An Indian tribe would like to develop its own water facilities and distribution system, but a rural water authority already exists to serve parts of the county, including all of the tribe’s lands and members. Not wanting to lose any of its customer base, the water authority claims an exclusive right to continue serving those parts of the county. The source of the claimed right is the anti-curtailment provision of the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act of 1961, 7 U.S.C. §§ 1921-2009dd-7, which protects water authorities funded with federal loans from encroachment on their territories. The tribe asserts that it has sovereign immunity.
Indian tribes have sovereign immunity from lawsuits unless Congress has abrogated it in the statute creating the right of action that is asserted against the tribe. To be effective the expression of congressional intent must be a clarion call of clarity. Ambiguity is the enemy of abrogation, and the critical part of the Rural Development Act is ambiguous.
I.
Freemanville Water System, Inc. is a rural water authority that operates a water system that supplies various parts of Escambia County, Alabama. It funds that service through a federal loan authorized by 7 U.S.C. § 1926(a)(1), which is one paragraph of the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act. The Poareh Band'of Creek Indians is a federally recognized Indian tribe with non-contiguous tribal reservation and trust lands located in Escambia County. Freemanville currently provides water to the Poareh Band’s lands.
Having decided that supplying its own water would be the best way to meet its needs, the Poareh Band began developing its own water facilities in the spring of 2007. To ensure that it has what it terms a “dependable and economic source of water for residential and commercial use on tribal lands,” the Poareh Band wants to construct a distribution facility that would deliver water to all of those lands. Because its tribal lands are not all contiguous, some of the water system’s infrastructure will be situated on non-tribal land within Freemanville’s service area.
The district court granted the motion to dismiss after concluding that the Rural Development Act did not make it clear that Congress had intended to abrogate the Poarch Band’s sovereign immunity from claims arising under the Act. Noting the Supreme Court’s refusal to draw distinctions between tribal and non-tribal lands for sovereign immunity purposes, the court also concluded that the Poarch Band’s immunity extended to all tribal actions regardless of whether those actions occurred solely on the tribe’s property. 2
II.
Paragraph 1926(a)(1) grants the Secretary of Agriculture authority “to make or insure loans to associations, including corporations not operated for profit, Indian tribes on Federal and State reservations and other federally recognized Indian tribes, and public and quasi-public agencies to provide for ... the conservation, development, use, and control of water ....” 7 U.S.C. § 1926(a)(1); see also id. § 1921. To safeguard the federal government’s investment in rural development, the Act also includes a subsection intended to protect a § 1926(a)(1) loanholder’s territory or service area so that the water service facility will generate enough funds to pay back the loan. See id. § 1926(b). That subsection, the anti-curtailment provision, states: “The service provided or made available through any such association shall not be curtailed or limited by inclusion of the area served by such association within the boundaries of any municipal corporation or other public body ... during the term of such loan . ...” Id.
Assuming that the anti-curtailment provision creates a private right of action for an association to sue an encroacher, see supra. n. 2, the question is whether a lawsuit asserting that right of action against an Indian tribe is barred by sovereign immunity.
A.
“ ‘Indian tribes have long been recognized as possessing the common-law immunity from suit traditionally enjoyed by sovereign powers.’ ”
Florida. v. Seminole Tribe,
When Congress intends to abrogate tribal sovereign immunity, it must do so expressly, with clear and unequivocal language.
See, e.g., Santa Clara,
B.
The anti-curtailment provision in the Rural Development Act refers to “any municipal corporation or other public body,” 7 U.S.C. § 1926(b), without specifically mentioning Indian tribes, while several other parts of the same Act do mention them. For example, § 1926(a)(13) requires that the “highest priority” for water facility loans be given to applications from “any municipality or other public agency (including an Indian tribe on a Federal or State reservation or other federally recognized Indian tribal group).” Id. § 1926(a)(13) (emphasis added). Paragraph 1926(a)(19), which authorizes a grant program for community facilities, states that the grants may be awarded to “associations, units of general local government, nonprofit corporations, Indian tribes ... and federally recognized Indian tribes.” Id. § 1926(a)(19)(A) (emphasis added). The next two paragraphs of the Act, § 1926(a)(20) and (21), in describing who is eligible for the grants in certain types of rural areas, list “associations, units of general local government, nonprofit corporations, and Indian tribes.” Id. § 1926(a)(20)(B), (21)(A) (emphasis added).
