The cert petition in MacArthur v. San Juan County was filed on Nov. 12. You can download the petition here:
Supreme Court
Blackmun Digital Archive Research — A Concordance of Indian Law Cases (1986-1993)
Justice Blackmun’s papers are starting to appear online. The docket sheets and the cert pool memos of each case in the docket years 1986 through 1993 are now available at this location. However, in order to find anything, you have to know the docket numbers.
I’ve listed all the Indian law cases I could find for those docket years. I used the United States Law Week categorization system, which puts Indian law cert petitions in the “Indians” or (now) “Native Americans” category. It does not do this for unpaid petitions, so my list is non-exhaustive. However, I captured a few important unpaid cert petitions because they were cross-referenced in other cert pool memos.
You can get this concordance at our occasional papers series website. It’s no. 2007-15.
It is a work in progress. Any additional information you have to make the concordance a better document would be much appreciated.
Carcieri v. Kempthorne Update
Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Massachusetts, Missouri, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, and Utah have just filed an amicus brief supporting the State of Rhode Island’s petition for cert in Carcieri v. Kempthorne.
The brief is here: State Amicus Brief Supporting Cert Petition
Teck Camino Cert Petition and Briefs
The materials in the Teck Camino v. Pakootas case are at the Supreme Court Project website, here. Today, the United States responded to the Court’s call for the views of the Solicitor General by arguing in favor of a denial of the petition. In some respects, this is a victory for the tribal member plaintiffs, because it upholds the Ninth Circuit’s decision that CERCLA applies to the Canadian company’s discharges. But in another respect, it is a loss, because the EPA attempted to render the case moot by refusing to enforce its own finding that Teck Camino was liable. The SG argued that the case was moot because of this action.
Federal Indian Law Cert Petitions — A Comparison of State Petitions and Tribal Petitions (1997 to present)
Using the United States Law Week online database (that goes back to 1997 or so) that lists all the paid cert petitions filed, I generated a list of all cert petitions filed under the “Native Americans” database.
Here is a snippet of my findings, previously discussed here (and now updated):
Petitions filed by state governments, state agencies, or state officers in their official capacities: 27
Grants: 10 (including Alaska v. Venetie, Idaho v. Coeur d’Alene Tribe, Minnesota v. Mille Lacs, Montana v. Crow Tribe, Nevada v. Hicks, Sherrill v. Oneida, Wagnon v. Prairie Band, plus two GVRs).
Percentage: 37 % grant rate
Petitions filed by Indian tribes: 77
Grants: 6 (Cherokee Nation v. Leavitt, Chickasaw Nation v. United States, Kiowa Tribe v. Manufacturing Technologies, plus three GVRs).
Percentage: 8% grant rate
Now, excluding GVR’s, where the Court grants cert. for the purpose of remanding back to the lower court usually to allow the lower court to reconsider the case in light of a new precedent, here are the stats:
State petitions: 25
Grants: 8
Percentage: 32% grant rate
Tribal petitions: 74
Grants: 3
Percentage: 4% grant rate
Tribal Amicus Brief in Supreme Court Voter ID Case
The Tribal Supreme Court Project spearheaded this amicus brief in the voter ID cases, Crawford v. Marion County Election Board (No. 07-21) and Indiana Democratic Party v. Rokita (No. 07-25).
Mich. Supreme Court Justice Cavanagh Remarks before the Michigan Indian Judicial Association
The text of Justice Cavanagh’s talk can be downloaded here: Justice Cavanagh’s Remarks
“Factbound and Splitless” Talk
Here’s the abstract for my talk tomorrow at U-M Law School, “Factbound and Splitless: The Impact of the Certiorari Process on Federal Indian Law.”
The process by which the Supreme Court reviews petitions for writs of certiorari is intended to parse through the thousands of petitions to pick out the most important cases for the Court to decide. These include cases in which there is a split of authority, cases in which a lower court has committed a gross error, or cases in which there is a critical constitutional issue at stake. Cases in which there is no split, cases that will affect only a few people, cases involving simple error correction, or cases involving an unimportant issue are unlikely to be heard by the Court.
