Lead Opinion
Appellant Samish Indian Tribe (“the Samish”) sought by means of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(6) to reopen United States v. Washington,
In 1855, federal representatives in the Territory of Washington induced a number of Indian tribes to relinquish much of their land in return for payments and the right to keep small parcels of land. See generally Washington v. Washington State Commercial Passenger Fishing Vessel Ass’n,
A century later, however, runs of fish had become scarce and Native Americans took only a small fraction of the fish harvest. In 1970, the United States brought an action against the State of Washington to force it to protect the tribes’ shares of anadromous fish runs. The United States brought the action on its own behalf and as trustee for seven Indian tribes. Another seven tribes successfully intervened in the action. United States v. Washington,
After the issuance of the decision in Washington I, the Samish intervened to assert fishing rights under the Treaty of Point Elliott. The district judge referred the matter to a magistrate judge, sitting as a special master. After a five-day hearing, the special master found that the Samish were not recognized as an Indian tribe by the United States government and “have not lived as a continuous separate, distinct and cohesive Indian cultural or political community.” The special master therefore concluded that the Samish “at this time” were neither a treaty tribe nor a political successor to a treaty tribe and “presently” did not hold treaty fishing rights. The Samish appealed the special master’s ruling to the district court, which held a de novo evidentiary hearing. The district court concluded that the Samish were not entitled to treaty fishing rights. Washington II,
In arriving at this conclusion, the district court adopted and relied on findings of fact proposed by the United States. Those findings concerned the Samish’s lack of an organized tribal structure, and included the following:
• The Samish Tribe “exercises no attributes of sovereignty over its members or any territory.”
• It is not recognized by the United States as a tribe.
• Neither its organization nor its membership has been recognized by the Congress or the Department of the Interior for Indian affairs purposes.
• The Secretary of the Interior has not prepared an official membership roll for the tribe.
• “There is no requirement of specific minimum blood quantum either as to Samish blood in particular or Indian blood in general.”
• Many tribe members “are of only l/16th degree Indian blood” and “[t]wo have only l/32nd Samish blood.”
• “The tribe does not prohibit dual membership and at least one member is an officer of the Lummi tribe.”
• The Samish members “do not and have not lived as a continuous separate, distinct and cohesive Indian cultural or political community.”
Id. After making these findings about the Samish, the district court stated as a conclusion of law that “[o]nly tribes recog
We affirmed the district court in a divided decision, noting that “[w]e have defined a single necessary and sufficient condition for the exercise of treaty rights by a group of Indians descended from a treaty signatory: the group must have maintained an organized tribal structure.” United States v. Washington,
Because the Samish’s inability to exercise their treaty fishing rights hinged on their status as an unrecognized tribe, and because the United States, tribes that opposed the Samish’s exercise of treaty fishing rights, and the district court all suggested that future federal recognition might warrant reexamination of the Samish’s treaty fishing rights,
The Samish then filed an action challenging the BIA’s denial of federal recognition. The Tulalip Tribe sought to intervene in that proceeding, arguing that federal recognition of the Samish would lead to a dilution of the Tulalip’s fishing rights. The district court denied the Tu-lalip’s intervention motion and, in an interlocutory appeal, we affirmed the denial. Greene v. United States,
On the merits of the Samish’s challenge to the denial of federal recognition, the district court vacated the BIA’s decision and remanded the case for a formal adjudication under the Administrative Procedures Act. Greene v. Lujan, No. C89-645Z,
On August 23, 2002, the Samish filed with the district court a Rule 60(b)(6) motion to be relieved of the judgment in Washington II. The United States and nine tribes whose treaty fishing rights were confirmed in United States v. Washington (“the Opposition Tribes”) opposed the Samish’s motion. The district court held that federal recognition was not an extraordinary circumstance, reasoning that “a tribe’s recognition, or nonrecognition, has no impact on whether it may exercise treaty rights.” United States v. Washington, No. CV 70-09213, Subproceeding No. 01-2, slip op. at 13, 16 (W.D.Wash. Dec. 19, 2002). The district court also noted that the Samish had not alleged that the Washington II proceeding was fundamentally unfair or that the Samish had been prevented from adducing evidence in support of its claim. The interest in finality was an equally compelling factor that weighed against reopening, given “the unmistakable conclusion that, at this stage, their addition would wreak havoc on hard-wrought management agreements and plans.” Id. at 17.
