1988 - 1998 Chronology of a Decade
Supreme Court Cases Related to Indian Law
Of 26 Indian law cases heard by the United States Supreme Court
in the last
decade, 21 of these cases were decided against Indian tribes, Indian country,
or Indian individual rights such as religious freedom; and 2 more of the
cases were partial losses. Since 1994, there has been a single Indian
law case decided in favor of Indians (Kiowa Tribe v. Manufacturing
Technologies), and one case which was a partial victory for Indians
(Oklahoma Tax Comm'n v. Chickasaw Nation).
CASE NAME: |
For or against Indian country? |
1988 Lyng v. Northwest Indian Cemetery Protective Association,
485 U.S. 439, 108 S.Ct. 1319, 99 L.Ed.2d 534 |
5-3 AGAINST |
1989 Oklahoma Tax Comm'n v. Graham, 489 U.S. 838, 109 S.Ct. 1519, 103 L.Ed.2d 924 |
Per Curiam AGAINST |
Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians v. Holyfield, 490 U.S. 30, 109 S.Ct. 1597, 104 L.Ed.2d 29 |
6-3 FOR |
Cotton Petroleum Corp. v. New Mexico, 490 U.S. 163, 109 S.Ct. 1698, 104 L.Ed.2d 209 |
6-3 AGAINST |
Brendale v. Confederated Tribes and Bands of Yakima Indian Nation, 492 U.S. 408, 109 S.Ct. 2994, 106 L.Ed.2d 343 |
Plurality AGAINST |
1990 Employment Div., Dept. Of Human Resources of State of Oregon v. Smith, 494 U.S. 872, 110 S.Ct. 1595, 108 L.Ed.2d 876 |
6-3 AGAINST |
Duro v. Reina, 495 U.S. 676, 110 S.Ct. 2053, 109 L.Ed.2d 693 |
7-2 AGAINST |
1991 Oklahoma Tax Comn'n v. Citizen Band Potawatomi Indian Tribe of Oklahoma, 498 U.S. 505, 111 S.Ct. 905,109 L. Ed.2d 112 |
Unanimous PARTIAL |
Blatchford v. Native Village of Noatak and Circle Village 501 U.S. 775, 111 S.Ct. 2578, 115 L.Ed.2d 686 |
6-3 AGAINST |
1992 County of Yakima v. Confederated Tribes and Bands of Yakima Indian Nation, 502 U.S. 251, 112 S.Ct. 688,116 L.Ed.2d 687 |
7-1 AGAINST |
1993 Negonsott v. Samuels, 507 U.S. 99, 113 S.Ct. 1119,122 L.Ed.2d 457 |
Unanimous AGAINST |
OklahomaTax Comm'n v. Sac and Fox Nation, 508 U.S. 114, 113 S.Ct. 1985, 124 L.Ed.2d 30 |
Unanimous FOR |
South Dakota v. Bourland, 508 U.S. 679, 113 S.Ct. 2309,124 L.Ed.2d 606 |
7-2 AGAINST |
Lincoln v. Vigil, 508 U.S. 182, 113 S.Ct. 2024,124 L.Ed.2d 101 |
Unanimous AGAINST |
1994 Hagen v. Utah, 510 U.S. 399, 114 S.Ct. 958,127 L.Ed.2d 252 |
7-2 AGAINST |
Dept. Of Taxation and Finance of New York v. Milhelm Attea & Bros, Inc., 512 U.S. 61, 114 S.Ct. 2028, 129 L.Ed.2d.52 |
Unanimous AGAINST |
1995 Oklahoma Tax Comm'n v. Chickasaw Nation, 515 U.S. 450, 115 S.Ct. 2214, 132 L.Ed.2d 400 |
5-4 PARTIAL |
1996Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida, 517 U.S. 44,116 S.Ct. 1114, 134 L.Ed.2d 252 |
5-3 AGAINST |
1997 Babbitt v. Youpee, 519 U.S. 234, 117 S.Ct. 727,136 L.Ed. 2d 696 |
8-1 AGAINST |
Strate v. A-1 Contractors, 520 U.S. 438, 117 S.Ct. 1404, 137 L.Ed.2d 661 |
Unanimous AGAINST |
Idaho v. Coeur d' Alene Tribe of Idaho, 521 U.S. 261,117 S.Ct. 2028, 138 L.Ed.2d 438 |
5-3 AGAINST |
1998 South Dakota v. Yankton Sioux Tribe, 118 S.Ct. 789,139 L.Ed.2d 773 |
Unanimous AGAINST |
Alaska v. Native Vllage of Venetie Tribal Government,118 S.Ct. 948, 140 L.Ed.2d 30 |
Unanimous AGAINST |
Montana v. Crow Tribe of Indians, 118 S.Ct. 1650,140 L.Ed.2d 898 |
7-2 AGAINST |
Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma v. Manufacturing Technologies, Inc., 118 S.Ct. 1700, 140 L.Ed.2d 981 |
6-3 FOR |
Cass County, Minn. v. Leech Lake Band of Chippewa Indians, 118 S.Ct. 1904, 141 L.Ed.2d 90 |
Unanimous AGAINST |
INDEX OF CASES
Alphabetical by Plaintiff Name:
Alaska
v. Native Village of Venetie Tribal Government,118 S.Ct. 948, 140 L.Ed.2d 30
(1998)
Babbitt v. Youpee, 519 U.S. 234,
117 S.Ct. 727,136
L.Ed. 2d 696 (1997)
Blatchford v.
Native Village of Noatak and Circle
Village 501 U.S. 775, 111 S.Ct. 2578, 1 15 L.Ed.2d 686 (1991)
Brendale v.
Confederated Tribes and Bands of Yakima
Indian Nation, 492 U.S. 408, 109 S.Ct. 2994, 106 L.Ed.2d 343 (1989)
Cass County, Minn. v. Leech Lake Band of Chippewa Indians, 118 S.Ct. 1904,
141 L.Ed.2d 90 (1998)
Cotton Petroleum Corp. v. New Mexico,490 U.S. 163, 109
S.Ct. 1698, 104 L.Ed.2d 209 (1989)
County of Yakima v. Confederated Tribes and Bands of
Yakima Indian Nation, 502 U.S. 251, 112 S.Ct. 688,116 L.Ed.2d 687 (1992)
Dept. Of Taxation and Finance of New York v. Milhelm
Attea & Bros, Inc., 512 U.S. 61, 114 S.Ct. 2028, 129 L.Ed.2d. 52 (1994)
Duro v. Reina, 495 U.S. 676, 110 S.Ct. 2053,109 L. Ed.2d
693 (1990)
Employment Div., Dept. Of Human Resources of State
of Oregon v. Smith, 494 U.S. 872, 110 S.Ct. 1595, 108 L.Ed.2d 876 (1990)
Hagen v. Utah, 510 U.S. 399, 114 S.Ct. 958,127 L.Ed.2d
252 (1994)
Idaho v. Coeur d'Alene Tribe of Idaho, 521 U.S. 261,117
S.Ct. 2028, 138 L.Ed.2d 438 (1997)
Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma v. Manufacturing Technologies, Inc., 118 S.Ct. 1700, 140 L.Ed.2d
981 (1998)
Lincoln v. Vigil, 508 U.S. 182, 113 S.Ct. 2024,124
L.Ed.2d 101 (1993)
Lyng v. Northwest Indian Cemetery Protective Association,
485 U.S. 439, 108 S.Ct. 1319, 99 L.Ed.2d 534 (1988)
Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians v. Holyfield,490
U.S. 30, 109 S.Ct. 1597, 104 L.Ed.2d 29 (1989)
Montana v. Crow Tribe of Indians, 118 S.Ct. 1650,140
L.Ed.2d 898 (1998)
Negonsott v. Samuels, 507 U.S. 99, 113 S.Ct. 1119,122
L.Ed.2d 457 (1993)
Oklahoma Tax Comm'n v. Chickasaw Nation, 515 U.S.
450, 115 S.Ct. 2214, 132 L.Ed.2d 400 (1995)
Oklahoma Tax Comn'n v. Citizen Band Potawatomi
Indian Tribe of Oklahoma, 498 U.S. 505, 111 S.Ct. 905,109 L. Ed.2d 112 (1991)
Oklahoma Tax Comm'n v. Graham, 489 U.S. 838, 109
S.Ct. 1519, 103 L.Ed.2d 924 (1989)
Oklahoma Tax Comm'n v. Sac and Fox Nation, 508 U.S.
114, 113 S.Ct. 1985, 124 L.Ed.2d 30 (1993)
Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida, 517 U.S. 44,1
16 S.Ct. 1114, 134 L.Ed.2d 252 (1996)
South Dakota v. Bourland, 508 U.S. 679, 113 S.Ct. 2309,124
L.Ed.2d 606 (1993)
South Dakota v. Yankton Sioux Tribe, 118 S.Ct. 789,139
L.Ed.2d 773 (1998)
Strate v. A-1 Contractors, 520 U.S. 438, 117 S.Ct. 1404,137
L.Ed.2d 661 (1997)
Lyng, Secretary of Agriculture, et al. v. Northwest
Indian Cemetery Protective Association, et al.
Docket No. 86-1013 Argued November 30, 1987 Decided April 19, 1988
CITATION: 485 U.S. 439, 108 S.Ct. 1319, 99 L.Ed.2d 534 (1988)
SYNOPSIS: The U. S Supreme Court held that protecting American
Indian sacred sites is not a cognizable claim under the American Indian
Religious Freedom Act, and is not protected by the Free Exercise Clause
of the First Amendment to the Constitution. The Court rejected the traditional
balancing test (governmental interest versus burden on free exercise of
religion) in favor of holding that where the federal government does not
coerce individuals into violating their religious beliefs or penalize
their religious activities by denying them rights and benefits available
to others, the government may develop its own property without regard
to its interference with religious practices. At issue in this case was
whether the First Amendment's Free Exercise Clause prohibits the Government
from permitting timber harvesting in, or constructing a road through,
a portion of a National Forest that has traditionally been used for religious
purposes by members of three American Indian tribes in northwestern California.
The Supreme Court held that it did not. Justice O'Connor filed the opinion
for the majority, joined by Justices Rehnquist, White, Stevens and Brennan.
Justices Brennan, Marshall and Blackmun filed a dissenting opinion. Justice
Kennedy took no part in the consideration or decision of the case.
HISTORY: In 1982, the United States Forest Service prepared a final
environmental impact statement for constructing a paved road through federal
land, including the Chimney Rock area of the Six Rivers National Forest.
This area, as reported in a study commissioned by the Service, had historically
been used by certain American Indian tribes for religious rituals that
depend on privacy, silence, and an undisturbed natural setting. The Service
rejected the study's recommendation that the road not be completed through
the Chimney Rock area because it would irreparably damage the sacred areas,
and also rejected alternative routes outside the National Forest. Instead,
the Service selected a route through the Chimney Rock area that avoided
archeological sites and was removed as far as possible from the sites
used by the Indians for specific spiritual activities. About the same
time, the Service adopted a management plan that allowed for timber harvesting
in these same areas, providing for protective zones around all the religious
sites identified in the study. After exhausting administrative remedies,
the respondents filed suit in Federal District Court challenging the road-building
and the timber-harvesting decisions. The court issued a permanent injunction
that prohibited the Government from constructing the Chimney Rock section
of the road or putting the timber-harvesting into effect, holding, inter
alia, that such actions would violate the Indians' rights under the Free
Exercise Clause of the First Amendment and would violate certain federal
statutes. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
HELD: 1) The courts below did not clearly explain whether - in
keeping with the principle requiring that courts reach constitutional
questions only when necessary - they determined that a decision on the
First Amendment was necessary because it might entitle respondents to
relief beyond that to which they were entitled on their statutory claims.
The structure and working of the District Court's injunction, however,
suggest that the statutory holding would have supported all of the relief
granted, and the Court of Appeals' silence as to the necessity of reaching
the First Amendment issue may have reflected its understanding that the
District Court's injunction necessarily rested in part on constitutional
grounds. Because it appears reasonably likely that the First Amendment
issue was necessary to the decisions below, and because the Government
is confident that it can cure the statutory defects identified below,
it would be inadvisable for this Court to vacate and remand without addressing
the constitutional question on the merits. Pp. 445-447.
2) The Free Exercise Clause does not prohibit the Government from prohibiting
timber harvesting in the Chimney Rock area or constructing the proposed
road. Pp. 447-458.
a) In Bowen v. Roy, 476 US 693 (which held that a federal statute
requiring States to use Social Security numbers in administering certain
welfare programs did not violate Indian religious rights under the Free
Exercise Clause) this Court rejected the same kind of challenge that respondents
assert. Just as in Roy, the affected individuals here would not be coerced
by the Government's action into violating their religious beliefs; nor
would the governmental action penalize the rights,benefits and privileges
enjoyed by other citizens. Incidental effects of government programs,
which may interfere with the practice of certain religions,but which have
no tendency to coerce individuals into acting contrary to their religious
beliefs, do not require government to bring forward a compelling justification
for its otherwise lawful actions. The Free Exercise Clause is written
in terms of what the government cannot do to the individual, not in terms
of what the individual can exact from the government. Even assuming that
the Government's actions here will virtually destroy the Indians' ability
to practice their religion, the Constitution simply does not provide a
principle that could justify upholding the respondents' legal claims.
Pp. 447-453.
b) The Government's right to the use of its own lands need not and should
not discourage it from accommodating religious practices like those engaged
in by the Indian respondents. The Government has taken numerous steps
to minimize the impact that construction of the road will have on the
Indians' religious activities - such as choosing the route that best protects
sites of specific rituals from adverse audible intrusions, and planning
steps to reduce the visual impact of the road on the surrounding country.
Such solicitude accords with the policy and requirements of the American
Indian Religious Freedom Act. Contrary to the respondents' contention,
however, that Act does not create any enforceable right that could authorize
the District Court's injunction. Pp. 453-455. 795 F.2d688, reversed and
remanded.
Oklahoma
Tax Commission v. Graham, et al.
Docket No. 88-266 Argued February 21, 1989 Decided March 29, 1989
CITATION: 489 US 838, 109 S.Ct. 1519, 103 L.Ed.2d 924 (1989)
SYNOPSIS: The U. S. Supreme Court found that the federal tribal
immunity defense to state claims does not permit removal of the underlying
action to federal court in this opinion. At issue in this case was whether
a tribe may remove a state action to federal court where the complaint
is facially based on state law, but contains the implicit federal question
of tribal sovereign immunity. Per Curiam decision.
HISTORY: Respondent Chickasaw Nation owns and operates a motor
in Oklahoma, where it conducts bingo games and sells cigarettes. The state
filed a state-court suit against the Tribe and respondent inn manager
to collect unpaid state taxes on these activities. The Tribe, asserting
federal-question jurisdiction, removed the action to Federal District
Court. The State's motion to remand the case to state court on the grounds
that the complaint alleged only state statutory violations and state tax
liabilities was denied by the District Court, which held that the complaint
implicated the federal question of tribal immunity since it sought to
apply state law to an Indian tribe. Thereafter,the court dismissed the
suit, finding it barred by tribal sovereign immunity. The Court of Appeals
affirmed, noting that as a prerequisite to stating jurisdiction over an
Indian tribe, an alleged waiver or consent to suit is a necessary element
of a well-pleaded complaint. The Court held to that decision on remand
from the U.S. Supreme Court, finding that the rule of Caterpillar Inc.
v.Williams, 483 U.S. 386 (in order to support federal-question removability,
a complaint on its face must present a federal claim) did not apply to
the State's complaint. It held that although nothing within the complaint's
literal language suggested the implication of a federal question, such
a question was inherent within the complaint because of the parties subject
to the action.
HELD:This case was improperly removed from the Oklahoma courts.
The Court of Appeals' decision is plainly inconsistent with Caterpillar.
The possible existence of a federal tribal immunity defense to the State's
claims did not convert a suit arising under state law to one which, in
the statutory sense, arises under federal law. And there was no independent
basis for original federal jurisdiction to support removal. This jurisdictional
question was not affected by the fact that tribal immunity is governed
by federal law, since Congress has expressly provided by statute for removal
when it desired federal courts to adjudicate defenses based on federal
immunities. 846F.2d 1258, reversed.
Mississippi
Choctaw Indian Band v. Holyfield, et al.
Docket No. 87-980 Argued January 11, 1989 Decided April 3, 1989
CITATION: 490 U.S. 30, 109 S.Ct. 1597, 104 L.Ed.2d 29 (1989)
SYNOPSIS: The U. S. Supreme Court found that the definition of
"domicile" under the Indian Child Welfare Act should be defined by federal
common law, versus state law, upholding ICWA's purpose of removing jurisdiction
of child custody proceedings from state courts to tribal courts. The case
establishes that a legitimate child takes the domicile of its parents,
and an illegitimate child takes the domicile of its mother. At issue in
this case was whether provisions of the Indian Child Welfare Act establishing
tribal jurisdiction over child custody proceedings are limited to Indian
children domiciled on the tribe's reservation. Justice Brennan filed the
majority opinion, joined by Justices White, Marshall, Blackmun,O'Connor
and Scalia. Justices Stevens, Rehnquist, and Kennedy filed a dissenting
opinion.
HISTORY: On the basis of extensive evidence indicating that large
numbers of Indian children were being separated from their families and
tribes and were being placed in non-Indian homes through state adoption,
foster care, and parental rights termination proceedings, and that this
practice caused serious problems for the children, their parents, and
their tribes, Congress enacted the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (ICWA)
which, inter alia, gives tribal courts exclusive jurisdiction over custody
proceedings involving an Indian child "who resides or is domiciled within"
a tribe's reservation. This case involves the status of twin illegitimate
babies, whose parents were enrolled members of appellant Tribe and residents
and domiciliaries of its reservation in Neshoba County, Mississippi. After
the twins' births in Harrison County, some 200 miles from the reservation,
and their parents' execution of consent-to-adoption forms, they were adopted
in that county's Chancery Court by the appellees Holyfield, who were non-Indian.
