564 F.2d 38 | Ct. Cl. | 1977
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court:
In Prairie Band of the Pottawatomie Tribe v. United States, 28 Ind. Cl. Comm. 454 (1972), the Indian Claims
I
Plaintiffs’ appeal
A. Plaintiff-appellants’ first point concerns the valuation of the timbered property. Among the more-than-5 million acres ceded by plaintiffs there were about one million of timberlands. The Indians’ expert valued these at $11 an acre, while the defendant’s witness thought them worth only $.35. The Commission did not value the timberland Separately; its determination of $1.26 per acre covered all the ceded land.
Nevertheless, plaintiffs challenge a glancing comment the Commission made in rejecting the Indian expert’s high timberland valuation of $11 an acre — a remark which recalled that at that time loggers entered public lands to cut down trees, either in flagrant trespass or under logging permits which the War Department issued without statutory authority.* **
Our conclusion on plaintiffs’ first point is that they have failed to show that the decision below permitted the Government to reduce the value of the ceded lands — in this proceeding — by reliance on its own wrong.
B. As part of the consideration for the cession, the United States agreed to pay the Pottawatomis $280,000 in annuities of $14,000 per year for 20.years. 7 Stat. at 432. The Commission’s ruling deducted the full $280,000 even
Although the Indian appellants ask us to abandon Pawnee Indian Tribe and revive Miami Tribe and Crow Tribe, we are not willing to do so. Litigation under the Indian Claims Commission Act is coming to its close. Pawnee has been the law for 15 years
C. The last of plaintiffs’ claims on appeal is that the Commission erred in crediting the Government, as part of
We cannot say that this ruling was wrong. The treaty (including the supplementary articles) expressly made these payments part of the consideration for the cession (and therefore part of the "payments made by the United States on the claim,” to be deducted from the award under Section 2 of the Claims Commission Act, 25 U.S.C. § 70a). See Part II, infra. Similar payments to individual Indians, required by a treaty in consideration for a cession or other undertaking by an Indian group, have been held deductible as consideration. See Quapaw Tribe v. United States, 1 Ind. Cl. Comm. 644, 665-66 (1951), aff’d on this point, 128 Ct. Cl. 45, 55 (1954). The theory is that the tribe itself desired such payments to be made as part of the exchange for its land cession. Plaintiffs insist that these payments were really in the nature of bribes to obtain the treaty, but at best the . evidence to that effect is miniscule; clearly the Commission did not have to draw such an inference.
As for the payment of the tribe’s debts, the Commission had earlier held, on the same principle, that a treaty provision of this type constituted part of the consideration for a cession. Absentee Delaware Tribe v. United States, 9 Ind. Cl. Comm. 346, 357 (1961). The opinion below correctly found that result peculiarly appropriate here "where the Senate, in consenting to the ratification of the Treaty, required the examination by a commissioner of all debts for which payment was sought under the provision to pay
II
Defendant’s cross-appeal
A more serious issue comes to us on the Government’s cross-appeal. We noted in Part I, C, supra, that Section 2 of the Indian Claims Commission Act, 25 U.S.C. § 70a, provides that "[i]n determining the quantum of relief the Commission shall make appropriate deductions for all payments made by the United States on the claim * * *.”
It has become an axiom in interpreting legislation that it is well to start with the words of the statute though one may not stop there. Here, if one puts aside the legislative history and background of the 1974 proviso, the normal, spontaneous reading of "payments on the claim” would cover consideration (if paid) for a land transfer embodied in a treaty of cession. If such consideration paid by the United States was less than the value of the property, it would ordinarily be thought of as a partial "payment on the claim,” to be taken into account in calculating the final award.
Thus, the problem emerges not from the language of the 1974 proviso, but from its legislative history. The most significant portion of this is the August 1974 Hearing before the House Subcommittee on Indian Affairs.