The Samish filed a motion for reconsideration of the district court’s ruling. In
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the denial of a Rule 60(b) motion for an abuse of discretion. G.C. & KB. Invs., Inc. v. Wilson,
ANALYSIS
I. Did the District Court Abuse Its Discretion By Ruling that Federal Recognition of the Samish Was Not an Extraordinary Circumstance?
The Samish contend that the district court abused its discretion by ruling that federal recognition was not an extraordinary circumstance that warranted reopening the judgment in Washington II. The Samish argue that this abuse of discretion resulted from errors of law.
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b) provides that “[o]n motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a party ... from a final judgment, order, or proceeding for the following reasons: ... (6) any other reason justifying relief from the operation of the judgment.” The Rule 60(b)(6) catchall provision applies only when the reason for granting relief is not covered by any of the other reasons set forth in Rule 60. Cmty. Dental Servs. v. Tani,
The Samish argue that the district court misinterpreted our precedents in ruling that “a tribe’s recognition, or nonrecognition, has no impact on whether it may exercise treaty rights.” It is well-settled that federal nonrecognition cannot divest a tribe of treaty rights. In Washington I, we held that “[n]onrecognition of the tribe by the federal government and the failure of the Secretary of the Interior to approve a tribe’s enrollment may result in loss of statutory benefits, but can have no impact on vested treaty rights.”
Although we have previously held that federal recognition is not necessary for the exercise of treaty fishing rights by
The mandatory criteria for federal recognition include the following:
(b) A predominant portion of the petitioning group comprises a distinct community and has existed as a community from historical times until the present.
(c) The petitioner has maintained political influence or authority over its members as an autonomous entity from historical times until the present.
25 C.F.R. § 83.7.
Indeed, we have never held that recognition of a tribe — as opposed to nonrecognition — is irrelevant to its exercise of treaty rights, despite some dicta to the contrary. See Greene v. Babbitt,
The district court erred in concluding that, because nonrecognition cannot impact vested treaty rights, recognition is irrelevant. The Samish would almost certainly have won the right to exercise its treaty fishing rights had the tribe been federally recognized at the time of Washington II. And although we have never explicitly held that federal recognition necessarily entitles a signatory tribe to exercise treaty rights,
Although federal recognition is for all practical purposes determinative of whether the tribe has maintained an organized tribal structure, the Opposition Tribes argue that the Samish’s federal recognition is still not an extraordinary circumstance. That is, the relevance of the Samish’s federal recognition is not the fact of the recognition itself, but rather the factual findings underlying that recognition, and whether the Samish had a full opportunity to present the facts supporting its treaty status to the district court in Washington II. That an ALJ arrived at different factual findings on better evidence is not a reason for granting a Rule 60(b)(6) motion. See Alpine Land & Reservoir Co.,
The crucial issue here is whether the fact that the Samish had the opportunity to litigate the factual basis underlying the tribe’s treaty status in Washington II means that the Samish were not “prevented ... from proceeding with the prosecution or defense of the action in a proper fashion.” Cmty. Dental Servs.,
For its part, the government argues that Washington II should not be reopened, because the judgment is not inconsistent with the federal recognition of the Samish. That is, the federally recognized Samish may have existed since historical times as a distinct group, enjoy a government-to-
The government’s position is inconsistent with our precedent. In Washington III, we “defined a single necessary and sufficient condition for the exercise of treaty rights by a group of Indians descended from a treaty signatory: the group must have maintained an organized tribal structure.”
