WILLIAM S. FLETCHER, individuаlly, and as member of the Osage Development Council, and on behalf of himself and all others similarly situated; CHARLES A. PRATT, individually, and as member of the Osage Development Council, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR; BUREAU OF INDIAN AFFAIRS; SALLY JEWELL, in her official capacity as Secretary of the Interior; KEVIN K. WASHBURN, in his official capacity as Assistant Secretary of the Interior-Indian Affairs, and SHRINERS HOSPITALS FOR CHILDREN, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 12-5078
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit
September 17, 2013
PUBLISH
Katherine W. Hazard, Attorney, United Sates Department of Justice, Environment and Natural Resources Division, Washington, D.C. (Alan Woodcock, Office of the Solicitor, United States Department of the Interior, Tulsa, Oklahoma; Ignacia S. Moreno, Assistant Attorney General, and Joseph H. Kim and John L. Smeltzer, Attorneys, United States Department of Justice, Environment and Natural Resources Division, Washington, D.C., with her on the brief), for Defendants-Appellees.
Before TYMKOVICH, ANDERSON, and GORSUCH, Circuit Judges.
After settlers displaced the Osage Nation from its native lands, the federal government shunted the tribe onto the open prairie in Indian Territory, part of what later became the State of Oklahoma. At the time, the government had no idea those grasslands were to prove a great deal more fertile than they appeared. Only years later did the Osages’ mammoth reserves of oil and gas make themselves known. When that happened, the federal government appropriated for itself the role of trustee, overseeing the collection of royalty income and its distribution to tribal members. That role continues to this day. In this lawsuit,
The statutory story begins in 1906. It was then Congress devised a scheme to deal with the Osages’ newfound wealth. See
This litigation‘s story begins in 2002. It was then William Fletcher and Charles Pratt, two Osage tribal members who receive payments under the 1906 Act, charged the federal government with breaching its trust responsibilities. A decade-long blizzard of paper followed — no fewer than seven motions to dismiss, three amended complaints, a first appeal and now this second. Yet even still the case remains stunted at the motion to dismiss stage, never having managed to progress past the pleadings to the facts.
All those years and all that paper have whittled this case down so much that in this appeal we are asked to resolve only a single legal question: Do Osage tribal member headright holders possess the legal right to seek an accounting from the Secretary of the Interior? No one disputes that the plaintiffs’ allegations are sufficient to invoke an accounting, only whether they have the right to demand one. The district court ruled no such right could be found in positive law, granted the government‘s (latest) motion to dismiss, and entered a final judgment.
We find ourselves unable to agree.
The district court was surely right in its general approach to the question. The government‘s relationship with and duties to Native American tribes are generally defined in the first instance by “applicable statutes and regulations.”
The district court also correctly held that just such a statute exists. The 1906 Act clearly creates a trust relationship — and not just a trust relationship between the federal government and the Osage Nation, but also between the federal government and the individual Osage headright owners who are plaintiffs in this case. Though the language of the Act is both arcane and antiquated, after laboring through it there‘s no question about this much. The Act requires the government to collect royalties, place them “to the credit of” each individual headright owner, and then disburse them to each individual headright owner on a quarterly basis, with interest. See
The only remaining question, then, is whether, attendant to the — undisputed — trust relationship between government and individual tribal members, the government must provide an accounting when asked. Everyone acknowledges the government has many other duties as a result of its trust relationship, like “supplying account holders with periodic statements of their account performance.” See
The answer comes clear in
(a) Requirement to account
The Secretary [of the Interior] shall account for the daily and annual balance of all funds held in trust by the United States for the benefit of an Indian tribe or an individual Indian which are deposited or invested pursuant to section 162a of this title.
