MIAMI NATION
OF INDIANS OF INDIANA, INC. and RAYMOND WHITE, as Chairman of the
Miami Nation of Indians of Indiana, Inc., Plaintiffs v. MANUEL LUJAN,
JR., et al., Defendants
CASE NO. S92-586M
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA, SOUTH BEND
DIVISION
832 F. Supp. 253; 1993 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 13448
July 26, 1993, Entered
COUNSEL: [**1] For Plaintiffs: Arlinda F. Locklear,
Jefferson, MD, Timothy Brazill, Indianapolis, IN, Henry Sockbeson,
Richard Dauphinais, Native American Rights Fund, Washington, D.C.
For Defendants: Kevin Meisner, Scott Keep, Department of the Interior, Div.
of Indian Affairs, Washington, D.C., R. Anthony Rogers, U.S. Department of
Justice, Environmental & Natural Resources Div., General Litigation Section,
Washington, D.C.
JUDGES: Miller, Jr.
OPINIONBY: ROBERT L. MILLER, JR.
OPINION: [*253] MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
In this part of this case, the plaintiffs seek an order declaring that the
United States Department of the Interior must recognize the Miami Nation of
Indians of Indiana as an Indian tribe. That claim is based on an 1854 treaty
between the federal government and the Miami Indiana tribe. The plaintiffs
argue that the federal government withdrew acknowledgement of the Indiana Miami
tribe due to an erroneous decision by an assistant attorney general in
1897. The plaintiffs, however, have waited far too long to bring this claim.
The law gives parties with claims against the federal government six years
within which to bring their claims. Because the plaintiffs have not shown that
the federal government has taken any action [**2] based on the 1897
decision in the six years before this suit was filed, the defendants are entitled
to judgment on this part of the complaint. The plaintiffs' other claims remain
to be decided later.
All parties seek summary judgment as to Count 1 of the complaint, and have
filed excellent briefs; the court heard argument on the motion on July 23.
For the reasons that follow, the court finds that the defendants' motion for
summary judgment as to Count 1 must be granted on grounds of the statute of
limitations, and for the same reason, the plaintiffs' motion must be denied.
Historically, the Miami Indian tribe lived in northern and central
Indiana. Between 1795 and 1840, the Miamis entered into a number of treaties
with the
United States, ceding millions of acres of land to the government. In
some of those treaties, the Miamis reserved tracts of land for individual
tribal members or for bands of the Miamis.
In the treaty of November 28, 1840, 7 Stat. 582, the Miamis ceded to the
government "all
of their remaining lands in Indiana" save eight sections of land previously
reserved for bands of the Miamis or patented to tribal leaders. The 1840 Treaty
also provided that within five years, [**3] the Miamis would remove
from Indiana to territory west of the Mississippi River located in what is
now east-central Kansas. Certain tribal leaders and their [*254] families,
however, were exempted from the planned removal by virtue of certain patents.
These patents included the Meshingomesia Reserve, patented to Chief Meshingomesia
in trust for his band in accordance with the 1840 Treaty, see 7 Stat. 582;
patents to Chief Francis Godfrey in the Treaty of 1838, see 7 Stat. 569; and
patents to Principal Chief John B. Richardville and John Lafountain (who succeeded
Chief Richardville) under the 1840 Treaty. See 7 Stat. 582. Of these patents,
only the Meshingomesia Reserve was held communally.
The Miamis strongly resisted their removal to the Kansas territory. In
early 1846, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs ordered that annuity payments
to the
Miamis be withheld until the tribe removed; federal troops were ordered to
Peru, Indiana to forcibly remove the Miamis, if necessary. By October 1846,
about half the Miamis had moved from Peru to the Kansas Territory. After this
emigration, there was a group of Miamis in the Kansas Territory (the "Kansas
Miamis") and a group of Miamis in [**4] Indiana on individual
land grants
and on the communal Meshingomesia Reserve (the "Indiana Miamis").
In 1854, the government entered into treaty negotiations with the Kansas
Miamis and the Indiana Miamis, and a treaty was signed on June 5, 1854.
Treaty of
1854, 10 Stat. 1093 ("1854 Treaty"). In Article 1 of the 1854 Treaty,
the Kansas Miamis ceded all but 70,000 acres of their Kansas lands, with
the excepted land to be surveyed and patented to individual Kansas Miamis.
In return, the Kansas Miamis received $ 200,000.00. The treaty specifically
provided that the Indiana Miamis would not share in those proceeds.
