Order On Recusal in Ute Tribe Lawsuit
Order On Recusal in Ute Tribe Lawsuit
Order On Recusal in Ute Tribe Lawsuit
ORDER
I. Introduction
On March 7, 2016, plaintiff filed a Motion to Recuse, doc. no. 1166, seeking
an order disqualifying Judge Bruce S. Jenkins from presiding in this case. The motion
rests on one statutory basis, viz., 28 U.S.C. 455(a), which provides, as relevant here,
that a judge shall disqualify himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality
might reasonably be questioned. The motion rests on three main factual assertions:
(1) Judge Jenkins is biased, (2) Judge Jenkins is senile, and (3) Judge Jenkins is a
Mormon.
Presumably because [b]ias is easy to attribute to others and difficult to discern
in oneself, Williams v. Pennsylvania, __ U.S. __, 136 S.Ct. 1899, 1905 ( 2016),
Judge Jenkins requested that another judge be assigned to rule on the motion. Doc.
no. 1170. On March 11, 2016, Chief Judge Timothy M. Tymkovich designated the
undersigned to hear the motion.1 Doc. no. 1174, at 2. Accordingly, Chief Judge
David Nuffer referred the motion to the undersigned. Id. On the same day, March
The undersigned has, to the best of his recollection, neither met Judge Jenkins nor had
any other form of contact with him.
11, the undersigned entered an order governing scheduling and other procedural
aspects of the motion. Doc. no. 1175.
The State of Utah, the county defendants, and Duchesne City have responded
to the motion. Doc. nos. 1181, 1184 and 1185. Plaintiff has replied to the responses
filed by the state and the counties. Doc. nos. 1197 and 1198. Other papers, raising
issues not going to the merits of the motion, have been filed. Doc. nos. 1203, 1215,
1218 and 1219. Those matters will be addressed as necessary in this order.
The motion is supported by an appendix consisting of 7,199 pages in 32
volumes.
The court has carefully considered all of the motion papers and has reviewed
all of the relevant materials in the appendix. For the reasons stated in this order, the
court concludes that the motion is without merit.
II. Scope of the issues presented for consideration
Plaintiff advances numerous contentions in support of disqualification under
455(a). All of the contentions that are cognizable under 455(a) will be addressed
in this order. The matters that are, and are not, before the undersigned should be
clearly understood at the outset:
a. The 455(a) standard
The elegant and superficially simple language of 455(a) a judge shall
disqualify himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be
questioned is encrusted with case law. But aside from the matters discussed in
parts II(b) and (c), below, the present motion presents no consequential legal issues,
so a simple recitation of some of the basic principles established by the case law will
suffice.
Section 455(a), which has been described as a catchall recusal provision,
Liteky v. United States, 510 U.S. 540, 548 (1994), establishes an objective standard
for disqualification. Id. [W]hat matters is not the reality of bias or prejudice but its
appearance. Id. The inquiry is limited to outward manifestations and reasonable
inferences drawn therefrom. United States v. Cooley, 1 F.3d 985, 993 (10th Cir.
1993). Disqualification is appropriate only where the reasonable person, were he to
know all the circumstances, would harbor doubts about the judges impartiality. In
re McCarthey, 368 F.3d 1266, 1269 (10th Cir. 2004). Otherwise stated: The test is
whether a reasonable person, knowing all the relevant facts, would harbor doubts
about the judge's impartiality. Hinman v. Rogers, 831 F.2d 937, 939 (10th Cir. 1987)
(emphasis added).
The statute is not intended to give litigants a veto power over sitting judges,
Bryce v. Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Colorado, 289 F.3d 648, 659 (10th Cir.
2002), but if the disqualification issue is a close one, the judge must be recused. Id.
Although the issue of disqualification must be raised without delay, Willner v.
University of Kansas, 848 F.2d 1023, 1028 (10th Cir. 1987), cert. denied, 488 U.S.
