Indian Water Rights, Practical Reasoning and Negotiated Settlements

R. Anderson
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Indian reserved water rights have a strong legal foundation buttressed by powerful moral principles. As explained more fully below, the Supreme Court has found implied reserved rights when construing treaties and other legal instruments recognizing or creating tribal reservations when access to water is necessary to fulfill the purposes behind establishing the reservation. The precise scope and extent of these rights in any treaty are unknown until quantified by a court ruling or an agreement ratified by Congress. When litigation is the quantification tool, tribal claims are generally caught up in massive general-stream adjudications. These adjudications are massive because to obtain jurisdiction over the Indian water rights (and over the United States as trustee to the tribes), states must adjudicate all claims to a given river system; they may not engage in piecemeal litigation of only the Indian and federal claims. The result can be that there are thousands of state water right holders who must be joined as parties to exceedingly complex litigation that takes too long and costs too much. Moreover, even when such adjudications are litigated to a conclusion and tribes win a decreed water right, such a “paper right” may do little to advance tribal needs without the financial ability or the infrastructure to put the water to use. At the same time, the general failure of the United States to assert and protect tribal rights until the 1970s, along with its zealous advancement of competing non-Indian uses, created expectations among non-Indians that their state-law water rights were secure. In fact, many non-Indian rights are far from secure. This article first reviews the Indian water rights issues that the Supreme Court has decided. The article then traces a critical issue common to Indian water rights litigation in the federal and state courts: how to determine the purposes of the reservation for which a reserved water right should be implied. The review of Indian water rights cases demonstrates the generally confusing state of the law in significant respects, especially with regard to the “purposes” determination. The relative uncertainty in this context fits neatly into the portions of Professor Frickey’s scholarship that call for less litigation and more sovereign-to-sovereign negotiation. Finally, the article reviews the approach taken by the parties and Congress in several recent Indian water rights settlements. There have been over two dozen Indian water rights settlements since the 1970s, each usually preceded by years of litigation. Given the Supreme Court’s abandonment of long accepted substantive and interpretive rules of Indian law, many tribes now prefer government-to-government negotiations for settling natural resource disputes in lieu of “all or nothing” litigation.
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印第安人的水权,实践推理和协商解决
印度保留的水权有着强有力的道德原则支撑的坚实法律基础。正如下文更充分地解释的那样,最高法院在解释承认或建立部落保留地的条约和其他法律文书时,当获得水是实现建立保留地的目的所必需时,就认定了隐含的保留权利。在任何条约中,这些权利的确切范围和程度都是未知的,直到法院裁决或国会批准的协议加以量化。当诉讼成为量化工具时,部落索赔通常会陷入大规模的通用流裁决中。这些裁决是巨大的,因为要获得对印第安人水权的管辖权(以及对作为部落受托人的美国的管辖权),各州必须对给定河流系统的所有主张进行裁决;他们不得只参与印第安人和联邦人的零星诉讼。结果可能是,成千上万的州水权持有者必须作为当事人加入到极其复杂的诉讼中,这些诉讼耗时太长,成本太高。此外,即使这样的裁决通过诉讼得出结论,部落赢得了法定的水权,如果没有财政能力或基础设施来使用水,这种“纸上权利”可能对促进部落需求几乎没有作用。与此同时,直到20世纪70年代,美国在维护和保护部落权利方面的总体失败,以及它对非印第安人用水竞争的积极推进,使非印第安人产生了一种期望,即他们的州法水权是安全的。事实上,许多非印第安人的权利远未得到保障。本文首先回顾了印度最高法院裁决的水权问题。然后,文章追溯了印度在联邦和州法院的水权诉讼中常见的一个关键问题:如何确定保留水权的保留目的。对印度水权案件的审查表明,法律在许多重要方面普遍令人困惑,特别是关于“目的”的确定。这种背景下的相对不确定性正好符合弗里基教授的学术观点,即呼吁减少诉讼,加强主权对主权的谈判。最后,本文回顾了各方和国会在最近几次印度水权解决方案中所采取的方法。自20世纪70年代以来,印度已经有二十多个水权解决方案,每个解决方案之前通常都要经过多年的诉讼。鉴于最高法院放弃了长期以来公认的印度法律的实质性和解释性规则,许多部落现在更喜欢政府对政府的谈判来解决自然资源争端,而不是“全有或全无”的诉讼。
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