Indigenous Property Perspectives... and how they differ from Western law
Angela Riley's review essay offers an introduction
A world of “ours” and a world of “mine”
UCLA property law professor Angela R. Riley’s June 2023 review of Mine!: How the Hidden Rules of Ownership Control Our Lives (Doubleday, 2021) is an amazingly readable essay contrasting US and Indigenous property law.
I say amazing because readability is a quality not usually found in law reviews, especially in the arcane field of property law, which Riley correctly observes is a “patchwork of legal rules and property puzzles …[alongside] incomprehensible and mind-bending irregularities”.
Riley is a member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation and, in addition to being a law professor and director of the Native Nations Law and Policy Center, is Chief Justice of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation Supreme Court. From this multifaceted perspective, she carefully explains the differences between Indigenous property perspectives — a world of “all our relations” — and Anglo-American individualistic perspectives. Two worlds emerge in her essay: a world of “ours” and a world of “mine”.
Her choice of title, “Before Mine!: Indigenous Property Rights for Jagenagenon” is is itself analytical and historical. It summarizes the differences between the two worlds by juxtaposing “Jagenagenon” (Potawatomi “for all my relations”) with Mine! and reminds us that Indigenous property perspectives predate the importation / imposition of Anglo rules in Turtle Island.
Riley states her purpose this way:
My primary objective in this Review is to use Mine! as a jumping-off point to introduce and then contrast its central tenets with an Indigenous property perspective. In doing so, I seek both to show how the property rules articulated in Mine! have historically been used and misused to justify the mass dispossession of Indigenous lands in the United States and, further, to demonstrate how the underpinning of those property theories stands in sharp relief to property systems found in many Indigenous communities.
Riley opens with a brief discussion of “six foundational property axioms… deeply rooted in Anglo-American property theory… [and] predominantly driven by individual interests”:
…first come, first served…
…possession is nine-tenths of the law…
…you reap what you sow…
…my home is my castle…
…our bodies, ourselves…
…the meek shall inherit the earth…
She notes that even though entities like corporations involve multiple owners, their structures “are developed, maintained, and defined by laws and legal rules that …focus on individual rights.”
The ‘corporate person’ as ‘individual right’ in US law
A prime example of Riley’s point is the 1883 case, Santa Clara County. v. Southern Pacific Railroad (18 F. 385), where the court used the 14th Amendment concept of human equality — adopted to ensure the emancipation of black slaves — to protect corporations.
Justice Stephen J. Field wrote the majority opinion; he said:
“… corporations are creatures of the state; they could not exist independently of the law…. But the members do not, because of such association, lose their rights to protection, and equality of protection. They continue, notwithstanding, to possess the same right to life and liberty as before, and also to their property….”
Field rationalized the ruling with a series of hypothetical statements conflating discrimination based on individual human characteristics with discrimination based on economic categories.
He said:
“It would be a singular comment upon the weakness and character of our republican institutions if the valuation and consequent taxation of property could vary according as the owner is white, or black, or yellow, or old, or young, or male, or female… Strangely, indeed, would the law sound in case it read that in the assessment and taxation of property a deduction should be made for mortgages thereon if the property be owned by white men or by old men, and not deducted if owned by black men or by young men; deducted if owned by landsmen, not deducted if owned by sailors; deducted if owned by married men, not deducted if owned by bachelors; deducted if owned by men doing business alone, not deducted if owned by men doing business in partnerships or other associations; deducted if owned by trading corporations, not deducted if owned by churches or universities; and so on, making a discrimination whenever there was any difference in the character or pursuit or condition of the owner. To levy taxes upon a valuation of property thus made is of the very essence of tyranny, and has never been done except by bad governments in evil times, exercising arbitrary and despotic power.”
Field waxed panegyrical, celebrating the 14th Amendment’s guarantees of “due process” and “equal protection of law” as a means to expand the rights and powers of corporations:
“[The 14th Amendment] attends every one everywhere, whatever be his position in society or his association with others, either for profit, improvement, or pleasure. It does not leave him because of any social or official position which he may hold, nor because he may belong to a political body, or to a religious society, or be a member of a commercial, manufacturing, or transportation company. It is the shield which the arm of our blessed government holds at all times over every one, man, woman, and child, in all its broad domain, wherever they may go and in whatever relations they may be placed.”
