Kevin Gunter, on behalf of himself, the ad hoc committee of Tetlin tribal members, and disenfranchised shareholders of The Tetlin Native Corporation v. Contango Ore, Inc.; Kinross Gold Corporation; Royal Gold, Inc.; Peak Gold, Inc.; Fairbanks Gold Mining, Inc.; Avalon Development Corporation; Black Gold Mining, Inc.; Bradley J. Juneau; Rick Van Nieuwenhuyse; Curtis J. Freeman; Young’s Timber, Inc.; Joseph A. Young; Kristie Charley (Young); Michael Sam; Rickey William Hendry; and John Does 1-10

CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedApril 23, 2026
Docket3:25-cv-00307
StatusUnknown

This text of Kevin Gunter, on behalf of himself, the ad hoc committee of Tetlin tribal members, and disenfranchised shareholders of The Tetlin Native Corporation v. Contango Ore, Inc.; Kinross Gold Corporation; Royal Gold, Inc.; Peak Gold, Inc.; Fairbanks Gold Mining, Inc.; Avalon Development Corporation; Black Gold Mining, Inc.; Bradley J. Juneau; Rick Van Nieuwenhuyse; Curtis J. Freeman; Young’s Timber, Inc.; Joseph A. Young; Kristie Charley (Young); Michael Sam; Rickey William Hendry; and John Does 1-10 (Kevin Gunter, on behalf of himself, the ad hoc committee of Tetlin tribal members, and disenfranchised shareholders of The Tetlin Native Corporation v. Contango Ore, Inc.; Kinross Gold Corporation; Royal Gold, Inc.; Peak Gold, Inc.; Fairbanks Gold Mining, Inc.; Avalon Development Corporation; Black Gold Mining, Inc.; Bradley J. Juneau; Rick Van Nieuwenhuyse; Curtis J. Freeman; Young’s Timber, Inc.; Joseph A. Young; Kristie Charley (Young); Michael Sam; Rickey William Hendry; and John Does 1-10) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kevin Gunter, on behalf of himself, the ad hoc committee of Tetlin tribal members, and disenfranchised shareholders of The Tetlin Native Corporation v. Contango Ore, Inc.; Kinross Gold Corporation; Royal Gold, Inc.; Peak Gold, Inc.; Fairbanks Gold Mining, Inc.; Avalon Development Corporation; Black Gold Mining, Inc.; Bradley J. Juneau; Rick Van Nieuwenhuyse; Curtis J. Freeman; Young’s Timber, Inc.; Joseph A. Young; Kristie Charley (Young); Michael Sam; Rickey William Hendry; and John Does 1-10, (D. Alaska 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF ALASKA

KEVIN GUNTER, on behalf of himself, the ad hoc committee of Tetlin tribal members, and disenfranchised shareholders of The Tetlin Native Corporation,

Plaintiff, Case No. : 3:25-cv-00307-ACP v.

CONTANGO ORE, INC.; KINROSS GOLD CORPORATION; ROYAL GOLD, INC.; PEAK GOLD, INC.; FAIRBANKS GOLD MINING, INC.; AVALON DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION; BLACK GOLD MINING, INC.; BRADLEY J. JUNEAU; RICK VAN NIEUWENHUYSE; CURTIS J. FREEMAN; YOUNG’S TIMBER, INC.; JOSEPH A. YOUNG; KRISTIE CHARLEY (YOUNG); MICHAEL SAM; RICKEY WILLIAM HENDRY; and JOHN DOES 1-10,

Defendants.

ORDER GRANTING CONTANGO ORE, INC.’S MOTION TO DISMISS COMPLAINT TO QUIET TITLE AND FOR EQUITABLE RELIEF (Dkt. 8) AND DISMISSING THE COMPLAINT

A native corporation formed pursuant to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) transferred about 643,000 acres of land to a tribe’s governing body in 1996. Then in 2008, the tribe leased most of the land to mining companies for exploration and development. In 2025, the Plaintiff, a shareholder in the native corporation, sued several parties with a connection to the land, including the mining companies and some of the tribe’s

leaders. The Plaintiff alleges that the 1996 land transfer was unlawful because it did not follow corporate voting procedures imposed, in his view, by ANCSA itself. The Plaintiff also alleges that people involved in the land transfer (and people subsequently managing the land) committed fraud and various torts. The Defendants responded by filing motions to dismiss based on differing theories. This order focuses on a threshold matter: subject

matter jurisdiction. As explained below, the motion to dismiss filed by Defendant Contango Ore, Inc. is GRANTED because the Court does not have subject matter jurisdiction over the complaint.1 The shareholder has not asserted a valid cause of action under federal law. Rather, his claims about corporate governance, fraud, and torts arise (if at all) under state law, and those state claims do not involve substantial federal issues. The complaint is thus

DISMISSED without prejudice for lack of federal jurisdiction. I. BACKGROUND A. Factual Allegations Congress passed ANCSA in 1971 to “settle all land claims by Alaska Natives.”2 The law authorized transfer of “approximately 44 million acres of Alaska land to state-chartered private business corporations that were to be formed pursuant to the statute; all of the

1 Dkt. 8 (Contango Ore, Inc. and Rick Van Nieuwenhuyse’s Motion to Dismiss Complaint to Quiet Title and for Equitable Relief). 2 Alaska v. Native Vill. of Venetie, 522 U.S 520, 523 (1998). shareholders of these corporations were required to be Alaska natives.”3 Under this framework, the Tetlin Native Corporation (TNC) was chartered under Alaska law in 1973 and deeded over 700,000 acres of land by the federal government.4

