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The United States Supreme Court ordered the dismissal of a claim involving a
coal lease because none of the statutes cited by the Indian Tribe contractor
provided a basis for a breach of trust action against the government. The
contractor sought damages in connection with the government's approval of
amendments to a 1964 coal lease affecting Indian lands. In a prior opinion (47
CCF ¶78,127), the Supreme Court reversed a decision of the Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit that held the Indian Mineral Leasing Act of 1938 created
a fiduciary duty enforceable through suits for monetary damages (47
CCF ¶78,077). After the Court of Federal Claims dismissed the complaint (50
CCF ¶78,512), the Federal Circuit reversed, finding the contractor had a
cognizable money-mandating claim under Sections 635(a) and 638 of the
Navajo-Hopi Rehabilitation Act of 1950 and Section 1300 of the Surface Mining
Control and Reclamation Act of 1977, and the government breached its trust
duties (53 CCF ¶79,097).
Dismissal Ordered
The Supreme Court reversed the Federal Circuit a second time and remanded with
instructions to affirm the CFC's dismissal, holding neither statute provided a
basis for a breach of trust suit against the government. First, the lease could
not have been issued under Section 635(a) of the NHRA. That provision only
authorizes lease terms of up to 25 years, and the lease term here was for an
indefinite period, suggesting issuance under the IMLA. Second, the lease was not
the type of "program" contemplated by Section 638 of the NHRA, so that
provision did not apply. Third, Section 1300 of the SMCRA was irrelevant because
it only covers leases issued after 1977, and the lease here was issued in 1964.
Also, a governmental fiduciary duty could not be premised on "comprehensive
control" over Indian lands, as suggested by the Federal Circuit. Since the
contractor failed to identify a "specific, applicable, trust-creating
statute or regulation that the [g]overnment violated," there was no basis
for jurisdiction under the Indian Tucker Act (28 USC 1500). (U.S. v. Navajo
Nation, US SCt, 53
CCF ¶79,086)
(The news featured above is a selection from the news covered in the Government Contracts Report Letter, which is published weekly and distributed to subscribers of the Government Contracts Reporter. )
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