RICARDO S. MARTINEZ, District Judge.
This matter comes before the Court after remand from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and upon the Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe's, Port Gamble S'Klallam Tribe's and Lower Elwha Klallam Indian Tribe's (collectively "the S'Klallam"), and Lummi Nation's ("the Lummi") motions for summary judgment. Dkts. #164, #167 and #168.
The Lummi has opposed the S'Klallam motion and also moves for summary judgment in its favor. Dkt. #167. The Lummi moves first for a determination that there is no proof Judge Boldt expressly excluded the disputed waters from the Lummi's U&A. Id. It next moves for partial summary judgment that this Court has jurisdiction to hear evidence on the extent of the U&A in the disputed marine area, asserting that Judge Boldt did not specifically determine the western boundary of the Lummi's U&A, and therefore a genuine question of material fact exists on the boundary location. Id.
The matter having now been fully briefed, and having determined that oral argument is not necessary in this matter, the Court now GRANTS S'Klallam's motions for summary judgment for the reasons set forth herein and DENIES Lummi's motion for summary judgment.
This case arises from an RFD brought by the S'Klallam to determine certain fishing rights of the Lummi under the 1855 Treaty of Point Elliott. This dispute has more than 25 years of litigation history behind it. Dkt. #1.
On January 22, 1855, the Lummi entered into the Treaty of Point Elliott with the United States. 12 Stat. 927 (1855). This treaty "secured" to the Lummi "[t]he right of taking fish at usual and accustomed grounds and stations" (hereinafter referred to as "U&A"). Id. at 928.
In 1970 the United States, as trustee for all the treaty tribes including the S'Klallam and the Lummi, filed suit in the Western District of Washington to obtain an interpretation of the Treaty of Point Elliott and an injunction protecting treaty fishing rights from interference by Washington State. Both the S'Klallam and the Lummi intervened as plaintiffs. In 1974, Judge Boldt issued extensive findings of fact, conclusions of law, and a permanent injunction. United States v. Washington, 384 F.Supp. 312 (W.D. Wash. 1974) ("Boldt Decree"). The Boldt Decree defined the Treaty of Point Elliott's reference to "usual and accustomed grounds and stations" as meaning "every fishing location where members of a tribe customarily fished from time to time at and before treaty times, however distant from the then usual habitat of the tribe, and whether or not other tribes then also fished in the same waters[.]" Id. at 332.
The U&A of the Lummi Nation was described by Judge Boldt in Findings of Fact ("FF") 45 and 46 of his decision:
U.S. v. Washington, 384 F. Supp. at 360.
In 1989, the S'Klallam, along with the Skokomish Tribe, filed an RFD regarding the Lummi U&A, which was opened as Subproceeding 89-2 and assigned to United States District Judge Robert Coyle. The Tribes asked for a ruling that Lummi fishing in the case area was "not in conformity with" the Findings of Fact in Decision I, which is one way by which a party may invoke the Court's jurisdiction under the Permanent Injunction. The Request asserted that the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Admiralty Inlet, and the mouth of Hood Canal are all outside the Lummi U&A as it was described by Judge Boldt, and therefore, Lummi fishing in these areas is "not in conformity with" that decision.
The parties cross-moved for summary judgment. On February 13, 1990, Judge Coyle granted summary judgment to the S'Klallam, stating with respect to the case area, "There is no question in the court's mind from the evidence presented to Judge Boldt that the Lummis' usual and accustomed fishing places were not intended to include the Strait of Juan de Fuca. The court is further persuaded that the mouth of the Hood Canal would not be an area which Judge Boldt would have intended to include in the Lummis' usual and accustomed fishing places." Case No. C70-9213RSM, Dkt. #11596 at 13-14. Judge Coyle also concluded that "Judge Boldt did not intend Admiralty Inlet to be part of the Lummis' usual and accustomed fishing places." Case No. C70-9213, Dkt. # 11596 at 14.