Article 4 dealt with the division of annuity payments between the Kansas
Miamis and the Indiana Miamis, with both groups relinquishing a permanent
annuity
in favor of a one-time payment. The treaty also provided that the President
would, if the Indiana Miamis wished, invest their payment and pay the Indiana
Miamis annual interest. Representatives of the Indiana Miamis signed the 1854
Treaty and returned to Indiana where, upon their return, the full Tribal Council
in Indiana sent representatives back to Washington to revise Article 4. A "fully
authorized deputation" of Indiana [**5] Miamis negotiated
a revision to Article 4 of the Treaty, which received Senate approval on August
4, 1854; no Kansas Miamis participated in the second round of negotiations
to revise Article 4.
Revised Article 4 provided that the President was to invest the Indiana
Miamis' share of the annuity payment, with annual interest paid to the
tribe. The Article
also listed the Indiana Miamis who would benefit under the treaty. No other
persons were eligible "unless other persons shall be added to
said list by the consent of said Miami Indians of Indiana, obtained in Council,
according
to the custom of Miami Tribe of Indians." Revised Article 4 did
not apply to the Kansas Miamis.
Congress later enacted legislation specifically concerning the Indiana
Miamis. In 1872, Congress authorized the partition of the Meshingomesia
Reserve. See
17 Stat. 213. From 1856 to 1881, Congress made annual appropriations of interest
payments to the "Miamies of Indiana" pursuant to the 1854 Treaty.
See 11 Stat. 65, 71, and 21 Stat 485, 491. In 1881, Congress appropriated to
the Indiana Miamis the principal sum due pursuant to the 1854 Treaty. See 21
Stat. 414, 433. In 1895, Congress appropriated $ 48,528.38 [**6] to
repay the Indiana Miamis for money taken from their tribal funds in violation
of the 1854 Treaty. See 28 Stat. 876, 903. As late as 1966 and 1972, Congress
appropriated funds to satisfy an Indian Claims Commission judgment, and distributed
the funds to the Indiana Miamis. See 80 Stat. 1070, and 86 Stat. 199.
The Indiana land allotted to the Indiana Miamis was partitioned among
individual tribe members as treaty patents or statutory allotments. By 1881,
the Meshingomesia Reserve allotments had become taxable. During the 1880s,
the State of Indiana had begun levying property taxes upon the other treaty
patents. The Indiana Miamis resisted paying those taxes and requested
the Department of the Interior's assistance in bringing suit. A lawsuit eventually
was filed,
and a federal court held that because the individual Indiana Miamis were members
of a recognized tribe, their land was not subject to real property taxes.
Wau-Pe-Man-Qua, alias [*255] Mary Strack v. Aldrich, 28 F. 489,
493 (Circuit Court, D. Ind. 1886).
The Indiana Miamis then sought the Secretary of the Interior's assistance
in recovering past taxes levied against the individual Indiana Miamis' [**7] land
which the tribal members already had paid. The Secretary referred the matter
to the
Assistant Attorney General Willis Van Devanter, n1 who decided that the Indiana
Miamis, having been made United States citizens and having had their land allotted,
no longer were tribal Indians subject to the United States' trust responsibilities.
See November 23, 1897 Opinion of Asst. Attorney General Van Devanter, 25 Decisions
of the Department of the Interior and General band Office in Cases Relating
to the Public Lands 426, 431 (GPO 1898) (Exhibit E, Plaintiffs' Motion
for Partial Summary Judgment). The Interior Secretary approved the decision
and withdrew acknowledgement of the Indiana Miamis, and has since refused to
acknowledge the Indiana Miamis as an Indian tribe.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - Footnotes - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n1 Mr. Van Devanter, who was born in Marion, Indiana, less than twenty miles
from the lands in question, later became an Associate Justice of the
United States Supreme Court.
- - - - - - - - - - - - End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
In 1978, the Department of the Interior published final regulations providing
a [**8] procedure for acknowledging the existence of Indian tribes.
See 25 C.F.R. § 83. On March 25, 1980, the plaintiffs filed a petition for
federal acknowledgment as an Indian tribe pursuant to these regulations. In
1990, the Assistant Secretary of the Interior published his proposed finding
that the plaintiffs did not meet the acknowledgement regulations' community
and political influence criteria and, therefore, did not exist as an Indian
tribe. 55 Fed. Reg. 29,423 (1990). On June 18, 1992, the Assistant Secretary
published his final determination that the plaintiffs did not exist as an Indian
tribe, and were not entitled to a government-to-government relationship with
the United States. 57 Fed. Reg. 27,312 (1992). This determination became effective
on August 17.
