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Montauk Point land claim

The Montauk Point land claim was a series of three lawsuits brought by Chief Wyandank Pharaoh, nephew of the Stephen Talkhouse who died in the same year (1879) that the tribe lost the last remaining vestige of their territory in the New York state courts, claiming Montauk Point on behalf of the Montaukett Indians, against the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) and its predecessors in title.

Stephen Talkhouse

The first suit, Montauk Tribe of Indians v. Long Island R.R. Co., brought by Wyandank Pharaoh in the name of the tribe, was dismissed because the tribe had not been explicitly authorized by the state to sue in its own name.[1]

As recommended by the Appellate Division's opinion, the second suit, Johnson v. Long Island R.R. Co., was brought in the name of Eugene A. Johnson, a citizen and tribal member. The New York Court of Appeals disavowed the previous dicta of the Appellate Division, and held that neither an individual Indian nor a tribe could sue in court without enabling legislation.[2]

The tribe failed in its efforts to convince the federal government to pass legislation enabling the tribe to bring the claim in federal court. In 1906, the state passed a statute enabling the tribe to sue, and Wyandank Pharaoh brought a third suit, Pharaoh v. Benson, in the name of the tribe. Reaching the merits, the New York courts held that the tribe no longer existed and that the transactions were valid.[3] Since the litigation, the Montauks have failed in their efforts to obtain compensation from the federal and state government, and much of the land in question has come to be held by public parks.[4]

Background edit

 
Map of the Long Island Rail Road, circa 1876

Circa 1875, the Montauk tribe began renting out Montauk Point for pasturage through the Proprietors' Company; the company took possession of the grazing allotments, and paid the tribe an annuity.[5] Circa 1880, the shareholders of the company disagreed over whether the lands should continue to be leased, or whether they should be re-apportioned.[5] In 1878, Robert M. Grinnell sued Edward M. Baker et al. for partition and division of the allotments.[6] In Grinnell v. Baker (unreported), the court ordered the lands sold at public auction (subject to the Montauk claim), with the proceeds distributed equally among the non-Indian lessees, rather than the Montauk tribe.[5]

The auction took place at the home of Jehial Parsons.[7] Arthur W. Benson bought the 11,000 acres (45 km2) at auction for $151,000 in 1879.[5][8] In turn, Benson sold 5,000 acres (20 km2) of the land to the Long Island Rail Road for $600,000.[5]

Benson hired Nathaniel Dominey to negotiate the removal of the Montauks still living on the reservation.[5] At a later, Senate Sub-Committee hearing, Dominey testified that eight Indians remained on the reservation at the time, including: future Chief Wyandank Pharaoh (10 years old at the time), his mother, and two of her brothers.[5] Later, Dominey experienced a change of heart and cooperated with the Montauks in their claim, and turning over his letters from Benson.[7] Dominey testified that he compensated Wyandank Pharaoh's mother with a $100 semi-annual annuity and two houses, to be inherited by Pharaoh, $80 each to her two brothers, and $10 to Wyandank.[3]

Arthur Benson had viewed Montauk as "his private playground"; after his death, his son approached Austin Corbin, President and controlling shareholder of the Long Island Rail Road, and Charles Pratt, of Standard Oil, about the possibility of voiding his fathers will and opening Montauk to development.[7] Montauk Point was purchased by Corbin and Pratt in 1895.[9]

On October 30, 1895, Chief Wyandank Pharaoh returned from a research trip to Brooklyn and Washington, D.C. to gather evidence to pursue a claim.[9] Pharaoh declared his intentions to undertake a hunting trip on the disputed land and initiate a lawsuit if he was interfered with.[9]

The New York Times blamed Chief Pharaoh for the dispute:

If King Wyandank Pharaoh of the Montauk Tribe of Indians had not given for $10 the living members of the Montauk tribe might now be wealthy, instead of being poor and fighting for their rights with a desperate hope of regaining at least part of what they claim to be their lawful heritage.[5]

Montauk Tribe of Indians v. Long Island R.R. Co. (App. Div. 1898) edit

Supreme Court edit

 
Judge Edgar M. Cullen delivered the opinion of the Appellate Division.

