Timbisha Shoshone Tribe v. US Department of the Interior , 824 F.3d 807 ( 2016 )


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  •                 FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE; JOSEPH           No. 13-16182
    KENNEDY; ANGELA BOLAND; GRACE
    GOAD; ERICK MASON; HILLARY                  D.C. No.
    FRANK; MADELINE ESTEVES;                 2:11-cv-00995-
    PAULINE ESTEVES,                           MCE-DAD
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.                         OPINION
    U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR;
    LARRY ECHO HAWK; AMY
    DUTSCHKE; TROY BURDICK;
    MARGARET CORTEZ; WILLIAM
    EDDY; GEORGE GHOLSON; CLYDE
    NICHOLS; EARL FRANK; DONALD
    LAVERDUE; BUREAU OF INDIAN
    AFFAIRS,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of California
    Morrison C. England, Jr., Chief District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted January 4, 2016
    San Francisco, California
    Filed May 27, 2016
    2            TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE V. USDOI
    Before: J. Clifford Wallace and Diarmuid F. O’Scannlain,
    Circuit Judges and Marilyn L. Huff,* District Judge.
    Opinion by Judge Wallace
    SUMMARY**
    Mootness / Tribal Affairs
    The panel dismissed, as moot, an appeal from the district
    court’s dismissal of a case challenging the Department of the
    Interior’s recognition of the election results for leadership
    authority over the Timbisha Shoshone Tribe.
    The panel held that the Tribe’s recent adoption of a new
    constitution, which overhauled tribal membership
    requirements, mooted the appeal because there was no chance
    that a remand to the Bureau of Indian Affairs would make
    any difference whatsoever in the election results.
    COUNSEL
    Jeffrey R. Keohane (argued), George Forman, Jay B. Shapiro,
    and Kimberly A. Cluff, San Rafael, California, for Plaintiffs-
    Appellants.
    *
    The Honorable Marilyn L. Huff, District Judge for the U.S. District
    Court for the Southern District of California, sitting by designation.
    **
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE V. USDOI                  3
    Mary Gabrielle Sprague (argued), Katherine J. Barton, and
    John C. Cruden, Assistant Attorney General, Appellate
    Section, Environment & Natural Resources Division, United
    States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., for Federal
    Defendants-Appellees.
    James M. Birkelund (argued), Law Offices of James
    Birkelund, San Francisco, California; Mark A. Levitan,
    Sonora, California, for Tribal Council Defendants-Appellees.
    OPINION
    WALLACE, Senior Circuit Judge:
    Since at least 2002, several competing factions have vied
    for leadership authority over the Timbisha Shoshone Tribe.
    Faced with these competing claims of authority, the
    Department of Interior (Department) reviewed the electoral
    history and recognized one of the factions for a limited time
    until the Tribe could hold a special election to choose new
    leadership. After the Department’s decision, the Tribe
    conducted a special election resulting in new leadership. The
    Department recognized the election’s result because it
    concluded that the Tribe conducted the election in compliance
    with tribal law.
    The defeated faction argues that the Department erred in
    several of its decisions by failing to comply with the
    Administrative Procedures Act, 5 U.S.C. § 500–596, in a
    variety of ways. We need take no position on those issues,
    however, if we conclude this appeal is now moot. We
    conclude that it is. Therefore, we lack jurisdiction to rule on
    the merits and, accordingly, dismiss this appeal.
    4            TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE V. USDOI
    I.
    For many Indian tribes, federal recognition is of great
    importance because “[s]uch status is a ‘prerequisite to the
    protection, services, and benefits of the Federal government
    available to Indian tribes by virtue of their status as tribes.’”
    AMERICAN INDIAN LAW DESKBOOK § 2:6 (quoting 25 C.F.R.
    § 83.2 (1994)). For instance, federally recognized tribes may
    receive “assistance for such purposes as corrections, child
    welfare, education, and fish and wildlife and environmental
    programs.” 
    Id. Moreover, only
    federally recognized tribes
    may operate gambling facilities under the federal Indian
    Gaming Regulatory Act. See Big Lagoon Rancheria v.
