United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
Argued September 16, 2005 Decided November 15, 2005
No. 05-5068
ELOUISE PEPION COBELL, ET AL.,
APPELLEES
v.
GALE A. NORTON,
SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, ET AL.,
APPELLANTS
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Columbia
(No. 96cv01285)
Mark B. Stern, Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice, argued
the cause for appellants. With him on the briefs were Peter D.
Keisler, Assistant Attorney General, Kenneth L. Wainstein, U.S.
Attorney, Gregory G. Katsas, Deputy Assistant Attorney
General, Robert E. Kopp, Thomas M. Bondy, Alisa B. Klein,
Mark R. Freeman, and I. Glenn Cohen, Attorneys.
G. William Austin III argued the cause for appellees. With
him on the brief were Dennis M. Gingold, Elliott H. Levitas,
Mark I. Levy, and Keith M. Harper.
2
Before: GARLAND, Circuit Judge, and SILBERMAN and
WILLIAMS, Senior Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge
WILLIAMS.
WILLIAMS, Senior Circuit Judge: In 1994 Congress passed
legislation that acknowledged the fiduciary duties that the
Secretaries of the Departments of the Interior and Treasury—the
defendants in this case—owed to beneficiaries of Individual
Indian Money (“IIM”) accounts. Frustrated by delay in the
fulfillment of these duties, plaintiffs filed a class action in 1996
on behalf of present and past beneficiaries of the accounts.
Since that time, the district court has drawn on a range of its
powers in an effort to ensure that defendants live up to their
duties as the accounts’ trustees. One such duty required
defendants to complete a historical accounting of all trust fund
assets. This past February, the district court reissued an
injunction that set out, in great detail, the means by which they
were to fulfill this duty. The defendants argue that reissuance of
the injunction was an abuse of discretion. Even the plaintiffs
agree that the injunction should not stand because they believe
it to be impossible to perform. In short, neither party thinks that
the injunction should survive in its present form. We agree.
* * *
The trust relationship at issue here dates back to the passage
of the General Allotment Act of 1887, ch. 119, 24 Stat. 388.
The Act allotted land to individual Indians and provided that the
government would “hold the land thus allotted, for the period of
twenty-five years [subject to discretionary extension by the
President], in trust for the sole use and benefit of the Indian to
whom such allotment shall have been made.” Id. Whenever the
government authorized money-producing transactions, such as
leasing allotted lands or selling timber rights, it was supposed to
3
hold the revenue in individual accounts for the Indian owners of
the beneficial interests in the lands. See Cobell v. Norton, 392
F.3d 461 (D.C. Cir. 2004) (“Cobell XIII”); Cobell v. Norton, 240
F.3d 1081, 1087 (D.C. Cir. 2001) (“Cobell VI”). Legislation
passed in 1934 halted the process of allotting additional land but
indefinitely extended the trust period for the lands that had
already been allotted. Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, 48
Stat. 984 (codified as amended at 25 U.S.C. § 461 et seq.). A
separate statute enacted in 1938 authorized the Secretary of the
Interior to transfer trust funds from the United States Treasury
to banks or to invest them in government (or government-
guaranteed) securities. An Act to Authorize the Deposit and
Investment of Indian Funds, 52 Stat. 1037 (codified as amended
at 25 U.S.C. § 162a). The Department of the Interior estimates
that approximately $13 billion has flowed into IIM accounts
since 1887, and about $12.6 billion has been distributed from
them, leaving an overall balance of $416.2 million as of
December 31, 2000. Declaration of James E. Cason, Associate
Deputy Secretary, U.S. Department of the Interior, in Support of
Motion for Emergency Stay Pending Appeal, at 3 (filed Mar. 9,
2005) (“March 2005 Cason Declaration”).
The legislative enactments that initially made the federal
government a trustee and then extended the trusteeship said little
as to how the government was to fulfill its fiduciary obligations
except to indicate the range of permissible investments. But it
is not disputed that the government failed to be a diligent trustee.