Chief Wyandank Pharaoh, on behalf of the tribe, filed suit, stating a cause of action for ejectment on February 5, 1897.[10][11] For proof of tribal status, the tribe cited a partition action decided by Judge Dykman and the 1890 United States Census.[11] The complaint valued the land at approximately $300,000.[11]

On June 5, 1897, Judge Wilmot Moses Smith of the New York Supreme Court set a hearing date for June 19 in Patchogue to hear the oral arguments for the defendants' demurrer.[12] The matter was transferred to Judge Samuel T. Maddox in Brooklyn.[11] Judge Maddox granted the demurrer, dismissing the action but allowing the tribe to re-plead if they paid costs.[11]

Appellate Division edit

The Montauk's, represented by ex-judge George M. Curtis, filed a notice of appeal on December 22, 1897.[11] Before the Appellate Division, the Montauk's case was argued by Leman B. Treadwell, with Francis M. Morrison (both Boston lawyers[5]) also on the brief.[1] Alfred A. Gardner argued on behalf of the LIRR, with William J. Kelly on the brief.[1] The Appellate Division panel consisted of Judges Goodrich, Edgar M. Cullen, Willard Bartlett, Hatch, and Woodward.[1]

The Appellate Division of the Second Department unanimously affirmed the judgment of the Suffolk Special Term on April 19, 1898.[13] Citing Strong v. Waterman and Seneca Nation of Indians v. Christy, Judge Cullen noted that "no provision had been made by law for bringing ejectment to recover possession of [Indians]" and "as a body or tribe, the Indians have no corporate name by which they can institute such a suit."[1] Judge Cullen suggested that the tribe either petition the legislature for enabling legislation to allow them to sue as a tribe, or have individual members bring the suit.[1][13]

Johnson v. Long Island R.R. Co. (N.Y. 1900) edit

 
Judge Edward T. Bartlett held that neither an individual Indian nor a tribe could sue, unless authorized by state statute.

Supreme Court edit

Eugene A. Johnson, a U.S. citizen of Montauk descent, and a member of the tribe since birth, brought a similar suit in his own name, on behalf of himself and other similarly interested.[13] The Special Term sustained a demurrer.[13]

Appellate Division edit

The divided panel of the Appellate Division of the Second Department reversed on July 1, 1899.[2][13] In a per curiam opinion, joined by all but Judge Willard Bartlett, the Appellate Division held:

While the right to maintain this action in its present form is not free from doubt, still, as it is brought in accordance with the view expressed by us on the prior appeal, we think we should adhere to our former decision, and allow the question to be finally determined by the court of appeals.[14]

Court of Appeals edit

The Appellate Division certified three questions to the Court of Appeals:

1. Has the plaintiff in this action legal capacity to sue?
2. Is there a defect of the parties plaintiff in this action, in that the members of the alleged Montauk Tribe of Indians are not made parties plaintiff?
3. Does the complaint herein state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action?[15]

Before the Court of Appeals, Treadwell and Morrison again argued for the Montauks, while Gardner and Kelly again argued for the LIRR.[2]

The New York Court of Appeals reversed the Appellate Division, and affirmed the Special Term, on April 17, 1900.[13] The court answered all three certified questions in the negative, without costs to either party.[16] Judge Edward T. Bartlett, joined by Judges Denis O'Brien, Albert Haight, and Celora E. Martin, held that Johnson had no capacity to bring a suit on the tribe's behalf.[2][13] The Court held that Indians, as wards of the state, had no right to sue unless conferred by statute:[13]

A decision holding that this action could be maintained either by the tribe, or an individual member thereof on behalf of himself and all others who should come in and contribute, would be contrary to the policy and practice which have been long established in our treatment of the Indian tribes. They are regarded as the wards of the state, and, generally speaking, possessed of only such rights to appear and litigate in courts of justice as are conferred upon them by statute.[17]

Chief Judge Alton B. Parker concurred in the result, without separate opinion; Judges Irving G. Vann and Landon dissented, without opinion.[2][13]

Senate Indian Affairs Sub-Committee hearing (1900) edit

 
The Fifth Avenue Hotel, the site of the Sub-Committee hearing

Chief Pharaoh, along with representatives of the Shinnecock Tribe, Narragansett Tribe, and Mohegan Tribe, testified before a Sub-Committee of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee on September 22, 1900, at the Fifth Avenue Hotel.[5] The Sub-Committee consisted of Senators John M. Thurston (R-NE) and Orville H. Platt (R-CT).[5] In addition to Pharaoh, the testifying Indians were: Rev. Eugene A. Johnson, Nathan J. Cuffee, and James Cuffee (of the Montauk Council), John Noka, Joshua Noka, and Donald Seeter (of the Narragansett Council), David Kellis (of the Shinnecock Council).[5] Maria Crippen and Dr. William H. Johnson of the Montauk tribe were among the spectators.[5]

Rev. Johnson testified that there were 300 living members of the Montauk tribe.[5] Johnson also testified that the New York state legislature had denied the Montauks a hearing because they were not "persons."[5] Johnson argued that the Montauks could not alienate property without the consent of both New York and the federal government.[5] He valued the disputed property at $3,000,000.[5]

The tribes requested special legislation to allow them to bring their land claims, for fraud, in the United States circuit court.[5] The Montauks and Shinnecocks claimed 11,000 acres (45 km2) of Montauk Point; the Narragansetts an eight-square-mile tract near Narragansett Bay; the Mohegans a reservation in and near Norwich, Connecticut.[5] Tredwell and Morrison continued to represent the tribes before the hearing.[5]

