In
Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United
States, 424 U. S. 800, it
was held that (1) the McCarran Amendment, which waived the
sovereign immunity of the United States as to comprehensive state
water rights adjudications, provides state courts with jurisdiction
to adjudicate Indian water rights held in trust by the United
States, and (2), in light of the federal policies underlying that
Amendment, a suit brought by the United States in federal court
claiming water rights on behalf of itself and certain Indian Tribes
was properly dismissed in favor of concurrent adjudication reaching
the same issues in a Colorado state court. The instant cases form a
sequel to that decision. In No. 81-2188, the United States and
various Indian Tribes brought actions in Federal District Court,
seeking an adjudication of rights in certain streams in Montana.
Subsequently, the Montana Department of Natural Resources and
Conservation filed a petition in state court to adjudicate water
rights in the same streams. Still later, the United States brought
additional actions in Federal District Court, seeking to adjudicate
its rights and the rights of various Indian Tribes in other Montana
streams, and these rights also became involved in state
proceedings. Motions to dismiss the federal actions were granted,
the District Court relying in part on
Colorado River. On
consolidated appeals, the Court of Appeals reversed, holding that
Montana might lack jurisdiction to adjudicate claims in state court
because the Enabling Act admitting Montana to the Union and the
provision of the Montana Constitution promulgated in response to
that Act reserved "absolute jurisdiction and control" over Indian
lands in Congress; that the State, however, might have acquired
such jurisdiction under Pub.L. 280, which allowed a State to
acquire certain jurisdiction over Indian affairs and to amend its
constitution to remove any impediment to such jurisdiction in a
constitutional or statutory declaimer; and that, even if it were
found that Montana
Page 463 U. S. 546
had validly repealed the disclaimer language in its
Constitution, the limited factual circumstances of
Colorado
River prevented its application to the Montana litigation. In
No. 81-2147, various water rights claimants in Arizona filed
petitions in state court to adjudicate rights in a number of river
systems, and the United States was joined in each case both in its
independent capacity and as trustee for various Indian Tribes.
Thereafter, some of these Indian Tribes filed suits in Federal
District Court, seeking,
inter alia, federal
determinations of their water rights. The District Court, relying
on
Colorado River, dismissed most of the actions, while
staying one of them pending completion of the state proceedings.
The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that the Enabling Act under
which Arizona was admitted to statehood and a provision of the
Arizona Constitution, both of which were similar to the Montana
Enabling Act and Constitution, disabled Arizona from adjudicating
Indian water claims.
Held:
1. The federal courts had jurisdiction to hear the suits brought
both by the United States and the Indian Tribes, and a dismissal or
stay would have been improper if there was no jurisdiction in the
concurrent state actions. Public Law 280 would nor have authorized
the States to assume jurisdiction over adjudication of Indian water
rights, since it specifically withheld such jurisdiction. And to
the extent that a claimed bar to state jurisdiction is premised on
the respective State Constitutions, that is a question of state law
over which state courts have binding authority. Pp.
463 U. S.
559-561.
2. Whatever limitation the Enabling Acts or federal policy may
have originally placed on state court jurisdiction over Indian
water rights, those limitations were removed by the McCarran
Amendment. That Amendment was designed to deal with the general
problem arising out of the limitations that federal sovereign
immunity placed on the States' ability to adjudicate water rights,
and nowhere in the Amendment's text or legislative history is there
any indication that Congress intended the efficacy of the remedy to
differ from one State to another. To declare now that the holding
in
Colorado River applies only to the immunity of Indian
water claims located in States without jurisdictional reservations
would constitute a curious and unwarranted retreat from the
rationale of
Colorado River, and would work the very
mischief that the decision in that case sought to avoid. Pp.
463 U. S.
561-565.
3. Where state courts have jurisdiction to adjudicate Indian
water rights, concurrent federal suits brought by Indian Tribes,
rather than by the United States, and seeking adjudication only of
Indian water rights are subject to dismissal under the
Colorado
River doctrine. Pp.
463 U. S.
565-570.
Page 463 U. S. 547
(a) If, as appears to be the case here, the state courts have
jurisdiction over the Indian water rights at issue, then the
concurrent federal proceedings are likely to be duplicative and
wasteful. Moreover, since a judgment by either court would
ordinarily be
res judicata in the other, the existence of
the concurrent proceedings creates the potential for spawning an
unseemly and destructive race to see which form can resolve the
same issues first -- a race contrary to the spirit of the McCarran
Amendment and prejudicial to the possibility of reasoned
decisionmaking in either forum. Pp.
463 U. S.
565-569.
(b) In these cases, assuming that the state adjudications are
adequate to quantify the rights at issue in the federal suits, and
taking into account the McCarran Amendment policies, the expertise
and administrative machinery available to the state courts, the
infancy of the federal suits, the general judicial bias against
piecemeal litigation, and the convenience to the parties, the
District Courts were correct in deferring to the state proceedings.
Pp.
463 U. S.
569-570.
668 F.2d 1093, 668 F.2d 1100, and 668 F.2d 1080, reversed and
remanded.
BRENNAN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and WHITE, POWELL, REHNQUIST, and O'CONNOR, JJ.,
joined. MARSHALL, J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
463 U. S. 572.
STEVENS, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BLACKMUN, J.,
joined,
post, p.
463 U. S.
572.
Page 463 U. S. 548
JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
These consolidated cases form a sequel to our decision in
Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United
States, 424 U. S. 800
(1976). That case held that (1) the McCarran Amendment, 66 Stat.
560, 43 U.S.C. § 666, which
Page 463 U. S. 549
waived the sovereign immunity of the United States as to
comprehensive state water rights adjudications, [
Footnote 1] provides state courts with
jurisdiction to adjudicate Indian water rights held in trust by the
United States, and (2), in light of the clear federal policies
underlying the McCarran Amendment, a water rights suit brought by
the United States in federal court was properly dismissed in favor
of a concurrent comprehensive adjudication reaching the same issues
in Colorado state court. The questions in these cases are parallel:
(1) What is the effect of the McCarran Amendment in those States
which, unlike Colorado, were admitted to the Union subject to
federal legislation that reserved "absolute jurisdiction and
control" over Indian lands in the Congress of the United States?
(2) If the courts of such States do have jurisdiction to adjudicate
Indian water rights, should concurrent federal suits brought by
Indian tribes, rather than by the United States, and raising only
Indian claims, also be subject to dismissal under the doctrine of
Colorado River?
I
Colorado River arose out of a suit brought by the
Federal Government in the United States District Court for the
District of Colorado seeking a declaration of its rights, and the
rights of a number of Indian Tribes, to waters in certain
rivers
Page 463 U. S. 550
and their tributaries located in one of the drainage basins of
the State of Colorado. In the suit, the Government asserted
reserved rights, governed by federal law, [
Footnote 2] as well as rights based on state law.
Shortly after the federal suit was commenced, the United States was
joined, pursuant to the McCarran Amendment, as a party in the
ongoing state court comprehensive water adjudication being
conducted for the same drainage basin. The Federal District Court,
on motion of certain of the defendants and intervenors, dismissed
the federal suit, stating that the doctrine of abstention required
deference to the state proceedings. The Court of Appeals reversed
the District Court, and we in turn reversed the Court of
Appeals.
We began our analysis in
Colorado River by conceding
that the District Court had jurisdiction over the federal suit
under 28 U.S.C. § 1345, the general provision conferring district
court jurisdiction over most civil actions brought by the Federal
Government. We then examined whether the federal suit was
nevertheless properly dismissed in view of the concurrent state
court proceedings. This part of the analysis began by
considering
"whether the McCarran Amendment provided consent to determine
federal reserved rights held on behalf of Indians in state
court,"
424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 809,
since,
"given the claims for Indian water rights in [the federal suit],
dismissal clearly would have been inappropriate if the state court
had no jurisdiction to decide those claims."
Ibid. We concluded:
"Not only the Amendment's language, but also its underlying
policy, dictates a construction including Indian rights in its
provisions. [
United States v. District Court for Eagle
County, 401 U. S. 520
(1971),] rejected the conclusion that federal reserved rights in
general were not reached by the Amendment for the reason that
the
Page 463 U. S. 551
Amendment "[deals] with an all-inclusive statute concerning
the adjudication of rights to the use of water of a river
system.'" Id. at 401 U. S. 524.
This consideration applies as well to federal water rights reserved
for Indian reservations."