1031 (1988), the duty to recuse is a continuing duty it does not taper off as the case
proceeds. Cooley, 1 F.3d at 992. Indeed, disqualification is often sought, as in the
case at bar, only after the presiding judge has had occasion to please or disappoint the
litigants with rulings in the case, and only after some level of antagonism, trivial or
severe, may have developed in the relations between counsel (or a displeased litigant)
and the judge. But judicial rulings alone almost never constitute a valid basis for a
bias or partiality motion. Liteky, 510 U.S. at 555. When no extrajudicial source of
bias is involved, the presiding judges rulings will only in the rarest circumstances
evidence the degree of favoritism or antagonism required. Id. And opinions formed
by the judge on the basis of events occurring within the confines of the case itself will
not suffice to require recusal unless they display a deep-seated favoritism or
antagonism that would make fair judgment impossible. Id.
Judicial remarks that are critical or disapproving of, or even hostile to, counsel,
the parties, or their cases, ordinarily do not support a bias or partiality challenge.
They may do so if they reveal an opinion that derives from an extrajudicial source; and
they will do so if they reveal such a high degree of favoritism or antagonism as to
make fair judgment impossible. Id. [E]xpressions of impatience, dissatisfaction,
annoyance, and even anger, that are within the bounds of what imperfect men and
women, even after having been confirmed as federal judges sometimes display, do
not establish bias or partiality. Id. at 555 - 56.
Finally, it must be borne in mind that cases within 455(a) are extremely
fact-driven and must be judged on [their] unique facts and circumstances more than
by comparison to situations considered in prior jurisprudence. Nichols v. Alley, 71
F.3d 347, 351 (10th Cir. 1995) (quoting from United States v. Jordan, 49 F.3d 152, 157
(5th Cir. 1995)).
b. The judges mental competence to discharge his duties
Plaintiffs arguments in support of disqualification under 455(a) include
allegations to the effect that Judge Jenkins mental competence is impaired.2 By way
of example, plaintiff asserts, in its opening brief, doc. no. 1166, and in its reply brief,
doc. no. 1197, that:
[T]he Judges memory and ability to analyze legal issues appears to be
decreasing. Doc. no. 1166 at 2.
The briefs in support of and in opposition to this motion were filed under seal, probably
because of the nature of the allegations discussed in this section. However, the court notes that
Judge Jenkins himself has not been squeamish about addressing, on the public record, allegations
about his mental competence. See, Peterson v. United States, 2006 WL 2252862, *4 (D. Utah
May 1, 2006) (denying motion to recuse). That fact undermines any considerations of
confidentiality with respect to what the Supreme Court has described as so delicate a subject
as the possible senility of a judge, Slayton v. Smith, 404 U.S. 53, 54 (1971), and strongly
supports adherence to the clear public policy favoring public access to records of judicial
decisions. For that reason, this order is not filed under seal.
III.
Plaintiffs contentions
Laying aside plaintiffs assertions with respect to Judge Jenkins mental
competence and his religious faith, plaintiffs core allegations of bias, within the
meaning of 455(a), are based on events which have occurred within the confines of
the litigation in the district court. Cataloging plaintiffs assertions is not a simple task,
but the following sampling will suffice as an overview of plaintiffs contentions:
The judges bias is demonstrated by the fact that he set a motion for
summary judgment for a three-week evidentiary hearing. There is
simply no way, from an objective perspective, that an experienced and
unbiased judge would set a motion for summary judgment for a three
week evidentiary hearing. Doc. no. 1166, at 3.
Bias is demonstrated by the fact that, in court proceedings, the judge
treats defense counsel better than he treats plaintiffs counsel. The judge
shows open hostility to plaintiff. Id. at 4. When the Tribe gets up to
speak, the Court continuously interrupts the Tribe, often with questions
wholly unrelated to the issues which are before the court. Id.
The judge has a default position of denying the Tribes requests, which
contrasts with its default position granting any request by the State and
aligned parties. Id. at 12.