In the two decades leading up to plaintiffs’ initiation of their
lawsuit, report after report excoriated the government’s
management of the IIM trust funds. See Cobell VI, 240 F.3d at
1089 (describing reports by the General Accounting Office, the
Interior Department Inspector General, and the Office of
Management and Budget, among others). Embarrassed by this
record, Congress in 1994 passed legislation reaffirming the
government’s obligation to “account for the daily and annual
4
balance of all funds held in trust by the United States for the
benefit of an Indian tribe or an individual Indian which are
deposited or invested pursuant to the [1938 Act to Authorize the
Deposit and Investment of Indian Funds].” American Indian
Trust Fund Management Reform Act of 1994, Pub. L. No. 103-
412 § 102, 108 Stat. 4239 (codified as amended at 25 U.S.C.
§ 161a-162a & § 4001 et seq.) (“1994 Act”).
Addressing plaintiffs’ claim under the Administrative
Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. §§ 702 & 706, and the Declaratory
Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201, the district court found that the
defendants had unlawfully delayed the congressionally
mandated accounting and remanded the case to the defendants
with instructions to bring themselves into compliance with their
trust duties. Cobell v. Babbitt, 91 F. Supp. 2d 1, 45-48, 57-59
(D.D.C. 1999). We affirmed the district court’s order. Cobell
VI, 240 F.3d at 1106.
Following our affirmance and a 29-day trial, the district
court issued an opinion holding Interior Secretary Gale Norton
and Assistant Secretary of Interior for Indian Affairs Neal
McCaleb in contempt of court. Cobell v. Norton, 226 F. Supp.
2d 1, 161 (D.D.C. 2002). On appeal from the contempt
citations, we overturned each of the five separate specifications
articulated by the district court for charging the individuals with
contempt. Cobell v. Norton, 334 F.3d 1128, 1147-50 (D.C. Cir.
2003) (“Cobell VIII”).
In spite of our decision reversing the district court’s
contempt citations, the court made clear that it considered its
findings of facts undisturbed. Cobell v. Norton, 283 F. Supp. 2d
66, 85 (D.D.C. 2003) (“Cobell X”). Without making any
additional findings of fact on the need for broader injunctive
relief, it initiated another bench trial to evaluate the parties’
competing plans for bringing the defendants into compliance
5
with their fiduciary obligations. See id. At the trial’s
conclusion the court issued a comprehensive and detailed
injunction specifying how the defendants were to go about the
accounting. See id. at 287-95.
The district court’s injunction expanded the scope of the
accounting well beyond that of the plan submitted by the
defendants. Among other differences, the injunction required
coverage of the accounts of deceased beneficiaries and
accounting for transactions prior to 1938, and it completely
precluded the use of statistical sampling. The defendants had
proposed to use such sampling for verification of the accuracy
of the transactions underlying entries for individual accounts.
In an exhibit attached to their motion to stay the injunction
pending appeal, the defendants estimated that the ultimate cost
of complying with the injunction would range from $6-$14
billion, as opposed to the $335 million estimated cost of the
defendants’ plan. Declaration of James E. Cason, Associate
Deputy Secretary, U.S. Department of the Interior, in Support of
Motion for Stay Pending Appeal, at 3-5 (filed Nov. 10, 2003)
(“November 2003 Cason Declaration”). A more recent
submission identified Interior’s current best estimate as $12-$13
billion. March 2005 Cason Declaration, at 1.
On appeal, defendants raised a number of specific
objections to the injunction, as well as a challenge based on a
fiscal year 2004 appropriations bill passed in November 2003.
The bill stated that “nothing in the [1994 Act], or in any other
statute, and no principle of common law, shall be construed to
require the Department of the Interior to commence or continue
historical accounting activities with respect to the Individual
Indian Money Trust” until either Congress passed legislation
amending the 1994 Act to delineate the defendants’ specific
historical accounting obligations or the date December 31, 2004,
had passed. Pub. L. No. 108-108, 117 Stat. 1241 (2003). We
6
did not reach any of the specific objections because this last
challenge trumped the others; we held that by enacting that
provision, Congress provided Interior temporary relief and
bought itself some time to come up with a legislative solution.