On September 11, 1992, the plaintiffs filed their complaint in this court.
The first of the complaint's four counts basically seeks a ruling that the
Secretary of the Interior's decision withdrawing federal recognition of the
Indiana Miamis was ultra vires, and that the court should declare that the
plaintiff Miami Nation of Indians of Indiana, Inc. "is now and always [**9] has
been a recognized Indian tribe entitled to acknowledgment" by the Department
of the Interior. The remaining counts question the constitutionality and validity
of the Department of the Interior's regulations for federal acknowledgement,
as well as the application of those regulations to the plaintiff. The parties
have filed cross-motions for summary judgment solely as to Count 1 of the complaint.
The parties raise several arguments; the court expressed its tentative
views as to some of those arguments at the summary judgment hearing. Because
some
of the parties' arguments may be pertinent to the complaint's remaining counts,
as to which summary judgment is not yet sought, and because resolution of Count
1 turns on a single issue, the court declines comment on whether the 1854 Treaty
recognized the Indiana Miamis as a tribe, whether the 1897 Van Devanter opinion
was ultra vires because only Congress can terminate a relationship with an
Indian tribe, whether the Interior Department's ensuing withdrawal of acknowledgement
of the Indiana Miamis was correct, and whether the present plaintiff continued
to exist as a tribe and/or abandoned its existence since 1854. These issues
are [**10] barred, within the context of the declaratory judgment
action comprising Count 1, by the applicable statute of limitations.
The government contends that the declaratory judgment claim is barred by
the statute of limitations found in 28 U.S.C. §§ 2401 and 2501. The government
contends that the Indiana Miamis have had since 1897 to raise any and all claims
for damages arising from the lack of recognition based on the Department of
the Interior's withdrawal of recognition, and their failure to raise the issue
in a timely fashion prevents suit at this time.
The plaintiffs contend that their action is timely under the continuing
claim doctrine, which provides that if the defendant owes a continuing
duty to the
plaintiff, a new cause of action arises each time the defendant [*256] breaches
the duty. Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma v. United States, 26 Cl. Ct. 798, 803
(1992). The continuing claim doctrine prevents the statute of limitations from
protecting an offender in an ongoing wrong, and avoids claims that would be
barred because they began before the statutory period. 26 Cl. Ct. at 803.
The Seventh [**11] Circuit has recognized the continuing claim doctrine
in certain circumstances, see Selan v. Kiley, 969 F.2d 560, 564 (7th Cir. 1992)
("The continuing violation doctrine allows a plaintiff to get relief for
a time-barred act by linking it with an act that is within the limitations
period. For purposes of the limitations period, courts treat such a combination
as one continuous act that is within the limitations period."), and the
doctrine has been recognized in actions against the government, Cherokee Nation
of Oklahoma v. United States, 26 Cl. Ct. at 803, as well as in actions seeking
affirmative relief. See Virginia Hospital Assoc. v. Baliles, 868 F.2d 653,
663 (4th Cir. 1989), aff'd, 496 U.S. 498, 110 S. Ct. 2510, 110 L. Ed. 2d 455
(1990).
The plaintiffs contend that Congress recognized its tribal status in the
1854 Treaty, and that Congress has never terminated that status. The plaintiffs
claim that based upon the 1897 Van Devanter opinion, the Department of the
Interior refused to acknowledge the Indiana Miamis as a tribe, but under the
Constitution only Congress can terminate recognition of [**12] the
tribe. Therefore, the plaintiffs argue that the Department of the Interior
is under a continuing duty to acknowledge the Indiana Miamis' tribal status,
and the Department's refusal to so acknowledge is a breach of duty continuing
to this day. The plaintiffs contend that the Department's refusal cannot be
considered a single event that caused the Indiana Miamis harm; rather, the
Department's refusal to acknowledge continues to harm the tribe. Thus, under
the continuing claim doctrine, the plaintiffs contend that their action is
timely.
