Lead Opinion
We are once again called upon to consider the availability of relief to Indian nations alleged to have been deprived long ago of their ancestral lands by the State of New York in violation of federal law. We adjudicate these ancient claims, dating back over two hundred years, against the background of over thirty years of litigation here and in the Supreme Court. These earlier cases, involving both present plaintiffs and the Cayuga Indian Nation, frame the issue now before us and in large measure determine its outcome.
In 1970 the Oneida Indian Nation of New York (“New York Oneidas”) and the Oneida Indian Nation of Wisconsin (“Wisconsin Oneidas”) brought suit—a “test case”-—-seeking from the Counties of Madison and Oneida in New York State two years of fair rental value (for 1968 and 1969) for about 872 acres occupied by these counties. This land represented a small portion of certain land ceded by the Oneida Indian Nation, the plaintiffs’ ancestors, to New York State in 1795 in alleged violation of both federal treaties and the Trade and Intercourse Act (“Nonintercourse Act”), Act of July 22, 1790, ch. 33, 1 Stat. 137 (1790) (codified as amended at 25 U.S.C. § 177), which prohibits sales of tribal land without the consent of the United States. The case reached the Supreme Court. The Court concluded that because the complaint asserted a current right to possession of the lands that existed as a matter of federal law, the plaintiffs had satisfied the well-pleaded complaint rule: “The claim may fail at a later stage for a variety of reasons; but for jurisdictional purposes, this is not a case where the underlying right or obligation arises only under state law and federal law is merely alleged as a barrier to its effectuation.” Oneida Indian Nation of N.Y. v. County of Oneida,
The present case was brought in 1974, but lay dormant for the better part of 25 years while the parties explored settle
The Oneidas, along with the United States, which intervened in this litigation in 1998, asserted a variety of claims before the district court. In an order dated May 21, 2007, the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Lawrence E. Kahn, District Judge), relying principally on this Court’s decision in Cayuga, granted in part a motion for summary judgment filed by the State of New York and the Counties of Oneida and Madison on the ground that all but one of the plaintiffs’ claims were barred by laches. See Oneida Indian Nation of N.Y. v. New York,
Here, the Oneidas and the United States assert primarily that the district court erred in dismissing any of the Oneidas’ claims, contending both that this Court’s decision in Cayuga was incorrectly decided and that, even accepting that Cayuga is controlling here, the defendants failed to establish the necessary elements of a laches defense. The United States defends the district court’s decision to the extent it permitted plaintiffs to proceed with a “nonpossessory” claim, while at the same time it articulates an alternative claim to that recognized by the district court, grounded not in federal common law but in the Nonintercourse Act.
For the reasons articulated below, we conclude that the district court correctly determined that Cayuga is controlling here, and that all claims dependent on the assertion of a current possessory interest in the subject lands are barred by equitable defenses. We further conclude, however, that the purportedly nonpossessory claim identified by that court is also barred, both by New York’s sovereign immunity and by the equitable principles applied in Cayuga. In light of Cayuga’s holding that equitable defenses apply to disruptive Indian land claims, we finally conclude that the alternative nonpossessory claim articulated on appeal by the plaintiffs, premised on a violation of the Nonintercourse Act, is also barred.
BACKGROUND
Because both this Court and the Supreme Court have repeatedly considered this case and other related cases involving the Oneidas, the historical events that form the basis for the plaintiffs’ claims have been described extensively elsewhere, including in Oneida I, Oneida II, Sherrill, this Court’s decision in Oneida Indian Nation of New York State v. County of Oneida,
The Oneidas are direct descendants of the Oneida Indian Nation, one of six nations of the Iroquois with an' aboriginal homeland that “[a]t the birth of the United States ... comprised some six million acres in what is now central New York.” Sherrill,
Despite the passage of the Nonintercourse Act and the conclusion of the Treaty of Canandaigua, New York continued to purchase land from the Oneida Indian Nation in a series of transactions from 1795 to 1846. Id. at 205,
The New York and Wisconsin Oneidas first instituted court proceedings seeking recompense in connection with these transactions with New York State in 1951, when they brought suit against the United States pursuant to the Indian Claims Commission Act (“ICCA”), ch. 959, 60 Stat. 1049 (1946). They asserted then that they had received unconscionable compensation in connection with “lands that New York had acquired through 25 treaties of cession concluded between 1795 and 1846,” that the United States had breached its fiduciary duty to them under the Nonintercourse Act, and that they should receive the fair market value of the transferred lands. Sherrill,
Commenced by the New York and Wisconsin Oneidas some eight years before they abandoned their case before the Indian Claims Commission, the instant litigation represents the alternative venue in which the Oneidas- elected to pursue their claims. As originally pled in 1974, this case sought recompense for the illegal occupation of Oneida land by the Counties of Madison and Oneida from 1951 onwards.