That court subsequently overruled appellant's motion to vacate the adoption
decree, which was based on the assertion that under the ICWA exclusive
jurisdiction was vested in appellant's tribal court. The Supreme Court
of Mississippi affirmed, holding, among other things, that the twins were
not "domiciled" on the reservation under state law, in light of the Chancery
Court's findings (1) that they had never been physically present there,
and (2) that they were "voluntarily surrendered" by their parents,
who went to some efforts to see that they were born outside the reservation
and promptly arranged for their adoption. Therefore, the court said, the
twins' domicile was in Harrison County and the Chancery Court properly
exercised jurisdiction over the adoption proceedings.
HELD: The twins were "domiciled"on the Tribe's reservation within
the meaning of the ICWA's exclusive tribal jurisdiction provision, and
the Chancery Court was, accordingly, without jurisdiction to enter the
adoption decree. Pp. 42-54.
a) Although the ICWA does not define "domicile," Congress clearly intended
a uniform federal law of domicile for the ICWA and did not consider the
definition of the word to be a matter of state law. The ICWA's purpose
was, in part, to make clear that in certain situations the state courts
did not have jurisdiction over child custody proceedings. In fact, the
statutory congressional findings demonstrate that Congress perceived the
States and their courts as partly responsible for the child separation
problem it intended to correct. Thus, it is most improbable that Congress
would have intended to make the scope of the statute's key jurisdictional
provision subject to definition by state courts as a matter of state law.
Moreover, Congress could hardly have intended the lack of nationwide uniformity
that would result from state-law definitions of "domicile,"whereby different
rules could apply from time to time to the same Indian child, simply as
a result of his or her being moved across state lines. Pp. 43-47.
b) The generally accepted meaning of the term "domicile" applies
under the ICWA to the extent that it is not inconsistent with the objectives
of the statute. In the absence of a statutory definition, it is generally
assumed that the legislative purpose is expressed by the ordinary meaning
of the words used, in light of the statute's object and policy. Well-settled
common-law principles provide that the domicile of minors, who generally
are legally incapable of forming the requisite intent to establish a domicile,
is determined by that of their parents, which has traditionally meant
the domicile of the mother in the case of illegitimate children. Thus,
since the domicile of the twins' mother (as well as their father) has
been, at all relevant times, on appellant's reservation, the twins were
also domiciled there even though they have never been there. The result
is not altered by the fact that they were "voluntarily surrendered" for
adoption. Congress enacted the ICWA because of concerns going beyond the
wishes of individual parents, finding that the removal of Indian children
from their cultural setting seriously impacts on long-term tribal survival
and has a damaging social and psychological impact on many individual
Indian children. These concerns demonstrate that Congress could not have
intended to enact a rule of domicile that would permit individual Indian
parents to defeat the ICWA's jurisdictional scheme simply by giving birth
and placing the child for adoption off the reservation. Pp. 47-53. 511
So. 2d 918, reversed and remanded.
Cotton
Petroleum Corp., et al., v. New Mexico, et al.
Docket No. 87-1327 Argued November 30, 1988 Decided April 25, 1989
CITATION: 490 U.S. 163, 109 S.Ct. 1698, 104 L.Ed.2d 209 (1989)
SYNOPSIS:
The U. S. Supreme Court upheld the State of New Mexico's right to impose
a severance tax on non-Indian oil and gas lessees on the Jicarilla Apache
Indian Reservation, despite the fact that the Tribe imposed the same severance
tax on the same lessees. Thus, a tribal tax does not preempt a state tax
even where the result is double taxation on businesses who deal with tribes,
and the outcome is an economic disadvantage to the tribe. At issue in
this case is whether the State of New Mexico can impose its severance
taxes on the production of oil and gas by non-Indian lessees of wells
located on the Jicarilla Apache Tribe's reservation, and on which the
Tribe also has power to impose severance taxes. Justice Stevens delivered
the opinion of the Court, joined by Justices Rehnquist, White, O'Connor,
Scalia, and Kennedy. Justices Blackmun, Brennan and Marshall filed a dissenting
opinion.
HISTORY: Pursuant to authority granted by the Indian Mineral Leasing
Act of 1938 (1938 Act), the Jicarilla Apache Tribe leased lands on its
New Mexico reservation to appellant Cotton Petroleum Corp., a non-Indian
company, for the production of oil and gas. Cotton's on reservation production
is subject to both a 6% tribal severance tax and appellee State's 8% severance
taxes, which apply to all producers throughout the State. In 1982, Cotton
paid its state taxes under protest and then brought an action in state
court under, inter alia, the Commerce Clause of the Federal Constitution,
contending that the state taxes were invalid on the basis of evidence
tending to prove that the amount of such taxes imposed on reservation
activity far exceeded the value of services the State provided in relation
to such activity. The Tribe filed a brief amicus curiae arguing that a
decision upholding the state taxes would substantially interfere with
the Tribe's ability to raise its own tax rates and would diminish the
desirability of reservation leases. The trial court upheld the state taxes,
concluding, among other things, that the State provides substantial services
to both the Tribe and Cotton, that the theory of public finance does not
require that expenditures equal revenues, that the taxes' economic and
legal burden falls on Cotton and has no adverse impact on tribal interests,
and that the taxes were not preempted by federal law. The State Court
of Appeals affirmed. The U.S. Supreme Court noted probable jurisdiction
and invited the parties to brief and argue the additional question whether
the Commerce Clause requires a tribe to be treated as a "State" for purposes
of determining whether a state tax on nontribal activities conducted on
a reservation must be apportioned to account for taxes the tribe imposed
on the same activity.
HELD: 1) The State may validly impose severance taxes on the same
on-reservation production of oil and gas by non-Indian lessees as is subject
to the Tribe's own severance tax. Pp.173-193.
a) Under
this Court's modern decisions, on-reservation oil and gas production by
non-Indian lessees is subject to nondiscriminatory state taxation unless
Congress has expressly or impliedly acted to pre-empt the state taxes.
See, e.g. Helvering v. Mountain Producers Corp., 303 U. S. 376,
387. Pp. 173-176.
b) The state
taxes in question are not pre-empted by federal law, even when it is given
the most generous construction under the relevant pre-emption test, which
is flexible and sensitive to the particular facts and legislation involved
and requires a particularized examination of the relevant state, federal,
and tribal interests, including tribal sovereignty and independence. The
1938 Act neither expressly permits nor precludes state taxation, but simply
authorizes the leasing for mining purposes of Indian lands. Moreover,
that Act's legislative history sheds little light on congressional intent.
The statement therein that pre-existing law was inadequate to give Indians
the greatest return for their property does not embody a broad congressional
policy of maximizing tribes' revenues without regard to competing state
interests, but simply suggests that Congress sought to remove disadvantages
in mineral leasing on Indian lands that were not present with respect
to public lands, which were, at the time, subject to state taxation. Montana
v. Blackfeet Tribe, 471 US 759, 767, n. 5, distinguished. The fact
that the 1938 Act's omission of that waivers simply reflects congressional
recognition that this Court's intervening decisions had repudiated the
preexisting doctrine of intergovernmental tax immunity, under which such
state taxation was barred absent congressional authorization. White
Mountain Apache Tribe v. Bracker 448 U. S. 136, and Ramah School
Board, Inc. v. Bureau of Revenue of New Mexico, 458 U.S.832, are distinguished
on the ground that, here, the State provides substantial services to the
Tribe and Cotton that justify the tax; the tax imposes no economic burden
on the Tribe; and federal and tribal regulation is not exclusive, since
the State regulates the spacing and mechanical integrity of on-reservation
wells. Pp. 176-187.
c) There
is no merit to Cotton's contention that the State's severance taxes -
insofar as they are imposed without allocation or apportionment on top
of tribal taxes - impose an unlawful multiple tax burden on interstate
commerce. The fact that the State and the Tribe tax the same activity
is not dispositive, since each of those entities has taxing jurisdiction
over the non-Indian wells by virtue of the location of Cotton's leases
entirely on reservation lands within a single State. That the total tax
burden on Cotton is greater than the burden of off-reservation producers
is also not determinative, since neither taxing jurisdiction's tax is
discriminatory, and the burdensome consequence is entirely attributable
to the fact of concurrent jurisdiction. The argument that the state taxes
generate revenues that far exceed the value of the State's on-reservation
services is also rejected. Moreover, there is no constitutional requirement
that the benefits received from a taxing authority by an ordinary commercial
taxpayer - or by those living in the taxpayer's community - must equal
the amount of its tax obligations. Pp. 187-191.
d) The express
language, distinct applications, and judicial interpretations of the Interstate
Commerce and Indian Commerce Clauses establish that Indian tribes may
not be treated as 'States' for tax apportionment purposes. Pp. 191-193.
106 N. M. 517, 745 P. 2d 1170, affirmed.
Brendale
v. Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakima Indian Nation, et al.
Consolidated
Docket Nos. 87-1622, 87-1697, and 87-1711 Argued January 10, 1989 Decided
June 29, 1989
CITATION:492 U.S. 408, 109 S.Ct. 2994, 106 L.Ed.2d 343 (1989)
SYNOPSIS: The US Supreme Court denied Indian tribes treaty rights
to exclusive use and occupation, and thus the power to regulate non-Indian
use of land, where land had been lost by tribe via the Indian General
Allotment Act despite the fact that the Act was later repudiated. In this
very split decision, the Court compromised in its final judgment by establishing
a judicial distinction between "open"and "closed" Indian lands, and assigning
tribal sovereignty rights according to that distinction. At issue in the
three consolidated cases in this matter, is whether the Yakima Indian
Nation or the County of Yakima, a governmental unit of the State of Washington,
has the authority to zone fee lands owned by nonmembers of the Tribe located
within the boundaries of the Yakima Reservation. The Supreme Court held
that the Nation only had jurisdiction over non-member Indians on such
lands where lands were "closed," versus "open" lands. There was no majority
in the case, but Justice White's concurrence won enough votes to carry
the decision. Justice White announced the judgment in Docket Nos. 87-1697
and 87-1711, joined by Justices Rehnquist, Scalia and Kennedy. Justice
Stevens announced the judgment in Docket No. 87-1622, and concurred in
the opinion for Docket Nos. 87-1697 and 87-1711, joined by Justice O'Connor.
Justices Blackmun, Brennan and Marshall concurred in the judgment in Docket
No. 87-1622. Justices White, Rehnquist, Scalia and Kennedy dissented in
the judgment in Docket No.87-1622. Justices Blackmun, Brennan and Marshall
dissented in the judgment in Docket Nos. 87-1697 and 87-1711.
HISTORY: The treaty between the United States and the Yakima Indian
Nation provided that the Tribe would retain its reservation for its "exclusive
use and benefit," and that "no white man [shall] be permitted to reside
upon the said reservation without [the Tribe's] permission." Much of the
reservation is located in Yakima County, Washington. Roughly 80% of the
reservation land is held in trust by the United States for the Tribe or
its individual members, and the remaining 20% is owned in fee by Indian
or non-Indian owners. Most of the fee land is found in three towns, and
the rest is scattered throughout the reservation in a "checkerboard" pattern.
The reservation is divided into two parts, a "closed area," which is so
named because it has been closed to the general public, and an "open area,"
which is not so restricted. Only a small portion of the closed area consists
of fee land, while almost half of the open area is fee land. The Tribe's
zoning ordinance applies to all lands within the reservation, including
fee lands owned by Indians or non-Indians, while the county's zoning ordinance
applies to all lands within its boundaries, except for Indian trust lands.
Petitioners Brendale and Wilkinson, who own land in the closed and open
areas, respectively, filed applications with the Yakima County Planning
Department to develop their lands in ways not permitted by the Tribe's
ordinance but permitted by the county ordinance. The department issued
declarations to both petitioners which, in effect, authorized their developments,
and the Tribe appealed the declarations to the county board of commissioners
on the ground, inter alia, that the county had no zoning authority over
the land in question. After the board concluded that the appeals were
properly before it and issued decisions, the Tribe filed separate actions
in District Court challenging the proposed developments and seeking declaratory
judgments that the Tribe had exclusive authority to zone the properties
at issue and injunctions barring any county action inconsistent with the
Tribe's ordinance. The Court held that the Tribe had exclusive jurisdiction
over the Brendale properly but lacked authority over the Wilkinson property,
concluding that Brendale's development, but not Wilkinson's, posed a threat
to the Tribe's political integrity, economic security, and health and
welfare, and therefore was impermissible under Montana v. United States,
450 US 544. The court also determined that the county was pre-empted from
exercising concurrent zoning authority over closed area lands because
its interests in regulating these lands were minimal while the Tribe's
were substantial. The Court of Appeals consolidated the cases and affirmed
as to the Brendale property but reversed as to the Wilkinson property.
In upholding the Tribe's zoning authority, the court concluded that, because
fee land is located throughout the reservation in a checkerboard pattern,
denying the Tribe its right under its local governmental police power
to zone fee land would destroy its capacity to engage in comprehensive
planning.
HELD: In Nos. 87-1697 and 87-1711:1) The Tribe does not have authority
to zone fee lands owned by nonmembers within the reservation. Pp. 421-433.
a) Any regulatory power the Tribe might have under its treaty with the
United States cannot apply to lands held in fee by non-Indians. Montana,
450 US at 559. The Tribe no longer retains the "exclusive use and benefit"
of such lands within the meaning of the treaty, since the Indian General
Allotment Act allotted significant portions of the reservation, including
the lands at issue, to individual members of the Tribe, and those lands
subsequently passed, through sale or inheritance, to nonmembers such as
petitioners. The Tribe's treaty rights must be read in light of those
subsequent alienations, it being unlikely that Congress intended to subject
non-Indian purchasers to tribal jurisdiction when an avowed purpose of
the allotment policy was to destroy tribal government. Id., at 560, n.9,
561. The fact that the Allotment Act was repudiated in 1934 by the Indian
Reorganization Act is irrelevant, since the latter Act did not restore
exclusive use of the lands in question to the Tribe. Id., at 560, n. 9.
Pp. 422-425.
b) Nor does the Tribe derive authority from its inherent sovereignty to
impose its zoning ordinance on petitioners' lands. Such sovereignty generally
extends only to what is necessary to protect tribal self-government or
to control internal relations, and is divested to the extent it is inconsistent
with a tribe's dependent status, i.e., to the extent it involves the tribe's
external relations with nonmembers - unless there has been an express
congressional delegation of tribal power to the contrary. Montana,
supra., at 564. Washington v. Confederated Tribes of Colville Indian
Reservation, 447 US 134, 153; and United States v. Wheeler,
435 US 313, 326, reconciled. There is no contention here that Congress
has expressly delegated to the Tribe the power to zone the fee lands of
nonmembers. Pp. 425-428.
c) Although Montana, supra., At 566, recognized, as an exception
to its general principle, that a tribe "may" retain inherent power
to exercise civil authority over the conduct of non-Indians on fee lands
within its reservation when that conduct threatens or has some direct
effect on the tribe's political integrity, economic security, or health
and welfare, that exception does not create tribal authority to zone reservation
lands. The fact that the exception is prefaced by the word "may"
indicates that a tribe's authority need not extend to all conduct having
the specified effects, but, instead, depends on the circumstances. To
hold that the Tribe has authority to zone fee land when the activity on
that land has the specified effects on Indian properties would mean that
the authority could only last so long as the threatened use continued,
would revert to the county when that use ceased and, conceivably, could
switch back and forth depending on what uses the county permitted, thereby
engendering uncertainty that would further neither the Tribe's nor the
county's interests and would be chaotic for landowners. Accordingly, Montana
should be understood to generally prohibit tribes from regulating the
use of fee lands by way of tribal ordinance or actions in the tribal courts,
but to recognize, in the special circumstance of checkboard ownership
of reservation lands, a protectible tribal interest under federal law,
defined in terms of a demonstrably serious impact by the challenged uses
that imperils tribal political integrity, economic security, or health
and welfare. Since the Supremacy Clause requires state and local governments,
including the county's zoning authorities, to recognize and respect that
interest in the course of their activities, the Tribe should have argued
in the zoning proceedings, not that the county was without zoning authority
over reservation fee lands, but that its tribal interests were imperiled.
The District Court had jurisdiction to entertain the Tribe's suit, but,
given that the county has jurisdiction to zone reservation fee lands,
could enjoin county action only if the county failed to respect the Tribe's
federal-law rights. Pp. 428-432.
2) In light of the District Court's findings that the county's exercise
of zoning power over the Wilkinson property would have no direct effect
on the Tribe and would not threaten its political integrity, economic
security, or health and welfare, the judgment in Nos. 87-1697 and 87-1711
must be reversed. Pp. 432-433.
In No. 87-1622 (concurring in 87-1697 and 87-1711):
1) The Tribe's
power to exclude nonmembers from its reservation - which derived from
its aboriginal sovereignty and the express provisions of its treaty with
the United States - necessarily includes the lesser power to regulate
land use in the interest of protecting the tribal community. Although,
at one time, the Tribe's power to exclude was virtually absolute, the
General Allotment Act (Dawes Act) in some respects diminished tribal authority
by providing for the allotment of reservation lands in severalty to resident
Indians, who were eventually free to sell to nonmembers. While the Indian
Reorganization Act repudiated that allotment policy, large portions of
reservation lands were conveyed to nonmembers in the interim. To the extent
that large portions of reservation land were sold in fee, such that the
Tribe could no longer determine the region's essential character by setting
conditions on entry to those parcels, the Tribe's legitimate interest
in land-use regulation was also diminished. Although it is inconceivable
that Congress would have intended that the sale of a few lots would divest
the Tribe of the power to determine the character of the region, it is
equally improbable that Congress envisioned that the Tribe would retain
its interest in regulating the use of vast ranges of land sold in fee
to nonmembers who lack any voice in setting tribal policy. Thus, the resolution
of these cases depends on the extent to which the Tribe's virtually absolute
power to exclude has been either diminished by statute or voluntarily
surrendered by the Tribe itself with respect to the relevant areas of
the reservation. Pp.433-437.
2) The Tribe
has the power to zone the Brendale property, which is in the reservation's
closed area. Although the presence of logging operations, the construction
of the Bureau of Indian Affairs roads, and the transfer of ownership of
a relatively insignificant amount of land in that area unquestionably
have diminished the Tribe's power to exclude non-Indians from the area,
this does not justify the conclusion that the Tribe has surrendered its
historic right to regulate land use there. To the contrary, by maintaining
the power to exclude nonmembers from entering all but a small portion
of that area, the Tribe has preserved the power to define the area's essential
character and has, in fact, exercised that power through its zoning ordinance.
