In re the Guardianship of Chewiwi

1 Navajo Rptr. 120
CourtNavajo Nation Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Navajo Rptr. 120 (In re the Guardianship of Chewiwi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Navajo Nation Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Guardianship of Chewiwi, 1 Navajo Rptr. 120 (navajo 1977).

Opinion

KIRK, Chief Justice

This an appeal from an order of the Trial Court of the Judicial District of Window Rock, awarding guardianship of the child, Catherine Denise Chewiwi, to Jose Marceline Chewiwi.

Having heard oral arguments on behalf of both parties on January 11, 1977, this Court finds the following facts:

1. The child, Catherine Chewiwi, is the daughter of Juan Antonio Chewiwi, an enrolled full-blooded Isleta Pubelo Indian, and Mary Ann Chewiwi, an enrolled full-blooded Navajo Indian.
2. The parents of the child enrolled her as a member of the Isleta Pueblo, to the exclusion of enrollment in the Navajo Nation ( 1 N.T.C. § 103).
3. The parents died in an automobile accident on or about April 3, 1976.
4. The Tribal Court of the Pueblo of. Isleta in April, 1976, appointed Jose Marceline Chewiwi as the child's guardian.
[121]*1215. The child is five years old as of the date of this decision, her birthday being August 7, 1971.
6. The child was brought within the territorial jurisdiction of the Courts of the Navajo Nation by Katherine and Cecil Begay, maternal aunt and uncle of the child, during July, 1976.
7. Pursuant to a petition filed on July 22, 1976, by counsel for the Begays with the Trial Court for the Judicial District of Window Rock, a hearing was held and an order issued on that same date granting the Begays temporary custody.
8. Pursuant to a motion filed by counsel for Jose Chewiwi to show cause why the above-named petition should not be dismissed, a hearing was held by the Window Rock Trial Court on September 24, 1976, and on October 8, 1976, an order issued vacating the temporary custody order and restoring guardianship to Jose Chewiwi.
9. The child then returned to the Isleta Pueblo, where she remains as of this date.
The issues presented to the Court of Appeals are:
1. Whether the Trial Court erred in not appointing an attorney to represent the child,
2. Whether the Trial Court had jurisdiction to determine the guardianship of the child,
3. Whether the Isleta Court's decision was res judicata, binding upon the Navajo courts,
4. Whether the concept of "full faith and credit" is applicable to the relationship between courts of different Indian tribes.

First, the contention that, in a custody proceeding, a child should be independently represented by counsel is without merit. Since it is obvious that such proceedings present to any court only two options, we will discuss representation by counsel in terms of the interests represented by and inherent in such options.

The first choice that a court has in determining custody is to award the child to one of the parties petitioning for such custody. [122]*122As was the case in this proceeding; such parties are usually represented by counsel. If the court is going to determine that one of the competing parties is to be awarded custody of the child, then the interests of the child are, by definition, represented by the counsel for such parties.

If, on the other hand, the court were to make a determination that none of the contesting parties is entitled to guardianship, then again, by definition of the parameters of such cases, the child's interests have been represented by the court, acting as the ultimate guardian of the child.

It is the fact of this case that neither party offered the court any alternative between custody for the Begays or Mr. Chewiwi. Nor did the court on its own find any suitable third alternative. Therefore, logically, appellants are bound to the conclusion that the child's interests were, in fact, represented as fully as they needed to be.

While it is certainly not a determining factor in our conclusion, as to the issue, we must point out that counsel for the appellants did not advise the court of any practicable means for the payment of such independent counsel.

Finally, petitioners' contention that the failure of the court to appoint an attorney for the child was a violation of the Indian Civil Rights Act (25 U.S.C. 1302) in that the child was deprived of her liberty without due process is patently absurd.

[123]*123Due process was had in that a hearing, with the only parties seeking custody both represented by counsel, was held and a determination was made by the Navajo court that a court having proper jurisdiction had made a determination on the merits. Furthermore, the Indian Civil Rights Act does not even require that the court appoint an attorney in criminal cases, let alone in civil cases. The Court of Appeals is unaware of any decision of any appellate court that the concept of due process requires the appointment, in a custody case, of independent counsel for the child.

Second, it is our determination that the courts of the Navajo Nation do have the authority to determine the custody of any Indian minor properly within the jurisdiction of the Navajo judicial system pursuant to Title 9 of the Navajo Tribal Code. The key word is "properly". Obviously, jurisdiction procured by fraud or asserted over a minor who is not actually within the Navajo Nation would be defective.

The Court of Appeals realizes that consent was given by the Isleta-appointed guardian to the appellants, the Begays, to bring Catherine Chewiwi to a place within Navajo territory. However, it is clear that this consent was intended only for the purpose of a limited family visit. This presence within the Navajo Nation may have given rise to personal jurisdiction but the real question for this Court is the one of whether Navajo courts can or should assert subject matter jurisdiction over the status of such minors.

The answer to this question iies only in a case-by-case [124]*124analysis of the contacts of the child with the Navajo Nation and any other Indian tribe. In this case, the child's parents made a conscious choice to live at the Isleta Pueblo and to enroll their child there, rather then on the rolls of the Navajo Nation. The child spent most of her time at the Isleta Pueblo. The mere fact that the child visited relatives within the Navajo Nation cannot by itself confer on a Navajo court the subject matter jurisdiction to determine this child's status. To rule otherwise would open the door to confused litigation.

Third, the issue of res judicata was not properly raised in this case. The decision of Evens v. Keller, 6. P.2d 200, cited as supporting authority in appellee's brief does not stand for the proposition that a court judgment determining a child's status in a custody proceeding is binding on anyone except the parties to such proceeding. The decision does not even purport to be binding on the parties to such a suit if the state of facts existing at the time of the decision have changed. Since appellants were not a party to the proceeding in the Isleta court and since they are alleging in the suit before the Navajo courts a change in the situation existing at the time of the Isleta decision, the rule of res judicata Is inapplicable in this case.

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1 Navajo Rptr. 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-guardianship-of-chewiwi-navajo-1977.