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[1] SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
[2] No. 8 Orig.
[3] 2000.SCT.0042136
[4] June 19, 2000
[5] As amended October 10, 2000.
[6] STATE OF ARIZONA, COMPLAINANT
v.
STATE OF CALIFORNIA ET AL.
[7] SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
[8] OCTOBER TERM, 1999
[9] ARIZONA v. CALIFORNIA
[10] NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as
is being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.The
syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been prepared
by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.See United States
v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
[11] SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
[12] ARIZONA v. CALIFORNIA
[13] on exceptions to report of special master
[14] No. 8, Orig. Argued April 25, 2000 -- Decided June 19, 2000
[15] This litigation began in 1952 when Arizona invoked this Court's original
jurisdiction to settle a dispute with California over the extent of each State's
right to use water from the Colorado River system. The United States intervened,
seeking water rights on behalf of, among others, five Indian reservations, including
the Fort Yuma (Quechan) Indian Reservation, the Colorado River Indian Reservation,
and the Fort Mojave Indian Reservation. The first round of the litigation culminated
in Arizona v. California, 373 U. S. 546 (Arizona I), in which the Court held
that the United States had reserved water rights for the five reservations,
id., at 565, 599-601; that those rights must be considered present perfected
rights and given priority because they were effective as of the time each reservation
was created, id., at 600; and that those rights should be based on the amount
of each reservation's practicably irrigable acreage as determined by the Special
Master, ibid. In its 1964 decree, the Court specified the quantities and priorities
of the water entitlements for the parties and the Tribes, Arizona v. California,
376 U. S. 340, but held that the water rights for the Fort Mojave and Colorado
River Reservations would be subject to appropriate adjustment by future agreement
or decree in the event the respective reservations' disputed boundaries were
finally determined, id., at 345. The Court's 1979 supplemental decree again
deferred resolution of reservation boundary disputes and allied water rights
claims. Arizona v. California, 439 U. S. 419, 421 (per curiam). In Arizona v.
California, 460 U. S. 605 (Arizona II), the Court concluded, among other things,
that various administrative actions taken by the Secretary of the Interior,
including his 1978 order recognizing the entitlement of the Quechan Tribe (Tribe)
to the disputed boundary lands of the Fort Yuma Reservation did not constitute
final determinations of reservation boundaries for purposes of the 1964 decree.
Id., at 636-638. The Court also held in Arizona II that certain lands within
undisputed reservation boundaries, for which the United States had not sought
water rights in Arizona I -- the so-called "omitted lands" -- were
not entitled to water under res judicata principles. Id., at 626. The Court's
1984 supplemental decree again declared that water rights for all five reservations
would be subject to appropriate adjustments if the reservations' boundaries
were finally determined. Arizona v. California, 466 U. S. 144, 145. In 1987,
the Ninth Circuit dismissed, on grounds of the United States' sovereign immunity,
a suit by California state agencies that could have finally determined the reservations'
boundaries. This Court affirmed the Ninth Circuit's judgment by an equally divided
vote.
[16] The present phase of the litigation concerns claims by the Tribe and the
United States on the Tribe's behalf for increased water rights for the Fort
Yuma Reservation. These claims rest on the contention that the Fort Yuma Reservation
encompasses some 25,000 acres of disputed boundary lands not attributed to that
reservation in earlier stages of the litigation. The land in question was purportedly
ceded to the United States under an 1893 Agreement with the Tribe. In 1936,
the Department of the Interior's Solicitor Margold issued an opinion stating
that, under the 1893 Agreement, the Tribe had unconditionally ceded the lands.
The Margold Opinion remained the Federal Government's position for 42 years.
In 1946, Congress enacted the Indian Claims Commission Act, establishing a tribunal
with power to decide tribes' claims against the Government. The Tribe brought
before the Commission an action, which has come to be known as Docket No. 320,
challenging the 1893 Agreement on two mutually exclusive grounds: (1) that it
was void, in which case the United States owed the Tribe damages essentially
for trespass, and (2) that it constituted an uncompensated taking of tribal
lands. In 1976, the Commission transferred Docket No. 320 to the Court of Claims.
In the meantime, the Tribe asked the Interior Department to reconsider the Margold
Opinion. Ultimately, in a 1978 Secretarial Order, the Department changed its
position and confirmed the Tribe's entitlement to most of the disputed lands.
A few months after this Court decided in Arizona II that the 1978 Secretarial
Order did not constitute a final determination of reservation boundaries, the
United States and the Tribe entered into a settlement of Docket No. 320, which
the Court of Claims approved and entered as its final judgment. Under the settlement,
the United States agreed to pay the Tribe $15 million in full satisfaction of
the Tribe's Docket No. 320 claims, and the Tribe agreed that it would not further
assert those claims against the Government. In 1989, this Court granted the
motion of Arizona, California, and two municipal water districts (State parties)
to reopen the 1964 decree to determine whether the Fort Yuma, Colorado River,
and Fort Mojave Reservations were entitled to claim additional boundary lands
and, if so, additional water rights. The State parties assert here that the
Fort Yuma claims of the Tribe and the United States are precluded by Arizona
I and by the Claims Court consent judgment in Docket No. 320. The Special Master
has prepared a report recommending that the Court reject the first ground for
preclusion but accept the second. The State parties have filed exceptions to
the Special Master's first recommendation, and the United States and the Tribe
have filed exceptions to the second. The Master has also recommended approval
of the parties' proposed settlements of claims for additional water for the
Fort Mojave and Colorado River Reservations, and has submitted a proposed supplemental
decree to effectuate the parties' accords.
[17] Held:
[18] 1. In view of the State parties' failure to raise the preclusion argument
earlier in the litigation, despite ample opportunity and cause to do so, the
claims of the United States and the Tribe to increased water rights for the
disputed boundary lands of the Fort Yuma Reservation are not foreclosed by Arizona
I. According to the State parties, those claims are precluded by the finality
rationale this Court employed in dismissing the "omitted lands" claims
in Arizona II, 460 U. S., at 620-621, 626-627, because the United States could
have raised the Fort Yuma Reservation boundary lands claims in Arizona I, but
deliberately decided not to do so. In rejecting this argument, the Special Master
pointed out that the Government did not assert such claims in Arizona I because,
at that time, it was bound to follow the Margold Opinion, under which the Tribe
had no claim to the boundary lands. The Master concluded that the 1978 Secretarial
Order, which overruled the Margold Opinion and recognized the Tribe's beneficial
ownership of the boundary lands, was a circumstance not known in 1964, one that
warranted an exception to the application of res judicata doctrine. In so concluding,
the Special Master relied on an improper ground: The 1978 Secretarial Order
does not qualify as a previously unknown circumstance that can overcome otherwise
applicable preclusion principles. That order did not change the underlying facts
in dispute; it simply embodied one party's changed view of the import of unchanged
facts. However, the Court agrees with the United States and the Tribe that the
State parties' preclusion defense is inadmissible. The State parties did not
raise the defense in 1978 in response to the United States' motion for a supplemental
decree granting additional water rights for the Fort Yuma Reservation or in
1982 when Arizona II was briefed and argued. Unaccountably, the State parties
first raised their res judicata plea in 1989, when they initiated the current
round of proceedings. While preclusion rules are not strictly applicable in
the context of a single ongoing original action, the principles upon which they
rest should inform the Court's decision. Arizona II, 460 U. S., at 619. Those
principles rank res judicata an affirmative defense ordinarily lost if not timely
raised. See Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 8(c). The Court disapproves the notion that
a party may wake up and effectively raise a defense years after the first opportunity
to raise it so long as the party was (though no fault of anyone else) in the
dark until its late awakening. Nothing in Arizona II supports the State parties'
assertion that the Court expressly recognized the possibility that future Fort
Yuma boundary lands claims might be precluded. 460 U. S., at 638, distinguished.
Of large significance, this Court's 1979 and 1984 supplemental decrees anticipated
that the disputed boundary issues for all five reservations, including Fort
Yuma, would be "finally determined" in some forum, not by preclusion
but on the merits. The State parties themselves stipulated to the terms of the
1979 supplemental decree and appear to have litigated the Arizona II proceedings
on the understanding that the boundary disputes should be resolved on the merits,
see, e.g., 460 U. S., at 634. Finally, the Court rejects the State parties'
argument that this Court should now raise the preclusion question sua sponte.
