MEMORANDUM-DECISION AND ORDER
The Cayuga Indian Nation and five chiefs of that tribe seek a declaration of their current ownership of and right to possess a 64,015 acre tract of land in central New York State, an award of fair rental value for the almost 200 years during which they have been out of possession, and other monetary and protective relief. The Cayugas allege that this tract is reserved for their tribe by treaties with both the United States and the State of New York, and has been subject to a restraint against alienation under the Nonintercourse Act, now codified at 25 U.S.C. § 177. Though the tract was conveyed to the State through transactions in 1795 and 1807, and thereafter conveyed, in large part, to private purchasers, the Cayugas claim that under federal law their right to possession has never been extinguished.
This suit is one of a recent series of land claims brought by eastern Indian tribes in the federal courts. 1 Such claims have imposed upon the courts the painful task of determining whether, and how, federal commitments to tribes are to be enforced against states, against municipalities, and against innocent non-Indians who have for generations considered the land their own. Most of the claims, like this one, challenge the validity of conveyances by the tribes which occurred after the adoption of the Constitution, and after the enactment of the first Nonintercourse Act. Although as of this date only one such claim has reached a final judgment for the plaintiffs, Oneida Indian Nation of New York v. County of Oneida, 70-CV-35 (N.D.N.Y. Oct. 5, 1981) (Port, J.), appeals docketed, (2d Cir. June 11, 1982; June 24, 1982), others have withstood a variety of challenges to the jurisdiction of the court and the legal sufficiency of the complaint.
For example, it has been established that a claim asserting a possessory right conferred by treaty and protected by the Nonintercourse Act is within the subject matter jurisdiction of the federal court,
Oneida Indian Nation of New York v.
County
of Oneida,
Further instruction on the maintainability of tribal land claims has recently appeared in a Second Circuit decision reviewing the dismissal of one such action by this Court.
Oneida Indian Nation of New York v. State of New York,
Presently before the Court are further challenges to jurisdiction and the legal sufficiency of a tribal land claim. These challenges are raised by means of (1) a joint motion by the Counties of Cayuga and Seneca, Miller Brewing Company, Consolidated Rail Corporation, and New York State Electric and Gas Corporation (hereinafter “the non-state defendants”), who appear individually and as representatives of the defendant class, to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Rules 12(b)(1) and (6), Fed.R.Civ.P., and (2) a motion by the State of New York and Governor Carey (hereinafter “the state defendants”), also individually and as representatives of the defendant class, to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Rules 12(b)(1), (2) and (6), Fed.R.Civ.P.
The arguments raised by the defendants in support of their motions are, to a large extent, variants of arguments presented to this and other courts in previous tribal land claim litigation. Eg., sovereign immunity, nonjusticiability, statutes of limitations, geographic nonapplicability of the Nonintercourse Act, equitable defenses. These have invariably been rejected in such cases and must be rejected in this case as well. The defendants have advanced other arguments herein which lead the Court into less well-charted territory. Eg., unavailability of an implied right-of-action under the Nonintercourse Act or of a federal common law remedy, abatement of statutory claims. However, for the reasons stated below, these relatively new contentions do not warrant dismissal of the complaint.
I. THE PARTIES
A. The Plaintiffs
The plaintiff Cayuga Indian Nation of New York asserts that it is an Indian Nation or Tribe recognized by the United States and principally situated in New York State, though without a reservation. Its members maintain that they are the “direct successors in interest” to the Cayuga Nation of the Six Nation Iroquois Confederacy which, until the acts complained of in this suit, had occupied the subject land in New York State since time immemorial. They state that tribal relations have been continuously maintained to the present time.
By Memorandum-Decision and Order of November 9, 1981, the Court granted a motion by the Seneca-Cayuga Tribe of Oklahoma to intervene as a plaintiff in this suit, pursuant to Rule 24, Fed.R.Civ.P. The Seneca-Cayuga Tribe had established sufficient interest in the action for the purpose of *1303 intervention by their allegations that, at the time of the challenged transactions, it had been “incorporated within and was a part of the Cayuga Nation of Indians.” According to the Intervenor, the Cayugas split into two branches after they lost their Original Reservation to New York State. One branch settled in Western New York State, and is, apparently, the branch represented by the Cayuga Indian Nation of New York. The Intervenor Seneca-Cayuga Tribe purports to represent the other, larger branch of the Cayugas, which had moved first to Ohio, then to “Indian Territory” (now Oklahoma). The Order permitting intervention does not impair the right of the plaintiff Cayuga Indian Nation of New York or the defendants to challenge the Intervenor’s entitlement to a share of the recovery from this lawsuit, if any is ultimately awarded. 2
B. The Defendants
The initial complaint in this action, filed November 19, 1980, named numerous defendants sued individually and as representatives of a proposed class of “all other persons who assert an interest in any portion of the Original Reservation lands.... ” Complaint ¶ 25. Those named included the Governor of New York, numerous administrative agencies, authorities and officials, the Counties of Cayuga and Seneca, various local governmental entities and officials, and various commercial and individual landowners. Plaintiffs have estimated the number of persons asserting an interest in the land as exceeding 7,000 individuals and entities.
On December 1, 1980, the plaintiffs commenced a second action,
Cayuga Indian Nation v. William J. Kirk, et a1,
80-CV-960, asserting the same legal claim against twelve individual owners of land in the contested area. By
Memorandum-Decision and Order
of March 25,1981,
By that same Memorandum-Decision and Order, as amended, this Court certified a defendant class, pursuant to Rule 23(b)(1)(B), Fed.R.Civ.P., for the purpose of litigating certain specified but key issues in this lawsuit. After notice to the class and a hearing, at which several individuals and a corporation lodged objections to the certification, all objections were overruled and a motion to decertify the class was denied. Order of March 31, 1982. A list of those named defendants who have been designated as representatives of the class for the purpose of this motion appears in the title of this decision.
II. FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
Plaintiffs allege that from time immemorial until the late eighteenth century the Cayuga Nation owned and occupied over 3,000,000 acres in what is now central New York State. They produce as an exhibit to their complaint in 80-CV-930 a map indicating a strip of land, about 50 miles wide, running from Lake Ontario to the Pennsylvania border; the strip is labeled “Cayuga Aboriginal Land Area”. The present suit is not an assertion of possessory rights to the entire Aboriginal Land Area, but to a portion thereof which was purportedly reserved for the Cayugas, then lost, in the course of the events alleged below.
During the colonial period in our history, the British Crown pursued a policy of protecting Indian tribes in the peaceful protection of their land. In furtherance of this policy, a treaty was concluded in 1768 at Fort Stanwix, establishing a boundary between the American colonies and the Six Nations — an Indian confederation comprised of the Oneida, Tuscarora, Mohawk, Onondaga, Cayuga and Seneca Nations. Plaintiffs state that a portion of this boundary corresponded to a portion of the eastern boundary of the Cayuga aboriginal territory.
*1304 At the conclusion of the American Revolution, Congress assumed authority over relations with Indians, pursuant to Article IX, clause 4 of the Articles of Confederation. 3 In exercise of its new authority, and allegedly to promote peaceful relations with the Indian tribes, Congress issued a Proclamation in 1783 which reiterated its “sole and exclusive”, but qualified, right to regulate trade and manage affairs with Indians. In addition, it prohibited the purchase of or settlement on certain Indians’ lands without the express authority and direction of the federal government.
The following year, federal commissioners met with the Six Nations and concluded the Treaty of Fort Stanwix, 7 Stat. 15 (1784). Article II of the Treaty delineated the boundaries of the Six Nations, including the boundary of the Cayuga Nation.
Notwithstanding the federal restrictions under the Articles of Confederation, the Proclamation of 1783 and the 1784 Treaty of Fort Stanwix, the State of New York concluded a treaty with the Cayuga Indian Nation on February 25,1789 in Albany; the Cayugas thereby relinquished all of their lands to New York, reserving for their own tribal use the 64,015 acres that is the subject of this action. This remaining area, referred to by the Cayugas as the “Original Reservation”, is depicted on the map attached to the complaint as two swaths of land on the eastern and western shores at the northern end of Cayuga Lake.
