Fletcher v. United States , 116 F.3d 1315 ( 1997 )


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  •                                                                              F I L E D
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    PUBLISH
    JUN 10 1997
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    PATRICK FISHER
    Clerk
    TENTH CIRCUIT
    WILLIAM S. FLETCHER, Individually;
    CHARLES A. PRATT, JR., Individually;
    JUANITA WEST, Individually; and
    BETTY WOODY, Individually; and
    on Behalf of Themselves and of All
    Other Persons Similarly Situated,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    v.                                                         No. 95-5208
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA;
    BRUCE BABBITT, Secretary of
    Interior; ADA E. DEER, Assistant
    Secretary of Interior for Indian Affairs;
    GORDON JACKSON, Superintendent
    of the Osage Indian Agency;
    OSAGE TRIBAL COUNCIL and
    each individual member thereof;
    CHARLES TILLMAN, JR., as Principal
    Chief of the Osage Tribe and Individually;
    EDWARD RED EAGLE, SR., as
    Assistant Principal Chief of the Osage
    Tribe and Individually,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OKLAHOMA
    (D.C. No. 90-C-248-E)
    Karin Johnson Chatfield, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiffs-Appellees.
    F. Browning Pipestem of F. Browning Pipestem & Associates, Norman, Oklahoma (Dena
    L. Silliman of F. Browning Pipestem & Associates, Norman, Oklahoma, and Robert E.
    Martin, Tulsa, Oklahoma, with him on the brief) for Defendants-Appellants Osage Tribal
    Council; Charles O. Tillman, Jr., Principal Chief of the Osage Tribe; and Edward Red
    Eagle, Sr., Assistant Principal Chief of the Osage Tribe.
    Lois J. Schiffer, Assistant Attorney General, Washington, D.C.; Steven C. Lewis, United
    States Attorney, and Phil Pinnel, Assistant United States Attorney, Tulsa, Oklahoma;
    Albert M. Ferlo, Jr., and David C. Shilton, Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., on
    the brief only, for Defendants-Appellants United States; Bruce Babbitt, Secretary of the
    Interior; Ada E. Deer, Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Indian Affairs; and Gordon
    Jackson, Superintendent of the Osage Indian Agency.
    Tracy A. Labin and K. Jerome Gottschalk of the Native American Rights Fund, Boulder,
    Colorado, filed an amicus curiae brief for the Osage National Council.
    Before BALDOCK, BRORBY, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
    BALDOCK, Circuit Judge.
    Four individuals of Osage ancestry, some of whom were not entitled to vote in
    tribal elections or hold tribal office because they do not own an interest in the Osage
    mineral estate or headright, brought this suit to challenge the validity of the franchise
    restriction and for a declaration on the validity of the Osage Constitution of 1881. Rather
    than reaching the merits of the complaint, the district court ordered (1) the formation of a
    constitutional commission to rework the form of the Osage government, (2) an expansion
    of the franchise to all lineal descendants of the 1908 Osage roll, and (3) a referendum in
    2
    which the expanded electorate adopted a new Osage constitution. Our jurisdiction arises
    under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    . Because the district court proceeded without subject matter
    jurisdiction in light of the Osage Tribe’s sovereign immunity and because the franchise
    was improperly extended in this case and a federal statute prescribed the form of tribal
    government for the Osage Tribe, we reverse.1
    Plaintiffs William S. Fletcher, Charles A. Pratt, Jr., Juanita West, and Betty Woody
    (“Individual Plaintiffs”) brought this action. Defendants include the United States; Bruce
    Babbitt, Secretary of the Interior; Ada E. Deer, Assistant Secretary of the Interior for
    Indian Affairs; and Gordon Jackson, Superintendent of the Osage Indian Agency
    (“Federal Defendants”); and the Osage Tribal Council, along with its individual members;
    Charles O. Tillman, Jr., Principal Chief of the Osage Tribe; and Edward Red Eagle, Sr.,
    Assistant Principal Chief of the Osage Tribe (“Tribal Defendants”).
    1
    On October 6, 1995, Appellants filed a notice of appeal from the district
    court’s order filed September 8, 1995, and entered on the docket September 11, 1995.
    The district court’s docket, however, reflected a pending summary judgment motion filed
    September 29, 1995. Because the summary judgment motion concerns only attorneys’
    fees and the order entered September 11, 1995, disposes of all remaining substantive
    issues in the case, it is a final appealable order. See Budinich v. Becton Dickinson & Co.,
    
    486 U.S. 196
    , 202-03 (1988).
    The parties submitted portions of the record in appendices. Each appendix is
    consecutively numbered. Using the appendices’ page numbers, we will refer to the
    Appendix to Appellant Osage Tribal Council’s Opening Brief as “Aplt. App. at ” and to
    the Supplemental Appendix of the Plaintiffs-Appellees as “Aple. App. at .”
    3
    I. History
    In 1881, the Osage people adopted a constitution which established a tribal
    government loosely patterned after the United States government. See H.R. Rep. No. 92-
    963, at 7 (1972). This government operated until 1900, when the Secretary of the Interior
    purportedly abolished it. 
    Id.
     However, one division of the government, consisting of a
    principal chief, an assistant principal chief, and a 15-member council, refused to dissolve.
    
    Id.
    Congress subsequently adopted the Act of June 28, 1906, 
    45 Stat. 539
    , which
    accomplished several important things. The 1906 Act called for the creation of a tribal
    membership roll,2 allotted Osage lands, set aside a trust fund consisting of proceeds from
    the sale of Osage lands in Kansas and income from the Osage mineral estate, and
    prescribed a tribal government. See H.R. Rep. No. 92-963, at 8. Each Osage whose
    name appeared on the roll received one “headright” in the tribal mineral estate. 
    Id. at 8-9
    .
    Osages who own an interest in a headright are known as “allotted” members of the Osage
    Tribe and have traditionally enjoyed the right to vote in tribal elections, hold tribal office,
    and receive a share in quarterly distributions of tribal income. 
    Id.
     Osages born after the
    closing of the 1908 roll and who have not acquired a headright interest are known as
    “unallotted” Osages and have not enjoyed the right to vote in tribal elections or hold tribal
    2
    The roll required under the 1906 Act was closed July 1, 1907, and approved
    April 11, 1908. H.R. Rep. No. 92-963, at 8. We will refer to it as the 1908 roll.
    4
    office. 
    Id.
     By the 1970's, many persons of Osage ancestry did not own headrights and
    could not vote in tribal elections. See 
    id. at 9
    ; Felix S. Cohen’s Handbook of Federal
    Indian Law 791 (Rennard Strickland, ed. 1982). At various times, persons of Osage
    descent have sought, to no avail, the assistance of Congress and the federal bureaucracy
    to extend the franchise to include Osages owning no headright interests.
    In the 1970's, seven enrolled members of the Osage Tribe filed suit in federal
    district court seeking a declaration limiting the powers of the Osage Tribal Council. See
    Logan v. Andrus, 
    640 F.2d 269
     (10th Cir. 1981). The disposition of the case, which was
    unfavorable to the seven tribal members, left open the issues of the validity of the
    restriction of the franchise to headright owners and the validity of the 1881 Constitution.
    