    California, 
    789 F.3d 947
    , 949–50 (9th Cir. 2015) (en banc).
    The Timbisha Shoshone Tribe received federal
    recognition as a sovereign Indian nation in 1983. See
    Timbisha Shoshone Homeland Act, Pub. L. No. 106-423, 114
    Stat. 1875 (2000). The Tribe’s organizational document is a
    written constitution, which allocates governmental power
    among three distinct branches: a General Council, a Tribal
    Council, and a Tribal Judiciary.1 The General Council is the
    Tribe’s supreme governing body but has delegated some of
    its authority to the Tribal Council. The Tribal Council
    consists of five people, each of whom holds office for two
    years. The Tribe holds general elections for the Tribal
    Council every year in November, but the Tribal Council
    officers’ terms of office are staggered so that not every seat
    1
    The Tribe adopted a new constitution in 2014 and it contains some
    significant changes from the earlier version. But in describing the
    background of this case, we refer to the pre-2014 constitution because that
    was the document under which the parties operated during the relevant
    background events.
    TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE V. USDOI                     5
    is up for election every year. A Tribal Council seat may also
    become vacant if a member resigns, is removed from office,
    or is recalled from office.
    Various rival factions within the Tribe have been vying
    for control over the Tribal Council for over a decade. See,
    e.g., Timbisha Shoshone Tribe v. U.S. Dep’t of the Interior,
    No. 2:11-cv-00995-MCE-DAD, 
    2011 WL 1883862
    (E.D.
    Cal. May 16, 2011); Timbisha Shoshone Tribe v. Bureau of
    Indian Affairs, No. CIVS-03-404 WBS/GGH, 
    2003 WL 25897083
    (E.D. Cal. April 10, 2003). Since the inception of
    these leadership disputes, Joseph Kennedy had headed one
    faction, and we refer generally to the various constituents he
    has led over the years as the Kennedy Group.
    While it is not the start of the factional disputes, we begin
    our discussion of this case with the Tribe’s November 2006
    elections, where Kennedy was elected Chairman of the Tribal
    Council. At an August 2007 Tribal Council meeting,
    Kennedy charged two other Council officers with committing
    misconduct while in office. The two charged officers, along
    with another Council officer, then left the meeting. These
    three were members of a group we refer to generally as the
    Beaman Group. After the Beaman Group members left,
    Kennedy and the other remaining Council officer purported
    to fill one of the vacant seats. Meanwhile, the Beaman Group
    later adopted resolutions purporting to act as the Tribe’s
    leadership.
    At the time of the next annual Tribal Council election in
    November 2007, both the Kennedy Group and the Beaman
    Group held elections, which unsurprisingly resulted in each
    group winning its own election. Troy Burdick, the
    Superintendent of the Central California Agency of the
    6          TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE V. USDOI
    Bureau of Indian Affairs (which is an agency within the
    Department of Interior), initially refused to recognize either
    election, but he later reversed course and recognized the
    Kennedy Group’s election results. Superintendent Burdick
    based the reversal on a January 2008 General Council
    meeting that Kennedy organized in which the General
    Council adopted resolutions purporting to ratify the results of
    the Kennedy Group’s election. The Beaman Group appealed
    Superintendent Burdick’s decision.
    The newly recognized Kennedy Group later reviewed the
    Tribe’s membership rolls and disenrolled 74 members who
    allegedly did not meet the membership criteria. George
    Gholson was one of those disenrolled members. Around the
    same time the Kennedy Group was performing its
    membership-roll review, Gholson organized a special
    meeting of the General Council, which ended with Kennedy
    being recalled as Chairman of the Tribal Council and
    Gholson being placed in the position. Shortly thereafter,
    Superintendent Burdick issued a decision recognizing
    Gholson as the Council’s Chairman. Yet, less than a month
    later, Superintendent Burdick changed course and issued a
    decision recognizing the November 2006 Tribal Council.