The undeniable impetus for the 1974 amendment was the Commission’s decision on the so-called Sioux "Black Hills” claim. See Sioux Nation v. United States, 33 Ind. Cl. Comm. 151 (1974), rev’d in part, 207 Ct. Cl. 234, 518 F.2d 1298, cert. denied, 423 U.S. 1016 (1975). There the
There is some hint that the 1974 proviso should be strictly confined to the Sioux’s Black Hills claim and that claim alone, but this reading is clearly not permissible. The amendment was deliberately framed in general terms,
Reversing its position, the Department of Justice now relies on the distinction apparently drawn in Chairman Kuykendall’s written statement, and bolsters its present view by the fact that the Commission told the subcommittee that, if the proposed "food, rations, or provisions” proviso had been in the Claims Commission Act from the beginning it would have barred only about $100,000 in deductions up to 1974 and, aside from the Sioux claim, would have only "minimal” or "insignificant” effect in the future. See Hearings on h.r. 16170, supra note 13, at 15, 17, 24, 29, 31, 38, 45, 47-48. Defendant says that unless "consideration” payments are excluded — as it now urges— it would be impossible to come up with the small figure of $100,000 for pre-1974 effect, or use the characterization "minimal” or "insignificant” for future impact. That appears to be true for the past; $100,000 would be far too small if "payments on the claim” covered past consideration expenditures for food, rations, and provisions, as well as purely unilateral payments for the same purpose. With respect to future effect, the use of "minimal” is more arguable; in the light of the Sioux payments for food,
This legislative history is certainly ambiguous, as the Commission noted below, 38 Ind. Cl. Comm, at 224, and we have concluded that, everything considered, the Commission was correct in refusing to separate out and exclude "consideration” payments of food, rations, and provisions from the coverage of the 1974 proviso. The normal understanding of the language would cover both, as we have pointed out, and to overcome such a normal reading the showing from legislative history or legislative purpose must be persuasive. See National Labor Relations Board v. Plasterers’ Union, 404 U.S. 116, 129 n.24 (1971); United States v. Dickerson, 310 U.S. 554, 562 (1940); United States v. American Trucking Ass’ns, 310 U.S. 534, 543-44 (1940). We do not find such persuasiveness here. The distinction drawn at the hearings by the Commission chairman between "consideration payments” and "payments on the claim” had not previously appeared in the Commission’s decisions,
Moreover, there seems to be only the weakest of policy reasons for differentiating, insofar as food, rations and provisions are concerned, between so-called consensual "consideration payments” and non-gratuitous unilateral payments by the Federal Government. If humanitarian impulses preclude the Government from collecting from the Indians for feeding and sustaining them when such expenditures are made by the United States, on its own, sometime after a cession of the Indian tract previously used for sustenance, then it would seem most peculiar to treat differently with sustenance payments promised in the same treaty which transfers the land to the Government. It is said in support of the distinction that in the case of "consideration payments” there would at least be participation and bargaining by the Indians for the food, rations, or provisions, but that supposed difference pales into nonexistence in the many cases in which any "bargaining” was decidedly one-sided — such as a case (like this) under Section 2(3) of the Claims Commission Act, 25 U.S.C. § 70a, where a treaty is being revised for "unconscionable consideration,” or where fraud, duress, or mistake is involved, or where there is a claim under Section 2(5) based on less than fair and honorable dealings.
The biggest obstacle, in the legislative history, to accepting the normal meaning of the language of the 1974 amendment is the repeated belief, expressed at the House subcommittee hearings, that the amendment would have cost the Government, aside from the Sioux case, only $100,000 in the past (and would have only "minimal” impact for the future). The $100,000 figure is clearly too small if the broader reading is adopted but might well be correct if one accepts the sharp distinction between
Because, for these reasons, the legislative history does not convince us to depart from the normal interpretation of the words of the 1974 proviso, we accept that reading as correct and affirm the Commission’s ruling which excluded from allowable offsets, under the 1974 amendment, some $516,606.65 in "consideration payments” to the Indians for food, rations, and provisions.
In all respects appealed from, the decision of the Indian Claims Commission is Affirmed.
The references are, of course, to Royce’s maps in the 18th Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology (Part 2), Indian Land Cessions (1896-97).
