Late Summer Update in Williams & Cochrane v. Quechan & Rosette Litigation

Here are the new materials in Williams & Cochrane LLP v. Quechan Tribe of the Fort Yuma Reservation (S.D. Cal.):

216 DCT Order Dismissing W&C Reply Claim

217 DCT Order Dismissing Claims against Rosette

Prior posts here.

UPDATE (12/16/19):

219-1 Motion for Reconsideration of 216

220 Fourth Amended Complaint

227 WC Motion for Judgment on Pleadings on Counterclaims

236 Quehan Response to 219

237 Reply in Support of 219

247 DCT Order Denying Motion for Reconsideration

Cultural Property Rights Complaint against the Alamo

Here is the complaint in Tap Pilam Coahuiltecan Nation v. Alamo Trust, Inc. (W.D. Tex.):

1 Complaint

Update (3/19/21):

43 DCT Order

44 Amended Complaint

47 George P. Bush Motion to Dismiss

48 McDonald Motion to Dismiss

53 Response

54 McDonald Reply

55 Bush Reply

57 DCT Order

Posting for Michigan SCT Clerkship with Justice Megan K. Cavanagh

Here.

Justice Cavanagh serves on the Michigan Tribal-State-Federal Judicial Forum.

Swinomish Loses Contract Support Costs Dispute with Indian Health Service

Here are the materials in Swinomish Indian Tribal Community v. Azar (D.D.C.):

1 Complaint

21-2 Swinomish MSJ

27 US Cross-Motion

29 Swinomish Reply

32 US Reply

36 DCT Order

An excerpt:

The question in this case is whether, when a tribe collects its own third-party revenue pursuant to 25 U.S.C. § 1641(d)(1), its expenditures of those funds on health care services are eligible for CSC funding from the IHS under the ISDEAA, id. §§ 5325, 5388.

Canadian First Nation’s Payday Lending Partners’ Convictions for RICO Violations in US Affirmed by Third Circuit

Here is the unpublished opinion in United States v. Neff:

Opinion

Briefs:

Hallinan Brief

Neff Brief

US Brief

Neff Reply

Hallinan Reply

Split Eighth Circuit Panel Holds Tax on Casino Patrons is Preempted by IGRA

Here is the opinion in Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe v. Noem (No. 18-1271).

Briefs here.

Split Eighth Circuit Panel Holds State Tax on Nonmember Contractor is not Preempted by IGRA

Here is the opinion in Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe v. Haeder (No. 18-2750).

Briefs here.

Idaho SCT Decides Coeur d’Alene Tribe Water Rights Matter Largely in Tribe’s Favor

Here is the opinion in In re:CSRBA Case No. 49576 (Idaho S. Ct.).

Briefs:

Idaho Opening Brief

Appellants Opening Brief

US Response Brief

Coeur d’Alene Tribe Response Brief

HECLA Response Brief

North Idaho Water Rights Alliance Response Brief

Idaho Response Brief

Coeur d’Alene Tribe Reply

US Reply Brief

Appellants Reply

Idaho Reply Brief

Tenth Circuit Affirms Interior’s Decision to Acquire Trust Land for United Keetoowah Band

Here is the opinion in Cherokee Nation v. Bernhardt.

Briefs:

federal-appellant-brief.pdf

ukb-opening-brief.pdf

cherokee-nation-answer-brief.pdf

federal-reply.pdf

ukb-reply.pdf

lower court materials here.

UPDATE:

Cherokee En Banc Petition

Cherokee Motion to Stay

Interior Opposition

UKC Opposition

Chicago Law Review Comment on Limiting State Eminent Domain Power under 25 USC § 357

Addison W. Bennett has published “Partially Tribal Land: The Case for Limiting State Eminent Domain Power under 25 USC § 357” in the University of Chicago Law Review (PDF).

The abstract:

When a state utility wishes to cross land located within a Native American reservation, but the landowners refuse to allow it, the utility in most circumstances may exercise eminent domain over the land. Under the authority of a federal statute, 25 USC § 357, states may generally condemn allotments, plots owned by individuals that lie within the sovereign boundaries of a tribal reservation. Courts have long recognized that the state authority to condemn these allotments under § 357 arises from the principle that individually owned allotments are no longer “tribal” land and, as a result, they are not protected by tribal sovereignty.

Congress’s failure to transition away from the allotment system has resulted in an ownership structure for certain plots of reservation land that it did not antic- ipate when it enacted § 357. Today, not all allotments are held entirely by individu- als, and many now contain fractional, undivided interests that belong to tribes themselves. This status of joint ownership between individuals and tribes, which this Comment refers to as “partially tribal,” leads to considerable complications with respect to the scope of § 357. Courts have routinely held that land owned by a sover- eign Native American tribe is not subject to state condemnation and that this prin- ciple protects tribal interests in allotments. Unresolved, however, is whether a tribal interest in an allotment—which can be as small as a fraction of 1 percent—should immunize even the nontribal interest in the plot from state condemnation proceed- ings. In other words, should a fractional tribal interest place an entire parcel out of the state’s reach?

This Comment argues that it should. The courts that have attempted to allow condemnations to proceed against partially tribal allotments run into the problem that all ownership interests in an allotment are undivided; each owner holds an undivided share of the whole parcel. This means there is no way to divide the tribal interests from the nontribal ones without effecting some kind of incursion on a tribal land interest without the tribe’s or Congress’s consent, a result that principles of tribal sovereignty squarely reject. This Comment recognizes that Congress’s intent when it passed § 357 was to eliminate tribal landholdings, but it argues that Congress has since changed course such that courts should disregard that original intent. This Comment also concedes that diminishing eminent domain power may lead to holdout problems, though it argues that protecting tribal sovereignty is the more important interest. Consistent with the principle that states may not diminish any tribal sovereignty without Congress’s consent, this Comment concludes that a state utility has multiple avenues for seeking access to a partially tribal allotment, including opportunities for negotiation with the tribe and the federal government. Courts should not permit states to use § 357 unilaterally to divest a nonconsenting tribe from its interest in land.