Less than a week later, on March 2,1789, the United States Government under the Constitution commenced.
See, Oneida Indian Nation of New York v. State of New York,
In 1790, Congress enacted the first in a series of Trade and Intercourse Acts, Act of July 22, 1790, ch. 33, 1 Stat. 137, pursuant to Congress’ authority under Article I, § 8, clause 3 of the Constitution. Section four of that Act constituted the first Nonintercourse Act. It provided:
.. . That no sale of lands made by any Indians or any nation or tribe of Indians within the United States, shall be valid to any person or persons, or to any state, whether having the right of pre-emption to such lands or not, unless the same shall be made or duly executed at some public treaty, held under the authority of the United States.
The Trade and Intercourse Act of 1790, which included the above-quoted Nonintercourse Act, was a temporary measure, and expired in 1793. It was replaced by the Trade and Intercourse Act of 1793, Act of March 1, 1793, ch. 19, 1 Stat. 329, which in Section 8, contained a revised Nonintercourse Act:
... That no purchase or grant of lands, or of any title or claim thereto, from any Indians or nation or tribe of Indians, within the bounds of the United States, shall be of any validity in law or equity, unless the same be made by a treaty or convention entered into pursuant to the Constitution....
The Act went on to establish penalties for its violation, and to carve certain exceptions to its coverage. The “non-alienability clause” set forth above has remained substantially the same through successive reenactments of the Act, and is now codified at 25 U.S.C. § 177.
The Cayugas next state that on November 11, 1794, the Six Nations concluded another treaty with the United States at Canandaigua. This treaty, 7 Stat. 44, acknowledged the Original Reservation retained by the Cayugas through their treaty of 1789 with New York State, and contained a promise by the United States that the land would remain theirs until the Cayugas “chose to sell the same to the people of *1305 the United States who have the right to purchase.”
We are then told that on June 16, 1795, William Bradford, then Attorney General of the United States, issued an opinion on the question of whether the State of New York had a right to purchase land from the Six Nations or from any of the individual tribes without the participation of the federal government. The Attorney General concluded that, under the Nonintercourse Act of 1793, no sale of land by an Indian tribe was valid, nor could the claims of the New York Indians be extinguished, except by a treaty entered into by the federal government.
On July 27 of that same year, however, while the Nonintercourse Act of 1793 was still in effect, a treaty was entered into at Cayuga Ferry, New York, by which New York State acquired the entire Cayuga reservation except for a three mile parcel on the eastern shore of Cayuga Lake. As consideration, the state agreed to pay the Cayuga Nation $1,800 annually in perpetuity.
Plaintiffs allege that the treaty negotiations were conducted by state officials without the consent and approbation of the federal government. A federal official, Israel Chapin, was among those who signed the treaty on July 27 as a witness, but he purportedly informed the Secretary of War Pickering shortly thereafter that he had attended the treaty signing as a private individual and not as a commissioner representing the United States. 4
The Nonintercourse Act was re-enacted in 1796, Act of May 19, 1796, ch. 30,1 Stat. 469, § 12; in 1799, Act of March 3,1799, ch. 46, 1 Stat. 743 § 12; and in 1802, Act of March 30,1802, ch. 13, 2 Stat. 139 § 12. In 1807, during the effective period of the 1802 Act, New York State purchased the remaining three mile parcel held by the Cayugas for $4,800. Plaintiffs allege that this conveyance, too, was without the consent and approbation of the federal government.
III. PLAINTIFFS’CLAIM
Plaintiffs have styled their suit “a defendant class action to declare plaintiffs’ current ownership of and right to possess certain lands in the State of New York ... the right to which is conferred by federal law and which is subject to restrictions against alienation.” 5 Complaint ¶ 1. Their claim for relief assertedly arises under Article IX of the Articles of Confederation; the Proclamation of 1783; the Treaty of Fort Stanwix (1784); the Treaty of Canandaigua (1794); Article I, Section 8 of the United States Constitution (the Commerce Clause); 25 U.S.C. § 177 and its predecessor, the 1790 Nonintercourse Act, Article 37 of the 1777 New York Constitution, and the common law. Elsewhere in the Complaint, plaintiffs add that their title is protected by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. Complaint ¶ 49. 6 With respect to the common law *1306 bases for their claim, references are made in plaintiffs’ papers to “ejectment”, “trespass”, “waste” and “conversion”, either as analogous forms of action or as indices of damages.
The Seneca-Cayugas, in their Amended Complaint in Intervention, at 2, invoke 42 U.S.C. § 1983 as a further statutory basis for the action.
As is apparent, the plaintiffs are not specifying a single source for their substantive possessory right, or a single source for their right of action. However, it may be noted here that the particular theory of plaintiffs’ case which has been the focus of argument and is the focus of this decision is that plaintiffs’ substantive right to the subject land has been confirmed by federal and state treaties, and has been subject to the restraint against alienation in the Nonintercourse Act; that the right to maintain this action is derived from the Nonintercourse Act itself or from federal common law.
The relief sought by plaintiffs is (1) a declaration of their current ownership and right to possess the land in question; (2) an order restoring the plaintiffs to possession of the land and ejecting the defendants; (3) an accounting of all taxes paid on the land from 1795 to the present; (4) trespass damages in the amount of the fair rental value of the land since plaintiffs’ dispossession; (5) establishment of a fund, comprised of all proceeds of any sales of the land in issue, for the satisfaction of trespass damages; (6) establishment of a fund, comprised of all tax proceeds collected by defendant counties for the land, for the satisfaction of trespass damages; (7) restitution for the value of all timber, oil, gas, coal, or other matter of value which has been extracted or removed from the land; and (8) establishment of a fund comprised of all future proceeds from the extraction or removal of the above natural resources.
IV. SUBJECT-MATTER JURISDICTION
The initial complaint invokes federal jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1337 and 1362. Plaintiff-Intervenors add § 1343(3) as the jurisdictional basis for their claim of deprivation of Constitutional and statutory rights. Having determined that the suit presents a federal controversy brought by an Indian tribe, the Court concludes that it has jurisdiction over the subject matter of this claim pursuant to § 1331 and § 1362.
In
Oneida Indian Nation of New York
v.
County of Oneida,
The Court viewed the complaint in
Oneida
v.
County of Oneida
as asserting “a current right to possession conferred by federal law”,
id.
at 666,
Given the nature and source of the possessory rights of Indian tribes to their aboriginal lands, particularly when confirmed by treaty, it is plain that the complaint asserted a controversy arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States within the meaning of both § 1331 and § 1362.
Id.
at 667,
Neither of the movant-defendants attempt to distinguish Oneida v. County of Oneida from the case at bar, or otherwise contend that its holding is inapplicable here. Instead, the defendant New York State seeks to exclude itself from the jurisdiction of this Court by asserting sovereign immunity under the Tenth and Eleventh Amendments. That defense is addressed below, but it is noted here that the immunity of *1307 the State would at most deprive the Court of jurisdiction over the State, and not over the subject matter.
Although the non-state defendants have also moved to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, the defenses they assert either challenge the timeliness or legal sufficiency of the complaint (statutes of limitations, equitable defenses, geographic non-applicability of the Nonintercourse Act, no right of action, abatement of statutory claims) or the justiciability of the claim, which is a
sui generis
ground for dismissal, not a jurisdictional defect.
See, Powell v. McCormack,
Thus, none of the contentions advanced by the movants upsets our initial conclusion that the Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of this action.
V. SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY
Defendant New York State seeks dismissal of the claim against it by reason of its sovereign immunity preserved by the Tenth Amendment or created by the Eleventh Amendment. In effect, the State requests this Court to reconsider its recent determination, in
Oneida Indian Nation of New York v. New York State,
In the interim between the submission of papers on this motion and the issuance of this decision, that particular holding of
Oneida v. New York
was affirmed by the Second Circuit. In
Oneida v. New York,
When the states granted to Congress the power “[t]o regulate commerce ... with the Indian tribes,” U.S. Constitution, Art. I, § 8, cl. 3, they necessarily “surrendered a portion of their sovereignty,” Parden v. Terminal Railway,377 U.S. 184 , 191 [84 S.Ct. 1207 , 1212,12 L.Ed.2d 233 ] (1964), and thereby granted Congress the power to abrogate the state’s immunity from suits upon claims arising out of such regulation.
