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(Cite
as: 51 F.3d 150)
U.S.
v. Lawrence
C.A.8
(S.D.), 1995.
United
States Court of Appeals,Eighth Circuit.
UNITED
STATES of America, Appellant,
v.
Leo
Lyle LAWRENCE, also known as Bud Lawrence, Appellee.
No.
94-2274.
Submitted
Oct. 11, 1994.
Decided
March 30, 1995.
Rehearing
Denied June 20, 1995.FN*
FN*
McKay,
Circuit Judge, would grant the petition for rehearing.
Elizabeth
Lohah Homer, Dept. of Justice, Washington, DC, argued, for appellant.
Kenneth
E. Jasper, Rapid City, SD, argued, for appellee.
Before
McMILLIAN, Circuit Judge, McKAY,FN**
Senior Circuit Judge, and BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.
FN**
The
HONORABLE MONROE G. McKAY, Senior United States Circuit Judge for
the Tenth Circuit, sitting by designation.
BOWMAN,
Circuit Judge.
The
government appeals an order of the District Court
FN1
granting the defendant's motion to dismiss for lack of subject-matter
jurisdiction an indictment charging the defendant, Leo Lyle Lawrence, with
abusive sexual contact, a violation of 18 U.S.C. §§
1152
and 2244(a)(3) (1988).
We affirm.
FN1.
The
Honorable Andrew W. Bogue, Senior United States District Judge for
the District of South Dakota.
I.
[1]
Under
the Indian Country Crimes Act, codified at 18 U.S.C. §
1152,
federal courts do not have jurisdiction over offenses committed within
Indian country unless either the defendant or the alleged victim
is Indian.
See
Duro
v. Reina,
495 U.S. 676, 680 n. 1, 110 S.Ct. 2053, 2057
n. 1, 109 L.Ed.2d 693 (1990);
United
States v. McBratney,
104 U.S. 621, 624, 26 L.Ed. 869 (1882).
In the present case, it is undisputed that the alleged
abusive sexual contact occurred in Indian country and that Lawrence
is non-Indian.
Based on stipulated facts and testimony adduced at an evidentiary
hearing, the District Court determined that the alleged victim is
also non-Indian for purposes of establishing federal criminal jurisdiction, and
granted the defendant's motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.
On appeal, the government challenges the District Court's determination that
the alleged victim is non-Indian.
We
first address the issue of the appropriate standard of review
in this case.
Lawrence's brief does not take a clear-cut position on the
issue.
The government argues for de
novo
review on the ground that the District Court's determination of
the alleged victim's status as an Indian or a non-Indian
is a legal conclusion.
The government acknowledges, however, that this Circuit has on occasion
employed a clear-error standard of review in subject-matter jurisdiction cases
involving diversity of citizenship.
See
Dunlap
v. Buchanan,
741 F.2d 165, 167 (8th Cir.1984);
Holmes
v. Sopuch,
639 F.2d 431, 434 (8th Cir.1981);
and
Rogers
v. Bates,
431 F.2d 16, 18 (8th Cir.1970). FN2
FN2.
But
see Blakemore
v. Missouri Pacific Ry. Co.,
789 F.2d 616, 618 (8th Cir.1986), which appears to confine
clear-error review to the district court's underlying fact-finding, rather than
to the ultimate question of diversity vel
non.
[2]
We
conclude that the diversity-of-citizenship cases are inapposite here.
When an action is brought in federal court on the
basis of diversity jurisdiction, the question whether complete diversity of
citizenship exists as required under 28 U.S.C. §
1332(a)
(1988) is generally a straightforward question of fact.
It therefore is not surprising that the clear-error standard of
review has been applied to determinations that subject-matter jurisdiction based
on diversity of citizenship either has or has not been
established.
In contrast, the present case calls for a conclusion as
to whether a particular person qualifies as an “Indian”
for purposes of federal criminal jurisdiction.
While many subsidiary facts may go into this determination, we
believe that ultimately the determination of Indian or non-Indian status
is a conclusion of law.
[3]
In
Falls
v. Nesbitt,
966 F.2d 375 (8th Cir.1992), we held that where our
decision “is
predominantly one of determining whether
the established facts fall within the relevant legal definition
...
we apply a de novo standard of review.”
Id.
at 377 (emphasis added);
see
also Kulinski
v. Medtronic Bio-Medicus, Inc.,
21 F.3d 254, 256 (8th Cir.1994) (reviewing de
novo
whether employee benefit plan was an “ERISA”
plan for purposes of subject-matter jurisdiction).
Like Falls,
the present case requires the application of a legal definition
to established facts.
Were any of the facts upon which the legal determination*152
must be made in dispute, we would apply the
clear error standard of Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a) to our review of
the subsidiary findings made by the trial court.
