Attorney for plaintiffs: Thomas E. Meacham,
Attorney for defendant Knikatu, Inc.: Jerome Juday,
Attorney for defendant Tyonek Native Corporation: David S. Case, Landye Bennett Blumstein,
O
R D E R
of
Summary Judgment
I. INTRODUCTION
At Docket No. 15, Defendants Knikatnu, Inc. (“Knikatnu”) and Tyonek Native Corporation (“Tyonek”) moved for summary judgment against Plaintiffs Polly Creek Estate Trust, Karen L. Daugherty as Trustee of the Estate of Elaine Swiss, Tyler Swiss, Jack Swiss, and Karen Daugherty (“Plaintiffs”). Defendants request a ruling from this Court that they are not obligated under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (“ANCSA”) to transfer to the Polly Creek Estate Trust a fee interest in an airstrip located near Polly Creek, Alaska, on the west side of the Cook Inlet. The motion has been fully briefed and is ripe for decision. For the reasons outlined below, Defendants’ Motion is GRANTED.
II. BACKGROUND
The Polly Creek Estate Trust (“the Trust”) and the Estate of Elaine Swiss are the successors in interest to the assets of John Swiss, who passed away in 2007. The remaining Plaintiffs are the children of John and Elaine Swiss.
John Swiss first came to
Not long after establishing his homestead in the
area, Swiss cleared out a rudimentary airstrip on federal property near the
homestead. On March 1, 1964, the Bureau
of Land Management (BLM) and Swiss entered into a 20-year public airport lease
for 2.5 acres of land at the mouth of
By 1986, the land on which the airstrip sits had been claimed from the federal government by the Cook Inlet Region, Inc. (“CIRI”), an Alaska Native corporation, pursuant to the provisions of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, 43 U.S.C.A. § 1613.2 In 1987, CIRI transferred the land to Defendants Knikatnu, Inc. and Tyonek, Inc, in separate parcels, such that the Defendants together own the airstrip site.3
Swiss filed successive applications with Defendants in 1988, 1990, and again in 2000 to have the airstrip land transferred to him under the provisions of 43 U.S.C. § 1613(c)(1).4 In a letter dated December 19, 2000, counsel for Swiss described the land Swiss sought from Defendant Tyonek as a “portion of landing strip near homesite[,]” and listed Swiss’ uses of the property as “guiding, air taxi, commercial and subsistence fishing.”5 All of Swiss’ applications were rejected.
Swiss passed away in 2007. On March 13, 2008, Defendant Tyonek filed a proposed map of boundaries with the Bureau of Land Management and the BLM approved the map on March 17, 2009.6 Plaintiffs filed this suit in Alaska Superior Court on March 12, 2009, within the statute of limitations for an action under § 1613(c)(1). Plaintiffs’ Complaint asks this Court to enter an “injunction requiring [Defendants] to convey to the Trust title in fee to the Polly Creek airstrip, and a permanent easement as to applicable approach clear zones or safety zones for the airstrip[.]”7
III. LEGAL STANDARD
Summary judgment is appropriate if, when viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, there are no genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment in its favor as a matter of law.8 The moving party bears the initial burden of proof as to each material fact upon which it has the burden of persuasion at trial.9 This requires the moving party to establish, beyond controversy, every essential element of its claim or defense.10 “When the party moving for summary judgment would bear the burden of proof at trial, it must come forward with evidence which would entitle it to a directed verdict if the same evidence were to be uncontroverted at trial. In such a case, the moving party has the initial burden of establishing the absence of a genuine issue of fact on each issue material to its case.”11
Once the moving party has met its burden, the nonmoving party must demonstrate that a genuine issue of material fact exists by presenting evidence indicating that certain facts are so disputed that a fact-finder must resolve the dispute at trial.12 The court must view this evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, must not assess its credibility, and must draw all justifiable inferences from it in favor of the nonmoving party.13
Plaintiffs’ counsel acknowledged at oral argument that there was no genuine issue of material fact. At this stage of the litigation, the Court need only determine whether Defendants are entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law.
