The United Tribe of Shawnee Indians (UTSI) brought this action for declaratory and mandamus relief against the United States, the Secretaries of Interior and Defense, and various federal administrative officials. UTSI sought a declaration of its status as a federally recognized Indian tribe, a mandate that it be included on the list of recognized tribes maintained by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and a declaration that a constructive trust in its favor be placed on certain lands subject to disposition under the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act, 40 U.S.C. §§ 471
et seq.
1
The district court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1), concluding that UTSI’s claims were barred by the doctrines of sovereign
*546
immunity, ripeness, standing, and primary jurisdiction.
See United Tribe of Shawnee Indians v. United States,
I
The facts underlying this litigation are set out in some detail in the district court opinion. We therefore recite only those necessary to our disposition of this appeal. UTSI is made up of thirty members, all of whom are related to its representative, principal chief Jimmie D. Oyler. It is based in Kansas on land owned by Mr. Oyler, which was patented to his ancestors under the Treaty with the Shawnee, 10 Stat. 1053 (1854). UTSI claims it is a present-day continuation as a tribal entity of the Shawnee Tribe that entered into the 1854 Treaty.
In 1994, Mr. Oyler initiated proceedings with the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) under 25 C.F.R. Pt. 83. These regulations provide the administrative process by which an Indian group can establish it exists as an Indian tribe, thereby becoming recognized by the federal government for purposes of the protection, benefits and services the government provides to tribes. See 25 C.F.R. § 83.2 (2000). Mr. Oyler abandoned these proceedings before the BIA had made a determination regarding whether UTSI was entitled to recognized status.
In 1998, federal officials began considering the potential disposal of the Sunflower Army Ammunition Plant as excess property. Part of this facility occupies land that was previously included in an Indian reservation created by the 1854 Treaty with the Shawnee. UTSI is based within three miles of the Sunflower Plant. The Federal Property and Administrative Services Act, which controls the management and disposal of government property, provides for the transfer to the Secretary of the Interi- or of
excess real property located within the reservation of any group, band, or tribe of Indians which is recognized as eligible for services by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Such excess real property shall be held in trust by the Secretary for the benefit and use of the group, band, or tribe of Indians, within whose reservation such excess real property is located.
40 U.S.C. § 483(a)(2).
In the present lawsuit, UTSI seeks a judicial ruling that it is a recognized tribe by virtue of both the 1854 Treaty and the decision in
The Kansas Indians,
On appeal, UTSI contends the district court erred in failing to conclude this case falls within the exception to sovereign immunity discussed in
Larson v. Domestic and Foreign Commerce Corp,,
II
Motions to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(1) may take one of two forms.
See Holt v. United States,
It appears from the record on appeal that defendants mounted a factual, rather than a facial, challenge to subject matter jurisdiction below. “Accordingly, we review the district court’s dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction de novo[, and its] findings of jurisdictional facts for clear error.” Id.
III
We turn first to UTSI’s argument that sovereign immunity is waived here under the holding in
Larson,
The United States as a sovereign is immune from suit unless it consents to be sued.
See United States v. Murdock Mach. & Eng’g Co.,
In Larson, the Supreme Court recognized an exception to sovereign immunity under the ultra vires doctrine.
[W]here the officer’s powers are limited by statute, his actions beyond those limitations are considered individual and not sovereign actions. The officer is not doing the business which the sovereign has empowered him to do or he is doing it in a way which the sovereign has forbidden. His actions are ultra vires his authority and therefore may be made the object of specific relief.
Larson,
UTSI contends that the BIA’s actions in refusing to accord it status as a recognized tribe and enter it on the list of recognized tribes is outside the limit on the BIA’s authority imposed by the Federally Recognized Indian Tribe List Act of 1994, Pub.L. No. 103-454, 108 Stat. 4791 (1994) (codified at 25 U.S.C. § 479a). Section 103 of that Act provides:
(3) Indian tribes presently may be recognized by Act of Congress; by the administrative procedures set forth in part 83 of the Code of Federal Regulation denominated “Procedures for Establishing that an American Indian Group Exists as an Indian Tribe;” or by a decision of a United States court;
(4) a tribe which has been recognized in one of these manners may not be terminated except by an Act of Congress.