See
Blakemore
v. Missouri Pacific Ry. Co.,
789 F.2d 616, 618 (8th Cir.1986).
Here, the underlying facts have been established in part by
stipulation and in part as a result of findings made
by the District Court after an evidentiary hearing.
The government does not challenge any of the District Court's
subsidiary findings as clearly erroneous.
What the government does challenge is the District Court's conclusion
that the established facts, when added together, do not result
in an “Indian”
for purposes of federal criminal jurisdiction.
Our review of that conclusion is de
novo.
See Drevlow
v. Lutheran Church, Mo. Synod,
991 F.2d 468, 470 (8th Cir.1993) (de
novo
review appropriate where subject-matter jurisdiction is at issue and facts
are undisputed).
II.
In
determining whether the alleged victim in this case is Indian,
the District Court followed the rule set out in United
States v. Rogers,
45 U.S. (4 How.) 567, 572-73, 11 L.Ed. 1105 (1846),
that for purposes of federal criminal jurisdiction, an Indian is
a person who (1) has some Indian blood;
and
(2) is “recognized”
as an Indian by a tribe or by the federal
government.
See
also United
States v. Torres,
733 F.2d 449, 456 (7th Cir.), cert.
denied,
469 U.S. 864, 105 S.Ct. 204, 83 L.Ed.2d 135 (1984);
United
States v. Dodge,
538 F.2d 770, 786 (8th Cir.1976), cert.
denied,
429 U.S. 1099, 97 S.Ct. 1118, 1119, 51 L.Ed.2d 547
(1977).
The District Court presumed that the alleged victim of the
offense, who is 11/128 ths Oglala Sioux Indian
FN3
, has the requisite quantum of Indian blood under the
first part of the Rogers
inquiry, and proceeded directly to the question of whether the
alleged victim was “recognized”
as an Indian by an Indian tribe or the federal
government.
FN3.
The
alleged victim's mother is 11/64 ths Oglala Sioux Indian,
and her father is from Saipan.
Although the mother is an enrolled member of the Oglala
Sioux Indian tribe, she has lived most of her life
away from the reservation.
[4][5]
The
Court's “recognition”
analysis was guided by consideration of four factors it first
enunciated in St.
Cloud v. United States,
702 F.Supp. 1456 (D.S.D.1988).
Those factors, which the Court considered in declining order of
importance, are:
1)
tribal enrollment;
2)
government recognition formally and informally through receipt of assistance reserved
only to Indians;
3)
enjoyment of the benefits of tribal affiliation;
and
4) social recognition as an Indian through residence on a
reservation and participation in Indian social life.
Id.
at 1461.
Although
the government now takes issue with the third and fourth
elements of the St.
Cloud
inquiry, no such objection was raised in the District Court,
and the government argues in its opening brief that the
victim of the offense is Indian precisely because she satisfies
each of the St.
Cloud
criteria.
Not until the reply brief did the government first challenge
the District Court's use of the St.
Cloud
approach.
Because the government's attack on the St.
Cloud
factors comes after long acquiescence in the use of those
factors in this case, the attack is not properly before
us and we decline to review it.
As did the District Court,
we take St.
Cloud
as supplying the framework for our examination of the facts,
and we review de
novo
that Court's conclusion that the alleged victim is non-Indian for
purposes of federal criminal jurisdiction.FN4
FN4.
We
note that the third and fourth elements of the St.
Cloud
inquiry appear to be nothing more than elaborations of the
Rogers
tribal-recognition factor, and thus appear to fit comfortably within the
broad framework of the Rogers
formulation.
Were we to reach the question, we would be inclined
to hold that the government's attack on these St.
Cloud
elements lacks merit.
A.
[6][7]
As
to the first St.
Cloud
factor, the parties stipulated that the alleged victim was not
an enrolled member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe or any
other Indian tribe.
The government makes much of the fact that the alleged
victim would become eligible for tribal enrollment once she completed
the tribe's *153
one-year residency requirement.
This argument misses the point.
An individual who has not completed the requirements for tribal
enrollment cannot be considered eligible.
Further, as the District Court correctly observed, the time of
the offense is the most appropriate point at which to
gauge a victim's status as an Indian.
At that time, the alleged victim was not an enrolled
member of any tribe and was not eligible for tribal
enrollment.
Thus, she did not satisfy the first St.
Cloud
factor.
B.
The
District Court also determined that the alleged victim did not
satisfy the St.
Cloud
government-recognition factor.
The government asserts that this factor is satisfied by the
alleged victim's receipt of medical treatment from the Indian Health
Service, and by her receipt of school books under the
federal Johnson-O'Malley Act.
The District Court concluded otherwise based on undisputed evidence that
the alleged victim was ineligible for medical treatment from the
Indian Health Service in her own right, and that she
had mistakenly been provided with the Johnson-O'Malley Act assistance while
ineligible.
