No Divided Argument in Carcieri v. Kempthorne

The Supreme Court released its other orders from last Monday’s long conference.

The motion of petitioners Donald L. Carcieri, Governor of Rhode Island, and the State of Rhode Island for divided argument is denied. The motion of petitioner Town of Charlestown for divided argument is denied. The motion of Narragansett Indian Tribe for leave to participate in oral argument as amicus curiae and for divided argument is denied.

So I assume the State will let Ted Olson on behalf of the governor argue the case against Ed Kneedler on the government’s side.

Here are the cert denials:

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SCT 2008 Term Preview in NYTs

No mention of the three Indian law cases….

From the NYTs:

WASHINGTON — Come Election Day, there will almost certainly be cursing at the Supreme Court. The justices are scheduled to hear a case that day concerning dirty words on television, and it will be hard for the advocates in the case to describe its facts without using four-letter words. The appeals court argument, which involves swearing by Cher and Paris Hilton on a prime-time awards show, would have made a sailor blush.

Another case on the docket for the new term, which starts Monday, considers whether adherents of a faith called Summum may place a monument to the “Seven Aphorisms” of their faith in a Utah park that already contains a monument devoted to the Ten Commandments.

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Supreme Court Grants Cert in Two Indian Law-Related Cases

The two cases are United States v. Navajo Nation (No. 07-1410) and Hawaii v. Office of Hawaiian Affairs (No. 07-1372). The good news is that the Court declined to grant cert in Kemp v. Osage (No. 07-1484).

From SCOTUSblog:

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Justice Alito Leaves the Cert Pool

From the NYTs:

Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. is getting out of the pool.

Jason Reed/Reuters

Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. is the court’s most junior member.

For almost 20 years, eight of the nine justices on the Supreme Court have assigned their law clerks to a shared legal labor pool that streamlines the work of reviewing incoming cases.

Only Justice John Paul Stevens has declined to participate. He relies on his own clerks to help cull perhaps 80 worthy cases from the thousands of appeals, called petitions for certiorari, that reach the court each year. The justices who participate in the arrangement, known around the court as the “cert. pool,” receive a common “pool memo” on each case from a single clerk. The memo analyzes the petition and makes a recommendation about whether it should be granted.

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Utilities File Cert Petition in EPA Mercury Case

Here is the cert petition.

And here and here are links to our previous post, with the D.C. Circuit’s opinion and other materials.

Obama vs. McCain and the Federal Judiciary

The NYT’s editorial today on the impact of the Presidential election on the federal judiciary should be especially salient to tribal advocates. Sen. McCain promises to continue to stock the federal judiciary and the Supreme Court with arch-conservatives like Justices Scalia and Thomas.  Sen. Obama has been more circumspect in his comments about federal judicial appointments, but the NYT editors (and we agree) assume he will appoint moderate liberals like Justice Breyer to the Court.

There are plenty of American Indian voters who have decided to back Sen. McCain, but they should reconsider in light of the import of his promises relating to the federal judiciary.

Consider what eight years of the Bush II Administration did to tribal interests, and add that to the 12 years of the Reagan and Bush I Administrations. Federal Indian law professors now recognize in general that 1986 or so was a major turning point in the success of tribal interests before the Supreme Court. From 1959 to 1986, tribal interests prevailed about 55-60 percent of the time before the Court, when the majority of the Court were liberals and centrists. Since then, they have lost more than 75 percent of the time. Seven of the nine current Justices are Republican appointees.

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SCOTUSBlog’s Petitions to Watch for the Long Conference

Here is the list of the petitions to watch according to SCOTUSBlog for the long conference. It includes four Indian law cases, Kickapoo v. Texas, Hawaii v. Office of Hawaiian Affairs, US v. Navajo Nation, and Kemp v. Osage Nation.

We agree (see here).

U.S. Supreme Court an International “Legal Backwater”?

From the NYTs:

Judges around the world have long looked to the decisions of the United States Supreme Court for guidance, citing and often following them in hundreds of their own rulings since the Second World War.

But now American legal influence is waning. Even as a debate continues in the court over whether its decisions should ever cite foreign law, a diminishing number of foreign courts seem to pay attention to the writings of American justices.

“One of our great exports used to be constitutional law,” said Anne-Marie Slaughter, the dean of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton. “We are losing one of the greatest bully pulpits we have ever had.”

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SCOTUSBlog Carcieri Preview

From SCOTUSBlog:

Jon Goodrich contributed the following preview of the upcoming term’s Carcieri v. Kempthorne.  Jon is a 3L at the University of Richmond School of Law and a 2008 Akin Gump summer associate.  Please be sure to check out SCOTUSwiki for any additional updates.

The contentious relationship between the State of Rhode Island and the Narragansett Indian Tribe dates back to at least 1880, when – after protracted resistance to Rhode Island’s efforts to assimilate it – the Tribe surrendered its tribal authority and sold all but two acres of its lands to the State for five thousand dollars. In 1975, the Tribe sought to invalidate the sale, arguing that Rhode Island had violated the Indian Nonintercourse Act, which requires federal consent prior to the purchase of Indian land or termination of aboriginal title. After three years of litigation, Rhode Island and the Tribe entered into a Joint Memorandum of Understanding, which granted the Tribe 1800 acres of land (known as the “settlement lands”) in exchange for the Tribe’s agreement to abandon its claims of aboriginal title and its claims to other lands in the state. Congress eventually approved and codified the agreement in the Rhode Island Indian Claims Settlement Act.

