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Memorandum of Causes
Resulting in Unfinished Conditions, Exhibit A
Memorandum of causes resulting in the unfinished conditions of enrollment
work and omission of names from the rolls of citizenship of the Five Civilized
Tribes.
I. Under the act of June 10, 1890. the burden was thrown upon Indian citizens of
making application for their enrollment. Many of them were full-blood Indians,
some were minors, others insane. All were entitled to look to the Government for
assistance.
Paradoxical as it may seem, allotments were made to these same Indians subject
to restrictions against leasing and sale. In other words, they had business
capacity to acquire their allotments, but not to dispose of the same.
II. In the hurry and confusion attendant upon the enrollment work under the act
of June 10, 1906, many mistakes were made. This was due to the fact that the
applications of approximately 75,000 persons were filed, and the commission was
required under the law to dispose of each within 90 days after receipt thereof.
Time has demonstrated that the work of the commission in many cases under said
act was worse than worthless.
III. Two questions arose under the act of June 10, 1896, which afterwards led to
great uncertainty, by reason of which much injustice was done unintentionally
during the last weeks of the enrollment work. These questions were as follows:
(1). Were the decisions of the Dawes Commission final in the absence of appeal
to the courts?
(2). Did the Dawes Commission and the United States courts have jurisdiction
over the cases of persons having a "tribal status"; that is to say, persons who
were admitted or enrolled, as Indian citizens, or otherwise duly recognized as
such, prior to the date of said act?
It is sufficient here to note that the Department of the Interior, on May 21,
1903, in the Wiley Adams case, adopted the view, with the concurrence of all
offices and parties concerned, that the commission and the courts did not have
jurisdiction over recognized citizens. This rule was followed in the
adjudication of many cases for four years, covering the period from May 21,
1903. to February 21, 1907, the latter date being the day when the opinion of
the Atorney General of February 19, 1907, was received by this department.
IV. During the first half of the period devoted to the enrollment work a number
of statutory constructions were made which were based upon lack of knowledge and
failure of appreciation of the situation of the Indian people. Some of these
constructions were too narrow to permit of justice being done, and it was
several years before it was possible to get away from the erroneous practice
which resulted from them.
To illustrate, I will cite the case of Serena Jackson, whose mother and several
full brothers and sisters were enrolled. She was denied enrollment, although a
babe five or six months of age, at the time the other members of the family were
enrolled.
The decision against her was based on the technical ground that the decree in
favor of the other members of the family did not specifically mention her name.
Later it was held in parallel cases that the admission or recognition. The terms
were practically synonymous of the parent included the unnamed minor child.
V. The rigid requirements imposed upon adults and persons of sound mind were
also held to be applicable to insane persons, minors, and others under legal
disability. For example, Nancy Smith, Choctaw by blood, of unsound mind, and
Lottie Adams, a minor Chickasaw by blood, were both denied enrollment. (See
opinion of A. A. G. of June 8, 1901; 16 A. A. G., 21.)
VI. Formal regulations were prescribed in the summer of 1899, under the act of
June 28, 1898, requiring all persons to make applications for their enrollment.
These regulations were foreign to the purpose of said act. which contemplated
that the commission should take the initiative, even to the extent of requiring
it to take "a census" if necessary. The failure of the commission to realize
that it was to investigate enrollment rights, acting upon its own motion, as
well as to hear cases which might be submitted to it, was one of the fundamental
causes of its failure to reach all the people who were entitled.
VII. The residence clause contained in paragraph eight or nine of section 21 of
the act of June 28, 1898, was misconstrued for about five years. The
construction adopted was so narrow and restricted that people were denied
enrollment who were simply absent from the Indian Territory, although
constructively residents therein. This period of erroneous construction
continued from June 28, 1898, to March 17, 1903. As a result much work had to be
done over again.
VIII. A proper administration of the act of June 10, 1896, and of the Curtis Act
of 1898, and of the act of May 31, 1900, required that the Dawes Commission
should be in possession of all of the tribal rolls and in position to make
intelligent use of the same. Nevertheless, it developed that the commission did
not obtain a number of important rolls until late in 1902 or early in 1903,
about six and a half years after such rolls should have been first obtained. It
has been recently discovered that there were other important rolls made in 1874,
as well as other citizenship papers and records, which the commission never
obtained during the whole course of the enrollment work. The rolls last referred
to were held in the office of Mansfield, McMurray & Cornish, and their failure
to surrender the same amounted, on their part and on the part of the nations
represented by them, as a great wrong upon all persons whose names appeared upon
said rolls who were rejected because of the jurisdictional features of the act
of May 31, 1900. This fact in its effect upon rejected cases is somewhat
analogous to a single challenge, in a court of law, aimed against the jury
considered as a whole.
