In 2008, plaintiffs Amelia Peters Bing-ham and her son, Steven, brought a Takings Clause claim against the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and the Town of Mashpee, seeking just compensation and the return of some of the lands in Massachusetts they say were granted in perpetuity to their ancestors, the South Sea Indians, in deeds from 1665 and 1667.
Plaintiffs styled this claim as a class action on behalf of themselves and all similarly situated descendants of the South Sea Indians, now known as the Mashpee Wampanoag. The Mashpee Wampanoag have been a federally recognized tribe since 2007. 72 Fed.Reg. 8007-01 (Feb. 22, 2007). Plaintiffs do not claim that the Commonwealth or Town directly seized lands from their tribal аncestors. Rather, plaintiffs argue that two Massachusetts statutes enacted in 1869 and 1870 deprived them of their right to hold in perpetuity all of the land currently comprising the Town of Mashpee by removing restraints on alienation and, later, by facilitating the sale of certain lands.
The district court held that the plaintiffs lacked standing and dismissed their elaims against the Commonwealth and Town,
Bingham v. Massachusetts (Bingham
I), No. 08-11770,
We affirm and hold that there is no jurisdiction to hear this case, because even when viewing all factual allegations in plaintiffs’ favor, plaintiffs cannot show they have suffered a personal injury as a result of the challenged state actions. We do not reach the Eleventh Amendment issues, nor
I.
We accept as true the following allegatiоns of fact, as stated in plaintiffs’ complaint and in supporting documentation, and construe them in the light most favorable to plaintiffs.
See Sanchez v. Pereira-Castillo,
Deeds in 1665 and 1667 granted the subject land—substantial portions of the land that currently comprise the Town of Mashpee—to “the South Sea Indians: and their[ ] Children for ever: and not to be sold or given away from them by any one: without all their[] Consents there unto,” In 1685, the General Court of Plymouth Colony “eonfirme[d] said land to the said Indians, to be perpetually to them & their children, as that no part of them shall be granted to or purchased by any English [non-tribal member] whatsoever ... without the consent of all the said Indians.”
See Mashpee Tribe v. Town of Mashpee (Mashpee I),
Plaintiffs’ complaint alleges that these deeds conveyed individual, inheritable rights in the subject lands to the grantees and that these interests passed to plaintiffs as the direct lineal descendants of the South Sea Indians. 2 In support of this contention, plaintiffs listed their predecessors going back five generations. The complaint did not sрecify birth or death dates, details about residency, or their predecessors’ relationship to the South Sea Indians. It explained that “[ajs a general rule,” records prior to the nineteenth century “were not maintained for Indians.”
Between 1685 and 1834, Plymouth Colony, and later the Commonwealth, continually recognized the restraints on аlienation contained in the original deeds as the subject land evolved from an Indian plantation to the “Mashpee Propriety.” In 1834, parts of the subject land became the “District of Mashpee,” but the restraints on alienation in the original deeds endured.
In 1842, the Massachusetts General Court passed a law providing that much of the lаnds in the district would now be held in severalty by proprietors, who included
In 1869, however, the Massachusetts General Court enacted a statute providing, in relevant part, that
[a]ll lands heretofore known as Indian lands, and rightfully held by any Indian in severalty, and all such lands which have been or may be set off to any Indian, shall be and become the property of such person and his heirs in fee simple ... and all Indians shall hereafter have the same rights as other citizens to take, hold, convey and transmit real estate.
1869 Mass. Acts ch. 463, § 2. 4 The law removed restraints on the alienation of the subjeсt land, and plaintiffs allege this was over the objections of a majority of South Sea Indian descendants who attended a hearing on the legislation. 5
A year later, in 1870, the Massachusetts General Court passed a law creating and incorporating the Town of Mashpee. The law provided that “[a]ll common lands ,.. held by the district of Mаrshpee, are hereby transferred to the town of Mashpee, and shall be owned and enjoyed as like property and rights of other towns are owned and enjoyed.” 1870 Mass. Acts eh. 293, § 1. Another provision of the 1870 law stated that upon application of the Town’s selectmen, a superior court justice could, after notice to all interested parties and a hearing, determine that “it is for the interest of said parties that any or all of the common lands of said town, or of the people heretofore known as the Marshpee tribe of Indians, be divided.” M § 6. The justice could then appoint three “discreet, disinterested persons [as] commissioners tо make partition of the same.” Id.