Paragraph 1926(a)(25) authorizes grants to “Tribal College[s] or Universities]” so that those institutions can develop “essential community facilities.”
Id.
§ 1926(a)(25)(A). Finally, a different provision in the Act allows for grants or loans to “rural water supply corporations, eoop-
In sum, Indian tribes are explicitly included within the scope of seven provisions of the Rural Development Act, but they are not mentioned in § 1926(b)’s anti-curtailment provision.
See
7 U.S.C. § 1926(b);
id.
§ 1926(a)(1), (13), (19)-(21), (25);
id.
§ 1926c(a)(l). “Where Congress includes particular language in one section of a statute but omits it in another section of the same Act, it is generally presumed that Congress acts intentionally and purposely in the disparate inclusion or exclusion.”
Duncan v. Walker,
Freemanville contends that even though Indian tribes are not explicitly mentioned in the anti-curtailment provision, as they are in other parts of the Act, tribes are clearly included within that provision’s language describing “other public bod[ies].” See 7 U.S.C. § 1926(b). But the term “municipal corporation or other public body” is not defined in the Act, and the references to Indian tribes in relation to public bodies or agencies throughout the Act are anything but consistent.
In the provision containing the original loan authority, § 1926(a)(1), Congress describes the entities eligible for loans this way: “Indian tribes on Federal and State reservations and other federally recognized Indian tribes, and public and quasi - public agencies.” Id. § 1926(a)(1) (emphasis added). The implication is that Indian tribes are not public agencies for purposes of the Act; if they were, there would have been no need to mention tribes separately from “public and quasi-public agencies” and join them to that phrase with the conjunctive “and.”
There is a conflicting indication, however, a dozen paragraphs later in the Act. Directing the Secretary of Agriculture to give highest priority to certain sparsely populated rural areas when making loans, the list of eligible entities is described this way: “any municipality or other public agency
(including
an Indian tribe on a Federal or State reservation or other federally recognized Indian tribal group).”
Id.
§ 1926(a)(13) (emphasis added). That language at least implies Indian tribes are included within the term “or other public
After a hard look at the statute the only thing that is unmistakably clear to us is that the statutory language does not make it unmistakably clear that Congress intended to abrogate tribal sovereign immunity from lawsuits claiming a violation of the anti-curtailment provision.
See Kimel,
III.
That sovereign immunity has not been abrogated generally in this kind of lawsuit almost ends this appeal, but one contention remains. Freemanville contends that tribal sovereign immunity does not extend to activities or conduct occurring outside tribal lands. This matters because, as we mentioned earlier, some of the tribe’s water system will have to run through non-tribal land. The Supreme Court, however, has “sustained tribal immunity from suit without drawing a distinction based on where the tribal activities occurred.”
Kiowa Tribe,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Freemanville sued two other parties, Creek Indian Enterprises and P.C.I. Gaming, both of which are wholly owned by the Poarch Band and are chartered under its tribal laws. Free-manville does not dispute that these entities share whatever immunity the Poarch Band enjoys.
. Before we get to the issues the parties have raised, we note one that they have not: whether the anti-curtailment provision in § 1926(b) creates a private right of action. It could be argued that § 1926(b) simply prohibits the Secretary of Agriculture from making or insuring loans that would be used by a municipal corporation or public body to encroach on a protected service area without giving an injured party the right to sue the encroacher. Not every statutory' limitation creates a private right of action for one who is harmed when the limits are transgressed.
See Hemisphere Biopharma, Inc.
v.
Johannesburg Consol. Invs.,