In 1996, TNC allegedly transferred about 643,000 acres of land to the Tetlin Tribal Council, a tribal governance body, in exchange for $10.5 The complaint alleges that the transaction “was executed unilaterally by TNC’s leadership” without “seeking or obtaining” approval from TNC’s shareholders.”6 several years after the land transfer, TNC

shareholders sued its directors in federal court, arguing that the land transfer was unlawful because the corporation did not hold a shareholder vote beforehand.7 The litigation led to a settlement, but the District Court declined to enforce the settlement after concluding that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the entire case.8 The case proceeded in state court, where the settlement was ultimately voided.9

3 Id. at 524. 4 Dkt. 1 at 16 (Complaint). The Court takes well-pleaded factual allegations as true at this stage of litigation. See Pride v. Correa, 719 F.3d 1130, 1133 (9th Cir. 2013). 5 Id. at 17. 6 Id. 7 Dkt. 8-2 (Tetlin Native Corp. v. Adams, Case no. F99-0008CV (HRH)). 8 Dkt. 8-4. The District Court assumed it had subject matter jurisdiction during the settlement phase of the case, including when it entered a judgment based on the settlement, because no one challenged jurisdiction. The Court reevaluated that assumption when a party finally raised the issue. 9 Jimerson v. Tetlin Native Corp., 144 P.3d 470 (Alaska 2006) (voiding settlement on the ground that it violated ANCSA). In 2008, the Tribal Council allegedly entered a mineral lease with Contango Ore, Inc. that included most of the land acquired from TNC.10 The lease gave Contango “rights

to explore and extract minerals” in exchange for “3%-5%” royalty and “annual payments” to the Tribal Council.11 Negotiations over the lease involved Kristie Charley, an official for the Tribal Council; the lease was extended in 2014 by Micheal Sam, another official for the Tribal Council.12 According to the complaint, Contango entered the lease knowing that the “underlying land title was in question.”13 And since entering the lease, Contango has

partnered with other mining companies on the project, including Kinross Gold Corporation; Royal Gold, Inc.; Peak Gold, Inc.; and Fairbanks Gold Mining, Inc.14 In 2018, the Tribal Council allegedly entered “a sublease or similar agreement” with Young’s Timber, Inc, which is owned by Joseph A. Young.15 The complaint says this lease granted “a direct interest in some portion of the Tetlin lands or the mining operations” to Young’s Timber.16

10 Dkt. 1 at 18-19. 11 Id. 12 Id. at 21. 13 Id. at 19-20. To make this point, Gunter quotes a 10-K form that Contango filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. 14 Id. at 1 (caption), 8-15, 18-21. 15 Id. at 21. 16 Id. B. The Complaint. The pro se plaintiff in this case, Kevin Gunter, filed a 70-page complaint in October 2025.17 He initially purported to represent himself, “the Ad Hoc Committee of Tetlin Tribal

Members, and disenfranchised shareholders of the Tetlin Native Corporation.”18 But Gunter later said he was only representing himself.19 The lengthy complaint is difficult to parse at times. But Gunter appears to raise three main legal claims. First, he alleges that the initial 1996 land transfer is void because it

happened “without any shareholder approval.”20 He says this “violated federal law (ANCSA)” and the Native Corporation’s “internal rules (no shareholder or proper tribal consent).”21 Second, Gunter alleges that the Defendants’ mining activity was unlawful because it was done using “false, misleading, or incomplete information [about] the applicant’s legal authority over the land.”22 Third, he alleges that several Defendants engaged in fraud and various torts.23

17 Dkt. 1. 18 Id at 70. 19 Dkt. 37 at 5 (Consolidated Opposition to Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss). 20 Dkt. 1 at 3. 21 Id. at 36. 22 Id. at 23. 23 Id. at 30. Gunter also makes allegations about tribal “governance manipulation.” Id. at 23. But he abandoned those claims in his opposition, saying “this case does not require the court to adjudicate tribal governance.” Dkt. 37 at 3, 33 (citation modified). Aside from state law, ANCSA appears to be the principal federal statute on which Gunter relies, although he cites others.24 The complaint mentions the “Treaty of Cession

between Russia and the United States,” the Indian Reorganization Act, the Indian Self- Determination and Education Assistance Act, and Executive Order 5365, which he calls the “Establishment of Tetlin Indian Reserve.”25 For relief, Gunter “seeks to have the 1996 transfer, and 2008 (and subsequent) leases declared void ab initio, to quiet title in the affected Tetlin lands back to [TNC], rescind the

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Kevin Gunter, on behalf of himself, the ad hoc committee of Tetlin tribal members, and disenfranchised shareholders of The Tetlin Native Corporation v. Contango Ore, Inc.; Kinross Gold Corporation; Royal Gold, Inc.; Peak Gold, Inc.; Fairbanks Gold Mining, Inc.; Avalon Development Corporation; Black Gold Mining, Inc.; Bradley J. Juneau; Rick Van Nieuwenhuyse; Curtis J. Freeman; Young’s Timber, Inc.; Joseph A. Young; Kristie Charley (Young); Michael Sam; Rickey William Hendry; and John Does 1-10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kevin-gunter-on-behalf-of-himself-the-ad-hoc-committee-of-tetlin-tribal-akd-2026.