Moreover,the Tribe has authority to prevent the few individuals who own
portions of the closed area in fee from undermining its general plan to
preserve the area's unique character by developing their isolated parcels
without regard to an otherwise common scheme, it seems necessary to a
reasonable operation of the allotment process that Congress could not
possibly have intended in enacting the Dawes Act that tribes would lose
control over the character of their reservations upon the sale of a few,
relatively small parcels of land. Cf. Seymour v. Superintendent of
Washington State Penitentiary, 368 US 351, 356; Mattz v. Arnett,
412 US 481, 497. Rather, the tribe's power to zone is like an equitable
servitude in that the burden of complying with the zoning rules runs with
the land without regard to how a particular estate is transferred. Montana
v. United States, 450 US 544, does not require a different result, since,
unlike the tribal regulation considered in that case, the Yakima Nation's
zoning rule is neutrally applied to Indians and non-Indians alike, is
necessary to protect the welfare of the Tribe, and does not interfere
with any significant state or county interest. Pp. 438-444.
3) The Tribe
lacks authority to zone the Wilkinson property, which is in the reservation's
open area. Given that about half of the open area land is owned by nonmembers,
the Tribe no longer possesses the power to determine the basic character
of that area, and allowing a nonmember to use his lands in a manner that
might not be approved by the Tribe does not upset an otherwise coherent
scheme of land use. Moreover, it is unlikely that Congress intended to
give the Tribe the power to determine the character of an area that is
predominantly owned and populated by nonmembers, who represent 80% of
the population yet lack a voice in tribal governance. Furthermore, to
the extent the open area has lost its character as an exclusive tribal
resource, and has become, as a practical matter, an integrated portion
of the county that is not economically or culturally delimited by reservation
boundaries, the Tribe has lost any claim to an interest analogous to an
equitable servitude. Thus, the Tribe's power to zone the open area has
become outmoded. Pp. 444-447. 828 F.2d 529: No. 87-1622, affirmed; Nos.
87-1697 and 8 7-1711, reversed.
Employment
Division, Oregon Department of Human Resources, et al. v. Smith, et al.
Docket No. 88-1213 Argued November 6, 1989 Decided April 17, 1990
CITATION: 494 U.S. 872, 110 S.Ct. 1595, 108 L.Ed.2d 876 (1990)
SYNOPSIS:
The U. S. Supreme Court found that the criminal laws of the State
of Oregon banning the use of peyote were generally applicable laws, not
intended to prohibit of burden religion. Thus, the religious rights of
Native American Church members to ingest peyote for sacramental purposes
was considered an incidental effect of the laws, negating any right of
the members to bring a Free Exercise claim under the First Amendment to
the Constitution. As in Lyng; a balancing test between governmental interest
and free exercise of religion was deemed inapplicable in this case. At
issue in this case was whether the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment
permits the State of Oregon to include religiously inspired peyote use
within the reach of its general criminal prohibition on the use of that
drug, and thus permits the State to deny unemployment benefits to persons
dismissed from their jobs because of such religiously inspired use. The
Supreme Court held that the State could do so. Justice Scalia filed the
opinion for the majority, joined by Justices Rehnquist, White, Stevens
and Kennedy. Justice O'Connor concurred in the judgment, in Parts I and
II of which Justices Brennan, Marshall and Blackmun joined, without concurring
in the judgment. Justices Blackmun, Brennan and Marshall filed a dissenting
opinion.
HISTORY:
Respondents Smith and Black were fired by a private drug rehabilitation
organization because they ingested peyote, a hallucinogenic drug, for
sacramental purposes at a ceremony of their Native American Church. Their
applications for unemployment compensation were denied by the State of
Oregon under a state law disqualifying employees discharged for work-related
"misconduct." Holding that the denials violated respondents' First Amendment
free exercise rights, the State Court of Appeals reversed. The State Supreme
Court affirmed, but this Court vacated the judgment and remanded for a
determination whether sacramental peyote use is proscribed by the State's
controlled substance law, which makes it a felony to knowingly or intentionally
possess the drug. Pending that determination, the Court refused to decide
whether such use is protected by the Constitution. On remand, the State
Supreme Court held that sacramental peyote use violated, and was not excepted
from, the state law prohibition, but concluded that prohibition was invalid
under the Free Exercise Clause.
HELD:
1) The Free Exercise Clause permits the State to prohibit sacramental
peyote use, and thus to deny unemployment benefits to persons discharged
for such use. Pp. 876-890.
a) Although
a State would be "prohibiting the free exercise [of religion]" in violation
of the Clause if it sought to ban the performance of (or abstention from)
physical acts solely because of their religious motivation, the Clause
does not relieve an individual of the obligation to comply with a law
that incidentally forbids (or requires) the performance of an act that
his religious belief requires(or forbids) if the law is not specifically
directed to religious practice and is otherwise constitutional as applied
to those who engage in the specified act for nonreligious reasons. See,
e.g., Reynolds v. United States, 98 US 145, 166-167. The only decisions
in which this Court has held that the First Amendment bars application
of a neutral, generally applicable law to religiously motivated action
are distinguished on the ground that they involved not the Free Exercise
Clause alone, but that Clause in conjunction with other constitutional
(494 US 873) protections. See, e.g., Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310
US 296,304-307; Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 US 205. Pp. 876-882.
b) Respondents'
claim for a religious exemption from the Oregon law cannot be evaluated
under the balancing test set forth in the line of cases following Sherbert
v. Verner, 374 US 398, 402-403, whereby governmental actions that
substantially burden a religious practice must be justified by a "compelling
governmental interest." That test was developed in a context -- unemployment
compensation eligibility rules -- that lent itself to individualized governmental
assessment of the reasons for the relevant conduct. The test is inapplicable
to an across-the-board criminal prohibition on a particular form of conduct.
A holding to the contrary would create an extraordinary right to ignore
generally applicable laws that are not supported by "compelling governmental
interest"on the basis of religious belief. Nor could such a right be limited
to situations in which the conduct prohibited is "central" to the individual's
religion, since that would enmesh judges in an impermissible inquiry into
the centrality of particular beliefs or practices to a faith. Cf. Hernandez
v. Commissioner, 490 US 680,699. Thus, although it is constitutionally
permissible to exempt sacramental peyote use from the operation of drug
laws, it is not constitutionally required. Pp.882-890. 307 Or. 68, 763
P.2d 146, reversed.
Duro
v. Reina, Chief of Police, Salt River Department of Public Safety
Docket No. 88-6546 Argued November 29, 1989 Decided May 29, 1990
CITATION:495 U.S. 676, 110 S.Ct. 2053, 109 L.Ed.2d 693 (1990)
SYNOPSIS:
The US Supreme Court found that an Indian tribe may not assert criminal
jurisdiction over a nonmember Indian for a crime committed on the tribe's
reservation. At issue in this case is whether an Indian tribe may assert
criminal jurisdiction over a defendant who is an Indian but not a tribal
member. The Supreme Court held that the tribe could not. Justice Kennedy
filed the majority opinion, joined by Justices Rehnquist, White, Blackmun,
Stevens, O'Connor, and Scalia. Justices Brennan and Marshall filed a dissenting
opinion.
HISTORY:
While living on one Indian Tribe's Reservation, petitioner Duro, an
enrolled member of another Tribe, allegedly shot and killed an Indian
youth within the Reservation's boundaries. He was charged with the illegal
firing of a weapon on the Reservation under the Tribal criminal code,
which is confined to misdemeanors. After the Tribal court denied his petition
to dismiss the prosecution for lack of jurisdiction, he filed a habeas
corpus petition in the Federal District Court. The court granted the writ,
holding that assertion of jurisdiction by the Tribe over a nonmember Indian
would constitute discrimination based on race in violation of the equal
protection guarantees of the Indian Civil Rights Act, since, under Oliphant
v. Suquamish Indian Tribe, 435 US 191, non-Indians are exempt from
Tribal courts' criminal jurisdiction. The Court of Appeals reversed. It
held that the distinction drawn between a Tribe's members and nonmembers
throughout United States v. Wheeler, 435 US 313 -- which, in upholding
Tribal criminal jurisdiction over Tribe members, stated that tribes do
not possess criminal jurisdiction over "nonmembers" -- was "indiscriminate,"
and should be given little weight. Finding the historical record "equivocal,"
the court held that the applicable federal criminal statutes supported
the view that the Tribes retain jurisdiction over minor crimes committed
by Indians against other Indians without regard to Tribal membership.
It also rejected Duro's equal protection claim, finding that his significant
contacts with the prosecuting Tribe -- such as residing with a Tribe member
on the Reservation and working for the Tribe's construction company --
justified the exercise of the Tribe's jurisdiction. Finally, it found
that the failure to recognize Tribal jurisdiction over Duro would create
a jurisdictional void, since the relevant federal criminal statute would
not apply to this charge, and since the State had made no attempt, and
might lack the authority, to prosecute him.
HELD: 1) An Indian Tribe may not assert criminal jurisdiction over
a nonmember Indian. Pp. 684-698.
a) The rationale
of Oliphant, Wheeler, and subsequent cases compels the conclusion
that Indian Tribes lack jurisdiction over nonmembers. Tribes lack the
power to enforce laws against all who come within their borders, Oliphant
supra. They are limited sovereigns, necessarily subject to the overriding
authority of the United States, yet retaining the sovereignty needed to
control their own internal relations and preserve their own unique customs
and social order,Wheeler, supra. Their power to prescribe and enforce
rules of conduct for their own members falls outside that part of their
sovereignty that they implicitly lost by virtue of their dependent status,
but the power to prosecute an outsider would be inconsistent with this
status, and could only come from a delegation by Congress. The distinction
between members and nonmembers and its relation to self-governance is
recognized in other areas of Indian law. See, e.g., Moe v. Salish &
Kootenai Tribes, 425 U. S. 463; Montana v. United States, 450
US 544. Although broader retained Tribal powers have been recognized in
the exercise of civil jurisdiction, such jurisdiction typically involves
situations arising from property ownership within the Reservation or consensual
relationships with the Tribe or its members, and criminal jurisdiction
involves a more direct intrusion on personal liberties. Since, as a nonmember,
Duro cannot vote in Tribal elections, hold Tribal office, or sit on a
Tribal jury, his relationship with the Tribe is the same as the non-Indian's
in Oliphant Pp. 684-688.
b) A review
of the history of the modern Tribal courts and the opinions of the Solicitor
of the Department of the Interior on the Tribal codes at the time of their
enactment also indicates that Tribal courts embody only the powers of
internal self-governance. The fact that the Federal Government treats
Indians as a single large class with respect to federal programs is not
dispositive of a question of Tribal power to treat them by the same broad
classification. Pp. 688-692.
c) This case
must be decided in light of the fact that all Indians are now citizens
of the United States. While Congress has special powers to legislate with
respect to Indians, Indians, like all citizens, are entitled to protection
from unwarranted intrusions on their personal liberty. This Court's cases
suggest constitutional limits even on the ability of Congress to subject
citizens to criminal proceedings before a tribunal, such as a Tribal court,
that does not provide constitutional protections as a matter of right.
In contrast, retained jurisdiction over members is accepted by the Court's
precedents and justified by the voluntary character [495 US 678] of Tribal
membership and the concomitant right of participation in a Tribal government.
Duro's enrollment in one Tribe says little about his consent to the exercise
of authority over him by another Tribe. Tribes are not mere fungible groups
of homogeneous persons among whom any Indian would feel at home, but differ
in important aspects of language, culture, and tradition. The rationale
of adopting a "contacts" test to determine which nonmember Indians must
be subject to Tribal jurisdiction would apply to non-Indian residents
as well, and is little more than a variation of the argument, already
rejected for non-Indians, that any person entering the Reservation is
deemed to have given implied consent to Tribal criminal jurisdiction.
Pp. 692-696.
d) This decision
does not imply endorsement of a jurisdictional void over minor crime by
nonmembers. Congress is the proper body to address the problem if, in
fact, the present jurisdictional scheme proves insufficient to meet the
practical needs of Reservation law enforcement. Pp. 696-698. 851 F.2d
1136 (9th Cir. 1987), reversed.
Oklahoma
Tax Commission v. Citizen Band, Potawatomi Indian Tribe of Oklahoma
Docket No. 89-1322 Argued January 7, 1991 Decided February 26, 1991
CITATION: 498 U.S. 505, 111 S.Ct. 905, 112 L.Ed.2d 1112 (1991)
SYNOPSIS:
The U. S. Supreme Court found that where a state has not asserted Public
Law 280 jurisdiction over Indian lands, it may not tax sales of goods
on the reservation to tribal members, but may tax sales to nontribal members.
The result is that states have enforcement powers over tribal sellers;
the state may tax sales of cigarettes to nonmembers by a tribal shop,
and require the tribal seller to collect and remit the tax to the state.
At issue in this case is whether a State that has not asserted jurisdiction
over Indian lands under Public Law 280 may validly tax sales of goods
to tribesmen and nontribal members occurring on land held in trust for
a federally recognized Indian tribe. Justice Rehnquist delivered the opinion
of a unanimous court. Justice Stevens filed a concurring opinion.
HISTORY: Although, for many years, respondent Indian Tribe has
sold cigarettes at a convenience store that it owns and operates in Oklahoma
on land held in trust for it by the Federal Government, it has never collected
Oklahoma's cigarette tax on these sales. In 1987, petitioner, the Oklahoma
Tax Commission (Oklahoma or Commission), served the Tribe with an assessment
letter, demanding that it pay taxes on cigarette sales occurring between
1982 and 1986. The Tribe filed suit in the District Court to enjoin the
assessment, and Oklahoma counterclaimed to enforce the assessment and
to enjoin the Tribe from making future sales without collecting and remitting
state taxes. The court refused to dismiss the counterclaims on the Tribe's
motion, which was based on the assertion that the Tribe had not waived
is sovereign immunity from suit. The court held on the merits that the
Commission lacked authority to tax on-Reservation sales to tribal members
or to tax the Tribe directly, and therefore that the Tribe was immune
from Oklahoma's suit to collect past unpaid taxes directly, but that the
Tribe could be required to collect taxes prospectively for on-Reservation
sales to nonmembers. The Court of Appeals reversed, holding, inter alia,
that the lower court erred in entertaining Oklahoma's counterclaims because
the Tribe enjoys absolute sovereign immunity from suit and had not waived
that immunity by filing its action for injunctive relief, and that Oklahoma
lacked authority to tax any on-Reservation sales, whether to tribesmen
or nonmembers.
HELD: 1) Under the doctrine of tribal sovereign immunity, a State
that has not asserted jurisdiction over Indian lands under Public Law
280 may not tax sales of goods to tribesmen occurring on land held in
trust for a federally recognized Indian tribe, but is free to collect
taxes on such sales to nonmembers of the tribe. Pp. 509-514.
a) The Tribe
did not waive its inherent sovereign immunity from suit merely by seeking
an injunction against the Commission's proposed tax assessment. United
States v. United States Fidelity and Guaranty Co., 309 U.S. 506, 511-512,
513. In light of this Court's reaffirmation, in a number of cases, of
its longstanding doctrine of tribal sovereign immunity, and Congress'
consistent reiteration of its approval of the doctrine in order to promote
Indian self-government, self-sufficiency, and [498 U.S. 506] economic
development, the Court is not disposed to modify or abandon the doctrine
at this time. Nor is there merit to Oklahoma's contention that immunity
should not apply because the Tribe's cigarette sales do not occur on a
formally designated "Reservation." Trust land qualifies as a Reservation
for tribal immunity purposes where, as here, it has been "validly set
apart for the use of the Indians as such, under the superintendence of
the Government." United States v. John, 437 U.S. 634, 648-649.
Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones, 411 U.S. 145, 148-149, which approved
nondiscriminatory state taxation of activities on non-Reservation, nontrust
Government land leased by Indians, is not to the contrary. Pp. 509-511.
b) Nevertheless,
the Tribe's sovereign immunity does not deprive Oklahoma of the authority
to tax cigarette sales to nonmembers of the Tribe at the Tribe's store,
and the Tribe has an obligation to assist in the collection of validly
imposed state taxes on such sales. Moe v. Confederated Salish and Kootenai
Tribes, 425 U. S.463, 482, 483; Washington v. Confederated Tribes
of Colville Reservation, 447 U.S. 134. This case is not distinguishable
from Moe and Colville on the ground that Oklahoma disclaimed
jurisdiction over Indian lands upon entering the Union and did not reassert
jurisdiction over civil causes of action in such lands as permitted by
Public Law 280. Neither of those cases depended on the assertion of such
jurisdiction by the State in question, and it is simply incorrect to conclude
that the Public Law was the essential (yet unspoken) basis for the Court's
decision in Colville. Although the Tribe's sovereign immunity bars Oklahoma
from pursuing its most efficient remedy -- a lawsuit -- to enforce its
rights, adequate alternatives may exist, since individual Indians employed
in "smoke-shops" may not share tribal immunity, and since States are free
to collect their sales taxes from cigarette wholesalers or to enter into
mutually satisfactory agreements with Tribes for the collection of taxes.
If these alternatives prove to be unsatisfactory, States may seek appropriate
legislation from Congress. Pp. 511-514. 888 F.2d1303 (10 Cir. 1989), affirmed
in part and reversed in part.
Blatchford,
Commissioner, Dept. Of Community and Regional Affairs of Alaska v.
Native
Village of Noatak, et al.
Docket No. 89-1782 Argued February 19, 1991 Decided June 24, 1991
CITATION: 501 U.S. 775, 111 S.Ct. 2578, 115 L.Ed.2d 686 (1991)
SYNOPSIS:
The U. S. Supreme Court held that the State was immune from a suit for
damages by an Indian tribe based on Eleventh Amendment sovereign immunity.
At issue in this case was whether state sovereign immunity extended to
lawsuits by Indian tribes. Justice Scalia delivered the opinion of the
Court, joined by Justices Rehnquist, White, O'Connor, Kennedy and Souter.
Justices Blackmun, Marshall and Stevens filed a dissenting opinion.