The judge denies plaintiff the relief to which it is entitled by
continuously delaying ruling on the plaintiffs motions for summary
judgment. Id. at 16, 19. He is simply too biased to timely enter the
relief which is required in this matter and has used subterfuges,
reversals of [his] own orders, and other methods to put off again and
again and again the entry of relief, including by now entering a truly
unprecedented order that [he] would postpone ruling in the Tribes
motion for summary judgment until [he] held a three week evidentiary
hearing on that motion. Id. at 22.
IV. Relevant history of this litigation
a. Events prior to the spring of 2013, when the litigation was revived
Before addressing plaintiffs arguments in support of disqualification, it will
be helpful to review, for the sake of context, some aspects of the history of this
lengthy litigation. The appellate decisions that are relevant for present purposes are
styled Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation v. State of Utah, and are
found at 773 F.2d 1087 (10th Cir. 1985) (Ute III), 114 F.3d 1513 (10th Cir. 1997) (Ute
V) and 790 F.3d 1000 (10th Cir. 2015) (Ute VI), as well as Hagen v. Utah, 510 U.S.
399 (1994).
At a high level of generality, the story of this litigation is not complicated:
A jurisdictional dispute between two sovereigns is being adjudicated in the court
system of a third sovereign. But the litigation itself (which includes the challenges of
implementing the legal outcome mandated by Ute V) is, and has been, hideously
complex. As will be seen, the challenges that now confront Judge Jenkins are more
factual than legal, and therein lies much of the explanation for the present posture of
the case.
At an earlier stage, this litigation presented issues as to the allocation of civil
and criminal jurisdiction as between plaintiff on one hand, and Utah state authorities
on the other hand, with respect to the Uintah Valley Reservation, National Forest
Lands within that reservation, and the Uncompahgre Reservation. Ute V, 114 F.3d
at 1516 - 17. Judge Jenkins had held, in 1981, (i) that some 1902 and 1905 legislation
dealing with unallotted lands did not diminish the Uintah Valley Reservation, (ii)
except that the 1905 legislation, to the extent that it provided for the creation of forest
reserves, did diminish the Uintah Valley Reservation, and (iii) that an 1894 Act
disestablish[ed] the Uncompahgre Reservation. Id. at 1517 (summarizing Judge
Jenkins decision in Ute I, reported at 521 F.Supp. 1072 (D. Utah 1981)).
In an en banc decision (Ute III), the Court of Appeals held that all of the
lands at issue retained their reservation status. Ute III, 773 F.2d at 1093. At that
point, the status was that all the lands retained their reservation status and remained
Indian country, subject to the jurisdiction of the Tribe and the federal government.
Ute V, 114 F.3d at 1518. The Supreme Court denied certiorari. Utah v. Ute Indian
Tribe, 479 U.S. 994 (1986). Eight years later, the Supreme Court reshuffled the deck.
In a decision in an appeal, in a criminal prosecution, from a decision of the Utah
Supreme Court, the U.S. Supreme Court (affirming the Utah courts decision that
essentially disregarded the Tenth Circuits holding in Ute III), expressly reject[ed]
[Ute IIIs] conclusion that the Uintah Valley Reservation had not been diminished.
Ute V, 114 F.3d at 1519, summarizing Hagen v. Utah, 510 U.S. 399, 421 - 22 (1994).