    Id. at 270-71
    .
    II. District Court Proceedings
    Taking up where Logan left off, Individual Plaintiffs filed this suit in federal
    district court in March, 1990. They alleged that some of them do not own headrights and
    do not enjoy the right to vote in tribal elections. According to their second amended
    complaint, they sought a declaration on the validity of the 1881 Constitution and claimed
    that the restriction of the right to vote to headright owners who are 18 years of age
    5
    violated the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment and the equal protection clause of
    Title II of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, 
    25 U.S.C. § 1302
    (8).3
    In August, 1990, Tribal Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of
    subject matter jurisdiction, contending that the case was barred by the tribe’s sovereign
    immunity. Federal Defendants joined Tribal Defendants’ motion to dismiss.
    Ignoring repeated requests for a ruling on the motion to dismiss, the district court
    set about for over five years to resolve what it perceived to be the voting rights issue. The
    district court established a commission to propose reforms for the Osage constitution and
    system of government. The commission proposed a new constitution, which provided for
    an Osage president, vice president, and a national council. The district court eventually
    ordered a referendum, and on February 4, 1994, a majority of a greatly expanded Osage
    electorate voted to adopt the Constitution of the Osage Nation (“1994 Constitution”).
    Later that year, a president, vice president, and a national council were selected in
    separate elections. Subsequently, the Bureau of Indian Affairs acknowledged the Osage
    Nation of Oklahoma by publication in the Federal Register.4
    3
    The Indian Civil Rights Act of 1968, 
    25 U.S.C. §§ 1301-1303
    , was
    approved and signed into law by the President as Titles II through VII of the Civil Rights
    Act of 1968, Pub. L. No. 90-284, 
    82 Stat. 77
    . Section 1302(8) provides that no Indian
    tribe in exercising powers of self-government shall, “deny to any person within its
    jurisdiction the equal protection of its laws or deprive any person of liberty or property
    without due process of law.”
    4
    See Indian Entities Recognized and Eligible to Receive Services from the
    United States Bureau of Indian Affairs, 
    60 Fed. Reg. 9250
    , 9253 (1995). The Department
    of the Interior has promulgated regulations for the recognition of Indian tribes. See 25
    6
    On September 8, 1995, the district court issued a final order, which among other
    things, declared moot Tribal Defendants’ motion to dismiss on the ground of sovereign
    immunity. Not only did the district court not reach the merits of the sovereign immunity
    defense, it also did not reach the merits of the claims of Individual Plaintiffs.
    III. Case or Controversy
    In light of the franchise expansion, the referendum, and the election of new Osage
    officials under the 1994 Constitution, the district court ruled that the issues raised by the
    pleadings of Individual Plaintiffs as well as the sovereignty issue raised by Tribal
    Defendants were moot under both the constitutional and prudential mootness doctrines
    discussed in Building and Construction Dept. v. Rockwell Int’l Corp., 
    7 F.3d 1487
     (10th
    Cir. 1993). With respect to the sovereign immunity issue, the district court simply stated
    that Tribal Defendants’ continued assertion of the defense was inappropriate
    “gamesmanship” and that “[T]he jurisdiction of the Court did not interfere with the
    sovereignty of the Osage Tribe.”5 Individual Plaintiffs and Federal Defendants assert the
    reasoning of the district court with the additional contention that Tribal Defendants lack
    C.F.R. Part 83 (1996); 25 C.F.R. Part 83 (1995).
    5
    See Aplt. App. at 141-42. The district court relied on Tribal Defendants’
    “cooperation in the referendum process and their agreement that an enfranchisement
    problem existed that needed to be resolved.” E.g., id. at 141. However, as discussed at
    part V, supra, Tribal Defendants urged the defense at every critical stage of the
    proceedings and participated in the referendum process because of the district court’s
    orders. While they may have agreed to the existence of a voting-rights problem, they
    made it clear that they did not consider the district court the proper forum for its
    resolution.
    7
    standing to take an appeal from the district court proceedings because they were not
    aggrieved by the district court’s final order.6
    A. Mootness
    The constitutional mootness question is a threshold inquiry because a live case or
    controversy is a constitutional prerequisite to federal jurisdiction. In re Texas Int’l Corp.,
    
    974 F.2d 1246
    , 1247 (10th Cir. 1992). Our review of this question is de novo. 
    Id.
    Because the doctrine of prudential mootness is concerned with the court’s discretion to
    exercise its power to provide relief, see Penthouse Int’l Ltd. v. Meese, 
    939 F.2d 1011
    ,
    1019-20 (D.C. Cir. 1991),7 however, we review the district court’s determination of
    prudential mootness for an abuse of discretion.
    Under the constitutional mootness doctrine, the suit must present a real and
    substantial controversy with respect to which specific relief may be fashioned. Lewis v.
    6
    Initially, Federal Defendants joined Tribal Defendants’ motion to dismiss
    on sovereign immunity grounds and further moved to have the entire case dismissed,
    arguing that Tribal Defendants were indispensable parties. See Aplt. App. at 38. Federal
    Defendants state that they later stopped urging the motion to dismiss once they realized
    the district court planned to proceed with the referendum process. Brief for the Federal
    Appellees, at 24 n.11 (filed June 11, 1996); see also Aplt. App. at 173, 177. See generally
    Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller, & Edward H. Cooper, 13 Federal Practice and
    Procedure § 3530, at 326-333 (1984) (discussing case or controversy problems
    engendered by the government changing sides in litigation).
    7
    In Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance v. Smith, F.3d , 
    1997 WL 137942
    ,
    at *4, *7 (10th Cir. Mar. 25, 1997), we relied on Meese in reviewing a district court’s
    determination of prudential mootness but did not explicitly articulate a standard of
    review. Meese articulates that prudential mootness is concerned not with a court’s power
    to provide relief but with the court’s discretion in exercising that power. Meese, 
    939 F.2d at 1019
    .
    8
    Continental Bank Corp., 
    494 U.S. 472
    , 477 (1990). Also, the controversy must remain
    alive at the trial and appellate stages of the litigation. 
    Id. at 477-78
    .
    We agree with Tribal Defendants that this case is not moot under the constitutional
    mootness doctrine. The district court’s reasoning with respect to the issues raised in the
    pleadings of Individual Plaintiffs is understandable, but its reasoning inadequately
    addresses the sovereign immunity issue and overlooks Tribal Defendants’ interests in the
    state of affairs existing before the referendum. Since the beginning of the proceedings,
    Tribal Defendants repeatedly challenged federal jurisdiction based on tribal sovereign
    immunity and have a legally cognizable interest in seeking the vindication of that
    immunity on appeal. They also have a personal stake in challenging the extension of the
    franchise to Osages who own no headrights and the formation of a new general governing
    body under the referendum and 1994 Constitution. These issues represent live
    controversies. Thus, this case is not moot under the constitutional mootness doctrine.
    See Murphy v. Hunt, 
    455 U.S. 478
    , 481 (1982) (per curiam).
    Under the doctrine of prudential mootness, there are circumstances under which a
    controversy, not constitutionally moot, is so “attenuated that considerations of prudence
    and comity for coordinate branches of government counsel the court to stay its hand, and
    to withhold relief it has the power to grant.” See Building and Construction Dept., 
    7 F.3d at 1491-92
     (internal quotations and citation omitted). Generally, this doctrine has been
    applied in cases involving requests for prospective equitable relief by declaratory
    9
    judgment or injunction. 
    Id. at 1492
    . A court may refuse to grant relief where it appears
    that a change in circumstances renders it highly unlikely that the actions in question will
    be repeated. 
    Id.
    At stake in this appeal are significant issues about the sovereign immunity of the
    Osage Tribe and the validity of the franchise extension and the 1994 Constitution and
    government. One such issue is the precedent set by the district court’s disregard of the
    repeated assertion of that immunity and its subsequent declaration of the immunity issue
    as moot in light of the results of the referendum process it ordered. The extension of the
    franchise and the institution of a new general governing body conflict with Tribal
    Defendants’ legally cognizable interests under the 1906 Act. The district court abused its
    discretion in applying the doctrine of prudential mootness.
    Lastly, Individual Plaintiffs and Federal Defendants argue that the case should be
    dismissed as moot because it would be inequitable to grant the requested relief under the
    rationale of In re Chateaugay Corp., 
    988 F.2d 322
    , 325-26 (2d Cir. 1993), because Tribal
    Defendants did not seek mandamus or take an interlocutory appeal under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1292
    (a)(1). In Chateaugay, the Second Circuit dismissed an appeal from a bankruptcy
    court order authorizing ERISA payments where the payments were made during the
    appeal, because the appellant had allowed an extensive change of circumstances by not
    availing itself of a rule allowing a party to move for a stay of a bankruptcy court’s order
    during appeal.
    10
    Although this argument presents a closer question, cf. Workman v. Jordan, 
    958 F.2d 332
    , 335 (10th Cir. 1992) (holding an order postponing the consideration of
    qualified immunity defense until trial was immediately appealable as a collateral order),
    the case should not be dismissed as moot under the equity rationale of Chateaugay.
    Tribal Defendants asserted the sovereign immunity defense at every critical stage of the
    proceedings and sought to have the issue certified for interlocutory appeal. While it is
    arguable that Tribal Defendants could have sought an interlocutory appeal under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1292
    (a)(1) on the ground that the district court’s orders directing participation in
    the referendum process constituted appealable injunctions or that they should have sought
    a mandamus directing the district court to consider the sovereign immunity issue,
    dismissing the appeal as moot under equity on these grounds would undermine the rule
    that a waiver of sovereign immunity must be unequivocally expressed. See Oklahoma
    Tax Comm’n v. Citizen Band Potawatomi Indian Tribe of Oklahoma, 
    498 U.S. 505
    , 509
    (1991). The unequivocal waiver aspect of tribal sovereign immunity was not at issue in
    Chateaugay, and on balance with Tribal Defendants’ efforts at the district court level in
    asserting the defense, compels us to conclude that the case is not properly considered
    moot under the equity rationale.
    11
    B. Standing
    Federal Defendants and Individual Plaintiffs contend that Tribal Defendants lack
    standing to take an appeal from the district court proceedings because they were not
    aggrieved by the district court’s final order. Individual Plaintiffs argue that the Osage
    mineral estate and the Osage Tribal Council’s statutory mandate regarding the mineral
    estate were preserved by the 1994 Constitution.8
    Standing is another threshold inquiry under the case or controversy prerequisite to
    federal jurisdiction. Bender v. Williamsport Area Sch. Dist., 
    475 U.S. 534
    , 541 (1986).
    Because Tribal Defendants’ standing to appeal is being challenged, we review the
    question in the first instance. See Arizonans for Official English v. Arizona, 
    117 S. Ct. 1055
    , 
    1997 WL 84990
    , at *12-*14 (1997).
    To have standing, a party must show an invasion of a legally protected interest that
    is actual or imminent, and concrete and particularized. Arizonans for Official English,
    