State enabling legislation (1906) edit

A bill granting the Montauks permission to sue was introduced in February 1903.[18] The Montauk's lawyer, Charles O. Maas, was the key lobbyist for the bill.[19]

On April 10, 1906, the New York legislature passed a statute enabling the Montauk tribe to bring suit,[20] The act contained the following proviso: "the question as to the existence of the Montauk Tribe of Indians shall be a question of law and fact to be determined by the court."[19] Judge Blackmar interpreted the act as "providing that the act should not be construed as conferring tribal rights on any individuals, but that the question of the existence of the Montauk Tribe should be determined by the court."[21]

Pharaoh v. Benson (N.Y. 1918) edit

 
The former Montauk LIRR station house

Supreme Court edit

Pursuant to the enabling act, Chief Wyandank Pharaoh brought a third suit on behalf of the tribe in 1906.[8] The named defendants were: Jane Ann Benson and Mary Benson, the executrices of Arthur Benson's will, John J. Pierrepoint and Henry R. Hoyt, the executors and trustees of Frank Sherman Benson's will, Mary Benson, the Montauk Company, the Montauk Dock and Improvement Company, Alfred W. Hoyt, the Montauk Extension Railroad Company, and the Long Island Rail Road.[8] An area of 4,200 acres (17 km2) was named in the third complaint (1,200 acres (4.9 km2) of it adjacent to the LIRR).[3][8]

Chief Pharaoh was represented by Maas and Lawrence W. Trowbridge (of counsel).[8] The defendants were represented by Daly, Hoyt & Mason (for the Bensons), Austin & McLanahan (for the Dock and Improvement Co.), A. T. Mason (for Pierrepoint and Henry Hoyt), P. Tecumseh Sherman (for Alfred Hoyt), and Joseph Keany (for the LIRR).[3][8] According to a 1910 Q&A in the New York Times, the lawyers fees were "long since supposed to have eclipsed the value of the land in litigation."[22]

The trial took place, without a jury, before Judge Abel Blackmar of the Supreme Court of Suffolk County, Special Term.[23] Fourteen of the sixteen living Montauk men appeared as witnesses at trial.[8]

Judge Blackmar, ruled against the Montauks on October 11, 1910.[8] According to Blackmar, the Montauks individually conveyed all their lands and claims to Arthur Benson between 1885 and 1894, in exchange for $100 to $250 each, except for Wyandank Pharaoh who received only $10, plus between 5 and 45 acres (20,000 and 182,000 m2) in Freetown and East Hampton, plus a $240 annuity to be divided per capita.[8]

Judge Blackmar also relied upon a December 1686 patent granted by Governor Thomas Dongan to the freeholders of East Hampton, granting them the exclusive right to purchase Indian lands in the area.[8] Benson had separately purchased the fee rights from the descendants of the patentees.[8]

Judge Blackmar also held that the Montauks were no longer a tribe:[22]

During this long period the number of the Indians was greatly reduced. Their blood became so mixed that in many of them Indian traits were obliterated. They had no internal government, and they lived a sort of shiftless life, hunting, fishing, cultivating the ground 'Indian fashion' as a witness called it, and often leaving for long periods and working in some menial capacity for the whites.[24]

 
Indian Fields Montauk Big Reed Nature Trail

Appellate Division edit

On appeal, the Montauks found a new lawyer: Allen Caruthers.[25]

The Appellate Division—composed of Judges Jenks, Burr, Rich, Stapleton, and Putnam—affirmed on October 16, 1914.[3] On appeal, the Montauks were represented by Allen Caruthers, while the defendants were represented by Charles K. Carpenter, with Alexander T. Mason and George T. Austin on the brief.[3] Judge Burr, for a unanimous court, wrote the opinion.[3]

Court of Appeals edit

The Court of Appeals—composed of Chief Judge Frank Harris Hiscock and Judges Emory A. Chase, Frederick Collin, William Herman Cuddeback, John W. Hogan, McLaughlin, and Frederick E. Crane—affirmed (per curiam, without opinion) on January 29, 1918, without costs.[3]

Aftermath edit

 
Montauk Point State Park
 
Hither Hills State Park

Federal lobbying edit

Maas departed for Washington, D.C. after the passage of the state enabling legislation.[19] The Interior Department endorsed the idea on July 7, 1906.[19]

In January 1921, Senator James Wolcott Wadsworth, Jr. (R-NY) and Representative Homer P. Snyder (R-NY) introduced legislation and asked the Interior Secretary to report to Congress on the Montauk's tribal status and the merits of their land claim.[26] The Secretary prepared a report agreeing with the conclusions of Judge Blackmar and the New York appellate courts in Pharaoh v. Benson.[27] The Senate Committee on Indian Affairs received the report on April 22, 1922, and introduced the Wadsworth bill that June; the bill did not make it out of committee.[28]

