This is a claim pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by a group of native Hawaiians against the Hawaiian Homes Commission, and other agencies and officials, to remedy the loss of approximately 25 acres of the Hawaiian home lands.
In 1921, Congress enacted the Hawaiian Homes Commission Act which mandated that certain lands, designated the Hawaiian home lands, be held in trust for the benefit of native Hawaiians. In 1959, when Hawaii was admitted into the union, section 4 of the Hawaiian Admission Act, Public Law No. 86-3, 73 Stat. 4, 5 (1959), required that the provisions of the Commission Act be incorporated into the constitution of the state. The incorporation was described “as a compact with the United States.” The Admission Act reiterated the state’s obligation to hold the lands in trust and retained a right of federal government intervention to protect the trust. As we explained in our earlier opinion in this case:
the Admission Act conveyed the United States’ title to thé Hawaiian home lands to the state, id. at § 5(b), and requires Hawaii to hold these lands “as a public trust ... for the betterment of the conditions of native Hawaiians ... and their use for any other object shall constitute a breach of trust for which suit may be brought by the United States. Id. at § 5(f). (footnotes deleted).
Keaukaha-Panaewa Community Association v. Hawaiian Homes Commission,
In the early 1970s, the County of Hawaii constructed a flood control project which used approximately twenty-five and one-half acres of the Hawaiian home lands. The Commission agreed to convey at least a part of that land to the County in exchange for equivalent acreage, but no such exchange has occurred.
Plaintiffs filed this action seeking declaratory and injunctive relief to replace the lost acreage, and the district court originally granted relief under both the Commission and Admission Acts. In an earlier appeal, while recognizing that acreage had been lost from the Hawaiian home lands, we held that plaintiffs had no implied right of action to enforce the trust provision of the Admission Act. Id. at 1224. We also held that the plaintiffs’ claim of violation of the Commission Act was a claim arising under state law. Id. at 1227. We reversed the district court’s judgment in favor of the plaintiffs.
After the Supreme Court denied certiorari but before the district court had entered any final judgment, plaintiffs obtained leave from the district court to amend their complaint to allege a violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for deprivation under color of state law of a federal right. Their amended complaint was based on the intervening decision in
Maine v. Thiboutot,
The district court in this case determined that the lack of an implied right of action under the Admission Act precluded a section 1983 cause of action. We disagree and again reverse.
In the earlier appeal, we considered only whether plaintiffs could assert a claim in federal court for direct violation of the Admission Act, a federal statute, and the Commission Act, now, by virtue of the Admission Act, a provision of the Hawaii state constitution. The Admission Act provides expressly that if there is any violation of Hawaii’s trust obligations, the United States may sue on behalf of the native *1470 Hawaiians. Pub.L. No. 86-3, § 5(f); 73 Stat. 6 (1959). The key issue in the first appeal was therefore whether there was, in addition, an implied private right of action which would enable the native Hawaiians themselves to enforce the Act in federal court.
We held, applying thg four factors enunciated by the United States Supreme Court in
Cort v. Ash,
After our decision in
Keaukaha
I, the Supreme Court in
Maine v. Thiboutot
recognized a 1983 cause of action for state officials’ violations of federal statutory requirements. Then, in
Middlesex County Sewerage Authority v. National Sea Clammers Association,
(i) whether Congress had foreclosed private enforcement of that statute in the enactment itself, and (ii) whether the statute at issue there was the kind that created enforceable ‘rights’ under § 1983.
Middlesex,
The lack of an implied private right of action under a federal act, in this case the Admission Act, does not by itself dispose of the issue of Congressional intent to foreclose private actions under section 1983.
Thiboutot
itself found a section 1983 claim available to enforce the Social Security Act, which expressly provides only a public remedy, a cut-off of funds, when states offend the provisions.
Thiboutot,
To determine whether Congress intended to foreclose private enforcement under section 1983 we must apply the test enunciated in
Middlesex.
The Supreme Court there called for us to look to whether "the remedial devices provided in a particular Act are sufficiently comprehensive, [that] they may suffice to demonstrate Congressional intent to preclude” a section 1983 remedy,
In conducting this inquiry, we must keep in mind that there is a presumption that a federal statute creating enforceable rights may be enforced in a section 1983 action.
Pennhurst,
In
Middlesex
itself, the Court found an intent to preclude a section 1983 action on the basis of the “unusually elaborate enforcement provisions” in the statutes before it. The provisions included authority of the government agency and the states to seek civil and criminal penalties, the right of any interested person to seek judicial review of agency action, and two separate citizen suit provisions.
Middlesex,
Other circuits have also required a strong government showing of Congressional intent to foreclose alternative remedies before ruling out a section 1983 claim.
See, e.g., Marvin H. v. Austin Independent School District,
In the present case, Congress has not provided a comprehensive enforcement scheme which includes any private administrative or judicial remedy. It has provided only a single, public remedy by reserving a right to sue in the federal government. We therefore conclude that the Admission Act does not contain a sufficiently comprehensive enforcement scheme to foreclose a section 1983 remedy. Thus, the Admission Act meets the first requirement of the Middlesex test.
There remains a question whether the second of the
Pennhurst-Middlesex
requirements is met, i.e. whether the Admission Act created a federal “right” enforceable under section 1983. The first Supreme Court
Pennhurst
decision implied that a right is created when Congress mandates, rather than merely encourages, a specified entitlement.
The defendants do not seriously contend that plaintiffs have no enforceable rights. Rather, they argue that any enforceable right under the Admission Act is a state rather than a federal right because the Admission Act effectively gave over to the state responsibility to administer the home lands. They rely on the Supreme Court’s more recent decision in
Pennhurst State School & Hospital v. Halderman,
*1472
— U.S.-,
We therefore hold that under United States v. Thiboutot, as read in the light of the subsequent Supreme Court decisions in Middlesex and Pennhurst, the plaintiffs have stated a federal cause of action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Reversed.