By its plain language this provision appears to impose on the federal government a duty to “account for” — to render a reckoning, answer for, explain
Other evidence tends to confirm this understanding. Take the surrounding statutory structure and its history. At the same time it enacted
More evidence still points in the direction of an accounting right. While the Supreme Court has said we may not employ traditional trust principles inconsistent with Congress‘s statutory directions, the Court has also said we may refer to traditional trust principles when those principles are consistent with the statute and help illuminate its meaning. Jicarilla Apache Nation, 131 S. Ct. at 2325. In the statute before us, Congress has chosen to invoke the concept of an accounting. That concept has a long known and particular meaning in background trust law. It means that “a beneficiary may initiate a proceeding to
Any residual doubt about
For its part, the district court accepted that
This is where things went awry. The district court misread
Statutory structure and history again confirm our understаnding. Subsections (a) through (c) of
If any doubt remains (and we harbor none), we would still reach the same conclusion because, again, statutory ambiguities in the field of trust relations must be construed for, not against, Native Americans. We would reach the same result, too, because the district court‘s alternative interpretation invites a strange, maybe even absurd, result. Under the district court‘s reading, the government‘s аccounting obligations extend only to trust fund deposits but not withdrawals. The Secretary has to account to headright owners for what goes into their trust fund, but not what comes out. But what could possibly be the point of that? Half of an accounting may be closer to no accounting at all — an assurance deposits are properly handled seems pretty nearly pointless without a corresponding assurance disbursements are too. Under the district court‘s reading of the law, even the Nation must be denied a full accounting of its funds — the court‘s interpretation, after all, applies to all Nаtive American trust funds, tribal as well
The government invests more energy — though still only a paragraph — pursuing an alternative ground for affirmance. It asks us to hold that
We are at a loss to see how we reach that interpretive destination. Even on a first approach, the government‘s position appears more than a little anomalous. The government recognizes that the 1906 Act creates a trust relationship running directly between the government and individual Osage headright owners, but it suggests one of the usual fiduciary duties attendant to a typical trust relationship here belongs only to someone else (the tribe). Of course, it‘s not impossible
The government briefly trots out a second alternative ground for affirming the district court — only to trot it back in just as quickly. The government points to its settlement of the Osage Nation‘s recently litigated accounting claim and
Neither does the government give us any оther basis for affirming the district court‘s judgment. With the district court‘s rationale unsustainable on its own terms and the government‘s two alternatives unmoored from the relevant statutes or withdrawn, we are left with no choice but to reverse.
Having come this far, we find another line of questions impossible to avoid. What must the government do to discharge its accounting duty provided under
We can say this much. Section 4011(a) holds the government to “account for the daily and annual balance of all funds . . . deposited or invested pursuant to section 162a of this title.” No one before us disputes that the plaintiffs’ current complaint adequately alleges that their trust funds are deposited in a bank pursuant to
On that first hand, we can add that the plaintiffs are entitled not only to some measure of information about the government‘s handling of deposits, as the district court thought, but also to some measure of information about disbursements. The scope of a traditional equitable accounting includes, after all, some degree of information about both receipts and disbursements. See, e.g., 2 Joseph Story, Commentaries on Equity Jurisprudence, as Administered in England and America § 1275, at 506-07 (1866). And as we‘ve seen,
On the other hand, equity does not require an accounting so punctilious, so expensive, and so laboriously long in coming that the final volume is released
Even more particularly, we can say this. We don‘t doubt that the plaintiffs ultimately hope to prove that the government has sent money to persons ineligible to receive headright shares under the various amendments to the 1906 Act — and, in this way, improperly diminished their pro rata share. But in an accounting action, trust beneficiaries are entitled only to information that is “reasonably necessary to enable [them] to enforce [their] rights under the trust.” Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 173 cmt. c. They are not entitled to information that only
It may be too much to hope, but in the end it may be the government can satisfy its accounting duty very simply. The government has suggested that in its settlement with the Osage Nation it has discharged its accounting duty to the
The plaintiffs’ motion to file a supplemental appendix is denied and the judgment of the district court is reversed. The case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
NEIL M. GORSUCH
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