Cobell XIII, 392 F.3d at 465-66. As it turned out, Congress
passed no amending legislation before its self-imposed deadline.
On December 8, 2004, however, the President signed into law
an appropriations bill that limited the funds available for
historical-accounting purposes in fiscal year 2005 to $58
million. Pub. L. No. 108-447, 118 Stat. 2809 (2004).
The district court, and not any of the parties to this
litigation, made the next move. On February 23, 2005, without
holding a hearing and without making any modifications to the
prior injunction’s content, the district court reissued its
historical-accounting injunction:
Of course, December 31, 2004 has come and
gone, and no legislative solution to the issues in
this litigation is available or in the offing.
Therefore, the Court is bound, by its findings of
fact and conclusions of law set forth in its
September 25, 2003 Memorandum Opinion, to
reissue without modification the “historical
accounting” provisions of its structural injunction.
Cobell v. Norton, 357 F. Supp. 2d 298, 300 (D.D.C. 2005)
(citation omitted) (“Cobell XIV”).
* * *
We review the district court’s reissuance of the injunction
for abuse of discretion and its underlying legal conclusions de
novo. Katz v. Georgetown University, 246 F.3d 685, 688 (D.C.
Cir. 2001). In Cobell XIII we explained that any injunction
7
issued by the district court must be grounded not only in (1) “the
defendants’ statutory trust duties,” but also in (2) “specific
findings that Interior breached those duties.” 392 F.3d at 465.
We examine first the consistency of the district court’s
injunction with these two requirements, and then turn to the
particular circumstances under which the district court reissued
its injunction.
The most relevant statute for ascertaining the defendants’
duty to provide a historical accounting is the 1994 Act, which
requires the Secretary of Interior to
account for the daily and annual balance of all
funds held in trust by the United States for the
benefit of an Indian tribe or an individual Indian
which are deposited or invested pursuant to the
Act of June 24, 1938.
1994 Act § 102(a), 25 U.S.C. § 4011(a). While the statute
clearly reaffirms the requirement that the Secretary complete an
accounting, its text offers little help in defining the accounting’s
scope.
In the ordinary APA case Interior would clearly enjoy a
high degree of deference to its interpretation of the 1994 Act,
including its ideas on the appropriate trade-off between absolute
accuracy and cost (in time and money). See, e.g., Chevron v.
Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 844,
104 S. Ct. 2778, 2782-83 (1984). The Department embodied its
interpretation in the plan that it submitted to the district court for
fulfilling its fiduciary duties. See Cobell X, 283 F. Supp. 2d at
147-52.
Although plaintiffs’ core claim is under the APA, Cobell VI,
240 F.3d at 1095, this is not an ordinary APA case. In Cobell
8
XIII we explained that the availability of common law trust
precepts complicates the application of conventional deference
principles to Interior’s interpretations of the 1994 Act’s
historical-accounting provision. 392 F.3d at 473. But because
the IIM trust differs from ordinary private trusts along a number
of dimensions, the common law of trusts doesn’t offer a clear
path for resolving statutory ambiguities. Where a trustee has by
misconduct or negligence made a proper accounting more
difficult, the trustee may be charged for the accounting’s cost,
and no precept of common law constrains the cost of such an
accounting, see GEORGE GLEASON BOGERT & GEORGE TAYLOR
BOGERT, THE LAW OF TRUSTS AND TRUSTEES § 963, at 459 n.36
(rev. 2d ed. 1983) (citing Haas v. Wishmier’s Estate, 190 N.E.
548 (Ind. App. 1934)), though obviously bargaining between
trustee and beneficiaries might eliminate some excesses. Absent
such misconduct or negligence, however, the costs of an
accounting would fall on the trust estate itself, which, as we said
before, would automatically give private beneficiaries an
incentive not to urge extravagance. Cobell XIII, 392 F.3d at
473. While Congress in the 1994 Act plainly faulted the United
States’ management, see, e.g., H.R. REP. NO. 103-778, at 9-11
(1994), the Act’s general language doesn’t support the
inherently implausible inference that it intended to order the best
imaginable accounting without regard to cost. Even plaintiffs’
counsel, responding during oral argument to a hypothetical
involving $1 million in accounting expenses for a $1,000 trust,
conceded some role for practicality. Oral Arg. Tr. at 63-64.