    In February 2009, Dale Morris, the Regional Director of
    the Bureau of Indian Affairs took up the Beaman Group’s
    appeal of Superintendent Burdick’s decision recognizing the
    Kennedy Group’s November 2007 election. Director Morris
    reversed the decision, concluding that the resolutions adopted
    by the General Council in January 2008 exceeded its
    authority and violated principles of due process. Director
    Morris declined to recognize the Kennedy Group, the
    Beaman Group, or the Gholson Group, and decided to
    TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE V. USDOI                 7
    recognize instead the Tribal Council as it was constituted
    following the November 2006 elections.
    The Kennedy Group appealed from Director Morris’s
    decision to then-Assistant Secretary of the Bureau of Indian
    Affairs, Larry Echo Hawk. Secretary Echo Hawk issued a
    decision on March 1, 2011, in which he made two holdings.
    First, he affirmed Director Morris’s decision rejecting the
    General Council’s January 2008 resolutions that purportedly
    ratified the Kennedy Group’s November 2007 Tribal Council
    election. Secretary Echo Hawk held that those resolutions
    contravened the Tribe’s constitution because the General
    Council attempted to replace Beaman as a member of the
    Tribal Council when Beaman had not resigned, been recalled,
    or removed from office. Second, given that there was no
    validly elected Tribal Council, Secretary Echo Hawk
    recognized the Gholson Group as the Tribal Council “for the
    limited time of 120 days . . . for the limited purpose of
    carrying out essential government-to-government relations
    and holding a special election that complies with tribal law.”
    He supported his recognition of the Gholson Group rather
    than the Kennedy Group on two grounds: (1) more votes were
    cast in the Gholson Group election than the Kennedy Group
    election (137 to 74), and (2) the Kennedy Group’s exclusion
    of the 74 members it disenrolled from voting rendered its
    election “facially flawed” because the disenrollments did not
    comply with either tribal law or federal law.
    Following Secretary Echo Hawk’s decision, the Gholson
    Group held a Tribal Council election. Gholson won election
    as the Council’s Chairperson, receiving 159 votes, while
    Kennedy received only 60. The Tribe then asked the
    Department to recognize the election results. Assistant
    Secretary Echo Hawk did so by issuing a second decision in
    8          TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE V. USDOI
    which he concluded that “the special election reflects the will
    of the Tribe.”
    The Kennedy Group challenged Secretary Echo Hawk’s
    decisions in federal district court, arguing that Secretary Echo
    Hawk’s reliance on certain principles of administrative law
    was incorrect in a variety of ways. As a remedy, the Kennedy
    Group did not ask the district court to place it in power, but
    instead asked the district court to remand Secretary Echo
    Hawk’s decisions “for further proceedings consistent with
    federal law.”
    The district court dismissed the Kennedy Group’s
    complaint, concluding that, under Rule 19 of the Federal
    Rules of Civil Procedure, the Tribe and the 2011-elected
    Council members (all of whom were members of the Gholson
    Group) were “indispensable parties that enjoy sovereign
    immunity.” Essentially, the district court ruled that for the
    Kennedy Group to present its claims, it needed to name both
    the Tribe and the Tribal Council members as defendants (in
    addition to the Department). But because neither had agreed
    to waive sovereign immunity, they could not be joined as
    defendants, and thus the court found it necessary to dismiss
    the action.
    Following the district court’s dismissal of the Kennedy
    Group’s action on April 9, 2013, the Tribe adopted a new
    constitution in 2014. The new constitution made changes to
    the original document, but most importantly for our purposes,
    the new constitution changes the criteria for membership in
    the Tribe. Under the new constitution, a person is a member
    of the Tribe if he or she meets any of the following criteria:
    (a) is on a certain 1936 list of people with some Shoshone
    blood, (b) is on a 1978 genealogy roll, (c) is a lineal
    TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE V. USDOI                      9
    descendant of anyone qualifying under subsections (a) or (b),
    and is at least one-fourth Indian (one-sixteenth of which must
    be Shoshone blood), or (d) persons of Indian blood who are
    adopted. It is undisputed that the 74 people that the Kennedy
    Group disenrolled in 2008 would qualify as Tribal members
    under the new constitution. The new constitution was
    submitted for a Tribal vote by the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
    The vote was 63 in favor of the new constitution, 22 against,
    and 1 spoiled ballot. In certifying the election results, the
    Bureau observed that even if all the votes of members that
    Kennedy Group disputed as qualifying for membership were
    ignored, the yes votes would have still won a majority. The
    new constitution is still in force and the Kennedy group has
    conceded that “the 2014 Constitution is not before” our panel.