The district court did permit the Oneidas significantly to amend their complaint against the present defendants to expand both the claims asserted and the scope of the relief sought so that the litigation came to encompass the 250,000-some acres and the 200-plus year history now at issue. The Oneidas filed an amended complaint, noting that it was “filed in accordance with [the district court’s] decision” with regard to the private landowners and therefore was “not a waiver of any rights or claims.” Oneida Am. Compl. ¶ 2. As amended, the Oneidas’ complaint states that:
Under Federal common law, the Non-intercourse Act and the Treaty of Canandaigua, Plaintiff Tribes ... have “possessory rights” in the subject lands ... and seek, in vindication of those rights, damages for unlawful possession of the subject lands from the time each portion of the subject lands was wrongfully acquired or transferred from the Oneida Indian Nation to the present time; disgorgement of the amounts by which defendants have been unjustly enriched by reason of the illegal taking of the subject lands; an accounting; and a declaration that New York State acquired and/or transferred the subject lands from the Oneida Indian Nation in violation of the*121 Nonintercourse Act and other Federal law and that the purported agreements and letters patent by which the subject lands were acquired or transferred ... were void ab initio.
Id. ¶ 3. The Oneidas’ prayer for relief seeks a declaration: (1) that the Oneidas “have possessory rights to the subject lands ... and there has been no termination of those possessory rights”; (2) that the subject lands were “conveyed unlawfully”; (3) that the various agreements pursuant to which the lands were conveyed “were void ab initio”; (4) that “the subject lands have been in the unlawful possession of trespassers”; and (5) that “all interests of any defendant in the subject lands are null and void.” Id. at 24. The Oneidas seek injunctive relief “as necessary to restore [them] to possession of those portions of the subject lands to which [the] defendants claim title.” Id. at 25. They also seek damages: (1) “in the amount of ... the fair market value of the subject lands, as improved”; (2) in the amount of the lands’ fair market rental value from the date of transfer to the present; (3) in an amount equal to the lands’ diminution in value due to any extraction of resources or “damage, pollution or destruction” to the property; and (4) in an amount equal to the value of any of these resources, whether taken from the lands by the defendants or those “purporting to act with defendants’ permission.” Id. The Oneidas also seek benefits received by New York State “from its purported purchases and sales of the subject lands,” including “the difference in value between the price at which New York State acquired or transferred each portion of the subject lands from the Oneida Indian Nation and its value.” Id. at 26.
The United States also amended its complaint in 2000. The 2000 United States complaint asserted both a “Federal Common Law Trespass Claim” and a “Trade and Intercourse Claim.” U.S. Am. Compl. at 14, 15. In its prayer for relief, the United States sought “damages, including prejudgment interest, against the State of New York as the primary tortfeasor ... for the trespasses to the Subject Lands that originated with the State’s illegal transactions.” Id. at 16. The United States also sought a determination that the State’s “purported acquisitions” of the property violated federal law, that the various agreements pursuant to which these acquisitions took place were void, and an award of appropriate “declaratory relief and/or ejectment” with regard to lands to which New York State and the Counties claimed title. Id. The United States amended its complaint again in 2002 to drop its claims against the Counties. In its prayer for relief, the 2002 amended complaint seeks, inter alia, a declaratory judgment “that the Oneida Nation has the right to occupy the [subject] lands ... currently occupied by the State.” It seeks “monetary and possessory relief,” including ejectment against the State, where appropriate, along with mesne profits or the fair rental value for all the subject lands “from the time when the State attempted to acquire each separate parcel ... until the present,” on the theory that the State “was the initial trespasser ... and all injury to the Oneida Nation flowed from the State’s tortious actions, including the subsequent trespasses by private landowners.” U.S. Second Am. Compl. at 14-15. The complaint seeks a judgment against New York “awarding appropriate monetary relief for those lands ... over which the State no longer retains title or control.” Id. at 15. It also seeks “such other relief as [the] Court may deem just and proper.” Id.
After the Supreme Court’s decision in Sherrill and this Court’s decision in Cayuga, New York and the Counties moved for
The Court is compelled to take this action to prevent further disruption: Plaintiffs seek to eject Defendants from their land and obtain trespass damages related to Defendants’ unjust possession of the land.... [C]laims based on the Oneidas’ possessory rights are disruptive to Defendants’ rights and might also call into question the rights of tens of thousands of private landowners and their legitimate reliance interests to continue in the undisturbed use and enjoyment of their property. Past injustices suffered by the Oneidas cannot be remedied by creating present and future injustices.
Id. at 137. The district court determined, however, that the Oneidas had adequately pled a claim for disgorgement by the State of New York of the difference in value between the price at which New York acquired the subject lands pursuant to the twenty-six agreements at issue and the lands’ value at the time of these transactions. The court determined that this claim “[was] best styled as a contract claim that seeks to reform or revise a contract that is void for uneonscionability” and determined that such a claim was not disruptive because it “only seeks retrospective relief in the form of damages, is not based on Plaintiffs’ continuing possessory right to the claimed land, and does not void the agreements,” but rather reforms them “through an exercise of [the court’s] equitable power[s].” Id. at 140. Accordingly, the court granted the defendants’ motion in part and denied it in part, noting that its decision “permits the Oneidas to reform and revise the twenty-six (26) agreements with the State and to receive fair compensation for lands transferred by their ancestors.” Id. at 147. The instant appeal and cross appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
At the start, both the Oneidas and the United States urge us to repudiate this Court’s earlier decision in Cayuga. This we cannot do. This panel is bound to adhere to the earlier precedent of this Court in the absence of a decision by the Supreme Court or an en banc panel of this Court calling that precedent into question. See Sullivan v. Am. Airlines, Inc.,
I. Sherrill and Cayuga
This Court’s decision in Cayuga, upon which the district court relied in dismiss
[W]e decline to project redress for the Tribe into the present and future, thereby disrupting the governance of central New York’s counties and towns. Generations have passed during which non-Indians have owned and developed the area that once composed the Tribe’s historic reservation. And at least since the middle years of the 19th century, most of the Oneidas have resided elsewhere. Given the longstanding, distinctly non-Indian character of the area and its inhabitants, the regulatory authority constantly exercised by New York State and its counties and towns, and the Oneidas’ long delay in seeking judicial relief against parties other than the United States, we hold that the Tribe cannot unilaterally revive its ancient sovereignty, in whole or in part, over the parcels at issue. The Oneidas long ago relinquished the reins of government and cannot regain them through open-market purchases from current titleholders.