Id. at
424 U. S. 810.
In sum, considering the important federal interest in allowing all
water rights on a river system to be adjudicated in a single
comprehensive state proceeding, and "bearing in mind the ubiquitous
nature of Indian water rights in the Southwest," it was clear to us
"that a construction of the Amendment excluding those rights from
its coverage would enervate the Amendment's objective."
Id. at
424 U. S.
811.
We buttressed this conclusion with an examination of the
legislative history of the McCarran Amendment. We also noted:
"Mere subjection of Indian rights to legal challenge in state
court . . . would no more imperil those rights than would a suit
brought by the Government in district court for their declaration.
. . . The Government has not abdicated any responsibility fully to
defend Indian rights in state court, and Indian interests may be
satisfactorily protected under regimes of state law. The Amendment
in no way abridges any substantive claim on behalf of Indians under
the doctrine of reserved rights. Moreover, as
Eagle County
said,"
"questions [arising from the collision of private rights and
reserved rights of the United States], including the volume and
scope of particular reserved rights, are federal questions which,
if preserved, can be reviewed [by the Supreme Court] after final
judgment by the Colorado court."
"401 U.S. at
401 U. S. 526."
Id. at
424 U. S.
812-813 (citations omitted).
We then considered the dismissal itself. We found that the
dismissal could not be supported under the doctrine of abstention
in any of its forms, but that it was justified as an application of
traditional principles of
"'[w]ise judicial administration,
Page 463 U. S. 552
giving regard to conservation of judicial resources and
comprehensive disposition of litigation.'"
Id. at
424 U. S. 817,
quoting
Kerotest Mfg. Co. v. C-O-Two Fire Equipment Co.,
342 U. S. 180,
342 U. S. 183
(1952). We stated that, although the federal courts had a
"virtually unflagging obligation . . . to exercise the jurisdiction
given them," 424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 817,
there were certain very limited circumstances outside the
abstention context in which dismissal was warranted in deference to
a concurrent state court suit.
See generally id. at
424 U. S.
817-819;
Moses H. Cone Hospital v. Mercury
Construction Corp., 460 U. S. 1,
460 U. S. 13-19
(1983). In the case at hand, we noted the comprehensive nature of
the state proceedings and the considerable expertise and technical
resources available in those proceedings, 424 U.S. at
424 U. S.
819-820. We concluded:
"[A] number of factors clearly counsel against concurrent
federal proceedings. The most important of these is the McCarran
Amendment itself. The clear federal policy evinced by that
legislation is the avoidance of piecemeal adjudication of water
rights in a river system. This policy is akin to that underlying
the rule requiring that jurisdiction be yielded to the court first
acquiring control of property, for the concern in such instances is
with avoiding the generation of additional litigation through
permitting inconsistent dispositions of property. This concern is
heightened with respect to water rights, the relationships among
which are highly interdependent. Indeed, we have recognized that
actions seeking the allocation of water essentially involve the
disposition of property, and are best conducted in unified
proceedings. The consent to jurisdiction given by the McCarran
Amendment bespeaks a policy that recognizes the availability of
comprehensive state systems for adjudication of water rights as the
means for achieving these goals."
Id. at
424 U. S. 819
(citations omitted).
Page 463 U. S. 553
For these reasons, and others, [
Footnote 3] we affirmed the judgment of the District Court
dismissing the federal complaint.
II
The two petitions considered here arise out of three separate
consolidated appeals that were decided within three days of each
other by the same panel of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit. In each of the underlying cases, either the United States
as trustee or certain Indian Tribes on their own behalf, or both,
asserted the right to have certain Indian water rights in Arizona
or Montana adjudicated in federal court.
The Montana Cases (No. 81-2188)
In January, 1975, the Northern Cheyenne Tribe brought an action
in the United States District Court for the District of Montana
seeking an adjudication of its rights in certain streams in that
State. Shortly thereafter, the United States brought two suits in
the same court, seeking a determination of water rights both on its
own behalf and on behalf of a number of Indian Tribes, including
the Northern Cheyenne, in the same streams. Each of the federal
actions was a general adjudication which sought to determine the
rights
inter sese of all users of the stream, and not
merely the rights of the plaintiffs. On motion of the Northern
Cheyenne, its action was consolidated with one of the Government
actions. The other concerned Tribes intervened as appropriate.
At about the time that all this activity was taking place in
federal court, the State of Montana was preparing to begin a
Page 463 U. S. 554
process of comprehensive water adjudication under a recently
passed state statute. In July, 1975, the Montana Department of
Natural Resources and Conservation filed petitions in state court
commencing comprehensive proceedings to adjudicate water rights in
the same streams at issue in the federal cases.
Both sets of contestants having positioned themselves, nothing
much happened for a number of years. The federal proceedings were
stayed for a time pending our decision in
Colorado River.
When that decision came down, the State of Montana, one of the
defendants in the federal suits, brought a motion to dismiss, which
was argued in 1976 but not decided until 1979. Meanwhile, process
was completed in the various suits, answers were submitted, and
discovery commenced. Over in the state courts, events moved even
more slowly, and no appreciable progress seems to have been made by
1979.
In April, 1979, the United States brought four more suits in
federal court, seeking to adjudicate its rights and the rights of
various Indian Tribes in other Montana streams. One month later,
the Montana Legislature amended its water adjudication procedures
"to expedite and facilitate the adjudication of existing water
rights." Act to Adjudicate Claims of Existing Water Rights in
Montana, Ch. 697, § 1(1), 1979 Mont. Laws 1901. The legislation
provided for the initiation of comprehensive proceedings by order
of the Montana Supreme Court, the appointment of water judges
throughout the State, and the consolidation of all existing actions
within each water division. It also provided, among other things,
that the Montana Supreme Court should issue an order requiring all
claimants not already involved in the state proceedings, including
the United States on its own behalf or as trustee for the Indians,
to file a statement of claim with the Department of Natural
Resources and Conservation by a date set by the court, or be deemed
to have abandoned any water rights claim. § 16, 1979 Mont. Laws
1906-1907, codified
Page 463 U. S. 555
at Mont.Code Ann. § 85-2-212 (1981). [
Footnote 4] The Montana court issued the required
order, and the United States was served with formal notice thereof.
[
Footnote 5]
In November, 1979, the two judges for the District of Montana
jointly considered the motions to dismiss in each of the federal
actions, [
Footnote 6] and
granted each of them.
Northern Cheyenne Tribe of Northern
Cheyenne Indian Reservation v. Tongue River Water Users
Assn., 484 F. Supp.
31. The court relied strongly on the new Montana legislation,
stating:
"The above-cited sections reflect both the policy and the
essential mechanism for adjudication of state water rights.
Adjudication by adversary proceeding initiated by one claimant
against all others in his drainage has been forsaken in favor of
blanket adjudication of all claims, including federal and federal
trust claims. . . . It is clear that the adjudication contemplated
by the [1979 legislation] is both comprehensive and efficient. As
the general adjudication has been initiated by recent order of the
Montana Supreme Court, it would seem that the greater wisdom lies
in following
Colorado River, and, on the basis of wise
judicial administration, deferring to the comprehensive state
proceedings."
Id. at 35-36.
Page 463 U. S. 556
The District Court also noted, among other things, that the
federal proceedings "are all in their infancy; service of process
has been but recently completed,"
id. at 36, that the
state forums were geographically more convenient to the parties,
that
"[t]he amount of time contemplated for completion of the state
adjudication is significantly less than would be necessary for
federal adjudication, insofar as the state has provided a special
court system solely devoted to water rights adjudication,"
ibid., and that
"[t]he possibility of conflicting adjudications by the
concurrent forums . . . looms large, and could be partially avoided
only by staying the pending state adjudication, an action
Colorado River has intimated is distinctly repugnant to a
clear state policy and purpose."
Ibid.
On appeal, a divided Court of Appeals reversed.
Northern
Cheyenne Tribe of Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation v.
Adsit, 668 F.2d 1080 (CA9 1982). First, it held that Montana,
unlike Colorado, might well lack jurisdiction to adjudicate Indian
claims in state court. The court reached this conclusion on the
basis of two closely linked documents: the Enabling Act under which
Montana was admitted to statehood, and the Montana Constitution
promulgated in response to that Enabling Act, both of which
provide, in identical terms, that the people inhabiting Montana
"agree and declare that they forever disclaim all right and
title to . . . all lands . . . owned or held by any Indian or
Indian tribes; and that until the title thereto shall have been
extinguished by the United States, the same shall be and remain
subject to the disposition of the United States, and said Indian
lands shall remain under the absolute jurisdiction and control of
the Congress of the United States. . . ."