Id. at 1079-80.
The Court then noted that the purpose of 28 U.S.C. § 1362, as discerned in
Moe v. Confederated Salish & Kootemai Tribes,
There was no assertion of Tenth Amendment immunity in
Oneida v. New York,
as there is by the State here; however, that precise defense was recently considered, and unequivocally rejected, in
Mohegan v. Connecticut,
There are, of course, some attributes of state sovereignty which are specifically protected by the Tenth Amendment from the exercise of Congressional power under the Commerce Clause.
See National League of Cities v. Usery,
VI. JUSTICIABILITY
The non-state defendants have also asked this Court to renounce an aspect of its decision in Oneida v. New York, and hold that plaintiffs’ claim is not justiciable. The argument is twofold: (A) the relief requested cannot be judicially molded, and (B) the action presents solely political questions.
A. Availability of Relief
Defendants have cited this Court’s recognition, in
Oneida v. New York,
that “serious, if not insurmountable problems ... would arise out of granting the plaintiffs the relief they seek,”
The dire warnings of the defendants are not unheard by this Court, and should plaintiffs ultimately prevail the utmost circumspection and restraint will be employed in fashioning an appropriate remedy. But the fact that a particular remedy sought may be unavailable or impractical as too disruptive or unfair does not render a lawsuit unjusticiable, so long as there is some form of relief that the Court could fashion.
Cf. Powell v. McCormack,
In
Oneida v. New York,
where the tribal plaintiffs sought some five million acres of New York land, this Court concluded that there were standards by which to formulate some relief should the plaintiffs establish their claim,
Defendants assert that great disruption has already been caused by the mere filing of this suit, and will worsen over the course of what promises to be lengthy litigation. The Court is aware of this and joins with other courts and commentators in regretting that too few of the eastern tribal land claims have been resolved by legislation or negotiated settlement.
See, e.g., Oneida v. New York,
B. Political Question
Defendants next contend that this action poses solely political questions and is thus nonjusticiable under
Baker v. Carr,
The identical arguments were raised by the defendants in
Oneida v. New York
and rejected, both in this Court and on appeal. In so doing, the Second Circuit observed that the political question doctrine is “ ‘essentially a function of separation of powers’,”
citing Baker v. Carr, supra
at 217,
adjudication of Indian land claims such as the instant action is wholly consistent with the prevailing conceptions of the relationship among the three branches of government concerning the appropriate means to redress the historical wrongs committed against the Native American.
In light of the Second Circuit decision in Oneida v. New York, it can no longer be seriously maintained that tribal land claims are nonjusticiable due to the difficulty of molding relief or due to the possible strain on our political concept of the separation of governmental powers.
VII. STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
The two transactions which are challenged in this lawsuit occurred over 1% centuries ago. One might expect that the term of some applicable statute of limitations would have long ago elapsed, shielding the defendants from the disruption and prejudice inherent in defending an aged claim. Nevertheless, the Second Circuit decision in Oneida v. State of New York makes it clear that this claim is not time-barred.
At the outset of its discussion, the Court rejected the view that a state statute of limitations could bar the action
ex propre vigore.
The Court’s reasoning was that “the United States as a trustee on behalf of an Indian tribe would not be subject to state delay-based defenses,” and therefore, “[i]t would be anomalous to allow the trustee to sue under more favorable conditions than those afforded the tribes themselves.”
*1310
However, the defendants do not contend here that the state statute governs of its own force and effect. Instead, they — to be precise, the state defendants — argue that there is no federal statute of limitations which is applicable to plaintiffs claim, and that under such circumstances the most analogous state statute of limitations should be “borrowed” and applied as federal law. See,
Wilson v. Omaha Indian Tribe,
The state defendants’ argument for a restrictive reading of 28 U.S.C. § 2415 (and for a correspondingly restrictive reading of
Capitan Grande
and
County of Oneida)
is weighty, but now academic. The Second Circuit has answered “the question whether a delay based defense founded on federal law may be asserted,” holding that “at the very least suits by tribes should be held timely if such suits would have been timely if brought by the United States.”
Oneida v. New York,
VIII. EQUITABLE DEFENSES
The non-state defendants also advance a delay-based defense, invoking certain common law principles of equity. Relying upon
Felix v. Patrick,
In the Court’s view, this argument may still be pertinent to the appropriateness of particular remedies, but can no longer refute the timeliness or maintainability of the action. As discussed in the preceding section, Congress has determined such claims to be timely when brought by the United States, 28 U.S.C. § 2415; and the Second Circuit has made it clear that tribal claims brought within that statutory period are also timely.
Oneida v. New York, supra,
This is not to say that the equitable considerations noted in
Felix v. Patrick
and in
Yankton Sioux Tribe
will play no role in this lawsuit. Should plaintiffs ultimately prevail, equitable factors will be carefully
*1311
weighed before any relief is granted.
See, Oneida v. New York, supra,
As a further equitable defense, the non-state defendants argue that a claim for recission cannot be asserted against parties not in privity with the plaintiff unless fraud is alleged. Their support for this proposition is
Gordon v. Burr,
Moreover, the holding in
Gordon v. Burr, supra,
is simply not instructive as to the availability of rescission with respect to the case at bar. In
Gordon,
the Court acknowledged that privity is ordinarily required “where an action for rescission is based on a contract theory — mistake or breach of contract ...
see, generally
3 Corbin Contracts § 613 (1960); 5
id.
§ 1104.”
Thus, neither of the equitable defenses asserted herein warrant either dismissal of the claim or the preclusion of any particular remedy against the non-state defendants.
IX. LEGAL SUFFICIENCY OF THE CLAIMS
In determining whether the plaintiffs have stated a claim upon which relief can be granted, we accept as true all material factual allegations in the complaint, and construe the complaint in favor of the complaining party.
Scheur v. Rhodes,
X. APPLICABILITY OF THE NONIN-TERCOURSE ACT TO PREEMPTION STATES
It is the contention of the State defendants that the 1793 version of the Nonintercourse Act contained a change in language from its 1790 predecessor that reveals a Congressional intent to exclude New York State and other states with “preemptive rights” from its coverage. 10 The language of the 1790 Act, with the pertinent clause underscored, is as follows:
... no sale of lands made by any Indians, or any nation or tribe of Indians within the United States, shall be valid to any person or persons, or to any state, whether having the right of pre-emption to such lands or not, unless the same shall be made and duly executed at some public treaty, held under the authority of the United States.
Act of July 22, 1790, ch. 33,1 Stat. 137 § 4.
The 1793 version, which was operative at the time of the challenged 1795 conveyance, omits the underscored clause and reads as follows:
... no purchase or grant of lands, or of any title or claim thereto, from any Indians or nation or tribe of Indians, within the bounds of the United States, shall be of any validity in law or equity, unless the same be made by a treaty or convention entered into pursuant to the constitution. ...
Act of March 1,1792, ch. 19,1 Stat. 329 § 8. The same language appears in the 1802 version, which was in effect at the time of the challenged 1807 conveyance.
Conceding that the 1790 statute applied uniformly throughout the United States, defendants argue that the deletion of the preemptive rights clause in the 1793 version was a deliberate measure to permit the original states to acquire Indian lands without federal supervision. Support for this proposition is derived from
Seneca Nation of Indians v. Christie,
In determining the scope of a statute, the Court must first examine its language.
North Dakota v. United States,
-U.S.-,
In
Mohegan Tribe v. State of Connecticut, supra,
nothing in this act shall be construed to prevent any trade or intercourse with Indians living on lands surrounded by settlements of the citizens of the United States, and being within the jurisdiction of the individual states.
In determining whether this provision limited the geographical scope of the Non-intercourse Act, the court first noted, as we have, that the plain language of the act admits of no intra-national geographical limitations, and that the presence of geographical limitations in other sections of the Act “suggests] that Congress was careful to distinguish between regulations applicable only to Indian country and those applicable to all Indian tribes and their lands.” Id. at 620.