The gravamen of plaintiffs’ complaint is that the 1869 and 1870 statutes “took ownership interests in the subject land that belonged to the plaintiffs without paying just compensation,”
6
in violation of the
Plaintiffs seek the return of “every portion of the subject land which is claimed, held, occupied, and/or used” by defendants, “with the exception of any substantial building structures and any other structures of improvements that serve a critical role in state or town operations.” They also seek fees for the use of land so held or used and just compensation “for the ownership interests in the subject land that were taken from the plaintiffs in 186[9] and 1870.” They do not seek the return of land held by private parties.
On May 6, 2009, after a heаring on the Commonwealth and Town’s separate motions to dismiss, the district court granted the motions and dismissed plaintiffs’ complaint for lack of jurisdiction.
See Bing-ham, I,
On July 2, 2009, the district court denied plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration.
See Bingham II,
II.
We review thе district court’s dismissal for lack of standing de novo. Though we construe the facts and draw reasonable inferences in plaintiffs’ favor, plaintiffs bear the burden of “clearly alleging definite facts to demonstrate that jurisdiction is proper.”
Nulankeyutmonen Nkihtaqmikon v. Impson,
To establish standing under Article III of the U.S. Constitution, plaintiffs “must allege personal injury fairly traceable tо the defendant’s allegedly unlawful conduct and likely to be redressed by the requested relief.”
Hein v. Freedom from Religion Found., Inc.,
The district court correctly held that plaintiffs lack standing because they failed to show a
personal
injury. Plaintiffs must show they had an individual interest in the property rights granted in the seventeenth-century deeds in order to show they were personally injured by the later state actions affecting those property rights. Plaintiffs can do so only if the deeds conveyed to plaintiffs’ individual ancestors discrete property interests that passed through successive generations. Even when viewing all facts in the light
The relevant language in the 1665 deed conveyed the subject lands to “the South Sea Indians: and their[ ] Children for ever: and not to be sold or given away from them by any one: without all their[ ] Consents there unto.” The 1685 grant contained similar material language. In plaintiffs’ favor, we will assume, as the district court did, that the rеference to the “South Sea Indians ... and their[ ] children” is ambiguous. 7
Plaintiffs insist the deed and grant did not convey the lands to the collective members of the tribe in common. Under that interpretation, the ownership of the land would belong to the tribe as a whole, and no individual member would have a personal interest in a particular share оf the property. See N. Newton et. al., Cohen’s Handbook of Federal Indian Law § 16.01[2], at 1037 (2005 ed.). Only the tribe would have standing to sue for any injury to its interests under the deed. Plaintiffs argue the deed must be read as conveying individual interests in the land to individual tribal members.
We need not determine whether the conveyances were to individual tribal members or to the collective tribe, because plaintiffs lack standing under either interpretation. Plaintiffs do not represent the tribe, nor do they claim the capacity to do so. Plaintiffs cannot assert the rights of the tribe, as an entity, simply by styling their claim as a class action on behalf of all tribal descendants. 8
Even assuming arguendo that the deed conveyed discrete property rights to the tribe’s individual members, рlaintiffs still cannot show a personal injury. Plaintiffs have alleged they are direct descendants of South Sea Indian grantees who were the original beneficiaries of the deeds. Plaintiffs have not, however, alleged any facts showing that their ances
Plaintiffs have also failed to allege that any such interests were affected as a result of the 1869 and 1870 acts in ways that resulted in the transfer or loss of ownership of those lands. Nor have thеy pled any facts showing that the loss of any “right” to hold the lands in perpetuity has caused them any injury. Plaintiffs say that “[t]hrough” the 1870 act, between 1870 and the present, many of the subject lands were ultimately conveyed to non-Indians, but a vague allegation of harms occurring over an undefined, 140-year time period is not the kind of concrete, particularized injury required to show standing.
