with the Government,
not with
[***6] Indians, former occupants of relinquished lands.
The District Court found, on what was sufficient
[**205] evidence, that the Indians living on each side of the
river, ever since the
treaty was
negotiated, had been
accustomed to cross to the other side to
fish, that the members of the
tribes associated freely and intermarried, and that neither claimed exclusive control
of the
fishing
places on either side of the
river or the necessary use of the
river banks, but used both in common. One Indian witness, says the court,
"likened the
river to a great table where all the Indians came to partake."
The record also shows with sufficient certainty, having regard to the character
of evidence which must necessarily be relied upon in such a case, that the
members of the
tribes designated in the
treaty as Yakima Indians, and also Indians from the
south side of the
river, were
accustomed to
resort
habitually to the locations described in the
decree for the purposes of
fishing at the time the
treaty was entered into, and that they continued to do so to the time of the taking
of the evidence in the case, and also that Indians from both sides of the
river built houses upon the
south bank in
[***7] which to dry and cure their
fish during the
fishing season.
[*198] This recital of the facts and circumstances of the case renders it unnecessary
to add much to what was said by this court in
United States v. Winans, 198 U.S. 371, in which this same provision of this
treaty was considered and construed. The right claimed by the Indians in that case
was to
fishing privileges on the north part and bank of the
Columbia River -- in this case similar rights are claimed on the south part and bank of the
river.
The difference upon which the appellant relies to distinguish this from the
former case is that the lands of the Yakima Indians were all to the north of the
river and therefore it is said that their rights could not extend beyond the middle
of that
stream, and also that since the
proviso we are considering is in the nature of an exception from the general grant of
the
treaty, whatever rights it saves must be reserved out of the thing granted, and as
all of the lands of the Yakima
tribes lay to the north of the
river it cannot give any rights on the
south bank.
But in the
former case (
United States v. Winans, supra), the principle to be applied in the construction
[***8] of this
treaty was given this statement:
"We will construe a
treaty with the Indians as 'that unlettered
people' understood it, and 'as justice and reason demand in all cases where
power is exerted by the strong over those to whom they owe care and
protection,' and counterpoise the inequality 'by the superior justice which
looks only to the substance of the right without regard to technical rules.'
119 U.S. 1;
175 U.S. 1."
How the Indians understood this
proviso we are considering is not doubtful. During all the years since the
treaty was signed they have been
accustomed
habitually to
resort for
fishing to the places to which the
decree of the lower court applies, and they have shared such places with Indians of
other
tribes from the
south side of the
river and with white men. This shows clearly that their understanding of the
treaty was that they had the right
[*199] to
resort to these
fishing grounds and make use of them in common with other citizens of the United
States, -- and this is the extent of the right that is secured to them by the
decree we are asked to revise.
To
restrain the Yakima Indians to
fishing on the
north side and shore of the
river would greatly
[***9] restrict the comprehensive
language of the
treaty, which gives them the right
"of taking
fish at all usual and
accustomed places, . . . and of
erecting
temporary buildings for
curing them," and would substitute for the natural meaning of the expression used, -- for
the meaning which it is proved the Indians, for more than fifty years derived
from it, -- the artificial meaning which might be given to it by the law and by
lawyers.
The suggestion, so impressively urged, that this construction
"imposes a
servitude upon the Oregon soil" is not alarming from the point of view of the public, and private owners not
only had notice of these Indian customary rights by the
reservation of them in the
treaty, but the
"servitude" is one existing only where there was an habitual and customary use of the
premises, which must have been so open and notorious during a considerable
portion of each year, that any person, not negligently or wilfully blind to the
conditions of the property he was purchasing, must have known of them.
The only other questions argued by the appellant relate to the claims which
counsel anticipated would be made on the cross-appeal by the Government, which,
however,
[***10] was abandoned before oral argument and must be dismissed. It results that the
decree of the District Court must be
Affirmed.
|
|