Early California Supreme Court decisions The earliest cases heard by the Supreme Court under the Land Claims Act involved non-Indians. Therefore, in
Thompson v. Doaksum (1886), the
California Supreme Court considered the application of the Act to Indians as a matter of first impression. The court upheld a
quiet title judgment for the plaintiff, holding: "If defendants [Indians belonging to the Big Meadows tribe] had any right to the land, it should have been asserted in the land department pending the application for patent, or by direct proceeding on the part of the government to set aside the patent." Two years later,
Byrne v. Alas (1888), the court distinguished its holding by reversing a quiet title judgment against a group of
Mission Indians.
Byrne, in distinguishing
Doaksum, held that the fact of a third party validating title to certain lands was conclusive of the fact that those lands were not in the public domain, and thus, that the aboriginal title was not extinguished. There, the Mission Indians did not claim fee simple by any Mexican grant, but rather "by virtue of their possession, and the continuous, open, and exclusive use and occupancy by their predecessors and ancestors ever since the year 1815." Further, the court interpreted the language in the Land Claims Act requiring the Commissioner to investigate the status of indigenous tenure as evidence that "Congress did not intend that the rights of the Indians should be cut off by a failure on their part to present their claims."
Barker v. Harvey (1901) In
Barker v. Harvey (1901), the Supreme Court heard the consolidated appeals of a group of Mission Indians who had lost a quiet title action by several non-Indians. The appeal to the Supreme Court was brought by the federal government in its trustee capacity. Justice Brewer, for a unanimous Court (White
recused), affirmed.
Barker has two independent holdings. First, the Court reaffirmed its holding from
Botiller v. Dominguez (1889) that even perfect title was subject to the requirements of the Land Claims Act.
Barker rejected in part the reasoning of the California Supreme Court from
Byrne, noting: "Surely a claimant would have little reason for presenting to the land commission his claim to land, and securing a confirmation of that claim, if the only result was to transfer the naked fee to him, burdened by an Indian right of permanent occupancy." Thus,
Barker has since been cited by the Court as the source of the rule that the Land Claims Act itself extinguished aboriginal title. Second, the Court held that the plaintiff's title had been extinguished before the
Mexican Cession. To determine this, the Court examined and quoted extensively the specific text of the plaintiff's grants. From this, the Court concluded that the aboriginal title had long been extinguished by abandonment: It thus appears that prior to the cession the Mexican authorities, upon examination, found that the Indians had abandoned the land; that the only adverse claim was vested in the mission of San Diego and made an absolute grant, subject only to the condition of satisfying whatever claims the mission might have. How can it be said therefore that when the cession was made by Mexico to the United States there was a present recognition by the Mexican government of the occupancy of these Indians? On the contrary, so far as any official action is disclosed, it was distinctly to the contrary, and carried with it an affirmation that they had abandoned their occupancy, and that whatever of title there was outside of the Mexican nation was in the mission, and an absolute grant was made subject only to the rights of such mission.
United States v. Title Ins. & Trust Co. (1923) More than two decades later, the Court reconsidered the meaning and propriety of its
Barker decision in
United States v. Title Ins. & Trust Co. (1923). There, the federal government sued on behalf of a group of Mission Indians holding an 1842 Mexican grant. The court cited reliance considerations of
stare decisis in declining the government's request to overrule
Barker: The decision was given 23 years ago, and affected many tracts of land in California, particularly in the southern part of the state. In the meantime there has been a continuous growth and development in that section, land values have enhanced, and there have been many transfers. Naturally there has been reliance on the decision. The defendants in this case purchased 15 years after it was made. It has become a rule of property, and to disturb it now would be fraught with many injurious results. Besides, the government and the scattered Mission Indians have adjusted their situation to it in several instances.
Super v. Work (1926) Super v. Work (1926) involved a challenge in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia (now known as the
United States District Court for the District of Columbia) to the construction of federal hydroelectric dams in California. The plaintiffs, members of the
Karuk and Peh-tsick tribes, alleged both that the dams would violate their aboriginal title rights and their rights under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. The
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia held that both rights (if they existed) were extinguished by the 1851 statute. Unlike the plaintiffs in
Barker, who were Mission Indians, the plaintiffs here were nomadic at the time of the relevant times. In a one-sentence
per curiam opinion, the Court affirmed the D.C. Circuit, citing
Barker,
Title Insurance,
Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock (1903), and
Conley v. Ballinger (1910). The Karuk attempt to re-assert their claims decades later based upon the federal government's general trust relationship and other statutes were unsuccessful. Since
Super, the Court has twice interpreted the Land Claims Act to also have imposed the requirement to file upon the state of California itself.
United States ex rel. Chunie v. Ringrose (1986) , unsuccessfully claimed by the
Chumash In
United States ex rel. Chunie v. Ringrose (1986), the
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit considered the
trespass and
conversion claims of
Chumash tribe (joined by the federal government) over the ownership of the
Channel Islands of California (and the channel beds surrounding the
Santa Cruz and
Santa Rosa islands) in California. The Ninth Circuit held that, although the Chumash's aboriginal title survived the issuance of Mexican land grants to the same islands, the tribe's title was extinguished by its failure to file under the Land Claims Act. First, the Ninth Circuit disagreed with the District Court's holding that Mexican land grants had extinguished the Chumash's title. Instead, the court applied the same standards to Mexican land grants as would have been applied to federal land grants: the grants were presumed to grant an interest subject to the tribe's aboriginal title. Next, the Ninth Circuit rejected the tribe's arguments that the islands were not within the land ceded by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. Third, the court rejected the Chumash's argument that the Treaty converted the tribe's aboriginal title into recognized title. Finally, the court reached the question of the Land Claims Act. The Ninth Circuit examined the rule of
Barker,
Title Insurance, and
Super. As for
Barker, the court conceded that "the precise basis for this holding is not clear." With respect to
Title Insurance, the court noted that it is "not entirely clear in the opinion" that the case involved aboriginal title, but inferred such from subsequent interpretations of that decision. The Chumash attempted to distinguish these cases by relying on
Cramer v. United States (1923), the case that established the existence of "individual aboriginal title" (as opposed to tribal);
Cramer, after all, had distinguished
Barker. Thus, "[g]iven the line of Supreme Court decisions recognizing the extensive reach of the Act of 1851," the Ninth Circuit stated that
Cramer could only avail those whose individual aboriginal title post-dated 1851. The court also rejected the Chumash's attempt to interpret the Act according to canons of
international law. The Supreme Court denied
certiorari. ==Individual aboriginal title==