Id. at 202-03,
The Court addressed a number of factors in reaching this conclusion. Although the United States appeared as amicus curiae on behalf of the New York Oneidas in Sherrill, the Supreme Court noted that “[f]rom the early 1800’s into the 1970’s, the United States largely accepted, or was indifferent to, New York’s governance of the land in question and the validity vel non of the Oneidas’ sales to the State.” Id. at 214,
This Court concluded shortly after Sherrill was decided that because its claims were likewise “indisputably disruptive,” the Cayuga Indian Nation was barred by similar equitable considerations from seeking recompense for the ancient deprivation of its ancestral lands, even though these claims, unlike those in Sherrill, sounded primarily in law rather than equity, and even though only money damages were at issue. Cayuga,
On appeal, this Court determined that since the district court’s rulings in Cayuga, Sherrill had “dramatically altered” the legal landscape against which ancient tribal land claims should be considered: “We understand Sherrill to hold that equitable doctrines, such as laches, acquiescence, and impossibility, can, in appropriate circumstances, be applied to Indian land claims, even when such a claim is legally viable and within the statute of limitations.” Id. at 273. The Court concluded that Sherrill’s concern with the New York Oneidas’ claim had been with “the disruptive nature of the claim itself,” and that, accordingly, the equitable defenses invoked in Sherrill apply, not narrowly to claims seeking a revival of sovereignty, but to “ ‘disruptive’ Indian land claims more generally,” id. at 274, whether such claims are legal or equitable in character, see id. at 276, and whether or not the remedy sought is limited to an award of money damages, see id. at 274. The Court concluded that the doctrine of laches barred the Cayugas’ claims, which it characterized as “possessory claims” that were by their nature disruptive in that they called into question settled land titles over a “large swath of central New York State.” Id. at 275. With regard specifically to the ejectment claim, the Court observed that “[t]he fact that, nineteen years into the case, at the damages stage, the District Court substituted a monetary remedy for plaintiffs’ preferred remedy of ejectment cannot salvage the claim, which was subject to dismissal ab initio." Id. at 277-78 (footnote omitted). As for the trespass claim, the Court said, it “is predicated entirely upon plaintiffs’ possessory land claim” and “because plaintiffs are barred by laches from obtaining an order conferring possession in ejectment, no basis remains for finding such constructive possession or immediate
II. The Oneidas’ Possessory Land Claims
A. Cayuga’s Import
The district court determined here that the plaintiffs “assert a current possessory interest in the land” and that their claims, to the extent premised on such an interest, are subject to the equitable considerations at issue in Cayuga. Oneida III,
With regard to the claims that the Oneidas alone assert against Madison and Oneida Counties, each one of these claims is a “possessory” claim of the sort found potentially subject to equitable bar in Cayuga. The Oneidas assert that the Counties have “unlawfully possessed the subject lands,” excluding the Oneidas from their rightful possession; that they have “kept and continued to keep [the Oneidas] out of possession”; and that they have “severed attachments such as minerals, crops, timber and other valuable resources from the land without authority to do so.” Oneida Am. Compl. ¶¶ 55-56, 59. The Oneidas seek, inter alia, “damages in the amount of the fair market value of the subject lands,” and damages representing “the fair market rental value of the subject lands” and “the value of all minerals and other resources taken from the subject lands.” Each of these claims, whether asserting violations of federal common law, the Non-intercourse Act, or the Treaty of .Canandaigua, sounds either in ejectment, trespass, or a related theory of injury derived from the Oneidas’ claimed right to possession of the lands.
This much is clear from even the most cursory reading of Cayuga. Cayuga expressly concluded that “possessory land claims”—any claims premised on the assertion of a current, continuing right to possession as a result of a flaw in the original termination of Indian title—are by their nature disruptive and that, accordingly, the equitable defenses recognized in Sherrill apply to such claims. See id. at 274-75 (determining claim seeking award of current market value of subject lands to be merely a “monetized” form of a claim
The same perforce holds true for the identical claims sounding in ejectment, trespass, or related “possessory” theories of injury brought against New York State by both the Oneidas and the United States. The district court rightly noted that this Court “was very clear in Cayuga: Indian possessory land claims that seek or sound in ejectment of the current owners are indisputably disruptive and would, by their very nature, project redress into the present and future; such claims are subject to the doctrine of laches.” Oneida III,
B. The Applicability of Laches
The plaintiffs next argue that even if the equitable considerations relevant in Cayuga are also applicable here, the defendants have nevertheless failed to establish the elements of a laches defense, so the plaintiffs’ possessory claims may still proceed. The United States argues, in addition, that it is not subject to laches when acting in its sovereign capacity and that the district court therefore erred in applying laches against it. For the reasons that follow, we disagree.