Moreover, no tribe can be the political successor to the Samish unless that tribe merged or consolidated with the Samish. See United States v. Suquamish Indian Tribe,
We conclude that the district court misinterpreted our precedents, and thereby abused its discretion, in ruling that the fact of federal recognition had no impact on whether the Samish may exercise treaty fishing rights. Federal recognition is determinative of the issue of tribal organization, the issue upon which the Samish were denied treaty fishing rights in Washington II. As the Samish’s lack of recognition was a circumstance beyond the tribe’s control, them subsequent recognition is an extraordinary circumstance that warrants setting aside the judgment in Washington II.
II. Do the District Court’s Finality Concerns Independently Support Its Denial of the Samish’s Rule 60(b)(6) Motion?
Although we conclude that federal recognition of the Samish constitutes an extraordinary circumstance for purposes of Rule 60(b)(6), we still must decide whether the district court’s finality concerns independently justify its denial of the Samish’s motion.
The Samish argue that the district court abused its discretion by failing to balance finality concerns against the interest in achieving justice. The district court stated that the motion raised two principal issues: (1) whether extraordinary circumstances justified reopening the judgment, and (2)”whether the interests in finality are paramount to other interests.” Having concluded that the lack of extraordinary circumstances was an independent basis for denying relief, the district court did not balance finality concerns but rather stated that they were “[a]n equally compelling factor.”
In discussing the interest in finality, the district court stated:
The United States and the Opposition Tribes point out that, in reliance on Washington II, this court has approved many state-tribal fish management plans, mediated and decided intertribal disputes on treaty fishing issues, determined treaty tribes’ usual and accustomed fishing places, and decided allocation issues. The United States and Opposition Tribes rightly observe that management of fish harvest involves a delicate balancing of interests within the overall framework and that these management plans — achieved after considerable time and expense — would be upset by the addition of another Tribe at this late stage.
... The Samish have not convincingly rebutted, nor could they, the unmistakable conclusion that, at this stage, their addition would wreak havoc on hard-wrought management agreements and plans.
(Citation omitted.) The district court also noted that the interest in finality is at its zenith in natural resource allocation cases.
In its motion for reconsideration, the Samish included a proposal to minimize possible disruptions that its participation in Washington I would entail. The Samish noted that three of the tribes participating in Washington I had established themselves as successors in interest to Samish treaty rights, and the Samish “would agree to exercise treaty fishing rights under the orders in the case that apply to these three tribes, and under the regulatory authority and framework of the three tribes.” Under this proposal, the Samish argued, their inclusion would not disrupt existing orders.
Despite “the Samish’s efforts to craft a workable, minimally disruptive framework for the Tribe’s intervention,” the district
Because it is unclear to what extent the district court relied on finality concerns in denying the Samish’s motions, especially after the Samish submitted a proposal for minimizing the disruptive effects of its participation in Washington I, we conclude that finality concerns do not independently support the district court’s denial of the Samish’s Rule 60(b)(6) motion. That is, had the district court properly concluded that federal recognition was an extraordinary circumstance the somewhat speculative concerns about finality are insufficient to have carried the day.
The Opposition Tribes’ point is well taken that “[hjaving supervised the litigation since 1970, the district court is in the best position to judge the impact adding new parties might have.”
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons we reverse the order of the district court denying the Samish’s Rule 60(b)(6) motion and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. "Federal recognition” is a process by which the United States government formally acknowledges a government-to-government relationship with a historic tribe. See 25 C.F.R. §§ 83.2, 83.12 (2003).
. This conclusion is surprising given that in Washington I the district court determined that the Stillaguamish Tribe and the Upper Skagit Tribe were treaty tribes, although neither was federally recognized at the time. See
. In dissent, Judge Canby argued that the district court's factual findings could not be so easily severed from its erroneous belief in the necessity of federal recognition.
. For example, the government argued that "should [the Samish] succeed in obtaining acknowledgment' of their current status as [an] 'Indian tribe[]' in the pending administrative proceedings, this might justify an application to re-open the present judgment against them.” Brief for United States in Opposition to Petition for a Writ of Certiorari, Duwamish Tribes v. Washington,
.Until the Department of the Interior . adopted acknowledgment regulations in 1978, see 25 C.F.R. §§ 83.1-83.13 (2003), the federal government decided on an ad hoc basis which groups of Indians would be recognized as tribes. See Barbara N. Coen, Tribal Status Decision Making: A Federal Perspective on Acknowledgment, 37 New Eng. L.Rev. 491, 491 (2003).
