Devils Lake Sioux Indian Tribe v. ND PUB. SERV.

896 F. Supp. 955
CourtDistrict Court, D. North Dakota
DecidedJanuary 10, 1995
DocketA1-90-179, A2-90-176, A2-90-196, A1-92-049 and A1-92-065
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 896 F. Supp. 955 (Devils Lake Sioux Indian Tribe v. ND PUB. SERV.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. North Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Devils Lake Sioux Indian Tribe v. ND PUB. SERV., 896 F. Supp. 955 (D.N.D. 1995).

Opinion

896 F.Supp. 955 (1995)

DEVILS LAKE SIOUX INDIAN TRIBE, a Federally Recognized Indian Tribe, Plaintiff,
v.
NORTH DAKOTA PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION, et al., Defendants.
BAKER ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE, INC., a North Dakota Rural Electric Cooperative Association, Plaintiff,
v.
Joseph CHASKE, et al., Defendants.
SHEYENNE VALLEY ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE, INC., Plaintiff,
v.
DEVILS LAKE SIOUX INDIAN TRIBE, et al., Defendants.
SHEYENNE VALLEY ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE, INC., Plaintiff,
v.
OTTER TAIL POWER COMPANY, Defendant.
OTTER TAIL POWER COMPANY, Plaintiff,
v.
Bruce HAGEN, et al., Defendants.

Nos. A1-90-179, A2-90-176, A2-90-196, A1-92-049 and A1-92-065.

United States District Court, D. North Dakota, Northeastern Division.

January 10, 1995.

*956 Larry M. Baer, Ackre & Baer, Ctd., Cando, ND, for Baker Elec. Co-op., Inc.

Philip Baker-Shenk, Pirtle, Morisset, Schlosser & Ayer, Washington, DC, Robert L. Pirtle, Pirtle, Morisset, Schlosser & Ayer, Seattle, WA, Warren Sogard, Fargo, ND, for Joseph Chaske, Myra Pearson, Oliver Gord, Sr., Merrill Berg, Harold McGowan.

Philip Baker-Shenk, Pirtle, Morisset, Schlosser & Ayer, Washington, DC, Robert L. Pirtle, Pirtle, Morisset, Schlosser & Ayer, Seattle, WA, Warren Sogard, Mason D. Morisset, Morisset Schlosser Ayer & Jozwiak, Seattle, WA, for Devils Lake Sioux Tribe Tribal Utilities Com'n.

Philip Baker-Shenk, Pirtle, Morisset, Schlosser & Ayer, Washington, DC, Robert L. Pirtle, Pirtle, Morisset, Schlosser & Ayer, Seattle, WA, Mason D. Morisset, Morisset Schlosser Ayer & Jozwiak, Seattle, WA, for Devils Lake Sioux Indian Tribe.

William W. Binek, Charles M. Carvell, Bismarck, ND, for N.D. Public Service Com'n, Leo M. Reinbold, Dale V. Sandstrom, Bruce Hagen, State of North Dakota.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

CONMY, District Judge.

The above captioned actions involve one ripe issue and one rather esoteric question of tribal sovereignty. The ripe issue involves the right to provide electrical service to several tribal owned businesses or facilities. In an earlier opinion, this court determined that the Tribal Government had the inherent sovereign power to decide which utility supplier to patronize and to do so without regard to the North Dakota Territorial Integrity Law which purports to allocate consumer load between investor owned and cooperative utility suppliers.

*957 The immediate dispute was between Baker Electric Cooperative and Otter Tail Power Co. Otter Tail took a customer away from Baker by virtue of a Tribal resolution directing Otter Tail to provide service to a Tribal owned manufacturing plant. The North Dakota Public Service Commission, and eventually the North Dakota Supreme Court, determined that the Public Service Commission had the power to determine which supplier would service the plant, and the matter ended up with a daily fine accruing against Otter Tail when the PSC and the Court came down on the side of Baker and the precedence of the PSC and the Territorial Integrity act over Tribal authority.

Unfortunately, the issue became wonderfully muddled through the action of the Tribe in adopting a complex utility regulation scheme, and claiming that it had the sovereign power to regulate all electrical supply service everywhere on the reservation, without regard to land status (tribal owned, trust lands or fee lands) and also without regard to indian vs. non indian occupancy, usage or ownership. This writer was initially of the opinion that resolution of the cosmic issue of this claim was not necessary to the disposition of the actual issue presented — who gets to supply power to the Tribal owned business and facility. It appeared clear, and still appears clear, that the Tribe has the inherent sovereignty to contract with whomever it will for the provision of service to its lands and businesses. This sovereign power takes precedence over the actions of the State of North Dakota, for this specific type of usage on the reservation.

As the court previously noted, this may be an illusory power as any supplier must cross non-reservation areas to get power to the reservation, and must therefore be under North Dakota Public Service Commission jurisdiction until either the reservation boundary or the actual facility is reached. The court's previous ruling was however inappropriate in that the injunction restraining the PSC from levying a fine based upon the service of Otter Tail to the Tribal facilities was ordered dissolved. The injunction should have been made permanent only to the extent that the fine imposed upon Otter Tail was premised upon its provision of service to the manufacturing plant or to the headstart facility.

The Circuit Court of Appeals, however, refuses to let the court duck the issue of the Tribe's authority to establish a comprehensive utility regulation scheme, and has directed a rather specific analysis. As directed, the court recites as follows:

Facts

1. The Fort Totten Reservation, often referred to as the Devils Lake Sioux Reservation, was established by the Treaty of February 19, 1867, 15 Stat. 505.

2. Article 2 of the Treaty states in part:

"The said bands hereby cede to the United States the right to construct wagon-roads, railroads, mail stations, telegraph lines, and such other public improvements as the interest of the government may require, over and across the lands claimed by said bands, (including their reservation as hereinafter designated over any route or routes that may be selected by the authority of the Government.......)"

Article 9 states in part:

"And it is further agreed that no person, not a member of said bands, parties hereto whether white, mixed blood, or Indian, except persons in the employ of the Government or located under its authority, shall be permitted to locate upon said lands, either for hunting, trapping or agricultural purposes."

Article 10 provides:

"The chiefs and head-men located upon either of the reservations set apart for said bands are authorized to adopt such rules, regulations, or laws for the security of life and property, the advancement of civilization, and the agricultural prosperity of the members of said bands upon the respective reservations, and shall have authority, under the direction of the agent, and without expense to the Government to organize a force sufficient to carry out all such rules, regulations or laws, and all rules and regulations for the government of said Indians, as may be prescribed by the Interior Department: Provided, That all rules regulations, *958 or laws adopted or amended by the chiefs and head-men on either reservation shall receive the sanction of the agent."

3. The Fort Totten Reservation is located within 4 North Dakota Counties, Ramsey, Eddy, Nelson, and Benson. The majority of the acreage is in Benson County.

4. The Reservation covers 245,141 acres, of which 60,342 acres is owned by the United States as "trust land" for the benefit of the tribe or individual tribal members. 342 acres of U.S. government owned land are included in the 245,141. Individual Indians own 335 acres (Indian fee land) and the tribe itself owns 2,358 acres (Tribal fee land). The remaining 181,764 acres are owned in fee by non-Indian owners (non-Indian fee land), leading to the following percentages:

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896 F. Supp. 955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devils-lake-sioux-indian-tribe-v-nd-pub-serv-ndd-1995.