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Delaware Tribal Business Comm. v. Weeks : ウィキペディア英語版
Delaware Tribal Business Committee v. Weeks

''Delaware Tribal Business Committee v. Weeks'', 430 U.S. 73 (1977) was a case decided by the United States Supreme Court.
== Background ==

*Appealed from the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma.
*Appellants, federally recognized Native American Tribe and Secretary of the Interior, challenged a judgment of the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma granting appellee, unrecognized Native American Tribe, an injunction in an action seeking a declaration that appellee's exclusion from an award violated the United States Fifth Amendment due process clause.
The Delaware Indians, who originally resided in the Northeastern United States, were gradually forced to move westward in the 19th century, and the tribe became geographically scattered. One group (the Cherokee Delawares), which initially had settled on a Kansas reservation as part of the tribe's main body, eventually moved to "Indian Country" in Oklahoma, became assimilated with the Cherokees, and is today a federally recognized tribe. Another group (the Absentee Delawares), which never joined the main body in Kansas, but migrated to Oklahoma and settled with the Wichita and Caddo Indians, is also a federally recognized tribe. A third group (the Kansas Delawares) lived with the main body on the Kansas reservation, but remained in Kansas when the Cherokee Delawares moved to Oklahoma; under an 1866 treaty, the Kansas Delawares elected to become United States citizens and to receive individual parcels of land in Kansas on condition that they dissolve their relationship with the tribe and participate in tribal assets only to the extent of a "just proportion" of the tribe's credits "then held in trust by the United States," and the descendants of this group are not a federally recognized tribe.
The funds were being distributed to redress the breach of a tribal land treaty and appellee alleged that its exclusion violated its equal protection rights under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. The district court rendered judgment in favor of appellee and enjoined further distributions. The appellate court affirmed and appellants sought review. The Court reversed, ruling that Congress' omission of appellee from the distribution did not offend due process and was tied rationally to the fulfillment of Congress' unique obligation toward the Indians. Appellee was not a recognized tribal entity; it was simply individual Indians with no vested rights in any tribal property. The statute distributed tribal, not individually owned, property. Appellee had previously been excluded from a distribution of tribal assets. Congress deliberately limited the distribution under the statute to avoid problems that might attend a wider distribution.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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