But the Hagen decision by the U.S. Supreme Court was limited to the status of the
unallotted Uintah Valley Reservation lands opened to settlement under the 1902 1905 allotment legislation. Ute V, id. The Supreme Court did not address the
National Forest Lands or the Uncompahgre Reservation. Id. On May 2, 1994, shortly
after the Supreme Courts decision in Hagen, Judge Jenkins modified the then-existing
injunctive order to permit state and local prosecutions for felonies occurring on lands
within the original boundaries of the Uintah Valley Reservation which were not
statutory Indian country. But, importantly for present purposes, he noted that he was
not determining one way or another which lands may or may not constitute Indian
Country. Order dated May 2, 1994, as quoted in Ute Indian Tribe v. State of Utah,
935 F.Supp. 1473, 1480 n. 1 (D. Utah 1996) (Ute IV). In Ute IV, which the Court of
Appeals has described as a comprehensive and detailed opinion, Ute V, 114 F.3d
at 1519, Judge Jenkins, agreeing with plaintiffs arguments, concluded that, Hagen
notwithstanding, he was bound under the law of the case doctrine to enforce the
mandate in Ute III. Ute V, id. The appeal that inevitably followed produced the
Tenth Circuits decision in Ute V. In Ute V, the Court of Appeals framed the issues
as follows:
On appeal, the Tribe maintains that principles of finality require the
district court to enjoin permanently the state and local defendants from
exercising jurisdiction in a manner inconsistent with Ute Indian Tribe III.
9
On the other hand, the state and local defendants argue that we should
give effect to the contrary boundary determination in Hagen by recalling
the mandate in Ute Indian Tribe III in its entirety and reinstating the
original Tenth Circuit panel opinion.
Ute V, 114 F.3d 1513, 1520.
In Ute V, the Court of Appeals concluded that Judge Jenkins properly
followed our mandate in Ute III, id. at 1521, but decided on its own to modify that
mandate to the extent necessary to conform the state-tribal allocation of jurisdiction
to the to the Supreme Courts inconsistent [with Ute III] boundary determination in
Hagen. Id. On that score, the Court of Appeals held that:
[W]e agree with the district court that Hagen did not effectively overrule
the entire judgment in Ute Indian Tribe III, including our holdings
concerning the National Forest Lands and the Uncompahgre
Reservation. Further, we agree that Hagen's only effect was to reduce
(and not terminate) the boundaries of the Uintah Valley Reservation to
the extent that lands within the Reservation were unallotted, opened for
settlement under the 1902 -1905 legislation, and not thereafter returned
to tribal ownership. Accordingly, we hold that our prior judgment in Ute
Indian Tribe III should be, and is now, modified to the extent that lands
within the original reservation boundaries were unallotted, opened to
non-Indian settlement under the 1902 - 1905 legislation, and not
thereafter returned to tribal ownership.
Ute V, at 1528.
After undertaking an extensive analysis, the Court of Appeals divided up
jurisdiction as follows:
Indian country: Non-trust lands passing in fee to non-Indians pursuant
to the 1902 - 1905 allotment legislation. Id. at 1530.
Not Indian country: (i) Trust lands, (ii) National Forest Lands, (iii) the
Uncompahgre Reservation, (iv) lands apportioned to Mixed Blood
Utes under the Ute Partition Act, (v) lands allotted to individual Indians
that have passed into fee status after 1905, and (vi) lands that were held
in trust after the Reservation was opened in 1905 but that since have
10
been exchanged into fee status by the Tribe for then-fee (now trust) lands
in an effort to consolidate its land holdings pursuant to the Indian
Reorganization Act.
Ute V, 114 F.3d at 1529 - 30.
The Court of Appeals noted that: Although a title search may be necessary
to determine which lands were opened under the 1902 - 1905 legislation, the parties
respective jurisdictions will never change once the status of those lands is conclusively
determined. Id. at 1530 (emphasis added). The result was a checkerboard
allocation of jurisdiction. Id.
Odd though this may seem for purposes of a motion to recuse, it is important
(as will be seen) to bear in mind that the plain language of the opinion Judge Tacha
wrote for the panel in Ute V left no room for doubt that the task of conclusively
determin[ing] the jurisdictional status of the squares on the checkerboard remained
to be accomplished, and that that task fell to the district court in the pending
proceedings. Nothing in the Ute V opinion intimates that the Court of Appeals
contemplated that parcel-by-parcel jurisdictional determinations would be made, over
the course of decades, by state courts in state prosecutions, by tribal courts, or by the
Utah federal court in a series of ad hoc rulings made in contempt proceedings.