Enabling Act of Feb. 22, 1889, § 4, 25 Stat. 677 (North Dakota,
South Dakota, Montana, and Washington); Mont.Const., Ordinance No.
I (1895). The Court of Appeals concluded that, by their terms, the
Enabling Act and constitutional disclaimer prohibit Montana
Page 463 U. S. 557
from exercising even adjudicatory jurisdiction over Indian water
rights, and that the McCarran Amendment effected no change in that
disability. It also held, however, that the State might have
acquired such jurisdiction under Pub.L. 280, 67 Stat. 588, which,
from 1953 until its amendment in 1968, allowed any State that
wished to do so to acquire certain aspects of civil and criminal
jurisdiction over Indian affairs, and authorized States with
constitutional or statutory disclaimers to "amend, where necessary,
their State constitution or existing statutes, as the case may be,
to remove any legal impediment" to the assumption of such
jurisdiction. § 6, 67 Stat. 590.
See generally Washington v.
Yakima Indian Nation, 439 U. S. 463
(1979). The court did not decide whether Montana had amended its
Constitution in accordance with the requirements of Pub.L. 280,
cf Yakima Indian Nation, supra, at
439 U.
S. but it criticized the District Court for not
undertaking such an analysis.
The second, and dispositive, ground of decision in the Court of
Appeals, however, was its conclusion that,
"[e]ven if we were to find that Montana had validly repealed the
disclaimer language in its constitution, . . . [t]he limited
factual circumstances of [
Colorado River] prevent its
application to the Montana litigation."
668 F.2d at 1087. In reaching this conclusion, the court relied
in part on the infancy of both the federal and state proceedings in
the Montana litigation, the possible inadequacy of the state
proceedings (which it did not discuss in great detail), and the
fact that the Indians (who could not be joined involuntarily in the
state proceedings) might not be adequately represented by the
United States in state court in light of conflicts of interest
between the Federal Government's responsibilities as trustee and
its own claims to water.
The Arizona Cases (No. 81-2147)
In the mid-1970's, various water rights claimants in Arizona
filed petitions in state court to initiate general
adjudications
Page 463 U. S. 558
to determine conflicting rights in a number of river systems. In
early 1979, process was served in one of the proceedings on
approximately 12,000 known potential water claimants, including the
United States. In July, 1981, process was served in another
proceeding on approximately 58,000 known water claimants, again
including the United States. In each case, the United States was
joined both in its independent capacity and as trustee for various
Indian Tribes.
In March and April, 1979, a number of Indian Tribes whose rights
were implicated by the state water proceedings filed a series of
suits in the United States District Court for the District of
Arizona, asking variously for removal of the state adjudications to
federal court, declaratory and injunctive relief preventing any
further adjudication of their rights in state court, and
independent federal determinations of their water rights. A number
of defendants in the federal proceedings filed motions seeking
remand or dismissal. The District Court, relying on
Colorado
River, remanded the removed actions, and dismissed most of the
independent federal actions without prejudice.
In re
Determination of Conflicting Rights to Use of Water from Salt River
Above Grante Reef Dam, 484 F.
Supp. 778 (1980). [
Footnote
7] It stayed one of the remaining actions pending the
completion of state proceedings. App. to Pet. for Cert. in No.
81-2147, p. D-1.
The Tribes appealed from these decisions, with the exception of
the remand orders. [
Footnote 8]
The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that the Enabling Act under
which Arizona was admitted to statehood, 36 Stat. 557, and the
Arizona Constitution,
Page 463 U. S. 559
Art. 20, 114, both of which contain wording substantially
identical to the Montana Enabling Act and Constitution, disabled
Arizona from adjudicating Indian water claims.
San Carlos
Apache Tribe v. Arizona, 668 F.2d 1093 (CA9 1982);
Navajo
Nation v. United States, 668 F.2d 1100 (CA9 1982). The court
remanded to the District Court to determine whether Arizona
nevertheless "properly asserted jurisdiction pursuant to Public Law
280." 668 F.2d at 1098;
see 668 F.2d at 1102. The court
did not decide whether, if the State had properly asserted
jurisdiction, dismissal would have been proper under
Colorado
River, except to note that
"the district judge did not make findings on this issue, and the
record indicates significant differences between these cases and
[Colorado River.]"
668 F.2d at 1098;
see 668 F.2d at 1102.
We granted certiorari, 459 U.S. 821 (1982), in order to resolve
a conflict among the Circuits regarding the role of federal and
state courts in adjudicating Indian water rights. [
Footnote 9] We now reverse.
III
A
At the outset of our analysis, a number of propositions are
clear. First, the federal courts had jurisdiction here to hear the
suits brought both by the United States and the Indian Tribes.
[
Footnote 10] Second, it is
also clear in these cases, as it was in
Page 463 U. S. 560
Colorado River, that a dismissal or stay of the federal
suits would have been improper if there was no jurisdiction in the
concurrent state actions to adjudicate the claims at issue in the
federal suits. 424 U.S. at
424
U. S. 800. Third, the parties here agree that the Court
of Appeals erred in believing that, in the absence of state
jurisdiction otherwise, Pub.L. 280 would have authorized the States
to assume jurisdiction over the adjudication of Indian water
rights. To the contrary, Pub.L. 280 specifically withheld from
state courts jurisdiction to adjudicate ownership or right to
possession
"of any real or personal property,
including water
rights, belonging to any Indian or any Indian tribe, band, or
community that is held in trust by the United States or is subject
to a restriction against alienation imposed by the United
States."
28 U.S.C. § 1360(b) (emphasis added). [
Footnote 11] Thus, the presence or
Page 463 U. S. 561
absence of jurisdiction must rise or fall without reference to
whether the States have assumed jurisdiction under Pub.L. 280.
Finally, it should be obvious that, to the extent that a claimed
bar to state jurisdiction in these cases is premised on the
respective State Constitutions, that is a question of state law
over which the state courts have binding authority. Because, in
each of these cases, the state courts have taken jurisdiction over
the Indian water rights at issue here, we must assume, until
informed otherwise, that -- at least insofar as state law is
concerned -- such jurisdiction exists. We must therefore look, for
our purposes, to the federal Enabling Acts and other federal
legislation, in order to determine whether there is a federal bar
to the assertion of state jurisdiction in these cases.
B
That we were not required in
Colorado River to
interpret the McCarran Amendment in light of any statehood Enabling
Act was largely a matter of fortuity, for Colorado is one of the
few Western States that were not admitted to the Union pursuant to
an Enabling Act containing substantially the same language as is
found in the Arizona and Montana Enabling Acts. [
Footnote 12] Indeed, a substantial majority
of Indian land -- including most of the largest Indian reservations
-- lies in States subject to such Enabling Acts. [
Footnote 13] Moreover, the reason that
Colorado was not subject to such an Enabling
Page 463 U. S. 562
Act, and Arizona and Montana were, has more to do with
historical timing than with deliberate congressional selection.
Colorado was admitted to the Union in 1876. In 1882, this Court
held in
United States v. McBratney, 104 U.
S. 621, that the federal courts in Colorado had no
criminal jurisdiction in a murder committed by one non-Indian
against another on an Indian reservation, pointing out that the
case did not concern
"the punishment of crimes committed by or against Indians, the
protection of the Indians in their improvements, or the regulation
by Congress of the alienation and descent of property and the
government and internal police of the Indians."
Id. at
104 U. S. 624.
We also suggested, however, that the result might have been
different if Congress had expressly reserved all criminal
jurisdiction on Indian reservations when Colorado was admitted to
the Union, pointing to a similar disclaimer contained in the
legislation by which Kansas was admitted to statehood in 1861.
Id. at
104 U. S.
623-624;
See The Kansas
Indians, 5 Wall. 737 (1867). Probably in response
to the
McBratney decision, Congress resumed the practice
of including reservations in Enabling Acts, and did so in the case
of virtually every State admitted after 1882.
See n 12,
supra.
Despite
McBratney and
The Kansas Indians, the
presence or absence of specific jurisdictional disclaimers has
rarely been dispositive in our consideration of state jurisdiction
over Indian affairs or activities on Indian lands. In
Draper v.