The special circumstances in which such judicial initiative might be appropriate
are not present here. See United States v. Sioux Nation, 448 U. S. 371, 432
(Rehnquist, J., dissenting). Pp. 11-17.
[19] 2. The claims of the United States and the Tribe to increased water rights
for the disputed boundary lands of the Fort Yuma Reservation are not precluded
by the consent judgment in Docket No. 320. The Special Master agreed with the
State parties' assertion to the contrary. He concluded that, because the settlement
extinguished the Tribe's claim to title in the disputed lands, the United States
and the Tribe cannot seek additional water rights based on the Tribe's purported
beneficial ownership of those lands. Under standard preclusion doctrine, the
Master's recommendation cannot be sustained. As between the Tribe and the United
States, the settlement indeed had, and was intended to have, claim-preclusive
effect. But settlements ordinarily lack issue-preclusive effect. This differentiation
is grounded in basic res judicata doctrine. The general rule is that issue preclusion
attaches only when an issue is actually litigated and determined by a valid
and final judgment. See United States v. International Building Co., 345 U.
S. 502, 505-506. The State parties assert that common-law principles of issue
preclusion do not apply in the special context of Indian land claims. They maintain
that the Indian Claims Commission Act created a special regime of statutory
preclusion. This Court need not decide whether some consent judgments in that
distinctive context might bar a tribe from asserting title even in discrete
litigation against third parties, for the 1983 settlement of Docket No. 320
plainly could not qualify as such a judgment. Not only was the issue of ownership
of the disputed boundary lands not actually litigated and decided in Docket
No. 320, but, most notably, the Tribe proceeded on alternative and mutually
exclusive theories of recovery, taking and trespass. The consent judgment embraced
all of the Tribe's claims with no election by the Tribe of one theory over the
other. The Court need not accept the United States' invitation to look behind
the consent judgment at presettlement stipulations and memoranda purportedly
demonstrating that the judgment was grounded on the parties' shared view, after
the 1978 Secretarial Order, that the disputed lands belong to the Tribe. Because
the settlement was ambiguous as between mutually exclusive theories of recovery,
the consent judgment is too opaque to serve as a foundation for issue preclusion.
Pp. 17-22.
[20] 3. The Court accepts the Special Master's recommendations and approves
the parties' proposed settlements of the disputes respecting additional water
for the Fort Mojave and Colorado River Reservations. Pp. 22-23.
[21] Exception of State parties overruled; Exceptions of United States and Quechan
Tribe sustained; Special Master's recommendations to approve parties' proposed
settlements respecting Fort Mojave and Colorado River Reservations are adopted,
and parties are directed to submit any objections they may have to Special Master's
proposed supplemental decree; Outstanding water rights claims associated with
disputed Fort Yuma Reservation boundary lands remanded.
[22] Ginsburg, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Stevens, Scalia,
Kennedy, Souter, and Breyer, JJ., joined. Rehnquist, C. J., filed an opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which O'Connor and Thomas, JJ.,
joined.
[23] Jeffrey P. Minear argued the cause for the United States. With him on the
brief were Solicitor General Waxman, Assistant Attorney General Schiffer, and
Deputy Solicitor General Kneedler.
[24] Mason D. Morisset argued the cause for defendant Quechan Indian Tribe.
With him on the briefs was K. Allison McGaw.
[25] Jerome C. Muys argued the cause for the state parties. With him on the
brief were Bill Lockyer, Attorney General of California, Richard M. Frank, Chief
Assistant Attorney General, Mary B. Hackenbracht, Assistant Attorney General,
Douglas B. Noble, Deputy Attorney General, Michael Pearce, Steven B. Abbott,
and Karen L. Tachiki.
[26] John M. Lindskog filed a brief for the West Bank Homeowners Association
as amicus curiae.
[27] ORDERLIST
[28] SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
[29] bill of complaint
[30] Justice Ginsburg delivered the opinion of the Court.
[31] In the latest chapter of this long-litigated original-jurisdiction case,
the Quechan Tribe (Tribe) and the United States on the Tribe's behalf assert
claims for increased rights to water from the Colorado River. These claims are
based on the contention that the Fort Yuma (Quechan) Indian Reservation encompasses
some 25,000 acres of disputed boundary lands not attributed to that reservation
in earlier stages of the litigation. In this decision, we resolve a threshold
question regarding these claims to additional water rights: Are the claims precluded
by this Court's prior decision in Arizona v. California, 373 U. S. 546 (1963)
(Arizona I), or by a consent judgment entered by the United States Claims Court
in 1983? The Special Master has prepared a report recommending that the Court
reject the first ground for preclusion but accept the second. We reject both
grounds for preclusion and remand the case to the Special Master for consideration
of the claims for additional water rights appurtenant to the disputed boundary
lands.
[32] I.
[33] This litigation began in 1952 when Arizona invoked our original jurisdiction
to settle a dispute with California over the extent of each State's right to
use water from the Colorado River system. Nevada intervened, seeking a determination
of its water rights, and Utah and New Mexico were joined as defendants. The
United States intervened and sought water rights on behalf of various federal
establishments, including five Indian reservations: the Chemehuevi Indian Reservation,
the Cocopah Indian Reservation, the Fort Yuma (Quechan) Indian Reservation,
the Colorado River Indian Reservation, and the Fort Mojave Indian Reservation.
The Court appointed Simon Rifkind as Special Master.
[34] The first round of the litigation culminated in our opinion in Arizona
I. We agreed with Special Master Rifkind that the apportionment of Colorado
River water was governed by the Boulder Canyon Project Act of 1928, 43 U. S.
C. §617 et seq., and by contracts entered into by the Secretary of the
Interior pursuant to the Act. We further agreed that the United States had reserved
water rights for the five reservations under the doctrine of Winters v. United
States, 207 U. S. 564 (1908). See Arizona I, 373 U. S., at 565, 599-601. Because
the Tribes' water rights were effective as of the time each reservation was
created, the rights were considered present perfected rights and given priority
under the Act. Id., at 600. We also agreed with the Master that the reservations'
water rights should be based on the amount of practicably irrigable acreage
on each reservation and sustained his findings as to the relevant acreage for
each reservation. Ibid. Those findings were incorporated in our decree of March
9, 1964, which specified the quantities and priorities of the water entitlements
for the States, the United States, and the Tribes. Arizona v. California, 376
U. S. 340. The Court rejected as premature, however, Master Rifkind's recommendation
to determine the disputed boundaries of the Fort Mojave and Colorado River Indian
Reservations; we ordered, instead, that water rights for those two reservations
"shall be subject to appropriate adjustment by agreement or decree of this
Court in the event that the boundaries of the respective reservations are finally
determined." Id., at 345.
[35] In 1978, the United States and the State parties jointly moved this Court
to enter a supplemental decree identifying present perfected rights to the use
of mainstream water in each State and their priority dates. The Tribes then
filed motions to intervene, and the United States ultimately joined the Tribes
in moving for additional water rights for the five reservations. Again, the
Court deferred resolution of reservation boundary disputes and allied water
rights claims. The supplemental decree we entered in 1979 set out the water
rights and priority dates for the five reservations under the 1964 decree, but
added that the rights for all five reservations (including the Fort Yuma Indian
Reservation at issue here) "shall continue to be subject to appropriate
adjustment by agreement or decree of this Court in the event that the boundaries
of the respective reservations are finally determined." Arizona v. California,
439 U. S. 419, 421 (per curiam). The Court then appointed Senior Circuit Judge
Elbert P. Tuttle as Special Master and referred to him the Tribes' motions to
intervene and other pending matters.
[36] Master Tuttle issued a report recommending that the Tribes be permitted
to intervene, and concluding that various administrative actions taken by the
Secretary of the Interior constituted "final determinations" of reservation
boundaries for purposes of allocating water rights under the 1964 decree. (Those
administrative actions included a 1978 Secretarial Order, discussed in greater
detail infra, at 9, which recognized the Quechan Tribe's entitlement to the
disputed boundary lands of the Fort Yuma Reservation.) Master Tuttle also concluded
that certain lands within the undisputed reservation boundaries but for which
the United States had not sought water rights in Arizona I -- the so-called
"omitted lands" -- had in fact been practicably irrigable at the time
of Arizona I and were thus entitled to water. On these grounds, Master Tuttle
recommended that the Court reopen the 1964 decree to award the Tribes additional
water rights.
