Rosales v. United States

89 Fed. Cl. 565, 2009 U.S. Claims LEXIS 321, 2009 WL 3286594
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedOctober 7, 2009
DocketNos. 08-512 L, 98-860 L
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 89 Fed. Cl. 565 (Rosales v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosales v. United States, 89 Fed. Cl. 565, 2009 U.S. Claims LEXIS 321, 2009 WL 3286594 (uscfc 2009).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

BLOCK, Judge.

Two cases before this court, Walter J. Rosales and Karen Toggery v. United States, No. 08-512 L. (“Rosales X”), and Walter Rosales, et al. v. United States, No. 98-860 L. (“Rosales VI ”), arise out of a common set of facts and implicate similar principles of law. For the purposes of judicial economy, the court addresses both cases in this single opinion.

Both cases stem from internecine disputes among the members and purported members of the Jamul Indian Village (“Village”), a federally-recognized tribal government.1 The two complaints before this court, in Rosales VI and Rosales X, represent but the most iterations of plaintiffs’ persistent attempts — in the face of repeated dismissals and unfavorable judgments over the course of fifteen years — to invalidate a series of tribal elections and to wrest from the Village the beneficial ownership of two parcels of tribal land. Plaintiffs have litigated or sought to litigate these same and related issues in no fewer than fourteen legal actions brought before tribal tribunals, administrative boards, and federal courts in California and the District of Columbia, all without success.2 Indeed, what this court previously [572]*572observed in Franklin Sav. Corp. v. United States, 56 Fed.Cl. 720, 721 (2003), seems doubly apt here: “Despite vainly prosecuting myriad legal claims in every conceivable forum and fruitlessly propounding inventive and novel legal theories, plaintiffs have continually stared down the face of defeat, personifying Mason Cooley’s aphorism, ‘if you at first don’t succeed, try again, and then try something else.’ ” Plaintiffs’ current attempt to defy their fate — an attempt this court strongly admonishes plaintiffs to make their last — miscarries again.

The court hereby grants defendant’s motion to dismiss the complaint in Rosales X, and dismisses, on its own motion, the complaint in Rosales VI.

I. BACKGROUND

The Village is a tribal governmental entity of the Kumeyaay Indians, which Congress recognized3 pursuant to section 16 of the Indian Reorganization Act (“IRA”) of 1934, 25 U.S.C. § 476. Rosales VIII at 122. The Village is located in Jamul, an unincorporated community in San Diego County, California. See id. The Village came into being in 1981, after twenty individuals petitioned the Bureau of Indian Affairs to organize as a community of “half-bloods”4 pursuant to IRA and submitted a proposed “Village Constitution.”5 See id. (citing Rosales I at 159-60). Of the twenty-three individuals eligible to vote on the proposed Constitution, sixteen did so, all in favor. Id. (citing Rosales I at 160). The Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs approved the Village Constitution on July 7, 1981. Id. This original constitution made tribal membership available only to individuals with no less than “1/2 degree California Indian blood quantum.” Id.

Plaintiffs in Rosales X, Walter Rosales and Karen Toggery, are Native American residents of San Diego County, California, of one-half or more degree of California Indian blood. Rosales X, Compl. ¶ 1. Of the twelve plaintiffs named in the original complaint in Rosales VI, only two remain, Joe Comacho (also a Native American resident of San Diego County, Rosales VI, 3d Am. Compl. ¶ 1) and Walter Rosales; all other named plaintiffs have either died or withdrawn consent for suit since counsel filed the original complaint.6

[573]*573 A. The Underlying Dispute

The path to the instant cases began in 1994, when a faction led by then Vice-Chairman Jane Dumas (“Dumas Faction”) held an election to recall and replace four Village officials7 who had been elected in 1992 (“Incumbent Faction”). Rosales VIII at 122-23. The Superintendent and Area Director of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (“the Bureau”) refused to uphold the 1994 recall election because the Dumas Faction had failed to comply with the Village Constitution’s procedural requirements. Id. at 123 (citing Rosales I at 160). Had the Bureau upheld the recall election, plaintiff Karen Toggery would have been the Secretary-Treasurer of the Village. Id. at 123 n. 3. Instead, the Bureau continued to recognize the Incumbent Faction. Id. at 123. In 1995, each faction held its own separate election, and, as a result of its respective contest, claimed to have the authority to lead the Village. Id. The Dumas Faction’s disputes of the 1994 and 1995 elections trickled through the Department of the Interior’s administrative review process, ultimately coming before the Department of the Interi- or Board of Indian Appeals (“IBIA”). Rosales I at 158-59. IBIA could not determine whether either faction’s 1995 election was valid, thus leaving the Incumbent Faction in control, because the 1992 election that had brought them to power was the most recent unchallenged election. Rosales VIII at 123; Rosales I at 167.

The Dumas Faction, including Mr. Rosales, Ms. Toggery, and others, continued to challenge tribal election results at IBIA. Next, they contested the propriety of the Village’s 1996 “secretarial” election, concerning a proposed amendment to the Village Constitution that would reduce the blood quantum requirement for Village membership from one-half to one-quarter. See Rosales II, 34 I.B.I.A. at 51-52. The Village had voted in favor of, and the Deputy Commissioner of Indian Affairs had ultimately approved, that amendment. Id. IBIA dismissed the Dumas Faction’s challenge for being procedurally defective, see id. at 51-54, evidently to plaintiffs’ profound dismay.

Plaintiffs’ grievance over the results of these tribal elections, in particular, the lowered blood quantum requirement for Village membership and plaintiffs’ exclusion from membership in the Village (i.e., the tribal government), would set off what is now a fifteen-year campaign of legal challenges.

In their suits against defendant United States, plaintiffs have advanced two theories for relief, alleging defendant’s breach of various fiduciary and trust duties. The first theory is founded upon plaintiffs’ challenge to the validity of tribal elections and the legitimacy of the current Village membership, while the second rests upon plaintiffs’ claim to beneficial ownership of two parcels of tribal land. The various complaints and amended complaints filed in the two cases before this court have invoked both theories for relief.

B. The Instant Litigation

1. Rosales v. United States, No. 08-512 (“Rosales X ”)

Before the court are two iterations of plaintiffs’ complaint: the original complaint, filed on July 15, 2008, and a proposed [574]*574Amended Complaint, filed on June 24, 2009 along with plaintiffs’ pending motion to amend and to consolidate this case with Rosales VI. Rosales X, Pis.’ June 24, 2009 Mot. to Amend. (“Pis.’ June Mot.”). The Amended Complaint adds nine pages (and nine numbered paragraphs), but is substantively identical

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Bluebook (online)
89 Fed. Cl. 565, 2009 U.S. Claims LEXIS 321, 2009 WL 3286594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosales-v-united-states-uscfc-2009.