IX. Besides the recently discovered rolls of 1874, there were other rolls which
were not discovered until several years after the date when they were first
required.
X. Numerous important rolls were not indexed by the Commission to the Five
Civilized Tribes. A considerable number of these rolls were not even arranged in
alphabetical order. Those that were so arranged were prepared by counties. This
condition of affairs did not favor thorough work, and must necessarily have
resulted in some cases in the rejection of the applicants.
XI. The act of May 31, 1900. limited the jurisdiction of the commission to the
receipt of application by parsons duly enrolled or admitted by the tribal
authorities as citizens. This act was well calculated to insure quick results,
but it worked great injustice. The rolls which it exalted to high importance
were very defective. Many names were stricken off without explanation, whole
pages were cut out, and they were otherwise defective. All of such rolls were
not obtained, and a considerable number were not indexed. The effect of this
act, which in itself was fundamentally wrong, was rendered much worse because of
the facts stated in connection with the tribal rolls.
The Secretary of the Interior was granted a supervisory power under this act
which, under a liberal construction, could have been resorted to to save
equitable cases.
The evil effects of this act continued throughout the enrollment work, for the
reason that it was made, by reference, part of later acts and agreements.
XII. In the case of Esau Wolf, section 34 of the Choctaw-Chickasaw agreement
(act of July 1, 1902. 32 Stat.. 641), it was so construed that the commission
was held to be without authority to receive the application even of a full-blood
Indian after December 24, 1902.
Wolfs name appeared upon the 1893 Chickasaw roll, and the commission might well
have taken up his case of its own motion, irrespective of any application by him
on his behalf. This follows because the Curtis Act of June 28, 1898. was made a
part of the Choctaw-Chickasaw agreement by reference. Under said Curtis Act it
was the duty of the commission to take up and consider cases, of its own motion.
It follows that while said section 34 operated as a bar to the making of
applications, the commission had full power to continue its own independent
investigations. But no relief came to these people until the act of April 26,
1906, which saved applications made prior to December 1, 1905. The remedial
feature of this act may be likened to a reprieve coming subsequent to the
execution.
XIII. Persons having double judgments in their favor, rendered by the Dawes
Commission and the United States courts under the act of June 10, 1896. were
erroneously stricken from the rolls or denied enrollment in supposed compliance
with the opinion of the Attorney General of February 19, 1907. One of these
cases included Lulu West and her children. From the record in this case and from
personal inspection of the applicants I am entirely satisfied that they should
be enrolled. The erroneous application of said opinion of February 19, 1907,
would never have been made had it not been for the fact that a subsequent
opinion, rendered by the Attorney General March 4, 1907. modifying his former
opinion, did not reach the department until two days after the closing of the
enrollment work.
XIV. Under the Cherokee agreement of 1902 the Dawes Commission held erroneously
that it was without authority to receive the applications of citizens of the
Cherokee Nation after October 31, 1902. This construction was not corrected
until the opinion of the Assistant Attorney General of April 26, 1906, in the
case of George Tinney, which came too late to be of any value in the enrollment
work.
XV. The acts of March 3, 1905, and April 26, 1906, provided for the enrollment
of newborn children, the offspring of enrolled and recognized citizens. These
children, by reason of the status of their parents, were clearly and
indisputably wards, and minor wards at that, of the Government, yet the burden
of making application was thrown entirely upon them.
XVI. Said acts of March 3, 1905. and April 26, 1906, were defective in their
wording in that they failed to make provision for the enrollment of certain
classes of children. The first of said acts provided only for the enrollment of
the offspring of citizens whose enrollment had theretofore been approved by the
Secretary of the Interior, overlooking the fact that there were applications
pending in other cases which were equally meritorious. The second of these acts
corrected said defect, but at a late date, and was itself defective in another
respect, in that it continued no provision for the enrollment of a child living
September 1, 1902, who was the offspring of a recognized citizen who died prior
to that date.