In 28 Ind. Cl. Comm. 454, 469, the Commission also held that the plaintiffs in Dockets No. 15-C (Prairie Band of the Pottawatomie Tribe of Indians, et al.), No. 29-A (Hannahville Indian Community, et al.) and No. 71 (Citizen Band of Pottawatomi Indians) could sue in a representative capacity for and on behalf of the Pottawatomi Tribe or Nation.
The valuation date was February 21, 1835. 28 Ind. Cl. Comm. at 497.
This method of evaluating the property as a whole, not appraising the various
The statement plaintiffs attack was as follows: "Considering the risks involved in the lumber industry, and considering that much of the timber could be acquired without purchasing the land, even though the acquisition was illegal, it seems doubtful that a purchaser who wanted to acquire the timber as well as the land would pay almost nine times as much for the pinery lands as the $1.25 for which the United States offered to sell it” (emphasis added). 38 Ind. Cl. Comm. at 181-82. Elsewhere in its opinion and findings, the Commission referred descriptively to such logging operations on plaintiffs’ land by trespassers and by loggers who had received unauthorized permits from the War Department. 38 Ind. Cl. Comm. at 144, 171, 250-51.
The Commission may even have been referring to trespass depredations after the Indian lands passed into federal ownership, not while the Indians owned it. Conversely, the opinion may not have had in mind the grant by the War Department, without statutory authority, of logging permits on Indian tracts. It is difficult to decipher precisely what the short comment was intended to cover.
Miami Tribe reigned for less than two years.
The Senate reservation provided (7 Stat. 447-48, Note) that debtors were to be paid only the sums found by the commissioner to be justly due them, "in no instance increasing the sum agreed to be paid.” 7 Stat. 447, Note. Any monies saved by deduction or disallowance of the debts were to be paid to the Indians.
The same section also calls for mandatory deduction "for all other offsets, counterclaims, and demands that would be allowable in a suit brought” by an Indian group in this court. In addition, the Commission has discretionary authority ("if it finds that the nature of the claim and the entire course of dealings and accounts between the United States and the claimant warrants such action”) to offset gratuitous expenditures by the Federal Government — except that Congress has specified certain types of gratuities which shall not be offset at all.
Defendant does not contend in this court that the $516,606.65 figure covered more than "food, rations, or provisions.” The issue here centers solely on the meaning of "payments on the claim” in the 1974 proviso.
Before the Commission the parties did not litigate the coverage of that proviso. Plaintiffs argued that the more-than-half-million dollar sum was non-deductible regardless of the proviso (that contention is still preserved in this court), and the defendant responded to that position. The Commission sua sponte imported the 1974 amendment into the case, holding it applicable. The opinion said (38 Ind. Cl. Comm, at 224): "Although there is some ambiguity in the language of the amendment and its legislative history as to whether 'payments on the claim’ are to be deemed synonymous with or include 'consideration,’ our present judgment as to the intent of Congress is that such forms of payment are not to be credited against our awards whether or not there exists a refined distinction between consideration and payments on the_ claim.”
Before the Indian Claims Commission Act was passed, the Supreme Court said: "Payment upon a claim means payment on account or in part as distinguished from one made and accepted as payment in full.” Klamath and Moadoc Tribes v. United States, 296 U.S. 244, 251 (1935).
For example, defendant itself cites in its reply brief, at 7-8, among a number of other Commission cases, the 1961 decision in Cheyenne-Arapaho Tribes v. United States, 10 Ind. Cl. Comm. 1, 37-61, in which the Commission deducted from its award a substantial sum in food, rations, or provisions as part of the Government’s "consideration” for the Indians’ undertakings.
