Hill v. United States Department of the Interior

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedOctober 19, 2023
DocketCivil Action No. 2022-1781
StatusPublished

This text of Hill v. United States Department of the Interior (Hill v. United States Department of the Interior) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. United States Department of the Interior, (D.D.C. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

MICHAEL HILL, et al.,

Plaintiffs, v. Civil Action No. 22-1781 (JEB)

THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, et al.,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A federally recognized Indian tribe, the Crow (Apsáalooké) Tribe has lived in Montana

for centuries. The water rights of the Tribe on its Reservation had been the subject of decades of

litigation and negotiation. To end those fraught disputes once and for all, Congress enacted the

Crow Tribe Water Rights Settlement Act in 2010, ratifying a compact that the Crow Tribe and

the State of Montana had entered 11 years prior. The Act provided a variety of benefits to the

Crow in exchange for waivers and releases of all claims for water rights that the Tribe or

individual Indians could have asserted against the United States. Pursuant to the Act, those

waivers and releases were to take effect once the Secretary of the Department of the Interior

published in the Federal Register a statement of findings that specified conditions were met. In

2016, the Secretary published those requisite findings.

Almost six years later, amidst increasing water insecurity, several Tribal members who

hold property on the Crow Reservation along with an association comprising such individuals

filed this action. Challenging both the Secretary’s publication of findings and the Act itself, they

assert that the Government breached its trust responsibilities to Tribal members and violated the

1 Administrative Procedure Act, the Settlement Act, and the Due Process Clause of the Fifth

Amendment. While Plaintiffs do not claim that they have actually been deprived of access to

water, they allege that their water rights have lost the senior priority date to which they are

entitled. That, in turn, has reduced the market value of their allotments and means that Plaintiffs

could be forced to forgo their use of a given water source should shortages prove severe enough.

Plaintiffs have, it seems, formulated this lawsuit in hopes that the Court will invalidate the

Settlement Act, thereby restoring their senior-priority-date water rights, increasing the market

value of their allotments, and guaranteeing that they will have access to water even during

shortages.

The Government moves to dismiss, advancing both jurisdictional and merits arguments.

First, it maintains that Plaintiffs lack standing because any injury to their water rights stems only

from the Settlement Act itself and is therefore neither traceable to Defendants nor redressable in

this action. Second, Defendants say that Plaintiffs fail to state claims upon which relief could be

granted. While the standing questions prove close, the Court concludes that Plaintiffs have

cleared the bar. It nonetheless will grant the Motion to Dismiss in its entirety because the Court

agrees that Plaintiffs’ claims are all deficient in one respect or another.

I. Background

A. Factual and Statutory Background

Given the prolixity of the pleadings, the Court will not recite them chapter and verse. It

will, instead, limit its account to the history most relevant to the lawsuit at hand.

The Crow Tribe has about 11,000 members, almost three-quarters of whom live on the

Crow Reservation in southern Montana. See ECF No. 14 (Am. Compl.), ¶ 53. Not long after the

Reservation’s establishment in the mid-nineteenth century, Congress enacted two statutes that

2 authorized land within it to be “allotted” to individual Indians. See General Allotment Act of

1887, ch. 119, 24 Stat. 388; Crow Allotment Act of 1920, ch. 224, 41 Stat. 751; see also Montana

v. United States, 450 U.S. 544, 548 (1981) (describing the statutory scheme). Pursuant to those

acts, “the bulk” of the Reservation was allotted to individuals. See Am. Compl., ¶ 60. Today,

approximately 46% of Reservation land is allotted to members of the Tribe and held by the

United States in trust for them, 10% is held in trust for the Tribe itself, and 44% has been

purchased by non-Indians. Id., ¶¶ 73–74. Plaintiffs (or Allottees) in this case are eight Crow

Tribal members who hold trust allotments on the Reservation — i.e., who are part of the 46% —

and the Apsáalooké Allottees Alliance, an association of such individuals. Id., ¶¶ 41–49.

The water rights of allottees like Plaintiffs have been heavily disputed for decades. In

1975, the United States filed a lawsuit in federal court seeking a declaration of the water rights of

the United States, the Crow Tribe, and allottees. Id., ¶ 79. Four years later, the State of Montana

created a dedicated water court and established a commission “to negotiate settlements with

Montana Indian tribes and federal agencies [that] claim federal reserved water rights within

Montana to quantify those rights.” Id., ¶¶ 80–81 (citation omitted).

After over twenty years of negotiations, from which allottees were excluded, the Crow

Tribe-Montana Compact finally emerged in 1999. Id., ¶¶ 82–83; see Mont. Code Ann. § 85-20-

901 (1999). The Compact set forth a “Tribal Water Right” — i.e., “the right of the Crow Tribe,

including any Tribal member” — to divert, use, and store certain Reservation waters. See Am.

Compl., ¶¶ 85–86. To guide administration of the Tribal Water Right, it directed the Tribe to

create a “Tribal Water Code.” Id., ¶ 107. It also instructed the Tribe’s Water Resources

Department and the United States to give the State a “Current Use List” indicating all current

uses of the Tribal Water Right. Id., ¶¶ 93–94.

3 Congress ratified the Compact in 2010 by enacting the Crow Water Rights Settlement

Act. See Pub. L. No. 111-291, §§ 401–16, 124 Stat. 3097. The Settlement Act provides that the

tribal water rights described in the Compact “are ratified, confirmed, and declared to be valid”

and shall be “held in trust by the United States for the use and benefit of the Tribe and the

allottees.” Id. § 407(b)(1), (c)(1). With respect to allottees, it confirms Congress’s intent “to

provide to each allottee benefits that are equivalent to or exceed the benefits allottees possess as

of the date of enactment,” taking into consideration a variety of factors. Id. § 407(a). It directs

that “[a]ny entitlement to water of an allottee under Federal law shall be satisfied from the tribal

water rights,” and allottees “shall be entitled to a just and equitable allocation of water for

irrigation purposes.” Id. § 407(d)(2)–(3). The Act also authorizes hundreds of millions of

dollars in federal appropriations for Crow water projects. Id. §§ 405–06, 411, 414.

In exchange for the Tribal Water Right, funding for water projects, and other benefits, the

Settlement Act provides that the “benefits realized by the allottees under [it] shall be in complete

replacement of and substitution for, and full satisfaction of,” the allottees’ water-rights claims,

including “any claims of the allottees against the United States that the allottees have or could

have asserted.” Id. § 409(a)(2). The Act, accordingly, “authorize[s] and direct[s]” the United

States, “acting as trustee for allottees,” to “execute a waiver and release of all claims for water

rights within the Reservation . . . that the United States, acting as trustee for the allottees,

asserted, or could have asserted” on their behalf. Id. § 410(a)(2).

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Hill v. United States Department of the Interior, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-united-states-department-of-the-interior-dcd-2023.