    1997 WL 84990
    , at *12. Likewise, a litigant must possess a direct stake in the outcome
    in order to seek appellate review. 
    Id. at *12-13
    . The direct stake requirement ensures
    that the dispute presented to the court is “presented in an adversary context and in a form
    8
    See, e.g., Constitution of the Osage Nation, art. II (1994) (stating that
    ownership of the Osage mineral estate is to be determined according to the 1906 Act as
    amended); 
    id.
     art. VII(a) (stating the powers of the national council shall not extend to
    any action the Secretary of the Interior determines to have an adverse impact on the
    mineral estate).
    12
    historically viewed as capable of judicial resolution.” Sierra Club v. Morton, 
    405 U.S. 727
    , 732 (1972).
    The 1906 Act conferred upon the Osage Tribal Council general governmental
    authority over the affairs of the Osage Tribe, including the right to include the Tribe as a
    participant in federal programs. Logan v. Andrus, 
    640 F.2d 269
    , 270-71 (10th Cir. 1981).
    The referendum process ordered and monitored by the district court which resulted in the
    1994 Constitution, if left intact, would displace the Osage Tribal Council as the general
    government of the Osage Tribe. Tribal Defendants doubtlessly have suffered an actual,
    concrete injury. See Goodface v. Grassrope, 
    708 F.2d 335
    , 338 (8th Cir. 1983) (holding
    that incumbent tribal council had standing to appeal district court’s order directing Bureau
    of Indian Affairs to recognize victors of recent council elections as the tribal council).
    This injury can be determined by reference to specific federal statutes and case law
    interpreting those statutes. See Trafficante v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 
    409 U.S. 205
    (1972) (stating that violations of statutory rights give rise to standing). Thus, Tribal
    Defendants have standing to bring this appeal.9
    9
    We also have an obligation to examine the standing of the other parties.
    Bender v. Williamsport Area Sch. Dist., 
    475 U.S. 534
    , 541 (1986). Individual Plaintiffs
    have a personal stake in retaining the rights to vote in tribal elections and to hold tribal
    office produced as a result of the district court proceedings. Initially, however, they
    brought suit seeking a declaration on the status of the 1881 Constitution and the validity
    of the franchise restriction. In their second amended complaint, Individual Plaintiffs
    allege, “The Plaintiffs are individuals, including ‘headright’ owners and non-owners of
    ‘headright’ interests. Those who are non-owners of ‘headright’ interests cannot vote in
    elections for the Chief or the members of the Tribal Council of the Osage Indian Tribe.”
    13
    V. District Court’s Subject Matter Jurisdiction
    and Sovereign Immunity of Tribal Defendants
    Shortly after this action was filed in district court, Tribal Defendants filed a motion
    to dismiss it for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, raising the defense of the Osage
    Tribe’s sovereign immunity. Apparently, the district court thought it had the power to
    consider using one of two methods to address the issues it perceived, and that each
    method was governed by separate jurisdictional principles. The first method was to
    address the claim articulated by the pleadings and the motion to dismiss. The second,
    alternative method was to order a process to resolve its conception of the voting rights
    issue.10 Choosing the second and evading the sovereign immunity issue, the district court
    In Logan, 
    640 F.2d at 271
    , we held that headright owners had no standing to challenge
    the franchise restriction. Neither the parties nor the district court questioned the standing
    of any Individual Plaintiff. The parties do not inform us and the second amended
    complaint does not specify which Individual Plaintiff owns headrights, and any such
    plaintiff has a standing problem under Logan with respect to the franchise issue. While
    even non-Indians can bring suit for the denial of equal protection under § 1302(8) of the
    Indian Civil Rights Act, White v. Pueblo of San Juan, 
    728 F.2d 1307
    , 1312 n.1 (10th Cir.
    1984), Individual Plaintiffs who do not own headrights in this case base their claim to a
    right to vote in tribal elections on their possession of some quantum of Osage blood, see
    Aplt. App. at 48. Individual Plaintiffs assert a basis for standing on these voting claims
    which is unique in American voting rights law–their race. This basis for standing to bring
    a tribal voting rights claim has been implicitly recognized before, e.g., Means v. Wilson,
    
    522 F.2d 833
    , 836, 838-39 (8th Cir. 1975), and is justified in this type of case because of
    the unique treatment afforded Indian tribes under federal law aimed at preserving tribal
    sovereignty. They state in their appellate brief without contradiction that Individual
    Plaintiff Charles Pratt is one-half Osage and owns no headright interest. Thus, Pratt has
    the standing to represent Individual Plaintiffs’ position on this appeal.
    10
    At the status conference held January 31, 1992, the district judge stated,
    “As I read the cases there’s a question of whether the Court can solve the problem
    directly, but I don’t think it’s questioned that the Court can involve itself in the creation
    14
    ruled that it had “sufficient jurisdiction pursuant to [Harjo v. Kleppe, 
    420 F. Supp. 1110
    (D.D.C. 1976), aff’d sub nom. Harjo v. Andrus, 
    581 F.2d 949
     (D.C. Cir. 1978)], to
    mandate a referendum on the enfranchisement issue and to provide a forum for resolution
    of the voting conundrum.”11 After the referendum in 1994, the district court denied the
    motion to dismiss as moot, stating that its exercise of jurisdiction did not interfere with
    the sovereignty of the Osage Tribe.
    We review de novo the legal question of when a party can assert sovereign
    immunity. Sac and Fox Nation v. Hanson, 
    47 F.3d 1061
    , 1063 (10th Cir.), cert. denied
    sub nom. Willingham v. Sac and Fox Nation, 
    116 S. Ct. 57
     (1995). Likewise, we review
    de novo a district court’s determination of subject matter jurisdiction. Sierra Club v.
    Lujan, 
    972 F.2d 312
    , 314 (10th Cir. 1992).
    “Indian tribes are ‘domestic dependent nations’ that exercise inherent sovereign
    authority over their members and territories.” Oklahoma Tax Comm’n v. Citizen Band
    Potawatomi Indian Tribe of Oklahoma, 
    498 U.S. 505
    , 509 (1991) (internal citation
    omitted). As an aspect of this sovereign immunity, suits against tribes are barred in the
    absence of an unequivocally expressed waiver by the tribe or abrogation by Congress.
    Id.; Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez, 
    436 U.S. 49
    , 58-59 (1978).
    of a process [to resolve the voting rights issues].” Aplt. App. at 147.
    11
    See Aplt. App. at 54, 141.
    15
    The Osage Tribe itself is not named as a defendant in this case. However,
    Individual Plaintiffs sued the Tribe’s principal governing body Defendant Osage Tribal
    Council as well as each individual member, and Defendants Charles Tillman, Principal
    Chief and Geoffrey Standing Bear, Assistant Principal Chief in their official capacities.12
    Because the relief requested by Individual Plaintiffs, concerning rights to vote in future
    tribal elections and hold tribal office, if granted, would run against the Tribe itself, the
    Tribe’s sovereign immunity protects these defendants in their official capacities. See
    Kenai Oil and Gas, Inc. v. Department of the Interior, 
    522 F. Supp. 521
    , 531 (D. Utah
    1981) (“Tribal immunity may not be evaded by suing tribal officers . . . .”), aff’d, 
    671 F.2d 383
     (10th Cir. 1982). This principle has been applied to protect state and federal
    12
    According to the caption of the second amended complaint, Individual
    Plaintiffs brought their claims against Defendants Charles Tillman and Geoffrey Standing
    Bear in their individual capacities as well. Tribal sovereign immunity does not protect an
    official against individual-capacity claims. Santa Clara, 
    436 U.S. at 59
    . However,
    § 1302(8) of the Indian Civil Rights Act speaks only to tribal action, see Dry Creek
    Lodge, Inc. v. United States, 
    515 F.2d 926
    , 934-35 (10th Cir. 1975), and does not
    authorize a cause of action for declaratory or injunctive relief against either the Osage
    Tribe or its officers in federal court, see Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez, 
    436 U.S. 49
    , 59-
    72 (1978). Also, the Tribe is “unconstrained by those constitutional provisions framed
    specifically as limitations on federal or state authority.” 
    Id.
     at 56-57 & n.7. The second
    amended complaint does not invoke any other civil rights statutes by name. It does not
    make allegations of state action to support claims under § 1983, see Chapoose v. Hodel,
    