This matter is indistinguishable from Cayuga in terms of the underlying factual circumstances that led the Cayuga court to conclude not only that the laches defense and other equitable defenses were available, but also that laches actually barred the claims at issue in that case. Here, as in Cayuga, a tremendous expanse of time separates the events forming the predicate of the ejectment and trespass-based claims and their eventual assertion. In that time, most of the Oneidas have
We have used the term “laches” here, as did the district court and this Court in Cayuga, as a convenient shorthand for the equitable principles at stake in this case, but the term is somewhat imprecise for the purpose of describing those principles. As Cayuga recognized, “[o]ne of the few incontestable propositions about this unúsually complex and confusing area of law is that doctrines and categorizations applicable in other areas do not translate neatly to these claims.” Id. at 276. The Oneidas assert that the invocation of a purported laches defense is improper here as the defendants have not established the necessary elements of such a defense. It is true that the district court in this case did not make findings that the Oneidas unreasonably delayed the initiation of this action or that the defendants were prejudiced by this delay—both required elements of a traditional laches defense. See Costello v. United States,
In Sherrill, the Supreme Court concluded that “standards of federal Indian law and federal equity practice” barred the New York Oneidas from obtaining declaratory and injunctive relief that would have exempted them from state property taxation for former reservation lands recently reacquired through market transactions. Sherrill,
This Court’s analysis in Cayuga was similar. Although the Cayuga court, like the district court in this case, employed the term “laches” to describe the defense upon which its decision rested, see Cayuga,
III. The “Nonpossessory” Claims
Our conclusion that the district court properly applied the equitable principles recognized in Shemll and Cayuga to the possessory claims asserted by the Oneidas and by the United States does not end our inquiry. The district court also determined that although claims based on the Oneidas’ possessory rights to the subject lands were disruptive and therefore barred by laches, the Oneidas had “allege[d] facts necessary to assert non-possessory claims” against New York State alone. Oneida III,
First, the district court, broadly construing the Oneidas’ complaint, discerned in it a common law “contract” claim—a different claim from any before considered by the Supreme Court, this Court, or the district court itself in this litigation’s thirty-year history—premised on the assertion that the Oneidas received unconscionable consideration in the original transactions with New York State. The remedy for this alleged wrong, the district court concluded, is the reformation of the challenged agreements. Id. at 140. The district court determined that this claim was not barred by laches:
Plaintiffs claim that the State inadequately compensated the Oneida Indian Nation for land transferred to it. This claim is best styled as a contract claim that seeks to reform or revise a contract that is void for unconscionability. This type of contract claim is not disruptive .... [T]he Court would reform the agreements through an exercise of its equitable power, which implicitly recognizes and confirms the transfer of property made pursuant to the agreements subject to attack. Therefore, Plaintiffs may pursue this cause of action while conforming to the Circuit’s mandate in*130 Cayuga that Defendants’ settled expectations not be disrupted.
Id. The court determined that the Oneidas, to prevail on this “unconscionable consideration” claim, would need to establish either (1) “the inadequacy of consideration ... coupled with evidence of the inferiority of the Oneida Indian Nation’s negotiating position, which can be established by evidence demonstrating that the State deceived or misled Plaintiffs as to the value of the land or had knowledge of any fact bearing upon its value that was not well known by Plaintiffs”; or (2) “the gross inadequacy of the consideration received ... in comparison to the fair market value of the land such that it is unnecessary for Plaintiffs to make any additional showing regarding the State’s actions or knowledge.” Id. at 144. Notably, the district court grounded this claim in federal common law, not in any violation of the Nonintercourse Act. See id. at 138-39 & n. 4, 140.
The plaintiffs on appeal, while generally supporting the district court’s conclusion that a purportedly nonpossessory claim may proceed, focus principally on a fundamentally different claim from the one recognized by the district court. The United States contends that a finding that the challenged land transactions violated the Nonintercourse Act is in and of itself sufficient to support a damages award.
The Circuit’s reasoning [in Cayuga] suggests that any award of damages that is predicated on possession of the land in question, however remotely, is too disruptive and must be barred by laches. Plaintiffs’ and the United States’ reliance on the Court’s .equitable powers to compensate them for the loss of land necessarily implicates the Oneidas’ historical claim to the land in question.