*548 25 U.S.C. § 479a (note). UTSI argues that because the Shawnee tribe was recognized as a tribal entity by Congress in the 1854 Treaty and by the Supreme Court in The Kansas Indians, the BIA acted outside the limits on its authority by refusing to list UTSI as a recognized tribe, which effectively terminated its existing recognition contrary to section 103.
UTSI’s argument assumes the very factual issue at the heart of this litigation. UTSI can only prevail on its contention if we accept its bare assertion that it is the present-day embodiment of the Shawnee Tribe. The only evidence even arguably offered by UTSI to support this proposition is the fact that UTSI is based on land patented to Mr. Oyler’s ancestor by the Treaty. While this fact may establish that Mr. Oyler’s ancestor was a member of the Shawnee tribe and that Mr. Oyler is therefore a descendant of a tribal member, it says nothing about whether UTSI has maintained its identity with the Shawnee tribe and has continued to exercise that tribe’s sovereign authority up to the present day. While the 1854 Treaty and The Kansas Indians recognized the sovereignty of the Shawnee Tribe in the nineteenth century, those events without more do not speak to the status of UTSI today. Because UTSI has failed to allege facts demonstrating that the BIA’s failure to recognize it or place it on the list of recognized tribes is ultra vires, that doctrine does not provide a basis for the waiver of sovereign immunity under Larson. 2
Moreover, Larson provides an alternative ground for our conclusion that UTSI may not rely on the ultra vires doctrine. Reliance on the doctrine
may fail, as one against the sovereign, even if it is claimed that the officer being sued has acted unconstitutionally or beyond Ms statutory powers, if the relief requested cannot be granted by merely ordering the cessation of the conduct complained of but will require affirmative action by the sovereign or the disposition of unquestionably sovereign property.
Painter v. Shalala,
Finally and perhaps most significantly, the Court in
Larson
took pains to point out that the ultra vires doctrine is grounded on “the officer’s
lack
of delegated power, A claim of error in the
exercise
of that power is therefore not sufficient.”
Larson,
The BIA has been delegated the authority to determine whether recognized status should be accorded to previously unrecognized tribes. See H.R. Rep. No. 103-781, at 3 & n. 10 (1994), reprinted in 1994 U.S.C.CA..N. 3768, 3769-70; see also 25 C.F.R. Pt. 83. Thus any action taken by the BIA with respect to determining whether UTSI is entitled to recognized status is within its delegated authority, and therefore not ultra vires, notwithstanding UTSI’s assertion that the BIA is wrongfully withholding such status. UTSI cannot invoke the ultra vires doctrine by attempting to equate the BIA’s current failure to accord it recognized status with the termination of recognized status previously given.
IV
UTSI also contends sovereign immunity is waived by the APA. The district court held that UTSI’S claims for tribal recognition and inclusion on the list of recognized tribes were not ripe for review under the APA because there had been no final agency action. The court further held that because the question of the tribe’s asserted existence and previous acknowledgment are within the BIA’s special expertise, the agency has primary jurisdiction over the recognition issues involved in UTSI’s claim regarding the Sunflower facility. Finally, the court held that sovereign immunity over UTSI’s request for a constructive trust was not waived by the APA because that claim did not seek review of any agency action.
The APA contains an express waiver of sovereign immunity for actions brought against the United States by providing that
[a]n action in a court of the United States seeking relief other than money damages and stating a claim that an agency or an officer or employee thereof acted or failed to act in an official capacity or under color of legal authority shall not be dismissed nor relief therein be denied on the ground that it is against the United States or that the United States is an indispensable party.... Nothing herein ... affects other limitations on judicial review or the power or duty of the court to dismiss any action or deny relief on any other appropriate legal or equitable ground....
5 U.S.C. § 702. The APA provides that agency action is judicially reviewable in two instances: when it is “made reviewable by statute” and when it constitutes “final agency action for which there is no other adequate remedy in a court.”
Id.
§ 704. UTSI has not identified any other statute which provides for judicial review of the official conduct it challenges, and thus any attempt to obtain judicial review directly under section 704 of the APA must be preceded by a final agency action.
See, e.g., Ash Creek Mining Co. v. Lujan,
UTSI contends it is not proceeding directly under the APA and that its claims are therefore not affected by the lack of a final order. It further asserts that the APA’s waiver of sovereign immunity applies to all civil claims against the United States and is not limited to actions seeking judicial review of final agency action.