    831 F.2d 931
    , 934-35 (10th Cir. 1987), or allegations supporting a claim under § 1985 or
    § 1986 for conspiracy to violate civil rights guaranteed under federal law other than
    § 1302(8), see Nero v. Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, 
    892 F.2d 1457
    , 1461-62 (10th Cir.
    1989), or allegations stating a claim under any other federal voting rights act. Cf. Nero,
    
    892 F.2d at 1465-66
    ; Martinez v. Southern Ute Tribe of the S. Ute Reservation, 
    249 F.2d 915
    , 919-20 (10th Cir. 1957); Runs After v. United States, 
    766 F.2d 347
    , 354-55 (8th Cir.
    1985).
    16
    officials sued in their official capacity. See, e.g., Hafer v. Melo, 
    502 U.S. 21
     (1991)
    (state); Larson v. Domestic and Foreign Commerce Corp., 
    337 U.S. 682
    , 689-90 (1949)
    (federal). Because there is no reason to treat tribal immunity differently from state or
    federal immunity in this sense, tribal immunity protects tribal officials against claims in
    their official capacity. See Merrion v. Jicarilla Apache Tribe, 
    455 U.S. 130
    , 148 (1982)
    (employing same rules for waiver of tribal immunity as are employed for waiver of state
    and federal immunity because no principled reason required different treatment). Thus,
    Tribal Defendants were entitled to sovereign immunity as far as the official capacity
    claims, unless there is an unequivocally expressed waiver either by the Tribe or
    abrogation by Congress.
    Neither Individual Plaintiffs nor Federal Defendants contend that Congress has
    abrogated the Osage Tribe’s sovereign immunity. However, Individual Plaintiffs, relying
    on Sierra Club v. Lujan, 
    972 F.2d 312
    , 314 (10th Cir. 1992), seem to contend that Tribal
    Defendants should not be afforded the protection of sovereign immunity from suit
    because they participated in the referendum process and failed to take an interlocutory
    appeal. Similarly, Federal Defendants contend that Tribal Defendants should have sought
    interlocutory review under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1292
    (a)(1), which provides for interlocutory
    appeals from district court orders which amount to an injunction.
    Notwithstanding their apparent waiver argument, Individual Plaintiffs and Federal
    Defendants do not point to an unequivocal waiver of sovereign immunity by Tribal
    17
    Defendants. Tribal Defendants filed their motion to dismiss soon after the original
    complaint was filed. They reurged it in no less than 15 papers filed with the district court,
    at virtually every critical stage of the proceedings.13 The defense was mentioned or urged
    at each of the three status conferences held in the case. Moreover, at the district court’s
    invitation, Tribal Defendants attempted to have the sovereign immunity issue certified for
    interlocutory appeal in early February, 1993.14 However, the district court never certified
    the issue. Lastly, Tribal Defendants state that they participated in the district court
    proceedings and the referendum only because participation was ordered by the district
    court.
    While Sierra Club, relied upon by Individual Plaintiffs, represents an example of
    an instance where we exercised our discretion under § 1292(b) to take an interlocutory
    appeal on the issue of sovereign immunity, the case does not stand for the proposition that
    a party waives sovereign immunity in the absence of such an appeal or the request for
    such an appeal. In any event, Tribal Defendants sought certification of the sovereign
    immunity issue in February, 1993; however, the district court’s inaction effectively denied
    13
    For example, Tribal Defendants specifically objected to the referendum
    process ordered by the district court on the ground of sovereign immunity. See Aplt.
    App. at 72, 75.
    14
    See Aplt. App. at 82, 84-85. A district court may certify certain issues for
    interlocutory appeal under the terms and conditions in 
    28 U.S.C. § 1292
    (b).
    18
    review.15 Likewise, while §1292(a)(1) authorizes an appeal of a district court’s injunction
    and the district court’s orders directing the reformation process arguably are injunctions
    within the meaning of the section, failure to take an interlocutory appeal under the section
    does not waive sovereign immunity. Thus, Tribal Defendants did not waive their
    sovereign immunity.
    The district court ruled its jurisdiction to order a referendum for the resolution of
    the voting rights issue flowed from Harjo v. Kleppe, 
    420 F. Supp. 1110
     (D.D.C. 1976),
    aff’d sub nom. Harjo v. Andrus, 
    581 F.2d 949
     (D.C. Cir. 1978). In Harjo, citizens of the
    Creek Nation brought suit against various federal officials and the principal chief of their
    tribe, alleging that the chief had been spending tribal monies without the approval of a
    Creek national council as required by the Creek Constitution of 1867. However, the
    national council had not met in over 60 years. Ruling that the Creek Nation retained the
    right to determine its own form of government under various treaties with the United
    15
    We doubt whether certifying the jurisdictional issue for interlocutory appeal
    would have prevented the expense of the referendum process in any event. In its order
    filed January 13, 1993, the district court stated that it would “certify the issue to the Tenth
    Circuit without staying the proceedings herein. In that way, the referendum preparations
    may proceed so that, should the Circuit find that this court does have jurisdiction, the
    process will be completed by the election–as envisioned by the parties.” Aplt. App. at 82.
    The district court planned to continue the referendum process notwithstanding an
    interlocutory appeal, even though a district court generally lacks jurisdiction to proceed
    during the pendency of an interlocutory appeal taken from the denial of absolute or
    qualified immunity. See State of Colorado v. Adhered Mining Co., 
    916 F.2d 1486
    , 1490
    n.2 (10th Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 
    499 U.S. 960
     (1991); Stewart v. Dongs, 
    915 F.2d 572
    ,
    574-75 (10th Cir. 1990) (vacating judgment rendered after trial held during pendency of
    interlocutory appeal from denial of qualified immunity defense).
    19
    States, the district court ordered a referendum process which allowed the people of the
    Creek Nation to determine whether they would revive the government and national
    council under the Creek Constitution of 1867 or whether they would adopt a new
    constitution. Ultimately, the Creeks adopted a new constitution and government.
    Whatever its merits, Harjo is inapposite to this case. Although the principal chief
    of the Creek Nation was sued in his official capacity, Harjo, 
    420 F. Supp. at 1115
    , the
    opinions of the district court and the District of Columbia Circuit do not indicate that the
    chief asserted a sovereign immunity defense on behalf of the tribe.16 Moreover, Harjo did
    not involve a federal statute which imposed limits on the ability of the Creek Nation to
    determine its form of government as the 1906 Act does in this case.
    Lastly, the district court’s statement that its exercise of jurisdiction in mandating
    the referendum process did not interfere with the sovereignty of the Osage Tribe pays
    scant attention to the implications of its handling of the proceedings. Tribal sovereign
    immunity is immunity from suit in federal court. Bank of Oklahoma v. Muscogee
    (Creek) Nation, 
    972 F.2d 1166
    , 1169 (10th Cir. 1992). A conception of immunity from
    suit which leaves a tribe nonetheless vulnerable to a court’s own program of alternative
    dispute resolution accords no meaningful immunity. It follows that there were not two
    16
    Harjo was argued to the District of Columbia Circuit before, and decided
    just weeks after, Santa Clara was handed down. Since Harjo, the Creek Nation has
    obtained dismissal of a suit in federal court on the ground of its tribal sovereign
    immunity. See Bank of Oklahoma v. Muscogee (Creek) Nation, 
    972 F.2d 1166
    , 1169
    (10th Cir. 1992).
    20
    sets of jurisdictional principles from which the district court could select an option
    allowing it to proceed with ordering and overseeing a referendum process to rework the
    governing structure of the Osage Tribe.
    In summary, Tribal Defendants properly and adequately challenged federal
    jurisdiction on the ground of tribal sovereign immunity. Tribal Defendants did not
    unequivocally waive the Tribe’s immunity by failing to seek interlocutory review under
    §1292(a)(1). Harjo, which did not involve the immunity question or statutory limits on
    the tribe’s right to select its form of government, provides no basis for federal jurisdiction
    in this case. Lastly, the immunity–immunity from suit–deprived the district court of
    jurisdiction to order and oversee the referendum.
    VI. Validity of Referendum and 1994 Constitution17
    In its final order filed September 8, 1995, the district court ruled that the
    referendum and the adoption of the 1994 Constitution represent a valid exercise of the
    power of the Osage people to govern themselves. Echoing this reasoning, Individual
    Plaintiffs argue that Congress did not intend to disenfranchise Osage descendants by the
    1906 Act and that they therefore were able to exercise an inherent right to reorganize their
    17
    Individual Plaintiffs and Federal Defendants contend that the results of the
    1994 referendum must stand regardless of the district court’s jurisdictional error because
    those results rest on an independently sufficient legal basis–the Tribe’s retained power to
    extend the franchise to Osages owning no headrights and to determine its own form of
    government. Thus, we must reach the issue of the validity of the referendum and 1994
    Constitution.
    21
    government. They also rely on the precept that any limitation on this power should be
    clearly expressed in a federal statute as expressed in Bryan v. Itasca County, Minnesota,
    
