Patricia Millett Commentary on D.C. Circuit’s Patchak Decision

Commentary on Patchak v. Salazar et al., No. 09-5324.

On January 21, 2011, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit disagreed with three other federal circuits and held that sovereign immunity is waived for a challenge to a Department of the Interior decision to take land into trust for an Indian tribe, so long as the plaintiff itself is not claiming title to the land. The decision is Patchak v. Salazar et al., No. 09-5324. Because Interior can usually be sued in the District of Columbia, Patchak not only creates a circuit split but also opens a ready forum for future challenges to trust acquisitions. This opening of the courthouse doors for suits against the United States makes a petition for rehearing en banc and, if unsuccessful, a petition for certiorari by the Solicitor General highly likely.

Patchak, an individual plaintiff, filed suit claiming that Interior’s decision to take land into trust for the Match-e-be-nash-she-wish Band of Pottawatomie (Gun Lake Tribe) in Michigan was ultra vires and contrary to statute. After Patchak unsuccessfully sought to enjoin the acquisition pending resolution of his complaint, Interior took the land into trust, and the district court dismissed the suit for lack of standing. On appeal, the D.C. Circuit reversed on the standing issue and addressed the United States’ claim of sovereign immunity under the Quiet Title Act. Until now, all three circuits that have addressed the issue (the Ninth, Tenth, and Eleventh) have held that the Quiet Title Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2409a, bars suits like Patchak’s. See Fla. Dep’t of Bus. Regulation v. Dep’t of Interior, 768 F.2d 1248, 1253-55 (11th Cir. 1985); Neighbors for Rational Dev., Inc. v. Norton, 379 F.3d 956, 961-63 (10th Cir. 2004); Metro. Water Dist. of S. Cal. v. United States, 830 F.2d 139, 143-44 (9th Cir. 1987). The Quiet Title Act allows suits “under this section to adjudicate a disputed title to real property in which the United States claims an interest,” and specifically excludes “trust or restricted Indian lands.” Courts have read this language as barring all after-the-fact challenges to the United States’ trust acquisitions for Indian tribes—notwithstanding the general waiver of sovereign immunity in the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 702, for actions seeking non-monetary relief against official agency action.

Rejecting this analysis, the D.C. Circuit examined the language and history of the Quiet Title Act and held that Patchak’s claim challenging the legality of the trust acquisition was not a “quiet title” action at all, because Patchak did not claim title to the lands at issue. Therefore, the Court reasoned, his suit was not covered by the Quiet Title Act or its “Indian lands” exception. In so holding, the D.C. Circuit identified and disagreed with two rationales relied on by other circuits. One is that the legislative history of the Indian lands exception to the Quiet Title Act cites the federal government’s obligations to Indian tribes. The D.C. Circuit reasoned that this spoke only to the need to exclude certain quiet title actions from the Act—not to whether a particular suit is a quiet title action. The other rationale is that Congress would have had no reason to allow suits by persons not claiming a title interest if it barred suits by those who do. The D.C. Circuit held that because the APA waiver in § 702 was enacted (in 1976) after the Quiet Title Act (in 1972), suits by persons not claiming title would not have been contemplated at all when the Quiet Title Act was passed. Thus, it reasoned, the Quiet Title Act does not speak to this distinction, and § 702 controls.

The breach in precedent protecting its immunity that Patchak opened will likely be of acute concern to the Justice Department. That, combined with the clear conflict in the circuits, is likely to prompt the Solicitor General to seek rehearing en banc in the D.C. Circuit (which is rarely granted) and, if that does not succeed, to take its case to the Supreme Court. The fact that the case is interlocutory is unlikely to pose a barrier. The Supreme Court generally allows interlocutory review of sovereign immunity claims, Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Auth., v. Metcalfe & Eddy, Inc., 506 U.S. 139 (1993), and it has granted certiorari to review interlocutory Quiet Title Act claims in the past, see United States v. Mottaz, 476 U.S. 834 (1986).

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Patchak v. Salazar: D.C. Circuit Allows Challenge to Federal Trust Land Acquisition to Proceed

Here is the opinion: Patchak decision.