It is true, as UTSI asserts, that section 702 has been held to provide a general waiver of sovereign immunity in all civil actions seeking equitable relief on the basis of legal wrongs for which governmental agencies are accountable.
See, e.g., United States v. Mitchell,
V
“The doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies is one among related doctrines — including abstention, finality, and ripeness — that govern the timing of federal-court decisionmaking.”
McCarthy v. Madigan,
As to the first of these purposes, the exhaustion doctrine recognizes the notion, grounded in deference to Congress’ delegation of authority to coordinate branches of Government, that agencies, not the courts, ought to have primary responsibility for the programs that Congress has charged them to administer. Exhaustion concerns apply with particular force when the action under review involves exercise of the agency’s discretionary power or when the agency proceedings in question allow the agency to apply its special expertise.
Id.
We have indicated that exhaustion is required when, as here, a plaintiff attempts to bypass the regulatory framework for establishing that an Indian group exists as an Indian tribe.
See Western Shoshone Bus. Council v. Babbitt,
In James, a group of Indians sought a declaratory judgment in federal court that the failure to include it on the list of recognized tribes was contrary to law, and requested an order directing that it be placed on the list. The Department of Interior moved to dismiss on the ground that the group had not exhausted available administrative remedies, contending “that because [the group] had not applied for recognition under its published rules and regulations, [it was] not entitled to a judicial declaration that [it] was federally recognized.” Id. at 1135. In that case, as here, the group relied on historical events to assert that it was already federally recognized and that it therefore need not *551 exhaust administrative channels. The court was not persuaded.
[T]he determination whether these documents adequately support the conclusion that the [group was] federally recognized in the middle of the nineteenth century, or whether other factors support federal recognition, should be made in the first instance by the Department of the Interior since Congress has specifically authorized the Executive Branch to prescribe regulations concerning Indian affairs and relations. 25 U.S.C. §§ 2, 9. The purpose of the regulatory scheme set up by the Secretary of the Interior is to determine which Indian groups exist as tribes. 25 C.F.R. § 83.2. That purpose would be frustrated if the Judicial Branch made initial determinations of whether groups have been recognized previously or whether conditions for recognition currently exist.
Id. at 1137.
We agree. Determining whether a group of Indians exists as a tribe is a matter requiring the specialized agency expertise the Court considered significant in
McCarthy,
The circumstances identified by the Court in McCarthy, where the interest of the individual in obtaining prompt access to a judicial forum may outweigh requiring exhaustion, are not present here. First, any current prejudice to UTSI from the delay due to requiring exhaustion is the result of UTSI’s own decision years ago to abandon the administrative process before it was completed. Second, there is no doubt that the agency is empowered to grant the relief UTSI seeks. Third, nothing in the record before us indicates that the administrative body is biased or has otherwise predetermined the issue. While the exchange of correspondence between UTSI and the agency reveals that UTSI’s submissions were not adequate, the agency assured UTSI that it stood ready to work closely with it to help identify deficiencies and give it the opportunity to strengthen its petition for recognition. See Aplee. Supp.App. at 33-34. In our judgment, requiring exhaustion is appropriate here.
VI
In sum, we conclude the ultra vires doctrine does not provide a waiver of sovereign immunity. We further conclude that even if immunity is waived by the APA with respect to UTSI’s claims, UTSI must first exhaust its administrative remedies. Because we hold that UTSI must proceed administratively with its claim that it is entitled to status as a recognized tribe, and because only recognized tribes are eligible for consideration under section 483(2) of the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act, UTSI’s claim under that provision is not ripe for judicial review. 4
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. UTSI also raised claims under the National Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 4331 et seq., and the Indian Gaming Regulation Act, 25 U.S.C. §§ 2701 et seq., and moved for a preliminary injunction. These matters were decided adversely to UTSI and it does not pursue them on appeal.
. The district court approached the ultra vires doctrine by determining that UTSI had no standing to claim the BIA had abridged the treaty rights of the Shawnee tribe because UTSI failed to demonstrate it was a party to that treaty.
See United Tribe of Shawnee Indians,
. We note that the federal officials named in this suit were sued only in their official capac-¡lies.
. We also note that UTSI could seek review under the APA of any administrative decision on its request to have reservation land within the Sunflower facility placed in trust for its benefit. UTSI’s requested mandamus relief is therefore precluded.
See Mt. Emmons Mining Co. v. Babbitt,