    426 U.S. 373
    , 381 (1976) (stating that states would not be presumed to possess the power
    to tax Indians or Indian property on reservations in the “total absence of mention or
    discussion regarding a congressional intent to confer” such power).
    In contrast, Tribal Defendants emphasize that Congress can limit a tribe’s power of
    self-government. They argue that Congress, in the 1906 Act, defined the Tribe’s
    membership and set its form of general government, and that the referendum and 1994
    Constitution are invalid in light of the 1906 Act.
    The determination of whether Congress has limited the power of the Osage Tribe
    to determine its own form of government involves primarily the interpretation of the
    1906 Act, its amendments, and subsequent case law. As this interpretation is a question
    of law, we review the district court’s ruling on the validity of the referendum and the
    1994 Constitution de novo. See Pierce v. Underwood, 
    487 U.S. 552
    , 558 (1988).
    Although the district court held no evidentiary hearings in its proceedings, the parties did
    stipulate to certain facts. We review any questions of fact underlying the district court’s
    ruling for clear error. 
    Id.
    Indian tribes are separate sovereigns with the power to regulate their internal and
    social relations, including their form of government and tribal membership. Santa Clara,
    
    436 U.S. at 62-63
    ; United States v. Wheeler, 
    435 U.S. 313
    , 322-23 & n.18 (1978); see
    22
    also Felix S. Cohen’s Handbook of Federal Indian Law 247-48 (Rennard Strickland, ed.
    1982). These powers of sovereignty are subject to the plenary authority of Congress. See
    Santa Clara, 
    436 U.S. at 58
    . Also, tribes retain sovereign powers except where restricted
    by treaty or statute or where the exercise of a particular power is inconsistent with a
    tribe’s status as a domestic dependent nation. See Oliphant v. Suquamish Indian Tribe,
    
    435 U.S. 191
    , 208 (1978). Although an express restriction of an aspect of tribal
    sovereignty is preferred, Congress’ clear intent to restrict an aspect of sovereignty is also
    sufficient even if it is not express. See United States v. Dion, 
    476 U.S. 734
    , 738-39
    (1986).
    The clear intent doctrine has been applied in the context of congressional
    abrogation of a tribe’s treaty rights. In Dion, for example, the U.S. Supreme Court
    interpreted the language of a federal statute in light of its legislative history to conclude
    that Congress had the clear intent to abrogate the treaty rights of the Yankton Sioux Tribe
    to hunt eagles even though the intent was not expressed. The doctrine also applies in the
    context of reservation disestablishment. See Mattz v. Arnett, 
    412 U.S. 481
    , 505 (1973).
    Moreover, the Eighth Circuit has held that Congress terminated the presumed power of
    Indian tribes to hear citizen suits brought under the Resource Conservation and Recovery
    Act of 1976 in the more purely internal context of a suit brought by two tribal members
    against their tribe and various federal defendants under a citizen-suit provision of RCRA
    arising out of polluted dump sites on the reservation. See Blue Legs v. United States
    23
    Bureau of Indian Affairs, 
    867 F.2d 1094
    , 1097-98 (8th Cir. 1989). The Blue Legs court
    based its holding on RCRA’s exclusive federal jurisdiction provision and its legislative
    history, which expressed a congressional preference for prompt federal adjudication of
    citizen suits under RCRA, and held that RCRA terminated tribal power to hear such suits
    even though it did not do so expressly. Id.18
    First, Congress has prescribed the form of tribal government for the Osage Tribe.
    The 1906 Act as amended established the offices of a principal chief, an assistant
    principal chief, and an eight-member Osage tribal council, and required that elections be
    held every four years to fill those offices. See Act of June 28, 1906, Pub. L. No. 321, 
    34 Stat. 539
    , 545, § 9; Act of March 2, 1929, Pub. L. No. 919, 
    45 Stat. 1478
    , 1481, § 7. A
    subsequent statute extended the operation of the government until a further act of
    Congress. See Act of October 21, 1978, Pub. L. No. 95-496, 
    92 Stat. 1660
    .
    In Logan v. Andrus, 
    640 F.2d 269
    , 270-71 (10th Cir. 1981), we rejected the
    proposition that the Osage Tribal Council as established under the 1906 Act was limited
    in its governing powers to the administration of the mineral estate. We held that the
    1906 Act conferred upon the Osage Tribal Council general governmental authority over
    18
    Although the Eighth Circuit did not expressly state in Blue Legs that a tribal
    court could not entertain a citizen suit under the section of RCRA at issue (the court only
    said that exhaustion of tribal remedies was not required), the Eighth Circuit subsequently
    explained that Blue Legs had held that a tribal court could not entertain such a suit. See
    Reservation Telephone Coop. v. Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Reservation,
    
