Kate Fort on “The New Laches” in the George Mason Law Review

Kathryn E. Fort (MSU) has published “The New Laches: Creating Title Where None Existed” in the George Mason Law Review.  From the introduction:

Recent legal decisions dealing with Indian land claims have been cre-ating title for private property owners where no title previously existed. As has been explored by others, various areas of property law have been turned upside down in order to defeat tribes in court. However, one area, equity, has received special attention from the courts. Specifically, the equitable defenses of laches, acquiescence, and impossibility were used by the United States Supreme Court in City of Sherrill v. Oneida Indian Nation to hand defeat to the Oneida Indian Nation on a tax issue. Since then, lower courts in the Second Circuit have used this precedent to deny Indian land claims altogether. But is the use of these three defenses based on precedent them-selves? A careful examination of City of Sherrill and its progeny reveals that these defenses have in fact been combined to create a new defense, what I will call the “new laches” defense.

Saginaw Chippewa v. Granholm Update — Motions to Certify Case for Interlocutory Appeal Denied

The City of Mount Pleasant and the County of Isabella had moved the Eastern District of Michigan to certify the earlier decision not to allow the defense of laches for an interlocutory appeal to the Sixth Circuit, but all the other parties (including co-defendant State of Michigan) objected. And so the district court rejected the motions.

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isabella-county-motion-for-certification

state-of-michigan-opposition-to-motions

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sag-chip-response-to-motions

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