Navajo Tribe of Indians v. Yellowhorse

5 Navajo Rptr. 235
CourtUnited States District Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1986
DocketNo. WR-CV-178-84
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Navajo Rptr. 235 (Navajo Tribe of Indians v. Yellowhorse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States District Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Navajo Tribe of Indians v. Yellowhorse, 5 Navajo Rptr. 235 (usdistct 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion delivered by

Yazzie, District Court Judge.

Statement of the Case

This action involves a suit on four separate claims against the defendants for damages for: Breach of Contract, Breach of Bailment/Conversion, Negligence, and Fraud. These four claims arise from a management contract entered into in 1982, between the Navajo Nation and Yellowhorse, Inc., to operate an arts and crafts purchasing and marketing program to benefit individual Navajo artisans, thereby relieving some of the unemployment problems on the Navajo Reservation.

I. Findings of Fact Parties

1. Plaintiff, the Navajo Nation, is a federally recognized Indian tribe occupying and enjoying the beneficial ownership of the Navajo Indian Reservation.

2. Defendant, Jane Yellowhorse Jones, is an enrolled member of the [236]*236Navajo Nation and at all times referred to in this cause of action, she operated a business and resided within the exterior boundaries of the Navajo Indian Reservation.

3. Defendant, Dennis Jones, is a non-Indian and at all times referred to in this cause of action, he resided within the exterior boundaries of the Navajo Indian Reservation. Jane and Dennis Jones testified that they were married by a medicine man on December 28,1978, though evidence was entered that they submitted a sworn affidavit to the Navajo Nation on July 27,1981, that they were married on June 06,1981. (See Plaintiffs Exhibits 5 and 6).

4. Defendant, Mary Ann Yellowhorse, is an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation and at all times referred to in this cause of action, she worked within the exterior boundaries of the Navajo Indian Reservation.

5. Defendant, Betty Yellowhorse Chauncey, is an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation and at all times referred to in this cause of action, she worked within the exterior boundaries of the Navajo Indian Reservation.

6. Defendant, John Chauncey, is a non-Indian who resides off the Navajo Indian Reservation in Albuquerque, New Mexico, but who burglarized the Fort Defiance Trading Post on April 04, 1982, and thereby submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the Navajo Nation.

7. All of the acts underlying the cause of action occurred within the exterior boundaries of Navajo Indian Country.

8. Yellowhorse, Inc., was a corporation under the laws of the State of Arizona on December 09,1982, by Jane Yellowhorse Jones, President, and Dennis Jones, the only other officer of the corporation.

Chronology of Events Leading to the Burglary of the Arts and Crafts

The facts involving these claims center around this essential chronology of events:

AUGUST 02,1982 — NAVAJO NATION ENTERED INTO A ONE-MILLION DOLLAR ($1,000,000) CONTRACT WITH YELLOWHORSE, INC.

9. On December 9, 1982, Defendants, Jane Yellowhorse Jones and Dennis Jones, purported to form a corporation called “Yellowhorse, Inc.” of which they were officers. (See Plaintiffs Exhibit 7).

10. On August 2, 1982, the Navajo Nation and Yellowhorse, Inc. entered into a valid and binding management contract in the amount of one (1) million dollars. The contract was entirely funded by a Federal ANA [237]*237Grant. It was to be administered from the Fort Defiance Trading Post, a.k.a. J.D.’s Market, where Defendant Jane Yellowhorse Jones held a business site lease. (See Plaintiffs Exhibit 8, the management contract).

11. The purpose of the contract was to expand the opportunity for individual Navajos to sell their jewelry and help relieve the unemployment problem on the Navajo Reservation. The contract authorized defendant to purchase and market Navajo Arts and Crafts with title of such property remaining in the Plaintiff Navajo Nation. The period of the contract was from August 02,1982, through December 31,1982.

12. The contract required Defendant Jane Yellowhorse Jones to comply with the contract provisions, which expressly included:

A) Being responsible for the physical custody and storage of the arts and crafts inventory;

B) Maintaining adequate inventory control records;
C) Providing adequate security of the arts and crafts inventory; and
D) Purchasing an insurance policy for the inventory.

13. Defendant Jane Yellowhorse Jones understood the contract provisions as they were discussed with her in detail. Ms. Jones is an experienced dealer in selling and buying Navajo Arts and Crafts, and has been in the business for twenty (20) years.

14. The contract expired on December 31, 1982, but was extended by written modification to December 31, 1983, by the Navajo Nation. (See Plaintiffs Exhibit 74). An express term of the provisions of the original contract, including insurance to be provided by defendants, was to remain in effect, except that no new purchase could occur until sale of 50% of the inventory on hand was done.

JANUARY 14,1983 — SEIZURE OF YELLOWHORSE TRADING POST

15. During the January 11, 1983, inauguration of Chairman Peterson Zah, boxes containing tribal records were reported missing from the offices of the Chairman. A search was undertaken by Navajo Police Officers to locate the missing boxes.

16. On January 14,1983, Ross Bigman, a BIA Law Enforcement Officer, who was aware of the missing tribal documents, observed boxes with Navajo Tribal markings being removed from the J.D. Market at Fort Defiance to a 1977 Ford Van. He contacted Navajo Police immediately, who arrived shortly thereafter, and discovered boxes of tribal records in the van as well as within a freezer inside the trading post. These were identified as those records missing from the Navajo Tribal Administration Building.

In locating the boxes, Tribal officials discovered a vault in the trading post containing a large amount of arts and crafts. Defendant Dennis Jones [238]*238informed the Tribal officials at the time that the arts and crafts were the property of the Navajo Nation.

17. Several witnesses for the Navajo Nation testified that sealing of the vault and securing of the arts and crafts was necessary, because Tribal officials had no knowledge about the Yellowhorse, Inc. contract with the Navajo Nation. There was ample evidence that Howard Bitsuie, former Director of Chapter Development, knew about the contract and had informed Colonel Larry Benallie of the Navajo Division of Public Safety. Eric Eberhard stated that he might have known about the contract before January 14,1983, but got a copy of the contract a few days later.

Harry Sloan, the accountant, testified that he was on the 1982 Zah Transition Team and explained about the Jones’ contract and missing inventory to Mr. Eberhard in December 1982. At the time the vault was seized, auditors of Sloan and Company were in the vault doing an ongoing inventory. Mr. Sloan explained at the time that there was a contract between the Defendant Jones’ and the Navajo Nation. Therefore, on January 14,1983, the Navajo Nation was on notice that a contract existed between the Defendant Jones’ and the Navajo Nation. A few days later they had received a copy of the contract.

18. On January 14,1983, Colonel Benallie then ordered the vault sealed with tape, and a temporary police guard was placed outside the vault door for two weeks.

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Navajo Rptr. 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/navajo-tribe-of-indians-v-yellowhorse-usdistct-1986.