    II.
    Before addressing the merits of the Kennedy Group’s
    arguments, we must assure ourselves that we have
    jurisdiction. Bender v. Williamsport Area Sch. Dist., 
    475 U.S. 534
    , 541 (1986) (“[E]very federal appellate court has a
    special obligation to satisfy itself . . . of its own jurisdiction.”
    (internal quotation marks omitted)). Our obligation to do so
    stems from Article III of the Constitution, which confines
    “[t]he judicial Power” to deciding cases and controversies.
    U.S. CONST. art. III, § 2, cl. 1.
    The case or controversy requirement is not a rule that
    applies only at the outset of litigation. Instead, the Supreme
    Court has explained that “[t]he rule in federal cases is that an
    actual controversy must be extant at all stages of review, not
    merely at the time the complaint is filed.” Steffel v.
    Thompson, 
    415 U.S. 452
    , 459 n.10 (1974). Where an actual
    controversy does not persist throughout litigation, “[a] case
    10         TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE V. USDOI
    becomes moot.” Already, LLC v. Nike, Inc., 
    133 S. Ct. 721
    ,
    726 (2013); Cook Inlet Treaty Tribes v. Shalala, 
    166 F.3d 986
    , 989 (9th Cir. 1999). The mootness doctrine does not turn
    on whether the plaintiff continues to believe that some
    unlawful conduct occurred. Already, 
    LLC, 133 S. Ct. at 727
    (explaining that a case may still be moot regardless of “how
    vehemently the parties continue to dispute the lawfulness of
    the conduct that precipitated the lawsuit”). Rather, “the case
    is moot if the dispute ‘is no longer embedded in any actual
    controversy about the plaintiffs’ particular legal rights.’” 
    Id. (quoting Alvarez
    v. Smith, 
    558 U.S. 87
    , 93 (2009)). Thus, we
    have held that “[i]f there is no longer a possibility that an
    appellant can obtain relief for his claim, that claim is moot
    and must be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.” Ruvalcaba v.
    City of Los Angeles, 
    167 F.3d 514
    , 521 (9th Cir. 1999); see
    Chafin v. Chafin, 
    133 S. Ct. 1017
    , 1023 (2013) (framing the
    mootness inquiry by asking whether it has become
    “impossible for a court to grant any effectual relief whatever
    to the prevailing party” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    In cases where a plaintiff seeks declaratory relief, such as
    this one, the test for mootness is “whether the fact alleged,
    under all the circumstances, show that there is a substantial
    controversy, between parties having adverse legal interests,
    of sufficient immediacy and reality to warrant the issuance of
    a declaratory judgment.” Gator.com Corp. v. L.L. Bean, Inc.,
    
    398 F.3d 1125
    , 1129 (9th Cir. 2005) (en banc) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). Or, “[s]tated another way, the
    central question before us is whether changes in the
    circumstances that prevailed at the beginning of litigation
    have forestalled any occasion for meaningful relief.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE V. USDOI                   11
    With that legal background, we now examine whether an
    “actual controversy” remains in this case. The Department
    argues that the Tribe’s adoption of a new constitution in 2014
    moots this appeal.
    As explained above, in 2014 the Bureau of Indian Affairs
    conducted an election on a proposed constitution for the
    Tribe. The proposed constitution obtained a substantial
    majority of favorable votes (63 in favor versus only 22
    opposed). Given the Kennedy Group’s concession that the
    validity of the new constitution is not at issue in this case, we
    assume its validity. See Reply Br. at 5; Oral Arg. at 5:35
    (stating that the Kennedy Group concedes that “the facts of
    the constitution are not before this court”). Since the new
    constitution remains in effect, the issue then is whether it
    precludes us from being able to provide the Kennedy Group
    with “meaningful relief,” thus rendering the case moot.
    Gator.com 
    Corp., 398 F.3d at 1129
    .