XVII. The remedial feature of the act of April 20, 1906, authorizing the
commission to consider applications made prior to December 1, 1905 was not of
much value because of its retroactive nature. As stated, it came very much like
a reprieve after an execution. This follows because the day, December 1, 1905,
was reached and passed before the date of the act extending relief.
XVIII. Under the act of April 26, 1906, the offspring of enrolled Mississippi
Choctaws were entitled to enrollment if living March 4, 1906. The Commission to
the Five Civilized Tribes erroneously held that such children were not entitled
to the benefits of said act. This ruling was corrected by the department in its
decision of May 25, 1906, in the case of Willis Willis, but the applicants,
owing to the error of the commission, lost at least one-third of the 90 days
allowed them for the making of applications.
XIX. The commission erroneously held that the children of Choctaw freedmen were
not entitled to enrollment under the act of April 26, 1906. This ruling was not
corrected by the department until about a week or 10 days before the closing of
the time for the making of applications, consequently by error in administration
these people lost at least 80 days of the 90 day period to which they were
entitled for the filing of applications.
XX. The Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes erroneously held that Cherokee
freedmen were required to return to the nation prior to January 18, 1967. Many
case were heard and much testimony was taken under this erroneous theory of the
law: probably from three to five years' work was done before the error was
corrected. Finally, in the opinion rendered by the Assistant Attorney General,
it was held that the privilege of returning was extended to February 11, 1867.
As a result much of the work had to be done over again with great expense to all
parties in interest.
XXI. The net of April 26, 1906, contained a drastic provision concerning
Cherokee freedmen requiring physical presence in the Cherokee Nation on February
11, 1867, whereby several families were deprived of rights guaranteed them under
Article IX of the treaty of 1866. Under this act some of the slaves of Chief
John Ross were denied enrollment, although other slave members of his household
having cases precisely analogous were enrolled.
XXII. The act of April 26, 1906, contained n new and drastic rule of
construction by which several member's of the Creek Nation were deprived of
rights to which they were entitled under the treaty of 1866 between the Creek
Nation and the United States. Other persons having parallel cases were granted
enrollment prior to the act of April 26, 1906.
XXIII. The Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes, in Cherokee freedmen cases,
adopted the practice of supplementing the records in given cases by adding
thereto copies of the records in other cases. This was done although the parties
to because thus supplemented were not parties to the case wherein the borrowed
testimony was taken.
This resulted in the adjudication of cases without due notice and opportunity
for bearing. In some instances parties to cases were notified of the intention
of the commission to add copies of records !n other cases, but this was done
after the supplemental testimony was taken. Under mien circumstances rebuttal
testimony might have been furnished, perhaps, but even as to them there was no
right of cross-examination at the original hearings.
XXIV. The act of April 26, 1906, worked a hardship upon persons of mixed Negro
and Indian blood seeking a transfer of their names from the freedmen roll to the
roll of citizens by blood. This was due to the fact that said act provided
expressly that no transfer should be permitted unless an application for
enrollment by blood was made within the time provided by law; that is to say
prior to October 31, 1902, in the Cherokee Nation and December 24, 1902, in the
Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations. Compare these facts with the time allowed other
Indians by blood whose rights might be adjudicated by the commission if
applications for enrollment could be shown prior to December 1, 1905. Here was a
discrimination of nearly three years' time against a certain class of Indian
citizens.
XXV. If the Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes had been limited in its
duties to the enrollment of citizens and freedmen. and had not been required to
perform a multitude of other duties, the enrollment work would have been
finished much sooner, possibly in three years. But the commission was
overburdened with numerous other duties relating to the allotment of lands, the
settlement of controversies, the removal of restrictions for townsite purposes,
etc. But the congestion in the office of the commission was probably not so
marked as in the Land Division of the Indian Office and the Indian Territory
Division of the Secretary's Office, where all classes of work coming from Indian
Territory converged.
XXVI. The work of enrollment was much delayed for administrative reasons. For
example, complicated cases would arise respecting certain classes of cases. They
would he referred to the Assistant Attorney General for opinion. Then they would
have to take their place, with other matters coming from other bureaus, and
await action in their turn. While waiting for such opinions, it was the practice
of the division to suspend action in parallel eases. When the opinions came out
it sometimes occurred that rehearing's were found necessary, and at times the
commission was required to adopt a new rule of practice affecting a large
numbers of applicants.