HISTORY:
Respondents, Alaska Native villages, brought suit against petitioner,
a state official, seeking an order requiring payment to them of money
allegedly owed under a state revenue-sharing statute. The District Court
dismissed the suit as violating the Eleventh Amendment. The Court of Appeals
reversed, first on the ground that 28 U.S.C. 1362 constituted a congressional
abrogation of Eleventh Amendment immunity, and then, upon reconsideration,
on the ground that Alaska had no immunity against suits by Indian Tribes.
HELD: 1) The Eleventh Amendment bars suits by Indian Tribes against
States without their consent. Respondents' argument that traditional principles
of sovereign immunity restrict suits only by individuals, and not by other
sovereigns, was rejected in Principality of Monaco v. Mississippi,
292 US 313, 322-323. Nor is there merit to respondents' contention that
the States consented to suits by Tribes in the "plan of the convention."
See ibid. Just as in Monaco with regard to foreign sovereigns,
see id. at 330, there is no compelling evidence that the Founders thought
that the States waived their immunity with regard to Tribes when they
adopted the Constitution. Although Tribes are in some respects more like
States -- which may sue each other, South Dakota v. North Carolina,
192 US 286, 318 -- than like foreign sovereigns, it is the mutuality of
concession that makes the States' surrender of immunity from suits by
sister States plausible. There is no such mutuality with Tribes, which
have been held repeatedly to enjoy immunity against suits by States. Oklahoma
Tax Comm'n v. Citizen Band of Potawatomi Tribe of Okla., 498 U. S.
505, 509. Pp. 7 79-782.
2) Section 1362 -- which grants district courts original jurisdiction
to hear "all civil actions, brought by any Indian Tribe . . . wherein
the matter in controversy arises under "federal law -- does not operate
to void the Eleventh Amendment's bar of Tribes' suits against States.
Pp. 782-788. [501 U. S. 776]
a) Assuming
the doubtful proposition that the Federal Government's exemption from
state sovereign immunity can be delegated, 1362 does not embody a general
delegation to Tribes of the Federal Government's authority, under United
States v. Minnesota, 270 US 181, 195, to sue States on the Tribes'
behalf. Although Moe v Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes,
425 US 463 -- which held that 1362 revoked as to Tribes the Tax Injunction
Act's denial of federal court access to persons other than the United
States seeking injunctive relief from state taxation -- equated tribal
access to federal court with the United States' access, it did not purport
to do so generally, nor on the basis of a "delegation" theory, nor with
respect to constitutional (as opposed to merely statutory) constraints.
Pp. 783-786.
b) Nor does
1362 abrogate Eleventh Amendment immunity. It does not satisfy the standard
for congressional abrogation set forth in Dellmuth v. Muth, 491
U.S.223, 227-228, since it does not reflect an "unmistakably clear" intent
to abrogate immunity, made plain "in the language of the statute." Nor
was it a sufficiently clear statement under the less stringent standard
of Parden v.Terminal Railway of Alabama Docks Dept., 377 US 184,
which case (unlike Dellmuth had already been decided at the time of
1362's enactment in1966. That case neither mentioned nor was premised
on abrogation (as opposed to consensual waiver) -- and indeed the Court
did not even acknowledge the possibility of congressional abrogation until
1976, Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer, 427 US 445. Pp. 786-788.
3) Respondents' argument that the Eleventh Amendment does not bar their
claim for injunctive relief must be considered initially by the Court
of Appeals on remand. P. 788.896 F.2d 1157, reversed and remanded.
County
of Yakima, et al. v. Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakima Indian
Nation
Docket Nos. 90-408, 90-577 Argued November 5, 1991 Decided January 14, 1992
CITATION: 502 U.S. 251, 112 S.Ct. 683, 116 L.Ed.2d 687 (1992)
SYNOPSIS:
The U S. Supreme Court held that state and local governments have been
authorized by the General Allotment Act to impose real property taxes
on fee lands alienated under the Act and owned by Indians within reservations.
At issue in the consolidated cases is whether the County of Yakima may
impose an ad valorem tax on so-called "fee patented" land located within
the Yakima Indian Reservation, and an excise tax on sales of such land.
Justice Scalia delivered the opinion of the Court, joined by Justices
Rehnquist, White, Stevens, O'Connor, Kennedy, Souter and Thomas. Justice
Blackmun filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.
HISTORY:
Yakima County, Washington, imposes an ad valorem levy on taxable real
property within its jurisdiction and an excise tax on sales of such land.
The County proceeded to foreclose on various properties for which these
taxes were past due, including certain fee-patented lands held by the
Yakima Indian Nation or its members on the Tribe's Reservation within
the County. Contending that federal law prohibited the imposition or collection
of the taxes on such lands, the Tribe filed suit for declaratory and injunctive
relief and was awarded summary judgment by the District Court. The Court
of Appeals agreed that the excise tax was impermissible, but held that
the ad valorem tax would be impermissible only if it would have a '"demonstrably
serious'" impact on the Tribe's "'political integrity, economic
security or...health and welfare'" (quoting Brendale v. Confederated
Yakima Indian Nation, 492 US 408, 431 (opinion of WHITE, J.), and
remanded to the District Court for that determination.
HELD:1) The Indian General Allotment Act of 1887 permits Yakima County
to impose an ad valorem tax on Reservation land patented in fee pursuant
to the Act and owned by Reservation Indians or the Yakima Indian Nation
itself, but does not allow the County to enforce its excise tax on sales
of such land. Pp. 257-270.
a) As the
Court held in Goudy v. Meath, 203 US 146, 149, the Indian General
Allotment Act authorizes taxation of fee-patented land. This determination
was explicitly confirmed in a 1906 amendment to the Act, known as the
Burke Act, which includes a proviso authorizing the Secretary of the Interior,
"whenever . . .satisfied that any [Indian] allottee is competent . . .
[,] to . . . issu[e] to such allottee a patent in fee simple," and provides
that "thereafter all restrictions as to. . . taxation of said land shall
be removed." (Emphasis added). Thus, the Indian General Allotment Act
contains the unmistakably clear expression of intent that [502 US 252]
is necessary to authorize state taxation of Indian lands. See, e.g., Montana
v. Blackfeet Tribe of Indians 471 US 759, 765. The contention of the
Tribe and the United States that this explicit statutory conferral of
taxing power has been repudiated by subsequent Indian legislation rests
upon a misunderstanding of this Court's precedents, particularly Moe
v. Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes, 425 US 463, and a misperception
of the structure of the Indian General Allotment Act. Pp. 257-266.
b) Because,
under state law, liability for the ad valorem tax flows exclusively from
ownership of realty on the annual assessment date, and the tax creates
a burden on the property alone, this tax constitutes "taxation of . .
. land" within the meaning of the Indian General Allotment Act, and is
therefore prima facie valid. Nevertheless, Brendale, supra, and
its reasoning are inapplicable to the present case, which involves an
asserted restriction on a State's congressionally conferred powers over
Indians, rather than a proposed extension of a tribe's inherent powers
over the conduct of non-Indians on Reservation fee lands. Moreover, application
of a balancing test under Brendale would contravene the per se
approach traditionally followed by this Court in the area of state taxation
of tribes and tribal members, under which taxation is categorically allowed
or disallowed, as appropriate, depending exclusively upon whether it has
in fact been authorized by Congress. Pp. 266-268.
c) However,
the excise tax on sales of fee-patented Reservation land cannot be sustained.
The Indian General Allotment Act explicitly authorizes only "taxation
of. . . land," not "taxation with respect to land," "taxation of transactions
involving land," or "taxation based on the value of land." Because it
is eminently reasonable to interpret that language as not including a
tax upon the activity of selling real estate, this Court's cases require
that interpretation be applied for the benefit of the Tribe. See, e.g.,
Blackfeet Tribe, supra, at 766. Pp. 268-270.
d) The factual
question whether the parcels at issue were patented under the Indian General
Allotment Act or some other federal allotment statute, and the legal question
whether it makes any difference, are left for resolution on remand. Pp.
270. 903 F.2d 1207 (9th Cir. 1990), affirmed and remanded.
Negonsott v. Samuels, Warden, et al.
Docket No. 91-5397 Argued January 11, 1993 Decided February 24, 1993
CITATION:
507 U.S. 99, 113 S.Ct. 1119, 122 L.Ed.2d 457 (1993)
SYNOPSIS:
The U S. Supreme Court found that the Kansas Act provided an unqualified
grant of jurisdiction to the State to define and enforce such criminal
laws as it may enact, even for an offense committed by an Indian against
another Indian on a reservation, normally chargeable under the Indian
Major Crimes Act. At issue in this case is whether the Kansas Act, 18
U.S.C. 3243, confers jurisdiction on the State of Kansas to prosecute
petitioner, a Kickapoo Indian, for the state law offense of aggravated
battery committed against another Indian on an Indian reservation. Justice
Rehnquist delivered the opinion of the Court, joined by Justices White,
Blackmun, Stevens, O'Connor, Kennedy and Souter. Justices Scalia and Thomas
joined in all but Part II-B of the opinion.
HISTORY: Petitioner Negonsott, a member of the Kickapoo Tribe and
a resident of the Kickapoo Reservation in Kansas, was convicted by a County
District Court jury of aggravated battery for shooting another Indian
on the Reservation. The court set aside the conviction on the ground that
the Federal Government had exclusive jurisdiction to prosecute Negonsott
for the shooting under the Indian Major Crimes Act, 18 U.S.C. 1153,
which encompasses 13 enumerated felonies committed by "[a]ny Indian against
. . . the person or property of another Indian or other person . . . within
the Indian country." However, the State Supreme Court reinstated the conviction,
holding that the Kansas Act, 18 U.S.C. 3243, conferred on Kansas jurisdiction
to prosecute all crimes committed by or against Indians on Indian Reservations
in the State. Subsequently, the Federal District Court dismissed Negonsott's
petition for a writ of habeas corpus, and the Court of Appeals affirmed.
HELD:1) The Kansas Act explicitly confers jurisdiction on Kansas
over all offenses involving Indians on Indian Reservations. Congress has
plenary authority to alter the otherwise exclusive nature of federal jurisdiction
under 1153. Standing alone, the Kansas Act's first sentence -- which
confers jurisdiction on Kansas over offenses committed by or against Indians
on Indian Reservations . . . to the same extent as its courts have jurisdiction
over offenses committed elsewhere within the State in accordance with
the laws of the State -- is an unambiguous grant of jurisdiction over
both major and minor offenses. And the most logical meaning of the Act's
second sentence -- which provides that nothing in the Act shall "deprive"
federal courts of their "jurisdiction over offenses defined by the laws
of the United States" -- is that federal courts shall retain their jurisdiction
to try all offenses subject to federal jurisdiction, while Kansas courts
shall have jurisdiction to try persons for the same conduct when it violates
state law. This is the only reading of the Kansas Act that gives effect
to every clause and word of the statute, and it is supported by the Act's
legislative history. In contrast, if this Court were to accept Negonsott's
argument that the second sentence renders federal jurisdiction exclusive
whenever the underlying conduct is punishable under federal law, Kansas
would be left with jurisdiction over only those minor offenses committed
by one Indian against [507 US, 100] the person or property of another,
a result that can hardly be reconciled with the first sentence's unqualified
grant of jurisdiction. There is no need to resort to the canon of statutory
construction that ambiguities should be resolved in favor of Indians,
since the Kansas Act quite unambiguously confers jurisdiction on the State.
Pp. 102-110. 933 F. 2d 818 (10th Cir. 1991), affirmed.
Oklahoma Tax Commission v. Sac and Fox Nation
Docket No.
92-259 Argued March 23, 1993 Decided May 18, 1993
CITATION:
508 U.S. 114, 113 S.Ct. 1985, 124 L.Ed.2d 30 (1993)
SYNOPSIS:
The U. S. Supreme Court found that tribal tax immunities extend to trust
lands on the same basis as they do to reservation lands, and tribal members
residing and earning income on such lands are immune from state income
taxation. At issue in this case is whether the State of Oklahoma can impose
income taxes or motor vehicle taxes on the members of the Sac and Fox
Nation. Justice O'Connor delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
HISTORY:
Respondent Sac and Fox Nation (Tribe) is a federally recognized Indian
Tribe located in Oklahoma. It brought this action seeking a permanent
injunction barring petitioner Oklahoma Tax Commission (Commission) from,
among other things, taxing the income of tribal members who work or reside
within tribal jurisdiction, and imposing the State's motor vehicle excise
tax and registration fees on tribal members who live and garage their
cars principally on tribal land and register those cars with the Tribe.
In large part, the Tribe based its claims of immunity from those state
taxes on McClanahan v. Arizona State Tax Comm'n, 411 U.S. 164,
in which the Court held that a State could not subject a tribal member
living on the Reservation, and whose income derived from Reservation sources,
to a state income tax absent an express authorization from Congress. The
Commission responded that the State had complete taxing jurisdiction over
the Tribe because McClanahan and the Court's other immunity cases
applied only to Tribes on established Reservations, whereas the Tribe's
1891 Treaty with the Government disestablished the Sac and Fox Reservation
in favor of allotments of trust land for individual tribal members. In
affirming the District Court's rulings on cross-motions for summary judgment,
the Court of Appeals held, among other things, that the income of tribal
members who work for the Tribe was immune from state taxation under McClanahan
and Oklahoma Tax Comm'n v. Citizen Band Potawatomi Indian Tribe of
Okla., 498 U.S. 505. In so ruling, the court rejected the Commission's
contention that the tribal member's residence was relevant in addition
to the status of the land on which the income was earned. The court also
concluded that the State's vehicle taxes were flatly prohibited under
Moe v. Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, 425 U.S. 463, and
Washington v. Confederated Tribes of Colville Indian Reservation,
447 U. S. 134.
HELD:1) Absent explicit congressional direction to the contrary,
it must be presumed that a State does not have jurisdiction to tax tribal
members who live and work in Indian country, whether the particular territory
consists of a formal or informal Reservation, allotted lands, or dependent
Indian communities. Pp. 123-128.
a) The Court
of Appeals erred to the extent that it did not determine the residence
of the tribal members working for the Tribe. The residence of a tribal
member is a significant component of the McClanahan presumption
against state taxing authority. Contrary to the Commission's contention,
that presumption applies not only to formal Reservations, but also to
all "Indian country." Citizen Band Potawatomi Indian Tribe of Okla.,
supra, 498 U. S. at 511. Title 18 U.S.C. 1151 broadly defines the quoted
phrase to include formal and informal Reservations, dependent Indian communities,
and Indian allotments, whether restricted or held in trust by the United
States. If it is determined on remand that the relevant tribal members
do live in Indian country, the Court of Appeals must analyze the relevant
treaties and federal statutes against the backdrop of Indian sovereignty.
Unless Congress expressly authorized state tax jurisdiction in Indian
country, the McClanahan presumption counsels against finding such
jurisdiction. Because all of the tribal members earning income from the
Tribe may live within Indian country, this Court need not determine whether
the Tribe's right to self-governance could operate independently of its
territorial jurisdiction to preempt the State's ability to tax income
earned from work performed for the Tribe itself when the employee does
not reside in Indian country. See, e.g., White Mountain Apache Tribe
v. Bracker 448 U.S. 136, 142.Pp. 123-126.
b) Oklahoma's
vehicle excise tax and registration fees are no different than the state
taxes the Court held preempted in Colville and Moe. The Commission's argument
that neither of those cases applies, because the Sac and Fox live on scattered
allotments, rather than a Reservation, fails for the same reasons it fails
with regard to income taxes. Pp. 126-128.
c) Because
the Court of Appeals did not determine whether the tribal members on whom
Oklahoma attempts to impose its income and motor vehicle taxes live in
Indian country, its judgment must be vacated. P. 128. 967 F.2d 1425 (10th
Cir.1992), vacated and remanded.
South
Dakota v. Bourland
Docket No.
91-2051 Argued March 2, 1993 Decided June 14, 1993
CITATION: 508 U.S. 679, 113 S.Ct. 2309, 124 L.Ed.2d 606 (1993)
SYNOPSIS:
The U. S. Supreme Court held that the alienation of the Cheyenne River
Sioux Indian Tribe's lands by the Flood Control and Cheyenne River Acts
eliminated the Tribe's power to exclude nonmembers from lands taken by
these Acts and its power to exercise regulatory jurisdiction over non-Indians
on these lands the resultant rule is that where there is a taking of a
portion of a reservation by the federal government for construction of
a dam and reservoir, a tribe's treaty right to regulate hunting and fishing
by non-members in the taken area is abrogated. At issue in this case is
whether the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe may regulate hunting and fishing
by non-Indians on lands and overlying waters located within the Tribe's
reservation but acquired by the United States for the operation of the
Oahe Dam and Reservoir. Justice Thomas delivered the opinion of the Court,
joined by Justices Rehnquist, White, Stevens, O'Connor, Scalia, and Kennedy.
Justices Blackmun and Souter filed a dissenting opinion.
HISTORY:
In 1868, the Fort Laramie Treaty established the Great Sioux Reservation
and provided that it be held for the "absolute and undisturbed use and
occupation" of Sioux Tribes. The Flood Control Act of 1944 authorized
the establishment of a comprehensive flood control plan along the eastern
border of the Cheyenne River Reservation, which is part of what was once
the Great Sioux Reservation, and mandated that all water project lands
be open for the general public's use and recreational enjoyment. Subsequently,
in the Cheyenne River Act, the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe conveyed all
interests in 104,420 acres of former trust lands to the United States
for the Oahe Dam and Reservoir Project. The United States also acquired
an additional 18,000 acres of Reservation land previously owned in fee
by non-Indians pursuant to the Flood Control Act. Among the rights the
Cheyenne River Act reserved to the Tribe or tribal members was a right
of free access [to the taken lands] including the right to hunt and fish,
subject . . . to regulations governing the corresponding use by other
[United States] citizens, 10. Until 1988, the Tribe enforced its game
and fish regulations against all violators, while petitioner South Dakota
limited its enforcement to non-Indians. However, when the Tribe announced
that it would no longer recognize state hunting licenses, the State filed
this action against tribal officials, seeking to enjoin the Tribe from
excluding non-Indians from hunting on nontrust lands within the Reservation
and, in the alternative, a declaration that the federal takings of tribal
lands for the Oahe Dam and Reservoir had reduced the Tribe's authority
by withdrawing the lands from the Reservation. The District Court ruled,
inter alia, that 10 of the Cheyenne River Act clearly abrogated the
Tribe's right to exclusive use and possession of the former trust lands
and that Congress had not expressly delegated to the Tribe hunting and
fishing jurisdiction over nonmembers on the taken lands. It therefore
permanently enjoined the Tribe from exerting such authority. The Court
of Appeals affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded. It ruled
that the Tribe had authority to regulate non-Indian hunting and fishing
on the 104,420 acres because the Cheyenne River Act did not clearly reveal
[508 U.S. 680] Congress' intent to divest the Tribe of its treaty right
to do so. As for the 18,000 acres of former fee lands, the court held
that Montana v. United States, 450 US 544, and Brendale v. Confederated
Tribes and Bands of Yakima Nation, 492 US 408, controlled, and therefore
that the Tribe's regulatory authority was divested unless one of the Montana
exceptions was met.