[37] In Arizona v. California, 460 U. S. 605 (1983) (Arizona II), the Court
permitted the Tribes to intervene, but otherwise rejected Master Tuttle's recommendations.
The Secretary's determinations did not qualify as "final determinations"
of reservation boundaries, we ruled, because the States, agencies, and private
water users had not had an opportunity to obtain judicial review of those determinations.
Id., at 636-637. In that regard, we noted that California state agencies had
initiated an action in the United States District Court for the Southern District
of California challenging the Secretary's decisions, and that the United States
had moved to dismiss that action on various grounds, including sovereign immunity.
"There will be time enough," the Court stated, "if any of these
grounds for dismissal are sustained and not overturned on appellate review,
to determine whether the boundary issues foreclosed by such action are nevertheless
open for litigation in this Court." Id., at 638. The Court also held that
the United States was barred from seeking water rights for the lands omitted
from presentation in the proceedings leading to Arizona I; "principles
of res judicata," we said, "advise against reopening the calculation
of the amount of practicably irrigable acreage." 460 U. S., at 626. In
1984, in another supplemental decree, the Court again declared that water rights
for all five reservations "shall be subject to appropriate adjustments
by agreement or decree of this Court in the event that the boundaries of the
respective reservations are finally determined." Arizona v. California,
466 U. S. 144, 145.
[38] The district court litigation proceeded with the participation of eight
parties: the United States, the States of Arizona and California, the Metropolitan
Water District of Southern California, the Coachella Valley Water District,
and the Quechan, Fort Mojave, and Colorado River Indian Tribes. The District
Court rejected the United States' sovereign immunity defense; taking up the
Fort Mojave Reservation matter first, the court voided the Secretary's determination
of that reservation's boundaries. Metropolitan Water Dist. of S. Cal. v. United
States, 628 F. Supp. 1018 (SD Cal. 1986). The Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit, however, accepted the United States' plea of sovereign immunity, and
on that ground reversed and remanded with instructions to dismiss the entire
case. Specifically, the Court of Appeals held that the Quiet Title Act, 28 U.
S. C. §2409a, preserved the United States' sovereign immunity from suits
challenging the United States' title "to trust or restricted Indian lands,"
§2409a(a), and therefore blocked recourse to the District Court by the
States and state agencies. Metropolitan Water Dist. of S. Cal. v. United States,
830 F. 2d 139 (1987). We granted certiorari and affirmed the Ninth Circuit's
judgment by an equally divided Court. California v. United States, 490 U. S.
920 (1989) (per curiam).
[39] The dismissal of the district court action dispelled any expectation that
a "final determination" of reservation boundaries would occur in that
forum. The State parties then moved to reopen the 1964 decree, asking the Court
to determine whether the Fort Yuma Indian Reservation and two other reservations
were entitled to claim additional boundary lands and, if so, additional water
rights. Neither the United States nor the Tribes objected to the reopening of
the decree, and the Court granted the motion. Arizona v. California, 493 U.
S. 886 (1989). After the death in 1990 of the third Special Master, Robert McKay,
the Court appointed Frank J. McGarr as Special Master. Special Master McGarr
has now filed a report and recommendation (McGarr Report), a full understanding
of which requires a discussion of issues and events specific to the Fort Yuma
Indian Reservation. We now turn to those issues and events.
[40] II.
[41] The specific dispute before us has its roots in an 1884 Executive Order
signed by President Chester A. Arthur, designating approximately 72 square miles
of land along the Colorado River in California as the Fort Yuma Indian Reservation
(Reservation) for the benefit of the Quechan Tribe. The Tribe, which had traditionally
engaged in farming, offered to cede its rights to a portion of the Reservation
to the United States in exchange for allotments of irrigated land to individual
Indians. In 1893, the Secretary of the Interior concluded an agreement with
the Tribe (1893 Agreement), which Congress ratified in 1894. The 1893 Agreement
provided for the Tribe's cession of a 25,000-acre tract of boundary lands on
the Reservation. Language in the agreement, however, could be read to condition
the cession on the performance by the United States of certain obligations,
including construction within three years of an irrigation canal, allotment
of irrigated land to individual Indians, sale of certain lands to raise revenues
for canal construction, and opening of certain lands to the public domain.
[42] Doubts about the validity and effect of the 1893 Agreement arose as early
as 1935. In that year the construction of the All-American Canal, which prompted
the interstate dispute in Arizona I, see 373 U. S., at 554-555, also sparked
a controversy concerning the Fort Yuma Reservation. When the Department of the
Interior's Bureau of Reclamation sought to route the canal through the Reservation,
the Department's Indian Office argued that the Bureau had to pay compensation
to the Tribe for the right-of-way. The Secretary of the Interior submitted the
matter to the Department's Solicitor, Nathan Margold. In 1936, Solicitor Margold
issued an opinion (Margold Opinion) stating that, under the 1893 Agreement,
the Tribe had unconditionally ceded the lands in question to the United States.
1 Dept. of Interior, Opinions of the Solicitor Relating to Indian Affairs 596,
600 (No. M-28198, Jan. 8, 1936). The Margold Opinion remained the position of
the Federal Government for 42 years.
[43] In 1946, Congress enacted the Indian Claims Commission Act, 60 Stat. 1049,
25 U. S. C. §70 et seq. (1976 ed.), establishing an Article I tribunal
with power to decide claims of Indian tribes against the United States. See
generally United States v. Dann, 470 U. S. 39 (1985). The Tribe filed an action
before the Commission in 1951, challenging the validity and effect of the 1893
Agreement. In that action, referred to by the parties as Docket No. 320, the
Tribe relied principally on two mutually exclusive grounds for relief. First,
the Tribe alleged that the 1893 Agreement was obtained through fraud, coercion,
and/or inadequate consideration, rendering it "wholly nugatory." Petition
for Loss of Reservation in Docket No. 320 (Ind. Cl. Comm'n.), ¶ ;¶
;15-16, reprinted in Brief for United States in Support of Exception, pp. 11a-27a.
At the very least, contended the Tribe, the United States had failed to perform
the obligations enumerated in the 1893 Agreement, rendering the cession void.
Id., at ¶ ;31. In either event, the Tribe claimed continuing title to the
disputed lands and sought damages essentially for trespass. Alternatively, the
Tribe alleged that the 1893 Agreement was contractually valid but constituted
an uncompensated taking of tribal lands, an appropriation of lands for unconscionable
consideration, and/or a violation of standards of fair and honorable dealing,
for which §§2(3)-(5) of the Act authorized recovery. Id., at ¶
;¶ ;19, 22, 25. According to this theory of recovery, the 1893 Agreement
had indeed vested in the United States unconditional title to the disputed lands,
and the Tribe sought damages as compensation for that taking. During the more
than quarter-century of litigation in Docket No. 320, the Tribe vacillated between
these two grounds for relief, sometimes emphasizing one and sometimes the other.
See Quechan Tribe of Fort Yuma Reservation v. United States, 26 Ind. Cl. Comm'n.
15 (1971), reprinted in Brief for United States in Support of Exception, pp.
29a-34a.
[44] The Commission conducted a trial on liability, but stayed further proceedings
in 1970 because legislation had been proposed in Congress that would have restored
the disputed lands to the Tribe. The legislation was not enacted, and the Commission
vacated the stay. In 1976, the Commission transferred the matter to the Court
of Claims.
[45] In the meantime, the Tribe had asked the Department of the Interior to
reconsider its 1936 Margold Opinion regarding the 1893 Agreement. In 1977, Interior
Solicitor Scott Austin concluded, in accord with the 1936 opinion, that the
1893 Agreement was valid and that the cession of the disputed lands had been
unconditional. Opinion of the Solicitor, No. M-36886 (Jan. 18, 1977), 84 I.