United States, 164 U. S. 240
(1896), for example, this Court held that, despite the
jurisdictional reservation in the Montana Enabling Act, a federal
court still did not have jurisdiction over a crime committed on an
Indian reservation by one non-Indian against another. We
stated:
"As equality of statehood is the rule, the words relied on here
to create an exception cannot be construed as doing so, if, by any
reasonable meaning, they can be otherwise treated. The mere
reservation of jurisdiction and control by the United States of
'Indian lands' does not, of
Page 463 U. S. 563
necessity, signify a retention of jurisdiction in the United
States to punish all offences committed on such lands by others
than Indians or against Indians."
Id. at
164 U. S.
244-245. Similarly, in
Organized Village of Kake v.
Egan, 369 U. S. 60
(1962), we held that a reservation in the Alaska Enabling Act did
not deprive the State of the right to regulate Indian fishing
licensed by the Department of the Interior, finding that the state
regulation neither interfered with Indian self-government nor
impaired any right granted or reserved by federal law. Conversely,
Worcester v.
Georgia, 6 Pet. 515 (1832), perhaps the most
expansive declaration of Indian independence from state regulation
ever uttered by this Court, pertained to one of the original 13
States, unbound by any Enabling Act whatsoever.
See also e.g.,
72 U. S. 5
Wall. 761,
72 U. S.
769-770 (1867) (reaching same conclusion as
The
Kansas Indians, supra, but without benefit of disclaimer). And
our many recent decisions recognizing crucial limits on the power
of the States to regulate Indian affairs have rarely either invoked
reservations of jurisdiction contained in statehood Enabling Acts
by anything more than a passing mention or distinguished between
disclaimer States and nondisclaimer States.
See, e.g., New
Mexico v. Mescalero Apache Tribe, 462 U.
S. 324 (1983);
Ramah Navajo School Board v. Bureau
of Revenue, 458 U. S. 832
(1982);
White Mountain Apache Tribe v. Bracker,
448 U. S. 136
(1980);
Bryan v. Itasca County, 426 U.
S. 373 (1976);
Williams v. Lee, 358 U.
S. 217 (1959).
In light of this history, the parties in these cases have
engaged in a vigorous debate as to the exact meaning and
significance of the Arizona and Montana Enabling Acts. [
Footnote 14] We
Page 463 U. S. 564
need not resolve that debate, however, nor need we resort to the
more general doctrines that have developed to chart the limits of
state authority over Indians, because we are convinced that,
whatever limitation the Enabling Acts or federal policy may have
originally placed on state court jurisdiction over Indian water
rights, those limitations were removed by the McCarran Amendment.
[
Footnote 15]
Cf.
Washington v. Yakima Indian Nation, 439 U.S. at
439 U. S.
484-493. Congress clearly would have had the right to
distinguish between disclaimer and nondisclaimer States in passing
the McCarran Amendment. But the Amendment was designed to deal with
a general problem arising out of the limitations that federal
sovereign immunity placed on the ability of the States to
adjudicate water rights, and nowhere in its text or legislative
history do we find any indication that Congress intended the
efficacy of the remedy to differ from one State to another.
Moreover, we stated in
Colorado River that,
"bearing in mind the ubiquitous nature of Indian water rights in
the Southwest, it is clear that a construction of the Amendment
excluding those rights from its coverage would enervate the
Amendment's objective."
424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 811.
The "ubiquitous nature of Indian water rights" is most apparent in
the very States to which Congress attached jurisdictional
reservations.
See supra at
463 U. S. 561.
To declare now that our holding in
Colorado River applies
only to that minority of Indian water claims located in States
without jurisdictional reservations would constitute a curious and
unwarranted retreat from the rationale behind our previous holding,
and would work the very mischief that our decision in
Colorado
River sought to avoid. We need not rely on the possibly
overbroad statement in
Page 463 U. S. 565
Draper v. United States that "equality of statehood is
the rule," 164 U.S. at
164 U. S. 244,
in order to conclude that, in this context at least, "equality of
statehood" is sensible, necessary, and, most important, consistent
with the will of Congress.
IV
The second crucial issue in these cases is whether our analysis
in
Colorado River applies with full force to federal suits
brought by Indian tribes, rather than by the United States, and
seeking adjudication only of Indian water rights. [
Footnote 16] This question is not directly
answered by
Colorado River, because we specifically
reserved in that case "[w]hether similar considerations would
permit dismissal of a water suit brought by a private party in
federal district court." 424 U.S. at
424 U. S.
820,
Page 463 U. S. 566
n. 26. On reflection, however, we must agree with JUSTICE
STEVENS, who, in dissenting from our decision, wrote:
"[T]he Federal Government surely has no lesser right of access
to the federal forum than does a private [party], such as an Indian
asserting his own claim. If this be so, today's holding will
necessarily restrict the access to federal court of private
plaintiffs asserting water rights claims in Colorado."
Id. at
424 U. S.
827.
The United States and the various Indian respondents raise a
series of arguments why dismissal or stay of the federal suit is
not appropriate when it is brought by an Indian tribe and only
seeks to adjudicate Indian rights. (1) Indian rights have
traditionally been left free of interference from the States. (2)
State courts may be inhospitable to Indian rights. (3) The McCarran
Amendment, although it waived United States sovereign immunity in
state comprehensive water adjudications, did not waive
Indian sovereign immunity. It is therefore unfair to force
Indian claimants to choose between waiving their sovereign immunity
by intervening in the state proceedings and relying on the United
States to represent their interests in state court, particularly in
light of the frequent conflict of interest between Indian claims
and other federal interests and the right of the Indians under 28
U.S.C. § 1362 to bring suit on their own behalf in federal court.
[
Footnote 17] (4) Indian
water rights claims are generally
Page 463 U. S. 567
based on federal, rather than state, law. (5) Because Indian
water claims are based on the doctrine of "reserved rights," and
take priority over most water rights created by state law, they
need not, as a practical matter, be adjudicated
inter sese
with other water rights, and could simply be incorporated into the
comprehensive state decree at the conclusion of the state
proceedings.
Each of these arguments has a good deal of force. We note,
though, that very similar arguments were raised and rejected in
United States v. District Court for Eagle County,
401 U. S. 520
(1971), and
Colorado River. [
Footnote 18] More important, all of these arguments
founder on one crucial fact: if the state proceedings have
jurisdiction over the Indian water rights at issue here, as appears
to be the case, [
Footnote
19] then concurrent federal proceedings are likely to be
duplicative and wasteful, generating "additional litigation through
permitting inconsistent dispositions of property."
Colorado
River, 424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 819.
Moreover, since a judgment by either court would ordinarily be
res judicata in the other, the existence of such
concurrent proceedings creates the serious potential for spawning
an unseemly and destructive race to see which forum can resolve the
same issues first -- a race contrary to the entire spirit of the
McCarran Amendment and prejudicial,
Page 463 U. S. 568
to say the least, to the possibility of reasoned decisionmaking
by either forum. The United States and many of the Indian Tribes
recognize these concerns, but, in responding to them, they cast
aside the sort of sound argument generally apparent in the rest of
their submissions and rely instead on vague statements of faith and
hope. The United States, for example, states that adjudicating
Indian water rights in federal court, despite the existence of a
comprehensive state proceeding, would not
"entail any duplication or potential for inconsistent judgments.
The federal court will quantify the Indian rights only if it is
asked to do so before the State court has embarked on the task.
And, of course, once the United States district court has indicated
its determination to perform that limited role, we assume the State
tribunal will turn its attention to the typically more complex
business of adjudicating all other claims on the stream.
In the
usual case, the federal court will have completed its function
earlier, and its quantification of Indian water rights will simply
be incorporated in the comprehensive State court decree."
Brief for United States 30 (emphasis added). Similarly, the
Navajo Nation states:
"There is no reasonably foreseeable danger that [the] federal
action [brought by the Navajo] will duplicate or delay state
proceedings or waste judicial resources. While the Navajo claim
proceeds in federal court, the state court
can move
forward to assess, quantify, and rank the 58,000 state claims. The
Navajo federal action will be concluded long before the state court
has finished its task."
Brief for Respondent Navajo Nation in No. 81-2147, p. 22
(emphasis added; footnote omitted).
The problem with these scenarios, however, is that they assume a
cooperative attitude on the part of state courts, state
legislatures, and state parties which is neither legally
Page 463 U. S. 569
required nor realistically always to be expected. The state
courts need not "turn their attention" to other matters if they are
prompted by state parties to adjudicate the Indian claims first.