HELD:1) Congress, in the Flood Control and Cheyenne River Acts,
abrogated the Tribe's rights under the Fort Laramie Treaty to regulate
non-Indian hunting and fishing on lands taken by the United States for
construction of the Oahe Dam and Reservoir. Pp. 687-698.
a) Congress
has the power to abrogate Indians' treaty rights, provided that its intent
is clearly expressed. The Tribe's original treaty right to exclude non-Indians
from Reservation lands (implicit in its right of "absolute and undisturbed
use and occupation"), and its incidental right to regulate non-Indian
use of these lands were eliminated when Congress, pursuant to the Cheyenne
River and Flood Control Acts, took the lands and opened them for the use
of the general public. See Montana v. United States, supra; Brendale
v. Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakima Indian Nation, supra.
Section 4 of the Flood Control Act opened the water project lands for
"recreational purposes," which includes hunting and fishing. The Cheyenne
River Act declared that the sum paid by the Government to the Tribe for
the 104,420 acres "shall be in final and complete settlement of all [of
the Tribe's] claims, rights, and demands." Had Congress intended to grant
the Tribe the right to regulate non-Indian hunting and fishing, it would
have done so by an explicit statutory command, as it did with other rights
in 10 of the Cheyenne River Act. And since Congress gave the Army Corps
of Engineers regulatory control over the area, it is irrelevant whether
respondents claim the right to exclude nonmembers or only the right to
prevent nonmembers from hunting or fishing without tribal licenses. Montana
cannot be distinguished from this case on the ground that the purpose
of the transfers in the two cases differ, because it is a transfer's effect
on preexisting tribal rights, not congressional purpose, that is the relevant
factor. Moreover, Congress' explicit Reservation of certain rights in
the taken area does not operate as an implicit Reservation of all former
rights. See United States v. Dion, 476 US 734.Pp. 68 7-694.
b) The alternative
arguments -- that the money appropriated in the Cheyenne River Act did
not include compensation for the Tribe's loss of licensing revenue, that
general principles of "inherent sovereignty" enable the Tribe to regulate
non-Indian hunting and fishing in the area, and that Army Corps regulations
permit the Tribe to regulate non-Indian hunting and fishing -- do not
undercut this statutory analysis. Pp. 694-697. 949 F.2d 984 (8th Cit.
1991), reversed and remanded.
Lincoln
v. Vigil
Docket No. 91-1833 Argued March 3, 1993 Decided May 24, 1993
CITATION: 508 U.S. 182, 113 S.Ct. 2024, 124 L.Ed.2d 101 (1993)
SYNOPSIS:
The U. S. Supreme Court held that the Indian Health Services decision
to terminate the Indian Childrens' Program was not reviewable under the
Administration Procedures Act because it involved the allocation of funds
from a lump sum appropriation, which the Court held was a decision committed
to agency discretion by law. At issue in this case was whether the Indian
Health Services' decision to discontinue diagnostic and treatment services,
known as the Indian Children's Program, to handicapped Indian children
in the Southwest and reallocate IHS resources elsewhere was subject to
judicial review under the Administrative Procedures Act. Justice Souter
delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
HISTORY:
The Indian Health Service receives yearly lump-sum appropriations from
Congress, and expends the funds under authority of the Snyder Act and
the Indian Health Care Improvement Act to provide health care for American
Indian and Alaska Native people. Out of these appropriations, the Service
funded, from 1978 to 1985, the Indian Children's Program, which provided
clinical services to handicapped Indian children in the Southwest. Congress
never expressly authorized or appropriated funds for the Program, but
was apprised of its continuing operation. In 1985, the Service announced
that it was discontinuing direct clinical services under the Program in
order to establish a nationwide treatment program. Respondents, Indian
children eligible to receive services under the Program, filed this action
against petitioners (collectively, the Service), alleging, inter alia,
that the decision to discontinue services violated the federal trust responsibility
to Indians, the Snyder Act, the Improvement Act, the Administrative Procedure
Act (APA), and the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause. In granting summary
judgment for respondents, the District Court held that the Service's decision
was subject to judicial review, rejecting the argument that the decision
was "committed to agency discretion by law" under the APA, 5 U.S.C.
701(a)(2). The court declined to address the merits of the Service's action,
however, holding that the decision to discontinue the Program amounted
to a "legislative rule" subject to the APA's notice and comment requirements,
553, which the Service had not fulfilled. The Court of Appeals affirmed,
holding that, even though no statute or regulation mentioned the Program,
the repeated references to it in the legislative history of the annual
appropriations Acts, in combination with the special relationship between
Indian people and the Federal Government, provided a basis for judicial
review. The court also reasoned that this Court's decision in Morton
v Ruiz, 415 U.S. 199, required the Service to abide by the APA's notice
and comment procedures before cutting back on a congressionally created
and funded program for Indians.
HELD:1) The Service's decision to discontinue the Program was
"committed to agency discretion by law," and therefore not subject to
judicial review under 701(a)(2). Pp. 190-195.
a) Section
701(a)(2) precludes review of certain categories of administrative decisions
that courts traditionally have regarded as "committed to agency discretion."
The allocation of funds from a lump-sum appropriation is such a decision.
It is a fundamental principle of appropriations law that where Congress
merely appropriates lump-sum amounts without statutory restriction, a
clear inference may be drawn that it does not intend to impose legally
binding restrictions, and indcia in committee reports and other legislative
history as to how the funds should, or are expected to, be spent do not
establish any legal requirements on the agency. As long as the agency
allocates the funds to meet permissible statutory objectives, courts may
not intrude under 701(a)(2). Pp.190-193.
b) The decision
to terminate the Program was committed to the Service's discretion. The
appropriations Acts do not mention the Program, and both the Snyder and
Improvement Acts speak only in general terms about Indian health. The
Service's representations to Congress about the Program's operation do
not translate through the medium of legislative history into legally binding
obligations, and reallocating resources to assist handicapped Indian children
nationwide clearly falls within the Service's statutory mandate. In addition,
whatever its contours, the special trust relationship existing between
Indian people and the Federal Government cannot limit the Service's discretion
to reorder its priorities from serving a subgroup of beneficiaries to
serving the class of all Indians nationwide. Pp. 193-195.
c) Respondents'
argument that the Program's termination violated their due process rights
is left for the Court of Appeals to address on remand. While the APA contemplates
that judicial review will be available for colorable constitutional claims
absent a clear expression of contrary congressional intent, the record
at this stage does not allow mature consideration of constitutional issues.
P. 195.
2) The Service was not required to abide by 553's notice and comment
rulemaking procedures before terminating the Program, even assuming that
the statement terminating the Program would qualify as a "rule" within
the meaning of the APA. Termination of the Program might be seen as affecting
the Service's organization, but 553(b)(A) exempts "rules of agency organization"
from notice and comment requirements. Moreover, 553(b)(A) exempts "general
statements of policy," and, whatever else that term may cover, it surely
includes announcements (508 U.S. 184) of the sort at issue here. This
analysis is confirmed by Citizens to Preserve Overton Park Inc.v. Volpe,
401 U.S. 402, which stands for the proposition that decisions to expend
otherwise unrestricted funds are not, without more, subject to 553's
notice and comment requirements. Finally, the Court of Appeals erred in
holding that Morton v. Ruiz, supra, required the Service to abide
by 553's notice and comment requirements. Those requirements were not
at issue in Ruiz Pp. 195-199. 953 F.2d 1225 (10 Cir. 1992) reversed and
remanded.
Hagen
v. Utah
Docket No.
92-6281 Argued November 2, 1993 February 23, 1994
CITATION: 510 U.S. 399, 114 S.Ct. 958, 127 L.Ed.2d (1994)
SYNOPSIS:
The U. S. Supreme Court found that the Uintah Valley Reservation had been
diminished by a 1902 Act, and so State had jurisdiction over an Indian
who had committed a crime within the original boundaries of the reservation.
At issue in this case was whether the Uintah Indian Reservation was diminished
by Congress when it was opened to non Indian settlers at the turn of the
century, resulting in state jurisdiction over areas that had been within
the original boundaries of the reservation. Justice O'Connor delivered
the opinion of the Court, joined by Judges Rehnquist, Stevens, Scalia,
Kennedy, Thomas, and Ginsburg joined. Justices Blackmun and Souter filed
a dissenting opinion.
HISTORY:
Petitioner, an Indian, was charged in Utah state court with distribution
of a controlled substance in the town of Myton, which lies within the
original boundaries of the Uintah Indian Reservation on land that was
opened to non-Indian settlement in 1905. The trial court rejected petitioner's
claim that it lacked jurisdiction over him because he was an Indian and
the crime had been committed in "Indian country," see 18 U.S.C. 1151,
such that federal jurisdiction was exclusive. The state appellate court,
relying on Ute Indian Tribe v. State of Utah, 773 F.2d 1087 (10
Cir.), cert. denied, 479 US 994, agreed with petitioner's contentions
and vacated his conviction. The Utah Supreme Court reversed and reinstated
the conviction, ruling that Congress had "diminished" the Reservation
by opening it to non-Indians, that Myton was outside its boundaries, and
thus that petitioner's offense was subject to state criminal jurisdiction.
See Solem v. Bartlett, 465 US 463, 467 ("States have jurisdiction
over . . . opened lands if the applicable surplus land Act freed that
land of its Reservation status and thereby diminished the Reservation
boundaries").
HELD: 1) Because the Uintah Reservation has been diminished by
Congress, the town of Myton is not in Indian country and the Utah courts
property exercised criminal jurisdiction over petitioner. Pp. 9-22.
a) This Court
declines to consider whether the State of Utah, which was a party to the
Tenth Circuit proceedings in Ute Indian Tribe, should be collaterally
estopped from relitigating the Reservation boundaries. That argument is
not properly before the Court because it was not presented in the petition
for a writ of certiorari and was expressly disavowed by petitioner in
his response to an amicus brief. Pp. 9-10.
b) Under
this Court's traditional approach, as set forth in Solem v. Bartlett,
supra, and other cases, whether any given surplus land Act diminished
a Reservation depends on all the circumstances, including (1) the statutory
language used to open the Indian lands, (2) the contemporaneous understanding
of the particular Act, and (3) the identity of the persons who actually
moved onto the opened lands. As to the first, the most probative, of these
factors, the statutory language must establish an express congressional
purpose to diminish, but no particular form of words is prerequisite to
a finding of diminishment. Moreover, although the provision of a sum certain
payment to the Indians, when coupled with a statutory expression of intent,
can certainly provide additional evidence of diminishment, the lack of
such a provision does not lead to the contrary conclusion. Throughout
the diminishment inquiry, ambiguities are resolved in favor of the Indians,
and diminishment will not lightly be found. Pp. 10-12.
c) The operative
language of the Act of May 27, 1902, ch. 888, 32 Stat. 263 -- which provided
for allotments of some Uintah Reservation land to Indians, and that "all
the unallotted lands within said Reservation shall be restored to the
public domain" (emphasis added) -- evidences a congressional purpose to
terminate Reservation status. See, e.g., Seymour v. Superintendent,
368 U.S.351, 354-355. Solem, supra, at 472-476, distinguished.
Contrary to petitioner's argument, this baseline intent to diminish was
not changed by the Act of March 3, 1905, ch. 1479, 33 Stat. 1069. Language
in that statute demonstrates that Congress clearly viewed the 1902 Act
as the basic legislation upon which the 1905 Act and intervening statutes
were built. Furthermore, the structure of the statutes -- which contain
complementary, nonduplicative essential provisions -requires that the
1905 and 1902 Acts be read together. Finally, the general rule that repeals
by implication are disfavored is especially strong here, because the 1905
Act expressly repealed a provision in the intervening statute passed in
1903; if Congress had meant to repeal any part of any other previous statute,
it could easily have done so. Pp. 12-17.
d) The historical
evidence -- including letters and other statements by Interior Department
officials, congressional bills and statements by Members of Congress,
and the text of the 1905 Presidential Proclamation that actually opened
the Uintah Reservation to settlement -- clearly indicates the contemporaneous
understanding that the Reservation would be diminished by the opening
of the unallotted lands. This conclusion is not altered by inconsistent
references to the Reservation in both the past and present tenses in the
post-1905 legislative record. These must be viewed merely as passing references
in text, not deliberate conclusions about the congressional intent in
1905. Pp. 17-21.
e) Practical
acknowledgment that the Reservation was diminished is demonstrated by
the current population situation in the Uintah Valley, which is approximately
85 percent non-Indian in the opened lands and 93 percent non-Indian in
the area's largest city; by the fact that the seat of local tribal government
is on Indian trust lands, not opened lands; and by the State of Utah's
assumption of jurisdiction over the opened lands from 1905 until the Tenth
Circuit decided Ute Indian Tribe. A contrary conclusion would seriously
disrupt the justifiable expectations of the people living in the area.
Pp. 21-22. 858 P.2d 925, affirmed.
Dept.
Of Taxation & Finance of New York, v. Milhelm Attea & Bros., Inc.
Docket No. 93-377 Argued March 23, 1994 Decided June 13, 1994
CITATION: 512 U.S. 61, 114 S.Ct. 2028, 129 L.Ed.2d 52 (1994)
SYNOPSIS:
The U. S. Supreme Court upheld New York's cigarette regulations, which
required the precollection of state taxes on cigarettes to be sold to
non-Indians by making the wholesaler/Indian trader responsible for the
precollection and payment of tax, the Court found that the regulations
did not impose an excessive burden on Indian traders by imposing state
record keeping requirements and quantity limitations on untaxed cigarettes.
At issue in this case is whether New York's cigarette regulations are
preempted by federal statutes governing trade with Indians. Justice Stevens
delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
HISTORY:
Enrolled tribal members purchasing cigarettes on Indian Reservations are
exempt from a New York cigarette tax, but non-Indians making such purchases
are not. Licensed agents precollect the tax by purchasing stamps and affixing
them to cigarette packs in advance of their first sale. Determining that
a large volume of unstamped cigarettes was being purchased by non-Indians
on Reservations, petitioner tax department enacted regulations imposing
recordkeeping requirements and quantity limitations on cigarette wholesalers
selling untaxed cigarettes to Reservation Indians. As relevant here, the
regulations set quotas on the quantity of untaxed cigarettes that wholesalers
may sell to Tribes and tribal retailers, and petitioner must approve each
such sale. Wholesalers must also ensure that a buyer holds a valid state
tax exemption certificate, and must keep records of their tax-exempt sales,
make monthly reports to petitioners, and, as licensed agents, precollect
taxes on nonexempt sales. Respondent wholesalers are licensed by the Bureau
of Indian Affairs to sell cigarettes to Reservation Indians. They filed
separate suits in state court alleging that the regulations were preempted
by the federal Indian Trader Statutes. The trial court issued an injunction.
Ultimately, the Appellate Division upheld the regulations, but the Court
of Appeals reversed, distinguishing this Court's decisions upholding taxes
imposed on non-Indian purchasers of cigarettes, see Moe v. Confederated
Salish and Kootenai Tribes of Flathead Reservation, 425 U. S. 463;
Washington v. Confederated Tribes of Colville Reservation, 447
U.S. 134, on the ground that they involved regulating sales to non-Indian
consumers whereas New York's regulations applied to sales by non-Indian
wholesalers to Reservation Indians. The court concluded that the Indian
Trader Statutes, as construed in Warren Trading Post v. Arizona Tax
Comm'n., 380 US 685, deprived the States of all power to impose regulatory
burdens on licensed Indian traders, and, alternatively, that if States
could impose minimal burdens on the traders, the State's regulations were
invalid because the burdens were significant.
HELD: 1) New York's regulations do not, on their face, violate
the Indian Trader Statutes.
a) Because
respondents have made essentially a facial challenge, this case is confined
to those alleged defects that inhere in the regulations as written, and
the Court need not assess for all purposes each feature of the tax scheme
that might affect tribal self-government or federal authority over Indian
affairs,
b) Indian
traders are not wholly immune from state regulation that is reasonably
necessary to the assessment or collection of lawful state taxes. Although
broad language in Warren Trading Post suggests such immunity, that
proposition has been undermined by subsequent decisions in Moe
(upholding a state law requiring Indian retailers on tribal land to collect
a state cigarette tax imposed on sales to non-Indians), Colville (upholding
in relevant part a state law requiring tribal retailers on Reservations
to collect cigarette taxes on sales to nonmembers and to keep extensive
records), and Oklahoma Tax Comm'n v. Citizen Band of Potawatomi Tribe
of Okla., 498 US 505. These cases have made clear that the States
have a valid interest in ensuring compliance with lawful taxes that might
easily be evaded through purchases of tax-exempt cigarettes on Reservations;
that interest outweighs Tribes' modest interest in offering a tax exemption
to customers who would ordinarily shop elsewhere. Thus, there is more
room for state regulation in this area. In particular, these cases have
decided that States may impose on Reservation retailers minimal burdens
reasonably tailored to the collection of valid taxes from non-Indians.
It would be anomalous to hold that a State could impose tax collection
and bookkeeping burdens on Reservation retailers who are enrolled tribal
members but not on wholesalers, who often are not.
c) New York's
scheme does not impose excessive burdens on Indian traders. Respondents'
objections to the regulations setting quotas and requiring that petitioner
preapprove deliveries provide no basis for a facial challenge, although
the possibility of inadequate quotas may provide a basis for a future
challenge to the regulations' application. The requirements that wholesalers
sell untaxed cigarettes only to persons with valid exemption certificates
and keep detailed records are no more demanding than comparable measures
approved in Colville. Moreover, the precollection obligation placed
on wholesalers is the same as the obligation that, under Moe and
Colville, may be imposed on Reservation retailers. The United States'
arguments supporting its position that the scheme improperly burdens Indian
trading are also rejected. 81 N.Y. 2d 417, 615 N.E.2d 994, reversed.