Oneida III,
The State of New York urges us to conclude that each of the above-described claims is similarly disruptive and accord
A. New York’s Sovereign Immunity Bars the Oneidas’ “Contract” Claim
We begin with first principles. It is well established that “the States entered the federal system with their sovereignty intact,” and that this sovereignty limits the “judicial authority in Article III” unless the states have “consented to suit” in court, “either expressly or in the plan of the convention.” Blatchford v. Native Vill. of Noatak,
The Supreme Court determined in Arizona v. California,
We need not address here the precise contours of when a tribe’s complaint raises a claim or issue not “identical to” one asserted by the United States, because even construing the United States’ most recent amended complaint liberally, it simply does not contain the contract-based claim that the district court found to be adequately pled by the Oneidas. The United States admits before this Court that while a complaint need not specify the legal theory underlying its claims, it must set forth “those facts necessary to a finding of liability.” Amron v. Morgan Stanley Inv. Advisors Inc.,
Even if the United States’ complaint is deemed to allege a purportedly nonpossessory claim, moreover, it is clear that any such claim in the complaint is based entirely on the Nonintercourse Act. The United States’ complaint asserts two claims against New York—a “Federal Common Law Trespass Claim” and a “Trade and Intercourse Claim.” The former claim appears to ground its cause of action in both the Nonintercourse Act and federal common law but, as a claim for trespass, is clearly possessory. See id. ¶ 24; Cayuga,
The United States suggests that we may consider its pleadings “constructively amended” to include the nonpossessory “contract” claim brought by the Oneidas and recognized by the district court because the issue was litigated below. Constructive amendment, when used by appellate courts, is a “judicially created” discretionary doctrine that we have used “extremely sparingly]” to recognize that an issue not in the parties’ pleadings was actually litigated in the court below. City of Rome, N.Y. v. Verizon Commc’ns, Inc.,
Finally, we note that the United States in its brief before this Court does not even defend the contract claim as articulated by the district court. The United States asserts with regard to the district court’s contract-based claim that it “does not agree with the entirety of the district court’s analysis,” U.S. Br. at 64, and, specifically, that it believes it need only show violation of the Nonintercourse Act to establish a basis for recovering restitution-' ary damages. The United States’ argument with regard to New York’s sovereign
B. Cayuga Bars the Nonintercourse Act Claim
New York next contends that the Nonintercourse Act, which does not by its terms provide for a damages remedy, cannot support a claim for damages, and that as a result, the plaintiffs’ alternative “nonpossessory” claim based on violation of the Act states no grounds on which they are entitled to relief. New York argues, in addition, that this purportedly nonpossessory claim is barred by the equitable considerations described in Sherrill and Cayuga. We agree with New York as to the latter proposition and conclude, more generally, that each of the purportedly nonpossessory claims pressed by plaintiffs on appeal falls within the equitable bar recognized in Cayuga. Accordingly, we need not and do not address the question whether the Nonintercourse Act can support a claim seeking damages.
The equitable defense recognized in Sherrill and Cayuga is not limited to “possessory” claims—to claims premised on the assertion of a current possessory right to tribal lands held by others on the theory that the original transfer of ownership of the lands was in some way flawed. Rather, the defense is properly applied to bar any ancient land claims that are disruptive of significant and justified societal expectations that have arisen as a result of a lapse of time during which the plaintiffs did not seek relief. See Sherrill,
This much is clear from Sherrill itself. In Sherrill, from which the Cayuga panel drew the equitable principles on which it relied, the New York Oneidas sought only equitable and declaratory relief regarding the imposition of property taxes on lands to which they held legal title, and which they claimed were exempt from local taxation. See id. at 211-12,
This Court undertook the same analysis in Cayuga. The claims at issue in that ease were premised on the assertion of a current possessory right to the subject lands founded on the alleged illegality of them initial transfer. See Cayuga,
The Nonintercourse Act claim proposed by the Oneidas and by the United States is disruptive in precisely this fashion. Despite the contentions of the plaintiffs, this claim is, at base, premised on the invalidity of the initial transfer of the subject lands. The Nonintercourse Act provides that “no sale of lands made by ... any nation or tribe of Indians” undertaken without the endorsement of the United States “shall be valid.”
The United States contends, citing United States v. Mottaz,
Unlike the hypothetical claim described in Mottaz, the Nonintercourse Act claim here necessarily requires a conclusion that title did not pass validly in the challenged land transactions, because the claim’s premise is that the transactions violated the Nonintercourse Act. Plaintiffs demand not, as in Mottaz’s hypothetical, a share of the profits from a concededly valid sale that were allegedly never distributed, but “fair compensation” and “restitution” merely as substitute remedies for the return of the property that they must establish was unlawfully taken in order to prove their claim. The invalidity of the sale ab initio is the underlying premise of a Nonintercourse Act claim and any theory of recovery plaintiffs could seek pursuant to this claim. Awarding such relief here would not involve “coneession[s] that title [has] passed” but rather would establish that it had not, but that return of the property was impossible as a remedy under the circumstances.