. In dissent, Judge Reinhardt argued that if the Samish qualified for federal recognition, they necessarily also qualified for treaty fishing rights.
. The regulations define '‘historical” as "dating from first sustained contact with non-Indians.” 25 C.F.R. § 83.1.
. Indeed, the United States argued in Washington III that "[w]hile recent cases have indicated that the federal government’s failure to recognize a tribe is not dispositive, positive recognition by the United States is accorded great deference and may well be controlling.” Brief for United States in Opposition to Petition for a Writ of Certiorari, Duwamish, Samish, Snohomish, Snoqualmie & Steilacoom Indian Tribes v. Washington,
. In extreme circumstances, courts may be able to overturn the decision to recognize a tribe. See Baker v. Carr,
.One commentator has explained that by acknowledging a tribe, the Department of the Interior "is not 'granting' sovereign status or powers to the group, nor is it creating a tribe made up of its Indian descendants .... Rather, the Department is acknowledging that the sovereign has existed continuously since historic times, retaining its inherent powers.” Coen, Tribal Status Decision Making, 37 New Eng. L.Rev. at 499.
.United States v. Oregon,
.The district court found that”[t]he present Lummi Tribe also includes descendants of the Semiahmoo and Samish Indians of 1855.” Washington I,
. We note, however, that a number of different district judges have presided over various parts of this case in the 34 years that it has been pending in the Western District of Washington.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Appellant Samish Indian Tribe (“Samish Tribe”) appeals the district court’s order denying the Samish Tribe’s motion pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(6) for relief from the district court’s prior judgment in United States v. Washington,
I.
A.
The issue before this court is not whether the Samish Tribe might qualify for off-reservation fishing rights pursuant to the Treaty of Point Elliott were it to commence an action today. Rather, as the majority opinion states: “The crucial issue here is whether the fact that the Samish had the opportunity to litigate this issue in Washington II means that the Samish were not ‘prevented ... from proceeding with the prosecution or defense of the action in a proper fashion.’ ” Op. at 1159 (internal citation omitted). The majority opinion answers in the negative; I believe our precedent requires an affirmative answer.
Our precedent in this area of the law and with regard to the very parties at issue here makes clear, if nothing else, that whether a group of Native Americans are recognized as a tribe by the federal government is a distinct legal inquiry from whether that same group of Native Americans qualify for off-reservation fishing rights pursuant to the Point Elliott and related treaties. Further, recognition as a tribe is not a necessary precondition to qualify for such treaty fishing rights.
Thus, in United States v. Washington,
This conclusion is clearly contrary to our prior holding and is foreclosed by well-established precedent.
* * *
*1164 We have defined a single necessary and sufficient condition for the exercise of treaty rights by a group of Indians descended from a treaty signatory: the group must have maintained an organized tribal structure.
Washington II,
Our precedent is equally clear that although recognition as a tribe may be a decision generally left to the discretion of the Executive Branch, “[wjhether a group of citizens of Indian ancestry is descended from a treaty signatory and has maintained an organized tribal structure [so as to qualify for off-reservation fishing rights pursuant to the Point Elliott and related treaties] is a factual question which a district court is competent to determine.” Washington I,
Thus, the fact alone that the Samish Tribe was not recognized by the federal government at the time of Washington II in no way prevented it from proffering the type of evidence that could have resulted in a finding by the district court in Washington II that the Samish Tribe had maintained an organized tribal structure and, therefore, was entitled to off-reservation fishing rights pursuant to the Treaty of Point Elliott. Indeed, two other tribes did precisely this. Specifically, in Washington I, the district court held that the Stilla-guamish Tribe and Upper Skagit Tribe were both entitled to off-reservation fishing rights pursuant to the Treaty of Point Elliott despite the fact that they were not at the time recognized as tribes by the federal government. United States v. Washington,
The Stillaguamish and Upper Skagit Tribes ... are not recognized as organized tribes by the federal government. ... Evidence supported the court’s findings that the members of the two tribes are descendants of treaty signatories and have maintained tribal organizations. We therefore affirm the*1165 district court’s conclusion that the Stilla-guamish and Upper Skagit Tribes are entities possessing rights under the Treaty of Point Elliott.