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II. Respondent’s Merits Brief

In his merits brief, Secretary Kempthorne asserts that the IRA permits him to take land into trust for the Tribe and that the Settlement Act presents no obstacles to that decision. The brief begins by focusing on the scope of the IRA, noting that the statute grants the Secretary the authority to take land into trust “for the purpose of providing land for Indians.” The word “Indians” is not used in the technical sense, but instead is used, the Secretary claims, like in other Indian statutes to refer to both “tribes” and individual “Indians.” Thus, the Secretary declares, because the IRA expansively defines “tribe” as “any Indian tribe, organized band, pueblo, or the Indians residing on one reservation,” he has the necessary trust authority regardless of what the word “now” means in the IRA’s definition of “Indian.”

Even if the definition of “Indian” has some bearing on the Secretary’s trust authority for a “tribe,” the Secretary argues that the immediate context of “now” suggests that Congress meant “at the time of the statute’s application.” As he did at the certiorari stage, the Secretary points out that if Congress had intended the disputed definition of “Indian” to refer to a closed class of tribes based on their status in 1934, then it could have used a specific date or stated “at the time of passage of this Act.” Although there may be other instances within the IRA where “now” means at the time of passage, the Secretary contends that “now” serves a functional, rather than a substantive purpose, and may be used to signify different time periods depending on the context. Here, the Secretary asserts, Congress intended “now” to account for the possibility that an Indian’s status –and, as a result, eligibility for IRA benefits – may vary over time and thus should be measured at the time of application. Rejecting the argument that Congress could have added “now or hereafter” to provide for the IRA’s ongoing application, the Secretary reasons that in this instance that phrase would incorrectly permit current trust acquisition for a tribe that was recognized in 1934 even if it is no longer federally recognized. Moreover, the Secretary dismisses Carcieri’s interpretation of John, arguing that the Supreme Court’s discussion of the IRA’s scope reinforces the conclusion that the relevant clause is, if anything, ambiguous.

The purposes and legislative history of the IRA, the Secretary explains, reinforce the conclusion that Congress intended to extend the IRA’s benefits to all federally recognized tribes. After noting the canon that statutes are to be construed liberally in favor of Indians with ambiguous provisions interpreted for their benefit, the Secretary explains that the overriding objective of the IRA was not simply to reverse the federal government’s allotment policy, but was to promote tribal self-determination, self-government, and welfare. If, as Carcieri contends, the IRA was merely intended to apply to tribes affected by the Allotment Act, then Congress would not have also included pueblo Indians – a group never subject to the allotment policy. In addition, the Secretary discounts Carcieri’s reading of the IRA’s legislative history, emphasizing that “ambiguous legislative history, much less an ambiguous colloquy at a single hearing, cannot make ambiguous text plain.”

The Secretary next argues that even if “now” means “at the time of enactment,” Congress nevertheless left a gap for the Secretary to fill. According to the Secretary, the IRA does not attempt to delineate the entire universe of persons who are “Indians” under the IRA, but instead leaves a gap by providing that the word “Indian” “shall include all persons of Indian descent who are members of any recognized Indian tribe now under Federal jurisdiction.” Congress’s use of the word “include,” the Secretary reasons, indicates that what follows is illustrative, not exclusive.

To the extent that the exact scope of the IRA and the definition of “now” are ambiguous, the Secretary professes that the text, structure, purpose, and history of the IRA support his interpretation as a reasonable one. The Secretary points out that his view is consistent with current regulations adopted after notice-and-comment rulemaking as well as prior departmental practice and regulations and other Indian statutes.

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The case is now scheduled for oral argument on Monday, November 3, 2008. It is the third of three cases scheduled for oral argument that day.

Ann Tweedy on the Constitution, the Marshall Trilogy, and U.S. v. Lara

Ann Tweedy has posted “Connecting the Dots Between the Constitution, the Marshall Trilogy, and United States v. Lara: Notes Toward a Blueprint for the Next Legislative Restoration of Tribal Sovereignty” on SSRN. This paper is forthcoming in one my favorite journals, the University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform. Here is the abstract:

This law review article examines: (1) the underpinnings of tribal sovereignty within the American system; (2) the need for restoration based on the Court’s drastic incursions on tribal sovereignty over the past four decades and the grave circumstances, particularly tribal governments’ inability to protect tribal interests on the reservation and unchecked violence in Indian Country, that result from the divestment of tribal sovereignty; (3) the concept of restoration as illuminated by United States v. Lara, and finally (4) some possible approaches to partial restoration.

The article first evaluates the constitutional provisions relating to Indians and the earliest federal Indian law decisions written by Chief Justice Marshall on the premise that these two sources shed light on the upper limits of a potential legislative restoration of tribal sovereignty. Next, the article examines the judicial trend of divestment of tribal sovereignty, focusing particularly on the latest decisions that evidence this trend. The article further examines the negative effects of this divestment in Indian Country, from impeding tribes’ ability to provide governmental services and to protect their unique institutions, to problems of widespread on-reservation violence, particularly against Indian women. The article concludes that the judicial trend of divesting tribal sovereignty combined with these dire effects clearly demonstrate a need for restoration. Finally, the article examines the Lara holding and its implications for the types of restoration that will be upheld by Court, concluding with an examination of options for potential legislative restorations.

This looks like a very interesting paper, and may be the first paper that digests the recent scholarship on the scope of the Indian Commerce Clause from Pommersheim, Natelson, and others.