D. 1 (1977) (Austin Opinion). It soon became clear both to the Tribe and to
interested Members of Congress, however, that the Austin Opinion had provoked
controversy within the Department, and, after the election of President Carter,
the Department revisited the issue and reversed course. In 1978, without notice
to the parties, Solicitor Leo Krulitz issued an opinion concluding that the
1893 Agreement had provided for a conditional cession of the disputed lands,
that the conditions had not been met by the United States, and that "[t]itle
to the subject property is held by the United States in trust for the Quechan
Tribe." Opinion of the Solicitor, No. M-36908 (Dec. 20, 1978), 86 I. D.
3, 22 (1979) (Krulitz Opinion). On December 20, 1978, the Secretary of the Interior
issued a Secretarial Order adopting the Krulitz Opinion and confirming the Tribe's
entitlement to the disputed lands, with the express exception of certain lands
that the United States had acquired pursuant to Act of Congress or had conveyed
to third parties.
[46] The 1978 Secretarial Order caused the United States to change its position
both in Docket No. 320, which was still pending in the Claims Court, and in
the present litigation. Because the Secretarial Order amounted to an admission
that the 1893 Agreement had been ineffective to transfer title and that the
Tribe enjoyed beneficial ownership of the disputed boundary lands, the United
States no longer opposed the Tribe's claim for trespass in Docket No. 320. In
the present litigation, the Secretarial Order both prompted the United States
to file a water rights claim for the affected boundary lands and provided the
basis for the Tribe's intervention to assert a similar, albeit larger, water
rights claim. See Arizona II, 460 U. S., at 632-633. Those water rights claims
are the subject of the current proceedings.
[47] In August 1983, a few months after this Court decided in Arizona II that
the 1978 Secretarial Order did not constitute a final determination of reservation
boundaries, see supra, at 4, the United States and the Tribe entered into a
settlement of Docket No. 320, which the Court of Claims approved and entered
as its final judgment. Under the terms of that settlement, the United States
agreed to pay the Tribe $15 million in full satisfaction of "all rights,
claims, or demands which plaintiff [i.e., the Tribe] has asserted or could have
asserted with respect to the claims in Docket 320." Final Judgment, Docket
No. 320 (Aug. 11, 1983). The judgment further provided that "plaintiff
shall be barred thereby from asserting any further rights, claims, or demands
against the defendant and any future action on the claims encompassed on Docket
320." Ibid. The United States and the Tribe also stipulated that the "final
judgment is based on a compromise and settlement and shall not be construed
as an admission by either party for the purposes of precedent or argument in
any other case." Ibid. Both the Tribe and the United States continue to
recognize the Tribe's entitlement to the disputed boundary lands.
[48] III.
[49] Master McGarr has issued a series of orders culminating in the report and
recommendation now before the Court. He has recommended that the Court reject
the claims of the United States and the Tribe seeking additional water rights
for the Fort Yuma Indian Reservation. The Master rejected the State parties'
contention that this Court's Arizona I decision precludes the United States
and the Tribe from seeking water rights for the disputed boundary lands. He
concluded, however, that the United States and the Tribe are precluded from
pursuing those claims by operation of the 1983 Claims Court consent judgment.
The State parties have filed an exception to the first of these preclusion recommendations,
and the United States and the Tribe have filed exceptions to the second. In
Part III-A, infra, we consider the exception filed by the State parties, and
in Part III-B we address the exceptions filed by the United States and the Tribe.
The Special Master has also recommended that the Court approve the parties'
proposed settlements respecting the Fort Mojave and Colorado River Indian Reservations.
No party has filed an exception to those recommendations; we address them in
Part III-C, infra.
[50] A.
[51] The States of Arizona and California, the Coachella Valley Water District,
and the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (State parties) argued
before Special Master McGarr, and repeat before this Court, that the water rights
claims associated with the disputed boundary lands of the Fort Yuma Reservation
are precluded by the finality rationale this Court employed in dismissing the
"omitted lands" claims in Arizona II. See supra, at 4. According to
the State parties, the United States could have raised a boundary lands claim
for the Fort Yuma Reservation in the Arizona I proceedings based on facts known
at that time, just as it did for the Fort Mojave and Colorado River Reservations,
but deliberately decided not to do so, just as it did with respect to the "omitted
lands." In Arizona II, this Court rejected the United States' claim for
water rights for the "omitted lands," emphasizing that "[c]ertainty
of rights is particularly important with respect to water rights in the Western
United States" and noting "the strong interest in finality in this
case." 460 U. S., at 620. Observing that the 1964 decree determined "the
extent of irrigable acreage within the uncontested boundaries of the reservations,"
id., at 621, n. 12, the Court refused to reconsider issues "fully and fairly
litigated 20 years ago," id., at 621. The Court concomitantly held that
the Tribes were bound by the United States' representation of them in Arizona
I. Id., at 626-627.
[52] The Special Master rejected the State parties' preclusion argument. He
brought out first the evident reason why the United States did not assert water
rights claims for the Fort Yuma Reservation boundary lands in Arizona I. At
that point in time, the United States was bound to follow the 1936 Margold Opinion,
see supra, at 6-7, which maintained that the Tribe had no claim to those lands.
"[I]t is clear," the Master stated, "that the later Secretary
of the Interior opinion arbitrarily changing [the Margold] decision was a circumstance
not known in 1964, thus constituting an exception to the application of the
rule of res adjudicata." Special Master McGarr Memorandum Opinion and Order
No. 4, pp. 6-7 (Sept. 6, 1991). Characterizing the question as "close,"
the Master went on to conclude that "the Tribe is not precluded from asserting
water rights based on boundary land claims on [sic] this proceeding, because
although the U. S. on behalf of the Tribe failed to assert such claims in the
proceeding leading to the 1964 decree, a later and then unknown circumstance
bars the application of the doctrine of res judicata to this issue." Id.,
at 7.
[53] While the Special Master correctly recognized the relevance of the Margold
Opinion to the litigating stance of the United States, he ultimately relied
on an improper ground in rejecting the State parties' preclusion argument. The
Department of the Interior's 1978 Secretarial Order recognizing the Tribe's
beneficial ownership of the boundary lands, see supra, at 9, does not qualify
as a "later and then unknown circumstance" that can overcome otherwise
applicable preclusion principles. The 1978 Order did not change the underlying
facts in dispute; it simply embodied one party's changed view of the import
of unchanged facts. Moreover, the Tribe can hardly claim to have been surprised
by the Government's shift in assessment of the boundary lands ownership question,
for the Tribe had been advocating just such a shift for decades.
[54] The United States and the Tribe, however, urge other grounds on which to
reject the State parties' argument regarding the preclusive effect of Arizona
I. The United States and the Tribe maintain that the preclusion rationale the
Court applied to the "omitted lands" in Arizona II is not equally
applicable to the disputed boundary lands, and that, in any event, the State
parties have forfeited their preclusion defense. We agree that the State parties'
preclusion defense is inadmissible at this late date, and therefore we do not
reach the merits of that plea. The State parties could have raised the defense
in 1979 in response to the United States' motion for a supplemental decree granting
additional water rights for the Fort Yuma Reservation. The State parties did
not do so then, nor did they raise the objection in 1982 when Arizona II was
briefed and argued. Unaccountably, they raised the preclusion argument for the
first time in 1989, when they initiated the current round of proceedings. See
Exception and Brief for the State Parties 16; Motion of the State Parties to
Reopen Decree in Arizona v. California, O. T. 1989, No. 8 Orig., p. 6, n. 2.
The State parties had every opportunity, and every incentive, to press their
current preclusion argument at earlier stages in the litigation, yet failed
to do so.
[55] "[W]hile the technical rules of preclusion are not strictly applicable
[in the context of a single ongoing original action], the principles upon which
these rules are founded should inform our decision." Arizona II, 460 U.
S., at 619. Those principles rank res judicata an affirmative defense ordinarily
lost if not timely raised. See Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 8(c). Counsel for the State
parties conceded at oral argument that "no preclusion argument was made
with respect to boundary lands" in the proceedings leading up to Arizona
II, and that "after this Court's decision in Arizona II and after the Court's
later decision in [Nevada v. United States, 463 U. S. 110 (1983)], the light
finally dawned on the State parties that there was a valid preclusion -- or
res judicata argument here with respect to Fort Yuma." Tr. of Oral Arg.
46-47. We disapprove the notion that a party may wake up because a "light
finally dawned," years after the first opportunity to raise a defense,
and effectively raise it so long as the party was (though no fault of anyone
else) in the dark until its late awakening.