Briefs are here.

Lower court materials are here.

Sault Tribe Enlisted Stupak to Pressure Justice and Interior on Greektown Parcel

From the Soo Evening News:

The Sault Tribe of Chippewa Indians has gained a powerful ally in its bid to retain Greektown Casino as Congressman Bart Stupak (D-Menominee) has requested the U.S. Bankruptcy Court and the Michigan Gaming Control Board to postpone Chapter 11 reorganization.

In a three-page letter [20100609_GreektownCasino], Stupak urges the U.S. Department of the Interior and the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate if it is legally possible for the Sault Tribe to lose its real estate interest in Greektown Casino. Essentially, Stupak argued, that the 0.76 acre parcel located at 1010 Beaubien Street in the City of Detroit has been placed in federal trust and cannot be conveyed to another party without Congressional authorization.

“I seriously question the propriety and legality of a process in which the property conveyed to the United States in trust on behalf of the Tribe can be conveyed without authority from Congress and without full Tribal consent,” wrote Stupak, indicating it was his opinion that the parcel is owned by the federal government for the benefit and use of the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians.

Stupak went on to write “that any further proceedings related to the reorganization of the Greektown Casino by the Michigan Gaming Control Board or other agencies be postponed” until a determination is made by federal authorities.
Stupak expressed his concerns regarding this matter following a meeting with Director D.J. Hoffman of the Sault Tribe Board of Directors last week.

“On June 4, 2010 myself, Director (Keith) Massaway and Chairman (Darwin “Joe”) McCoy met with Congressman Stupak to discuss Tribal issues, including Greektown,” said Hoffman. “I am extremely grateful that Congressman Stupak recognized the serious nature of this situation and immediately took action to call this issue into question.”
Chairman McCoy expressed similar sentiments.

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Stupak Throws Indian Law Monkey Wrench Into Greektown Bankruptcy

Potentially, though perhaps not likely, this is a huge issue. Assuming that the Greektown parcel is owned by the Secretary of Interior on behalf of the Sault Tribe, then an Act of Congress may be required. And if one is not forthcoming, there may be some very interesting litigation involving the interaction of federal bankrupcty laws and maybe the Quiet Title Act. If the land is not in trust, then we may still have a Non-Intercourse Act problem, but likely not. Apparently, according to the letter, the land is in trust.

Update: Via Indianz, here is Stupak’s letter.

From the Freep, via Pechanga:

WASHINGTON — U.S. Rep Bart Stupak wants to halt the bankruptcy reorganization of Greektown Casino at least until the federal government determines whether an act of Congress is needed to transfer the land the Detroit gaming hall sits on.

Earlier this year, a federal bankruptcy judge approved a reorganization plan allowing Greektown Casino’s bondholders — including several private equity and hedge funds — to take ownership. The Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians, based on Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, has a majority ownership stake in the casino.

The process needs the approval of the Michigan Gaming Control Board, with a court deadline of June 30 approaching.

But Stupak, D-Menominee, has asked U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and Interior Secretary Ken Salazar to delay any change in ownership while they investigate whether land held by the federal government on behalf of the tribe — about three-fourths of an acre on Beaubien Street in Detroit — can be transferred without an act of Congress.

“The tribe stands to lose its entire investment in the business, including a portion of the real property underlying the casino,” Stupak said in the letter written Wednesday.

According to Stupak, 400 Monroe Associates — controlled by Greektown businessman Ted Gatzaros — deeded the land to the U.S. Department of Interior on behalf of the tribe in 1992.

Tribally owned lands cannot be sold without the consent of the federal government, and the Interior Department is not allowed to approve the sale of such land without direct congressional authorization, Stupak said.

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Tenth Circuit Applies Quiet Title Act in Tribal Challenge to Trust Acquisition–UPDATED with Briefs

Big case. Here is the opinion in Iowa Tribe v. Salazar.

