Here:
11-393&11-400bsacNationalIndianHealthBoardEtAl,
Here.
Here:
The two petitions are Malaterre v. Amerind Risk Management and K2 America v. Roland Oil & Gas.
Mid-term Supreme Court updates are often a bit hollow, since the Court doesn’t start issuing many opinions before January, but here it is anyway. Our preview was here.
Cert Grants
No real surprises here, with the Court granting two cases — Salazar v. Patchak and Salazar v. Ramah Navajo Chapter. If past history is any indicator, there is a likelihood of a split in decisions here, given that tribal (and federal) interests are the petitions in Patchak and tribal interests are opposing federal interests in the Ramah case. It should be noted that past history always is irrelevant in a given case, but these two seem like they will come out as expected.
In Patchak, the questions involve federal immunity and standing doctrine, areas of considerable federal government concern where the government is fairly successful before the Court (more so the immunity question). There is always the concern that the Court thinks of Indian law as exceptional, and it could be open to creating an unusual exception in federal immunity because tribal interests are at play.
In Ramah, things looks a little rougher for tribal interests. True, tribal interests won a similar case in 2005 (Cherokee Nation v. Leavitt, in fact the last case tribal interests won before the Court), but the behind-the-scenes Court developments point to a likely result. There are three petitions relating to similar fact patterns arising out of three different lower courts, and the Supreme Court is holding one of those petitions (it appears — Arctic Slope Native Assn. v. Sebelius) pending the disposition of the federal government’s petition in Ramah. That’s not a good development, in that it’s exactly what the federal government asked the Court to do in its Arctic Slope response. Another petition, Salazar v. Southern Ute, is also pending.
Cert Denials
Another rough year for tribal interests in seeking Supreme Court review of lower court defeats. Most interesting is the United States v. New York petition relating to the Oneida land claims dismissal in the Second Circuit. (We at the MSU ILPS co-wrote an amicus brief supporting the petition.) The declination of the OSG’s petition continues a kind of futility for that office I wrote about last year when the government supports tribal interests before the Supreme Court. My suspicion is the Court thinks of the feds as supporting some sort of private entity (Indian tribes) that doesn’t really implicate the sovereign interests of the federal government. Given the implication of cases like Jicarilla, this is an ongoing problem for tribal interests. I’ll say it again — unless tribes make the United States pay for its negligence (to be gentle) in administering Indian affairs, then the government has no incentive to defend tribal interests.
The Court also denied two other petitions involving tribal immunity (Reed and Seneca Telephone), but there’s blood in the water and interests opposing Indian tribes can smell it. More on this later.
Pending Cert Petitions Continue reading
The Malaterre v. Amerind cert petition is scheduled for this Friday’s Supreme Court Conference. Despite being a SCOTUSblog petition to watch, it really isn’t certworthy (though pretty much any tribal immunity-related petition attracts attention).
Might Malaterre be a candidate for CVSG, assuming it isn’t simply denied? Perhaps, for two reasons. First, the Court asked the OSG five times in the last couple Terms for the government’s views in Indian law cases. Second, the immunity question may depend on the Court’s interpretation and analysis of Section 17 of the Indian Reorganization Act.
Here is today’s order list. Lower court materials are here. Cert stage materials are here.
The Court took no action on the Arctic Slope petition, apparently accepting the SG’s recommendation to hold that case pending the outcome of this case.
You must be logged in to post a comment.