Oklahoma
Tax Comm'n v. Chickasaw Nation
Docket No. 94-771 Argued April 24, 1995 Decided June 14, 1995
CITATION: 515 U.S. 450, 115 S.Ct. 2214, 132 L.Ed.2d 400 (1995)
SYNOPSIS:
The U. S Supreme Court held that Oklahoma could not apply its motor fuels
tax to fuel sold by the Chickasaw Nation in Indian Country, but could
tax the income of tribal members who work for the Tribe but reside in
the State outside of Indian Country. At issue in this case is the taxing
authority of the State of Oklahoma over the Chickasaw Nation, namely 1)
whether Oklahoma may impose its motor fuels excise tax upon fuel sold
by Chickasaw Nation retail stores on tribal trust land and 2) whether
Oklahoma may impose its income tax upon members of the Chickasaw Nation
who are employed by the Tribe but who reside in the State outside of Indian
country. Justice Ginsburg delivered the opinion of an unanimous court,
with respect to Parts I and II, and the opinion of the Court with respect
to Part III, in which Rehnquist, Scalia, Kennedy and Thomas joined. Justice
Breyer filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, joined
by Justices Stevens, O'Connor and Souter.
HISTORY: Respondent Chickasaw Nation filed this action to stop
Oklahoma from enforcing several state taxes against the Tribe and its
members. Pertinent here, the District Court held for the State on the
motor fuels question, and largely for the Tribe on the income tax issue.
The Court of Appeals ruled for the Tribe and its members on both issues,
determining: (1) that, without congressional authorization, the State
could not impose a motor fuels tax on fuel sold by the Tribe at its retail
stores on tribal trust land: and (2) that the State could not tax the
wages of tribal members employed by the Tribe, even if they reside outside
Indian country.
HELD:
1) Oklahoma may not apply its motor fuels tax, as currently designed,
to fuel sold by the Tribe in Indian Country. Pp. 4-12.
a) The Court
declines to address the State's argument, raised for the first time in
its brief on the merits, that the Hayden-Cartwright Act expressly authorizes
States to tax motor fuel sales on Indian reservations. Pp. 5-6.
b) When a
State attempts to levy a tax directly on Indian tribes or their members
inside Indian country, the proper approach is not, as the State contends,
to weight the relevant state and tribal interests. Rather, a more categorical
approach should be employed: Absent clear congressional authorization,
a State is without power to tax reservation lands and reservation Indians.
The initial and frequently dispositive question in Indian tax cases, therefore,
is who bears the legal incidence of the tax, for if it is a tribe or tribal
members inside Indian country, the tax cannot be enforced absent federal
legislation permitting the impost. The inquiry proper in this case is
whether the fuels tax rests on the Tribe as retailer, or on who sells
to the Tribe, or the consumer who buys from the Tribe. Judicial focus
on legal incidence accords due deference to Congress' lead role in evaluating
state taxation as it bears on Indian tribes and tribal members. A 'legal
incidence' test, furthermore, provides a reasonably bright-line standard
accommodating the reality that tax administration requires predictability.
And a State unable to enforce its tax because the legal incidence falls
on tribes or on Indians within Indian country, generally is free to amend
its law to shift the tax's legal incidence. Pp. 6-10.
c) The Court
of Appeals' ruling that the fuel tax's legal incidence rests on the retailer
is reasonable. The state legislation does not expressly identify who bears
the tax's legal incidence. Nor does it contain a provision requiring that
the tax be passed on to consumers. In the absence of such dispositive
language, the question is one of fair interpretation of the taxing statute
as written and applied. In this case, the fuels tax law's language and
structure indicate that the tax is imposed on fuel retailers. Pp. 10-12.
2) Oklahoma
may tax the income of tribal members who work for the Tribe but reside
in the State outside Indian country. The Court of Appeals' holding to
the contrary conflicts with the well-established principle of interstate
and international taxation that a jurisdiction may tax all the income
of its residents, even income earned outside the taxing jurisdiction.
The exception that the Tribe would carve out of the State's taxing authority
gains no support from the rule that Indians and tribes are generally immune
from state taxation, as this principle does not operate outside Indian
country. In addition, the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek, which guarantees
the Tribe and its members that "no Territory or State shall ever have
a right to pass laws for the [Tribe's]government," provides only for the
Tribe's sovereignty within Indian country and does not confer super-sovereign
authority to interfere with another jurisdiction's sovereign right to
tax income, from all sources, of those who choose to live within that
jurisdiction's limits. Nor can the Treaty be read to incorporate the repudiated
doctrine that an income tax imposed on government employees should be
treated as a tax on the government. The Treaty's signatories likely gave
no thought to a State's authority to tax income of tribal members living
in the State's domain, since the Treaty's purpose was to move the Tribe
to unsettled land not then within a State. Moreover, if that doctrine
were to apply, it would require exemption for nonmember as well as tribal
member employees of the Tribe. Pp. 12-17. 31 F.3d 964, affirmed in part,
reversed in part, and remanded.
Seminole
Tribe of Florida v. Florida
Docket No. 94-12 Argued October 11, 1995 Decided March 27, 1996
CITATION: 517 U.S. 44, 116 S.Ct. 1114, 134 L.Ed.2d 252 (1996)
SYNOPSIS:
The US Supreme Court held that states and state officials are immune,
under the Eleventh Amendment to the Constitution, from suits brought by
Indian tribes to enforce the compact negotiation requirement of the Indian
Gaming Regulatory Act. At issue in this case was the constitutionality
of the provisions of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act that impose upon
States a duty to negotiate in good faith with an Indian tribe toward the
formation of a compact, 25 U.S.C. 2710(d)(3)(A), and authorize a tribe
to bring suit in federal court against a State to compel performance of
that duty, 25 U.S.C. 2710(d)(7). Justice Rehnquist delivered the opinion
of the Court, joined by Justices O'Connor, Scalia, Kennedy and Thomas.
Justice Souter filed a dissenting opinion, joined by Justices Ginsburg
and Breyer.
HISTORY:
The Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, passed by Congress pursuant to the Indian
Commerce Clause, allows an Indian Tribe to conduct certain gaming activities
only in conformance with a valid compact between the Tribe and the State
in which the gaming activities are located. 25 U.S.C. 2710(d)(1)(C).
Under the Act, States have a duty to negotiate in good faith with a Tribe
toward the formation of a compact, 2710(d)(3)(A), and a Tribe may sue
a State in federal court in order to compel performance of that duty,
2710(d)(7). In this 2710(d)(7) suit, respondents, Florida and its
Governor, moved to dismiss petitioner Seminole Tribe's complaint on the
ground that the suit violated Florida's sovereign immunity from suit in
federal court. The District Court denied the motion, but the Court of
Appeals reversed, finding that the Indian Commerce Clause did not grant
Congress the power to abrogate the States' Eleventh Amendment immunity,
and that Ex parte Young, 209 US 123, does not permit an Indian Tribe to
force good faith negotiations by suing a State's Governor.
HELD: 1) The Eleventh Amendment prevents Congress from authorizing
suits by Indian Tribes against States to enforce legislation enacted pursuant
to the Indian Commerce Clause.
a) The Eleventh
Amendment presupposes that each State is a sovereign entity in our federal
system, and that "' [i]t is inherent in the nature of sovereignty not
to be amenable to the suit of an individual without [a State's] consent."'
Hans v. Louisiana, 134 US 1, 13. However, Congress may abrogate
the States' sovereign immunity if it has "unequivocally expresse[d] its
intent to abrogate theimmunity"and has acted "pursuant to a valid exercise
of power." Green v. Mansour, 474 US 64, 68. Here, through the numerous
references to the "State" in 2710(d)(7)(B)'s text, Congress provided
an "unmistakably clear" statement of its intent to abrogate,
b) The inquiry
into whether Congress has the power to abrogate unilaterally the States'
immunity from suit is narrowly focused on a single question: was the Act
in question passed pursuant to a constitutional provision granting Congress
such power? This Court has found authority to abrogate under only two
constitutional provisions: the Fourteenth Amendment, see, e.g., Fitzpatrick
v. Bitzer, 427 U.S.445, and, in a plurality opinion, the interstate
Commerce Clause, Pennsylvania v. Union Gas Co., 491 U.S. 1. The
Union Gas plurality found that Congress' power to abrogate came
from the States' session of their sovereignty when they gave Congress
plenary power to regulate commerce. Under the rationale of Union Gas,
the Indian Commerce Clause is indistinguishable from the Interstate Commerce
Clause.
c) However,
in the five years since it was decided, Union Gas has proven to
be a solitary departure from established law. Reconsidering that decision,
none of the policies underlying stare decisis require this Court's continuing
adherence to its holding. The decision has been of questionable precedential
value, largely because a majority of the Court expressly disagreed with
the plurality's rationale. Moreover, the deeply fractured decision has
created confusion among the lower courts that have sought to understand
and apply it. The plurality's rationale also deviated sharply from this
Court's established federalism jurisprudence and essentially eviscerated
the Court's decision in Hans, since the plurality's conclusion
"that Congress could under Article I expand the scope of the federal courts'
Article III jurisdiction" contradicted the fundamental notion that Article
III sets forth the exclusive catalog of permissible federal court jurisdiction.
Thus, Union Gas was wrongly decided, and is overruled. The Eleventh
Amendment restricts the judicial power under Article III, and Article
I cannot be used to circumvent the constitutional limitations placed upon
federal jurisdiction.
2) The doctrine
of Ex parte Young may not be used to enforce 2710(d)(3) against
a state official. That doctrine allows a suit against a state official
to go forward, notwithstanding the Eleventh Amendment's jurisdictional
bar, where the suit seeks prospective injunctive relief in order to end
a continuing federal law violation. However, where, as here, Congress
has prescribed a detailed remedial scheme for the enforcement against
a State of a statutorily created right, a court should hesitate before
casting aside those limitations and permitting an Ex parte Young
action. The intricate procedures set forth in 2710(d)(7) show that Congress
intended not only to define, but also significantly to limit, the duty
imposed by 2710(d)(3). The Act mandates only a modest set of sanctions
against a State, culminating in the Secretary of the Interior prescribing
gaming regulations where an agreement is not reached through negotiation
or mediation. In contrast, an Ex parte Young action would expose
a state official to a federal court's full remedial powers, including,
presumably, contempt sanctions. Enforcement through an Ex parte Young
suit would also make 2710(d)(7) superfluous, for it is difficult to
see why a Tribe would suffer through 2710(d)(7)'s intricate enforcement
scheme if Ex parteYoung's more complete and more immediate relief
were available. The Court is not free to rewrite the statutory scheme
in order to approximate what it thinks Congress might have wanted had
it known that 2710(d)(7) was beyond its authority. 11 F.3d1016, affirmed.
Babbitt,
Secretary of the Interior v. Youpee
Docket No.95-1595 Argued December 2, 1996 Decided January 21, 1997
CITATION: 519 U.S. 234, 117 S.Ct. 727, 136 L.Ed. 2d 696 (1997)
SYNOPSIS:
The U. S. Supreme Court struck down the tribal "escheat" provision
of the amended Indian Land Consolidation Act, designed to deal with fractionated
allotments. The Court held that permitting certain fractionated allotments
to escheat to the tribe, in order to re-establish and repair a tribe's
land base divided by the General Allotment Act, was an unconstitutional
taking in violation of the Fifth Amendment. At issue in this case was
the constitutionality of an escheat-to-tribe provision of the Indian Land
Consolidation Act, as amended, 25 U.S.C. 2206. Justice Ginsburg delivered
the opinion of the Court, joined by Justices Rehnquist, O'Connor, Scalia,
Kennedy, Souter, Thomas, and Bryer. Justice Stevens filed a dissenting
opinion.
HISTORY:
In the late Nineteenth Century, Congress initiated an Indian land program
that authorized the allotment of communal Indian property to individual
tribal members. This allotment program resulted in the extreme fractionation
of Indian lands as allottees passed their undivided interests on to multiple
heirs through descent or devise. In 1983, Congress adopted the Indian
Land Consolidation Act in part to reduce fractionated ownership of allotted
lands. Section 207 of the Act--the "escheat" provision--prohibited the
descent or devise of fractional interests that constituted 2 percent or
less of the total acreage in an allotted tract and earned less than $100
in the preceding year. Instead of passing to heirs, the interests described
in 207 would escheat to the Tribe, thereby consolidating the ownership
of Indian lands. Section 207 made no provision for the payment of compensation
to those who held such fractional interests. In Hodel v. Irving,
481 US 704, this Court invalidated the original version of 207 on the
ground that it effected a taking of private property without just compensation,
in violation of the Fifth Amendment. Id., at 716-718. Considering, first,
the economic impact of 207, the Court observed that the provision's
income generation test might fail to capture the actual economic value
of the land. Id., at 714. Weighing most heavily against the constitutionality
of 207, however, was the "extraordinary" character of the Government
regulation, Id., at 716, which amounted to the virtual abrogation of the
rights of descent and devise, Id, at 716-717. While Irving was
pending in the Court of Appeals, Congress amended 207. Amended 207
differs from the original provision in three relevant respects: it looks
back five years instead of one to determine the income produced from a
small interest, and creates a rebuttable presumption that this income
stream will continue; it permits devise of otherwise escheatable interests
to persons who already own an interest in the same parcel; and it authorizes
Tribes to develop their own codes governing the disposition of fractional
interests. The will of William Youpee, an enrolled member of the Sioux
and Assiniboine Tribes, devised to respondents, all of them enrolled tribal
members, his several undivided interests in allotted lands on Reservations
in Montana and North Dakota. Each interest was devised to a single descendant.
Youpee's will thus perpetuated existing fractionation, but it did not
splinter ownership further by bequeathing any single fractional interest
to multiple devisees. In a proceeding to determine claims against and
heirs to Youpee's estate, an administrative law judge in the Department
of the Interior found that Interests devised to each of the respondents
fell within the compass of amended 207 and should therefore escheat
to the relevant tribal governments. Respondents, asserting the unconstitutionality
of amended 207, appealed the order to the Board of Indian Appeals. The
Board, stating that it did not have jurisdiction to consider respondents'
constitutional claim, dismissed the appeal. Respondents then filed this
suit against the Secretary of the Interior, alleging that amended 207
violates the Just Compensation Clause of the Fifth Amendment. The District
Court agreed with respondents and granted their request for declaratory
and injunctive relief. The Ninth Circuit affirmed.
HELD: Amended 207 does not cure the constitutional deficiency
this Court identified in the original version of 207. The Court is guided
by Irving in determining whether the amendments to 207 render
the provision constitutional. The United States maintains that the amendments
moderate the economic impact of the provision and temper the character
of the Government's regulation. However, the narrow revisions Congress
made to 207, without benefit of this Court's ruling in Irving;
do not warrant a disposition different than the one announced and explained
in Irving. Amended 207 permits a five year window rather than
a one year window to assess the income generating capacity of a fractional
interest, and the United States urges that this alteration substantially
mitigates the economic impact of 207. But amended 207 still trains
on income generated from the land, not on the value of the parcel. Even
if the income generated by such parcels may be typed de minimis, the value
of the land may not fit that description. 481 U. S., at 714. The United
States correctly comprehends that Irving rested primarily on the
"extraordinary" character of the governmental regulation: the "virtual
abrogation" of the right of descent and devise, id., at 716. The United
States contends, however, that Congress cured the fatal infirmity in
201 when it revised the section to allow transmission of fractional interests
to successors who already own an interest in the allotment. But this change
does not rehabilitate the measure. Amended 207 severely restricts the
right of an individual to direct the descent of his property by shrinking
drastically the universe of possible successors. And, as the Ninth Circuit
observed, the "very limited group [of permissible devisees] is unlikely
to contain any lineal descendants." 67 F. 3d 194, 199-200. Moreover, amended
207 continues to restrict devise "even in circumstances when the governmental
purpose sought to be advanced, consolidation of ownership of Indian lands,
does not conflict with the further descent of the property." 481 U. S.,
at 718. As the United States acknowledges, giving effect to Youpee's directive
bequeathing each fractional interest to one heir would not further fractionate
Indian land holdings. The United States' arguments that amended 207
satisfies the Constitution's demand because it does not diminish the owner's
right to use or enjoy property during his lifetime and does not affect
the right to transfer property at death through non probate means are
no more persuasive today than they were in Irving. See id., At
716-718. The third alteration made in amended 207 also fails to bring
the provision outside the reach of this Court's holding in Irving.
Tribal codes governing disposition of escheatable interests have apparently
not been developed. Pp. 8-1 1. 67 F. 3d 194, affirmed.
Strate,
Association Tribal Judge, Tribal Court of the Three Affiliated Tribes
of the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation v. A-1 Contractors
Docket No. 95-1872 Argued January 7, 1997 Decided April 28, 1997
CITATION: 520 U.S. 438, 117 S.Ct. 1404, 137 L.Ed.2d 661 (1997)
SYNOPSIS:
The U. S. Supreme Court found that tribal courts may not entertain claims
against nonmembers arising out of accidents on state highways running
through Indian reservations, absent a statute or treaty authorizing the
tribe to govern the conduct of nonmembers on the highway in question.
Thus, the Court departed from the usual presumption that tribal sovereignty
exists, requiring a search of statutes or treaties for language that negates
the presumption, and established a rule that tribal sovereignty does NOT
exist unless Congress has specifically stated that it does exist. At issue
in this case was the question, when an accident occurs on a portion of
public highway maintained by the State under a federally granted right
of way over Indian reservation land, may tribal courts entertain a civil
action against an allegedly negligent driver and the driver's employer,
neither of whom is a member of the tribe? Justice Ginsburg delivered the
opinion for a unanimous court.