However, no final judgment was entered by Judge Coyle. United States v. Lummi Indian Tribe, 235 F.3d 443, 447-48 (9th Cir. 2000). Instead, the Lummi filed a cross-request for determination, and both parties continued to litigate. Id. The Lummi's cross-request sought determination that:
(emphasis added). The Lummi filed a motion to dismiss and a motion for summary judgment; the S'Klallam filed a cross motion to dismiss.
In 1993, the case was assigned to United States District Judge Barbara Rothstein. After lengthy additional proceedings, on September 1, 1998, Judge Rothstein denied the Lummi motions, and granted the S'Klallam's motion to dismiss. She described in her Order the issues raised in Subproceeding 89-2 as whether the Lummi's U&A includes "the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Admiralty Inlet, or the mouth of Hood Canal." USA v. Washington, Case No. 70-9213RSM, Dkt. # 16550 at 2. She concluded that Judge Boldt did not intend to include the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Admiralty Inlet, or the mouth of Hood Canal in the Lummi U&A. Id. at 18. The Clerk was directed to enter judgment in favor of the S'Klallam and Skokomish tribes, and dismiss the subproceeding.
The Lummi appealed. Lummi Indian Tribe, 235 F.3d at 445. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held, first, that the Coyle Decision was not final because Judge Coyle never entered final judgment. Id. at 448-49. Because it was not final, the Court of Appeals continued, the Coyle Decision merged into the Rothstein Decision. Id. at 449. Therefore, the Court of Appeals concluded, both the Coyle and Rothstein decisions were before the court. Id.
As the Court of Appeals framed the issue:
Id. The Court of Appeals found that Judge Boldt's language in describing the Lummi U&A is ambiguous, "because it does not delineate the western boundary of the Lummi's usual and accustomed fishing grounds and stations." Lummi Indian Tribe, 235 F.3d at 449.
The panel then analyzed the evidence that was before Judge Boldt and concluded that Judge Boldt had not intended to include either the Strait of Juan de Fuca or the Hood Canal in the Lummi's U&A, because Judge Boldt commonly distinguished between the Puget Sound, where the Lummi fished, and the Strait of Juan de Fuca and Hood Canal, where other tribes fished. Id. at 450-52. The panel held "[i]t is clear that Judge Boldt viewed Puget Sound and the Strait of Juan de Fuca as two distinct regions, with the Strait lying to the west of the Sound." Id. at 451-52. Thus, "had he intended to include the Strait of Juan de Fuca in the Lummi's usual and accustomed fishing grounds and stations, he would have used that specific term, as he did elsewhere in Decision I." Lummi Indian Tribe, 235 F.3d. at 452.
The panel also concluded that Judge Boldt did intend for the Admiralty Inlet, i.e. "[t]he waters to the west of Whidbey Island, separating that island from the Olympic Peninsula[,]" to be included in the Lummi's U&A, because, "[g]eographically," the Admiralty Inlet
Id. at 452 (quoting the Boldt Decree, 384 F. Supp. at 360). The panel thus affirmed in part and reversed in part, concluding:
Lummi, 235 F. 3d at 453.
After Lummi Indian Tribe was decided, the Lummi Natural Resources Commission, a tribal body, interpreted the decision as including in the Lummi U&A "Haro Strait and Admiralty Inlet and the waters between the two." In April 2009, the S'Klallam moved for the district court in Subproceeding 89-2 to hold the Lummi in contempt for violating the court orders regarding the extent of the Lummi's U&A. The Lummi moved to dismiss, arguing that Subproceeding 89-2 was closed, and the issue should be addressed in a new subproceeding. This Court, Judge Martinez (to whom the case had been reassigned), granted the Lummi's motion to dismiss and denied the S' Klallam's motion without prejudice so it could be renewed as a new subproceeding.
On November 11, 2011, the S'Klallam initiated the instant proceeding by filing a Request for Determination that the Lummi's U&A does not include "the eastern portion of the Strait of Juan de Fuca or the waters west of Whidbey Island (excepting Admiralty Inlet)." In particular, the S'Klallam defined the "case area" at dispute as follows:
Dkt. #1. The S'Klallam then moved for summary judgment.