    76 F.3d 181
    , 185-86 (8th Cir. 1996).
    24
    the affairs of the Osage Tribe, including the right to include the Tribe as a participant in
    federal programs. 
    Id. at 270
    . In Logan, we explained that Congress’ description of the
    government established by the 1906 Act as the “tribal government”19 is significant and
    resolves the question of its general authority.20 
    Id.
    The legislative history of the 1906 Act makes it clear that the act was passed with
    the approval of the Tribe and in its interests. See H.R. Rep. No. 3219, at 102 (1906). The
    House Report expressly notes that the 1906 Act made “ample provision for the . . . tribal
    government.” Id. at 2. Not only did Congress ordain the structure of the tribal
    government, it also set the terms of office and provided for the time and place of general
    tribal elections, the succession of officers, and the removal of members of the Tribal
    Council. In spite of its knowledge of the problems with the statutory government,21
    19
    See, e.g., Act of March 2, 1929, Pub. L. No. 919, 
    45 Stat. 1478
    , 1481 (“said
    tribal government shall continue in full force and effect . . . .”); Act of October 21, 1978,
    Pub. L. No. 95-496, 
    92 Stat. 1660
     (same).
    20
    Congress also assigned governmental functions to the principal chief and
    the Osage tribal council that are not directly related to the administration of the Osage
    mineral estate. See, e.g., Act of June 28, 1906, Pub. L. No. 321, 
    34 Stat. 539
    , 542-43
    (stating that certain reserved lands may be sold “in the discretion of the Osage tribe”); 
    id. at 544
     (providing that the “Osage tribal council” may request payments from an
    emergency fund for the Osage tribe); 
    id. at 545
     (stating deeds to Osage lands “shall be
    executed by the principal chief for the Osages”). The legislative history of the 1906 Act
    also indicates that Congress was providing for a tribal government concerned with more
    than the mere administration of the mineral estate. See H.R. Rep. No. 3219, at 1-2
    (1906).
    21
    In 1957, Congress recognized problems in “the present form of government
    of the Osage Tribe.” See H.R. Rep. No. 965, at 1, reprinted in 1957 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1688.
    The Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs directed the Bureau of Indian Affairs to
    25
    Congress extended its operation indefinitely in 1978. The legislative history of this 1978
    amendment shows that Congress was aware that it was dealing with the “tribal
    government,” see S. Rep. No. 95-1157, at 5 (1978), and the amendment reinforces the
    conclusion that Congress was aware of its prescription of the form of tribal government
    by not only extending its operation indefinitely but also by providing for a method of
    selecting a principal chief and a tribal council in the event of a common disaster, see 
    id. at 9
    ; Act of October 21, 1978, Pub. L. No. 95-496, 
    92 Stat. 1660
    , § 1. Until the referendum,
    the United States government recognized Defendant Osage Tribal Council as the general
    governing body of the Osage Tribe.22 Moreover, the Council has operated under the
    1906 Act since its passage–not the 1881 Constitution.23
    The referendum process ordered by the district court produced the
    1994 Constitution, which creates a new general government for the Osage Tribe. The
    1994 Constitution separates the powers of the Osage Nation into the legislative,
    executive, and judicial divisions and confers those powers on a national council, a
    president and vice-president, and a supreme court, respectively. Although the 1994
    review and report to the committee on a proposal to reorganize or enlarge the form of the
    Osage government to provide representation to adult members of the Tribe who were not
    owners of headrights. See id. The Bureau of Indian Affairs apparently did not act on this
    mandate.
    22
    See Indian Entities Recognized and Eligible to Receive Services from the
    United States Bureau of Indian Affairs, 
    58 Fed. Reg. 54364
    , 54367 (1993).
    23
    See Aple. App. at ¶¶ 5-6, at 3; S. Rep. No. 95-1157, at 4-7, 12-14 (1978).
    26
    Constitution makes some provisions to preserve the power of the government established
    by the 1906 Act over the Osage mineral estate, the government created by the 1994
    Constitution is a government wielding general authority, designed, according to the
    constitutional preamble, to secure to the Osage Nation the blessings of freedom and the
    Osage ancestral heritage and culture. This establishment of an entirely new form of tribal
    government exercising general powers is inconsistent with Congress’ statutory
    prescription of the form of tribal government for the Osage Tribe. We hold that Congress
    clearly intended to terminate the power of the Osage Tribe to create a new form of tribal
    government inconsistent with the statutory form, see Felix S. Cohen’s Handbook of
    Federal Indian Law 247 (Rennard Strickland, ed. 1982) (recognizing the 1906 Act as an
    “effective limitation on self-governing powers”), as the Tribe did in the
    1994 Constitution. Because Congress’ prescription of a form of tribal government and
    the restriction of a tribe’s powers over internal affairs in this way appears unique in its
    relations with Indian tribes, see 
    id.
     at 247 & n.11,24 our holding in this matter is
    correspondingly narrow.
    24
    “In a few instances, Congress has by statute dictated the manner of
    choosing tribal officials or other aspects of a tribe’s form of government.” See Felix S.
    Cohen’s Handbook, at 247. Cohen supports this statement by reference to the 1906 Act
    and to only one other act, the Act of April 26, 1906, ch. 1876, § 6, 
    34 Stat. 137
    , 139. This
    act is a smaller intrusion on tribal sovereignty as it mainly confers upon the President of
    the United States the power to remove from office certain officials of five specified tribes
    for failure to perform official duties and to appoint replacements in the event of such
    removal or an official’s permanent disability.
    27
    Second, the district court ordered the expansion of the Osage franchise to persons
    who were not entitled to vote under regulations promulgated by the Department of the
    Interior,25 and the 1994 Constitution approved this expansion. The district court declared
    that “all persons listed on the 1906 roll and their descendants by blood (but without regard
    to Indian blood quantum) will be eligible for membership in the Tribe and will be
    permitted to vote in the referendum.”26 The district court’s final order of dismissal
    confirms that the franchise was expanded to all registered lineal descendants of persons
    whose names appear on the 1908 roll, without regard to headright ownership, and the
    certificate of ratification of the 1994 Constitution echoes this expansion.
    The franchise extension as created in this case is invalid. The district court’s
    orders expanding the franchise in the first instance are invalid because they were issued
    without subject matter jurisdiction. Moreover, because the form of tribal government
    created by the 1994 Constitution, its major provision, is inconsistent with the form of
    government prescribed for the Osage Tribe in the 1906 Act, the 1994 Constitution is
    invalid. Accordingly, the 1994 Constitution’s ratification of the franchise extension is
    void. Because we decide this issue on grounds independent of the 1906 Act, we need not
    25
    E.g., 
    25 C.F.R. §73.21
     (1978).
    26
    See Aplt. App. at 55, 67.
    28
    decide the issue of whether the 1906 Act terminates the Osage Tribe’s power to extend
    the right to vote in its elections to persons not owning headrights.27
    In summary, Congress terminated the power of the Osage Tribe to create a form of
    tribal government inconsistent with the prescription of the 1906 Act. Thus, the
    government created by the 1994 Constitution is invalid. Also, the extension of the
    franchise, ordered by the district court and ratified in the 1994 Constitution, is void.28
    VII. Remedy
    Contending that the 1906 Act is not an idle choice of words and that only Congress
    can expand the franchise tied to headright ownership and replace the tribal government,
    Tribal Defendants maintain, as we confirmed at oral argument, that the right to vote in
    tribal elections should be returned to headright owners only and that the government
    prescribed by the 1906 Act should be restored as the sole government of the Osage Tribe.
    Tribal Defendants also contend that this remedy is necessary to vindicate the sovereign
    immunity of the Osage Tribe. In short, Tribal Defendants argue that we should provide a
    27
    The issue of the extension of the franchise is on a different footing than the
    issue of the validity of the form of government created by the 1994 Constitution. If the
    Osage Tribe retained the power to create a form of tribal government inconsistent with
    the 1906 Act’s prescription, then the district court’s error in retaining jurisdiction would
    not require reversal of the results of the 1994 referendum.
    28
    We hold only that the franchise was improperly extended in this case and
    that the new government formed under the 1994 Constitution is invalid under the 1906
    Act. The issue of whether the headright restriction violates Individual Plaintiffs’ equal
    protection and due process rights, as raised by the second amended complaint, remains an
    open question.
    29
    remedy which would put the parties back in the position in which they would have been
    had the district court properly dismissed the case on grounds of sovereign immunity at the
    outset of the action and had no referendum been held.
    Individual Plaintiffs and Federal Defendants contend that we have no authority to
    grant the remedy sought by Tribal Defendants. They contend that the Osage Nation has a
    legal existence independent of the district court proceedings such that a reversal of the
    district court would not result in the restoration of the government established by the
    1906 Act as the sole government. Ironically, they contend that the Osage Nation enjoys
    sovereign immunity, which precludes us from providing the remedy sought by Tribal
    Defendants. They also rely on the traditional reluctance of federal courts to interfere in
    the results of tribal elections or involve themselves in internal tribal disputes. Lastly, at
    oral argument, they suggested that the decision to recognize officially an Indian tribe is a
    task exclusively committed to the executive branch and that we should leave the task to
    that branch.
    30
    A. District Court’s Relationship to Referendum
    In light of the contention by Individual Plaintiffs and Federal Defendants that the
    1994 Constitution and its government assume a legal significance independent of the
    district court’s actions by way of the referendum process, the breadth of the remedy
    requested by Tribal Defendants, and the principle that we are particularly concerned with
    judicial error, any remedy we fashion in this case should be justified by a close
    relationship between the actions of the district court and the referendum and 1994
    Constitution. We turn to examine that relationship.
    The district court’s actions are inseparable from the referendum and 1994
    Constitution. The district court did not merely initiate a process which was then carried
    out by the parties. Departing from the task of deciding the issues in the pleadings,29 the
    district court ruled that it had “sufficient jurisdiction” to “mandate a referendum on the
    enfranchisement issue and provide a forum for resolution of the voting conundrum.” It
    ordered the creation of a commission to propose a revision of the existing documents
    governing the Osage Tribe, and required the commission to submit all its proposals to the
    29
    See, e.g., Aplt. App. 147 (Transcript of Status Conference held Jan. 31,
    1992) (“As I read the cases there’s a question of whether the Court can solve the problem
    directly, but I don’t think it’s questioned that the Court can involve itself in the creation
    of a process and I think that that might be the direction that this case should take.”); 
    id. at 158
     (“My view is that the best solution for the parties is to attempt to resolve this matter
    in the way that [Federal Defendants] suggest [after the manner of Harjo.]”); 
    id. at 161
     (“I
    will hang on to this process because I think I should, and keeping in mind that ultimately
    I’ll have a hard look at the jurisdictional issue.”).
    31
    court for its review. The district court retained continuing jurisdiction over the work of
    the commission and the referendum process.
    Additionally, the district court played an integral and commanding role in the
    referendum process. The district court issued a comprehensive order governing the
    commission and the referendum process, requiring an educational program on the
    referendum, and mandating election of new Osage officials. It directed or attempted to
    direct the parties past numerous points of potential conflict, not only on the methods for
    conducting the referendum but also on issues relating to the composition of the
    commission, whether commission meetings would be open to the public, the exchange of
    information between commissioners, deadlines, expansion of the franchise and
    preparation of a master tribal membership and voting list, an educational program about
    the referendum, referendum funding, and commissioner compensation. It also required
    the Secretary of the Interior to submit his views on whether the new proposed governing
    documents contravened federal law.
    Lastly, the district court actively avoided the issue of sovereign immunity.
    Although Tribal Defendants raised the issue shortly after the commencement of the action
    in their motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, the district court evaded30
    30
    At the status conference held October 9, 1992, the district judge stated, “I
    also recognize the urging of the Council that the Court rule on the motion to dismiss but
    I’m going to have to consider that as cleverly as I can.” See Aplt. App. at 220. The judge
    also stated, “I’m convinced that I have jurisdiction and that we’re proceeding
    appropriately in this case, but I will do it [consider the sovereignty issue], as I say, in
    32
    the motion for several years31 and ultimately denied it as moot in light of the results of the
    referendum it ordered. When one Tribal Defendant requested a ruling on the motion to
    dismiss at the status conference on October 9, 1992, well before the referendum, the
    district judge immediately turned to the attorney for Federal Defendants, who by this time
    had abandoned their initial position and embraced the referendum, and asked:
    Is this an issue that is going to be urged seriously . . . ? The Court had felt
    that we were on course for working out a plan, of having the parties with
    the aid of the Court agree to a process or plan for resolving this voting
    issue. I’m hearing the argument from [one Tribal Defendant] that really
    they want the judicial system to address some of the legal issues in a
    manner that could cause an appeal before the plan had been worked
    through, and this is kind of a new tact [sic] that could possibly throw a
    wrench into the process.32
    The district court made no bones about the fact that it did not intend to let the sovereign
    immunity issue stop the referendum.
    whatever means I can do it to ensure that our process continues, because I am reading
    your mind [in urging the motion to dismiss].” 
    Id. at 221-22
    .
    31
    The district court abused any discretion it had by exceeding the bounds of
    permissible choice under the circumstances, Moothart v. Bell, 
    21 F.3d 1499
    , 1504-05
    (10th Cir. 1994), in failing to rule on the motion attacking subject matter jurisdiction
    within a reasonably short time. See Workman v. Jordan, 
    958 F.2d 332
    , 335 (10th Cir.
    1992) (reversing district court’s order postponing consideration of qualified immunity
    defense until trial and directing district court to immediately consider the defense); Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 12(h)(3) (“Whenever it appears by suggestion of the parties or otherwise that
    the court lacks jurisdiction of the subject matter, the court shall dismiss the action.”)
    (emphasis added).
    32
    Aplt. App. at 172-73.
    33
    The district court’s actions are inseparable from the referendum and 1994
    Constitution. The district court’s actions were possible only because it disregarded the
    sovereign immunity defense. Not only is the existence of the referendum not independent
    of the district court’s actions, but its validity is seriously undermined by the disregard of
    the sovereign immunity defense. Moreover, any purported independent validity of the
    referendum and the 1994 Constitution is undermined by the departures from the statutory
    prescription of the form of tribal government for the Osage Tribe.
    B. Appropriateness and Form of Relief
    Congress prescribed the form of government in the 1906 Act as amended, thereby
    restricting the Tribe’s power to create a form of government inconsistent with the
    statutory form. The principle that only Congress has the power to amend an otherwise
    proper federal statute is well settled. For example, in Kennerly v. District Court of the
    Ninth Judicial District of Montana, 
    400 U.S. 423
    , 425-26 (1971) (per curiam), the U.S.
    Supreme Court rejected a state’s claim that it had jurisdiction over a civil case arising on
    the Blackfeet reservation because the state legislature had not taken affirmative legislative
    action to extend such jurisdiction in accordance with a federal statute. In light of the
    statute, the Supreme Court rejected the proposition that the Blackfeet Tribal Council’s
    specific authorization of coordinate state court jurisdiction in such cases was sufficient.
    