Next, the Court examined the legislative' and jurisdictional history of the Trade and Intercourse Acts, and found it consistent with “reading the Nonintercourse Statute, as its language suggests, to include encroachment upon Indian lands throughout the United States.” Id. at 622. In reaching that conclusion the Court encountered the same argument advanced by the defendants here, that longstanding contemporaneous interpretation is indicative of the non-applicability of the statute to eastern states. It rejected that argument, stating:
We believe that, although considerable evidence amassed by the State supports the proposition that the federal government did not avail itself of the provisions of the Nonintercourse statute and appeared to leave management of the affairs of the eastern tribes to the individual states, it does not follow that the federal government had no obligation to do so, or that the states had the authority— *1314 unimpeded by the Acts — to buy land from the eastern tribes without federal approval.
Id. at 623.
The Court then surveyed the case law with respect to the geographic scope of the Nonintercourse Act, and concluded:
... the case law does not support the State’s contention that we should ignore the plain language of the statute and limit the Nonintercourse statute’s applicability. Moreover, while no case is controlling on the issue, Oneida [v. County of Oneida ] does make clear that the extinguishment of all Indian title was meant to be a matter of federal concern. Since we have found no evidence that Congress intended to treat Indian lands in a different manner it would seem reasonable to believe that Congress intended a unified federal policy toward land acquisition from the Indians. In any event, we find nothing in the case law which dissuades us from our conclusion that Congress intended the Nonintercourse statute to apply throughout the United States.
Id., 626. In a final section of the Mohegan decision, the “surrounded by settlements” exception was construed to apply only to those provisions of the Trade and Intercourse Act which regulated trade and intercourse, and not to the Nonintercourse Act, which governs conveyances of land.
The State defendants contend that Mohegan may be read only for its ultimate holding — that the “surrounded by settlements” exception does not limit the Nonintercourse Act — and thus does not preclude them from asserting other theories for excluding eastern states from coverage of the Act. In our view, however, it is improper to fixate on the ultimate holding in Mohegan and ignore almost the entire basis for that holding: the Court’s finding that the statutory language, the legislative and jurisdictional history, and the case law all indicate that the Nonintercourse Act was meant to apply to land transactions throughout the United States.
Even if
Mohegan
were deemed distinguishable for not having addressed the specific geographic limitation asserted here, it may be noted that the district court which entertained the case upon remand did reach this precise question, and found no implied exclusion for preemption states.
Mohegan v. State of Connecticut,
The cases relied upon by the state do not warrant a pronouncement that the Nonintercourse Act is inapplicable to preemption states. In
Seneca v. Christie, supra,
United States v. Franklin County,
The Franklin Court also based its decision on an overly broad reading of Seneca v. Christie, which, as discussed above, treated the Nonintercourse Act as applicable to preemption states. Finally, there is an incorrect intimation in Franklin that the federal government lacks authority to regulate the extinguishment of Indian title within the states; that in such matters, “the State has an exclusive right to deal.” Id. at 156. That view is contrary to now clear principles of federal sovereignty over and responsibility for tribal lands, which were expressed by Justice White in Oneida v. County of Oneida, supra:
The rudimentary propositions that Indian title is a matter of federal law and can be extinguished only with federal consent apply in all of the States, including the original 13. It is true that the United States never held fee title to the Indian lands in the original States as it did to almost all the rest of the continental United States and that fee title to Indian lands in these States, or the pre-emptive right to purchase from the Indians, was in the State, Fletcher v. Peck, [ (10 U.S.) ]6 Cranch 87 ,3 L.Ed. 162 (1810). But this reality did not alter the doctrine that federal law, treaties, and statutes protected Indian occupancy and that its termination was exclusively the province of federal law.
Thus the decision in
United States v. Franklin County,
though in point, does not adequately substantiate its restrictive view of the geographic scope of the Nonintercourse act to commend its adoption here. In this regard, the Court joins company with
Mohegan, supra,
and with
Oneida v. County of Oneida,
Defendants have thus failed to convince the Court that the language in the Nonintercourse act making it applicable “within the bounds of the United States” was employed with intent to exclude the State of New York from its geographic scope.
XI. PLAINTIFFS’ RIGHT OF ACTION
In support of their motion to dismiss, the non-state defendants advance the novel argument that the Nonintercourse Act does not afford a private right of action. The argument begins with the proposition that none of the versions of the Nonintercourse Act have expressly provided that an Indian tribe or any other private party could sue to enforce its provisions or recover for statutory violations. It is therefore contended that, in order for the Cayugas to establish a right to sue to recover for injuries sustained as a result of an alleged violation of the Act, they must first show that the action meets the criteria set forth in
Cort v. Ash,
First, is the plaintiff “one of the class for whose especial benefit the statute was enacted,” ... Second, is there any indication of legislative intent, explicit or implicit, either to create such a remedy or deny one? ... Third, is it consistent with the underlying purposes of the legislative scheme to imply such a remedy for the plaintiff? ... And finally, is the cause of action one traditionally relegat *1316 ed to state law, in an area basically the concern of the States, so that it would be inappropriate to infer a cause of action based solely on federal law?
Id.
at 78,
Defendants correctly consider the intent of the enacting Congress to be the key inquiry in such analysis,
Transamerica Mortgage Advisors Inc. v. Lewis,
Particular significance is attached to provisions in the 1793 Act which empowered the President to remove persons settling on Indian lands, and which made the purchase of Indian lands in violation of the non-alien-ability provisions a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not exceeding $1,000 and up to twelve month’s imprisonment. This, in defendant’s view, evidences a legislative intent not to create other remedies, such as a private right of action.
Defendants add that it is particularly unlikely for the enactors to have intended that a right of action be available to an Indian tribe, since until the late eighteenth century it was doubtful that Indian tribes could sue in federal court, absent special legislation.
Finally, a variety of excerpts from historical and legal sources are produced by the defendants in an effort to establish that the Nonintercourse Act was not enacted for the purpose of protecting Indians, but rather to maintain peace and order on the frontier. In this view, Congress was concerned with the alienation of Indian land only insofar as it engendered a risk of Indian wars or other retaliatory acts against non-Indians. Since the act was meant to benefit the public at large, and since the enforcement provisions and penalties set forth in the Act were ample to effectuate such purpose, defendants conclude that the implication of a private remedy would be inappropriate.
The defendants’ argument is elaborate and well-researched, but unpersuasive for a number of reasons.
A. The Complaint Asserts a Current Right to Possession Conferred by Federal Law Without Reliance on an Implied Right of Action Under the Nonintercourse Act
1. The Characterization of the Claim in Oneida v. County of Oneida.
The Supreme Court decision in
Oneida v. County of Oneida,
The district court and the Court of Appeals read the complaint in
Oneida
as stating a claim, under state law, to establish a right to the possession of real property,
Oneida v. County of Oneida,
70-CV-35 (N.D.N.Y. Nov. 9, 1971),
aff’d,
The Supreme Court accepted the premise shared below that “the case was essentially a possessory action,”
id.
at 666, but rejected the conclusion that the action presented no federal question. Federal jurisdiction was implicated in that “the right to possession itself is claimed to arise under federal law in the first instance.”
Id.
at 676. The Court distinguished other suits for possession claiming title under a federal statute, patent, or treaty which were found devoid of the requisite federal question,
e.g., Taylor
v.
Anderson,
Given the nature and source of the possessory rights of Indian tribes to their aboriginal lands, particularly when confirmed by treaty, it is plain that the complaint asserted a controversy arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties within the meaning of both § 1331 and § 1362.
Id. at 667.
This is not to say that the allegation that plaintiff’s title had been extinguished in violation of the Nonintercourse Act was irrelevant for the purpose of determining jurisdiction. Indeed, the Court emphasized that:
the assertion of a federal controversy does not rest solely on the claim of a right to possession derived from a federal grant of title ... Rather, it rests on the not insubstantial claim that federal law now protects, and has continuously protected from the time of the formation of the United States, possessory rights to tribal lands ....
Id. at 782 (emphasis added).