Nor does the Act have language in any way appearing to grant
courts the same discretion that an equity court would enjoy in
dealing with a negligent trustee. Congress was, after all,
mandating an activity to be funded entirely at the taxpayers’
expense.
Congress’s post-1994 appropriations fall equally short of
supporting a mandate to indulge in cost-unlimited
9
accounting—in fact, they suggest quite the opposite. Our
analysis in Cobell XIII of the fiscal year 2004 appropriations
bill, Pub. L. No. 108-108, 117 Stat. 1241 (2003), quoted one
Senator’s conclusion that completing the judicially ordered
accounting would be “nuts.” 392 F.3d at 466. More
importantly, Congress later limited Interior’s annual
expenditures for historical accounting to $58 million for two
years in a row. See Pub. L. No. 108-447, 118 Stat. 2809 (2004)
(appropriating funds for fiscal year 2005 for the operation of
trust programs for Indians, “of which not to exceed $58,000,000
shall be available for historical accounting”); Pub. L. No. 109-
54, 119 Stat. 499 (2005) (appropriating such funds for fiscal
year 2006, “of which not to exceed $58,000,000 from this or any
other Act, shall be available for historical accounting”).
The significance of appropriations bills is of course limited
and the associated legislative history even more so. First, by
their own terms such bills are controlling only for a limited
period except to the extent that they explicitly provide
otherwise. Second, post-enactment legislative history is not
only oxymoronic but inherently entitled to little weight. See
United States ex rel. Long v. SBC Business & Technical
Institute, Inc., 173 F.3d 870, 878-79 (D.C. Cir. 1999).
Nonetheless, the appropriations can’t be completely
disregarded.1 They unequivocally control what may be spent on
1
Plaintiffs erroneously cite Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma v.
Leavitt, 125 S. Ct. 1172 (2005), for the proposition that “Congress’s
failure to appropriate sufficient funds does not relieve government
of its obligations.” Br. for Appellees 17 n.21. Cherokee Nation
concerned government contracts with Indian tribes under the Indian
Self-Determination and Education Act. The Court ruled that the
government was legally bound to honor those contracts where
Congress had, without any relevant statutory restriction,
appropriated amounts ample to cover the government’s contractual
obligations.
10
historical-accounting activities during the period of their
applicability. If the appropriations pattern should continue and
the government’s current $12-$13 billion estimate proves
correct, an accounting of the sort ordered by the district court
would not be finished for about two hundred years, generations
beyond the lifetimes of all now living beneficiaries. Plaintiffs
themselves recognize an impact from the appropriations, if only
indirectly, by arguing that the defendants’ “recognition” of the
inadequacy of the annual appropriations “further demonstrates
that the historical-accounting provisions of the structural
injunction are impossible of compliance.” Plaintiffs’ 28(j)
Letter, Sept. 7, 2005.
Thus neither congressional language nor common law trust
principles (once translated to this context) establish a definitive
balance between exactitude and cost. This being so, the district
court owed substantial deference to Interior’s plan. The choices
at issue required both subject-matter expertise and judgment
about the allocation of scarce resources, classic reasons for
deference to administrators. See, e.g., Heckler v. Chaney, 470
U.S. 821, 831-32, 105 S. Ct. 1649, 1655-56 (1985); Steel
Manufacturers Ass’n v. EPA, 27 F.3d 642, 648 (D.C. Cir. 1994);
Methodist Hospital v. Shalala, 38 F.3d 1225, 1230, 1233 (D.C.
Cir. 1994). Here the district court invoked the common law of
trusts and quite bluntly treated the character of the accounting as
its domain. It thus erroneously displaced Interior as the actor
with primary responsibility for “work[ing] out compliance with
the broad statutory mandate.” Norton v. Southern Utah
Wilderness Alliance, 124 S. Ct. 2373, 2381 (2004).