Washington I,
Because the Samish Tribe has presented no evidence that it was precluded from doing precisely what the Stillaguamish and Upper Skagit Tribes did, it has not shown that it was “ ‘prevented ... from proceeding with the prosecution or defense of the action in a proper fashion,’ ” Op. at 1159, such that its recognition as a tribe now should permit it to set aside the judgment in Washington II.
B.
Despite this clear, consistent and controlling authority, the majority opinion “concluded] that the Samish were effectively prevented from proving their tribal status ‘in a proper fashion’ ” for three reasons:
the government’s ‘excessive delays and ... misconduct’ in withholding of recognition from the Samish, a circumstance beyond their control; [2] the government’s position in Washington II that federal recognition was necessary and that future federal recognition might justify revisiting the treaty rights issue; and [3] the district court’s erroneous conclusion that nonrecognition was decisive and wholesale adoption of the United States’ boilerplate findings of fact in Washington II. ...
Op. at 1159. But none of these factors supports granting the Samish Tribe’s Rule 60(b)(6) motion.
First, although the Samish Tribe initially applied for federal recognition in 1972 and were not finally recognized until 1996, whether the Samish Tribe was entitled to off-reservation fishing rights pursuant to the Treaty of Point Elliott was an issue tried and submitted before the district court in Washington II in 1977. Greene v. Babbitt,
Further, as noted above, there is no showing that the five-year delay immediately following the Samish Tribe’s application for federal recognition to the BIA precluded the Samish Tribe from submitting to the district court in Washington II the same evidence of having maintained an organized tribal structure that it had submitted or thereafter would submit to the BIA. Nor is there evidence that the Samish Tribe applied for a postponement of their treaty-rights trial and submission to allow the BIA to determine its recognition claim.
Second, “the government’s position in Washington II that federal recognition
The Stillaguamish and Upper Skagit Tribes ... are not recognized as organized tribes by the federal government. ... Nonrecognition of the tribe by the federal government and the failure of the Secretary of the Interior to approve a tribe’s enrollment may result in loss of statutory benefits, but can have no impact on vested treaty rights. Whether a group of citizens of Indian ancestry is descended from a treaty signatory and has maintained an organized tribal structure is a factual question which a district court is competent to determine.... Evidence supported the court’s findings that the members of the two tribes are descendants of treaty signatories and have maintained tribal organizations. We therefore affirm the district court’s conclusion that the Stilla-guamish and Upper Skagit Tribes are entities possessing rights under the Treaty of Point Elliott.
Washington I,
Third, nor is “the district court’s erroneous conclusion that nonrecognition was decisive and wholesale adoption of the United States’ boilerplate findings of fact in Washington II,” Op. at 1159, relevant. On appeal, as noted above, we expressly corrected the district court’s erroneous conclusion. Washington II,
[T]he district court specifically found that the appellants had not functioned since treaty times as ‘continuous separate, distinct and cohesive Indian cultural or political communit(ies).’
After close scrutiny, we conclude that the evidence supports this finding of fact. Although the appellants now have constitutions and formal governments, the governments have not controlled the lives of the members. Nor have the appellants clearly established the continuous informal cultural influence they concede is required.
*1167 The appellants’ members are descended from treaty tribes, but they have intermarried with non-Indians and many are of mixed blood. That may be true of some members of tribes whose treaty status has been established. But unlike those persons, those who comprise the groups of appellants have not settled in distinctively Indian residential areas.
We cannot say, then, that the finding of insufficient political and cultural cohesion is clearly erroneous.
