Cermak v. United States Ex Rel. Department of Interior

478 F.3d 953
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 28, 2007
Docket06-1686
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 478 F.3d 953 (Cermak v. United States Ex Rel. Department of Interior) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cermak v. United States Ex Rel. Department of Interior, 478 F.3d 953 (8th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

LOKEN, Chief Judge.

In 1944, the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) issued Indian Land Certificates 64 and 65, assigning the right to possess fifty acres of Indian trust land in Scott County, Minnesota, to “John Cermak and his heirs ... for the exclusive use and benefit of [Cermak] so long as [Cermak] or his ... heirs occupy and use said land.” In this action, John Cermak’s son Stanley and grandson Raymond seek to enforce rights as heirs under the Certificates. The BIA denied this claim, and the Interior Board of Indian Appeals (IBIA) affirmed. The district court 1 upheld the final agency action under the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 706, and transferred any remaining non-APA claims to the Court of Federal Claims for further proceedings. Stanley and Raymond Cermak appeal. We affirm.

I. Background

Between 1888 and 1890, Congress appropriated funds to purchase land for the benefit of Mdewakanton Sioux and other Indians who remained in Minnesota after the Sioux Uprising of 1862. For some years, the Commissioner of Indian Affairs conveyed fee title to these lands to eligible Indians. But in 1904, the Commissioner began issuing Indian Land Certificates as a way of assigning rights of occupancy and use to individual Indians while retaining fee title in the United States. A 1915 letter from the Assistant Commissioner to the Secretary of the Interior explained that these Certificates passed no “vested interest ... which requires any determination of the heirs upon the death of such occupants.” Rather, upon the death of a Certificate holder, the agency would reassign the land “to the Mdewakanton Sioux Indian who appears to be most equitably entitled to have the temporary use and occupancy of it.”

Some Certificates, including those issued to John Cermak, assigned occupancy and use rights to land in Scott County to members of what is now the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community (“the Community”). 2 In 1980, Congress placed the federal government’s “right, title, and interest” in those lands in trust for the benefit of the Community, subject to “any contract, lease, or assignment entered into or issued prior to enactment of this Act.” Pub.L. No. 96-557, §§ 1(1), 3, 94 Stat. 3262 (“the 1980 Act”). After this transfer, when a Certificate expires or is properly cancelled, the Community (not the BIA) determines how the land will be used in the future for the benefit of its members.

John Cermak died in 1989 leaving a will that devised to his son, Edward, “the interest that I may have” in the land assigned by Certificates 64 and 65. The BIA refused to probate John’s will, ruling that its probate authority is limited to a deceased Indian’s ownership interest in *955 Indian Trust lands, that “previous administrative decisions” extinguished any inheritance rights in the Certificates, and that the 1980 Act had transferred beneficial ownership of the land to the Community. Edward Cermak did not appeal or seek judicial review of this ruling. At the Community’s request, the BIA then cancelled Certificates 64 and 65.

Edward Cermak died in May 1992. In 1994, Edward’s minor children asserted a claim to their interest as “heirs” in the Certificates. The BIA rejected this claim, again ruling that the Certificates conveyed no inheritable interest, that any “use rights” expired with John Cermak’s death, and that the 1980 Act transferred all beneficial interests to the Community. The children filed an administrative appeal. The IBIA affirmed this decision as well as the BIA’s 1989 refusal to probate John Cermak’s will. Gitchel v. Minneapolis Area Director, 28 IBIA 46, 48-49 (1995). Edward’s children did not seek judicial review of this final agency action.

Up to this point, Stanley and Raymond Cermak had taken no action other than to write the BIA in 1990 seeking information and to publish on the day of Edward’s death a letter addressed “To Whom It May Concern” advising that they “intend to lay claim” to the land assigned in Certificates 64 and 65. In 1996, following the Gitchel decision, Raymond on behalf of the “Cermak family” requested that the BIA “reopen the land issue based on new evidence.” The BIA refused to do so in a letter ruling stating that the Certificates “provided only life use rights to John and Edward Cermak ... which were extinguished by the death of the certificate holder.”

Raymond appealed this BIA ruling to the IBIA, as authorized by 43 C.F.R. § 4.331, stating for the first time in a reply brief that the appeal was also filed on behalf of Stanley. The IBIA dismissed the appeal on the grounds that (i) Stanley Cermak was not named in the notice of appeal and was therefore not a party to the appeal, see 43 C.F.R. § 4.332(a), (ii) Raymond lacked standing because he presented no evidence he was an heir of Edward or “would otherwise be entitled to take this land, if it were devisable,” (iii) res judicata barred Raymond’s claim because he is in privity with the Gitchel claimants and is therefore bound by that decision, and (iv) in any event Raymond’s arguments “are not sufficient to cause the Board to reconsider” the Gitchel decision. Cermak v. Acting Area Director, 32 IBIA 77, 80 (1998).

Raymond and Stanley commenced this action in 1998, initially asserting only breach of trust and Takings Clause claims. The district court transferred those claims to the Court of Federal Claims; we affirmed the transfer. Following a later suggestion by the Federal Circuit, see Cermak v. Babbitt, 234 F.3d 1356, 1364 (C.A.Fed.2000), the Cermaks amended their complaint in the district court to assert the APA claim now under review. Applying the proper APA standard of review, the district court granted the government summary judgment, concluding that any challenge to the BIA’s initial transfer of beneficial interest in the land to the Community is time-barred, and the agency’s denial of the request to reopen its Gitchel decision was not arbitrary and capricious. Cermak v. Norton, 322 F.Supp.2d 1009 (D.Minn.2004).

II. Discussion

The IBIA’s decision in Gitchel determined that the heirs of John and Edward Cermak inherited no interest in the land assigned by Certificates 64 and 65, that those Certificates were properly cancelled in 1990, and that all beneficial interest in the trust lands has been trans *956 ferred to the Community. No one sought timely judicial review of that final agency action. Accordingly, as counsel for Stanley and Raymond conceded at oral argument, the APA claim reflected in their 1996 letter request to the BIA will only provide them relief as a motion to reopen the Gitchel proceedings; otherwise, the Gitchel decision is dispositive.

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Related

Estate of Sauser v. United States
171 F. Supp. 3d 947 (D. South Dakota, 2016)
Cermak v. United States
478 F.3d 953 (Eighth Circuit, 2007)

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478 F.3d 953, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cermak-v-united-states-ex-rel-department-of-interior-ca8-2007.