At one point, the Court even acknowledged that the Oneida’s complaint, in part, “asserts a claim under the Non-Intercourse Acts.” Id. at 678. But the thrust of that same paragraph, as well as of the opinion as a whole, is that the Oneidas were asserting a possessory right based primarily on the unique source and nature of their tribal property interest. The alleged violation of the Nonintercourse Act, though an inevitable and key issue in Oneida, and here as well, is not necessarily regarded as the source or basis of the claim.
The concurring opinion of Justice Rehnquist, joined by Justice Powell, confirms this reading of the Oneida decision. Near the outset of his opinion, Justice Rehnquist acknowledges and approves the majority’s characterization of the action:
As the majority seems willing to accept, the complaint in this action is basically one in ejectment. Plaintiffs are out of possession; the defendants are in possession, allegedly wrongfully; and the plaintiffs claim damages because of the allegedly wrongful possession. These allegations appear to meet the pleading requirements for an ejectment action as stated in Taylor v. Anderson,234 U.S. 74 ,34 S.Ct. 724 ,58 L.Ed. 1218 (1914). Thus the complaint must be judged according to the rules applicable to such cases.
Id. at 683.
Justice Rehnquist then reasoned, much as the majority did, that the peculiar source of the Indians’ interest, coupled with the federal government’s “continuing solicitude for the rights of Indians in their land,” id. at 683, created federal court jurisdiction over what might otherwise be a state law suit in ejectment.
The
Oneida
decision and its concurrence make it clear that the complaint before this Court presents a possessory claim, “basically in ejectment,” with federal juris
*1318
diction based on the source, nature, and continuing federal interest in the contested possessory right.
See also, Mohegan Tribe v. State of Connecticut,
2. Availability of a Common Law Cause of Action
Defendants dispute the Cayuga’s right to assert a possessory claim without statutory authorization for the cause of action. They rely largely upon
Milwaukee v. Illinois,
Turning first to the more general limitations on federal common law remedies, defendants cite the following familiar principle:
Federal courts, unlike state courts, are not general common law courts and do not possess a general power to develop and apply their own rules of decision ... The enactment of a federal rule in an area of national concern ... is generally made not by the federal judiciary, purposely insulated from democratic pressures, but by the people through their elected representatives in Congress.
Id.
at 312-13,
The question presented in
Milwaukee
was whether the respondent states of Illinois and Michigan could invoke federal common law principles of nuisance to require stricter effluent limitations than those imposed by the Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972. Starting from the assumption that “it is for Congress, not the federal courts to articulate the appropriate standards to be applied as a matter of federal law,”
id.
at 317,
Nothing in Milwaukee inhibits this Court from permitting the Cayugas to sue to establish a right to possess property. The plaintiffs are not asking the Court to create substantive law of the type which concerned the Court in Milwaukee. Instead, plaintiffs point to specific treaties which define the scope of their substantive right to possession, and the construction of those sources — not federal common law— will determine the validity of their claim. Federal common law is invoked at this point only as a source for the right of action, only for the proposition that an Indian possessory action may be asserted in a court of proper jurisdiction without express *1319 statutory authorization. That principle is well-established.
“Indian lands claims have traditionally been asserted in the courts of this country for resolution.”
Oneida v. New York,
To be sure, there is an unfortunate lack of specificity in early federal court cases involving Indian possessory rights as to the governing sphere — state or federal— which provided the right of action.
See generally,
A. Hill, The Law Making Power of the Federal Courts: Constitutional Preemption, 67
Colum.L.Rev.
1024, 1028, 1069 (noting that such lack of specificity was endemic in the pre-Erie era). Nevertheless, it has long been clear that “Indian title is a matter of federal law,”
Oneida v. Oneida County,
The Supreme Court decision in
Milwaukee v. Illinois, supra,
does not purport to disable federal courts from continuing their traditional reliance upon federal common law for such interstitial purposes,
3. Preemption of the Common Law Right of Action
Nor does the Court accept defendants’ contention that Congress preempted any common law right of action to enforce tribal possessory rights by enacting the Trade and Intercourse Acts. The question of whether a federal statute preempts an existing federal common law remedy is distinct from the question of whether a statute implies a private right of action, but Congressional intent and the comprehensiveness of the statute are key elements in either determination.
See, Middlesex County Sewage Authority v. National Sea Clammers Assn.,
The Trade and Intercourse Act neither created a “comprehensive regulatory program” with respect to tribal possessory rights, nor “addressed the problem” in the sense that the FWPCA did in the water pollution field. As described in
Mohegan Tribe v. State of Connecticut,
The more crucial question, however, is whether Congress has “addressed the problem” for which the plaintiffs are invoking a common law remedy. In this instance it has not. Nothing in the Trade and Intercourse Acts touches upon the traditional mechanisms for the enforcement of possessory rights. While it is true that matters beyond those specifically addressed by a comprehensive statute may be displaced by implication,
Illinois v. Outboard Motor Corp.,
B. The Right of Action of the United States may be invoked by a Tribal Trust-Beneficiary
As discussed above, the Court has concluded that the Cayugas may, as a matter *1321 of federal common law, assert a claim to recover possession of tribal lands. In this section, the Court notes an alternative basis for the tribal right of action, which still does not necessitate the inference of a private right of action under the Nonintercourse Act.
It is well established that the United States may, as trustee on behalf of an Indian tribe, bring suit to enforce tribal possessory rights protected by the Nonintercourse Act and other federal laws.
See, e.g., United States v. Santa Fe Pac. R. Co.,
The United States could have brought this suit, but has, according to the parties, declined to do so. The Cayugas are therefore to be afforded an opportunity to do so on their own behalf. In short, the right of action owned by the United States to enforce the Nonintercourse Act may, due to 28 U.S.C. § 1362, be invoked by the affected Indian tribe. The Cayugas are exercising that derivative right of action in bringing this lawsuit.
C. A Private Right of Action is Implicit in the Nonintercourse Act
Assuming plaintiffs could not raise their claims except by a private right of action implicit in the Nonintercourse Act, there is sufficient basis for finding that such implied right of action exists.
In
Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith v. Curran,
Our approach to the task of determining whether Congress intended to authorize a private cause of action has changed significantly, much as the quality and quantity of federal legislation has changed. When federal statutes were less comprehensive the Court applied a relatively simple test to determine the availability of a private remedy. If the statute was enacted for the benefit of a special class, the judiciary normally recognized a remedy for members of that class. Texas & Pacific R. Co. v. Rigsby,241 U.S. 33 ,36 S.Ct. 482 ,60 L.Ed. 874 (1916).
Id.,
The principle of
Rigsby,
that a statutory violation gives rise to a cause of action for damages “to one of the class for whose especial benefit the statute was enacted,”
*1322
In the 1975 decision,
Cort v. Ash,
Despite the fact that the new restrictive approach to inferring private rights of action was devised in response to problems inherent in modern legislation, defendants assume that such approach must be employed in the analysis of a statute which has remained substantially the same since 1793. In light of Merrill Lynch, however, that assumption must be discarded. As the Court stated:
In determining whether a private cause of action is implicit in a federal statutory scheme when the statute by its own terms is silent on the issue, the initial focus must be on the state of the law at the time the legislation was enacted.
As noted above, the Nonintercourse Act was enacted during a period in which federal courts, “following the common law tradition,” regularly inferred private rights of action from statutes not expressly providing them.
Merrill Lynch, supra
This is, of course, not to say that Merrill Lynch requires federal courts to infer private rights of action freely from statutes enacted before Cort v. Ash and sparingly from those enacted thereafter. Cort v. Ash *1323 itself involved the construction of a measure which had been enacted in 1907: 18 U.S.C. § 610, which prohibited campaign contributions or expenditures by national banks, corporations, and labor organizations. But that measure was nevertheless part of a modern and comprehensive statutory scheme, for which the criteria employed by the Court in its decision were well-suited. In subsequent eases in which the implied right of action issue was considered, the legislation was of a similar nature. See, e.g., Merrill Lynch, supra (Commodity Exchange Act amendments of 1973); Middlesex Cty. Sewage Auth. v. Nat. Sea Clammers Ass’n., supra (Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1972); Touche Ross & Co. v. Reddington, supra (Securities Exchange Act of 1934); Cannon v. University of Chicago, supra (Title IX of Education Amendments of 1972). The problem with applying the Cort v. Ash criteria to the Nonintercourse Act is not, therefore, that the statute predates the decision. It is, rather, that the criteria were devised as a means to ascertain congressional intent with respect to complex legislation enacted in a modern jurisprudential context. If those criteria are formalistically applied to the antique measure now under scrutiny, it is most doubtful that an accurate portrayal of congressional intent will emerge.