Washington II,
Indeed, the argument that the district court’s erroneous conclusion of law in Washington II so “permeated the entire factual history,” id. at 1375 (Canby, J., dissenting), that the findings of fact could not be relied upon even by this court when it applied the correct standard is one that was heralded by the dissent in Washington II and, as demonstrated above, rejected by the majority:
My difference with the majority is that I am unable to say that the findings of the district court resolve the determinative question of tribal continuity or provide us with the means to do so upon review.
[T]he conclusions of law help to illustrate the deficiencies of the findings of fact upon which the decision of the district court is based. The findings that appellants had not maintained a ‘continuous separate, distinct and cohesive Indian cultural or political communitfies)’ or ‘organized tribal structure(s) in a political sense’ amounted in context to findings that appellants lacked federal recognition or attributes necessarily dependent upon federal recognition. These findings consequently do not resolve the crucial factual issue and cannot support the judgment.
Application of the proper legal standards to this case requires new determination of fact, and possibly additional evidence relating to the political organization of the relevant tribes at treaty times. I would therefore remand the matter to the district court for determinations whether appellants have maintained tribal structures reflecting the degree of organization that existed at the time of the treaties, with reasonable allowances for adaptation to changing conditions, and whether some defining characteristic of the original tribes persists in appellants as evolving tribal communities.
Id. at 1374, 1375-76 (Canby, J., dissenting). The majority opinion recognizes that this is an argument already made and rejected, Op. at 1155 n. 3, but pays no heed to the crucial finding of not having maintained an organized tribal structure, approved by our decision. Such insouciance to our precedent is inadvisable.
II.
Although acknowledging that “we have never explicitly held that federal recognition necessarily entitles a signatory tribe to exercise treaty rights,” the majority opinion asserts that “this is an inevitable conclusion.” Op. at 1158. Again, this is contrary to our precedent.
In Greene I, what was thereafter recognized as the Samish Tribe appealed to the district court from the BIA’s denial of the Samish Tribe’s petitions for recognition.
Our holding in Greene I that the proper fora — if any — to relitigate the Samish Tribe’s treaty rights were Washington I and Washington II and our promise to the Tulalip Tribe that it would have an opportunity to protect its interests in those fora compels the conclusion that federal recognition does not necessarily entail treaty status. Indeed, this-is clearly what we meant when we said: “Allowing the Tulal-ip to intervene would only further confuse the issues and postpone what may be inevitable: a direct challenge to the allocation of treaty fishing rights, which would be fully and independently litigated in the Washington I forum.” Id. at 978 (emphasis added). It would have been an empty promise — indeed, a complete deprivation of due process — to deny the Tulalip Tribe’s motion to intervene in the Samish BIA recognition proceedings on the basis that it could later protect its treaty rights in the Washington I and Washington II courts, while all along assuming that by virtue of the Samish Tribe gaining federal recognition, the Washington I and Washington II courts would be required to grant the Samish Tribe treaty rights. If that was the case, where then was the Tulalip Tribe to protect its interests? Elementary principles of due process, such as the right to present evidence and to be heard before property rights are taken, require that a tribe challenging the Samish Tribe’s claims to treaty rights have an opportunity to disprove the maintenance of organized tribal structure and not be precluded from offering such proof by an administrative agency determination from which the challenging tribe was excluded.
Indeed, the majority opinion’s “inevitable conclusion,” Op. at 1158, is precisely the argument advanced by the dissent in Greene I, and rejected by the majority opinion there. Dissenting, Judge Reinhardt argued that “federal recognition is tantamount to acknowledgment by the federal government of tribal entitlement to treaty rights,” id. at 980-81, and therefore concluded:
As a practical matter, if the BIA reconsiders its earlier decision, granting federal recognition to the Samish, the agency’s determination that the Samish have “maintained tribal political influence or other authority,” 25 C.F.R. § 83.7(c), will undoubtedly carry great weight in any judicial reconsideration of Samish entitlement to treaty fishing rights.