In 1996, represented by Bell, Boyd & Lloyd, the Montauks filed a letter of intent with the Branch of Acknowledgement and Research of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the first step towards federal recognition.[29] The petition for recognition was submitted on June 23, 1998.[30] The tribe received a request for documents from the BIA in January 1999.[31]

State lobbying edit

On February 14, 1922, New York state assemblyman John J. O'Connor introduced legislation to compensate the Montauks.[32] The bill excluded James Waters and the other members of the Montauk diaspora.[33] The bill would have created a three-person committee—composed of two assembly members and one state senator—to determine whether the land claim had been meritorious.[33] The bill never reached the floor.[33]

Montaukett burial grounds edit

In 1983, Fort Hill Associates and Signal Hill Associates applied to the town of East Hampton for a permit to build homes on North Neck hill, above the Montauk's ancestral burial ground.[34] As quoted in the New York Times, the East Hampton town supervisor said, "Who cares about a bunch of dead Indians?"[34] The Montauketts won a temporary injunction in court that July.[34] That November, the town board voted to purchase the 30 acres (120,000 m2) for $1.4 million and preserve the burial ground.[34]

In 1989, developers announced plans touching on a different Montaukett burial ground in North Neck.[35] After protests, the town government agreed to preserve the site in 1991.[36]

State parks edit

In 1984, the federal government announced plans to sell Montauk Air Force Station, a 278 acres (1.1 km2) air force installation southwest of Montauk Point, to real estate developers.[35] New York State and the Town of East Hampton sued to block the sale.[35] The land was eventually turned over to the New York State Park Service, becoming Camp Hero State Park.[35] The state purchased 1,000 acres (4.0 km2) of Hither Woods in 1986 and created Hither Hills State Park.[35] In 1988, the state purchased 777 acres (3.1 km2) more to augment the park.[35]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Montauk Tribe of Indians v. Long Island R.R. Co., 51 N.Y.S. 142 (App. Div. 1898).
  2. ^ a b c d e Johnson v. Long Island R.R. Co., 61 N.Y.S. 1139 (App. Div. 1899) (per curiam), rev'd, 56 N.E. 992 (N.Y. 1900).
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Pharaoh v. Benson, 126 N.Y.S. 1035 (Sup. Ct. 1910), aff'd, 149 N.Y.S. 438 (App. Div. 1914), aff'd, 119 N.E. 1072 (N.Y. 1918) (per curiam).
  4. ^ Laskin, David (27 August 1989). "History at the Tip of Long Island - the New York Times". The New York Times. from the original on 2018-05-10. Retrieved 2018-05-09.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Indians Claim Lands, New York Times, Sept. 23, 1900, at 15.
  6. ^ Pharaoh, 149 N.Y.S. at 440.
  7. ^ a b c John A. Strong & Philip Wyppensenwah-Rabito, More on How Montauk Was Parceled Out, New York Times letter to the editor, at LI11.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Indians Can't Get Lands, New York Times, Oct. 12, 1910, at 6.
  9. ^ a b c Montauks to Make a Test Case, New York Times, Oct. 30, 1895, at 1.
  10. ^ Strong, 2001, at 120.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Indians Want the Land, New York Times, Dec. 22, 1897, at 1.
  12. ^ Indians' Claim for Montauk Point, New York Times, June 5, 1897, at 21.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i Legal Notes: Rights of Indian Tribes, New York Times, Apr. 29, 1900, at 16.
  14. ^ Johnson, 61 N.Y.S. at 1139 (citation omitted).
  15. ^ Johnson, 56 N.E. at 992.
  16. ^ Johnson, 56 N.E. at 468.
  17. ^ Johnson, 56 N.E. at 467-68.
  18. ^ Strong, 2001, at 125.
  19. ^ a b c d Strong, 2001, at 127.
  20. ^ 1906 N.Y. Laws, ch. 177.
  21. ^ Pharaoh, 127 N.Y.S. at 1038.
  22. ^ a b Queries and Answers, New York Times, Nov. 6, 1910, at X11.
  23. ^ Strong, 2001, at 128.
  24. ^ Pharaoh, 126 N.Y.S. at 1037-38.
  25. ^ Strong, 2001, at 141.
  26. ^ Strong, 2001, at 147-48.
  27. ^ Strong, 2001, at 150-52.
  28. ^ Strong, 2001, at 152.
  29. ^ Strong, 2001, at 167.
  30. ^ Strong, 2001, at 174.
  31. ^ Strong, 2001, at 174-75.
  32. ^ Strong, 2001, at 149-50.
  33. ^ a b c Strong, 2001, at 150.
  34. ^ a b c d Strong, 2001, at 160.
  35. ^ a b c d e f Strong, 2001, at 162.
  36. ^ Strong, 2001, at 163.