HISTORY:
Vehicles driven by petitioner Fredericks and respondent Stockert collided
on a portion of a North Dakota state highway that runs through the Fort
Berthold Indian Reservation. The 6.59 mile stretch of highway within the
reservation is open to the public, affords access to a federal water resource
project, and is maintained by North Dakota under a federally granted right
of way that lies on land held by the United States in trust for the Three
Affiliated Tribes and their members. Neither driver is a member of the
Tribes or an Indian, but Fredericks is the widow of a deceased tribal
member and has five adult children who are also members. The truck driven
by Stockert belonged to his employer, respondent A-1 Contractors, a non
Indian owned enterprise with its principal place of business outside the
reservation. At the time, A-1 was under a subcontract with LCM Corporation,
a corporation wholly owned by the Tribes, to do landscaping within the
reservation. The record does not show whether Stockert was engaged in
subcontract work at the time of the accident. Fredericks filed a personal
injury action in Tribal Court against Stockert and A-1, and Fredericks'
adult children filed a loss of consortium claim in the same lawsuit. The
Tribal Court ruled that it had jurisdiction over Fredericks, claim and
therefore denied respondents' motion to dismiss, and the Northern Plains
Intertribal Court of Appeals affirmed. Respondents then commenced this
action in the Federal District Court against Fredericks, her adult children,
the Tribal Court, and Tribal Judge Strate, seeking a declaratory judgment
that, as a matter of federal law, the Tribal Court lacked jurisdiction
to adjudicate Fredericks' claims; respondents also sought an injunction
against further Tribal Court proceedings. Relying particularly on National
Farmers Union Ins. Cos. v. Crow Tribe, 471 U.S. 845, and Iowa Mut.
Ins. Co. v. LaPlante, 480 US 9, the District Court dismissed the action,
determining that the Tribal Court had civil jurisdiction over Fredericks'
complaint against respondents. The en banc Eighth Circuit reversed, concluding
that the controlling precedent was Montana v. United States, 450
US 544, and that, under Montana, the Tribal Court lacked subject
matter jurisdiction over the dispute.
HELD:
When an accident occurs on a public highway maintained by the State pursuant
to a federally granted right of way over Indian reservation land, a civil
action against allegedly negligent nonmembers falls within state or federal
regulatory and adjudicatory governance; absent a statute or treaty authorizing
the tribe to govern the conduct of nonmembers driving on the State's highway,
tribal courts may not exercise jurisdiction in such cases. This Court
expresses no view on the governing law or proper forum when an accident
occurs on a tribal road within a reservation. Pp. 4-20.
a) Absent
express authorization by federal statute or treaty, tribal jurisdiction
over nonmembers' conduct exists only in limited circumstances. In Oliphant
v. Suquamish Tribe, 435 US 191, the Court held that tribes lack criminal
jurisdiction over non Indians. Later, in Montana v. United States,
the Court set forth the general rule that, absent a different congressional
direction, Indian tribes lack civil authority over the conduct of nonmembers
on non-Indian land within a reservation, subject to exceptions relating
to (1) the activities of nonmembers who enter consensual relationships
with the tribe or its members and (2) nonmember conduct that threatens
or directly affects the tribe's political integrity, economic security,
health, or welfare. 450 US, at 564-567. Pp. 4-7.
b) Montana
controls this case. Contrary to petitioners' contention, National Farmers
and Iowa Mutual do not establish a rule converse to Montana.
Neither case establishes that tribes presumptively retain adjudicatory
authority over claims against nonmembers arising from occurrences anywhere
within a reservation. Rather, these cases prescribe a prudential, nonjurisdictional
exhaustion rule requiring a federal court in which tribal court jurisdiction
is challenged to stay its hand, as a matter of comity, until after the
tribal court has had an initial and full opportunity to determine its
own jurisdiction. See 471 US, at 857; 480 US, at 20, n.14; see also id.,
at 16, n.8. This exhaustion rule, as explained in National Farmers,
471 US, at 855-856, reflects the more extensive jurisdiction tribal courts
have in civil cases than in criminal proceedings and the corresponding
need to inspect relevant statutes, treaties, and other materials in order
to determine tribal adjudicatory authority. National Farmers' exhaustion
requirement does not conflict with Montana, in which the Court
made plain that the general rule and exceptions there announced govern
only in the absence of a delegation of tribal authority by treaty or statute.
See 450 US, at 557-563. Read in context, the Court's statement in Iowa
Mutual, 480 US, at 18, that "[c]ivil jurisdiction over [the] activities
[of non Indians on reservation lands] presumptively lies in the tribal
courts," addresses only situations in which tribes possess authority to
regulate nonmembers' activities. As to nonmembers, a tribe's adjudicative
jurisdiction does not exceed its legislative jurisdiction, absent congressional
direction enlarging tribal court jurisdiction. Pp. 7-13.
c) It is
unavailing to argue, as petitioners do, that Montana does not govern
this case because the land underlying the accident scene is held in trust
for the Three Affiliated Tribes and their members. Petitioners are correct
that Montana and the cases following its instruction- -Brendale
v. Confederated Tribes and Bands of Yakima Nation, 492 US 408, and
South Dakota v. Bourland, 508 U.S.679--all involved alienated,
non Indian owned reservation land. However, the right of way North Dakota
acquired for its highway renders the 6.59 mile stretch here at issue equivalent,
for nonmember governance purposes, to such alienated, non-Indian land.
The right of way was granted to facilitate public access to a federal
water resource project, forms part of the State's highway, and is open
to the public. Traffic on the highway is subject to the State's control.
The granting instrument details only one specific reservation to Indian
land owners, the right to construct necessary crossings, and the Tribes
expressly reserved no other right to exercise dominion or control over
the right of way. Rather, they have consented to, and received payment
for, the State's use of the stretch at issue, and so long as that stretch
is maintained as part of the State's highway, they cannot assert a landowner's
right to occupy and exclude. Pp. 13-16.
d) Petitioners
refer to no treaty or federal statute authorizing the Three Affiliated
Tribes to entertain highway accident tort suits of the kind Fredericks
commenced against A-1 and Stockert. Nor have they shown that Fredericks'
tribal court action qualifies under either of the exceptions to Montana's
general rule. The tortious conduct alleged by Fredericks does not fit
within the first exception for "activities of nonmembers who enter consensual
relationships with the tribe or its members, through commercial dealing
contracts, leases, or other arrangements," 450 US, at 565, particularly
when measured against the conduct at issue in the cases cited by Montana,
id, at 565-566, as fitting within the exception, Williams v. Lee,
358 US 217, 223; Morris v. Hitchcock, 194 U.S.384; Buster v.
Wright, 135 F. 947, 950; and Washington v. Confederated Tribes
of Colville Reservation, 447 US 134, 152-154. This dispute is distinctly
nontribal in nature, arising between two non-Indians involved in a run
of the mill highway accident. Although A-1 was engaged in subcontract
work on the reservation, and therefore had a "consensual relationship"
with the Tribes, Fredericks was not a party to the subcontract, and the
Tribes were strangers to the accident. Montana's second exception,
concerning conduct that "threatens or has some direct effect on the political
integrity, the economic security, or the health or welfare of the tribe,"
450 US, at 566, is also inapplicable. The cases cited by Montana
as stating this exception each raised the question whether a State's (or
Territory's) exercise of authority would trench unduly on tribal self
government. Fisher v. District Court of Sixteenth Judicial Dist. of
Mont., 424 U. S. 382, 386; Williams, 358 US, at 220; Montana
Catholic Missions v. Missoula County, 200 US 118, 128-129; and Thomas
v. Gay, 169 US 264, 273. Opening the Tribal Court for Fredericks'
optional use is not necessary to protect tribal self government; and requiring
A-1 and Stockert to defend against this commonplace state highway accident
claim in an unfamiliar court is not crucial to the Tribes' political integrity,
economic security, or health or welfare. Pp. 16-20. 76 F. 3d 930, affirmed.
Idaho
v. Coeur d'Alene Tribe of Idaho
Docket No.
94-1474 Argued October 16, 1996 Decided June 23, 1997
CITATION:521 U.S. 261, 117 S.Ct. 2028, 138 L.Ed.2d 438 (1977)
SYNOPSIS:
The US Supreme Court held that the Eleventh Amendment to the Constitution
barred claims brought against the state of Idaho and its officials by
the Coeur d"Alene Tribe. At issue in this case was whether the Eleventh
Amendment bars a federal court from hearing the Tribe's claim to ownership
in the submerged lands and bed of Lake Coeur d'Alene and the various navigable
rivers and streams that are part of its water system. Justice Kennedy
delivered the opinion of the Court with respect to Parts I, II-A, and
III, joined by Justices Rehnquist, O'Connor, Scalia, and Thomas, and an
opinion with respect to Parts II-B, II-C, and II-D, joined by Justice
Rehnquist. Justice O'Connor filed an opinion concurring in part and concurring
in the judgment, joined by Justices Scalia and Thomas. Justices Stevens,
Ginsburg, and Breyer filed a dissenting opinion.
HISTORY: Alleging ownership in the submerged lands and bed of Lake
Coeur d'Alene and various of its navigable tributaries and effluents lying
within the original boundaries of the Coeur d'Alene Reservation (the submerged
lands), the Coeur d'Alene Tribe and various of its members (collectively,
the Tribe) filed this federal court action against the State of Idaho,
various state agencies, and numerous state officials in their individual
capacities. The Tribe sought, inter alia, a declaratory judgment establishing
its entitlement to the exclusive use and occupancy and the right to quiet
enjoyment of the submerged lands, a declaration of the invalidity of all
Idaho laws, customs, or usages purporting to regulate those lands, and
a preliminary and permanent injunction prohibiting defendants from taking
any action in violation of the Tribe's rights in the lands. The District
Court dismissed the suit, but the Ninth Circuit affirmed in part, reversed
in part, and remanded. As here relevant, the latter court agreed with
the District Court that the Eleventh Amendment barred all claims against
the State and its agencies, as well as the quiet title action against
the officials. However, it found the doctrine of Ex parte Young,
209 US 123, applicable and allowed the claims for declaratory and injunctive
relief against the officials to proceed insofar as they sought to preclude
continuing violations of federal law. The court reasoned that those claims
are based on Idaho's ongoing interference with the Tribe's alleged ownership
rights, and found it conceivable that the Tribe could prove facts entitling
it to relief on the claims.
HELD:
Justice Kennedy delivered the opinion of the Court with respect to
Parts I, II-A,and III, concluding that the Tribe's suit against the state
officials may not proceed in federal court. Pp. 4-8, 18-26.
a) Because
States enjoy Eleventh Amendment immunity in suits by Indian tribes, Blatchford
v. Native Village of Noatak, 501 U. S. 775, 782, the present suit
is barred unless it falls within the exception this Court has recognized
for certain suits seeking declaratory and injunctive relief against state
officers in their individual capacities, see, e.g., Ex parte Young;
supra. The Court does not question the continuing validity of the Young
doctrine, but acknowledges that questions will arise as to its proper
scope and application. In resolving these questions, the Court must ensure
that the sovereign immunity doctrine remains meaningful, while also giving
recognition to the need to prevent violations of federal law. In a suit
commenced against such officials, even if they are named and served as
individuals, the State itself will have a continuing interest in the litigation
whenever state policies or procedures are at stake. See, e.g., Pennhurst
State School and Hospital v. Halderman, 465 U. S. 89, 114, n. 25.
Pp. 4-8. The Tribe may not avoid the Eleventh Amendment bar and avail
itself of the Young exception in this action. In support of Young's
applicability, the Tribe alleges an ongoing violation of its property
rights under federal law, seeks prospective injunctive relief, and attempts
to rely on the plurality decision in Florida Dept. of State v. Treasure
Salvors, Inc., 458 US 670. The latter case is not helpful because
the state officials there were acting beyond their state conferred authority,
Id, at 696-697, a theory the Tribe does not even attempt to pursue in
this case. Moreover, although a request for prospective relief from an
allegedly ongoing federal law violation is ordinarily sufficient to invoke
the Young fiction, this case is unusual in that the Tribe's suit
is the functional equivalent of a quiet title implicating special sovereignty
interests: This is especially troubling when coupled with the far reaching
and invasive relief the Tribe seeks, which would shift substantially all
benefits of ownership and control of vast areas from the State to the
Tribe, and thereby entail consequences going well beyond those typically
present in a real property quiet title action. Furthermore, the requested
relief would divest the State of its control over lands underlying navigable
waters, which have historically been considered uniquely "sovereign lands,"
see, e.g., Utah Div. of State Lands v. United States, 482 U. S.193,
195-198, title to which is conferred on the States by the Constitution
itself, see Oregon ex rel. State Land Bd. v. Corvallis Sand & Gravel
Co., 429 US 363,374. Indeed, Idaho law views its interest in the submerged
lands in such terms. Under these particular and special circumstances,
the Young exception is inapplicable. The dignity and status of
its statehood allows Idaho to rely on its Eleventh Amendment immunity
and to insist upon responding to these claims in its own courts, which
are open to hear and determine the case. Pp. 18-26. The judgment is reversed
in part, and the case is remanded. 42 F. 3d 1244, reversed in part and
remanded.
South
Dakota v. Yankton Sioux Tribe
Docket No. 96-1581 Argued December 8, 1997 Decided January 26, 1998
CITATION: 118 S.Ct. 789, 139 L.Ed.2d 773 (1998)
SYNOPSIS:
The U.S. Supreme Court held that by an 1897 statute ratifying an agreement
for the sale of surplus tribal lands, Congress diminished the boundaries
of the Yankton Sioux Reservation. At issue in this case is whether a landfill
constructed on non-Indian fee land within the boundaries of the original
Yankton Reservation remains subject to federal environmental regulations.
Justice O'Connor delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
HISTORY:
The Yankton Sioux Reservation in South Dakota was established pursuant
to an 1858 Treaty between the United States and the Yankton Tribe. Congress
subsequently retreated from the reservation concept and passed the 1887
Dawes Act, which permitted the Government to allot tracts of tribal land
to individual Indians and, with tribal consent, to open the remaining
holdings to non-Indian settlement. In accordance with the Dawes Act, members
of the respondent Tribe received individual allotments and the Government
then negotiated with the Tribe for the cession of the remaining, unallotted
reservation lands. An agreement reached in 1892 provided that the Tribe
would "cede, sell, relinquish, and convey to the United States" all of
its unallotted lands; in return, the Government agreed to pay the Tribe
$600,000. Article XVII of the agreement, a saving clause, stated that
nothing in its terms "shall be construed to abrogate the [1858] treaty",
and that "all provisions of the said treaty . . . shall be in full force
and effect, the same as though this agreement had not been made." Congress
ratified the agreement in an 1894 statute, and non-Indians rapidly acquired
the ceded lands. In this case, tribal, federal, and state officials disagree
as to the environmental regulations applicable to a solid waste disposal
facility that lies on unallotted, non-Indian fee land, but falls within
the reservation's original 1858 boundaries. The Tribe and the Federal
Government contend that the site remains part of the reservation and is
therefore subject to federal environmental regulations, while petitioner
State maintains that the 1894 divestiture of Indian property effected
a diminishment of the Tribe's territory, such that the ceded lands no
longer constitute "Indian country" under 18 U.S.C. 1151(a), and the
State now has primary jurisdiction over them. The District Court declined
to enjoin construction of the landfill but granted the Tribe a declaratory
judgment that the 1894 Act did not alter the 1858 reservation boundaries,
and consequently that the waste site lies within an Indian reservation
where federal environmental regulations apply. The Eighth Circuit affirmed.
HELD:
The 1894 Act's operative language and the circumstances surrounding its
passage demonstrate that Congress intended to diminish the Yankton Reservation.
Pp. 11-27.
a) States
acquired primary jurisdiction over unallotted opened lands if the applicable
surplus land Act freed those lands of their reservation status and thereby
diminished the reservation boundaries, Solem v. Bartlett 465 US
463, 467, but the entire opened area remained Indian country if the Act
simply offered non-Indians the opportunity to purchase land within established
reservation boundaries, id., at 470. The touchstone to determine whether
a given statute diminished or retained reservation boundaries is congressional
purpose, see Rosebud Sioux Tribe v. Kneip, 430 US 584, 615, and
Congress' intent to alter an Indian treaty's terms by diminishing a reservation
must be "clear and plain," United States v. Lion, 476 US 734, 738-739.
The most probative evidence of congressional intent is the statutory language,
but the Court will also consider the historical context surrounding the
Act's passage, and, to a lesser extent, the subsequent treatment of the
area in question and the pattern of settlement there. Hagen v. Utah,
510 US 399, 411. Ambiguities must be resolved in favor of the Indians,
and the Court will not lightly find diminishment. Ibid. Pp. 11-12.
b) The plain
language of the 1894 Act evinces congressional intent to diminish the
reservation Article I's "cession" language-the Tribe will "cede, sell,
relinquish, and convey to the United States all their claim, right, title,
and interest in and to all the unallotted lands" and Article II's "sum
certain" language-whereby the United States pledges a fixed payment of
$600,000 in return-is "precisely suited" to terminating reservation status.
See DeCoteau v. District County Court for Tenth Judicial Dist.,
420 US 425, 445. Indeed, when a surplus land Act contains both explicit
cession language, evidencing "the present and total surrender of all tribal
interests," and a provision for a fixed-sum payment, representing "an
unconditional commitment from Congress to compensate the Indian tribe
for its opened land," a "nearly conclusive," or "almost insurmountable,"
presumption of diminishment arises. See Solem, supra, at 470; see
also Hagen, supra, at 411.Pp. 13-14.
c) The Court
rejects the Tribe's argument that, because the 1894 Act's saving clause
purported to conserve the 1858 Treaty, the existing reservation boundaries
were maintained. Such a literal construction would eviscerate the 1892
agreement by impugning the entire sale. Rather, it seems most likely that
the parties inserted Article XVIII, including both the general statement
regarding the force of the 1858 Treaty and a particular provision ensuring
that the "Yankton Indians shall continue to receive their annuities under
[that Treaty]," for the limited purpose of assuaging the Tribe's concerns
about their entitlement to annuities. Discussion of the annuities figured
prominently in the negotiations that led to the 1892 agreement, but no
mention was made of the preservation of the 1858 boundaries. Pp. 14-18.
d) Neither
the 1894 Act's clause reserving sections of each township for schools
nor its prohibition on liquor within the ceded lands supports the Tribe's
position. The Court agrees with the State that the school sections clause
reinforces the view that Congress intended to extinguish the reservation
status of the unallotted land. See, e.g., Rosebud, supra, at 601;
but see Solem, supra, at 474. Moreover, the most reasonable inference
from the inclusion of the liquor prohibition is that Congress was aware
that the opened, unallotted areas would henceforth not be"Indian country,"
where alcohol already had been banned. Rosebud supra, at 613. Pp.