Accordingly, the determination of whether a private right of action exists under the Nonintercourse Act will be made by applying the implication principles accepted by Congress and the Courts of the enactment era: the
Rigsby
approach. The Cayugas, then, may infer a private right of action under the Act provided their tribe is “one of the class for whose especial benefit the statute was enacted....”
Rigsby, supra
at 39,
There can no longer be any doubt but that Indian tribes are especial beneficiaries of the Nonintercourse Act. In
Joint Tribal Council of the Passamaquoddy Tribe v. Morton, supra,
[e]very court ... which has considered the purpose of the [Nonintercourse] Act has agreed that the intent of Congress was to protect the lands of the Indian tribes in order to prevent fraud and unfairness.
Id. at 656. Most notable among the many cases cited therein is
Federal Power Comm’n v. Tuscarora Indian Nation,
The obvious purpose of that [Nonintereourse Act] is to prevent the unfair, improvident or improper disposition by Indians of lands owned or possessed by them to other parties ....
Id.
at 119,
The decided cases are replete with similar statements of the Act’s purpose. E.g., United States v. Candelaria,271 U.S. 432 , 441-42 [46 S.Ct. 561 , 562-63,70 L.Ed. 1023 ] ... (1926) (the intent of Congress was “to prevent the Government’s Indian wards from improvidently disposing of their lands and becoming homeless public charges,” . ..; Tuscarora Nation of Indians v. Power Authority,257 F.2d 885 , 888 (2d Cir.1958) ... (the statute was enacted “to prevent Indians from being victimized by artful scoundrels inclined to make a sharp bargain”); Alonzo v. United States,249 F.2d 189 , 196 (10th Cir.1957) .. . (the purpose of such legislation is to protect the Indians “against the loss of their lands by improvident disposition or through overreaching by members of other races”); Seneca Nation of Indians v. United States,173 Ct.Cl. 917 , 923 (1965) (“From the beginning, this legislation has been interpreted as giving the Federal Government a supervisory role over conveyances by Indians to others, in order to forestall fraud and unfairness.”)
Id.,
Cases since the district court decision in
Passamaquoddy
have adhered to the rather self-evident proposition that the Noninter
*1324
course Act was intended to protect Indians.
E. g., Joint Tribal Council of Passamaquoddy Tribe v. Morton,
Notwithstanding this judicial consensus, defendants urge this Court to re-examine the historical background of the Nonintercourse Act and declare that its purpose was to promote peace on the frontier for the benefit of the public at large, and that it was not meant to benefit any special class in particular. A major source of support for their thesis is an address made in 1791 by President George Washington, in which he discussed the objectives of the statute:
Among the most important of these [objectives] is the defense and security of the western frontiers. To accomplish it on the most humane principles was a primary wish.
Accordingly ... effectual measures have been adopted to make those of a hostile description sensible ...
It is sincerely to be desired that all need of coercion in the future may cease; and that an intimate intercourse may succeed
In order to do this, it seems necessary . .. [t]hat the mode of alienating their lands, the main source of discontent and war, should be defined and regulated as to obviate imposition.
American State Papers: Foreign Relations 16.
The thesis advanced by the defendants does, at least in part, explain the purpose for granting protection to the Indians. Indeed, the Second Circuit has recognized as much in
Mohegan Tribe v. State of Connecticut,
Of course, Washington and Knox and their countrymen were concerned not only with protecting the Indians, but with preventing the onset of overt hostilities. Moreover, it is true that peace along the frontier, and in particular the prevention of encroachment by non-Indian settlers on Indian lands along the frontiers, were primary objects of the Act’s land provisions.
Id. at 622. However, the Court ultimately rejected the proposed geographic limitation on the scope of the Act, due to its conclusion that,
there is no evidence demonstrating that peace on the frontier and enforcement of treaty obligations were the sole purposes of the various Acts.
Id. at 622 (emphasis in original).
The important point for consideration here is that the Mohegan decision does not in any way contest the longstanding view that the Nonintercourse Act was enacted for the protection of Indians. It limited itself to discussing “the State’s argument ... on the motivation for granting federal protection for Indians,” id., at 621, and found that a governmental concern for *1325 peace on the frontier was a factor in the determination to protect Indians.
There is no inconsistency in finding that a statute was enacted for the benefit of a special class, and that it serves a broader public interest as well. In Merrill Lynch, supra, for example, the Supreme Court found that the Commodities Exchange Act, 7 U.S.C. § 4b, was enacted for the especial benefit of investors in futures contracts, and could be invoked by such persons in private actions for damages. In so holding, the Court explained:
The legislative history quite clearly indicates that Congress intended to protect all futures traders from price manipulation and other fraudulent conduct violative of the statute. It is assumed, of course, that federal regulation of futures trading benefits the entire economy; a sound futures market tends to reduce retail prices of the underlying commodities . .. Although the speculator has never been the favorite of Congress, Congress recognized his crucial role in an effective and orderly futures market and intended him to be protected as much as the hedger.
Id.,
The defendants also argue that the original policy of the federal government was not to protect Indian possessory rights, but was rather to promote Indian withdrawal and the advancement of white settlement. In this view, the function of the Nonintercourse Act was to afford federal control over dispossession, in order that “this process should be as free of disorder and injustice as possible.” F. Prucha, American Indian Policy in the Formative Years: The Indian Trade and Intercourse Acts, 1790-1882 186 (1962). The defendants thus regard it as historically inaccurate to characterize the Nonintercourse Act as a measure for the special protection of Indians, and they insist that a private right of action would disserve the Act’s true function.
The defendants’ thesis may well be accurate as history,
see, e.g., Mohegan, supra
at 622 (“... the evidence rather convincingly demonstrates that the nation’s early leaders were perhaps not so charitable toward the Indian as we have come to view them”), but it must not be a basis for discerning law. Whether or not the federal government anticipated or even desired the alienation of Indian lands, it nevertheless committed itself to a system of treaties, agreements, and statutes which gave rise to a trust relationship between the government and the tribes.
See, Cherokee Nation v. Georgia,
In effect, the defendants are asking the Court to look beyond the face of unequivocal legal commitments made to Indian tribes, and give effect to ulterior policy considerations which may have induced, in part, those commitments. The Court is loathe to take that path. No matter how thoroughly a
de facto
policy of Indian removal may be established, the
de jure
policy of this government from its very beginning has been to respect and protect Indian possessory rights.
Cramer v. United States, supra,
In a related argument, defendants maintain that the Nonintercourse Act was enacted in an era when Indian tribes generally lacked capacity to bring suit in federal court; that Congress therefore could not have intended that Act to bestow upon tribes a private right of action.
The historical accuracy of defendant’s premise is debatable. Certainly during the nation’s early history lawsuits by tribes were rare, but as scholars of the subject have explained:
Except for the Cherokee, who had experienced some intermarriage and infusion of Anglo-American legal concepts, the tribes were ignorant of American legal processes and were still politically organized in traditional fashions, making resort to American courts virtually impossible.
Clinton & Hotopp, Judicial Enforcement of the Federal Restraints on Alienation of Indian Land: The Origins of the Eastern Land Claims, 31
Me.L.Rev.
17, 46 (1978). It is also likely that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Cherokee Nation
v.
Georgia,
In either case, the present right of the Cayugas to invoke the Nonintercourse Act does not turn on whether their ancestors had or lacked access to the federal courts. The crucial aspect of our inquiry under
Rigsby
is firmly established: the Act was enacted for the especial benefit of Indians. Whatever impediments may have prevented plaintiffs’ ancestors from bringing suit were extraneous to the purpose of the Non-intercourse Act, and have long since disappeared. Indians are now “entitled ‘to take their place as independent qualified members of the modern body politic’ ”, and their “participation in litigation crucial to their welfare should not be discouraged.”