Since the 1980s, more and more Justices have resorted to a pool of law clerks for a write-up of each cert petition that includes a recommendation of whether or not the Court should grant cert using these factors. With the release of Justice Blackmun’s papers, the cert pool petitions from the docket years 1986 to 1993 are available for study. The views of Supreme Court clerks in the cert pool memos are often the only written documentation of the Court’s views of the vast majority of petitions that are denied.
The certiorari process creates a structural barrier to the fair adjudication of federal Indian law cases. Because over 80 percent of Indian law cases arise in three circuits, few circuit splits arise, rendering most petitions “splitless.” Moreover, since Indian law cases are often sui generis, they are labeled “factbound.” Most importantly, Supreme Court clerks do not find Indian law cases to be important in regards to the legal issues in dispute, except when the petitioner is a state or local government opposing a tribal interest such as a tribe or a tribal member.
What this means is that the clerks almost never recommend a grant when the petitioner is an Indian tribe or an Indian because the petition is “splitless,” “factbound,” or just unimportant. Conversely, when a state or local government petitions, the Court grants the petition around 75 percent of the time, regardless of whether any split exists. Perhaps this is part of the explanation for why tribal interests have lost 75 percent of their cases before the Court since 1987.
The classic case is a treaty rights case brought by a tribe. If the tribe loses below, the clerks will never find a split in authority because the treaty is unique, making the case sui generis. And Supreme Court clerks almost never find the petitions of Indians and Indian tribes to be important enough to be certworthy. But if the tribe wins below, the opponents usually are state governments, whose cert petitions are viewed favorably by the clerks.
This paper argues, as have occasional Supreme Court clerks, that the Court should recognize the special relationship that exists between the United States and Indian tribes in the certiorari process. The Court should also recognize the structural inequity of the certiorari process in the context of federal Indian law. Both of these changes could be accomplished through an amendment to Supreme Court Rule 10, which articulates the Court’s factors in considering certiorari petitions. Either the Court should grant more petitions filed by tribal interests or deny more petitions filed by tribal opponents.
Hope you can make it. The talk begins at 12:20 in Room 150 in the law school. Lunch is available. The talk is sponsored by the U-M NALSA and the Michigan Journal of Race & Law.
Tales from the Cert Pool: Montana Taxes at Crow
The Supreme Court denied cert in a case captioned Montana v. Crow Tribe of Indians, 484 U.S. 1039 (1988) (No. 87-343). The case involved the State’s attempt to impose severance and gross proceeds on a non-Indian mining company.
The cert pool memo (from a Rehnquist clerk no less) ripped the State’s argument:
[Montana]’s contention that its taxes should not be preempted because they fall on Westmoreland, rather than on the Crow Tribe itself, is ludicrous. The state severance and gross proceeds taxes have restricted the amount of taxation [Crow] can levy on its lessees. The CA9 found that the marketability of [Crow]’s coal was significantly diminished by [Montana]’s taxes, resulting in a corresponding decrease in the amount of money accruing to[Crow]’s coffers.
Cert Pool Memo at 7.
How times have changed. After Cotton Petroleum and Wagnon, states can strategically tax for the specific purpose of limiting on-reservation activities and all but eliminate tribal tax base.
Supreme Court Preview @ MSU Law College, Tuesday at 3:30 PM
I’ll be giving a talk tomorrow at the law college at the behest of the MSU chapter of the ACS: a preview of the 2007 Term of the Supreme Court.
Here’s a preview of the preview — namely, a list of the cases I plan on discussing tomorrow, with links to briefs and other materials as available:
Boumediene v. Bush (No. 06-1195)
Al-Odah v. Bush (No. 06-1196)
Baze v. Rees (No. 07-5439)
Crawford v. Marion Election Board (No. 07-21)
Democratic Party v. Rokita (No. 07-25)
District of Columbia v. Heller (No. 07-290)
FCC v. Fox Television Stations (No. 07-582)
United States v. Williams (No. 06-694)
Exxon Shipping Co. v. Baker (No. 07-219)
Medellin v. Texas (No. 06-984)
Danforth v. Minnesota (No. 06-8273)
Carcieri v. Kempthorne (No. 07-526)
Matthew L.M. Fletcher
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