To support their position, the plaintiffs cite Hopland Band of Pomo Indians
v. United States, 855 F.2d 1573 (Fed. Cir. 1987). In that case, the court intimated,
in dicta, that the continuing claim doctrine could have possible application
as long as the underlying wrong -- the unlawful termination of tribal status
-- remained uncorrected. 855 F.2d at 1581-82. However, the court was speaking
of actions for recovery of monies due to the arbitrary or unlawful denial of
statutory benefits based upon the illegal termination of tribal status, not
merely the termination of tribal status itself. [**13] Id. The
Hopland court stated that "the wrongful termination of an Indian tribe's
federal tribal status could give rise to a monetary claim for lost benefits
against the government if, apart from the illegal termination, the tribe could
sue for an arbitrary or unlawful denial of such benefits." 855 F.2d at
1581 (citing Duncan v. United States, 229 Ct. Cl. 120, 667 F.2d 36, 48 (1981),
cert. denied, 463 U.S. 1228, 77 L. Ed. 2d 1410, 103 S. Ct. 3569 (1983)).
The plaintiffs have not sought recovery for the arbitrary or unlawful denial
of statutory benefits; the only relief sought in Count 1 is for a declaration
that the Miami Nation of Indiana is now and has always been a federally recognized
Indian tribe, and that the Department of the Interior must so recognize the
tribe. The only act in Count 1 identified by the plaintiffs as constituting
a refusal of acknowledgement is the Department of the Interior's 1897 withdrawal
of recognition. That the harm stemming from an 1897 decision continues to today
is not dispositive; the plaintiffs must link that 1897 decision with a governmental
act or action within the limitations period. Selan v. Kiley, 969 F.2d 560,
564 (7th Cir. 1992) [**14] ("The continuing violation doctrine
allows a plaintiff to get relief for a time-barred act by linking it with an
act that is within the limitations period."). The plaintiffs have not
linked the 1897 decision with any act within the statute of limitations.
The plaintiffs argue that the continuing claim is based on a continuing
omission: each time the government denies, as it did at the summary judgment
hearing,
that the Indiana Miamis are a federally recognized tribe, the claim runs anew.
The court cannot agree. If a mere unchanging status is a continuing claim,
there is no statute of limitations for acts that produce unchanging conditions:
hiring decisions still uncured, debts still unpaid, and torts still uncompensated
would [*257] remain actionable in perpetuity. Here, lack of formal
recognition is the gravamen of the plaintiffs' complaint, so only formal recognition
could bring an end to the "continuing claim"; acceptance of the plaintiffs'
argument effectively would eradicate the statute of limitations by preserving
their cause of action until it becomes moot. See Hopland Band of Pomo Indians
v. United States, 855 F.2d at 1579-1580 ("It makes little sense [**15] to
conclude that the Band could only bring an action for wrongful termination
once the government acknowledged the wrongful termination because, at that
point, the Band would no longer need to sue to prove that.")
Section 2401 of Title 28 of the United States Code provides, in pertinent
part, that "every civil action commenced against the United States shall be
barred unless the complaint is filed within six years after the right of action
first accrues"; 28 U.S.C. § 2501 provides, in pertinent part, that "every
claim of which the United States Court of Federal Claims has jurisdiction shall
be barred unless the petition thereon is filed within six years after such
claim first accrues." A cause "first accrues" when all events
have occurred which fix the alleged liability of the defendant and entitle
the plaintiff to file an action. Hopland Band of Pomo Indians v. United States,
855 F.2d at 1577.
This case was filed in 1992; all necessary events that allegedly fixed
the government's liability with respect to Count 1 occurred in 1897. The
plaintiffs
concede that the Indiana Miamis knew of the 1897 action and its effects [**16] well
before 1986, and have pointed to nothing that occurred after 1986, other than
the continued omission of formal recognition, that the court may link to the
1897 Van Devanter opinion. The 1992 denial of the petition for acknowledgement
did not rely on the 1897 Van Devanter opinion.
The statute of limitations bars the Indiana Miamis' action for declaratory
relief under Count 1. The court need not address the parties' arguments concerning
the Indian Claims Commission Act, previously codified at 25 U.S.C. § 70k, or
concerning the equitable doctrine of laches.
For the foregoing reasons, the court now GRANTS the defendants' motion for
summary judgment on Count 1, and DENIES the plaintiffs' motion for summary
judgment on Count 1. The cause remains at issue on the remaining counts of
the complaint; the court will arrange a scheduling conference with respect
to the handling of those counts.
SO ORDERED.
ENTERED: July 26, 1993
Robert L. Miller, Jr., Judge
United States District Court
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