On October 11, 2012, this Court granted summary judgment in favor of the S'Klallam, finding that "[t]he law of the case holds that the Lummi U&A does not include the Strait of Juan de Fuca or the waters west of Whidbey Island that were named in the Lummi Cross-Request for Determination." Dkt. #59 at 16. In reaching that conclusion, this Court relied, in part, on Judge Rothstein's determination that there was no difference between "the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Hood Canal, and the Admiralty Inlet" and a list of locations that included "the waters west of Whidbey Island." See Dkt. #59 at 8-9. This Court also relied on a report on traditional U&As of Indian tribes, including the Lummi, by Dr. Barbara Lane, on which Judge Boldt had relied in making his findings of facts. That report stated "Lummi fishermen were accustomed, at least in historic times, and probably earlier, to visit fisheries as distant as the Fraser River in the north and Puget Sound in the south." See Dkt. #59 at 11-15. This Court found that this statement does not compel the conclusion that the waters west of northern Whidbey Island should be included in the Lummi U&A because "the Lummi have pointed to no facts before Judge Boldt which would support the conclusion that he intended to include all the marine waters in between." Dkt. #59 at 15.
The Lummi then moved for reconsideration on the ground that this Court's decision was overbroad because it interpreted the Lummi's U&A as not including waters off the southern coast of the San Juan Islands. This Court denied the motion, but did clarify that "the Lummi U&A should include nearshore waters immediately to the south of San Juan Island and Lopez Island." Dkt. #72. The Lummi then appealed both this Court's summary judgment decision and its denial of its motion for reconsideration.
On August 19, 2014, in a 2-1 opinion, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed this Court's summary judgment determination. Dkt. #109. The Court of Appeals concluded that because its own prior decision in the matter (under Subproceeding 89-2) was ambiguous, the "law of the case" doctrine did not control the outcome of this matter. The Court explained:
Dkt. #109 at 14-16. The matter was then remanded for further proceedings in this Court.
After remand, the Court raised the issue of whether there were jurisdictional questions brought about by the Ninth Circuit's remand and in dispute between the parties, which should be resolved prior to reaching the merits. See Dkt. # 156, Ex. A (Transcript). After hearing argument from the parties, the Court entered a briefing schedule for dispositive motions, with a motion noting date of June 30, 2015. See id. at 10:18-20, 14:22-24; Dkt. # 123.
The Court subsequently granted the S'Klallam's request for a temporary restraining order and permanent injunction, enjoining the Lummi from issuing regulations or encouraging its members to fish in the disputed waters pending a decision on the merits. Dkts. #132 and #150. The parties' motions for summary judgment are now ripe for review.
This Court has already addressed potential jurisdictional issues in this case. Dkt. #174. As previously explained:
Dkt. #174 at 3-4. Accordingly, the Court shall proceed in that manner.
As an initial matter, the Court addresses a number of pending motions to strike filed by various parties.
The S'Klallam have moved to strike the Lummi's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment to the extent that it has been brought under Paragraph 26(a)(6). Dkt. #183 at 16-19. The motion is DENIED AS MOOT. For the reasons discussed below, the Court does not reach any Paragraph 26(a)(6) analysis and denies that portion of Lummi's motion for summary judgment.