When the Santa Clara case got to the US Supreme Court, it simply rubber-stamped the ruling. The court reporter quoted Chief Justice Morrison Waite telling the lawyers there would be no point in arguing about it:
“The court does not wish to hear argument on the question whether the provision in the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which forbids a State to deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws, applies to … corporations. We are all of opinion that it does.”
In short, as Riley says, US corporate property rules were “developed, maintained, and defined by laws and legal rules that …focus on individual rights.” The high water mark of “corporate person” rights continues to rise, as in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. (2014), where the Supreme Court said:
“The plain terms of [the Religious Freedom Restoration Act] make it perfectly clear that Congress did not discriminate …against men and women who wish to run their businesses as for-profit corporations….”
An Indigenous Earth
Riley moves into the heart of her essay by emphasizing the historical precedence of Indigenous property perspectives:
“This Review does not pick up where Mine! leaves off; rather, it serves as a prequel of a sort, offering insights based on Indigenous property formations that far predate the concepts discussed in Mine!”
She contrasts Indigenous property with Anglo-American law in three points:
“Indigenous cultures are as exceptionally collectivist as American culture is individualistic.”
In Indigenous property systems, “the earth is imbued with sacred elements that are entirely nonfungible, a fact that stands in stark contrast to the ‘everything has a price’ view [of Anglo concepts].”
“Indigenous …systems are rooted in the divine interconnectedness of all things in the universe, …referred to in Potawatomi as ‘Jagenagenon’ (‘for all my relations’)….”
She says:
“Tribes’ spiritual beliefs do not afford two-leggeds (humans) dominion over animals and all other living things on the planet (including the planet itself), as contrasted with Western religion and philosophy. To the contrary, Indigenous cosmologies place humans in relation to all other living things, viewing everything in the universe as intricately connected.
In Federal Anti-Indian Law: The Legal Entrapment of Indigenous Peoples, I refer to this perspective as an “Indigeneous nomos of the Earth”.
The ‘civilized’ attack on Indigenous peoples
Riley next provides an overview of how Indigenous property practices were (and are) a prime target of US law. In the 1950s, sharing of Tribal resources was equated to ‘communism’; from the earliest colonial times Tribal communal relations to land were cited as evidence of a lack of ‘civilization’ — which the colonizers presumed required individual acquisition and ‘advancement’.
‘Allotment’, ‘relocation’, and ‘termination’ schemes were imposed to destroy Tribal land bases and coerce Tribal peoples into the ‘competitive individualism’ of American society, which US law viewed as the apotheosis of ‘civilization’.
Riley says Mine! delves into the 1823 Supreme Court case, Johnson v. McIntosh, that legalized the dispossession of Indigenous peoples on the basis of a property concept that categorized Indigenous peoples as “occupants” rather than owners of their lands and said that the US holds “title” to Indigenous lands as the “Christian discoverer”.
Justice Joseph Story, a member of the Marshall court, starkly summarized the concept in these words:
“The title of the Indians was not treated as a right of propriety and dominion; but as a mere right of occupancy. As infidels, heathen, and savages, . . . [they] were not allowed to possess the prerogatives belonging to absolute, sovereign and independent nations”
(Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States, 1833)
Story added the extraordinary statement that:
“The territory [of the Indians]. . . was, in respect to Christians, deemed, as if it were inhabited only by brute animals.”
The Supreme Court went on to build an entire apparatus of US domination out of ‘Christian discovery’ property law.
In 1831, in Cherokee Nation v. State of Georgia, the court ruled that Indigenous nations were “dependent” on US “guardianship” because they only ‘occupied’ and did not own their lands. In 1832, Worcester v. State of Georgia put the cap on the US claim of a right of domination, calling it the “ultimate right of domain” over all Indigenous peoples and lands.
‘Christian discovery’ property law is still viewed as valid US law today, under the rubric of ‘plenary power’ and ‘trust doctrine’.
Indigenous lawsuits rarely directly challenge the US claim of a right of domination. In some instances, as the ICWA case demonstrates, they actually embrace ‘plenary power’ and ‘trust’, as if there were no alternative to the colonial structure.
Other cases try to squeeze Indigenous spiritual understandings of property into US ‘religious freedom’ laws. The results there have been meager at best, as evidenced by the Standing Rock, Oak Flat, and Thacker Pass cases.