We believe that the District Court correctly determined that the
alleged victim did not satisfy the second St.
Cloud
factor.
C.
The
District Court next concluded that the alleged victim did not
satisfy the third St.
Cloud
factor, namely, enjoyment of the benefits of tribal affiliation.
This factor, like the tribal-enrollment and social-recognition factors, goes to
the question of tribal recognition of Indian status.
The government presented undisputed evidence that seven months prior to
the alleged sexual abuse, the Oglala Sioux Tribe had taken
custody of the alleged victim under the authority of the
Indian Child Welfare Act, 25 U.S.C. §
1911
(“the
Act”),
and had placed her under the care of her grandmother,
an enrolled member of the Tribe.
However, the Court deemed this act insufficient to satisfy the
third factor, especially in light of the fact that the
alleged victim is ineligible for tribal benefits such as distributions.
We agree with the District Court's analysis.
As
the dissent suggests, a tribe's intervention in a child custody
proceeding under the Act might in some cases be deemed
tribal recognition of the child as an Indian.
Nevertheless, in the circumstances of this case, we do not
believe that the Tribe's actions amounted to tribal recognition.
The record reflects that prior to the Tribe's intervention, the
alleged victim and her siblings were on vacation with their
step-father in Nevada when the step-father was arrested there.
The State of Nevada took custody of the alleged victim
and her siblings and placed them in foster care on
August 14, 1992.
About a month later, on September 18, an individual from
the Indian Center in Las Vegas contacted the administrator of
the Indian Child Welfare Program for the Oglala Sioux Tribe
with respect to intervening on behalf of the alleged victim
and her siblings.
Subsequently, the Tribe agreed to become involved in transferring the
alleged victim and her siblings from foster care in Nevada
to their grandmother's care in her home on the Oglala
reservation.
Under
the Tribe's own standards the alleged victim was neither an
enrolled member nor at that time eligible for enrollment.
She could become eligible only by completing the one-year residency
requirement.
Moreover, because of her age, the alleged victim had the
right, pursuant to Bureau of Indian Affairs guidelines,FN5
to object to the transfer to South Dakota, regardless of
the actions of the Tribe.
In this case, the alleged victim never was apprised of
her right to object to the transfer, a fact that
casts doubt upon the legality of the transfer and thus
upon the significance of any recognition conferred thereby.
In fact the Tribe did little more than contact the
alleged victim's grandmother who wished to assist the alleged victim
by taking the child into her home.
The alleged victim was flown, at the State of Nevada's
expense, to South Dakota, where she was picked up at
the airport by her grandmother.
The Tribe's minimal involvement with the *154
child casts doubt upon the significance of any recognition conferred
by the Tribe's actions in connection with the transfer.
FN5.
Guidelines
for State Courts;
Indian
Child Custody Proceedings, 44 Fed.Reg. 67,584 (1979).
In
addition, we note a further difficulty that attends according significance
to any recognition conferred by the Tribe's actions.
The Act defines an Indian child for purposes of the
Act as “any
unmarried person who is under age eighteen and is either
(a) a member of an Indian tribe or (b) is
eligible for membership in an Indian tribe and is the
biological child of a member of an Indian tribe.”
25
U.S.C. §
1903(4)
(1988).
Here, when the alleged victim was transferred from Nevada to
South Dakota, she was unmarried and under age eighteen, but
otherwise she did not meet any part of the Act's
definition of “Indian
child.”
Thus, the Tribe's intervention on the alleged victim's behalf was
undertaken without a proper basis under the Act.
We believe that the Tribe's spurious use of the Act
to bring the alleged victim from Nevada to her grandmother
in South Dakota is entitled to little weight, and does
not constitute “recognition”
of the alleged victim as an Indian.
Thus, the District Court did not err in concluding that
the third St.
Cloud
factor had not been satisfied.
D.
Finally,
the District Court concluded that the alleged victim is not
recognized socially as an Indian.
The parties stipulated, among other things, that the alleged victim
was born off the reservation;
that
except for one seven-month period immediately preceding the alleged abusive
sexual contact, she had lived her entire life off the
reservation;
that
she did not attend pow-wows, Indian dances or other Indian
cultural events;
and
that she and her family lived without focusing on their
Indian heritage.
These stipulated facts sustain the District Court's determination that the
alleged victim failed to satisfy the fourth St.
Cloud
factor.
III.
Having
considered the question de
novo,
we agree with the District Court's conclusion that the alleged
victim is a non-Indian for purposes of federal criminal jurisdiction.
Accordingly, the District Court's dismissal of the indictment for lack
of subject-matter jurisdiction is affirmed.
McKAY,
Circuit Judge, dissenting.
I
respectfully dissent.
