Northern Cheyenne Tribe v. Northern Cheyenne Class of Allottees

505 F.2d 268
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 17, 1974
DocketNos. 73-1545 to 73-1547
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 505 F.2d 268 (Northern Cheyenne Tribe v. Northern Cheyenne Class of Allottees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern Cheyenne Tribe v. Northern Cheyenne Class of Allottees, 505 F.2d 268 (9th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

CHOY, Circuit Judge:

The Northern Cheyenne Tribe, at the direction of Congress, brought this action in the district court under a special grant of jurisdiction against appellants, individual owners, and class representatives of all allottees, their heirs and dev-isees, owning allotments of land within the tribal reservation. At stake are the rights to the mineral deposits contained in and beneath these lands. In 1968, Congress reserved these deposits in perpetuity for the benefit of the tribe, provided the tribe instituted this suit “to determine whether under the provisions of the Act of June 3, 1926 [44 Stat. 690], as amended, the allottees, their heirs or devisees, have received a vested property right in the minerals which is protected by the fifth amendment.” Act of July 24, 1968, 82 Stat. 424, 425. The district court held that no vested property rights were received and awarded judgment for the tribe, 349 F.Supp. 1302 (D.Mont. 1972). This appeal followed. We reverse.

The Act of June 3, 1926 as Amended

Pursuant to its then existing policy under the General Allotment Act of 1887, 24 Stat. 388, of ending the Indians’ communal land holdings and substituting therefore the private ownership of the reservation lands, Congress in 1926 ordered the allotment of specific tracts of land in the Northern Cheyenne reservation in Montana. In the first section of the Northern Cheyenne Allotment Act (the Act), Congress declared the reservation lands to be the property of Northern Cheyenne Indians, “subject to such control and management of said property as the Congress of the United States may direct.” 44 Stat. at 690. Section 2 authorized the Secretary of the Interior to prepare a complete roll of these Indians along with a list of lands suitable for agriculture and grazing. A tract not exceeding 160 acres of such land was then to be allotted in severalty to each of the duly enrolled Indians for whom the reservation was set apart, and a trust patent issued for this land. Classified as a homestead of the individual allottee, the land was to be held in trust for him by the United States, and was to remain inalienable and nontaxable for a period of twenty-five years from the issuance of the patent, or until the death of the allottee.

[270]*270In the part of the Act which is most critical here, Congress reserved the land’s timber and mineral deposits for the benefit of the tribe for a period of years. Section 3 states:

“That the timber, coal or other minerals, including oil, gas, and other natural deposits, on said reservation are hereby reserved for the benefit of the tribe and may be leased with the consent of the Indian council under such rules and regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe: Provided, That at the expiration of fifty years from the date of the approval of this Act the coal or other minerals, including oil, gas, and other natural deposits, of said allotments shall become the property of the respective allottees or their heirs: Provided further, That the unallotted lands of said tribe of Indians shall be held in common, subject to the control and management thereof as Congress may deem expedient for the benefit of said Indians.” 44 Stat. at 691.

After several other changes in the Act,1 on July 24, 1968, Congress enacted P.L. 90-424, 82 Stat. 424, which amended Section 8 of the Act to read as follows:

“(a) The coal or other minerals, including oil, gas, and other natural deposits, on said reservation are hereby reserved in perpetuity for the benefit of the tribe and may be leased with the consent of the Indian council for mining purposes . . . under such rules, regulations, and conditions as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe.
(b) The unallotted lands of said tribe of Indians shall be held in common, subject to the control and management thereof as Congress may deem expedient for the benefit of said Indians.”

Thus, as a result of the 1968 amendment, the mineral deposits which under the Act were to become the allottees’ property in 1976, were instead declared to be the property of the tribe in perpetuity. The question presented is whether the allottees received rights to the minerals through the Act which are constitutionally protected against impairment by the 1968 amendment. The answer to this question in turn depends upon the intent of Congress in 1926 when it reserved the minerals for fifty years, but provided that thereafter they would become the property of the allot-tees.

The district court held that Congress had reserved to itself sufficient powers (1) to preclude any vesting of rights in the allottees and (2) to preserve its right to extend in perpetuity the trust period of the mineral estate. The court reasoned that the allottees received no rights in the minerals when Congress reserved them for the tribe; that this reservation severed them from the allotted lands, creating two separate estates, one surface and one mineral, with only the surface estate passing to the allottees, while the minerals became part of the unallotted tribal lands. Since Congress, in section 3 of the Act, had [271]*271explicitly reserved the power to manage and control such unallotted land, the court concluded that the reallocation of the minerals to the tribe was but a valid exercise of this power. In addition, the court found that Congress’s more broadly stated power in section 1, of management and control over the reservation lands, indicated that it intended to retain its plenary authority over the mineral rights. Finally, the court concluded that the language in section 3, referring to the minerals which “shall become the property of the individual allottees,” when compared with other language stating that the land “is hereby, declared to be the property” of the allottees, showed that Congress created only an inchoate or prospective right to the minerals, rather than a present vested one. 349 F.Supp. at 1308-1309.

We believe the district court erred when it considered the mineral deposits as unallotted tribal land subject to reap-propriation, when Congress, by its unconditional, noncontingent grant of these deposits to the allottees, evidenced an intent to create rights to the minerals in their favor. Under the Fifth Amendment, these rights, belonging to the individual allottees incident to their ownership of the allotted lands, could not be divested absent compliance with due process of law or payment of compensation.

Reserving Mineral Deposits

It had been Congress’s policy in several other allotment statutes, where the lands contained potentially valuable mineral resources, to allot the surface estate while reserving for the tribe for a period of years the minerals beneath these lands. E. g., Act of March 3, 1921, 41 Stat. 1355 (Fort Belnap Indians); Act of June 4, 1920, 41 Stat. 751 (Crow Indians) ; Act of June 28, 1906, 34 Stat. 539 (Osage Indians). In each of these prior acts, however, the future interest of the allottees at the expiration of the term fixed was clearly made contingent upon Congress not acting to the contrary.2 3 Thus, where Congress had retained the power to extend the period of the Osage Indians’ tribal ownership, it has been held that the allottees could not prevent this extension based on a claim that they had received vested rights to those minerals. Adams v. Osage Tribe of Indians, 59 F.2d 653

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505 F.2d 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-cheyenne-tribe-v-northern-cheyenne-class-of-allottees-ca9-1974.