Arizona v.
California,-U.S.-,-,
Moreover, it is a cardinal rule of construction that a statute framed in general terms embraces conditions arising in the future not known at the time of enactment.
Delima v. Bidwell,
For the reasons set forth above, the Court finds that the Cayugas’ right to maintain this possessory action is derived from federal common law, from the right of the United States to maintain the action as trustee, and from the Nonintercourse Act itself, under the Rigsby analysis.
*1327 XII. ABATEMENT
Finally, the defendants contend that plaintiffs’ right to sue under the 1793 and 1802 Nonintercourse Acts has “abated” due to the repeal of those statutes. The common law doctrine upon which they rely was stated by Chief Justice Marshall in
The General Pinkney,
[I]t has been long settled, on general principles, that after the expiration or repeal of a law, no penalty can be enforced, nor punishment inflicted for violations of the law committed while it was in force, unless some special provision be made for the purpose by statute.
Chief Justice Taney later stated the rule with even greater brevity: “The repeal of a law imposing a penalty is itself a remission.”
Maryland
v.
The Baltimore & Ohio R.R. Co.,
Accepting defendants’ premise that the 1793 and 1802 Nonintercourse Acts have either expired or have been repealed, 15 the defense of abatement is nonetheless inapplicable for several reasons. First, the defense is dependant upon a characterization of plaintiffs’ claim as a private action to enforce the Nonintercourse Act. As discussed previously, however, plaintiffs’ claim is also properly characterized as an action in ejectment asserting possessory rights confirmed by federal treaty. So viewed, the repeal of any particular Nonintercourse statute would not disable plaintiffs from asserting their claim.
But even if the action were deemed one arising under the Nonintercourse Act, the Court cannot accept the view that the pertinent clause in the Nonintercourse Act which plaintiffs seek to enforce imposes a “penalty” or “punishment” which would be subject to abatement. The relevant clause declares that certain transactions in land are of no validity in law or equity. The purpose of this restraint against alienation, as discussed at length above, was to protect Indian possessory rights. Under the rule of
Trop v. Dulles,
This Court has been called upon to decide whether or not various statutes were pe *1328 nal ever since 1798. Calder v. Bull [3 U.S.],3 Dall. 386 ,1 L.Ed. 648 ... In deciding whether or not a law is penal, this Court has generally based its determination upon the purpose of the statute. If the statute imposes a disability for the purpose of punishment — that is, to reprimand the wrongdoer, to deter others, etc., it has been considered penal. But a statute has been considered nonpenal if it imposes a disability, not to punish, but to accomplish some other legitimate governmental purpose.
Id.
at 95-96,
It is clear that every Nonintercourse Act since 1793 has contained some penal provision within it which, arguably, is subject to abatement. For example, it may well be that the provision in the 1793 statute which imposed upon violators a “fine not exceeding one thousand dollars, and imprisonment not exceeding twelve months” became unenforceable once that statute was repealed (or at least once the savings clause expired). This application would appear consistent with Chief Justice Marshall and Chief Justice Taney’s statement of the rule. Indeed, the cases cited by the defendants in which the abatement doctrine was employed involved precisely such type of penal provisions.
See, e.g., United States v. The Schooner Peggy,
The clause in the Nonintercourse Act which invalidates certain conveyances is wholly unlike the penal provisions held abated in the cases above. Though enforcement could work great hardship upon those who claim title through a transaction which is invalid under the Act, it is nevertheless manifest that the statutory disability was established not to punish, but to accomplish “some other legitimate governmental purpose.”
Trop v. Dulles, supra,
Moreover, the rationale of the abatement doctrine counsels against its application here. The cases in which the doctrine has been invoked typically involve situations wherein conduct that was punishable when committed became legal at some point before final judgment in the case had been rendered. For example, in United States v. Chambers, supra, defendant’s conviction for conspiracy to violate the National Prohibition Act was vacated because, while his appeal was pending, the 21st Amendment was adopted, repealing Prohibition. Similarly, in Hamm v. City of Rock Hill, supra, the Court dismissed trespassing charges against civil rights “sit-in” participants because, though such conduct was illegal when committed, the intervening enactment of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 legalized the conduct and abated further prosecutions. See also, United States v. The Schooner Peggy, supra (vacating the condemnation of a vessel which was hostile when seized, because a United States- *1329 French treaty ended hostilities before the condemnation became final); The General Pinkney, supra (vacating the condemnation of a vessel which had illegally traded at St. Domingo, because during appeal such trade became legal).
The circumstances here stand in stark contrast to those in the abovementioned cases. The very first Nonintercourse Act provided that conveyances of land, absent federal consent, were invalid. That provision has been continually re-enacted in substance, and “has remained the policy of the United States to this day.”
Oneida v. County of Oneida, supra,
Defendants argue that Norris v. Crocker, supra, holds otherwise and is controlling. In Norris, the owner of a fugitive slave brought an action to recover a statutory penalty against a person who allegedly violated the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793. While the action was pending, Congress replaced the 1793 Act with the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. Although the Acts shared a common purpose, to penalize those who assist fugitive slaves, the Court held that the claim arising under the earlier statute had abated, and was no longer enforceable.
Norris
is reconcilable with
Bear Lake, supra.
In
Norris,
Justice Catron emphasized that the relevant provision in the new Act was “new and inconsistent with the 4th section of the act of 1793” with respect to the nature of remedies available to slaveowners.
Quite clearly, that requisite continuity of statutory policy is present in the case at bar. Plaintiffs’ first claim arose under the 1793 Act, which provided in pertinent part:
That no purchase or grant of lands, or of any title or claim thereto, from any Indians or nation or tribe of Indians, within the bounds of the United States, shall be of any validity in law or equity, unless the same be made by a treaty or convention entered into pursuant to the Constitution.
The 1796, 1799, and 1802 versions of the Act exhibit only the minor change underscored below:
That no purchase, grant, lease, or other conveyance of lands, or of any title or claim thereto, from any Indian, or nation or tribe of Indians, within the bounds of the United States, shall be of any validity in law or equity, unless the same be made by treaty or convention entered into pursuant to the Constitution.
The 1834 version applies only to “any Indian nation or tribe of Indians”, but is otherwise identical to its predecessor, as is the current version, 25 U.S.C. § 177.
In view of the nonpenal nature of the nonalienability clause in the 1793 and 1802 Acts, and in view of the continuous effectiveness of the statutory protection of Indian lands, the Court finds that plaintiffs cause of action has not abated. •
XIII. CONCLUSION
Tribal land claim litigation attracts considerable attention and apprehension among non-Indians, and not merely among those in the claim areas. This is understandable given the size and location of the claimed lands and the drastic nature of the remedy sought. Indeed, the prospect of the most drastic conceivable remedies is extremely disturbing, and has tended to pervade and disrupt the impartial determination of the issues raised on this motion to dismiss. That it must not do. It is the duty of the Court, at this juncture, to ascertain whether it has jurisdiction over the subject-mat *1330 ter and the parties, whether the claim is justiciable and timely, and whether the complaint states a violation of Indian possessory rights. Those questions we must answer affirmatively. The Cayugas are therefore entitled to present evidence in support of their claim.
Defendants’ motions under Rules 12(b)(1), (2), and (6) are denied. It is so ordered.
Notes
. It is likely that this recent surge of tribal land claims was prompted, in large part, by the enactment of 28 U.S.C. § 2415 which, as amended, set a deadline of December 31, 1982 for the filing of certain claims. For a discussion of other factors in the revival of these long-dormant claims, see Clinton & Hotopp, Judicial Enforcement of the Federal Restraints on Alienation of Indian Land: The Origins of the Eastern Land Claims, 31 Me.L.Rev. 17, 47-49 (1979-80).
. Although plaintiff Cayuga Indian Nation of New York and the plaintiff-intervenor Seneca-Cayuga Tribe have submitted separate briefs in opposition to the motions to dismiss, the briefs are similar enough to permit the Court to treat them collectively in this opinion, by referring to the allegations or arguments of “the plaintiffs” or “the Cayugas”.