Even if it were not barred by the Eleventh Amendment, the contract-based claim that the district court allowed to proceed must similarly fail. The claim essentially amounts to the assertion that the agreement by which the State of New York purported to 'acquire title was unconscionable. If a contract is unconscionable then it is also necessarily invalid and unenforceable. See, e.g., Ragone v. Atl. Video at Manhattan Ctr.,
The plaintiffs, at least for now, have elected after years of litigation to pursue particular alternative remedies that would not actually require the State of New York or the parties that have subsequently acquired the subject lands from the State to return the lands to the Oneidas. This election, however, does not exempt their claims from the defense established in Sherrill and Cayuga. Cayuga clearly indicated that adroit manipulation of the remedy sought will not rescue a claim where its essential premise threatens to disrupt justified societal expectations. Thus, Cayuga confirms that in this context the applicability of an equitable defense requires consideration of the basic premise of a claim, rather than the particular remedy sought. See Cayuga,
We note that it would be significantly anomalous if we were to hold otherwise. The relevant defense, as originally articulated in Sherrill, served solely to bar a particular equitable remedy on account of underlying equitable concerns. Cayuga held that claims sounding primarily in law that would “project redress ... into the present and future” are also subject to Sherrill’s equitable defense. Cayuga,
Our decision also prevents the plaintiffs from converting an otherwise unsuccessful claim-—like the claims asserted by the Cayuga Indian Nation in Cayuga—into a successful claim simply by re-framing it as “nonpossessory.” As this Court has previously indicated, the essence of a cause of action is found in the facts alleged and proven by the plaintiff, not the particular legal theories articulated. Cf. Hack v. President & Fellows of Yale Coll.,
Finally, the Oneidas contend that the application of Cayuga to the purportedly nonpossessory claims asserted here would effectively overrule Oneida II. We disagree. The Supreme Court indicated in Oneida II that there exists a federal common law cause of action by which Indian nations may seek recompense for ancient deprivations of their ancestral lands, see Oneida II,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that all claims raised by the plaintiffs in this action, whether possessory or purportedly nonpossessory, are subject to and barred by the defense recognized in Sherrill and Cayuga. The Oneidas’ contract-based claim is further barred by New York’s sovereign immunity. For this reason, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED as to the dismissal of plaintiffs’ possessory claims, and REVERSED with respect to plaintiffs’ nonpossessory
Notes
. The Oneidas assert that both federal common law and the Nonintercourse Act provide a basis for asserting "nonpossessory” claims
. The Nonintercourse Act was renewed and revised several times and remains codified today at 25 U.S.C. § 177. The version of the Act in effect in 1793 provided in relevant part:
[N]o 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; and it shall be a misdemeanor, in any person not employed under the authority of the United States, in negotiating such treaty or con*119 vention, punishable by fine not exceeding one thousand dollars, and imprisonment not exceeding twelve months, directly or indirectly to treat with any such Indians ... for the title or purchase of any lands by them held, or claimed.
Act of Mar. 1, 1793, ch. 19, § 8, 1 Stat. 329, 330.
. The Treaty of Buffalo Creek, which was entered into between the Oneidas and the United States in 1838, “envisioned removal of all remaining New York Indians, including the Oneidas, to Kansas.” Sherrill,
. As noted previously, the New York and Wisconsin Oneidas at the time this litigation was initiated were seeking damages from the United States in the Court of Claims proceeding for the period prior to 1951. See Oneida Indian Nation v. County of Oneida,
. The United States successfully intervened in the Cayuga litigation in November 1992, so that notwithstanding New York’s sovereign immunity, the Cayugas were not barred from bringing claims against the State of New York identical to those brought by the United States. Cayuga,
. Cayuga recognized, correctly, that a claim sounds in ejectment even when the ejectment remedy is "effectively monetized,” since the "substitut[ion] [of] a monetary remedy for plaintiffs' preferred remedy of ejectment” does not alter the character of a claim asserting a present right to possession and "subject to dismissal ab initio.” Cayuga,
. The dissent argues that Cayuga is distinguishable in that the United States here is acting not only on behalf of the Oneidas, but to assert its own interest in the vindication of a federal statute. In Cayuga, however, the United States also asserted that the initial transfers of land from the Cayuga Indian Nation had violated the Nonintercourse Act, U.S. Compl. in Intervention ¶¶ 8, 10-11, Cayuga,
. To reiterate, the version of the Nonintercourse Act in effect in 1793 provided in relevant part that ''[N]o 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 Oneidas, while supporting the district court's conclusion that a nonpossessory, contract-based claim premised on federal common law may proceed, also articulate as an alternative a "fair compensation” claim grounded in New York’s alleged violation of the Nonintercourse Act.
. The Indian tribes in Arizona initially sought greater relief than did the United States but the United States ultimately "joined the Indians in moving for a supplemental decree to grant additional water rights to the reservation.” Arizona,
. Alabama v. North Carolina involved a suit within the Supreme Court’s original jurisdic
. See, e.g., U.S. Second Am. Compl. ¶ 1.b (indicating that "[b]ecause [New York's purchases of the subject lands] violated the Trade and Intercourse Act, the State of New York failed to extinguish the Oneida Nation's right to possess the Subject Lands under federal law”); id. ¶ 2 ("The United States seeks monetary and other relief from ... New York for its denial of the Oneida Nation’s enjoyment of its rights to the Subject Lands under federal law and for the trespasses to the Subject Lands that originated with the State's illegal transactions.”); id. ¶ 8 (“The United States has intervened in this action as plaintiff to enforce federal law, namely, the restrictions on alienation set forth in the Trade and Intercourse Act ...; to enforce the provisions of the Treaty of Canandaigua of 1794, ... to which the United States was a party; and to protect the treaty-recognized rights of the Oneida Nation.”); id. ¶ 13 (noting that the Treaty of Canandaigua gave the Oneida Nation "the right to occupy the Subject Lands and guaranteed the ... free and undisturbed use of the land”); id. ¶ 14 (noting that the Nonintercourse Act "expressly forbade and declared invalid any sale of land, or any title or claim thereto, by any Indian Nation ... without the approval and ratification of the United States”); id. ¶ 16 ("[E]ach of the above-mentioned agreements was illegal and void ab initio under the Nonintercourse Act.”); id. ¶ 18 ("After each of its purported acquisitions ... New York wrongfully asserted control and/or possession of ... the Subject Lands."); id. ¶ 19 ("New York State unlawfully retains possession .... ”); id. ¶¶ 22-24 (describing "Claim I: Federal Common Law Trespass Claim,” premised on past and continuing violations of the Oneidas’ possessory rights); id. ¶¶ 25-26 (describing "Claim II: Trade and Intercourse Claim,” premised on fact that "New York State asserted control and assumed possession of the Subject Lands[,] ... continues to assert control and possession of some of the Subject Lands,” and "purport[ed] to sell or otherwise grant the Subject Lands to third parties,” causing “Third Party Trespasses”); id. at 14 ("Prayer for Relief,” requesting (1) a declaratory judgment that the Oneida Nation "has the right to occupy the lands described in this complaint”; (2) “a judgment awarding monetary and possessory relief, including ejectment where appropriate”; (3) a judgment awarding "mesne profits or fair rental value for the entire Claim Area,” on the grounds that New York was "the initial trespasser”; (4) a judgment "awarding appropriate monetary relief” for lands no longer occupied by the State, also on the grounds that it was “the initial trespasser”; (5) attorneys fees and costs; (6) “such other relief as this Court may deem just and proper”) (emphasis added throughout).