    Id. at 427, 429
    . Kennerly, thus, confirms that action by a recognized tribal authority
    34
    cannot overcome a statutory requirement, even where protection of a tribal interest
    underlies the statute.
    As an appellate court, we have the power to provide an appropriate and meaningful
    remedy to correct judicial error of a district court. In this case, the district court had far
    more than a causal relationship to the referendum process. The district court ignored
    numerous requests for a ruling on the sovereign immunity issue, proceeded without
    jurisdiction, assumed powers which can only be described as legislative in scope, and
    commanded a constitutional referendum–a remedy far in excess of that requested by the
    pleadings–despite a congressional act and precedent of the U.S. Supreme Court and this
    circuit to the contrary. In this case, the appropriate and meaningful remedy is to restore
    the form of government established by the 1906 Act by striking down the inconsistent
    form created by the 1994 Constitution and to declare the extension of the franchise void.
    The District of Columbia Circuit granted a similar remedy in Morris v. Watt, 
    640 F.2d 404
     (D.C. Cir. 1981), where the court vacated the results of tribal referendum
    elections adopting new constitutions for the Chickasaw and Choctaw Nations on grounds
    of procedural irregularities.33 Other courts have also formed remedies in tribal election
    33
    Because the tribes in Morris retained the power to adopt new tribal
    constitutions, the District of Columbia Circuit then remanded the case for new
    referendum elections. Morris, 
    640 F.2d at 406, 415-16
    . We disagree with any contention
    that the results of the district court proceedings in this case are immune from review
    because of the 1994 tribal referendum. While, as Federal Defendants point out, Morris
    involved procedural irregularities not at issue in this case, the importance of Morris for
    our purposes is that the case serves as an example of an appellate court vacating the
    35
    disputes even though the remedies interfered with some aspect of tribal control over the
    election. See, e.g., Rosebud Sioux Tribe of S. Dakota v. Driving Hawk, 
    534 F.2d 98
     (8th
    Cir. 1976) (affirming district court’s order directing a tribal secretary to issue a certificate
    of election to all but two candidates in a tribal election where the court determined the
    candidates had been properly elected even though the tribal election board had refused to
    certify the election results and had ordered a new election); Means v. Wilson, 
    522 F.2d 833
    , 839-42 (8th Cir. 1975) (holding tribal members stated a claim against the tribal
    election board for interference with their right to vote in tribal elections under § 1302(8)
    based on allegations of procedural misconduct aimed at ensuring the election of the
    incumbent council president), cert. denied, 
    424 U.S. 958
     (1976); Solomon v. LaRose, 
    335 F. Supp. 715
     (D. Neb. 1971) (issuing a preliminary injunction prohibiting tribal council
    from executing its resolutions ousting three newly-elected council members because the
    council exceeded its authority over tribal elections as set by tribal election ordinance).
    Both Individual Plaintiffs and the new Osage National Council, in its amicus brief,
    assert that the Osage National Council possesses sovereign immunity which precludes us
    from granting the relief requested by Tribal Defendants. However, the immunity of the
    results of referendum elections in which Indian tribes adopted new constitutions. Instead
    of relying on the procedural irregularities at issue in Morris to justify our reversal of the
    1994 referendum, we rely on our conclusions that the district court lacked the subject
    matter jurisdiction to order the referendum process and the expansion of the franchise in
    light of the asserted tribal sovereign immunity and that the 1906 Act prescribes the form
    of tribal government for the Osage Tribe, thereby restricting the Tribe’s power to create a
    form of government inconsistent with the statutory form.
    36
    Osage Tribe was properly asserted by Tribal Defendants at the outset of this suit, and
    granting the relief requested by Tribal Defendants vindicates that immunity. Indian tribal
    sovereign immunity would be a poor shield if it could be disregarded at the will of a
    district court or if a court could command resolution of tribal affairs in such a way as to
    put the vindication of immunity beyond the fashioning of a remedy at the appellate level.
    The Osage National Council cannot assert that immunity to bar relief.34
    Federal Defendants point to Two Hawk v. Rosebud Sioux Tribe, 
    534 F.2d 101
     (8th
    Cir. 1976), and Wheeler v. Swimmer, 
    835 F.2d 259
     (10th Cir. 1987), as examples of the
    reluctance of federal courts to interfere with the results of tribal elections or involve
    themselves in internal tribal disputes. However, both cases are distinguishable.
    In Two Hawk, the Eighth Circuit dismissed an appeal regarding a challenge to a
    tribal election as moot where the appellant failed to seek a stay of the election, which was
    34
    Federal Defendants and the Osage National Council also contend that
    proper relief cannot be granted in the absence of the Osage National Council as a party.
    However, the Osage National Council failed to file a notice of appeal on the district
    court’s denial of its motion to intervene and has thus waived the issue. See In re Grand
    Jury Subpoenas Dated December 7 and 8, Issued to Bob Stover, Chief of Albuquerque
    Police Dept. v. United States, 
    40 F.3d 1096
    , 1099 (10th Cir. 1994) (stating a denial of a
    motion to intervene is a final appealable order), cert. denied sub nom. Nakamura v.
    United States, 
    115 S. Ct. 1957
     (1995); Sanguine, Ltd. v. United States Department of the
    Interior, 
    736 F.2d 1416
     (10th Cir. 1984) (reversing district court’s denial of tribal
    members’ motion to intervene). Similarly, the Osage National Council did not move to
    intervene on appeal. See Izumi Seimitsu Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha v. U.S. Philips Corp.,
    
