Lonetree v. Funmaker

7 Am. Tribal Law 144
CourtHo-Chunk Nation Trial Court
DecidedJune 14, 2007
DocketNo. CV 00-105
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Am. Tribal Law 144 (Lonetree v. Funmaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ho-Chunk Nation Trial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lonetree v. Funmaker, 7 Am. Tribal Law 144 (hochunkct 2007).

Opinion

[146]*146Denial of Preliminary Injunction

MARK BUTTERFIELD, Chief Judge.

INTRODUCTION

In this case the duly elected President of the Ho-Chunk Nation and Various supporters challenge his removal as President by a vote of the General Council. In particular, in the hearing held November 16, 2000, the plaintiffs moved to prevent the holding of an election for a seat on the Legislature vacated by the former Vice President who is required to act as President pro tempore after the removal of plaintiff Jacob Lonetree. The special election was to be held November 18, 2000.

At the hearing on November 16, 2000 the defendant argued that the plaintiffs, none of whom are electors from Area I, which contains the vacant seat, had standing to challenge the holding of the special election and that the case as a whole presented a political question beyond the ability of the courts to decide.1

Facts
1. Jacob Lonetree was duly elected as President of the Ho-Chunk Nation in the General Election of 1999. He was elected to a four-year term due to expire sometime after June 2003.
2. Forrest Whiterabbit is a Ho-Chunk tribal member, who held the position of Tribal Treasurer under Jacob Lonetree. He is the brother-in-law of Jacob Lonetree. He resided in Hatfield Wisconsin, which is in Area I, while he was Treasurer, but filed his taxes in Colorado for 1999 and intends to file his taxes in Colorado in 2000. His wife, Kathyleen Lonetree-Whiterabbit, is the representative for Area V, which requires residency outside of the 14 counties listed in the Ho-Chunk Nation Constitution. Mr. Whiterabbit is not a [147]*147resident of Area I for the purposes of voting within the Ho-Chunk Nation.
3. Mr. Elliot Littlejohn is a tribal member elector who resides in LaCrosse, Wisconsin, which is in Area II of the Ho-Chunk Nation.
4. Ms. Libby Fairchild is a tribal member elector who resides in the State of Minnesota, which is in Area V of the Ho-Chunk Nation. Ms. Fairchild held a position in the Office of the President under Jacob Lonetree.
5. Mr. Spencer Lonetree is a tribal member elector who is the brother of Jacob Lonetree and resides in Area V in the State of Iowa. Mr. Spencer Lonetree held various positions in the Office of the President under his brother Jacob Lonetree.
6. Mr. Parmenton Decorah is a tribal member elector who resides in Area IV of the Ho-Chunk Nation in Mau-ston, Wisconsin.
7. Mr. Forrest Whiterabbit was nominated to the position of Treasurer of the Ho-Chunk Nation by Jacob Lonetree and was confirmed by a vote of the Ho-Chunk Nation Legislature. He serves at the pleasure of the President of the Ho-Chunk Nation and can be fired by him/her for any reason. See Daniel Sine v. Jacob Lonetree, CV 97-143 (HCN Tr. Ct. Aug. 3,1998).
8. Libby Fairchild and Spencer Lone-tree were employed as the personal staff of President Lonetree prior to his removal by the General Council.
9. Gloria Visintin, a tribal member, served President Lonetree with papers alleging malfeasance in office on October 3, 2000. The papers alleging malfeasance gave notice to President Lonetree that various members of the Ho-Chunk Nation intended to seek his removal at the Annual General Council called for October 21, 2000.
10. President Lonetree had previously called the Annual General Council for October 21, 2000 to be held at the Ho-Chunk Nation Convention Center in Baraboo, Wisconsin.
11. A story appeared in the Wisconsin State Journal on October 20, 2000, the day before the General Council, in which President Lonetree denied the charges of malfeasance and stated, that if removal occurred, “so be it.”
12. At the Annual General Council on October 21, 2000 Mr. Robert Fun-maker served as the Chairman. President Lonetree was nominated to serve as chairman, but declined the nomination.
13. Robert Funmaker then appointed Darcy Funmaker Rave to serve as General Council Secretary. HCN Constitution, Art. IV. § 7.
14. According to the minutes, the issue of the alleged malfeasance of President Lonetree was brought up upon motion by defendant Visintin. This was seconded by tribal member Christine (Whiterabbit) Jendri-sak. See Exhibit B attached to the Complaint.
15. Various other items were put on the agenda of the General Council including considering the removal of ineligible members from the rolls; to increase per capita; to consider a zero tolerance policy for appointed and elected officials; to hear the General Council Planning Committee; to hear the Treasurer’s report. The agenda was accepted. Id.
[148]*148Hi. After the approval of the agenda President Lonetree was given the opportunity to defend himself against the charges of malfeasance. Testimony established that Jacob Lonetree explained his position for 15 minutes including the fact that the HCN Dept, of Justice had stated that it was okay for him to sign a contract mentioned in the notice of intent to remove for malfeasance.
17. A vote was taken with 599 voting for removal and 548 against removal.
18. The next General Election for the Ho-Chunk Nation is due to be held in June 2001.
19. Clarence Pettibone was first elected as an Area I Legislator in the disputed 1995 General Election. See Generally Robert L. Fun-maker, Jr. v. Ho-Chunk Nation Election Board, CV 95-04 (HCN Tr. Ct., July 6, 1995). He served his full four year term and was reelected in the June 1999 Election, which also saw the election of Jacob Lon-etree as President of the Ho-Chunk Nation for a full four year term.
20. Jacob Lonetree was first elected to fill the remainder of the term of Chloris A. Lowe Jr. who was removed by General Council action in 1997. He served from the General Election in June 1997 until the end of the vacant Chloris A. Lowe Jr. term in June 1999. He was then elected to a four-year term in his own right in 1999. Jacob Lonetree was in only the first half of his second year in this term of office.
21. There are nine candidates for the position as replacement Legislator for Area I. These include two former Area I Legislators, Robert Mudd and Douglas Greengrass and one former Tribal Chairman, Gordon Thunder.
22. The election set for November 18, 2000 will cost anywhere from $10,000 to $20,000. This consists of the cost of three poll workers; the stipends and mileage for the Election Board after the election so they can meet and certify the election results, the cost of the consultant, the election equipment and printing the ballots.
23. If no candidate is elected by a majority vote on November 18, 2000 a run-off election will need to be held in two weeks to a month after the November 18 special election.
24. The HCN Constitution requires that anyone elected be sworn into office four Wednesdays after the results are certified.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Allen v. Wright
468 U.S. 737 (Supreme Court, 1984)
Coalition for Fair Government II v. Lowe
1 Am. Tribal Law 145 (Ho-Chunk Nation Trial Court, 1997)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Am. Tribal Law 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lonetree-v-funmaker-hochunkct-2007.