Id. at 982. To this, the majority opinion replied:
The dissent speculates that if the BIA reverses its decision and recognizes the Samish as an official tribe, this “will*1169 undoubtedly carry great weight in any judicial reconsideration of Samish entitlement to treaty fishing rights.” In fact, such a decision would have marginal influence at best. The Washington I court need not accord any deference to an agency proceeding that has been expressly limited to matter other than rights under the 1855 treaty.
Id. at 978 (emphasis added).
Our holding in Greene I that the district court “need not accord any deference” to the BIA’s recognition of the Samish Tribe, id. at 978, was affirmed in Greene II. There, the Secretary of the Interior appealed the district court’s decision that it was formally to adjudicate under the Administrative Procedure Act whether the Samish should be recognized as a tribe. Greene II,
Washington II precludes a finding that the Samish Tribe has ‘maintained tribal political influence or other authority over its members as an autonomous entity throughout history until the present.’ 25 C.F.R. § 83.7(c). Washington II involved the same factual inquiry into the historicity of the present Samish Tribe. Such an inquiry is a necessary condition both for treaty recognition and for statutory recognition under the current BIA regulations. We have here substantial overlap in evidence and argument, save for subsequently developed evidence; and the claims, although not identical, are closely related. See Restatement (Second) of Judgments, § 27 (1982).
The factual finding regarding the Samish Tribe’s historicity in Washington II precludes what would be a near identical inquiry in this case.
Id. at 1276. The majority opinion in Greene II rejected this argument, noting that in Greene I “[w]e ... squarely rejected the Tulalip’s position that federal recognition of the Samish would be inconsistent with Washington I and Washington II” and “agreed with the district court ... that the question of federal recognition as a tribe ‘did not implicate treaty claims.’ ” Id. at 1271.
Indeed, basic rules of judicial review, collateral estoppel and evidence dictate this result. The factual findings underlying the BIA’s recognition of the Samish Tribe are adjudicative in nature and, thus, not entitled to Chevron deference. See Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
Our precedent holds — and, for the reasons explained above, rightly so — that “[fjederal recognition does not self-execute treaty rights claims,” Greene I,
III.
Until now, our precedent has been both clear and consistent that whether a group of Native Americans are recognized as a tribe by the federal government is a distinct legal inquiry from whether that same group of Native Americans qualify for off-reservation fishing rights pursuant to the Point Elliott and related treaties; and, equally so, that recognition as a tribe is not a necessary precondition for off-reservation fishing rights. Thus, the fact that the Samish Tribe was not recognized by the federal government at the time of Washington II in no way prevented it (as did the Stillaguamish and Upper Skagit Tribes) from putting forth the type of evidence of having maintained an organized tribal structure that could have resulted in a finding by the district court in Washington II that the Samish Tribe was entitled to off-reservation fishing rights pursuant to the Treaty of Point Elliott. Nor has the Samish Tribe adduced any evidence that it was precluded from so doing.
Further, as we have previously held, federal recognition does not compel status under the Point Elliott and related treaties, and, indeed, a district court “need not accord any deference to an agency proceeding that has been expressly limited to matter other than rights under the 1855 treaty.” Greene I,
Accordingly, I would affirm the order of the district court.
. Except " 'when an intervening Supreme Court decision undermines an existing precedent of the Ninth Circuit, and both cases are closely on point,’ " "[a] three-judge panel generally has no power to overrule a decision of this court.” Rotee Industries, Inc. v. Mitsubishi Corp.,
. This precedent in no way renders federal recognition a nullity. Rather, ”[f]ederal recognition brings its own obvious rewards, not the least of which is the eligibility of federal money for tribal programs, social services and economic development.” Greene v. United States,
. In light of this precedent, the majority opinion's statement that “the Samish's inability to exercise their treaty fishing rights hinged on their status as an unrecognized tribe,” Op. at 1155, is inexplicable,
. Nor, as the majority opinion recognizes, is the fact “[t]hat an ALJ arrived at a different factual finding [as to federal recognition] on better evidence ... a reason for granting a Rule 60(b)(6) motion. See Alpine Land & Reservoir Co.,