[56] The State parties assert that our prior pronouncements in this case have
expressly recognized the possibility that future boundary lands claims for the
Fort Yuma Reservation might be precluded. If anything, the contrary is true.
Nothing in the Arizona II decision hints that the Court believed the boundary
lands issue might ultimately be held precluded. Rather, the Court expressly
found it "necessary to decide whether any or all of these boundary disputes
have been `finally determined' within the meaning of Article II(D)(5) ... ."
460 U. S., at 631 (emphasis added). That Arizona II contains no discussion of
preclusion with respect to the disputed lands is hardly surprising, given that
the State parties neglected to raise that issue until six years later.
[57] The Court did note in Arizona II that in the district court proceedings
the United States had asserted defenses based on "lack of standing, the
absence of indispensable parties, sovereign immunity and the applicable statute
of limitations," and added that "[t]here will be time enough, if any
of these grounds for dismissal are sustained and not overturned on appellate
review, to determine whether the boundary issues foreclosed by such [lower court]
action are nevertheless open for litigation in this Court." 460 U. S.,
at 638 (emphasis added). This passage, however, is most sensibly read to convey
that the defenses just mentioned -- standing, indispensable parties, sovereign
immunity, and the statute of limitations -- would not necessarily affect renewed
litigation in this Court. The passage contains no acknowledgment, express or
implied, of a lurking preclusion issue stemming from our Arizona I disposition.
[58] Moreover, and of large significance, the 1979 and 1984 supplemental decrees
anticipated that the disputed boundary issues for all five reservations, including
the Fort Yuma Reservation, would be "finally determined" in some forum,
not by preclusion but on the merits. See 1984 Supplemental Decree, Art. II(D)(5),
Arizona v. California, 466 U. S., at 145 (Water rights for all five reservations
"shall be subject to appropriate adjustments by agreement or decree of
this Court in the event that the boundaries of the respective reservations are
finally determined."); 1979 Supplemental Decree, Art. II(D)(5), Arizona
v. California, 439 U. S., at 421 (same).
[59] The State parties themselves stipulated to the terms of the supplemental
decree we entered in 1979. They also appear to have litigated the Arizona II
proceedings on the understanding that the boundary disputes should be resolved
on the merits. See Arizona II, 460 U. S., at 634 ("[The State parties]
argued ... that the boundary controversies were ripe for judicial review, and
they urged the Special Master to receive evidence, hear legal arguments, and
resolve each of the boundary disputes, but only for the limited purpose of establishing
additional Indian water rights, if any."); Report of Special Master Tuttle,
O. T. 1981, No. 8 Orig., p. 57 (describing the State parties' contention "that
the boundaries [of all five Reservations] have not been finally determined and
that I should make a de novo determination of the boundaries for recommendation
to the Court"). As late as 1988, the State parties asked the Court to appoint
a new Special Master and direct him "to conclude his review of the boundary
issues as expeditiously as possible and to submit a recommended decision to
the Court." Brief for Petitioners in California v. United States, O. T.
1987, No. 87-1165, p. 49.
[60] Finally, the State parties argue that even if they earlier failed to raise
the preclusion defense, this Court should raise it now sua sponte. Judicial
initiative of this sort might be appropriate in special circumstances. Most
notably, "if a court is on notice that it has previously decided the issue
presented, the court may dismiss the action sua sponte, even though the defense
has not been raised. This result is fully consistent with the policies underlying
res judicata: it is not based solely on the defendant's interest in avoiding
the burdens of twice defendinga suit, but is also based on the avoidance of
unnecessary judicial waste." United States v. Sioux Nation, 448 U. S. 371,
432 (1980) (Rehnquist, J., dissenting) (citations omitted). That special circumstance
is not present here: While the State parties contend that the Fort Yuma boundary
dispute could have been decided in Arizona I, this Court plainly has not "previously
decided the issue presented." Therefore we do not face the prospect of
redoing a matter once decided. Where no judicial resources have been spent on
the resolution of a question, trial courts must be cautious about raising a
preclusion bar sua sponte, thereby eroding the principle of party presentation
so basic to our system of adjudication.
[61] In view of the State parties' failure to raise the preclusion argument
earlier in the litigation, despite ample opportunity and cause to do so, we
hold that the claims of the United States and the Tribe to increased water rights
for the disputed boundary lands of the Fort Yuma Reservation are not foreclosed
by our decision in Arizona I.
[62] B.
[63] The State parties also assert that the instant water rights claims are
precluded by the 1983 consent judgment in the Claims Court proceeding, Docket
No. 320. Special Master McGarr agreed, noting the consent judgment's declaration
that the Tribe would "be barred thereby from asserting any further rights,
claims or demands against the defendant and any future action encompassed on
docket no. 320." See Special Master McGarr Memorandum Opinion and Order
No. 4, pp. 9-10 (Sept. 6, 1991). On reconsideration, the Special Master provided
a fuller account of his recommendation. The settlement, he concluded, had extinguished
the Tribe's claim to title in the disputed boundary lands, vesting that title
in the United States against all the world: "The only viable basis for
a damage or trespass claim [in Docket No. 320] was that the 1893 taking was
illegal and that title therefore remained with the Tribe. When the Tribe accepted
money in settlement of this claim, it relinquished its claim to title."
Id., No. 7, p. 5 (May 5, 1992). See also id., No. 13, p. 3 (Apr. 13, 1993) ("[T]he
relinquishment of all future claims regarding the subject matter of Docket No.
320 in exchange for a sum of money extinguished the Tribe's title in the subject
lands ... ."). Because the settlement extinguished the Tribe's title to
the disputed boundary lands, the Master reasoned, the United States and the
Tribe cannot now seek additional water rights based on the Tribe's purported
beneficial ownership of those lands.
[64] Under standard preclusion doctrine, the Master's recommendation cannot
be sustained. As already noted, the express terms of the consent judgment in
Docket No. 320 barred the Tribe and the United States from asserting against
each other any claim or defense they raised or could have raised in that action.
See supra, at 10. As between the parties to Docket No. 320, then, the settlement
indeed had, and was intended to have, claim-preclusive effect -- a matter the
United States and the Tribe readily concede. Exception and Brief for the United
States 36; Exception and Brief for the Quechan Indian Tribe 20. But settlements
ordinarily occasion no issue preclusion (sometimes called collateral estoppel),
unless it is clear, as it is not here, that the parties intend their agreement
to have such an effect. "In most circumstances, it is recognized that consent
agreements ordinarily are intended to preclude any further litigation on the
claim presented but are not intended to preclude further litigation on any of
the issues presented. Thus consent judgments ordinarily support claim preclusion
but not issue preclusion." 18 C. Wright, A. Miller, & E. Cooper, Federal
Practice and Procedure §4443, p. 384-385 (1981). This differentiation is
grounded in basic res judicata doctrine. It is the general rule that issue preclusion
attaches only "[w]hen an issue of fact or law is actually litigated and
determined by a valid and final judgment, and the determination is essential
to the judgment." Restatement (Second) of Judgments §27, p. 250 (1982).
"In the case of a judgment entered by confession, consent, or default,
none of the issues is actually litigated. Therefore, the rule of this Section
[describing issue preclusion's domain] does not apply with respect to any issue
in a subsequent action." Id., comment e, p. 257.
[65] This Court's decision in United States v. International Building Co., 345
U. S. 502 (1953), is illustrative. In 1942, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue
assessed deficiencies against a taxpayer for the taxable years 1933, 1938, and
1939, alleging that the taxpayer had claimed an excessive basis for depreciation.