Briefs and other materials:

Iowa Tribe and Sac & Fox Nation Opening Brief

Interior Answer Brief

Iowa Tribe and Sac & Fox Nation Reply Brief

Interior Motion to Take Judicial Notice of Warranty Deed

Order Dismissing Sac and Fox Nation as a Party

Ninth Circuit Decides QTA Case; Holds FTCA May Apply

The Ninth Circuit recently decided Robinson v. United States (Robinson v US CA9 Opinion), where the court held that the Quiet Title Act does not foreclose litigation over an easement running across Indian trust lands.

Here are the materials:

Robinson Opening Brief

US Answering Brief

Robinson Reply Brief

Federal Sovereign Immunity Precludes Suit re: Intertribal Reservation Dispute

The case is Mesa Grande Band of Mission Indians v. Salazar (S.D. Cal.). Here are the materials:

Interior Motion to Dismiss

Mesa Grande Opposition

Interior Reply

Mesa Grande v Salazar DCT Order

An excerpt:

This case arises from a dispute between two neighboring Indian tribes over beneficial title to several thousand acres of land in this district. Its origins stretch back over a century. According to the FAC, President Grant issued an executive order setting aside approximately 15,000 acres for Mission Indians in California known as “Santa Ysabel — including Mesa Grande.” In a second order in 1883, President Arthur set aside 120 acres for the “Mesa Grande Indian Reservation.”

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The fact that Plaintiff wants to have the current patents — under which the United States is trustee and Santa Ysabel the beneficiary — canceled and reissued to name the United States as trustee and Plaintiff as beneficiary does not change the analysis. The QTA’s Indian lands exception was intended to allow the United States to carry out its commitments to Indian tribes. Block, 461 U.S. at 283; Mottaz, 476 U.S. at 842-43 and n.6. While issuing a land patent in favor of Plaintiff might promote this goal, it would have the effect of taking land from Santa Ysabel. Plaintiff may be tacitly viewing this action as essentially a dispute between it and Santa Ysabel, with the United States as a disinterested stakeholder. Because Plaintiff cannot proceed against Santa Ysabel, it is therefore left to proceed against the United States. Yet allowing Plaintiff or any other litigant to sue the United States to cancel a land patent issued in favor of an Indian tribe would interfere with the United States’ trust commitment to that tribe, which is the very reason the United States has retained its immunity in such matters.

Tenth Circuit Briefing in Important Quiet Title Act Case

The case is Sac and Fox Nation v. Salazar, and is in the Tenth Circuit. Since Carcieri v. Salazar, for a whole bunch of tribes, the Quiet Title Act (QTA) has become a terribly important statute. As readers will recall, the Act expressly preserves the federal government’s sovereign immunity in cases challenging title to Indian trust lands.

Sac and Fox, which involves the Secretary’s taking into trust of the so-called Shriner Tract in Kansas on behalf of the Oklahoma Wyandotte community, is perhaps one of the more ruthless applications of federal sovereign immunity, in that the parties and the courts in prior years had sought to avoid the application of the QTA by keeping open a case even after the land had been taken into trust. When the district court mistakenly closed the case, forcing the plaintiffs to refile, the QTA kicked in with a vengance, forcing the district court to dismiss (see lower court materials here).

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Cheyenne-Araphoe v. United States in D.C. Circuit

The D.C. Circuit ruled against the Cheyenne-Arapahoe Tribes of Oklahoma in this case (opinion here) (H/T Indianz). Here is an excerpt:

This appeal involves disputed rights to land originally designated as part of a reservation for the Cheyenne Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma and later set apart by executive order as a U.S. military installation. The district court dismissed the Tribes’ action to quiet title to the land for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The Tribes argue that the court erred in dismissing the case prematurely without allowing for jurisdictional discovery. Because the Tribes fail to specify what facts discovery could produce that would alter the jurisdictional analysis, we hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the Tribes’ discovery request.

Kansas v. Kempthorne & Wyandotte Nation — Revised CA10 Opinion

The Tenth Circuit granted the government’s motion for rehearing and issued a revised opinion.

CA10 Panel Decision (pre-rehearing)

Kempthorne Petition for Rehearing

State and Tribal Response to Petition