We now turn to the second requirement articulated in
Cobell XIII—that the injunction be grounded in specific findings
that Interior breached its statutory trust duties. As noted earlier,
the district court explicitly relied on its earlier contempt findings
to justify a remedy more intensive than its initial remand to the
11
defendants, see Cobell X, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 85, even though
this court had in the meantime ruled that the record was
inadequate to support the contempt citations. Our decision
reversing the contempt citations rested in part on the timing of
the misconduct found by the district court—it occurred prior to
either McCaleb’s or Norton’s assumption of responsibility. This
point of course does not exonerate the Department of the Interior
as an institution. But we also relied on the court’s disregard of
Interior’s affirmative accomplishments on Norton’s watch,
Cobell VIII, 334 F.3d at 1148, and on the apparently
uncontradicted truth of certain statements Norton made
regarding efforts to improve computer security (which the
district court had mistakenly thought contradicted), id. at 1149-
50. Thus a return to the record was plainly in order before the
court could rely carte blanche on the factual findings underlying
its contempt citations.
Further, even if the prior findings had been fully valid and
had supported issuance of the injunction in September 2003,
they would not necessarily have supported its reissuance 17
months later in February 2005. During that 17-month period
defendants continued to submit status reports to the district court
documenting their progress in completing the historical
accounting and otherwise fulfilling their fiduciary duties. See,
e.g., Department of the Interior, Status Report to the Court
Number Twenty-One, Docket No. 2950 (filed May 2, 2005).
For the district court to rely on the old record in the face of our
previous decision and of subsequent developments was error.
Thus reissuance of the injunction was not properly
grounded in either fact or law. In a sense these deficiencies
aren’t surprising in light of the circumstances. Because the
district court reissued the injunction sua sponte without holding
a hearing or even soliciting briefs from the parties, it failed to
recognize that no party favored the injunction as now written.
12
What is more, the district court completely disregarded
relevant information about the costs of its injunction. While the
district court was unaware of just how much compliance would
cost when it initially issued the injunction in September 2003,
less than two months later the government submitted a cost
estimate running between $6 billion and $14 billion. November
2003 Cason Declaration, at 5. Moreover, this court’s opinion in
Cobell XIII quoted the congressional conference committee
report that estimated the cost of compliance at somewhere
between $6 billion and $12 billion. 392 F.3d at 466. Most
recently, the government stated its best estimate as $12-$13
billion. March 2005 Cason Declaration, at 1. With the benefit
of a hearing or at least briefing, the district court could have
learned more about the sources and validity of these estimates
and used the results to guide it in any contemplated supersession
of Interior’s judgment.
To recap: the district court reissued an injunction dictating
how Interior must fulfill its obligation to complete an accounting
for the IIM trust fund in the absence of any pending request for
reissuance by any party and on the ill-founded assumption that
the 1994 Act gave it the freedom of a private-law chancellor to
exercise its discretion. Instead of deferring to Interior’s
judgment about how best to execute the historical accounting,
the district court set out, in great detail, how Interior must go
about the job. The resulting modifications of Interior’s plan
evidently caused the cost of complying with the injunction to
rise by more than an order of magnitude, from $335 million over
five years to more than $10 billion. Under these circumstances,
the district court abused its discretion by reissuing the
injunction. We reach this conclusion without prejudice to
plaintiffs’ argument on appeal that execution of the reissued
injunction is impossible, and, of course, without prejudice to
future claims, such as beneficiaries’ challenges to the
correctness of specific account balances.
13
* * *
Although it is unnecessary at this stage to review all of the
defendants’ specific objections to the injunction, which if to be
reissued at all will require drastic modification, one central
point, the provision barring statistical sampling, see Cobell XIV,
357 F. Supp. 2d at 304, deserves mention.
As the district court pointed out, “a proper accounting does
not consist merely of a list of transactions; rather, the trustee
must provide supporting documentation that is adequate to
demonstrate that each listed transaction actually took place.”