The S'Klallam have also moved to strike the Declarations of Philip Buri and Sharon Kinley and attachments thereto, along with Part IV of Lummi's motion which relies on those documents. Dkts. #186 at 2-4 and #193 at 9-11. The S'Klallam argue that these documents are inadmissible because they are post-Boldt and for other evidentiary deficiencies. The S'Klallam further move to strike an additional Declaration of Philip Buri and its attachments, Appendix A to the Lummi Reply brief, and references to certain materials in the Reply brief. Dkt. #199 and Dkt. #205. The motions are GRANTED. These materials were not before Judge Boldt at the time he rendered Final Decision I, and it appears they are actually being offered in support of the Lummi's summary judgment motion under Paragraph 25(a)(6). Further, Ms. Kinley's Declaration presents evidentiary issues as it merely purports to agree with the conclusions set forth by another person, and does not contain any specific factual bases for her own concurrence with those conclusions. See Dkt. #181. Accordingly, the following materials are STRICKEN from the record:
Interested party Suquamish Indian Tribe has moved to strike the Reply brief filed by Interested Party State of Washington and the Reply brief filed by Interested Party Tulalip Tribes, on the basis that the Court's rules do not allow non-moving parties to file such briefs. Dkt. #200. The Lummi join in that motion. Dkt. #202. The Court DENIES the motions. This Court has previously clarified that Interested parties in all subproceedings may exercise the rights afforded to all parties. See Case No. 09-sp-01, Dkt. #247 at 10-11.
When conducting a Paragraph 25(a)(1) analysis, the Court engages in a two-step inquiry, first determining whether a particular finding of fact is ambiguous, and, if so, then examining the record in front of Judge Boldt to clarify his intent. Upper Skagit Indian Tribe v. Washington, 590 F.3d 1020 (9th Cir. Wash. 2010).
There can be no genuine dispute that Finding of Fact 46 is ambiguous. Indeed, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has twice made that determination. United States v. Lummi Nation, 763 F.3d 1180, 1187 (9th Cir. 2014); Lummi Indian Tribe, 235 F.3d at 449. Accordingly, the Court moves to the next step in the analysis.
The next step is to determine whether Judge Boldt intended to include the disputed area in the description of the Lummi's U&A in FF 46. The burden is on the S'Klallam to provide evidence that will enable the Court to "interpret the decree in specific geographic terms." Muckleshoot Indian Tribe v. Lummi Indian Nation, 141 F.3d 1355, 1360 (9th Cir. 1998) ("Muckleshoot I"). It is the evidence that was before Judge Boldt when he made his finding that is relevant to the inquiry. Id. at 1359 ("The only relevant evidence is that which was considered by Judge Boldt when he made his finding"); Puyallup Indian Tribe v. Muckleshoot Indian Tribe, 235 F.3d 429, 434 (9th Cir.2000) ("Muckleshoot III") ("[The] most relevant evidence in determining what Judge Boldt intended by the [ambiguous] phrase consists of the [] documents referenced in the finding").
The S'Klallam argue that in looking at the evidence before Judge Boldt, there is both no specific reference to any of the disputed area and no evidence supporting any additional U&A than the areas described in FF 46. As a result, the S'Klallam urge the conclusion that Judge Boldt did not intend the disputed waters to be included in the Lummi U&A. In its motion for summary judgment, the Lummi advances several different arguments for its contention that the case area waters are not part of the Strait of Juan de Fuca, which has been excluded from the Lummi U&A. For the reasons below, the Court agrees with the S'Klallam and rejects Lummi's arguments — an examination of the record before Judge Boldt in 1974 reveals that there is no factual evidence to establish that the Lummi customarily fished at any time in the disputed waters at issue here. Thus, there is no factual basis to support any claim by the Lummi to U&A rights in the disputed area. The absence of such specific evidence results in this Court's determination that Judge Boldt did not intend to include the disputed waters in the Lummi's U&A. See Upper Skagit Indian Tribe v. Washington, 590 F.3d 1020, 1025 (9th Cir. 2010).
Before even engaging in the two-step analysis, the Lummi argue that the waters west of Whidbey Island are not linguistically excluded from the Northern Puget Sound, and that the western waters of Whidbey Island fit geographically within the Sound as distinct from the Strait of Juan de Fuca, and conclude that the disputed waters must therefore be part of the Lummi U&A. Dkt. #167 at 8-11. However, that contention is not supported by case law or the record, as further discussed herein.