Id., at 503. After the taxpayer filed for bankruptcy, however, the Commissioner
and the taxpayer filed stipulations in the pending Tax Court proceedings stating
that there was no deficiency for the taxable years in question, and the Tax
Court entered a formal decision to that effect. Id., at 503-504. In 1948, the
Commissioner assessed deficiencies for the years 1943, 1944, and 1945, and the
taxpayer defended on the ground that the earlier Tax Court decision was preclusive
on the issue of the correct basis for depreciation. We disagreed, holding that
the Tax Court decision, entered pursuant to the parties' stipulations, did not
accomplish an "estoppel by judgment," i.e., it had no issue-preclusive
effect:
[66] "We conclude that the decisions entered by the Tax Court for the years
1933, 1938, and 1939 were only a pro forma acceptance by the Tax Court of an
agreement between the parties to settle their controversy for reasons undisclosed
. ... Perhaps, as the Court of Appeals inferred, the parties did agree on the
basis for depreciation. Perhaps the settlement was made for a different reason,
for some exigency arising out of the bankruptcy proceeding. As the case reaches
us, we are unable to tell whether the agreement of the parties was based on
the merits or on some collateral consideration. Certainly the judgments entered
are res judicata of the tax claims for the years 1933, 1938, and 1939, whether
or not the basis of the agreements on which they rest reached the merits . ...
Estoppel by judgment includes matters in a second proceeding which were actually
presented and determined in an earlier suit. A judgment entered with the consent
of the parties may involve a determination of questions of fact and law by the
court. But unless a showing is made that that was the case, the judgment has
no greater dignity, so far as collateral estoppel is concerned, than any judgment
entered only as a compromise of the parties." Id., at 505-506 (citations
omitted).
[67] The State parties, perhaps recognizing the infirmity of their argument
as a matter of standard preclusion doctrine, assert that common-law principles
of issue preclusion do not apply in the special context of Indian land claims.
Instead, they argue, §22 of the Indian Claims Commission Act created a
special regime of "statutory preclusion." According to the State parties,
the payment of a Commission judgment for claims to aboriginal or trust lands
automatically and universally extinguishes title to the Indian lands upon which
the claim is based and creates a statutory bar to further assertion of claims
against either the United States or third parties based on the extinguished
title. The State parties point to several decisions of the Ninth Circuit in
support of this contention. See Reply Brief for State Parties 17 (citing United
States v. Pend Oreille Pub. Util. Dist. No. 1, 926 F. 2d 1502 (CA9 1991)); id.,
at 15 (citing United States v. Dann, 873 F. 2d 1189 (CA9 1989)); id., at 11
(citing United States v. Gemmill, 535 F. 2d 1145 (CA9 1976)).
[68] We need not decide whether, in the distinctive context of the Indian Claims
Commission Act, some consent judgments might bar a tribe from asserting title
even in discrete litigation against third parties, for the 1983 settlement of
Docket No. 320 plainly could not qualify as such a judgment. Not only was the
issue of ownership of the disputed boundary lands not actually litigated and
decided in Docket No. 320, but, most notably, the Tribe proceeded on alternative
and mutually exclusive theories of recovery. Had the case proceeded to final
judgment upon trial, the Tribe might have won damages for a taking, indicating
that title was in the United States. Alternatively, however, the Tribe might
have obtained damages for trespass, indicating that title remained in the Tribe.
The consent judgment embraced all of the Tribe's claims. There was no election
by the Tribe of one theory over the other, nor was any such election required
to gain approval for the consent judgment. The Special Master's assumption that
the settlement necessarily and universally relinquished the Tribe's claim to
title was thus unwarranted. Certainly, if the $15 million payment constituted
a discharge of the Tribe's trespass claim, it would make scant sense to say
that the acceptance of the payment extinguished the Tribe's title. In contrast,
the Ninth Circuit cases cited by the State parties (the correctness of which
we do not address) all involved Indian Claims Commission Act petitions in which
tribes claimed no continuing title, choosing instead to seek compensation from
the United States for the taking of their lands. See, e.g., Pend Oreille, 926
F. 2d, at 1507-1508; Dann, 873 F. 2d, at 1192, 1194; Gemmill, 535 F. 2d, at
1149, and n. 6.
[69] The United States invites us to look behind the consent judgment in Docket
No. 320 at presettlement stipulations and memoranda purportedly demonstrating
that the judgment was grounded on the parties' shared view, after the 1978 Secretarial
Order, that the disputed lands belong to the Tribe. We need not accept the Government's
invitation. On the matter of issue preclusion, it suffices to observe that the
settlement was ambiguous as between mutually exclusive theories of recovery.
Like the Tax Court settlement in International Building Co., then, the consent
judgment in the Tribe's Claims Court action is too opaque to serve as a foundation
for issue preclusion. Accordingly, we hold that the claims of the United States
and the Tribe to increased water rights for the disputed boundary lands of the
Fort Yuma Reservation are not precluded by the consent judgment in Docket No.
320.
[70] C.
[71] The Special Master has recommended that the Court approve the parties'
proposed settlement of the dispute respecting the Fort Mojave Reservation. The
claim to additional water for the Fort Mojave Reservation arises out of a dispute
over the accuracy of a survey of the so-called Hay and Wood Reserve portion
of the Reservation. See Arizona II, 460 U. S., at 631-632. The parties agreed
to resolve the matter through an accord that (1) specifies the location of the
disputed boundary; (2) preserves the claims of the parties regarding title to
and jurisdiction over the bed of the last natural course of the Colorado River
within the agreed-upon boundary; (3) awards the Tribe the lesser of an additional
3,022 acre-feet of water or enough water to supply the needs of 468 acres; (4)
precludes the United States and the Tribe from claiming additional water rights
from the Colorado River for lands within the Hay and Wood Reserve; and (5) disclaims
any intent to affect any private claims to title to or jurisdiction over any
lands. See McGarr Report 8-9. We accept the Master's uncontested recommendation
and approve the proposed settlement.
[72] The Master has also recommended that the Court approve the parties' proposed
settlement of the dispute respecting the Colorado River Indian Reservation.
The claim to additional water for that reservation stems principally from a
dispute over whether the reservation boundary is the ambulatory west bank of
the Colorado River or a fixed line representing a past location of the River.
See Arizona II, 460 U. S., at 631. The parties agreed to resolve the matter
through an accord that (1) awards the Tribes the lesser of an additional 2,100
acre-feet of water or enough water to irrigate 315 acres; (2) precludes the
United States or the Tribe from seeking additional reserved water rights from
the Colorado River for lands in California; (3) embodies the parties' intent
not to adjudicate in these proceedings the correct location of the disputed
boundary; (4) preserves the competing claims of the parties to title to or jurisdiction
over the bed of the Colorado River within the reservation; and (5) provides
that the agreement will become effective only if the Master and the Court approve
the settlement. See McGarr Report 9-10. The Master expressed concern that the
settlement does not resolve the location of the disputed boundary, but recognized
that it did achieve the ultimate aim of determining water rights associated
with the disputed boundary lands. Id., at 10-12, 13-14. We again accept the
Master's recommendation and approve the proposed settlement.
[73] For the foregoing reasons, we remand the outstanding water rights claims
associated with the disputed boundary lands of the Fort Yuma Indian Reservation
to the Special Master for determination on the merits. Those claims are the
only ones that remain to be decided in Arizona v. California; their resolution
will enable the Court to enter a final consolidated decree and bring this case
to a close.
[74] With respect to the Fort Mojave and Colorado River Reservations, the Special
Master has submitted a proposed supplemental decree to carry the parties' accords
into effect. That decree is reproduced as the Appendix to this opinion, infra,
at 26-27. The parties are directed to submit to the Clerk of this Court, before
August 22, 2000, any objections to the proposed supplemental decree.
[75] It is so ordered.
[76] APPENDIX TO OPINION OF THE COURT
[77] Supplemental Decree
[78] It is ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED:
[79] A.Paragraph (4) of Article II(D) of the Decree in this case entered on
March 9, 1964 (376 U. S. 340, 344-345) is hereby amended to read as follows:
[80] (4) The Colorado River Indian Reservation in annual quantities not to exceed
(i) 719,248 acre-feet of diversions from the mainstream or (ii) the quantity
of mainstream water necessary to supply the consumptive use required for irrigation
of 107,903 acres and for the satisfaction of related uses, whichever of (i)
or (ii) is less, with priority dates of March 3, 1865, for lands reserved by
the Act of March 3, 1865 (13 Stat. 541, 559); November 22, 1873, for lands reserved
by the Executive Order of said date; November 16, 1874, for lands reserved by
the Executive Order of said date, except as later modified; May 15, 1876, for
lands reserved by the Executive Order of said date; November 22, 1915, for lands
reserved by the Executive Order of said date.