Moreover, considering the specialized resources and experience of
the state courts, it is not at all obvious that the federal actions
"will be concluded long before" the state courts have issued at
least preliminary judgments on the question of Indian water rights.
Cf. 484 F. Supp.
at 36.
The McCarran Amendment, as interpreted in
Colorado
River, allows and encourages state courts to undertake the
task of quantifying Indian water rights in the course of
comprehensive water adjudications. Although adjudication of those
rights in federal court instead might, in the abstract, be
practical, and even wise, it will be neither practical nor wise as
long as it creates the possibility of duplicative litigation,
tension and controversy between the federal and state forums,
hurried and pressured decisionmaking, and confusion over the
disposition of property rights.
Colorado River, of course, does not require that a
federal water suit must always be dismissed or stayed in deference
to a concurrent and adequate comprehensive state adjudication.
Certainly, the federal courts need not defer to the state
proceedings if the state courts expressly agree to stay their own
consideration of the issues raised in the federal action pending
disposition of that action. Moreover, it may be in a particular
case that, at the time a motion to dismiss is filed, the federal
suit at issue is well enough along that its dismissal would itself
constitute a waste of judicial resources and an invitation to
duplicative effort.
See Colorado River, supra, at
424 U. S. 820;
Moses H. Cone Hospital, 460 U.S. at
460 U. S. 21-22.
Finally, we do not deny that, in a case in which the arguments for
and against deference to the state adjudication were otherwise
closely matched, the fact that a federal suit was brought by
Indians on their own behalf and sought only to adjudicate Indian
rights should be figured into the balance. But the most important
consideration in
Colorado River, and
Page 463 U. S. 570
the most important consideration in any federal water suit
concurrent to a comprehensive state proceeding, must be the "policy
underlying the McCarran Amendment," 424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 820;
see Moses H. Cone Hospital, supra, at
460 U. S. 16,
and, despite the strong arguments raised by the respondents, we
cannot conclude that water rights suits brought by Indians and
seeking adjudication only of Indian rights should be excepted from
the application of that policy or from the general principles set
out in
Colorado River. In the cases before us, assuming
that the state adjudications are adequate to quantify the rights at
issue in the federal suits, [
Footnote 20] and taking into account the McCarran
Amendment policies we have just discussed, the expertise and
administrative machinery available to the state courts, the infancy
of the federal suits, the general judicial bias against piecemeal
litigation, and the convenience to the parties, we must conclude
that the District Courts were correct in deferring to the state
proceedings. [
Footnote
21]
V
Nothing we say today should be understood to represent even the
slightest retreat from the general proposition we expressed so
recently in
New Mexico v. Mescalero Apache Tribe, 462 U.S.
at
462 U. S.
332:
"Because of their sovereign status,
Page 463 U. S. 571
[Indian] tribes and their reservation lands are insulated in
some respects by a 'historic immunity from state and local
control,'
Mescalero Apache Tribe v.
Jones, [
411 U.S.
145,
411 U. S. 152 (1973)], and
tribes retain any aspect of their historical sovereignty not
'inconsistent with the overriding interests of the National
Government.'
Washington v. Confederated
Tribes, [
447 U.S.
134,
447 U. S. 153 (1980)]."
Nor should we be understood to retreat from the general
proposition, expressed in
Colorado River, that federal
courts have a "virtually unflagging obligation . . . to exercise
the jurisdiction given them." 424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 817.
See generally Moses H. Cone Hospital, supra, at
460 U. S. 13-16.
But water rights adjudication is a virtually unique type of
proceeding, and the McCarran Amendment is a virtually unique
federal statute, and we cannot in this context be guided by general
propositions.
We also emphasize, as we did in
Colorado River, that
our decision in no way changes the substantive law by which Indian
rights in state water adjudications must be judged. State courts,
as much as federal courts, have a solemn obligation to follow
federal law. Moreover, any state court decision alleged to abridge
Indian water rights protected by federal law can expect to receive,
if brought for review before this Court, a particularized and
exacting scrutiny commensurate with the powerful federal interest
in safeguarding those rights from state encroachment.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals in each of these cases is
reversed, and the cases are remanded for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion. [
Footnote 22]
So ordered.
Page 463 U. S. 572
* Together with
Arizona et al. v. Navajo Tribe of Indians,
et al. (
see this Court's Rule 19.4), and No. 81-2188,
Montana et al. v. Northern Cheyenne Tribe of the Northern
Cheyenne Indian Reservation, et al., also on certiorari to the
same court.
[
Footnote 1]
The McCarran Amendment provides in relevant part:
"(a) Consent is hereby given to join the United States as a
defendant in any suit (1) for the adjudication of rights to the use
of water of a river system or other source, or (2) for the
administration of such rights, where it appears that the United
States is the owner of or is in the process of acquiring water
rights by appropriation under State law, by purchase, by exchange,
or otherwise, and the United States is a necessary party to such
suit. The United States, when a party to any such suit, hall (1) be
deemed to have waived any right to plead that the State laws are
inapplicable or that the United States is not amenable thereto by
reason of its sovereignty, and (2) shall be subject to the
judgments, orders and decrees of the court having jurisdiction, and
may obtain review thereof, in the same manner and to the same
extent as a private individual under like circumstances. . . ."
[
Footnote 2]
See generally Arizona v. California, 373 U.
S. 546 (1963);
Winters v. United States,
207 U. S. 564
(1908).
[
Footnote 3]
The other factors were the apparent absence at the time of
dismissal of any proceedings in the District Court other than the
filing of the complaint, the extensive involvement of state water
rights in the suit, the 300-mile distance between the Federal
District Court in Denver and the state tribunal, and the
Government's apparent willingness to participate in other
comprehensive water proceedings in the state courts.
[
Footnote 4]
The statute required that the filing period established by the
Montana Supreme Court be no less than one year, and that it be
subject to extension, but not beyond June 30, 1983. Mont.Code Ann.
§ 85-2-212(2) (1981). In 1981, the statute was amended to exempt
from the filing deadline Indian claims being negotiated with the
Montana Reserved Water Rights Compact Commission. Ch. 268, § 4,
1981 Mont. Laws 393, codified at Mont.Code Ann. § 85-2-217
(1981).
[
Footnote 5]
The Montana Supreme Court set an original filing deadline of
January 1, 1982, App. to Pet. for Cert. in No. 81-2188, pp.
138-139, and then extended the deadline to April 30, 1982,
id. at 140-141. The United States apparently made
protective filings by the deadline on behalf of all the Montana
Tribes. Brief for Petitioners in No. 81-2188, p. 32. Two of the
Indian Tribes apparently filed statements of claim of their own,
and five apparently are negotiating with the Montana Reserved Water
Rights Compact Commission,
see n 4,
supra.
[
Footnote 6]
See generally C. Wright, Law of Federal Courts 9 (4th
ed.1983).
[
Footnote 7]
Two of the actions are in abeyance, apparently pending
completion of service of process.
[
Footnote 8]
The stay order was certified for interlocutory appeal under 28
U.S.C. § 1292(b).
See also Moses H. Cone Hospital v. Mercury
Construction Corp., 460 U. S. 1,
460 U. S. 8-13
(1983) (upholding appealability of similar stay order under 28
U.S.C. § 1291).
[
Footnote 9]
In
Jicarilla Apache Tribe v. United States, 601 F.2d
1116 (1979), the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit held that
the Enabling Act under which New Mexico was admitted to the Union
(whose language is essentially the same as the Enabling Acts at
issue in these cases) did not bar state jurisdiction over Indian
water rights, and upheld the District Court's dismissal of a
general water adjudication suit brought in federal court by the
Jicarilla Apache Tribe.
[
Footnote 10]
The primary ground of jurisdiction for the suits brought by the
United States is 28 U.S.C. § 1345. The primary ground of
jurisdiction for the suits brought by the Indians is 28 U.S.C. §
1362, which provides in relevant part:
"The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of all
civil actions, brought by any Indian tribe . . . wherein the matter
in controversy arises under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of
the United States."
Section 1362 was passed in 1966 in order to give Indian tribes
access to federal court on federal issues without regard to the
$10,000 amount-in-controversy requirement then included in 28
U.S.C. § 1331, the general federal question jurisdictional statute.