References edit

  • John A. Strong, The Montaukett Indians of Eastern Long Island (2001).
  • John A. Strong, Who Says the Montauk Tribe Is Extinct? Judge Abel Blackmar's Decision in Wyandank v. Benson (1909), 16 Am. Indian Culture & Res. J. 1 (1992).


montauk, point, land, claim, series, three, lawsuits, brought, chief, wyandank, pharaoh, nephew, stephen, talkhouse, died, same, year, 1879, that, tribe, lost, last, remaining, vestige, their, territory, york, state, courts, claiming, montauk, point, behalf, m. The Montauk Point land claim was a series of three lawsuits brought by Chief Wyandank Pharaoh nephew of the Stephen Talkhouse who died in the same year 1879 that the tribe lost the last remaining vestige of their territory in the New York state courts claiming Montauk Point on behalf of the Montaukett Indians against the Long Island Rail Road LIRR and its predecessors in title Stephen Talkhouse The first suit Montauk Tribe of Indians v Long Island R R Co brought by Wyandank Pharaoh in the name of the tribe was dismissed because the tribe had not been explicitly authorized by the state to sue in its own name 1 As recommended by the Appellate Division s opinion the second suit Johnson v Long Island R R Co was brought in the name of Eugene A Johnson a citizen and tribal member The New York Court of Appeals disavowed the previous dicta of the Appellate Division and held that neither an individual Indian nor a tribe could sue in court without enabling legislation 2 The tribe failed in its efforts to convince the federal government to pass legislation enabling the tribe to bring the claim in federal court In 1906 the state passed a statute enabling the tribe to sue and Wyandank Pharaoh brought a third suit Pharaoh v Benson in the name of the tribe Reaching the merits the New York courts held that the tribe no longer existed and that the transactions were valid 3 Since the litigation the Montauks have failed in their efforts to obtain compensation from the federal and state government and much of the land in question has come to be held by public parks 4 Contents 1 Background 2 Montauk Tribe of Indians v Long Island R R Co App Div 1898 2 1 Supreme Court 2 2 Appellate Division 3 Johnson v Long Island R R Co N Y 1900 3 1 Supreme Court 3 2 Appellate Division 3 3 Court of Appeals 4 Senate Indian Affairs Sub Committee hearing 1900 5 State enabling legislation 1906 6 Pharaoh v Benson N Y 1918 6 1 Supreme Court 6 2 Appellate Division 6 3 Court of Appeals 7 Aftermath 7 1 Federal lobbying 7 2 State lobbying 7 3 Montaukett burial grounds 7 4 State parks 8 Notes 9 ReferencesBackground editMain article Aboriginal title in New York nbsp Map of the Long Island Rail Road circa 1876 Circa 1875 the Montauk tribe began renting out Montauk Point for pasturage through the Proprietors Company the company took possession of the grazing allotments and paid the tribe an annuity 5 Circa 1880 the shareholders of the company disagreed over whether the lands should continue to be leased or whether they should be re apportioned 5 In 1878 Robert M Grinnell sued Edward M Baker et al for partition and division of the allotments 6 In Grinnell v Baker unreported the court ordered the lands sold at public auction subject to the Montauk claim with the proceeds distributed equally among the non Indian lessees rather than the Montauk tribe 5 The auction took place at the home of Jehial Parsons 7 Arthur W Benson bought the 11 000 acres 45 km2 at auction for 151 000 in 1879 5 8 In turn Benson sold 5 000 acres 20 km2 of the land to the Long Island Rail Road for 600 000 5 Benson hired Nathaniel Dominey to negotiate the removal of the Montauks still living on the reservation 5 At a later Senate Sub Committee hearing Dominey testified that eight Indians remained on the reservation at the time including future Chief Wyandank Pharaoh 10 years old at the time his mother and two of her brothers 5 Later Dominey experienced a change of heart and cooperated with the Montauks in their claim and turning over his letters from Benson 7 Dominey testified that he compensated Wyandank Pharaoh s mother with a 100 semi annual annuity and two houses to be inherited by Pharaoh 80 each to her two brothers and 10 to Wyandank 3 Arthur Benson had viewed Montauk as his private playground after his death his son approached Austin Corbin President and controlling shareholder of the Long Island Rail Road and Charles Pratt of Standard Oil about the possibility of voiding his fathers will and opening Montauk to development 7 Montauk Point was purchased by Corbin and Pratt in 1895 9 On October 30 1895 Chief Wyandank Pharaoh returned from a research trip to Brooklyn and Washington D C to gather evidence to pursue a claim 9 Pharaoh declared his intentions to undertake a hunting trip on the disputed land and initiate a lawsuit if he was interfered with 9 The New York Times blamed Chief Pharaoh for the dispute If King Wyandank Pharaoh of the Montauk Tribe of Indians had not given for 10 the living