[81] B.Paragraph (5) of Article II(D) of the Decree in this case entered on
March 9, 1964 (376 U. S. 340, 345) and supplemented on April 16, 1984 (466 U.
S. 144, 145) is hereby amended to read as follows:
[82] (5) The Fort Mojave Indian Reservation in annual quantities not to exceed
(i) 132,789 acre-feet of diversions from the mainstream or (ii) the quantity
of mainstream water necessary to supply the consumptive use required for irrigation
of 20,544 acres and for the satisfaction of related uses, whichever of (i) or
(ii) is less, with priority dates of September 19, 1890, for lands transferred
by the Executive Order of said date; February 2, 1911, for lands reserved by
the Executive Order of said date.
[83] C.Paragraph (5) of the introductory conditions to the Supplemental Decree
in this case entered on January 9, 1979 (439 U. S. 419, 421-423) is hereby amended
by adding the following exception at the end of the concluding proviso in the
first sentence of that paragraph: "except for the western boundaries of
the Fort Mojave and Colorado River Indian Reservations in California."
[84] D.Paragraph II(A)(24) of the Decree of January 9, 1979 (439 U. S. 419,
428) is hereby amended to read as follows:
[85] 24)
[86] Colorado River Indian Reservation10,745 1,612 Nov. 22, 1873 40,241 6,037
Nov. 16, 1874
[87] 5,860 879 May 15, 1876
[88] E.Paragraph II(A)(25) of the Decree of January 9, 1979 (439 U. S. 419,
428) is hereby amended to read as follows:
[89] 25)
[90] Fort Mojave Indian Reservation16,720 2,587 Sept. 18, 1890
[91] F.Except as otherwise provided herein, the Decree entered on March 9, 1964,
and the Supplemental Decrees entered on January 9, 1979, and April 16, 1984,
shall remain in full force and effect.
[92] G.The Court shall retain jurisdiction herein to order such further proceedings
and enter such supplemental decree as may be deemed appropriate.
[93] The Act conferred exclusive jurisdiction on the Commission to resolve Indian
claims solely by the payment of compensation. Section 2 of the Act gave the
Commission jurisdiction over, among other things, claims alleging that agreements
between a tribe and the United States were vitiated by fraud, duress, or unconscionable
consideration, 25 U. S. C. §70a(3) (1976 ed.), claims arising from the
unlawful taking of Indian lands by the United States, §70a(4), and claims
based upon fair and honorable dealings not recognized by law or equity, §70a(5).
The Commission's "[f]inal determinations," §70r, were subject
to review by the Court of Claims, §70s(b), and, if upheld, were submitted
to Congress for payment, §70u. Section 15 authorized the Attorney General
to represent the United States before the Commission and, "with the approval
of the Commission, to compromise any claim presented to the Commission."
25 U. S. C. §70n (1976 ed.). The Act provided that such compromises "shall
be submitted by the Commission to the Congress as a part of its report as provided
in section 70t of this title in the same manner as final determinations of the
Commission, and shall be subject to the provisions of section 70u of this title."
Ibid. Section 22(a) of the Act provided that "[t]he payment of any claim,
after its determination in accordance with this chapter, shall be a full discharge
of the United States of all claims and demands touching any of the matters involved
in the controversy." 25 U. S. C. §70u(a) (1976 ed.). Pursuant to statute,
§70v, the Commission ceased its operations in 1978 and transferred its
remaining cases to the Court of Claims.
[94] The United States and the Tribe point to the holding in Arizona I that
Special Master Rifkind had erred in prematurely considering boundary land claims
relating to the Fort Mojave and Colorado River Reservations, see 373 U. S.,
at 601; they contend that consideration of the Fort Yuma Reservation boundaries
would have been equally premature. They further stress that in Arizona II we
held the omitted lands claims precluded because we resisted "reopen[ing]
an adjudication ... to reconsider whether initial factual determinations were
correctly made," 460 U. S., at 623-624; in contrast, they maintain, the
present claims turn on the validity of the 1893 Agreement and the 1978 Secretarial
Order, questions of law not addressed in prior proceedings.
[95] Noting that in Arizona II we "encouraged the parties to assert their
legal claims and defenses in another forum," the dissent concludes that
the Court probably would have declined to resolve the preclusion issue at that
stage of the case even had the State parties raised it then. Post, at 2. One
can only wonder why this should be so. If this Court had held in Arizona II
that the United States and the Tribe were precluded from litigating their boundary
lands claims, it would have been pointless for the Court to encourage pursuit
of those claims "in another forum"; further assertion of the claims
in any forum would have been barred. In any event, a party generally forfeits
an affirmative defense by failing to raise it even if the relevant proceeding
is ultimately resolved on other grounds.
[96] The dissent's observation that "the only `pleadings' in this case
were filed in the 1950's," post, at 1, is beside the point. The State parties
could have properly raised the preclusion defense as early as February 1979,
in their response to the United States' motion for modification of the decree,
yet did not do so. See Response of the States of Arizona, California, and Nevada
and the Other California Defendants to the Motion of the United States for Modification
of Decree, O.T. 1978, No. 8 Orig. Alternatively, it was open to the State parties
to seek leave to file a supplemental pleading "setting forth ... occurrences
or events which have happened since the date of the pleading sought to be amended."
Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 15(d). In such a supplemental pleading, and in compliance
with Rule 8(c), the preclusion defense could have been raised. No such supplemental
pleading was ever presented, and by 1989 a reasonable time to do so had surely
expired.
[97] The State parties' tardiness in raising their preclusion defense is hard
to account for, while the United States' decision not to assert claims for the
disputed boundary lands until 1978 can at least be explained by the continued
vitality of the Margold Opinion, see supra, at 9-10. It is puzzling that the
dissent should go to such lengths to excuse the former delay while relentlessly
condemning the latter.
[98] Section 22 provided:
[99] "(a) When the report of the Commission determining any claimant to
be entitled to recover has been filed with Congress, such report shall have
the effect of a final judgment of the Court of Claims, and there is authorized
to be appropriated such sums as are necessary to pay the final determination
of the Commission.
[100] "The payment of any claim, after its determination in accordance
with this chapter, shall be a full discharge of the United States of all claims
and demands touching any of the matters involved in the controversy.
[101] "(b) A final determination against a claimant made and reported in
accordance with this chapter shall forever bar any further claim or demand against
the United States arising out of the matter involved in the controversy."
25 U. S. C. §70u (1976 ed.).
[102] A group called the West Bank Homeowners Association has filed a brief
amicus curiae objecting to the proposed settlement of water rights claims respecting
the Colorado River Indian Reservation. The Association represents some 650 families
who lease property from the United States within the current boundaries of the
Reservation. The Court and the Special Master have each denied the Association's
request to intervene in these proceedings. See Arizona v. California, 514 U.
S. 1081 (1995); Special Master McGarr Memorandum Opinion and Order No. 17 (Mar.
29, 1995). The Master observed that the Association's members do "not own
land in the disputed area and [the Association] makes no claim to title or water
rights," id., at 2, thus their interests will "not be impeded or impaired
by the outcome of this litigation,"id., at 6. Accordingly, we do not further
consider the Association's objections.
[103] Opinion of Rehnquist, C. J.
[104] Chief Justice Rehnquist, with whom Justice O'Connor and Justice Thomas
join, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
[105] I believe that the United States and Quechan Tribe's claim for additional
water rights is barred by the principles of res judicata, and therefore I dissent.
The Special Master concluded that an exception to the general preclusion rule
applied and that, therefore, the United States' claim was not barred. The Court
rejects the Special Master's reasoning but concludes that the State Parties'
res judicata defense is not properly before the Court. While I agree that the
Special Master erred in finding the 1978 Order of the Secretary of the Interior
a "new fact" justifying an exception to the application of preclusion,
I disagree with the Court's refusal to reach the merits of the State Parties'
defense.
[106] The Court first concludes that the State Parties lost the defense because
they failed to assert it in a timely manner. While the State Parties concede
that they did not raise their claim of res judicata until 1989, it does not
automatically follow that the defense is lost. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
8(c) provides that res judicata shall be pleaded as an affirmative defense.