I agree with the majority that the determination of one's
status as an Indian is ultimately a question of law
subject to de
novo
review by this court.
I must, however, depart from the majority's resolution of this
admittedly close question.
I conclude that the alleged victim in this case is
an Indian under the rule of United
States v. Rogers,
45 U.S. (4 How.) 567, 572-73, 11 L.Ed. 1105 (1846).
I would therefore reverse the District Court and order the
indictment reinstated.
Under
Rogers,
federal criminal jurisdiction exists if a victim has some Indian
blood and is “recognized”
as an Indian by the federal or
tribal
government.
Id.
at 572-73.
The majority presumes, and I conclude, that this child, who
is by ancestry 11/128 ths Oglala Sioux, meets the
first prong of the Rogers
test.
Her status thus turns upon the degree to which she
has been recognized as an Indian by tribal or federal
government.
The child was admittedly not an enrolled member of the
Oglala Sioux at the time of the alleged crime.
Tribal enrollment is not, however, the exclusive
method by which a tribe may confer official recognition of
an individual's status.
I believe that the actions taken by the Oglala Sioux
tribal court on behalf of this child compel the conclusion
that she has in fact been “recognized”
as an Indian by the tribal government.
Some
months prior to the alleged sexual assault, the Oglala Sioux,
acting through the tribal court, affirmatively intervened to assume responsibility
for the care and protection of this girl.
The child had been abandoned in Las Vegas and had
subsequently been relegated to a shelter there.
Acting at the request of the child's grandmother, who was
unable to act herself on behalf of the child, the
tribe asserted its right of intervention under 25 U.S.C. §
1911
and acquired jurisdiction over the custody proceedings.
The Oglala Sioux tribal court exercised its authority to make
the girl a ward of the court and she was
moved from Nevada to the *155
Oglala Sioux reservation.
The tribal court then placed her in the care of
her grandmother.
The
majority, although attributing some importance to the actions of the
tribal court, minimizes their significance by relegating its consideration of
those actions to the third (and third least important) prong
of the framework suggested in St.
Cloud v. United States,
702 F.Supp. 1456 (D.S.D.1988).
While I accept the St.
Cloud
factors as a nonexhaustive enumeration of relevant considerations, I believe
that the majority missteps in characterizing the tribal court's role
in this girl's life as “enjoyment
of the benefits of tribal affiliation.”
FN1
I
readily acknowledge that the intervention of the tribal court markedly
enhanced this child's life by rescuing her from a state
foster facility in Nevada.
Beneficence notwithstanding, however, the symbolic implications of intervention and, more
particularly, of wardship loom much greater than any gain received.
FN1.
I
note that the St.
Cloud
framework recognizes tribal enrollment as the only avenue of “official”
tribal recognition.
This strikes me as an unduly constricted interpretation of the
term.
Enrollment is undoubtedly the most authoritative form of official recognition;
we
would, however, slight a fellow court if we failed to
acknowledge the adjudicatory authority of a tribal court to bestow
“official”
recognition.
I
therefore cannot help but conclude that the assumption and exercise
by the tribal court of custodial and protective jurisdiction over
this girl necessarily stands as official recognition by that court
of her status vis-a-vis the Oglala Sioux.FN2
Rogers
requires no more.
Comity suggests, and arguably compels, that we accord this action
substantial deference.
Compare
National
Farmers Union Ins. Cos. v. Crow Tribe,
471 U.S. 845, 105 S.Ct. 2447, 85 L.Ed.2d 818 (1985)
(comity compels federal courts to allow tribal court to make
initial determination of its own jurisdiction);
Roman-Nose
v. New Mexico Dep't of Human Servs.,
967 F.2d 435, 437 (10th Cir.1992) (state courts to give
full faith and credit to tribal court custody determinations).
I therefore respectfully dissent.
FN2.
The
District Court, in weighing the significance of the tribal court's
actions, speculated as to the motivations and intentions attending those
actions:
“[The
authority of the tribal court was] used under the circumstances
to ‘rescue’
the children from a bad situation because of the grandmother's
status as a participating tribal member.
There is no indication that ...
the tribe took the alleged victim ‘under
its wing’....”
I am at a loss to understand the relevance to
this inquiry of the District Court's speculations.
Why the tribal court acted is of no importance given
that it did in fact act;
likewise,
the intended implication of that action is of no consequence
if the action itself constitutes official tribal recognition.
The tribal court called upon its ancient and august prerogative
to cloak this girl in the security of a wardship.
It is not for this court or for the District
Court to trivialize the responsibilities thereby assumed.
We are no more free to lend significance to hypothetical
assessments of the tribal court's mental processes than we are
to attribute legal meaning to a psychological analysis of a
Supreme Court opinion.
C.A.8
(S.D.),1995.
U.S.
v. Lawrence
51
F.3d 150
|