. The Articles of Confederation, Art. 9, els. 1, 4, provides in pertinent part:
The United States in Congress assembled shall have the sole and exclusive right and power of determining on peace and war ... entering into treaties and alliances ....
The United States in Congress assembled shall also have the sole and exclusive right and power of ... regulating the trade and managing all affairs with the Indians, not members of any of the states, provided that the legislative right of any state within its own limits be not infringed or violated.
. In ¶ 47 of their Complaint, plaintiffs allege that Chapin wrote again to Secretary Pickering, to inform him of a grievance expressed to him by a party of Cayugas from the reservation. The Cayugas allegedly explained that the land was sold out from under them; that those who signed on behalf of the Cayugas were Canadian Indians and not residents of the reservation; that the remaining three mile parcel was too small for their usage. Since plaintiffs’ claim is based on the nonalienability of the parcel, and not on the unfairness of the transaction, this particular allegation is surplusage.
. Because of the peculiar nature of tribal land tenure, the Cayugas do not claim to hold fee title to the land, such title having been appropriated by the European sovereign upon “discovery”. See,
Oneida Indian Nation of New York v. State of New York,
. At one point in their papers, the Cayuga Indian Nation of New York refers to the action as one for “a declaratory judgment and ancillary relief.” Plaintiff's Memorandum of Law at 7. However, the applicability of 28 U.S.C. § 2201, which authorizes that remedy, is nowhere discussed by the parties.
. 28 U.S.C. § 1362. Indian tribes The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of all civil actions, brought by any Indian tribe or band with a governing body duly recognized by the Secretary of the Interior, wherein the matter in controversy arises under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States.
. 28 U.S.C. § 2415. Time for Commencing actions brought by the United States
(a) ... an action for money damages brought by the United States for or on behalf of a recognized tribe, band, or group of American Indians shall not be barred unless the complaint is filed more than six years and ninety days after the right of action accrued: Provided further, That an action for money damages which accrued on the date of enactment of this Act in accordance with subsection (g) ... shall not be barred unless the complaint is filed after December 31, 1982....
(c) Nothing herein shall be deemed to limit the time for bringing an action to establish the title to, or right of possession of, real or personal property.
(g) Any right of action subject to the provisions of this section which accrued prior to the date of enactment of this Act shall, for purposes of this section, be deemed to have accrued on the date of enactment of this Act.
. In the course of arguing this point, the parties devoted considerable attention to issues which are more pertinent to a conceptually similar defense: that the Cayugas may not recover against subsequent bona-fide purchasers of parcels in the claim area. Thus, the parties debated whether the conveyances should be deemed void ab initio, or merely voidable, and whether the statutory restraints against alienation are fully and equally enforceable against all current occupiers of the claimed land.
The defense of the bona-fide purchaser is a serious question which is not squarely before the Court on these motions, because it involves cognizance of matters outside the pleadings. The Court has not been briefed on the question, and it appears not to have been explicitly decided in prior decisions.
But see, Oneida v. County of Oneida,
. An explanation of what is meant by “preemptive rights’’ appears in
Mohegan Tribe
v.
State of Connecticut, supra,
In accordance with the “right of discovery” of the European settlers, native Indians found in this country were granted the “right of occupancy” to their lands. That is, the natives were allowed to remain upon their lands, but their freedom to alienate those lands was restricted. The land could be sold only to the European settlers or the governmental authority representing those settlers ... Thus, while the Indians retained the “right of occupancy,” the settlers retained the “fee interest” in the land and retained a “pre-emptive right” to purchase the land from the Indians. After the Revolution, this “pre-emptive right” lay in the individual states — at least in the already settled part of the country. And when the states joined the Union, unless they ceded the lands, they retained their “pre-emptive rights.” Nevertheless, the right to purchase Indian lands was not inconsistent with federal control over the extinguishment of Indian occupancy. Thus, the first Nonintercourse statute provided that even where the states retained “pre-emptive” rights to purchase the land, the federal government was responsible for overseeing any transfer of land from the Indians to the states.
See also, Johnson v. M'Intosh,
. Plaintiffs inform the Court that during the district court proceedings in Oneida v. County of Oneida upon remand, Judge Port offered the following comment from the bench:
The principle thrust of the [defendants’] argument is a reassertion of the non-justiciability and the lack of an implied cause-of-action arguments. These were made earlier. I have ruled adversely to the defendants. Those arguments did not, in my opinion, support a dismissal for failure to state a claim after a trial. They do not support a denial of damages. I think what’s been missed here, when you talk about implied causes of action under the Non-Intercourse Act, is that it is not necessary to seek out an implied cause of action. The old common law action of trespass will do very well. Why be inventive? You’re going to invent the wheel all over again.
Transcript at 19 (October 5, 1981).
Defendants vigorously argue that the above-quoted comments were unsolicited and unwarranted; that the implied right-of-action argument had been tangentially raised by the Oneida defendants in a memo prior to trial on the liability issue, but had then been dismissed by the Court as outside the scope of its pre-trial order. Consequently, when the remarks were made after trial, the issue was no longer present in the case.
Accepting defendants’ account of the Oneida proceeding, it would indeed be improper to accord stare decisis status to Judge Port’s conclusion. However, this Court has reached a similar conclusion after independently considering the question. The quote is reproduced here merely as a concise and intuitive statement close to our own view of the issue.
. Although the question of whether a federal statute preempts a state statute involves somewhat different considerations than those raised by a question of preemption of federal common law,
Milwaukee, supra,
. Indeed, the failure of the United States to bring such action may, in certain circumstances, constitute an actionable breach of fiduciary duty.
United States v. Oneida Nation of New York,
. To be sure, the purpose of the Nonintercourse Act as stated in the cited cases may today be criticized for its paternalistic assumptions. See, F. Cohen, supra at 509 (noting this, but describing less paternalistic functions the Act continues to serve). However, the Court’s duty here is to identify the Act’s purpose, not to critique it.
. The Trade and Intercourse Acts of 1790, 1793, 1796, and 1799 were all acts of limited duration; the first three were made operative “for the term of two years, and from thence to the end of the next session of Congress, and no longer”, Act of 1790 § 7; Act of 1793 § 15; Act of 1796 § 22. The last was made operative for three years. Act of 1799 § 21.
The 1793 Act was expressly repealed by section 21 of the 1796 Act. It is arguable, however, that a right of action under the 1793 Act was preserved by a limited savings clause in section 21 which provided that:
all disabilities, that have taken place, shall continue and remain; all penalties and forfeitures, that have been incurred, may be recovered; and all prosecutions and suits, that may have been commenced, may be prosecuted to final judgment, under the said act or acts, in the same manner, as if the said act or acts were continued, and in full force and virtue.
Whatever effect this savings clause had, it terminated when the savings clause itself expired in 1802. The Trade and Intercourse Act of that year, which was the first such Act of unlimited duration, contained no such savings provision.
Thus defendants are correct in their statement that the Nonintercourse Act of 1793, whlch was in effect at the time of the challenged land transaction of 1795, has expired or has been repealed, and has not been preserved continuously by any savings clause.
The Act of 1802 was in effect at the time of the second challenged land transaction in 1807, and it remained in effect until superceded by the Next Trade and Intercourse Act of 1834. The new Act expressly continued the effectiveness of the prior Act with respect to Indian tribes residing east of the Mississippi. Act of 1834 § 29.
The 1834 Act continued in effect until Congress enacted the Revised Statutes in 1874. Defendants contend that a possessory action based on the pre-1874 Nonintercourse Act was made unavailable by the general repealer in the Revised Statutes, § 5596, and was not preserved by the general savings clause in the Revised Statutes, found in § 13 (now at 1 U.S.C. § 109). Because the Court has determined, for reasons set forth, infra, that this possessory action has not been abated irrespective of whether the Nonintercourse Statute of 1834 survived the enactment of the Revised Statutes of 1874, it is not necessary to address the intricate question of what rights were terminated by the repealer and what rights were preserved by the savings clause.
. One remaining case cited by the defendants does involve a non-penal remedy, but does not involve abatement. In
Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. Dennis,