members of the Montauk tribe might now be wealthy instead of being poor and fighting for their rights with a desperate hope of regaining at least part of what they claim to be their lawful heritage 5 Montauk Tribe of Indians v Long Island R R Co App Div 1898 editSupreme Court edit nbsp Judge Edgar M Cullen delivered the opinion of the Appellate Division Chief Wyandank Pharaoh on behalf of the tribe filed suit stating a cause of action for ejectment on February 5 1897 10 11 For proof of tribal status the tribe cited a partition action decided by Judge Dykman and the 1890 United States Census 11 The complaint valued the land at approximately 300 000 11 On June 5 1897 Judge Wilmot Moses Smith of the New York Supreme Court set a hearing date for June 19 in Patchogue to hear the oral arguments for the defendants demurrer 12 The matter was transferred to Judge Samuel T Maddox in Brooklyn 11 Judge Maddox granted the demurrer dismissing the action but allowing the tribe to re plead if they paid costs 11 Appellate Division edit The Montauk s represented by ex judge George M Curtis filed a notice of appeal on December 22 1897 11 Before the Appellate Division the Montauk s case was argued by Leman B Treadwell with Francis M Morrison both Boston lawyers 5 also on the brief 1 Alfred A Gardner argued on behalf of the LIRR with William J Kelly on the brief 1 The Appellate Division panel consisted of Judges Goodrich Edgar M Cullen Willard Bartlett Hatch and Woodward 1 The Appellate Division of the Second Department unanimously affirmed the judgment of the Suffolk Special Term on April 19 1898 13 Citing Strong v Waterman and Seneca Nation of Indians v Christy Judge Cullen noted that no provision had been made by law for bringing ejectment to recover possession of Indians and as a body or tribe the Indians have no corporate name by which they can institute such a suit 1 Judge Cullen suggested that the tribe either petition the legislature for enabling legislation to allow them to sue as a tribe or have individual members bring the suit 1 13 Johnson v Long Island R R Co N Y 1900 edit nbsp Judge Edward T Bartlett held that neither an individual Indian nor a tribe could sue unless authorized by state statute Supreme Court edit Eugene A Johnson a U S citizen of Montauk descent and a member of the tribe since birth brought a similar suit in his own name on behalf of himself and other similarly interested 13 The Special Term sustained a demurrer 13 Appellate Division edit The divided panel of the Appellate Division of the Second Department reversed on July 1 1899 2 13 In a per curiam opinion joined by all but Judge Willard Bartlett the Appellate Division held While the right to maintain this action in its present form is not free from doubt still as it is brought in accordance with the view expressed by us on the prior appeal we think we should adhere to our former decision and allow the question to be finally determined by the court of appeals 14 Court of Appeals edit The Appellate Division certified three questions to the Court of Appeals 1 Has the plaintiff in this action legal capacity to sue 2 Is there a defect of the parties plaintiff in this action in that the members of the alleged Montauk Tribe of Indians are not made parties plaintiff 3 Does the complaint herein state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action 15 Before the Court of Appeals Treadwell and Morrison again argued for the Montauks while Gardner and Kelly again argued for the LIRR 2 The New York Court of Appeals reversed the Appellate Division and affirmed the Special Term on April 17 1900 13 The court answered all three certified questions in the negative without costs to either party 16 Judge Edward T Bartlett joined by Judges Denis O Brien Albert Haight and Celora E Martin held that Johnson had no capacity to bring a suit on the tribe s behalf 2 13 The Court held that Indians as wards of the state had no right to sue unless conferred by statute 13 A decision holding that this action could be maintained either by the tribe or an individual member thereof on behalf of himself and all others who should come in and contribute would be contrary to the policy and practice which have been long established in our treatment of the Indian tribes They are regarded as the wards of the state and generally speaking possessed of only such rights to appear and litigate in courts of justice as are conferred upon them by statute 17 Chief Judge Alton B Parker concurred in the result without separate opinion Judges Irving G Vann and Landon dissented without opinion 2 13 Senate Indian Affairs Sub Committee hearing 1900 editSee also Narragansett land claim and Mohegan Indians v Connecticut nbsp The Fifth Avenue Hotel the site of the Sub Committee hearing Chief Pharaoh along with representatives of the Shinnecock Tribe Narragansett Tribe and Mohegan Tribe testified before a Sub Committee of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee on September 22 1900 at the Fifth Avenue