In this very case, defendant, in the findings it proposed to the Ind. Cl. Comm, on the award, included the now challenged $517,000 (approx.) under its Proposed Finding No. 19, headed "Payments on the Claim”; it reserved the term "Considera
Defendant now suggests that the deduction of paid consideration could be justified separately under the statutory provision in 25 U.S.C. § 70a for deduction of "all other offsets, counterclaims, and demands that would be allowable in a suit” brought by the Indian group in this court under Title 28 (emphasis added). There are at least three objections to this proposal. The first is that this provision, rather than to be taken independently of "payments on the claim,” throws light on the latter clause by suggesting that consideration-payments, one sort of legal offsets normally allowable in this court, are incorporated in "payments on the claim.” The second difficulty is that this particular provision, if read separately, seems never previously to have been invoked alone, in this context, by the Ind. Cl. Comm, or the defendant. The third objection is the doubt that the cited provision, if taken separately, was intended to apply to offsets integrally related to a non-legal Indian claim which could not be brought in this court under Title 28 — such as revision of a treaty for "unconscionable consideration” or a claim "based upon fair and honorable dealings that are not recognized by any rule of law or equity.” The present case falls in that "non-legal” category.
Amendments to the Indian Claims Commission Act: Hearings on H.R.16170 Before the Subcomm. on Indian Affairs of the House Comm. on Interior & Insular Affairs, 93rd Cong., 2d Sess. (1974) [hereinafter cited as Hearings on h.r. 16170.] It is unnecessary to set out in detail all the steps in the passage of Public Law 93-494, a measure mainly devoted to authorizing appropriations for the Indian Claims Commission, but also containing the new proviso to § 2 of the Claims Commission Act. Because of that statute’s peculiar legislative course (spelled out in H.R. Rep. No. 93-1446, 93rd Cong., 2d Sess. 3, reprinted in [1974] U.S. Code Cong. & Ad. News 6118 (Conference Rep.)), there is very little formal history bearing on the proviso other than the Hearings on h.r. 16170. The other bits of relevant legislative history appear in S. Rep. No. 93-863, 93rd Cong., 2d Sess. 1, reprinted in [1974] U.S. Code Cong. Ad. News 6112-6115; H.R. Rep. No. 93-1446, supra; and 120 Cong. Rec. (1974).
This court on review held that any eminent domain claim was barred by an earlier decision of the Court of Claims. United States v. Sioux Nation, 207 Ct. Cl. 234, 247-49, 518 F.2D 1298, 1305-06, cert. denied, 423 U.S. 1016 (1975). The court was not asked to, and did not, disturb the holding as to fair and honorable dealings.
See S. Rep. No. 93-863, supra note 13, at 1-5, for the Sioux’ initial proposal to Congress.
The Sioux memorandum proposing it, see note 15, supra, says that it is “couched in general terms,” although its objective was to help the Sioux.
In pertinent part, this statement said:
"* * * we must analyze three types of payments made by the United States to the Indian tribal claimant and for which the Government may obtain credit or have deducted from a monetary award to such claimant. They are known as (1) consideration, (2) payments on the claim and (3) gratuitous or gratuitous offsets.
"The first one, "consideration,” is not truly mi offset. In the typical land cession case the United States paid something in money, -lieu lands, or goods, for the ceded land in accordance with the treaty or agreement it had made with the Indian tribe. The Commission tests the conscionability of the transaction by comparing the then fair market value of the land with the amount of consideration paid. If the transaction is determined to be unconscionable because the treaty consideration is so grossly less than the value of the ceded land, the Indian claimant is entitled to an award of the difference between the two sums, but the consideration paid by the United States is credited against the gross fair market value to determine the net award to the plaintiff tribe. It is inherent in a conscionability claim that credit will be given for the consideration paid in order to reach a fair result. It is our understanding that there is no proposal before the Congress to change the existing practice of crediting' consideration paid [emphasis added],
"Payments on the claim” are those sums, goods and services provided to the tribe by the United States in response to a claim or grievance asserted by the tribe. As distinguished from consideration, payments on the claim are made unilaterally by the United States not because of any treaty obligation to do so, but in acknowledgment by the Government that some compensation is due the tribe for past specific cases. Such payments are usually authorized by statute. Like consideration, but unlike gratuities, Sec. 2 of our Act as it stands, requires that
The H.R. Rep. No. 93-1446, supra note 13, at 3, refers to the fact that the House of Representatives had originally been unwilling to agree to the "food, rations, or provisions” amendment without holding a hearing, "inasmuch as the cost of such an amendment to the Indian Claims Commission Act could approach $100 million.” If the figure of "$100 million” relates to the amount thought to be involved in the Sioux case, the level of "minimal” for other cases would obviously be higher on a comparative basis; if, however, "$100 million” refers significantly to other cases (as well as the Sioux’s) it likewise shows that "minimal” was probably not used in the absolute sense of trivial or very small.