. The United States and Judge Gerslion in dissent note that New York described the Oneidas' and United Slates’ complaints as “parallel” in its summary judgment briefing below. The State meant, however, only that both complaints asserted the Oneidas' right to possess the land in question. See Def.'s Mem. of Law in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment at 3-4, Doc. 582 (Aug. 11, 2006). New York never conceded that either complaint adequately alleged nonpossessory claims, let alone consented to the litigation of such claims.
. Given this disposition, we need not address the State's alternative arguments that such a claim does not raise a federal question, so that the district court abused its discretion in exercising jurisdiction over it after dismissing the possessory claims, and that the contract-based claim does not exist in federal common law.
. We recognize that the municipality imposing the property taxes in Sherrill had initiated
. We note also that the basis of the jury award rejected in Cayuga was, in part, the fair market value of the land. Cayuga,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
The Supreme Court has held that the Oneida Indian Nation has “a federal common-law right to sue to enforce [its] aboriginal land rights.” County of Oneida, N.Y. v. Oneida Indian Nation of N.Y. State,
Like the majority, I accept that, in light of the decision in Cayuga Indian Nation of N.Y. v. Pataki,
I.
The plaintiffs—the Oneida Indian Nation and the United States—-both present two cognizable non-possessory claims. First, the United States emphasizes its federal common law claim against the State for violating the Nonintercourse Act, 25 U.S.C. § 177, when the State failed to pay the Oneidas a fair price for their land. (The Oneidas also assert a claim under the Nonintercourse Act.) This claim is consistent with the Act’s “obvious purpose”: “to prevent unfair, improvident, or improper disposition by Indians of lands owned or possessed by them .... ” Fed. Power Comm’n v. Tuscarora Indian Nation,
Unquestionably, the United States may sue New York for a violation of a federal statute. See Cramer v. United States,
In my view, both the United States and the Oneidas also assert a claim arising under federal common law which, as articulated by Judge Kahn, is a contract claim based on uneonseionability.
If the majority finds the United States’ amended complaint insufficient, then we should deem the United States’ complaint constructively amended. See Wahlstrom v. Kawasaki Heavy Indus., Ltd.,
In addition to finding the United States’ pleading insufficient, the majority also reasons that the United States “disavows” such a claim in its briefs to this court. This miseharaeterizes the United States’ position. The United States asserted at oral argument that there is both a federal common law contract claim and a common law Nonintercourse Act claim. Clearly the United States prefers its Nonintercourse Act claim, under which, it argues, it would not have to prove “gross inadequacy of consideration” or the “inferiority of the Oneida Indian Nation’s negotiating position” to prevail. But there is nothing in its briefs or statements at oral argument that “disavows” the contract claim.
In any event, whether the claim is premised on contract law or the Nonintercourse Act, the remedy would, as Judge Kahn acknowledged, be the same: “the difference between the fair market value of the land at the time and the consideration received by the Oneida Indian Nation minus any offsets, including, but not limited to, sales costs incurred by the State.” Oneida Indian Nation of N.Y. v. N.Y.,
II.
Determining whether plaintiffs have alleged cognizable claims is only the first part of the inquiry; the court must also consider whether both the claims and remedies the plaintiffs assert are precluded by the equitable defense articulated in City of Sherrill, N.Y. v. Oneida Indian Nation of N.Y.,
In Cayuga, this court applied Sherrill’s equitable defense to bar the Cayugas’ possessory land claims. The Cayugas had filed suit in 1980, alleging that the cession of certain tribal lands to the State of New York in 1795 and 1807 was never ratified by the federal government. For these violations, they, later joined by the United States, sought actual possession of their ancestral reservation land. After ruling for the Cayugas on the liability issues, the
The Second Circuit reversed. It understood Sherrill as holding “that equitable doctrines, such as laches, acquiescence, and impossibility, can, in appropriate circumstances, be applied to Indian land claims, even when such a claim is legally viable and within the statute of limitations.” Cayuga,
The plaintiffs’ claims at issue here— whether premised on the Nonintercourse Act or contract law—are wow-possessory and do not “project redress into the present and future.” The Nonintercourse Act claim seeks restitution of the State’s profits from the State, a common remedy for violations of federal law, and one that does not implicate land ownership, much less possession. See, e.g., Securities and Exchange Comm’n. v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co.,
But we are not constrained to provide only a “traditional” remedy for any violation; to the contrary, judgments “should grant the relief to which each party is entitled, even if the party has not demanded that relief in its pleadings.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 54. As the majority itself notes, in remedying an unconscionability claim, courts can choose, as Judge Kahn did, to reform the contract, rather than void it. This has the effect of denying enforcement of the unconscionable provision'—-in this case, the price—while preserving the rest of the contract, including the transfer of title.