In Lummi Indian Tribe, the Ninth Circuit found that, unlike for the Strait of Juan de Fuca and Hood Canal, there were no linguistic clues in Decision No. 1 to compare for Admiralty Inlet. Lummi Indian Tribe, 235 F.3d at 452. Accordingly, linguistic clues could not be used to determine whether Admiralty Inlet was or was not intended to be included by Judge Boldt. Id. ("[I]t is just as likely that this area was intended to be included as that it was not"). In Upper Skagit, the Ninth Circuit held that "the inquiry properly focuses on individual U&As" and the "fact that Judge Boldt defined `Puget Sound' in one instance as including" specifically named bodies of water "does not mean that references to `Puget Sound' in other U&As always include those same areas." 590 F.3d 1026. "If anything," the Ninth Circuit concluded, Judge Boldt's "inclusion of reference points in one U&A but not in another indicates a lack of intent to include them generically." Id. As this Court recently held, the fact that a geographic term may include the waters at issue does not mean on the basis of the evidence that Judge Boldt intended to include them within a Tribe's U&A. See Subproceeding 14-01, Case No. C70-9213, Dkt. No. 21017 at 6.
The Lummi then continue to contend that Dr. Lane's report supports its position. Dkt. #167 at 13-19. Specifically, they assert that the disputed waters are necessarily included in Judge Boldt's description of the U&A. The Lummi rely on Dr. Lanes testimony that Lummi fishermen were "accustomed . . . to visit fisheries as distant as Fraser River in the north and Puget Sound in the South," USA-30 at 25, and that "other fisheries in the Straits and bays from the Fraser River south to the present environs of Seattle were utilized" by the Lummi. USA-30 at 26. See Dkt. #167 at 13-19. The Lummi has also relied on FF 13 in Decision I as support for its argument. However, when FF 13 is read in its entirety, and together with the following FF 14, they lead to the opposite conclusion from what the Lummi argue.
These Findings of Fact, stated in full, read as follows:
U.S. v. Washington, 384 F. Supp. at 353.
Thus, FF 13, with its references to drainage systems, riffles, weirs, river flow, turbidity, and so on in Reasons 1 through 3, appears to address only fishing sites along rivers. It would be pure speculation to infer that the "impossible to compile a complete inventory" statement applies as well to fishing in the marine areas where none are mentioned; indeed logic and linguistics lead to the opposite inference. Judge Boldt used terms specific to riverine areas in FF 13 when he listed reasons why it was "impossible to compile a complete inventory" of any tribe's usual fishing areas. On the other hand, marine areas, and specifically the Lummi reef net sites, are addressed in FF 14, which is also the basis for the oft-quoted principle that transit through an area does not, without more specific evidence of fishing, lead to inclusion of an area in a tribe's U&A. Thus, FF 13 fails to support the conclusion that Judge Boldt intended to include the case area in the Lummi U&A, and FF 14 leads to the conclusion that the Lummi "natural pathway" argument must be rejected.
Nor does reference to Dr. Lane's language regarding the Lummi's "other fisheries in the Straits and bays from the Fraser River south" (quoted from Exhibit USA-30, p. 26) aid the Lummi position. First, the case area is not a bay, and according to the Lummi argument it is not part of the Strait of Juan de Fuca either. Therefore they have not shown how the case area could be included in the "other fisheries in the Straits and bays" referenced by Dr. Lane. Second, this statement in her report is a summary conclusion, and must be read in context with the entire report, particularly the sections that were cited or quoted by Judge Boldt in FF 45 and 46. Notably, Judge Boldt did not quote Dr. Lane's "Straits and bays" conclusion in either Finding of Fact. Instead, he cited extensively and repeatedly to Dr. Lane's discussion of reefnetting, its uniqueness and importance to the Lummi, their system of individual ownership of reefnetting sites, and the location of those sites. See FF 45 and citations therein to Exhibit USA-30 at 11 and 23.
