Fletcher v. United States

730 F.3d 1206, 2013 WL 5184985, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 19171
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 17, 2013
Docket12-5078
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 730 F.3d 1206 (Fletcher v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fletcher v. United States, 730 F.3d 1206, 2013 WL 5184985, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 19171 (10th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

GORSUCH, Circuit Judge.

After settlers displaced the Osage Nation from its native lands, the federal government shunted the tribe onto the open prairie in Indian Territory, part of what later became the State of Oklahoma. At the time, the government had no idea those grasslands were to prove a great deal more fertile than they appeared. Only years later did the Osages’ mammoth reserves of oil and gas make themselves known. When that happened, the federal government appropriated for itself the role of trustee, overseeing the collection of royalty income and its distribution to tribal members. That role continues to this day. In this lawsuit, tribal members seek an accounting to determine whether the federal government has fulfilled the fiduciary obligations it chose to assume. The district court dismissed the tribal members’ claims. We reverse,

The statutory story begins in 1906. It was then Congress devised a scheme to deal with the Osages’ newfound wealth. See Act of June 28, 1906, Pub.L. No. 59-321, 34 Stat. 539. Congress severed the mineral estate underlying Osage lands from the surface estate, placed the mineral estate in trust, directed the Secretary of Interior to collect royalties, and told the Secretary to distribute the royalties (along with interest income) every quarter on a pro rata basis to individual members of the tribe. Id. § 4, 34 Stat. at 544. To determine who qualified as a tribal member entitled to receive an interest in the mineral estate, Congress provided for the ere- *1208 ation of an official tribal roll. Id. § 1, 34 Stat. at 539-40. This same statutory structure remains intact and in force today, though with some amendment. As time passed, various tribal members sold— and others gave away or bequeathed— their royalty interests (sometimes called “headrights”) or portions of them (a process that resulted in “fractionalization”). Sometimes these assignments went to other tribal members; other times they went to non-tribal members. Displeased with the choice by some headright owners to convey their interests to non-tribal members, Congress responded with a series of legislative amendments placing ever increasing limits on the practice. See Felix S. Cohen, Cohen’s Handbook of Federal Indian Law § 4.07, at 304-08 (Nell Jessup Newton ed., 2012).

This litigation’s story begins in 2002. It was then William Fleteher and Charles Pratt, two Osage tribal members who receive payments under the 1906 Act, charged the federal government with breaching its trust responsibilities. A decade-long blizzard of paper followed—no fewer than seven motions to dismiss, three amended complaints, a first appeal and now this second. Yet even still the case remains stunted at the motion to dismiss stage, never having managed to progress past the pleadings to the facts.

All those years and all that paper have whittled this case down so much that in this appeal we are asked to resolve only a single legal question: Do Osage tribal member headright holders possess the legal right to seek an accounting from the Secretary of the Interior? No one disputes that the plaintiffs’ allegations are sufficient to invoke an accounting, only whether they have the right to demand one. The district court ruled no such right could be found in positive law, granted the government’s (latest) motion to dismiss, and entered a final judgment.

We find ourselves unable to agree.

The district court was surely right in its general approach to the question. The government’s relationship with and duties to Native American tribes are generally defined in the first instance by “applicable statutes and regulations.” United States v. Jicarilla Apache Nation, — U.S. —, 131 S.Ct. 2313, 2325, 180 L.Ed.2d 187 (2011). One might be excused for thinking the relationship between the federal government and Native American tribes resembles a traditional trust relationship bearing all the usual attendant fiduciary responsibilities—responsibilities the government seems to have taken up voluntarily and assumed for itself. But traditional trust principles cannot displace what statutes and regulations mandate. Traditional trust principles may help illuminate the meaning of a “specific, applicable, trust-creating statute or regulation.” Id. Indeed, we normally assume Congress has legislated against the background of traditional “adjudicatory principles”—including traditional adjudicatory principles found in trust law. Astoria Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. Solimino, 501 U.S. 104, 108, 111 S.Ct. 2166, 115 L.Ed.2d 96 (1991). But those background principles cannot be used to “override” the language of statutes and regulations “defin[ing] the Government’s ... obligationfs]” to a tribe or tribal members. Jicarilla Apache Nation, 131 S.Ct. at 2329-30. Congress enjoys considerable latitude in deciding how to organize and manage Native American trusts and it is permitted to “structure the trust relationship to pursue its own policy goals”— sometimes by establishing a full blown trust relationship with all the attendant fiduciary duties we’re familiar with from the common law and equity, but sometimes also by “establishfing] only a limited trust relationship to serve a narrow[er] purpose.” Id. at 2324-25. So, as the district court quite rightly observed, to trigger a *1209 duty to account the plaintiffs in this case first had to identify some statute or regulation creating a trust relationship between them and the government.

The district court also correctly held that just such a statute exists. The 1906 Act clearly creates a trust relationship— and not just a trust relationship between the federal government and the Osage Nation, but also between the federal government and the individual Osage headright owners who are plaintiffs in this case. Though the language of the Act is both arcane and antiquated, after laboring through it there’s no question about this much. The Act requires the government to collect royalties, place them “to the credit of’ each individual headright owner, and then disburse them to each individual headright owner on a quarterly basis, with interest. See 1906 Act § 4(l)-(2), 34 Stat. at 544. A small slice of royalty income may be diverted to tribal operations, id. § 4(3), (4), but all else is “placed ... to the credit” of headright owners and distributed to them personally. In short, the 1906 Aet imposes an obligation on the federal government to distribute funds to individual headright owners in a timely (quarterly) and proper (pro rata, with interest) manner. Over the years both Congress and this court have repeatedly recognized that, in this way, the 1906 Act created a trust relationship between the government and individual headright owners. 1

On appeal the federal government contests none of this.

The only remaining question, then, is whether, attendant to the—undisputed— trust relationship between government and individual tribal members, the government must provide an accounting when asked.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
730 F.3d 1206, 2013 WL 5184985, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 19171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fletcher-v-united-states-ca10-2013.