As Riley puts it in her overview of those cases:
“Most Indigenous property claims have not been resolved in favor of tribes, though there are a few exceptions. The taking of Indian lands for white settlement, national parks, extractive industry, and beyond has deprived Indian people of religious freedom, self-determination, and rights to language and culture.”
Riley moves to a conclusion by briefly assessing “three areas that provide potential avenues for recovery of or additional protection for Indigenous lands and resources…:
“Landback”: An intriguing consequence of “Johnson’s legacy… making the federal government the titular “owner” of …Tribal lands” is that such lands can directly be transferred to their Indigenous owners without affecting private claims of ownership or state claims of taxation rights.
“Comanagement”: These agreements “fall short of all-out return of Indigenous lands”, though they may provide some relief from the outright exclusion of Indigenous peoples from their ancestral lands.
“Cultural property legislation”: But “laws that are inadequate to protect the territory … of Indigenous Peoples are necessarily inadequate to protect the[ir] political and cultural survival…”
She suggests the possibility of “groundbreaking cases” in a “'jurisgenerative’” moment in international arenas, especially under the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, where there will “perhaps be sufficient room for property conceptions that deviate from those of the strictly individualistic Western view”.
She concludes with some thoughts on political-economy:
“Scarcity… and … related argument[s] …that Native people have ‘too much’ and do not ‘use’ all that they have — ha[ve] been used to deprive Native people of property in the United States and all across the globe for centuries.”
“Our capitalistic and consumeristic culture has driven the climate to a crisis point…[and] Indigenous lands are under threat of even more mining to produce lithium and other minerals to satisfy the increased demand for electric cars and sources of ‘green energy.’”
The Tee-Hit-Ton case: Hiding ‘Christian discovery’
I have only one disagreement with Professor Riley: Her discussion of the 1955 case, Tee-Hit-Ton Indians v. United States, where she incorrectly says that the decision “essentially went against all established precedent in order to avoid paying a tribe of Tlingit Indians just compensation for taking their property”.
That is not an accurate characterization of the decision.
Tee-Hit-Ton is infamous for its re-affirmation of the Johnson v. McIntosh property law precedent of ‘Christian discovery’. It ruled against the Tee-Hit-Ton on the ground that “discovery and conquest” gave the US sovereignty over and ownership of Tlingit lands.

But the Tee-Hit-Ton justices quarreled in conference about whether to mention Christianity in the decision.
The problem was that the Justice Department brief in Tee-Hit-Ton explicitly relied on ‘Christian discovery'. It cited 15th century papal bulls and the Bible, as well as Johnson v. McIntosh. It said:
“Although the nations of Europe … ceased to recognize the Popes as the source of their titles to newly acquired lands, the new concept of title by discovery was based upon the same idea that lands occupied by heathens and infidels were open to acquisition by the Christian nations.”
🤯 This was written in 1954!
At the 11th hour, Justice Stanley Reed deleted the word from the decision.
Reed’s memo to his fellow justices said:
“If there is no objection from the members of the Conference I shall change in the final print the first sentence of the last paragraph on p. 7 to read as follows:
‘This position of the Indian has long been rationalized by the legal theory that discovery and conquest gave the conquerors sovereignty over and ownership of the lands thus obtained.’
“It formerly read:
‘This position of the Indian has long been rationalized by the legal theory that discovery and conquest by Christian nations gave these conquerors sovereignty over and ownership of the lands thus obtained.’”
The intentional concealing of ‘Christian discovery’ while relying on the doctrine emboldened courts throughout the US legal system to rely on Johnson v. McIntosh. In a sense, Tee-Hit-Ton put Johnson through a laundromat.
An interesting statistic:
In the 131 years before Tee-Hit-Ton, courts cited Johnson 153 times, a rate of 1.168 per year; in the 68 years since Tee-Hit-Ton (up to March 2023), Johnson was cited in 212 cases, a rate of 3.118 per year. The laundered opinion in Tee-Hit-Ton put the Christian discovery doctrine on steroids.
The Tee-Hit-Ton story deserves its own telling and I have done so and more in Federal Anti-Indian Law: The Legal Entrapment of Indigenous Peoples (Praeger, 2022).
With this clarification, I highly recommend Angela Riley’s essay as a significant entry point into understanding the entanglement of Indigenous lands and peoples in US property law.
The concept of “mine” would certainly seem to encapsulate so much that is wrong with our capitalist society.
A very well written historical account of how the colonists took possession of lands!