Hotel 5 The Sub Committee consisted of Senators John M Thurston R NE and Orville H Platt R CT 5 In addition to Pharaoh the testifying Indians were Rev Eugene A Johnson Nathan J Cuffee and James Cuffee of the Montauk Council John Noka Joshua Noka and Donald Seeter of the Narragansett Council David Kellis of the Shinnecock Council 5 Maria Crippen and Dr William H Johnson of the Montauk tribe were among the spectators 5 Rev Johnson testified that there were 300 living members of the Montauk tribe 5 Johnson also testified that the New York state legislature had denied the Montauks a hearing because they were not persons 5 Johnson argued that the Montauks could not alienate property without the consent of both New York and the federal government 5 He valued the disputed property at 3 000 000 5 The tribes requested special legislation to allow them to bring their land claims for fraud in the United States circuit court 5 The Montauks and Shinnecocks claimed 11 000 acres 45 km2 of Montauk Point the Narragansetts an eight square mile tract near Narragansett Bay the Mohegans a reservation in and near Norwich Connecticut 5 Tredwell and Morrison continued to represent the tribes before the hearing 5 State enabling legislation 1906 editA bill granting the Montauks permission to sue was introduced in February 1903 18 The Montauk s lawyer Charles O Maas was the key lobbyist for the bill 19 On April 10 1906 the New York legislature passed a statute enabling the Montauk tribe to bring suit 20 The act contained the following proviso the question as to the existence of the Montauk Tribe of Indians shall be a question of law and fact to be determined by the court 19 Judge Blackmar interpreted the act as providing that the act should not be construed as conferring tribal rights on any individuals but that the question of the existence of the Montauk Tribe should be determined by the court 21 Pharaoh v Benson N Y 1918 edit nbsp The former Montauk LIRR station house Supreme Court edit Pursuant to the enabling act Chief Wyandank Pharaoh brought a third suit on behalf of the tribe in 1906 8 The named defendants were Jane Ann Benson and Mary Benson the executrices of Arthur Benson s will John J Pierrepoint and Henry R Hoyt the executors and trustees of Frank Sherman Benson s will Mary Benson the Montauk Company the Montauk Dock and Improvement Company Alfred W Hoyt the Montauk Extension Railroad Company and the Long Island Rail Road 8 An area of 4 200 acres 17 km2 was named in the third complaint 1 200 acres 4 9 km2 of it adjacent to the LIRR 3 8 Chief Pharaoh was represented by Maas and Lawrence W Trowbridge of counsel 8 The defendants were represented by Daly Hoyt amp Mason for the Bensons Austin amp McLanahan for the Dock and Improvement Co A T Mason for Pierrepoint and Henry Hoyt P Tecumseh Sherman for Alfred Hoyt and Joseph Keany for the LIRR 3 8 According to a 1910 Q amp A in the New York Times the lawyers fees were long since supposed to have eclipsed the value of the land in litigation 22 The trial took place without a jury before Judge Abel Blackmar of the Supreme Court of Suffolk County Special Term 23 Fourteen of the sixteen living Montauk men appeared as witnesses at trial 8 Judge Blackmar ruled against the Montauks on October 11 1910 8 According to Blackmar the Montauks individually conveyed all their lands and claims to Arthur Benson between 1885 and 1894 in exchange for 100 to 250 each except for Wyandank Pharaoh who received only 10 plus between 5 and 45 acres 20 000 and 182 000 m2 in Freetown and East Hampton plus a 240 annuity to be divided per capita 8 Judge Blackmar also relied upon a December 1686 patent granted by Governor Thomas Dongan to the freeholders of East Hampton granting them the exclusive right to purchase Indian lands in the area 8 Benson had separately purchased the fee rights from the descendants of the patentees 8 Judge Blackmar also held that the Montauks were no longer a tribe 22 During this long period the number of the Indians was greatly reduced Their blood became so mixed that in many of them Indian traits were obliterated They had no internal government and they lived a sort of shiftless life hunting fishing cultivating the ground Indian fashion as a witness called it and often leaving for long periods and working in some menial capacity for the whites 24 nbsp Indian Fields Montauk Big Reed Nature Trail Appellate Division edit On appeal the Montauks found a new lawyer Allen Caruthers 25 The Appellate Division composed of Judges Jenks Burr Rich Stapleton and Putnam affirmed on October 16 1914 3 On appeal the Montauks were represented by Allen Caruthers while the defendants were represented by Charles K Carpenter with Alexander T Mason and George T Austin on the brief 3 Judge Burr for a unanimous court wrote the opinion 3 Court of Appeals edit The Court of Appeals composed of Chief Judge Frank Harris Hiscock and Judges Emory A Chase Frederick Collin William Herman Cuddeback John W Hogan McLaughlin and Frederick