The majority distinguishes Mottaz by stating that awarding relief in this case “would not involve ‘concession[s] that title [has] passed’ but rather would establish that it had not, but that return of the property was impossible as a remedy under the circumstances.” In doing so, the majority refers to plaintiffs’ requests for “fair compensation” and “restitution” as “substitute remedies,” apparently to liken what is sought here to the monetization found improper in Cayuga. But these are not “substitute remedies”—a term that is the majority’s own, and not that of the plaintiffs or the district court—but separate claims with separate remedies pled in the complaint. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(d) (“A party may set out 2 or more statements of a claim or defense alternatively or hypothetically. ...”).
The suggestion that plaintiffs raised these non-possessory claims .and remedies only “to cast their claims in such a way as to avoid Cayuga’s equitable defense” is not to the point. Unlike the majority, I do not fault the Oneidas for adjusting their claims to recognize the changing legal landscape. It shows no disrespect to precedent to acknowledge that Cayuga significantly changed that landscape. Cayuga not only applied laches to bar Indian land claims, as well as remedies, relying on Sherrill, but it also applied laches to the United States’ claims.
At its broadest reading, Cayuga limits only recovery for all possessory claims; while Cayuga found that both legal and equitable claims could be possessory in nature, and therefore subject to equitable defenses based on disruption to settled expectations regarding land title, Cayuga does not compel us to find, or even suggest, that non-possessory claims are to be treated as possessory. This is particularly true here where the United States seeks to vindicate a right that is not possessory in any sense: the right to sue for a violation of its statute.
III.
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, we must not forget the actual concerns Cayuga and Sheriill addressed. In Cayuga, the court wrote that “[ijnasmuch as the instant claim, a possessory land claim, is subject to the doctrine of laches, we conclude that the present case must be dismissed because the same considerations that doomed the Oneidas’ claim in Sherrill apply with equal force here.” Cayuga,
The nonpossessory claims and remedy involved here implicate none of these concerns. Present-day land considerations are irrelevant to the question of whether the State should disgorge the profit it earned from violating a United States statute. To calculate a restitution or fair compensation remedy, the court would not have to consider improvements to the land, settled expectations of innocent parties, or the “distinctly non-Indian character of the area and its inhabitants.” Sherrill,
Cayuga held that “the import of Sherrill is that ‘disruptive,’ forward-looking claims, a category exemplified by possessory land claims, are subject to equitable defenses, including laches.” Cayuga,
.In finding a cognizable federal contract law claim of uneonseionability, Judge Kahn drew analogies from the body of law federal courts have developed relating to Indian claims seeking fair compensation from the United States. Oneida Indian Nation of N.Y. v. N.Y.,
. The majority does not dispute that the Non-intercourse Act claim was pled by the United States and therefore does not present sovereign immunity issues.
. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(b)(2) provides that "[w]hen an issue not raised by the pleadings is tried by the parties' express or implied consent, it must be treated in all respects as if raised in the pleadings.” Although this rule technically does not apply on appeal, appellate courts, using Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(b) "by way of analogy,” permit constructive amendment of pleadings "when the effect will be to acknowledge that certain issues upon which the lower court’s decision has been based or consistent with the trial court’s judgment have been litigated.” 6A Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Maiy Kay Kane, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1494 (3d ed.2010).
. Constructive amendment in these circumstances is consistent with our federal rules’ instruction that "[pjleadings must be construed so as to do justice.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(e). “This provision is not simply a precatory statement but reflects one of the basic philosophies of practice under the federal rules.” 5 Charles A. Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1286 (3d ed.2010). "One of the most important objectives of the federal rules is that lawsuits should be determined on their merits and according to the dictates of justice, rather than in terms of whether or not the averments in the paper pleadings have been artfully or inartfully drawn.” Id. Where, as here, a defendant has suffered no prejudice, constructive amendment is entirely compatible with this objective.
. Judge Kahn premised the Oneidas' and the United States’ non-possessory claim on the contract claim rather than the Nonintercourse Act. This was because he found that “the Circuit recognized an implied right of action [under the Nonintercourse Act] that was possessory in nature,” and that the federal common law claim was, therefore, "on stronger ground.”
. The Nonintercourse Act "contains no remedial provision.” See Oneida II,
. I need not address the applicability of this aspect of Cayuga’s holding to the present case because I do not agree with the majority that Sherrill’s equitable defenses apply to the nonpossessory claims. However, it is worth noting that the Cayuga majority acknowledged that "laches is not available against the federal government when it undertakes to enforce a public right or protect the public interest.” Cayuga,
. Of course, the distance in time affects prejudgment interest. But, as Judge McCurn recognized in Cayuga, prejudgment interest is an equitable matter. See Cayuga Indian Nation of N.Y.,