18-20.
e) Although
the Act's historical context and the area's subsequent treatment are not
such compelling evidence that, standing alone, they would indicate diminishment,
neither do they rebut the "almost insurmountable presumption" that arises
from the statute's plain terms. The manner in which the Government negotiated
the transaction with the Tribe and the tenor of the legislative reports
presented to Congress reveal a contemporaneous understanding that the
1894 Act modified the reservation. See Solem, supra, at 471. The
legislative history itself adds little because Congress considered several
surplus land sale agreements at the same time, but the few relevant references
from the floor debates support a finding of diminishment. In addition,
the Presidential Proclamation opening the lands to settlement contains
language indicating that the Nation's Chief Executive viewed the reservation
boundaries as altered. See Rosebud, supra, at 602-603. Pp. 20-23.
f) Despite
the apparent contemporaneous understanding that the 1894 Act diminished
the reservation, in the years since, both Congress and the Executive Branch
have described the reservation in contradictory terms and treated the
region in an inconsistent manner. The mixed record reveals no dominant
approach, and it carries but little force in light of the strong textual
and contemporaneous evidence of diminishment. E.g., Rosebud, supra,
at 605, n.27. Pp. 23-25.
g) Demographic
factors also signify diminishment: The Yankton population in the region
promptly and drastically declined after the 1894 Act, and the area remains
predominantly populated by non Indians with only a few surviving pockets
of Indian allotments. Solem, 465 US, at 471, and n.12. The Court's
holding is further reinforced by the State's assumption of jurisdiction
over the ceded territory almost immediately after the 1894 Act, and by
the lack of evidence that the Tribe has attempted until recently to exercise
jurisdiction over nontrust lands. Id., at 1456. Finally, the Yankton Constitution,
drafted in 1932 and amended in 1962, defines the Tribe's territory to
include only those tribal lands within the 1858 boundaries "now owned"
by the Tribe. Pp. 25-26.
h) The conflicting
understandings about the status of the reservation, together with the
fact that the Tribe continues to own land in common, caution the Court
to limit its holding to the narrow question presented: whether unallotted,
ceded lands were severed from the reservation. The Court need not determine
whether Congress disestablished the reservation altogether in order to
resolve this case, and accordingly declines to do so. See, e.g., Hagen,
supra, at 421. P. 27. 99 F.3d 1439, reversed and remanded.
Alaska
v. Native Village of Venetie Tribal Government
Docket No. 96-1577 Argued December 10, 1997 Decided February 25, 1998
CITATION: 118 S.Ct. 948, 140 L.Ed.2d 30 (1998)
SYNOPSIS:
The U. S. Supreme Court held that land held in fee simple by the Native
Village of Venetie Tribal Government pursuant to the Alaska Native Claims
Settlement Act did not constitute "Indian country." At issue
in this case was whether approximately 1.8 million acres of land in northern
Alaska owned in fee simple by the Native Village of Venetie Tribal Government
pursuant to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, 43 U.S.C. 1601, et
seq., is "Indian country." Justice Thomas delivered the opinion of
a unanimous court.
HISTORY:
In 1943, the Secretary of the Interior created a reservation for the Neets'aii
Gwich'in Indians on approximately 1.8 million acres surrounding Venetie
and another tribal village in Alaska. In 1971, Congress enacted the Alaska
Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA), which, inter alia, revoked the Venetie
Reservation and all but one of the other reserves set aside for Native
use by legislative or executive action, 43 U.S.C. 1618(a); completely
extinguished all aboriginal claims to Alaska land, 1603; and authorized
the transfer of $962.5 million in federal funds and approximately 44 million
acres of Alaska land to state-chartered private business corporations
to be formed by Alaska Natives, Sections 1605, 1607, 1613. Such corporations
received fee simple title to the transferred land, and no federal restrictions
applied to subsequent land transfers by them. Section 1613. In 1973, the
two Native corporations established for the Neets'aii Gwich'in elected
to make use of an ANCSA provision allowing them to take title to former
reservation lands in return for forgoing the statute's monetary payments
and transfers of nonreservation land. See Section 1618(b). The United
States conveyed fee simple title to the land constituting the former Venetie
Reservation to the corporations as tenants in common; thereafter, they
transferred title to respondent Native Village of Venetie Tribal Government
(the Tribe). In 1986, Alaska entered into a joint venture with a private
contractor to construct a public school in Venetie. After the contractor
and the State refused the Tribe's demand for approximately $161, 000 in
taxes for conducting business on tribal land, the Tribe sought to collect
in tribal court. In the State's subsequent suit to enjoin collection of
the tax, the Federal District Court held that, because the Tribe's ANCSA
lands were not "Indian country" within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. 1151(b),
the Tribe lacked the power to impose a tax upon nonmembers of the Tribe.
The Ninth Circuit disagreed and reversed.
HELD:
The Tribe's land is not "Indian country." Pp. 4-13.
a) As here
relevant, "Indian country" means "all dependent Indian communities
within the . . . United States . . . ." Section 1151(b). "[D]ependent
Indian communities" refers to a limited category of Indian lands that
are neither reservations nor allotments (the other categories of Indian
country set forth in Section 1151), and that satisfy two requirements-first,
they must have been set aside by the Federal Government for the use of
the Indians as Indian land; second, they must be under federal superintendence.
See United States v. Sandoval, 231 U.S. 28, 46, United States
v. Pelican, 232 U.S. 442, 449, and United States v. McGowan,
302 U.S. 535, 538-539. Those cases held that these two requirements were
necessary for a finding of "Indian country" generally before Section 1151
was enacted, and Congress codified these requirements in enacting Section
1151. Section 1151 does not purport to alter the cases' definition of
Indian country. Section 1151(b)'s text, moreover, was taken virtually
verbatim from Sandoval, supra, at 46, which language was later
quoted in McGowan, supra, at 538. The legislative history states
that Section 1151(b)'s definition is based on those cases, and the requirements
are reflected in Section 1151(b)'s text: The federal set-aside requirement
ensures that the land in question is occupied by an "Indian community";
the federal superintendence requirement guarantees that that community
is sufficiently "dependent" on the Federal Government that the Government
and the Indians involved, rather than the States, are to exercise primary
jurisdiction over the land. Pp. 4-10.
b) The Tribe's
ANCSA lands do not satisfy either of these requirements. The federal set-aside
requirement is not met because ANCSA, far from designating Alaskan lands
for Indian use, revoked all existing Alaska reservations "set aside by
legislation or by Executive or Secretarial Order for Native use, " save
one. 43 U.S.C. 1618(a) (emphasis added). Congress could not more clearly
have departed from its traditional practice of setting aside Indian lands.
Cf. Hagen v. Utah, 510 U.S. 399, 401. The difficulty with the Tribe's
argument that the ANCSA lands were set apart for the use of the Neets'aii
Gwich'in, "as such," by their acquisition pursuant to Section 1618(b)
is that ANCSA transferred reservation lands to private, state-chartered
Native corporations, without any restraints on alienation or significant
use restrictions, and with the goal of avoiding "any permanent racially
defined institutions, rights, privileges, or obligations," Section 1601(b);
see also Sections 1607, 1613. Thus, Congress contemplated that non-Natives
could own the former Venetie Reservation, and the Tribe is free to use
it for non-Indian purposes. Equally clearly, ANCSA ended federal superintendence
over the Tribe's lands by revoking all existing Alaska reservations but
one, see Section 1618(a), and by stating that ANCSA's settlement provisions
were intended to avoid a "lengthy wardship or trusteeship," Section 1601(b).
Although ANCSA exempts the Tribe's land, as long as it has not been sold,
leased, or developed, from adverse possession claims, real property taxes,
and certain judgments, see Section 1636(d), these protections simply do
not approach the level of active federal control and stewardship over
Indian land that existed in this Court's prior cases. See, e.g., McGowan,
supra, at 537-539. Moreover, Congress' conveyance of ANCSA lands to state-chartered
and state-regulated private business corporations is hardly a choice that
comports with a desire to retain federal superintendence. The Tribe's
contention that such superintendence is demonstrated by the Government's
continuing provision of health, social, welfare, and economic programs
to the Tribe is unpersuasive because those programs are merely forms of
general federal aid, not indicia of active federal control. Moreover,
the argument is severely undercut by the Tribe's view of ANCSA's primary
purposes, namely, to effect Native self-determination and to end paternalism
in federal Indian relations. The broad federal superintendence requirement
for Indian country cuts against these objectives, but this Court is not
free to ignore that requirement as codified in Section 1151. Whether the
concept of Indian country should be modified is a question entirely for
Congress. Pp. 10-13. 101 F. 3d 1286, reversed.
Montana
v. Crow Tribe of Indians
Docket No. 96-1829 Argued February 24, 1998 Decided May 18, 1998
CITATION: 118 S.Ct. 1650, 140 L.Ed.2d 898 (1998)
SYNOPSIS:
The U S. Supreme Court held that the Crow Tribe of Indians was not entitled
to restitution for severance taxes wrongfully paid to the State of Montana
for coal production conducted on land held in trust for the tribe. At
issue in this case is whether the Tribe and the United States may recover
coal-related taxes once paid to the State and counties by Westmoreland
Resources, Inc., a nontribal enterprise that mined coal under a lease
from the Tribe. Justice Ginsburg delivered the opinion of the court, joined
by Justices Rehnquist, Stevens, Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas and Breyer. Justice
Souter filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, in
which Justice O'Connor joined.
HISTORY:
In 1904, the Crow Tribe ceded part of its Montana Reservation to the United
States for settlement by non-Indians. The United States holds rights to
minerals underlying the ceded strip in trust for the Tribe. In 1972, with
the approval of the Department of the Interior and pursuant to the Indian
Mineral Leasing Act of 1938 (IMLA), Westmoreland Resources, Inc., a non-Indian
company, entered into a mining lease with the Tribe for coal underlying
the ceded strip. After executing the lease, Westmoreland signed contracts
with its customers, four utility companies, allowing it to pass on to
the utilities the cost of valid taxes. Westmoreland and the Tribe renegotiated
the lease in 1974. The amended lease had an extendable ten-year term,
and set some of the highest royalties in the United States. In 1975, Montana
imposed a severance tax and a gross proceeds tax on all coal produced
in the State, including coal underlying the reservation proper and the
ceded strip. Westmoreland paid these taxes without timely pursuit of the
procedures Montana law provides for protests and refunds. Some six months
after the State imposed its taxes, the Crow Tribal Council adopted its
own severance tax. The Department of the Interior approved the Tribe's
tax as applied to coal underlying the reservation proper but, because
of a limitation in the Tribe's constitution, did not approve as to coal
beneath the ceded strip. The Tribe again enacted a tax for coal mined
on the ceded strip in 1982, and again the Department rejected the tax.
In 1978, the Tribe brought a federal action for injunctive and declaratory
relief against Montana and its counties, alleging that the State's severance
and gross proceeds taxes were preempted by the IMLA and infringed on the
Tribe's right to govern itself. The District Court dismissed the complaint.
The Ninth Circuit reversed, holding that the Tribe's allegations, if proved,
would establish that the IMLA preempted the State's taxes. The Court of
Appeals noted, however, that the Tribe had paid none of Westmoreland's
taxes and apparently would not be entitled to any refund in the event
that the taxes were declared invalid. Crow Tribe v. Montana, 650
F. 2d 1 104, 1113, n. 13 (Crow I). In 1982, the Tribe and Westmoreland
entered into an agreement, with Interior Department approval, under which
Westmoreland agreed to pay the Tribe a tax equal to the State's then existing
taxes, less any tax payments Westmoreland was required to pay to the State
and its subdivisions. The agreement achieved, prospectively, the federal
permission the Tribe had long sought. It allowed the Tribe to have an
approved tax in place so that, if successful in the litigation against
Montana, the Tribe could claim for itself any tax amounts Westmoreland
would be ordered to pay into the District Court's registry pendente lite.
It also enabled Westmoreland to avoid double taxation, and absolved the
company from any tax payment obligation to the Tribe for the 1976-1982
period. In 1983, the District Court granted a motion by the Tribe and
Westmoreland to deposit severance tax payments into the District Court's
registry, pending resolution of the controversy over Montana's taxing
authority. In 1987, the court granted the same interim relief for the
gross proceeds taxes. Later that year, the United States intervened on
behalf of the Tribe to protect its interests as trustee of the coal upon
which Montana's taxes were levied. After trial, the District Court determined
that federal law did not preempt the State's taxes on coal mined at the
ceded strip. The Ninth Circuit again reversed, concluding that the taxes
were both preempted by the IMLA and void for interfering with tribal self-governance.
Crow Tribe v. Montana, 819 F. 2d 895, 903 (Crow II) . The Court
of Appeals stressed, inter alia, that the State's taxes had at least some
negative impact on the marketability of the Tribe's coal. Id., at 900.
This Court summarily affirmed. When the case returned to the District
Court in 1988, the court ordered distribution of the funds in its registry
to the United States as trustee for the Tribe. Subsequently, the United
States and the Tribe filed amended complaints against Montana and Big
Horn County to recover taxes paid by Westmoreland prior to the 1983 and
1987 orders directing deposits into the court's registry. Neither the
Tribe nor the United States requested, as additional or alternate relief,
recovery for the Tribe's actual financial losses attributable to the State's
taxes. After trial, the District Court concluded that the disgorgement
remedy sought by the Tribe was not appropriate. Key to the court's decision
was this Court's holding in Cotton Petroleum Corp. v. New Mexico,
490 U.S. 163, that both State and Tribe may impose severance taxes on
on-reservation oil and gas production by a non-Indian lessee. Cotton
Petroleum indicated that Montana's taxes on ceded strip coal were
invalidated in Crow II not because the State lacked power to tax the coal
at all, but because its taxes were "extraordinarily high." Id., at 186-187,
n.17. The District Court also considered that Westmoreland would not have
paid coal taxes to the Tribe before 1983, for Interior Department approval
was essential to allow pass through to the company's customers. Furthermore,
under the 1982 lease agreement, the Tribe and Westmoreland stipulated
that Westmoreland would have no tax liability to the Tribe for the 1976-1982
period. Moreover, the deposited funds, Westmoreland's post-1982 tax payments,
had been turned over in full to the United States for the benefit of the
Tribe. The court further noted that Westmoreland did not timely endeavor
to recover taxes paid to the State and counties, and the Tribe did nothing
to prompt Westmoreland to initiate appropriate refund proceedings. The
court received additional evidence concerning the effect of Montana's
taxes on the marketability of Montana coal and described the parties'
conflicting positions on that issue, but made no findings on the matter.
The Ninth Circuit again reversed, holding that the District Court had
ignored the law of the case and abused its discretion.
HELD: The restitution sought for the Tribe is not warranted. Pp. 14-21.
a) As a rule,
a nontaxpayer may not sue for a refund of taxes paid by another. The Ninth
Circuit evidently had that rule in mind when it noted, in Crow I,
that the Tribe was apparently not entitled to any refund of taxes Westmoreland
had paid to Montana. The Tribe maintains, however, that the disgorgement
remedy it gained does not fall within the "refund" category. The Tribe's
disgorgement claim must be examined in light of this Court's pathmarking
decision in Cotton Petroleum Corp. v. New Mexico, 490 US 163. There,
the Court clarified that neither the IMLA, nor any other federal law,
categorically preempts state nondiscriminatory severance taxes on all
extraction enterprises in a State, including on-reservation operations.
Both State and Tribe have taxing jurisdiction over on-reservation production.
The Court in Cotton Petroleum distinguished Crow II in a footnote,indicating
that Montana had the power to tax Crow coal, but not at an exorbitant
rate. Pp. 14-17.
b) The Tribe
first argues that it, not Montana, should have received Westmoreland's
1975-1982 coal tax payments; therefore the proper remedy is to require
the state to turn all taxes it collected from Westmoreland over to the
Tribe. However, as Cotton Petroleum makes plain, neither the State
nor the Tribe enjoys authority to tax to the total exclusion of the other.
This situation differs from cases like Valley County v. Thomas,
109 Mont. 345, 97 P. 2d 345, in which only one jurisdiction could tax
a particular activity. Moreover, the Tribe could not have taxed Westmoreland
during the period in question, for the Interior Department had withheld
the essential permission, further distancing this case from Valley
County. The District Court correctly took these and other factors
into account in holding disgorgement an exorbitant, and therefore inequitable,
remedy. Pp.17-18.
c) The Tribe
and the United States urge the negative impact of Montana's high taxes
on the marketability of the Tribe's coal as an alternative justification
for requiring Montana to disgorge the taxes collected from Westmoreland.
This claim rests on the concern that, by taxing the coal actually mined
and sold, Montana deprived the Tribe of its fair share of the economic
rent. Again, however, the Tribe could not have exacted a tax from Westmoreland
before 1983, because the Interior Department withheld approval. And no
evidence suggests that Westmoreland would have agreed to pay even higher
royalties to the Tribe in 1974, but for Montana's tax. It merits emphasis
also that under Cotton Petroleum, Montana could have imposed a
severance tax, albeit not one so extraordinarily high. The District Court
did not consider awarding the Tribe, in lieu of all the 1975-1982 taxes
Montana collected, damages based on actual losses the Tribe suffered.
This was not an oversight. The complaint contained no prayer for compensatory
damages. Nor did the proof establish entitlement to such relief. The Tribe
concentrated on disgorgement as the desired remedy; it deliberately sought
and proved no damages attributable to coal not sold because the State's
tax made the price too high. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(c) therefore
could not aid the Tribe, for the Tribe had not shown entitlement to actual
damages. While not foreclosing the District Court from any course the
Federal Rules and that court's thorough grasp on this litigation may lead
it to take, this Court is satisfied that the Court of Appeals improperly
overturned the District Court's judgment. Pp. 18-21. 92 F. 3d 826, 98F.
3d 1194, reversed and remanded.
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