Congress contemplated that § 1362 would be used particularly in
situations in which the United States suffered from a conflict of
interest or was otherwise unable or unwilling to bring suit as
trustee for the Indians, and its passage reflected a congressional
policy against relegating Indians to state court when an identical
suit brought on their behalf by the United States could have been
heard in federal court.
See S.Rep. No. 1507, 89th Cong.,
2d Sess., 2-3 (1966); H.R.Rep. No. 2040, 89th Cong., 2d Sess., 2, 4
(1966). Just as the McCarran Amendment did not do away with federal
jurisdiction over water rights claims brought under § 1345,
Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United
States, 424 U. S. 800,
424 U. S.
806-809 (1976), there is no reason to think that it
limits the jurisdictional reach of § 1362.
[
Footnote 11]
As we explained in
Colorado River, however, these
provisions
"only qualif[y] the import of the general consent to state
jurisdiction given by [Pub.L. 280, and] . . . [do] not purport to
limit the special consent to jurisdiction given by the McCarran
Amendment."
424 U.S. at
424 U. S.
812-813, n. 20.
[
Footnote 12]
See Enabling Act of Feb. 22, 1889, § 4, 25 Stat.
676-677 (North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, and Washington);
Enabling Act of July 16, 1894, § 3, 28 Stat. 108 (Utah); Enabling
Act of June 16, 1906, § 3, 34 Stat. 270 (Oklahoma); Enabling Act of
June 20, 1910, §§ 2, 20, 36 Stat. 558-559, 569 (New Mexico and
Arizona); Enabling Act of July 7, 1958, § 4, 72 Stat. 339, as
amended by Pub.L. 86-70, § 2(a), 73 Stat. 141 (Alaska). Idaho and
Wyoming, which were both admitted to statehood in 1890 without
prior Enabling Acts, nevertheless inserted disclaimers in their
State Constitutions.
See Idaho Const., Art. 21, § 19;
Wyo.Const., Art. 21, § 26.
[
Footnote 13]
See Brief for United States 12, and sources cited.
[
Footnote 14]
The United States, alone among the respondents, agrees that, in
light of the McCarran Amendment, the Enabling Acts at issue here do
not pose an obstacle to state jurisdiction to adjudicate Indian
water rights. Brief for United States 11-15.
[
Footnote 15]
Because we do not construe the original meaning of the Enabling
Acts, we also have no occasion to decide (assuming the relevance of
the Acts in the first place) whether the McCarran Amendment's grant
of permission to the States to adjudicate Indian water rights was
effected by a partial repeal of the Enabling Acts, or by an
exercise of the very power reserved to Congress under those
Acts.
[
Footnote 16]
As is apparent from our discussion of the facts,
supra
at
463 U. S.
553-558, some of the cases now before us are suits
brought by the United States. In light of our express holding in
Colorado River, what we say here with regard to the suits
brought by the Indians must apply
a fortiori to the suits
brought by the United States. In addition, some of the cases before
us sought adjudication of all the rights to a particular water
system, rather than merely Indian or other federal water rights,
and it is argued that these suits avoid the "piecemeal adjudication
of water rights" which we found in
Colorado River to be
inconsistent with federal policy. 424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 819.
See, e.g., Brief for Respondents Assiniboine and Sioux
Tribes
et al. 25-29. Given, however, that one of the best
arguments in favor of retaining federal jurisdiction in Indian
water cases is that Indian water rights can be adjudicated
separately and then incorporated into the results of the
comprehensive state proceedings,
see infra at
463 U. S. 567,
the proper analysis of the more ambitious federal suits at issue
here must also follow
a fortiori from our discussion in
text. A comprehensive federal adjudication going on at the same
time as a comprehensive state adjudication might not literally be
"piecemeal." It is, however, duplicative, wasteful, inconsistent
with the McCarran Amendment's policy of
"recogniz[ing] the availability of comprehensive state systems
for adjudication of water rights as the means for [conducting
unified water rights proceedings],"
424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 819,
likely to "generat[e] . . . additional litigation" as a result of
"inconsistent dispositions of property,"
ibid., and
permeated with state law issues entirely tangential to any
conceivable federal interest,
see id. at
424 U. S. 820;
cf. Moses H. Cone Hospital, 460 U.S. at
460 U. S.
19-26.
[
Footnote 17]
This argument, of course, suffers from the flaw that, although
the McCarran Amendment did not waive the sovereign immunity of
Indians as parties to state comprehensive water adjudications, it
did (as we made quite clear in
Colorado River) waive
sovereign immunity with regard to the Indian
rights at
issue in those proceedings. Moreover, contrary to the submissions
by certain of the parties, any judgment against the United States,
as trustee for the Indians, would ordinarily be binding on the
Indians. In addition, there is no indication in these cases that
the state courts would deny the Indian parties leave to intervene
to protect their interests. Thus, although the Indians have the
right to refuse to intervene even if they believe that the United
States is not adequately representing their interests, the
practical value of that right in this context is dubious, at
best.
[
Footnote 18]
See, e.g., Brief for United States in
United States
v. District Court for Eagle County, O.T. 1970, No. 87, p.19
("excluding reserved water rights of the United States from State
adjudication proceedings would not produce the
undesirable,
impractical and chaotic situation' that the Colorado Supreme Court
envisioned"); Brief for United States in Colorado River
Conservation District v. United States, O.T. 1975, No. 74-940,
p. 33 (federal suit brought by United States involves only
questions of federal law); pp. 35-36 (federal forum necessary to
avoid "local prejudice"); pp. 43-44 (federal adjudication of Indian
water rights can be incorporated into comprehensive state
proceedings); p. 50 (separate proceedings practical, as long as all
determinations are ultimately integrated); pp. 53-54 (construing
McCarran Amendment to grant States jurisdiction to adjudicate
Indian water rights would ignore "unique legal status of Indian
property").
[
Footnote 19]
But cf. n 20,
infra.
[
Footnote 20]
In a number of these cases, respondents have raised challenges,
not yet addressed either by the Court of Appeals or in this
opinion, to the jurisdiction or adequacy of the particular state
proceeding at issue to adjudicate some or all of the rights
asserted in the federal suit. These challenges remain open for
consideration on remand. Moreover, the courts below should, if the
need arises, allow whatever amendment of pleadings not prejudicial
to other parties may be necessary to preserve in federal court
those issues as to which the state forum lacks jurisdiction or is
inadequate.
[
Footnote 21]
We leave open for determination on remand whether the proper
course in such cases is a stay of the federal suit or dismissal
without prejudice.
See Moses H. Cone Hospital, 460 U.S. at
460 U. S. 28
(reserving issue). In either event, resort to the federal forum
should remain available if warranted by a significant change of
circumstances, such as, for example, a decision by a state court
that it does not have jurisdiction over some or all of these claims
after all.
[
Footnote 22]
The motion of the Blackfeet Indian Tribe, filed March 22, 1983,
to suspend all proceedings in this Court respecting the water
rights of the Blackfeet Indian Tribe, Browning, Mont., and to
preclude the Solicitor General or any other attorney of the
Department of Justice from purporting to represent that Tribe in
these proceedings is denied. The motion of the White Mountain
Apache Tribe and the Blackfeet Indian Tribe, filed June 3, 1983,
for leave to file a motion to dismiss for lack of
in
personam and subject matter jurisdiction in this Court over
the state court water rights adjudication proceedings is denied.
Treating the papers whereon the motion filed June 3, 1983, was
submitted as a motion for leave to file a brief
amicus
curiae, and treating the accompanying papers as a brief
amicus curiae, leave to file the brief is granted.
JUSTICE MARSHALL, dissenting.
In
Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United
States, 424 U. S. 800
(1976), this Court recognized a narrow rule of abstention governing
controversies involving federal water rights. We stated that, in
light of "the virtually unflagging obligation of the federal courts
to exercise the jurisdiction given them,"
id. at
424 U. S. 817,
"[o]nly the clearest of justifications,"
id. at
424 U. S. 819,
will warrant abstention in favor of a concurrent state proceeding.
Substantially for the reasons set forth in JUSTICE STEVENS'
dissenting opinion, I believe that abstention is not appropriate in
these cases. Unlike the federal suit in
Colorado River,
the suits here are brought by Indian Tribes on their own behalf.
These cases thus implicate the strong congressional policy,
embodied in 28 U.S.C. § 1362, of affording Indian tribes a federal
forum. Since § 1362 reflects a congressional recognition of the
"great hesitancy on the part of tribes to use State courts," S.Rep.