E Crane affirmed per curiam without opinion on January 29 1918 without costs 3 Aftermath edit nbsp Montauk Point State Park nbsp Hither Hills State Park Federal lobbying edit Maas departed for Washington D C after the passage of the state enabling legislation 19 The Interior Department endorsed the idea on July 7 1906 19 In January 1921 Senator James Wolcott Wadsworth Jr R NY and Representative Homer P Snyder R NY introduced legislation and asked the Interior Secretary to report to Congress on the Montauk s tribal status and the merits of their land claim 26 The Secretary prepared a report agreeing with the conclusions of Judge Blackmar and the New York appellate courts in Pharaoh v Benson 27 The Senate Committee on Indian Affairs received the report on April 22 1922 and introduced the Wadsworth bill that June the bill did not make it out of committee 28 In 1996 represented by Bell Boyd amp Lloyd the Montauks filed a letter of intent with the Branch of Acknowledgement and Research of the Bureau of Indian Affairs the first step towards federal recognition 29 The petition for recognition was submitted on June 23 1998 30 The tribe received a request for documents from the BIA in January 1999 31 State lobbying edit On February 14 1922 New York state assemblyman John J O Connor introduced legislation to compensate the Montauks 32 The bill excluded James Waters and the other members of the Montauk diaspora 33 The bill would have created a three person committee composed of two assembly members and one state senator to determine whether the land claim had been meritorious 33 The bill never reached the floor 33 Montaukett burial grounds edit In 1983 Fort Hill Associates and Signal Hill Associates applied to the town of East Hampton for a permit to build homes on North Neck hill above the Montauk s ancestral burial ground 34 As quoted in the New York Times the East Hampton town supervisor said Who cares about a bunch of dead Indians 34 The Montauketts won a temporary injunction in court that July 34 That November the town board voted to purchase the 30 acres 120 000 m2 for 1 4 million and preserve the burial ground 34 In 1989 developers announced plans touching on a different Montaukett burial ground in North Neck 35 After protests the town government agreed to preserve the site in 1991 36 State parks edit In 1984 the federal government announced plans to sell Montauk Air Force Station a 278 acres 1 1 km2 air force installation southwest of Montauk Point to real estate developers 35 New York State and the Town of East Hampton sued to block the sale 35 The land was eventually turned over to the New York State Park Service becoming Camp Hero State Park 35 The state purchased 1 000 acres 4 0 km2 of Hither Woods in 1986 and created Hither Hills State Park 35 In 1988 the state purchased 777 acres 3 1 km2 more to augment the park 35 Notes edit a b c d e f Montauk Tribe of Indians v Long Island R R Co 51 N Y S 142 App Div 1898 a b c d e Johnson v Long Island R R Co 61 N Y S 1139 App Div 1899 per curiam rev d 56 N E 992 N Y 1900 a b c d e f g h Pharaoh v Benson 126 N Y S 1035 Sup Ct 1910 aff d 149 N Y S 438 App Div 1914 aff d 119 N E 1072 N Y 1918 per curiam Laskin David 27 August 1989 History at the Tip of Long Island the New York Times The New York Times Archived from the original on 2018 05 10 Retrieved 2018 05 09 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Indians Claim Lands New York Times Sept 23 1900 at 15 Pharaoh 149 N Y S at 440 a b c John A Strong amp Philip Wyppensenwah Rabito More on How Montauk Was Parceled Out New York Times letter to the editor at LI11 a b c d e f g h i j k Indians Can t Get Lands New York Times Oct 12 1910 at 6 a b c Montauks to Make a Test Case New York Times Oct 30 1895 at 1 Strong 2001 at 120 a b c d e f Indians Want the Land New York Times Dec 22 1897 at 1 Indians Claim for Montauk Point New York Times June 5 1897 at 21 a b c d e f g h i Legal Notes Rights of Indian Tribes New York Times Apr 29 1900 at 16 Johnson 61 N Y S at 1139 citation omitted Johnson 56 N E at 992 Johnson 56 N E at 468 Johnson 56 N E at 467 68 Strong 2001 at 125 a b c d Strong 2001 at 127 1906 N Y Laws ch 177 Pharaoh 127 N Y S at 1038 a b Queries and Answers New York Times Nov 6 1910 at X11 Strong 2001 at 128 Pharaoh 126 N Y S at 1037 38 Strong 2001 at 141 Strong 2001 at 147 48 Strong 2001 at 150 52 Strong 2001 at 152 Strong 2001 at 167 Strong 2001 at 174 Strong 2001 at 174 75 Strong 2001 at 149 50 a b c Strong 2001 at 150 a b c d Strong 2001 at 160 a b c d e f Strong 2001 at 162 Strong 2001 at 163 References editJohn A Strong The Montaukett Indians of Eastern Long Island 2001 John A Strong Who Says the Montauk Tribe Is Extinct Judge Abel Blackmar s Decision in Wyandank v Benson 1909 16 Am Indian Culture amp Res J 1 1992 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Montauk Point land claim amp oldid 1165156491, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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