Dr. Lane went into great detail on reefnetting by the Lummi in her report, describing the equipment and techniques, and the reasons for its success, which was attributed in part to specialized knowledge of topography and salmon behavior and migration patterns. Exhibit USA-30 at 12. "Usually the reefnet was located in a kelp-covered reef a short distance offshore. Often it was opposite a headland that caused a backward sweep of tidal current. The fish entered with the current." Exhibit USA-30 at 17. "The more important reefnet locations of the Semiahmoo-Lummi-Samish are noted in the section on usual and accustomed fishing sites and are plotted on the accompanying map." Exhibit USA-30 at 11. The map shows reefnet sites at various points from Point Roberts south to the southern shore of Lopez Island. All appear to be associated with promontories and headlands, and none are located south of Lopez Island, where the case area begins. The singular importance of reefnetting to the Lummi was acknowledged by Judge Boldt in FF 45, and the complete absence of any indicated sites from the case area is significant.
The section of Dr. Lane's report which was cited extensively, and sometimes quoted, by Judge Boldt states, in its entirety:
USUAL AND ACCUSTOMED FISHING AREAS
Exhibit USA-30 at 23-24 (emphasis added).
This Court previously found, and it continues to find, that several aspects of this section have significant implications for the Lummi "logic and linguistics" argument. See Dkt. #59 at 14-15. First, Dr. Lane stated that it was feasible to indicate a general area for the fishing operations of the Lummi, and within that general area to designate important sites, but not all of them. This is contrary to the sense in which the Lummi would have the Court read the "impossible to compile a complete inventory" language in FF 13. They use this language to invite consideration of unnamed locations well outside the designated area, but this section shows that was not Dr. Lane's intent. (And as shown above, Judge Boldt's "complete inventory" remark appears to be addressed to river fishing sites, not marine areas.) Second, the "traditional fishing areas" of the Lummi were designated as extending only as far south as Anacortes, well above the case area. Judge Boldt cited specifically to this section of the report and used the specific place names in FF 45, thus indicating his reliance upon this section.
Further, Dr. Lane named only two places, Fraser River in the north and Puget Sound to the south, as fisheries visited by Lummi fisherman; she did not report that they fished all the waters in between, or mention any intermediate fisheries. While Judge Boldt described the Lummi U&A in FF 46 as including marine areas from Fraser River south to the present environs of Seattle, "and particularly Bellingham Bay," the Lummi have pointed to no facts before Judge Boldt which would support the conclusion that he intended to include
The Lummi also point to a map that was before Judge Boldt, namely Exhibit USA-62, which is a reproduction of a U.S. coastal survey map from 1853. Dkt. #167 at 15-16. The Lummi assert that the placement of the lettering for "Strait of Juan de Fuca" on this map would have led Judge Boldt to conclude that the eastern extent of the Strait was approximately Angeles Point. Dkts. #167 at 15 and #43 at 18.
The Lummi argue that its U&A includes the case area because the Ninth Circuit expressly held that the Lummi's U&A includes Admiralty Inlet, which the Ninth Circuit defined as "consist[ing] of the waters to the west of Whidbey Island, separating that island from the Olympic Peninsula." Dkts. #167 at 8 and 17 and #43 at 6 (quoting Lummi, 235 F.3d at 452). This argument misreads the Ninth Circuit's definition of Admiralty Inlet and impermissibly expands its scope. The correct reading of the Ninth Circuit language describes Admiralty Inlet as "(those) waters to the west of Whidbey Island (which) separate that island from the Olympic Peninsula;" in other words, only the southern portion of the waters west of Whidbey Island. The fact that the Lummi understood the "waters west of Whidbey Island" to be distinct from Admiralty Inlet is evidenced from their own Cross-Request for Determination, filed in Subproceeding 89-2, which names them separately and disjunctively. See C70-9213 at Dkt. #11690.
Based on the analysis of Dr. Lane's report and FF 45 and 46, the Court finds that neither logic nor linguistics would compel the conclusion that the waters to the west of northern Whidbey Island were intended by Judge Boldt to be included in the Lummi U&A. Accordingly, the Court need not reach any determination under Paragraph (a)(6) in this matter.
Having reviewed the parties' motions for summary judgment, the responses thereto and replies in support thereof, along with all supporting declarations and exhibits and the remainder of the record, the Court hereby FINDS and ORDERS: