Albert Pinkham and other Indian plaintiffs appeal the district court’s dismissal of their action against Lewiston Orchards Irrigation District for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1353. We affirm.
PACTS
Plaintiffs are enrolled members of the Nez Perce Tribe of Indians and beneficial owners of an undivided share of allotted land held in trust by the United States on the Nez Perce Indian Reservation of Idaho. According to their second amended complaint, plaintiffs brought an action for damages caused by the flooding of water onto plaintiffs’ allotted land in April 1959, and again around April 24,1984. These alleged floods occurred because a canal carrying water across plaintiffs’ allotted land broke. The canal is owned by the United States, and used and maintained by Lewiston Orchards Irrigation District (LOID). Plaintiffs alleged that defendants “have been grossly negligent in the construction and maintenance of the [LOID] canal bisecting Plaintiffs’ land, in a manner amounting to outrageous conduct.” The complaint added that “there has been a trespass upon Plaintiffs’ land which has effectively acted as a taking of said land without just compensation within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment.” The complaint concluded that “[a]s a result and proximate cause of defendants’ gross negligence and outrageous conduct, Plaintiffs have been injured in their property in an amount in excess of $10,000.00, with damages to be proven at trial.” Plaintiffs asserted that the district court had subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1353.
The United States and LOID separately filed a motion to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1). The district court granted the mo *186 tions and subsequently denied plaintiffs’ motion to reconsider. Plaintiffs timely appeal. The United States has since been dismissed from the appeal.
ANALYSIS
Subject matter jurisdiction presents a question of law, which we review
de novo. Peter Starr Prod. Co. v. Twin Continental Films,
Title 28 U.S.C. § 1853 provides, in relevant part:
The district court shall have original jurisdiction of any civil action involving the right of any person, in whole or in part of Indian blood or descent, to any allotment of land under any Act of Congress or treaty.
Plaintiffs specifically draw our attention to a related provision, which is part of the General Allotment Act:
All persons who are in whole or in part of Indian blood or descent who are entitled to an allotment of land under any law of Congress, or who claim to be so entitled to land under any allotment Act or under any grant made by Congress, or who claim to have been unlawfully denied or excluded from any allotment or any parcel of land to which they claim to be lawfully entitled by virtue of any Act of Congress, may commence and prosecute or defend any action, suit, or proceeding in relation to their right thereto in the proper district court of the United States[.]
25 U.S.C. § 345.
The Supreme Court has reasoned that section 345 grants district courts subject-matter jurisdiction over two types of cases: “suits seeking the issuance of an allotment ... and suits involving ‘the interest and rights of the Indian in his allotment or patent after he has acquired it.’ ”
United States v. Mottaz,
Plaintiffs rely heavily on
Coring v. United States,
*187 In contrast to plaintiffs’ claim here, however, the claim in Loring did not sound in tort. Instead, it arose under federal statutes and regulations that specifically protected Indian allotments against improvident grants of rights-of-way. Because such provisions “gave rise to rights appurtenant to the allotted lands,” federal jurisdiction under sections 345 and 1353 existed “to entertain an action brought to preserve these rights.” Id. at 651. An essential element in Loring was thus preservation of the Indian’s ownership of the allotted lands and rights appurtenant to the allotment. The consequential damages caused by LOID’s alleged negligence and tortious invasion does not amount to rights appurtenant to the plaintiffs’ allotted land. Contrary to plaintiffs’ contentions, Loring is not the most analogous to the present controversy. Loring cannot stand for the proposition that the district court has federal jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ tort action for damages due to flooding on their allotted lands.
Another case relied upon by plaintiffs,
Big Spring v. United States Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Before reaching that conclusion, we discussed the government’s sovereign immunity, reasoning that section 345 “is not limited to actions to compel issuance of an allotment; it permits actions to define or protect an allotment once issued.”
Id.
at 616. Because plaintiffs’ claims sought to compel issuance of missing mineral rights appurtenant to their allotment, the court held that “section 345 applies in this case to waive the United States’ sovereign immunity.”
Id.