No. 1507, 89th Cong., 2d Sess., 2 (1966), tribes which have sued
under that provision should not lightly be remitted to asserting
their rights in a state forum. Moreover, these cases also differ
from
Colorado River in that the exercise of federal
jurisdiction here will not result in duplicative federal and state
proceedings, since the District Court need only determine the water
rights of the Tribes. I therefore cannot agree that this is one of
those "exceptional" situations justifying abstention. 424 U.S. at
424 U. S.
818.
JUSTICE STEVENS, with whom JUSTICE BLACKMUN joins,
dissenting.
"Nothing in the McCarran Amendment or in its legislative history
can be read as limiting the jurisdiction of the federal courts."
Colorado River Water
Conservation District v.
Page 463 U. S. 573
United States, 424 U. S. 800,
424 U. S. 821,
n. 2 (1976) (Stewart, J., dissenting). That Amendment is a waiver,
not a command. [
Footnote 2/1] It
permits the United States to be joined as a defendant in state
water rights adjudications; it does not purport to diminish the
United States' right to litigate in a federal forum, and it is
totally silent on the subject of Indian tribes' rights to litigate
anywhere. Yet today the majority somehow concludes that it commands
the federal courts to defer to state court water rights
proceedings, even when Indian water rights are involved. Although
it is customary for the Court to begin its analysis of questions of
statutory construction by examining the text of the relevant
statute, [
Footnote 2/2] one may
search in vain for any textual support for the Court's holding
today.
"Most of the land in these reservations is and always has been
arid. . . . It can be said without overstatement that, when the
Indians were put on these reservations, they were not considered to
be located in the most desirable area of the Nation. It is
impossible to believe that, when Congress created the great
Colorado River Indian Reservation and when the Executive Department
of this Nation created the other reservations, they were unaware
that most of the lands were of the desert kind -- hot, scorching
sands -- and that water from the river would be essential to the
life of the Indian people and to the animals they hunted and the
crops they raised."
Arizona v. California, 373 U.
S. 546,
373 U. S.
598-599 (1963).
This Court has repeatedly recognized that the Government, when
it created each Indian reservation,
"intended to deal fairly with the Indians by reserving for them
the waters
Page 463 U. S. 574
without which their lands would have been useless."
Id. at
373 U. S. 600.
See Winters v. United States, 207 U.
S. 564 (1908);
United States v. Powers,
305 U. S. 527,
305 U. S. 532
(1939);
Arizona v. California, supra, at
373 U. S.
600-601;
Cappaert v. United States,
426 U. S. 128,
426 U. S.
138-139 (1976). This doctrine, known as the
Winters doctrine, is unquestionably a matter of federal,
not state, law.
See ante at
463 U. S. 571;
Colorado River, supra, at
424 U. S. 813.
Its underlying principles differ substantially from those applied
by the States to allocate water among competing claimants. Unlike
state law claims based on prior appropriation, Indian reserved
water rights are not based on actual beneficial use, and are not
forfeited if they are not used. Vested no later than the date each
reservation was created, these Indian rights are superior in right
to all subsequent appropriations under state law. Not all of the
issues arising from the application of the Winters doctrine have
been resolved, because, in the past, the scope of Indian reserved
rights has infrequently been adjudicated. [
Footnote 2/3] The important task of elaborating and
clarifying these federal law issues in the cases now before the
Court, and in future cases, should be performed by federal, rather
than state, courts whenever possible.
Federal adjudication of Indian water rights would not fragment
an otherwise unified state court proceeding. Since Indian reserved
claims are wholly dissimilar to state law water claims, and since
their amount does not depend on the total volume of water available
in the water source or on the quantity of competing claims, it will
be necessary to conduct separate proceedings to determine these
claims even if the adjudication takes place in state court.
Subsequently the state court will incorporate these claims -- like
claims under state law or Federal Government claims that have been
formally adjudicated in the past -- into a single inclusive,
binding decree for each water source. Thus, as Justice Stewart
wrote
Page 463 U. S. 575
in dissent in
Colorado River:
"Whether the virtually identical separate proceedings take place
in a federal court or a state court, the adjudication of the claims
will be neither more nor less 'piecemeal.' Essentially the same
process will be followed in each instance."
424 U.S. at
424 U. S.
825.
To justify virtual abandonment of Indian water rights claims to
the state courts, the majority relies heavily on
Colorado River
Water Conservation District, which in turn discovered an
affirmative policy of federal judicial abdication in the McCarran
Amendment. [
Footnote 2/4] I
continue to believe that
Colorado River read more into
that Amendment than Congress intended, and cannot acquiesce in an
extension of its reasoning. Although the Court's decision in
Colorado River did, indeed, foreshadow today's holding, it
did not involve an Indian tribe's attempt to litigate on its own
behalf, 424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 820,
n. 26. The majority today acknowledges that the question in these
cases was "not directly answered," but in fact was "specifically
reserved," in
Colorado River. Ante at
463 U. S.
565.
Although in some respects Indian tribes' water claims are
similar to other reserved federal water rights, different treatment
is justified. States and their citizens may well be more
antagonistic toward Indian reserved rights than other federal
reserved rights, both because the former are potentially greater in
quantity and because they provide few direct or indirect benefits
to non-Indian residents. [
Footnote
2/5] Indians have
Page 463 U. S. 576
historically enjoyed a unique relationship with the Federal
Government, reflecting the tribes' traditional sovereign status,
their treaty-based right to federal protection, and their special
economic problems. Recently, the Court reaffirmed
"'the distinctive obligation of trust incumbent upon the
Government in its dealings with these dependent and sometimes
exploited people.'"
United States v. Mitchell, ante at
463 U. S. 225,
quoting
Seminole Nation v. United States, 316 U.
S. 286,
316 U. S. 296
(1942).
See also McClanahan v. Arizona State Tax Comm'n,
411 U. S. 164,
411 U. S.
168-175 (1973);
Rice v. Olson, 324 U.
S. 786,
324 U. S. 789
(1945). [
Footnote 2/6]
One important aspect of the special relationship is 28 U.S.C. §
1362, which embodies a federal promise that Indian tribes will be
able to invoke the jurisdiction of federal courts to resolve
matters in controversy arising under federal
Page 463 U. S. 577
law. [
Footnote 2/7] Congress
thereby assured Indians a neutral federal forum -- a guarantee
whose importance should not be underestimated. [
Footnote 2/8] The Senate Report noted:
"There is great hesitancy on the part of tribes to use State
courts. This reluctance is founded partially on the traditional
fear that tribes have had of the States in which their reservations
are situated. Additionally, the Federal courts have more expertise
in deciding questions involving treaties with the Federal
Government, as well as interpreting the relevant body of Federal
law that has developed over the years."
S.Rep. No. 1507, 89th Cong., 2d Sess., 2 (1966).
Page 463 U. S. 578
Section 1362 also assured the tribes that they need not rely on
the Federal Government to protect their interests, an important
safeguard in light of the undeniable potential for conflicts of
interest between Indian claims and other Federal Government claims.
[
Footnote 2/9]
Despite the silence of the McCarran Amendment regarding Indian
tribal claims, and the clear promise of a federal forum embodied in
§ 1362, the Court holds that considerations of "wise judicial
administration" require that Indian claims, governed by federal
law, must be relegated to the state courts. It is clear to me that
the words "wise judicial administration" have been wrenched
completely from their ordinary meaning. One of the Arizona
proceedings, in which process has been served on approximately
58,000 known water claimants, illustrates the practical
consequences of giving the state courts the initial responsibility
for the adjudication of Indian water rights claims. Because this
Court may not exercise appellate jurisdiction in state court
litigation until after a final judgment has been entered by the
highest court of the State, no federal tribunal will be able to
review any federal question in the case until the entire litigation
has been concluded. The Court promises that
"any state court decision alleged to abridge Indian water rights
protected by
Page 463 U. S. 579
federal law can expect to receive, if brought for review before
this Court, a particularized and exacting scrutiny commensurate
with the powerful federal interest in safeguarding those rights
from state encroachment."
Ante at
463 U. S. 571.
If a state court errs in interpreting the
Winters doctrine
or an Indian treaty, and this Court ultimately finds it necessary
to correct that error, the entire comprehensive state court water
rights decree may require massive readjustment. If, however, the
quantification of Indian rights were to be adjudicated in a
separate federal proceeding -- which presumably would be concluded
long before the mammoth, conglomerate state adjudication comes to
an end -- the state judgment would rest on a solid foundation that
this Court should never need to examine.