    Secretary Echo Hawk’s first decision hinged, in part, on
    his conclusion that “the [2007] Kennedy election was facially
    flawed by its exclusion of certain Tribe members.” He
    explained that any decision to “bar[]” valid members “from
    voting fatally invalidates an election”; the Kennedy Group
    does not dispute this legal premise. This flaw led Secretary
    Echo Hawk to recognize the Gholson Group for the limited
    purpose of holding a special election. The Kennedy Group
    has repeatedly argued that Secretary Echo Hawk’s analysis on
    this point was mistaken because, it asserts, the 74 Tribe
    members the Group excluded at its November 2007 election
    were not actually members of the Tribe under the prior
    constitution. But this argument misses the point. Even if we
    assume that the Kennedy Group was correct that the 74
    excluded individuals failed to meet the Tribe’s membership
    12         TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE V. USDOI
    qualifications (and so assume that Secretary Echo Hawk erred
    in reasoning the opposite), the new constitution overhauled
    those membership requirements. Under the new constitution’s
    membership framework, there is no dispute that the 74
    disenrolled individuals qualify for Tribal membership. Thus,
    were we to remand for the Bureau of Indian Affairs to
    reconsider its decision, there would be no possibility
    whatsoever that the agency would change its reasoning as to
    the disenrolled individuals because those people clearly
    qualify for Tribal membership under the new constitution.
    The Kennedy Group argues that the reasoning we apply
    above is “circular” because it allows purportedly ineligible
    members to vote on a new constitution which retroactively
    cures their membership defects. In short, the group argues
    that the new constitution is ineffective because unqualified
    individuals voted in favor of it, so it cannot possibly moot
    this case. But this argument ignores the fact that the new
    constitution received a substantial majority of votes in its
    favor, the Bureau of Indian Affairs certified it, and the
    Kennedy Group has conceded that its validity “is not before”
    us. Given all of that, on what authority can we decide the new
    constitution is invalid? Our case law certainly does not
    support doing so, since we have on many occasions cautioned
    against intermeddling in tribal affairs. See, e.g., Williams v.
    Gover, 
    490 F.3d 785
    , 791 (9th Cir. 2007) (observing that a
    prior case and “its predecessors establish that [a] tribe’s right
    to define its own membership for tribal purposes has long
    been recognized as central to its existence as an independent
    political community” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    Moreover, as the Bureau of Indian Affairs observed, even if
    we accepted the Kennedy Group’s argument that the
    unqualified individuals who voted in favor of the new
    TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE V. USDOI                 13
    constitution should not have been able to vote, the new
    constitution still would have won a majority.
    Thus, this is a moot case because a remand by us to the
    Bureau of Indian Affairs to reconsider Secretary Echo
    Hawk’s decisions would serve no purpose. Even if the agency
    disagreed with Secretary Echo Hawk’s reasoning under the
    prior constitution, it would have to apply the membership
    criteria in the new constitution, which would lead it to
    conclude that the Kennedy Group’s exclusion of 74 members
    from voting in its November 2007 election rendered the
    election unenforceable.
    Because we conclude that the Tribe’s recent adoption of
    a new constitution moots this appeal, we will not reach the
    Department’s alternative arguments, including that
    intervening tribal elections moot this appeal and that the
    Kennedy Group lacks standing to challenge the Department
    of Interior’s so-called “Rollback Rule.” Further, because this
    appeal is now moot, we cannot address the Kennedy Group’s
    argument that the district court abused its discretion in
    dismissing the Group’s action under Rule 19 of the Federal
    Rules of Civil Procedure.
    III.
    Article III of the Constitution limits federal courts to
    deciding live cases or controversies. Under that constitutional
    mandate, we must dismiss a case if “there is no longer a
    possibility that an appellant can obtain relief for his claim.”
    
    Ruvalcaba, 167 F.3d at 521
    . That rule forecloses our ability
    14        TIMBISHA SHOSHONE TRIBE V. USDOI
    to reach the merits in this case, because there is no chance
    that a remand to the Bureau of Indian Affairs would make
    any difference whatsoever.
    APPEAL DISMISSED.