    510 U.S. 27
    , 29 (1993) (dismissing writ of certiorari because Court would have had to
    decide appellate court’s denial of petitioner’s motion to intervene on appeal before
    reaching merits and petitioner failed to include the denial in the petition for certiorari).
    37
    completed during the appeal. The Two Hawk court carefully noted that the case did not
    involve an attack on an allegedly invalid election ordinance or a statute which imposed
    unwarranted burdens on candidates in future elections and, thus, future elections would
    not be affected. In contrast, the 1994 Constitution and the new government at issue in
    this case pose enduring conflicts with the 1906 Act and Tribal Defendants’ cognizable
    interests.
    In Wheeler, we affirmed the district court’s refusal to exercise jurisdiction over the
    claims of defeated candidates in a tribal election, where resort to the tribal judicial system
    was available, under the rationale of Santa Clara. In this case, we are following the
    animating principle of Wheeler and Santa Clara by providing Tribal Defendants their
    requested relief.
    Individual Plaintiffs and Federal Defendants contend that the decision to recognize
    officially an Indian tribe is exclusively committed to the executive branch and that we
    should leave the task to that branch. Many administrative functions concerning Indian
    affairs have been delegated to the executive branch by way of the Department of the
    Interior, e.g., 
    25 U.S.C. §§ 1-9
    , and the Department has procedures for officially
    recognizing Indian tribes, see 25 C.F.R. Part 83 (1996). Congress, however, has the
    power to regulate commerce with the Indian tribes, U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, and Congress
    has spoken to the governing of the Osage Tribe in the 1906 Act. There is no “textually
    demonstrable constitutional commitment of the issue[s]” relevant to this case to the
    38
    executive branch to render the case nonjusticiable. See Baker v. Carr, 
    369 U.S. 186
    , 217
    (1962). The principal issue in this case is the adherence of the district court and the
    parties, including Federal Defendants, to the 1906 Act and the doctrine of tribal sovereign
    immunity as interpreted in binding precedent such as Logan and Santa Clara.35
    Construction of the 1906 Act and the applicable precedent and judging the adherence to
    this authority are eminently judicial tasks.36
    35
    Additionally, Tribal Defendants allege in their reply that the procedures for
    recognition of the Osage Nation set out in 25 C.F.R. Part 83 (1995) were not followed in
    spite of the publication in the Federal Register. See Indian Entities Recognized and
    Eligible to Receive Services from the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs, 
    60 Fed. Reg. 9250
    , 9253 (1995). Resolution of the question of whether the procedures were
    followed involve evidentiary matters not before us and is a question we would not decide
    in the first instance.
    36
    In its final order dismissing the case, the district court reasoned because it
    had the jurisdiction to order the referendum, Tribal Defendants were not necessary
    parties. To the extent the district court is intimating that any error it made regarding the
    sovereign immunity defense is immaterial because it could have ordered the same result
    in Tribal Defendants’ absence, we disagree.
    A party is a necessary party if it claims an interest relating to the subject of the
    action and is so situated that the disposition of the action in the party’s absence may as a
    practical matter impair or impede the party’s ability to protect that interest. Provident
    Tradesmens Bank & Trust Co. v. Patterson, 
    390 U.S. 102
    , 109-10 (1968); Fed. R. Civ.
    P. 19(a). Tribal Defendants were necessary parties whether this test is applied in relation
    to the relief requested by Individual Plaintiffs, the invalidation of the franchise restriction
    and what amounted to the revival of the tribal government under the 1881 Constitution, or
    in relation to the relief actually granted, the franchise extension and a new constitution
    and government. The relief requested in the second amended complaint posed a practical
    threat to the ability of Tribal Defendants to protect their interest as the sole governing
    body of the Tribe as well as to meet their obligations to protect the Osage mineral estate,
    while the actual results of the district court proceedings directly compromised those
    interests. Moreover, Tribal Defendants were indispensable because the case, essentially
    an internal tribal dispute, could not in equity and good conscience proceed in their
    39
    In summary, the appropriate and meaningful remedy in this case is to resurrect the
    restriction of the franchise to headright owners and to restore the government established
    by the 1906 Act, by striking down the inconsistent form created by the 1994 Constitution.
    This remedy is justified by the inseparable role of the district court in the referendum and
    its error in refusing to honor the sovereign immunity of the Osage Tribe urged repeatedly
    by Tribal Defendants. The remedy is fundamentally appropriate given the departures
    from the 1906 Act and vindicates the Tribe’s sovereign immunity.
    VIII. Conclusion
    Congress prescribed the form of tribal government for the Osage Tribe in the
    1906 Act as amended, thereby restricting the Tribe’s power to create an inconsistent form
    of government. Also, the extension of the franchise in this case is void. The district court
    erred in failing to timely rule on Tribal Defendants’ motion to dismiss on the ground of
    sovereign immunity. The district court further erred in ordering and presiding over the
    extension of the tribal franchise and the referendum process, working a fundamental
    change in the form of the Tribe’s government. Outside the power of judicial review or
    circumstances requiring court-supervised implementation of a constitutionally-required
    absence, Fed. R. Civ. P. 19(b), in light of Tribal Defendants’ interests. We have
    dismissed cases under Rule 19(b) when a tribe cannot be joined to a suit on account of
    sovereign immunity. See, e.g., Enterprise Mgt. Consultants, Inc. v. United States, 
    883 F.2d 890
    , 893-94 (10th Cir. 1989); Tewa Tesuque v. Morton, 
    498 F.2d 240
    , 242-43 (10th
    Cir. 1974), cert. denied, 
    420 U.S. 962
     (1975); United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee
    Indians v. Mankiller, 
    2 F.3d 1161
    , 
    1993 WL 307937
     (10th Cir. Aug. 12, 1993)
    (unpublished opinion).
    40
    remedy superseding any contrary statute, e.g., Cooper v. Aaron, 
    358 U.S. 1
     (1958)
    (striking down suspension of school desegregation plan under Brown), a district court
    cannot provide what amounts to a legislative forum for resolution of issues fit solely for
    Congress simply because Congress and the federal bureaucracy have proven too slow,
    unresponsive, or otherwise unsatisfactory. Only Congress has the power to permit a
    fundamental alteration of the prescribed form of tribal government. The results of the
    district court proceedings and the 1994 referendum are reversed. The right to vote in
    elections of the Osage Tribe is restricted to headright owners, and the form of government
    established by the 1994 Constitution is declared invalid.
    41
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 95-5208

Citation Numbers: 116 F.3d 1315, 1997 WL 309902

Judges: Baldock, Brorby, Murphy

Filed Date: 6/10/1997

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/4/2024

Authorities (51)

Mattz v. Arnett , 93 S. Ct. 2245 ( 1973 )

Baker v. Carr , 82 S. Ct. 691 ( 1962 )

Merrion v. Jicarilla Apache Tribe , 102 S. Ct. 894 ( 1982 )

United States v. Wheeler , 98 S. Ct. 1079 ( 1978 )

United States v. Dion , 106 S. Ct. 2216 ( 1986 )

Budinich v. Becton Dickinson & Co. , 108 S. Ct. 1717 ( 1988 )

bank-of-oklahoma-national-association-v-muscogee-creek-nation-indian , 972 F.2d 1166 ( 1992 )

r-perry-wheeler-agnes-cowan-wendall-cochran-george-wickliffe-james , 835 F.2d 259 ( 1987 )

haskell-levi-chapoose-as-guardian-ad-litem-for-and-on-behalf-of-his-minor , 831 F.2d 931 ( 1987 )

in-re-texas-international-corporation-debtor-dais-naid-incorporated , 974 F.2d 1246 ( 1992 )

enterprise-management-consultants-inc-cross-appellee-v-united-states , 883 F.2d 890 ( 1989 )

duane-goodface-winona-long-charles-langdeau-patrick-spears-and-william , 708 F.2d 335 ( 1983 )

reservation-telephone-cooperative-consolidated-telephone-cooperative-west , 76 F.3d 181 ( 1996 )

Kennerly v. District Court of the Ninth Judicial District ... , 91 S. Ct. 480 ( 1971 )

Dry Creek Lodge, Inc., a Wyoming Corporation v. The United ... , 515 F.2d 926 ( 1975 )

rh-nero-carrie-brown-mamie-ross-nivens-caroline-green-william-nave-john , 892 F.2d 1457 ( 1989 )

Trafficante v. Metropolitan Life Insurance , 93 S. Ct. 364 ( 1972 )

Larson v. Domestic and Foreign Commerce Corp. , 69 S. Ct. 1457 ( 1949 )

Provident Tradesmens Bank & Trust Co. v. Patterson , 88 S. Ct. 733 ( 1968 )

Lewis v. Continental Bank Corp. , 110 S. Ct. 1249 ( 1990 )

View All Authorities »