See, e.g., Sutliffe v. Epping Sch. Dist.,
Plaintiffs argue the district court erred when it dismissed their complaint sua sponte on the ground that the Binghams failed to allege sufficient genealogical data to support individual interest standing and they could not assert standing on behalf of the tribe. The Town’s motion to dismiss had argued only that the tribe, not individual tribal members, had standing to sue for injuries to property interests granted in the seventeenth-century deeds. The Town did not address, until its reply brief to the motion for reconsideration, the issue of lack of individual interest standing.
Plaintiffs’ motion to reconsider and to amend their complaint to add the names of ancestors going back to the 1665 and 1667 deeds, dates of birth and death for previous generations, and the names of ancestors who were grantees under the deeds would, as we have held, not have changed the outcome. In light of that futility, there was no error in denial of reconsideration and the motion for leave to amend.
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. Our review of a motion to dismiss on grounds of standing is ordinarily confined to the complaint and to "further particularized allegations of fact deemed supportive of plaintiff’s standing.”
Warth v. Seldin,
. Because plaintiffs claim property rights based on formal deeds they say the Pilgrims granted, we understand plaintiffs’ claim as not relying on the theory of aboriginal title.
See
N. Newton et al.,
Cohen's Handbook of Federal Indian Law
§ 15.04[2], at 969-70 & 969 n.28 (2005 ed.) (describing different ways in which Indiаn tribes and individual Indians have obtained interests in real property). Aboriginal title (also called "original Indian title”) derives from the tribe’s continuous possession of lands and is a “right of occupancy-in the Indian tribes ... good against all but the sovereign,”
Oneida Indian Nation v. Cnty. of Oneida,
. We use the term "Indians," as opposed to "Native Americans,” for the sake of consistenсy with the language of the original deeds and relevant statutes.
. The 1869 act, entitled "An Act to Enfranchise the Indians of the Commonwealth,” was a general recognition statute that also conferred full citizenship on ”[a]ll Indians ... within this Commonwealth.” Section 1 of the law declared all Indians "to be citizens of the Commonwealth, and entitled to all thе rights, privileges and immunities, and subject to all the duties and liabilities to which citizens of this Commonwealth are entitled or subject.” 1869 Mass. Acts ch. 463, § 1.
. The 1869 act permitted but did not require any Indian to alienate his lands. 1869 Mass. Acts ch. 463, § 2. Some have viewed the act as beneficial to the Indians because it added to the bundle of property rights the same rights of аlienation as others held.
See, e.g., James,
.Plaintiffs did not assert claims under any other specific constitutional provisions or statutes applicable to Indian tribes, such as the Indian Commerce Clause, U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 3, or the Indian Nonintercourse Act (INA), 25 U.S.C. § 177. Plaintiffs have also consistently portrayed the instruments at issue as deeds, not treaties.
Plaintiffs' complaint cursorily asserted that the Town and Commonwealth had "violated the plaintiffs’ rights pursuant to federal common law and federal Indian policies throughtheir ongoing claim, holding, and/or use arid occupancy of pоrtions of the subject land.” That language is too vague to state a claim on these grounds under any standard.
. We bypass the Commonwealth's arguments that our precedents involving these instruments conclusively interpreted this language. The Commonwealth cites
Mashpee
I,
Indeed, those earlier cases concerning the Mashpee Tribe’s claims to the subject lands at issue here concerned different issues entirely.
Mashpee I
primarily discussed claims under the INA asserted by the “Mashpee Tribe” as a collective tribe. Plaintiffs’ primary theory was that the 1869 and 1870 acts lifted restraints on alienation in violation of the INA, which permits only the federal government to do so.
See New Seabury Corp.,
. Indeed, the tribe and its authorized representatives have repeatedly and strenuously disavowed plaintiffs' suit. In April 2008, the tribe entered into an agreement with the Town in which it received certain Town lands in exchange for waiving all claims to property located within the Town. On November 5, 2008, the tribe further distanced itself from plaintiffs' suit, formally resolving at a tribal council meeting that “the Tribal Counsel condemns the land claim action brought by Steven Bingham and Amelia Bingham.”