IV. DISCUSSION
In their Complaint, Plaintiffs asked this Court to
order Defendants to convey the airstrip land to the Trust because they were
entitled to such a transfer under 43 U.S.C. § 1613(c)(1). Section 1613 specifies
procedures by which an Alaska Native corporation may obtain title to Alaskan
land to which it is entitled under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act,
(ANCSA). Once the Native Corporation has
obtained land under ANCSA, subsection (c)(1) provides that an
individual who
occupied those lands as of December 18, 1971, may receive, from the Native
corporation, title to the lands they used at that time. This conveyance does not require the payment
of consideration.14 The right to
reconveyance is limited, however, to four types of occupancy. The land to which the occupant seeks title
must have been used, as of December 1971, “as a primary place of residence, or
as a primary place of business, or as a subsistence campsite, or as
headquarters for reindeer husbandry[.]”15
Plaintiffs rest their subsection (c)(1) claims on the assertion that
the
airstrip “provides access to the plaintiffs’ primary place of business and
subsistence site at
Defendants argue in their motion that the airstrip land does not fit any of the purposes stated in § 1613(c)(1). Defendants further argue that the airstrip cannot fall within the reach of subsection (c)(1) because Congress specifically addressed the disposition of “airport sites” in § 1613(c)(4). Plaintiffs oppose the motion, arguing that “[w]ithout a right of access to the airstrip sought in John Swiss’s §14(c)(1) application, plaintiffs will be unable to safely and conveniently gain access to, and use, their patented lands as the primary place of their commercial fishing business and their subsistence campsite[.]”17
Although the facts are not generally in dispute,
there remains some factual question as to which of John Swiss’ many business
activities was most prevalent at his
The Court need not delve into that factual dispute
because, regardless of what business Swiss conducted his
Plaintiffs’ litigation position is that subsection
(c)(1) requires the transfer of an airstrip if that airstrip is necessary for
access to land occupied for a purpose listed in subsection (c)(1). But Plaintiffs have failed to cite any
authority which supports this assertion.
Plaintiffs cite to Hakala v. Atxam
Corp., 753 P.2d 1144 (
According to Plaintiffs, Hakala stands for the proposition that, if an airstrip “were necessary for the applicant’s physical access to the 14(c)(1) site, and this improvement lay within the ‘curtilage’ as defined and described in Hakala[,] it would not be precluded from conveyance[.]”23 The problem with this reading of Hakala is that the airstrip in that case was not held to be part of the cabin’s “curtilage,” despite being “near” to the plaintiff’s cabin.24 Rather, the plaintiff’s access to airstrip was premised on the public easement which was included in the federal land grant, and could have been used by anyone.25 Plaintiffs argue that if the airstrip in Hakala had not already been subject to a public easement, the Alaska Supreme Court would have considered it to be part of the cabin’s “curtilage” because “without a right of access to the nearby, existing bush airstrip,” a § 1613(c)(1) reconveyance of the cabin and surrounding property “would be worthless, and meaningless.”26 But as Defendants note, the Hakala court specifically rejected the notion that “curtilage” consists of “‘access rights to the entire area and reconveyance of the acreage actually utilized by [the plaintiff] in conjunction with’” his business operations.27 Rather, the Hakala court chose to “apply the traditional definition of curtilage,” which is not nearly expansive enough to include a nearby airstrip such as that used by Swiss.28
Plaintiffs would have the Court read § 1613(c)(1) as requiring Native corporations to convey not only the types of property named in the statute, but also any land necessary for aerial access to that property. This requirement is nowhere to be found in the language of the statute itself. In interpreting a statute, the Court must first look at its plain language.29 The Supreme Court has held that “‘[i[f a literal construction of the words of a statute be absurd, the act must be so construed as to avoid the absurdity.’”30 The Court could only read § 1613 in the manner urged by Plaintiffs if any other reading would be absurd.
The statute as written does not lead to absurd results, primarily because Congress has specifically addressed the disposition of airports on Native land in § 1613(c)(4), which reads as follows:
[T]he Village Corporation shall convey to the Federal Government, State, or to the appropriate Municipal Corporation, title to the surface estate for airport sites, airway beacons, and other navigation aids as such existed on December 18, 1971, together with such additional acreage and/or easements as are necessary to provide related governmental services and to insure safe approaches to airport runways as such airport sites, runways, and other facilities existed as of December 18,1971[.]31
Defendants argue that this provision shows that Congress provided only one possible treatment for “public airports” such as the airstrip in this case, which is to transfer them to a governmental body.32 The Court agrees. A basic principle of statutory construction is that the specific prevails over the general.33 Congress specifically addressed the disposition of “airports” in subsection (c)(4). To the extent that much of the Alaskan bush is accessible only through air service, Congress has provided a remedy to ensure that owners of § 1613(c)(1) allotments have a way to reach their property. Thus, the Court cannot read an additional, unspoken, remedy into the provisions of subsection (c)(1).
Plaintiffs argue that, because subsection (c)(4) mentions “airway beacons, and other navigation aids,” then “the ‘existing airport sites’ reference in Section 14(c)(4) is not to rudimentary, minimally-cleared bush ‘airstrips,’ but instead to the typical constructed and improved public airport with installed beacons, navigation aids, related services, and designated safe approach zones.”34 First of all, the Court notes that subsection (c)(4) does not refer to “related services” provided by the airport. It refers to easements which are “necessary to provide related governmental services”.35 Thus, it makes no sense for Plaintiffs to claim that subsection (c)(4) only covers an “improved public airport with . . . related services,” as if only full-service airports were included. The statute says no such thing. Likewise, there is no reference in the statute to “designated safe approach zones.”