Important matters were also submitted to the courts and. pending action thereon,
parallel cases were held up. A notable example of this kind is I hat at the case
of intermarried whites, which was in the courts for three or four years and
perhaps longer.
Many cases were also held up at the request of the attorneys for the Choctaw and
Chickasaw Nations waiting for the decision of the Choctaw-Chickasaw court in
cases which said attorneys claimed to be parallel with those before the
department.
The penalty for all these delays finally fell upon the Indian wards of the
Government.
XXVII. There was a vast amount of work on hand during the months of January and
February of 1907. Shortly before the termination of the enrollment work, the
Secretary of the Interior informed Congress that unless the time for completing
the rolls was extended for one year, many worthy citizens would be denied their
rights. Several reports to Congress, rendered in February and March of 1907.
showed there wore between 2,500 and 3.000 cases requiring action at the bands of
the Secretary of the Interior within the space of a few weeks at most. It was
Impossible to give full and careful consideration to all such cases. Some were
erroneously denied in supposed compliance with the opinion of the Attorney
General of February 19, 1907. Others were never examined at all. The result was
that the enrollment work was finished in law. but not in fact, on March 4, 1907.
XXVIII. Shortly prior to the termination of the enrollment work It was
discovered that the reports, recommendations, and decisions of the Dawes
Commission were predicated upon supposed decisions of the United States Court
for the Northern District of Indian Territory, when. in fact, the commission1
was without authentic records of the decrees and judgments of said courts. Based
upon the commission's reports some were denied enrollment, and others were
stricken from the rolls in supposed compliance with said opinion of February 19,
1907. This relates only to the Cherokee and Creek Nations.
XXIX. In the Land Division of the Indian Office and the Indian Territory
Division of the Secretary's Office there was great congestion of work owing to
the fact that the business of all branches of the service in Indian Territory
was required to puss through these respective divisions in the order named
before final action was taken. The result was that while one man's application
was pending, another's citizenship rights would be accorded, his allotment would
be made, the land contest would be settled to which he was a party, his land
would be leased for oil or gas, and he would be the recipient of thousands of
dollars of income, or his restrictions would be removed and his hind actually
sold. Of course, the favor thus shown in advancing one man's case retarded the
others in a corresponding degree. Following this came the arbitrary closing of
the rolls on a fixed date.
XXX. The hurry and confusion toward the end of the enrollment work resulted in
unintentional action in some cases. Final decisions were sometimes based upon
some particular fact which would have been satisfactorily explained had there
been time to examine the whole record.
XXXI. The opinion of the Attorney General of February 19, 1907, came at a most
unfortunate time. After the receipt thereof, there were only a few days left to
complete the enrollment work. There was not sufficient time to analyze said
opinion or to confer with the Department of Justice concerning it. A hasty
telegram was prepared in the department and sent to the Dawes Commission. Based
upon this telegram, a large list of names was prepared of persons supposed to
come within the terms of said opinion, and recommendation was made that such
names be stricken from the rolls.
The points in this opinion, which were most far reaching in their effect, were
decided wholly upon jurisdictional grounds: whereas the rulings of the
Department of the Interior upon the same points were based entirely upon grounds
going to the merits of the cases. The result was that there was a hurried
attempt to review and change many decisions representing the work of
approximately four years
It is now definitely settled that this opinion was misapplied and misunderstood
in respect (1) to persons who were simply denied in 1896 by the Dawes
Commission, and (2) to persons who having double judgments in their favor,
failed to transfer or appeal their cases to the citizenship court.
Many names were stricken from the rolls because of these errors. There were also
many cases pending at the time which were disposed of in original decisions
based upon the same erroneous grounds.
As a matter of justice and good conscience, the work should not be allowed to
remain in its present unfinished condition, but sufficient jurisdiction should
be invested in the Secretary of the Interior to enable him to correct obvious
errors.
Notes About the Book:
Source: Five Civilized Tribes In Oklahoma, Reports of the Department of the
Interior and Evidentiary Papers in support of S. 7625, a Bill for the Relief of
Certain Members of the Five Civilized Tribes in Oklahoma, Sixty-second Congress,
Third Session, Published 1913, by the Department of the Interior, United States.
Online Publication: The manuscript was scanned and then ocr'd. Minimal editing
has been done, and readers can and should expect some errors in the textual
output.
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