The Sioux decision, supra, 33 Ind. Cl. Comm, at 219, and the other opinions cited by defendant (Prairie Band of Pottawatomie Tribe v. United States, 33 Ind. Cl. Comm. 394, 404 (1974); Nez Perce Tribe v. United States, 24 Ind. Cl. Comm. 429, 433-34 (1971)), merely pointed out that "consideration” required a consensual element; they did not hold or suggest that "consideration payments” could not also be "payments on the claim,” or that the two terms were mutually exclusive.
It is worth noting that the chairman of the Commission, who filed the written statement with the House subcommittee, joined in the opinion below which we are asked by the Government to reverse with respect to the 1974 proviso.
We have already said that "minimal” is too comparative a word for us to tell whether or not it was an improper forecast. See text and note at note 18 supra. At one point in the hearings, Hearings on h.r. 16170, supra note 13, at 23, the chairman of the subcommittee indicated that it would probably be "less than $2 million in the future.” From what we now know, we cannot say that that is a wholly illusory prognosis of the total future cost of the 1974 amendment as we now construe it.
We need not, and do not, pass upon the other grounds put forward by the Indians for affirming the Commission’s action deducting the $517,000 — apart from the 1974 proviso. See note 9, supra (second paragraph).
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I join in Judge Davis’ opinion and in the judgment of the court. As to the cross-appeal, I would like to say that I would find the issue even more difficult than it is, but for a factor not mentioned in the opinion. Congress was clearly concerned as to the bogging down of the Sioux case or cases in factual investigation of minutiae of insufficient importance to justify the time lost and the auditors’ pay. The Senate Committee said, 3 U.S. Code Congressional and Administrative News (1974) 6111, 6115, that the computation of an offset for feeding the Sioux, if allowed, would "take 5-15 men working at least a year (and probably longer)---and even then the absence of necessary data may prevent the preparation of a complete and fully accurate report.” This of course relates to the Sioux cases and not others, but the Committee plainly indulged in the presumption that the problems manifest in the Sioux cases might arise in others. It declined to enact special legislation for the Sioux alone. In effect, the problems of their cases were taken as models of others about which no information was obtained, except for generalizations that may have been mistaken. As Judge Davis says, we cannot correct Congress’ factual errors. If the figure of almost $25,000,000, or more, estimated as the cost of feeding the Sioux, was significantly less in the cases of other Indian tribes but still substantial, the cost of accurate computation of the offset would be disproportionate to the amount involved and would delay final settlement to no useful purpose. It is not reasonable to believe that Congress, striking this blow for simplicity and speed of adjudication, would have wished to restrict its effect to instances duplicating the Sioux situation, for the cost of the computation and delay it caused would be disproportionate to the benefit of making it, whether the rations were furnished as "consideration,” as "payments on the claims,” or even as "gratuities.” Thus the view originally put forward by Chairman Kuykendall, but later abandoned by him, would have almost entirely frustrated an object Congress sought to achieve. The computations in the instant case have been made, apparently, but there is
In United States v. Delaware Tribe of Indians, 192 Ct. Cl. 385, 427 F.2d 1218 (1970) we had before us a Commission rule that it would ignore for offset purposes any gratuities in the nature of subsistence, etc., which in any year did not exceed five percent of the deficiency in the compensation previously paid the Indians for their lands, below what it should have been. We struck this down as an attempt to award interest, contrary to the applicable precedents. However, the parties made it clear that the Commission was also attempting to shed some of the burden of making insignificant calculations. There was much talk about the cost of a hypothetical sack of peanuts, as against the cost of tracking it down for audit purposes a century later. This we recognized as worthy of consideration, even though the cure adopted was incurably tainted. Congress has now acted in the premises and we should give its enactment all the effect the language permits.