In any event, the references in subsection (c)(4)
to “airway beacons” and “other navigational aids” are terms of inclusion, not
exclusion. By their own terms, they
merely ensure that any subsection (c)(4) transfer of an airport include the
land on which the appurtenant navigational aids sit. Certainly the airstrip is not what most
people imagine when they think of an “airport.”
However, it was this very airstrip that John Swiss once leased on the express
condition that he “establish a public airport.”36
There are many such “airports” in
The Court notes in passing that it cannot be said
that Plaintiffs’ ownership of the
Indeed, Plaintiffs’ counsel indicated at oral argument that Plaintiffs have continued to use the airstrip, although they have been “verbally admonished” not to do so by certain employees of Defendants. In the Court’s view, there is no reason why the parties cannot arrive at some reasonable accommodation which would allow Plaintiffs to use the airstrip with Defendants’ permission.
As a further aside, Plaintiffs’ counsel was quite correct in asserting that Knikatnu’s laches argument, asserted for the first time in its reply brief, should not be entertained because it was not raised in the original motion. The Court will not rule upon the laches issue, which is unrelated to Defendants’ other arguments for summary judgment.
The Ninth Circuit has held that “any ambiguity in a statute must be interpreted liberally in favor of the Native tribes.”38 Given the plain language of § 1613, the Court will not read into the statute more rights for a subsection (c)(1) applicant than those expressly provided by Congress. The airstrip in this case has never been used for any of the purposes for which Congress has authorized conveyance under 43 U.S.C. § 1613(c)(1).
V. CONCLUSION
The airstrip near Plaintiffs’
ENTERED at
/s/ TIMOTHY BURGESS
United States District Judge
Footnote 1-- Dkt. 16, Ex.
5 at 1. ![]()
Footnote 2 -- Dkt. 16,
Ex. 11. ![]()
Footnote 3 -- Dkt. 16,
Ex. 9; ![]()
Footnote 4 -- Dkt. 16 at
9. ![]()
Footnote 5 -- Dkt. 16,
Ex. 2 at 3.![]()
Footnote 6 -- Dkt. 1, Ex.
1 at 7. ![]()
Footnote 7 -- Dkt. 1, Ex.
1 at 10. ![]()
Footnote 8 -- Fed.
R. Civ. P. 56 (c). ![]()
Footnote 9 -- Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 ![]()
Footnote 10 -- S. Calif. Gas Co. v. City of ![]()
Footnote 11 -- C.A.R. Transp. Brokerage Co., Inc. v. Darden
Rest., Inc.,213 F.3d 474, 480 (9th Cir. 2000); Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574,
586 (1986). ![]()
Footnote 12 -- Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 ![]()
Footnote 13 -- ![]()
Footnote 14 -- 43 U.S.C.
§ 1613(c)(1).![]()
Footnote 15 -- 43 U.S.C.
§ 1613(c)(1).![]()
Footnote 16 -- Dkt. 1,
Ex. 1 at 9.![]()
Footnote 17 -- Dkt. 28
at 15. ![]()
Footnote 20 – Dkt. 1, Ex. 1 at 6.![]()
Footnote 23 – Dkt. 28 at
12-13. ![]()
Footnote 27 – Hakala at 1149, n. 8. ![]()
Footnote 28 – Black’s Law
Dictionary defines “curtilage” as “The land or yard adjoining a house, usu.
within an enclosure.” Black's Law Dictionary (8th ed.
2004). ![]()
Footnote 29 – U.S. v. Neal, 976 F.2d 601, 602 (9th Cir. 1992) (citing United States v. Van Winrow, 951 F.2d
1069, 1072 (9th Cir.1991)(per curiam)). ![]()
Footnote 30 – In re Southwest Aircraft Services, Inc., 831 F.2d 848, 852(9th Cir.
1987) (quoting Church of the Holy Trinity
v. United States, 143 ![]()
Footnote 31-- 43 U.S.C. § 1613(c)(4) ![]()
Footnote 33 – Bonneville Power Admin. v.
F.E.R.C., 422 F.3d 908, 916 (9th.Cir. 2005). ![]()
Footnote 35 – 43 U.S.C. §
16139(c)(4). ![]()
Footnote 36 – Dkt. 16, Ex. 5 at 1.
![]()
Footnote 38 – Ketchikan v. Cape Fox, 85 F.3d 1381, 1385 (9th Cir. 1996);citing Montana v. Blackfeet Tribe of Indians,
471 ![]()
Page last revised September 14, 2010

Created and maintained by Bob Hume
© 2010 Robert H. Hume, Jr. and Landye Bennett Blumstein LLP