Background
The Mashpee lands were sold in 1834 and 1870 without federal consent.592 F.2d 575, 579. The Mashpee claim implicated 11,000 acres, worth approximately $30,000,000 at the time of trial.Vecsey & Starna, 1988, at 27. The Mashpee's attempts to settle the claim were rebuffed.Trial
The Mashpee filed suit on August 16, 1976 against a defendant class of land owners in the town of Mashpee. TheOpinion
Before the First Circuit, the Mashpee argued: (1) that the district court should have granted their motion for a continuance; (2) that the district court erred in instructing the jury on the definition of a "tribe"; (3) that the district court erred in allocating the burden of proof to the Mashpee; (4) that the district court erred in not granting a new trial on the basis of the special verdict; and (5) that the district court erred in its handing of ex parte communication with a juror. The First Circuit rejected all these arguments and affirmed.Continuance
The First Circuit rejected the idea that the district court should have waited for an agency determination, holding: " is is not the kind of case in which the Supreme Court has required courts to defer to administrative process." Much of the holding focuses on the historical inaction of the Department in developing a procedure for contested determinations:'The Department of the Interior has not historically spent much effort deciding whether particular groups of people are Indian tribes. By and large no one has disputed the tribal status of Indians with whom the Department has dealt. The Department has never formally passed on the tribal status of the Mashpees or, so far as the record shows, any other group whose status was disputed. Therefore, the Department does not yet have prescribed procedures and has not been called on to develop special expertise in distinguishing tribes from other groups of Indians.592 F.2d 575, 581.To that end, the court added the qualification that "once the Department has finally approved its regulations and developed special expertise through applying them, we might arrive at a different answer." Additionally, the First Circuit found that the issues were suitable for in-court determination:
e facts in this case, though developed and interpreted in part with the expert help of historians and anthropologists, are not so technical as to be beyond the understanding of judges or juries. As the court said in its charge, 'We are dealing with the human condition here as well.'"
Definition of "tribe"
The First Circuit noted that tribal status often goes unlitigated because federally recognized tribes are presumed to be tribes in the legal sense.592 F.2d 575, 582. Instead, the district court had relied upon the definition from '' Montoya v. United States'' (1901): "By a ‘tribe’ we understand a body of Indians of the same or similar race, united in a community under one leadership or government, and inhabiting a particular though sometimes ill-defined territory . . . ." The court reviewed at length the supplemental instructions the trial court had given to clarify that definition. The First Circuit approved those instructions, with a rather substantial caveat:We conclude that though a few isolated sentences of the charge may have been unclear or overstated, the instructions taken as a whole were largely consistent with the position plaintiff argued before us. Therefore, we will not reverse on the basis of the court's instructions. This holding is a narrow one, and it may be useful to point out what we do not hold. We have no occasion to pass on portions of the court's instruction other than those discussed above. Even as to those portions we have considered, the issue we have decided, technically, is not whether those portions are correct as a matter of law, but whether they conform to the objecting party's view of the law. Finding they do, we see no remaining controversy. Because there are no sure yardsticks against which to measure the court's instructions, we cannot say that even those we considered are correct or the best possible, but we have not found any law conflicting with the portions of the charge we have reviewed.Judge Bownes, concurring, would have held the instruction correct as a matter of law, rather than merely consistent enough with the objecting party's view of the law.
Burden of proof
The district court had allocated the burden of proof to the plaintiff on all issues.592 F.2d 575, 588 (majority opinion). The plaintiff's argued first that the district court should have at least shifted the burden to the defendants to prove that they had ceased to be a tribe for the periods after which the jury determined the tribe had carried its burden. Second, the Mashpee argued that 25 U.S.C. § 194 shifted the burden. That section provides: "In all trials about the right of property in which an Indian may be a party on one side, and a white person on the other, the burden of proof shall rest upon the white person, whenever the Indian shall make out a presumption of title in himself from the fact of previous possession or ownership." The First Circuit held the statute had no application to the initial question of whether the plaintiff was a tribe.592 F.2d 575, 589.Special verdict consistency
The Mashpee argued that the verdict was inconsistent because there was no way a tribe in existence in 1842 could have voluntarily ceased being a tribe by 1869. The First Circuit agreed that it was unlikely, but, drawing all inferences in favor of the verdict, not impossible.Juror communication
After the trial, a bus commuter notified the court that one juror had talked about his involvement in the case on the bus and mentioned a threatening phone call he had received. The district court, with counsel for both sides present, questioned the former jury about the incident and concluded that it had not affected the verdict enough to merit a new trial. The First Circuit held that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion by doing so.592 F.2d 575, 592–95.Notes
References
*Paul Brodeur, ''Restitution: The Land Claims of the Mashpee, Passamaquoddy, and Penobscot Indians of New England'' (1985). *Jack Campisi, ''The Mashpee Indians: Tribe on Trial'' (1991). *Joe Carrillo, Identity as Idiom: Mashpee Reconsidered, 28 Ind. L. Rev. 511 (1995). *Jackie K. Kim, The Indian Federal Recognition Administrative Procedures Act of 1995: A Congressional Solution to an Administrative Morrass, 9 Admin. L.J. Am. U. 899 (1995). *James M. Kulikowski, Mashpee Revisited, 6 Am. Indian J. 18 (1980). *Christopher Vecsey & William A. Starna (eds.), ''Iroquois Land Claims'' (1988).Further reading
*Gerald Torres & Kathryn Milun, ''Translating'' Yonnondio ''by Precedent and Evidence: The Mashpee Indian Case'', 1990 625. *Note, ''The Unilateral Termination of Tribal Status'': Mashpee Tribe v. New Seabury Corp., 31 153 (1979). {{Aboriginal title in the United States Aboriginal title case law in the United States Legal history of Massachusetts 1979 in United States case law 1979 in Massachusetts United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit cases Wampanoag tribe Mashpee, Massachusetts Native American history of Massachusetts