Cobell X, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 183-84. This step is labeled
“verification”; its purpose is to correct errors that may have
arisen when transactions, such as receipts of lease rentals, were
posted to individual accounts. Interior proposed to verify all
transactions with stated values above $5,000. For transactions
valued at less than $5,000 in the “land-based” accounts,2 Interior
proposed to match only a statistically representative sample of
transactions to their supporting documentation. See Department
of the Interior, Historical Accounting Plan for Individual Indian
Money Accounts, Docket No. 1705 (filed Jan. 6, 2003)
(“Interior Plan”); Cobell X, 283 F. Supp. 2d at 149-50, 187. For
the initial testing the plan was to study about 10% of the roughly
800,000 transactions with values between $500 and $5,000 and
about 0.3% of the roughly 25 million transactions under $500.
Interior Plan, at III-12. Interior’s plan was to proceed in this
2
The “land-based” accounts hold revenue from land allotted
between 1887 and 1934. Interior would not use sampling to verify
transactions in the remaining types, which include special-deposit
accounts (those holding funds that could not be immediately
credited to the proper owner), judgment accounts (those holding
funds from tribal distributions of litigation settlements), and per
capita accounts (those holding distributions from tribal revenues).
14
manner until it was 99% confident that statements of account
reached some threshold level of accuracy (as yet not fully
specified).3 Id. at III-12 to 13.
In rejecting the defendants’ plan to rely on statistical
sampling, the district court acknowledged the extra burden in
time and money but saw that singular burden as outweighed
simply by the beneficiaries’ preferences:
[W]eighing against these factors [of extra
monetary and time costs] is the fact that the
beneficiaries themselves have overwhelmingly
rejected the use of statistical sampling in the
performance of Interior’s historical accounting,
even when confronted with the fact that such a
rejection would substantially increase the time
necessary to complete the accounting.
3
Interior’s plans were not yet fully formalized when submitted
to the district court. Interior will start by hypothesizing an error rate
of 1% or less; if sample results show that the true error rate is
greater, it may target and correct systematic errors, revise its initial
hypothesis, or select additional samples. Interior Plan, at III-12, D-
2 to 3. The absence of a precise rule for testing the error rate may
account for potentially conflicting statements interpreting the results
of Interior’s proposed analysis. Compare id. at III-13 (statistical
analyses “will allow Interior to state, for each stratum, that it is 99
percent confident that the Historical Statements of Account are 99
percent accurate) with id. at D-2 (sample notice to beneficiary
stating that “[w]ith 99 percent confidence, we can say that more
than 99 percent of the transactions are accurate”) (emphasis added).
Interior has also indicated that it plans to employ a set of de
minimis rules in assessing accuracy, but has not yet developed
them. See id. at III-12 n.22. These rules are significant because
they will affect Interior’s error rate calculations.
15
Cobell X, 283 F. Supp. 2d. at 196. The court also reasoned that
“no evidence has been presented to the court that statistical
sampling has ever been considered to be an appropriate method
to use in conducting an accounting.” See id. at 188 (emphasis
omitted).
Under the circumstances presented here, neither
beneficiaries’ preferences nor the absence of precedent, nor the
combination, could properly be deemed controlling. Where
trade-offs are necessary because it is costly to increase accuracy,
the preference of a party that will bear none of the monetary
costs can’t sweep the cost issue off the table. And in the
situation here, where common law precedents don’t map directly
onto the context, the absence of precedent tells us little.
Interior’s decision to use statistical sampling seems especially
reasonable in light of information submitted to the district court
after it issued the injunction: for the subset of transactions
valued at less than $500, Interior estimated that the average cost
of accounting, per transaction, would exceed the average value
of the transactions. November 2003 Cason Declaration, at 4.
Because the district court’s ban on statistical sampling
reflected no deference to defendants’ expertise or to their
judgment regarding the allocation of scarce resources, the
district court abused its discretion by including that provision in
the injunction. The other specific challenges to the injunction
raised by defendants should be resolved (if necessary) by the
district court under the same principles that we have applied
here. In this class action under the APA the court may to a
degree use the common law of trusts as a filler of gaps left by
the statute, but in doing so it may not assume a fictional plaintiff
class of trust beneficiaries completely and uniformly free of bars
or limitations that the common law may provide.
16
* * *
Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s order reissuing
the historical-accounting injunction.
So ordered.