Norwest v. Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde

5 Am. Tribal Law 109
CourtGrand Ronde Tribal Court
DecidedOctober 6, 2004
DocketNo. C-01-03-001
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Am. Tribal Law 109 (Norwest v. Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Grand Ronde Tribal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norwest v. Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde, 5 Am. Tribal Law 109 (grrondect 2004).

Opinion

[110]*110ORDER REMANDING ENROLLMENT COMMITTEE DETERMINATION

KATHARINE ENGLISH, Chief Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION; BACKGROUND

The procedural setting of this case is both somewhat unusual and somewhat complicated.1 Identifying the issue before the Court thus requires more extensive discussion than might be true in many cases.

Petitioner appeals from the Enrollment Committee’s decision to deny her application for enrollment in the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon (Tribe). The basis of the Enrollment Committee’s (Committee) decision is not entirely clear. The letter from the Committee to Petitioner simply says that her application is denied “due to the fact that the provisions of the amended constitution have not been met.” Other documents in the record, however, indicate that her application was denied because she does not have a parent who was enrolled in the Tribe at the time of her birth or at the time of her application. In addition, another document adds that Petitioner’s application was denied because she was “born during Termination years.”

On July 27, 1999, at an election by eligible Tribal members, an amendment was approved that altered, and in certain respects increased, the requirements for membership in the ’Tribe. The amendment later was approved by the Secretary of the Interior in September 1999, and it became effective. Among the new provisions was a requirement that an applicant have a parent who was a Tribal member at the time of his birth.

After her application for enrollment was denied, Petitioner sought judicial review in this Court, appearing pro se. After the Tribe complained that it could not tell what claim(s) Petitioner was raising, the parties and the Court conferred, and the Court determined that Petitioner’s claims would “be framed more clearly” as follows:

1. Petitioner/Applicant alleges that his/ her constitutional rights were violated, and that the Enrollment Committee’s decision was arbitrary and capricious because the Enrollment Committee retroactively applied the wrong version of the Tribal Constitution in making their enrollment decision. Petitioner/Applicant claims that the Constitution in effect at the time Petitioner submitted [her] application should have been applied to [her] application.
2. Petitioner/Applicant alleges that the Tribe’s Constitutional Amendment is unconstitutional under federal law and the application of the Amendment is arbitrary and capricious because it denies membership to all new applicants born between 1954 and 1983 (Termination).

In earlier decisions, this Court has rejected claims indistinguishable from the second one identified above. See, e.g., In the Matter of Daniel Miller, Case No. C-00-07-913, 2001 WL 36155772, 3 Am. Tribal Law 264 (2001) (rejecting claims, and finding that “many persons born during Termination have been deemed to have a parent on the rolls—the roll as it existed at the time of Termination, and w'hich was then earned over to the time of Restoration”). Thus, as to that precise issue raised by Petitioner, Miller controls and Petitioner cannot prevail.

[111]*111Recent Court of Appeals cases also may bear on the outcome here. In Ballini v. Confederated Tribes of Grand, Ronde, App Case No. A-01-08-020, 2003 WL 25756368, 4 Am. Tribal Law 107 (2003), the Court of Appeals held that the provisions of the 1999 constitutional amendment affecting the enrollment requirements permissibly could be applied to applicants who submitted their applications before the effective date of the amendment. In a subsequent unpublished decision—relied on by the Tribe in this case—the Court “considered and rejected [the applicant’s] contention that she filed a complete application by June 1, 1999, the deadline for consideration of an enrollment applicaiimi under the pre-amended version of the enrollment ordinance.” Tywman v. Confederated, Tribes of Grand Ronde, App Case No. A-10-08-008 (2004) (unpublished). Because she had not done so, the Court relied on Ballini and upheld the denial of her membership application. In this case, the Tribe argues that Tywman controls. “As in Tywman,” the Tribe contends, “Petitioner did not file a complete application by the June 1, 1999, deadline for consideration of her application under the pre-amendment enrollment requirements.”

Yet another recent Court of Appeals decision may be pertinent here. After Petitioner filed her petition and clarified the issues she wished to raise, in Loy v. Confederated Tribes of Grand, Ronde, App Case No. A-01-08-024, 2003 WL 25756096, 4 Am. Tribal Law 132 (2003), the Court of Appeals affirmed this Court, on a different basis. A 1997 Enrollment Ordinance required that, before an enrollment application could be considered, one year must have passed from the time the applicant relinquished enrollment in another tribe. That requirement had been applied in Loy’s case, but the Court of Appeals held that the provision of the Ordinance was invalid because it was adopted when the Tribal Constitution contained no such requirement.

The Tribal Council did not, and does not, have the authority to create by ordinance membership requirements inconsistent with those expressly defined in the Constitution. The Tribal Council could no more add the one-year waiting period to the membership requirements than it could change the Indian blood quantum the Constitution requires.

hoy opinion at 5, 4 Am. Tribal Law at 135.

Because the one-year waiting period was not valid, Loy “did not have to wait the one-year period to have her application considered by the Enrollment Committee.” Id. Since the Committee made her wait, however, they considered her application after the 1999 constitutional amendment and under its terms, rather than before the date of the amendment. Because the Committee should have considered the application “under the requirements of the 1984 Tribal Constitution and the 1997 Enrollment Ordinance,” the Court remanded the case to the Committee. The Committee was told “not [to] apply the one-year waiting period.” Id. at 6, 4 Am. Tribal Law at 135.

Petitioner’s application in this case was dated May 20, 1999. It was received by the Tribe on May 27, 1999. In the application, Petitioner admitted that she was enrolled in another Tribe, specifically the Klamath Tribe. In the record submitted to this Court, immediately adjacent to Petitioner’s application is a copy of Petitioner’s birth certificate, her Oregon identification card, and her social security card. Also in the record is a Tribal form, noting that Petitioner’s application did not include all the required “birth documentation.” Specifically, her “mother’s birth certificate [112]*112[was needed] to prove decendency [sic ].”2 A decree regarding the adoption of Petitioner’s mother was received by the Tribe on June 24, 1999, apparently having been sent by the Klamath Tribe. The record also includes a copy of Petitioner’s mother’s birth certifícate. It is not clear when it was received or who sent it.

As noted, Petitioner acknowledged on her application that she was a member of the Klamath Tribe.

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Related

Ballini v. Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde
4 Am. Tribal Law 107 (Grand Ronde Court of Appeals, 2003)
Loy v. Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde
4 Am. Tribal Law 132 (Grand Ronde Court of Appeals, 2003)
Miller v. Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde
3 Am. Tribal Law 264 (Grand Ronde Tribal Court, 2001)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Am. Tribal Law 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norwest-v-confederated-tribes-of-grand-ronde-grrondect-2004.