The Court acknowledges the logical force of these propositions,
but sets them aside because the exercise of concurrent federal
court jurisdiction would create
"the possibility of duplicative litigation, tension and
controversy between the federal and state forums, hurried and
pressured decisionmaking, and confusion over the disposition of
property rights."
Ante at
463 U. S. 569.
These possibilities arise, as the Court candidly admits, from a
pessimistic assessment of the likelihood that state courts, state
legislatures, and state parties will assume a "cooperative
attitude." In other words, the state courts might engage in an
unseemly rush to judgment in order to give the Indians less water
than they fear that the federal courts might provide. If state
courts cannot be expected to adhere to orderly processes of
decisionmaking because of their hostility to the Indians, the
statutory right accorded to Indian tribes to litigate in a federal
tribunal is even more important.
In my view, a federal court whose jurisdiction is invoked in a
timely manner by an Indian tribe has a duty to determine the
existence and extent of the tribe's reserved water rights under
federal law. It is inappropriate to stay or dismiss such federal
court proceedings in order to allow determinations
Page 463 U. S. 580
by state courts. In the cases before us today, complaints were
timely filed in federal court by the Indian Tribes, before or
shortly after the institution of state water adjudication
proceedings; the state proceedings in Arizona and Montana remain at
an early stage. The District Court should therefore grant the
Tribes leave to amend the various complaints, where necessary, to
seek adjudication of the scope and quantity of Indian reserved
water rights and to eliminate other claims; the suits should then
proceed in federal court.
Today, however, on the tenuous foundation of a perceived
congressional intent that has never been articulated in statutory
language or legislative history, the Court carves out a further
exception to the "virtually unflagging obligation" of federal
courts to exercise their jurisdiction. The Court does not -- and
cannot -- claim that it is faithfully following general principles
of law. After all, just four months ago in
Moses H. Cone
Memorial Hospital v. Mercury Construction Corp., 460 U. S.
1 (1983), the Court wrote:
"[W]e emphasize that our task in cases such as this is not to
find some substantial reason for the exercise of federal
jurisdiction by the district court; rather, the task is to
ascertain whether there exist 'exceptional' circumstances, the
'clearest of justifications,' that can suffice under
Colorado
River to justify the
surrender of that jurisdiction.
Although in some rare circumstances the presence of state law
issues may weigh in favor of that surrender . . . the presence of
federal law issues must always be a major consideration weighing
against surrender."
Id. at
460 U. S. 25-26.
Today that "major consideration" is but a peppercorn in the scales,
outweighed by the phantom command of the McCarran Amendment.
Instead of trying to reconcile this decision with
Moses H.
Cone and other prior cases, the Court
Page 463 U. S. 581
merely says:
"But water rights adjudication is a virtually unique type of
proceeding, and the McCarran Amendment is a virtually unique
federal statute, and we cannot in this context be guided by general
propositions."
Ante at
463 U. S.
571.
I submit that it is the analysis in
463 U.
S. " Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
See ante at
463 U. S. 549,
n. 1 (quoting the statutory text).
[
Footnote 2/2]
See, e.g., BankAmerica Corp. v. United States,
462 U. S. 122,
462 U. S.
128-130 (1983);
Morrison-Knudsen Construction Co. v.
Director, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs,
461 U. S. 624,
461 U. S.
630-632 (1983);
Griffin v. Oceanic Contractors,
Inc., 458 U. S. 564
(1982);
Bread Political Action Committee v. FEC,
455 U. S. 577,
455 U. S.
580-581 (1982);
Consumer Product Safety Comm'n v.
GTE Sylvania, Inc., 447 U. S. 102,
447 U. S. 108
(1980).
[
Footnote 2/3]
See generally Note, Indian Reserved Water Rights: The
winters of Our Discontent, 88 Yale L.J. 1689, 1690-1701 (1979).
[
Footnote 2/4]
Although giving lipservice to the balancing of factors set forth
in
Colorado River, the Court essentially gives decisive
weight to one factor: the policy of unified water rights
adjudication purportedly embodied in the McCarran Amendment.
Ante at
463 U. S. 552,
463 U. S.
569-570. The Court's entire discussion of the
applicability in these cases of the four
Colorado River
factors is found in a single vague sentence.
Ante at
463 U. S. 570.
It is worth noting, however, that the Court leaves open the
possibility that Indian water claims will occasionally be heard in
federal court.
Ante at
463 U. S.
569.
[
Footnote 2/5]
See Comptroller General of the United States, Reserved
Water Rights for Federal and Indian Reservations: A Growing
Controversy in Need of Resolution 18 (Nov.1978) ("Indian reserved
water rights present a more pressing problem than Federal reserved
water rights. Unlike Federal reservations, which are not expected
to have large consumptive water demands, many Indian reservations
are expected to require significant water quantities to satisfy
reservation purposes"). In addition, national forests, national
parks, and other federal uses provide benefits to non-Indian
residents, including lumbering operations, grazing, recreational
purposes, watershed protection, and tourist revenues.
See
Note, Adjudication of Indian Water Rights Under the McCarran
Amendment: Two Courts are Better Than One, 71 Geo.L.J. 1023,
1053-1054 (1983).
[
Footnote 2/6]
Congress has been particularly solicitous of Indian property
rights, including water rights, even when it has expanded the
governmental role of the States with respect to Indian affairs. In
1953, a year after the McCarran Amendment was passed, Congress
authorized the States to assume general criminal and limited civil
jurisdiction within "Indian country," but it expressly withheld
certain matters, including water rights, from state adjudication.
Pub.L. 280, 67 Stat. 588, codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1360(b). The
Court held in
Colorado River that this proviso to Pub.L.
280 did not purport to limit the special consent to jurisdiction
given by the McCarran Amendment. 424 U.S. at
424 U. S.
812-813, n. 20. But, even assuming that state courts
have jurisdiction to adjudicate Indian water claims, the proviso
casts serious doubt on the assertion that Congress intended state
courts to be the preferred forum.
[
Footnote 2/7]
The statute provides:
"The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of all
civil actions, brought by any Indian tribe or band with a governing
body duly recognized by the Secretary of the Interior, wherein the
matter in controversy arises under the Constitution, laws, or
treaties of the United States."
Enacted in 1966, § 1362 was designed to remove the $10,000
jurisdictional amount limitation with respect to these claims.
[
Footnote 2/8]
The majority recognizes that there is "a good deal of force" to
the assertion that "[s]tate courts may be inhospitable to Indian
rights."
Ante at
463 U. S. 567,
463 U. S. 566.
Federal officials responsible for Indian affairs have consistently
recognized the appropriateness of deciding Indian claims in
federal, not state, courts.
See, e.g., H.R.Rep. No. 2040,
89th Cong., 2d Sess., 2 (1966) (describing position of Interior
Department); National Water Comm'n, Water Policies for the Future,
Final Report to the President and to the Congress of the United
States 478-479 (1973). American Indian Policy Review Commission,
Task Force Four, Report on Federal, State, and Tribal Jurisdiction
176 (Comm.Print 1976); American Indian Policy Review Commission,
Final Report 333-334 (Comm.Print 1977).
Although the Court correctly observes that state courts, "as
much as federal courts, have a solemn obligation to follow federal
law,"
ante at
463 U. S. 571,
state judges, unlike federal judges, tend to be elected, and hence
to be more conscious of the prevailing views of the majority. Water
rights adjudications, which will have a crucial impact on future
economic development in the West, are likely to stimulate great
public interest and concern.
See Note,
supra,
463
U.S. 545fn2/5|>n. 5, at 1052-1053.
[
Footnote 2/9]
The Senate Report stated:
"Currently, the right of the Attorney General of the United
States to bring civil actions on behalf of tribes without regard to
jurisdictional amount, a power conferred on him by special
statutes, is insufficient in those cases wherein the interest of
the Federal Government as guardian of the Indian tribes and as
Federal sovereign conflict, in which case the Attorney General will
decline to bring the action."
"The proposed legislation will remedy these defects by making it
possible for the Indian tribes to seek redress using their own
resources and attorneys."
S.Rep. No. 1507, at 2. If federal courts defer to state court
proceedings, then the Indian tribes will be unable to represent
themselves without waiving tribal sovereign immunity from state
court jurisdiction.