This holding in
Big Spring
has recently been upset by the Supreme Court. In
Mottaz,
the Supreme Court made clear that section 345 waives the government’s immunity only with regard to these cases seeking an original allotment, and not those involving the interests and rights in an allotment after it has been acquired.
The other cases relied upon by the plaintiffs also involved rights related to ownership of title, or other rights appurtenant to title in allotted land.
See Christensen,
Of critical importance in deciding whether jurisdiction exists under section 345 for protection of interests appurtenant to the allotment are the claims advanced by plaintiffs. In
Scholder v. United States,
As to the issue of the Bureau’s decision to expend funds, we concluded in Scholder that the consent given by the government to be sued in section 345 did not encompass the plaintiffs’ challenge to the expenditure. 2 We distinguished Pierce, reasoning that plaintiffs were “not claiming denial of a right acquired appurtenant to their allotment.” Id. The second issue before us involved reimbursement charges arising out of the expenditures, which were to be allocated on a per-acre basis against all irrigable land within the project. Id. at 1129. We reasoned:
Irrigation construction charges levied against Indian land are not collectible until after the Indian title to the land has been extinguished ... The deferred charges amount to a lien on the Indian’s allotment, reducing its sale value.
Id. Because the imposition of these charges affected the Indians’ interests and rights to their allotment, we concluded that the plaintiffs could challenge the validity of the charges under section 345. Id.
As in the first issue in Scholder, the claims advanced by plaintiffs here do not involve the denial of rights appurtenant to their allotment. Plaintiffs’ allegations of tortious conduct simply cannot be construed as an action to protect or preserve an allotment once issued, or to determine rights appurtenant to an allotment. 3 Instead, it is a negligence claim for damages from flood waters trespassing onto their allotted land. 4 Because section 345, and its companion provision 28 U.S.C. § 1353, provide no subject-matter jurisdiction for such *189 a tort claim, we affirm the district court’s dismissal. 5
CONCLUSION
The Supreme Court has construed section 345 to allow federal jurisdiction over suits by Indian allottees concerning their rights and interests to an allotment after it has been acquired against parties other than the United States.
Mottaz,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Specifically, the Supreme Court reasoned that "to the extent that section 345 involves a waiver of federal immunity, as opposed to a grant of subject-matter jurisdiction, that section ‘authorizes, and provides governmental consent for, only actions
for
allotments.’ ”
Mottaz,
.As with
Big Spring,
discussed
supra,
we note that
Scholder
discussed § 345 in the context of whether the United States had waived its sovereign immunity.
Scholder
reasoned that § 345 was a limited consent by the United States to be sued.
. We do not hold that tortious conduct, as a matter of law, is necessarily unable to implicate rights appurtenant to an allotment under section 345. But plaintiffs’ contention that the two alleged floods at issue in this case amount to a denial of equitable title, for instance, is wholly insubstantial and obviously frivolous. See note 5, infra.
. The Eighth Circuit recently discussed jurisdiction over trespass actions under section 345. In
United States v. Turtle Mountain Housing Authority,
. An allotment action under section 345 does not require the defendant to be a state actor. "In fact, § 345 has been used by Indians to sue parties other than the United States to quiet title to land originally given under various allotment schemes.”
Mottaz,
We would still dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction even if,
arguendo,
plaintiffs had properly pleaded an inverse condemnation against LOID as a quasi-governmental entity under the fourteenth amendment. The fifth amendment’s proscription against takings without just compensation is made applicable to the states by the fourteenth amendment.
Webb’s Fabulous Pharmacies, Inc. v. Beckwith,
To constitute a compensable taking by inverse condemnation where no permanent flooding of land is involved, proof of
frequent
and
inevitably recurring
inundation due to governmental action is required.
See United States v. Cress,
The two floodings alleged by plaintiffs in their complaint are plainly insufficient to amount to a constitutional taking.
See Fromme v. United States,
Ordinarily, district courts will assume jurisdiction if a complaint alleges that a governmental body has taken property without just compensation in violation of the fifth and fourteenth amendments.
See Mosher v. City of Phoenix,