But the only "pleadings" in this case were filed in the 1950's, at
which time no claim of res judicata could have been made. The motions filed
by the State Parties in 1977 and 1979 were not in any sense comprehensive pleadings,
purporting to set forth all of the claims and defenses of the parties. More
importantly, neither Special Master Tuttle nor this Court focused on the merits
of the boundary dispute during the proceedings in Arizona v. California, 460
U. S. 605 (1983)(Arizona II). Rather, the Master only decided whether the Secretary's
order was a final boundary determination, and, similarly, this Court simply
determined that the Secretary's order was subject to challenge and encouraged
the parties to assert their legal claims and defenses in another forum. Consequently,
it is likely that the State Parties' res judicata claim would not have been
resolved in Arizona II even if it had been raised.
[107] The State Parties did expressly raise the defense of res judicata in their
1989 motion, and neither the United States nor the Tribe objected to its consideration.
The Tribe contested the merits of the State Parties' res judicata claim and
argued that its water rights' claim was not precluded. In so doing, the Tribe
asserted that the State Parties had not argued res judicata during the Arizona
II proceedings. But neither the Tribe nor the United States contended, in response
to the State Parties' motion, that the Court could not decide the res judicata
issue because it was not timely raised. We granted the motion, and Master McGarr
considered the claim on the merits. Under these circumstances, I believe that
the State Parties did not lose their res judicata defense by failing to assert
it in the earlier proceedings.
[108] The Court also concludes that this Court's 1979 and 1984 supplemental
decrees "anticipated" that the boundary dispute would be finally resolved
in some forum. See, ante, at 16. To reach this conclusion, the Court reads too
much into the simple language of the supplemental decrees and ignores language
in our Arizona II opinion. The supplemental decrees stated that water rights
for the five reservations "shall be subject to appropriate adjustments
by agreement or decree of this Court in the event that the boundaries of the
respective reservations are finally determined." 1984 Supplemental Decree,
Art. II(D)(5), Arizona v. California, 466 U. S. 144, 145 (1984); 1979 Supplemental
Decree, Art. II(D)(5), Arizona v. California, 439 U. S. 419, 421 (1979) (per
curiam). These decrees can best be interpreted as merely providing that the
reservation's water quantity can be adjusted if the boundary changes, without
deciding whether the boundary relied on in the 1964 decree could be properly
challenged, and without indicating that the boundary necessarily would be "finally
determined" at some future point. This reading is supported by language
in Arizona II. In discussing the pending District Court action, we explained:
"We note that the United States has moved to dismiss the action filed by
the agencies based on lack of standing, the absence of indispensable parties,
sovereign immunity, and the applicable statute of limitations. There will be
time enough, if any of these grounds for dismissal are sustained and not overturned
on appellate review, to determine whether the boundary issues foreclosed by
such action are nevertheless open for litigation in this Court." 460 U.
S., at 638 (emphasis added; footnote omitted). As is evident from this language,
we did not "anticipate" that the dispute would be finally resolved.
Instead, we explicitly left open the question whether the dispute could be litigated
in this Court.
[109] The Court disregards this language in Arizona II because it does not mention
a potential preclusion defense. However, the point is not that this Court anticipated
the State Parties' preclusion defense. Rather, it is that this Court recognized
the possibility that the boundary issue would not be judicially resolved at
all, and left open the question whether there was some defense precluding this
Court's review. What that defense might be was not before the Court.
[110] Now that the question is squarely before us, I would hold that the United
States' claim for additional water rights is barred by the principles of res
judicata. Res judicata not only bars relitigation of claims previously litigated,
but also precludes claims that could have been brought in earlier proceedings.
Under the doctrine of res judicata, "when a final judgment has been entered
on the merits of a case, `[i]t is a finality as to the claim or demand in controversy,
concluding parties and those in privity with them, not only as to every matter
which was offered and received to sustain or defeat the claim or demand, but
as to any other admissible matter which might have been offered for that purpose."
Nevada v. United States, 463 U. S. 110, 129-130 (1983) (quoting Cromwell v.
County of Sac, 94 U. S. 351, 352 (1877)).
[111] In Arizona II, we recognized that the general principles of res judicata
apply to our 1964 decree even though the decree expressly provided for modification
in appropriate circumstances. In so doing, we noted the importance of the certainty
of water rights in the Western United States. "A major purpose of this
litigation, from its inception to the present day, has been to provide the necessary
assurance to States of the Southwest and to various private interests, of the
amount of water they can anticipate to receive from the Colorado River system.
. . . If there is no surplus of water in the Colorado River, an increase in
federal reserved water rights will require a `gallon-for-gallon reduction in
the amount of water available for water-needy state and private appropriators.'"
460 U. S., at 620-621 (quoting United States v. New Mexico, 438 U. S. 696, 699
(1978)). Thus, we concluded that allowing recalculation of the amount of practicably
irrigable acreage "runs directly counter to the strong interest in finality
in this case." Id., at 620. We also noted that treating the 1964 calculation
as final comported with the clearly expressed intention of the parties and was
consistent with our previous treatment of original actions, allowing modifications
after a change in the relevant circumstances.
[112] This reasoning is equally applicable to the United States and the Tribe's
claim for additional water for the disputed boundary lands. Even though the
exact claim was not actually litigated in Arizona v. California, 373 U. S. 546
(1963) (Arizona I), the United States could have raised the boundary claim and
failed to do so. Indeed, in the proceedings before Special Master Rifkind, the
counsel for the United States affirmatively represented that "[t]he testimony
. . . as reflected by these maps and by the other testimony will define the
maximum claim which the United States is asserting in this case." Earlier
in the proceedings, the Master explicitly warned the United States about the
preclusive effect of failing to assert potential claims: "In an action
or a decree quieting title, you cut out all claims not asserted. . . . I just
want you to be aware of the fact that the mere fact that it has not been asserted
does not mean that you may not lose it . . . ." Exception by State Parties
to Report of Special Master and Supporting Brief 8-9 (colloquy between counsel
for the United States and the Special Master). Thus, under the general principles
of res judicata, the United States would clearly be barred from now asserting
the claim for additional water rights.
[113] Master McGarr concluded that the United States' claim was not precluded
because it fell within an exception to the bar of res judicata. Wisely abandoning
the Master's reasoning, the United States instead defends the Master's ruling
on the ground that these claims "are not precluded, under basic principles
of res judicata, because [they] were not decided, and could not have been decided,
in the prior proceedings." Reply Brief for United States in Response to
Exception of the State Parties 21. But this argument fares no better.
[114] The issue before the Master in Arizona I was the amount of water from
the Colorado River to which the Quechan Tribe was entitled. The Master made
an allotment to the reservation based on the evidence then before him as to
the amount of irrigable acreage within the reservation boundary, which was undisputed
at the time. Only years after that decree was confirmed by this Court in Arizona
I did the United States assert a larger claim to water for the reservation based
on a claim for a larger amount of irrigable acreage -- not because of a miscalculation
as to the irrigability of acreage already claimed, but because of a claimed
extension of the boundaries of the reservation. But, at the time of Arizona
I, the United States had in its possession all of the facts that it later asserted
in 1979 in Arizona II, and it could have litigated the larger claim before Master
Rifkind.
[115] The United States offers no support for its contention that the boundary
dispute could not have been decided in Arizona I except for the fact that this
Court rejected the Master's resolution of the Fort Mojave Reservation and Colorado
River Reservation boundary disputes. However, those boundary disputes are different.
While we did not explain in Arizona I why we believed it was improper to decide
the boundary disputes, California's objection was based on the fact that necessary
parties were not participating in the proceedings. Specifically, California
argued that it lacked the authority to represent private individuals claiming
title to the disputed lands and maintained that "it would be unfair to
prejudice any of the parties in future litigation over land titles or political
jurisdiction by approving findings on a tangential issue never pleaded by the
United States." Arizona II, supra, at 629. The Fort Yuma Reservation boundary
dispute, on the other hand, is solely between the United States and the Quechan
Tribe -- there are no private parties claiming title to the land. Thus, the
United States could have raised this claim in Arizona I, and the Master could
have decided it.
[116] Because I believe that the State Parties' res judicata defense is properly
before the Court and that the United States' claim for additional water rights
is precluded, I see no need to remand for further proceedings. I agree with
the Court that we should approve the proposed settlements of the remaining claims
in this case and direct the parties to submit any objections to the proposed
supplemental decree.