Although Ute V remanded the case to the district court for consideration of
permanent injunctive relief, the parties instead entered into, as plaintiff puts it, three
agreements that have since expired, or were never implemented, or were terminated
according to their terms. Doc. no. 1198, at 3. The matter was essentially dormant
from 2000 until 2013, when the Complaint in Case No. 13-cv-00276 was filed and
motions were filed in the 1975 case, seeking additional relief in that case. See, doc.
nos. 153 - 161.
The litigation once again came to a head in June, 2015, with the Tenth
Circuits decision in Ute VI. Judge Jenkins had denied a motion for a preliminary
11
injunction to halt a prosecution pending in the Wasatch County Justice Court. The
Court of Appeals turned aside all of the defendants arguments in support of Judge
Jenkins decision and, more to the point here, directed the district court to enter
appropriate preliminary injunctive relief forthwith. Ute VI, 790 F.3d at 1012.
b. District court proceedings after the case was revived in the spring of 2013
Plaintiffs motion under 455(a) is based on events that have occurred since
the litigation was revived in April, 2013. Before the 1975 case was revived in 2013,
the most recent substantive action had been taken by Judge Jenkins in early 2000. The
case was then dormant until early 2013. In April, 2013, plaintiff filed a motion for
supplemental proceedings. Doc. no. 153. Five days after that motion was filed, Judge
Jenkins entered an order reopening the case and consolidating it with the newly filed
case, Case No. 13-cv-0276. Doc. no. 161.
Preliminary note
Careful and admittedly tedious review of the proceedings, especially
over the last year, is appropriate. There are several reasons for this. First, the present
motion presents the question of whether a reasonable person, knowing all the
relevant facts, would harbor doubts about the judge's impartiality." Hinman v.
Rogers, 831 F.2d 937, 939 (10th Cir. 1987) (emphasis added). By their nature,
plaintiffs arguments in support of recusal make thousands of pages of pleadings,
briefs and transcripts relevant. Second, one of the main components of plaintiffs case
for bias is delay in granting relief. An objective observer especially one who has
read the Tenth Circuit's decision in Ute VI might well wonder why this case has not
progressed further toward a final and definitive conclusion. One possibility is that a
biased and recalcitrant judge is dragging the matter out with no justification, thus
inflicting his bias on a disfavored litigant by evading the mandate of Ute V while
12
At a hearing on February 22, 2016, plaintiffs counsel purported to have that belief:
13
order also set other deadlines relating to the preliminary injunction proceedings. Doc.
no. 231.
The pretrial conference was held as scheduled on June 24, 2013. Doc. no.
269. The pretrial conference consumed more than two hours. The time pressure, in
terms of injunctive relief, was alleviated by the announcement, apparently by counsel
for Duchesne County, that pending state cases would be held in abeyance. Doc. no.
269.
Plaintiffs April 29 motion was labeled as a Renewed Motion for
Emergency Temporary Restraining Order. Doc. 176, at 1. However, it was clear
from the motion that the relief sought was a preliminary injunction. Id. at 11. The
motion sought injunctive relief to halt four criminal prosecutions which were pending
in Uintah County. Specifically, the motion sought a preliminary injunction enjoining
the defendants from:
1) Asserting in any court, administrative forum or other law-applying
forum that the Uncompahgre Reservation has been disestablished or
diminished.
2) Asserting in any court, administrative forum, or other law-applying
forum that the Ute Tribe lacks any power of a sovereign Indian Tribe
over any part of the Uncompahgre Reservation.
3) Asserting in any court, administrative forum or other law-applying
forum that the Uintah Valley Reservation has been disestablished.
4) For any land recognized as remaining part of the Uintah Valley
Reservation in Ute Tribe of Indians of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation
v. State of Utah, 773 F.2d 1298 (10th Cir. 1985) (Ute III) as modified by
Ute Tribe of Indians of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation v. State of
Utah, 114 F.3d 1513 (10th Cir. 1993) (Ute V), asserting in any court,
administrative forum or other law-applying forum that such land is not
part of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation or is not part of an Indian
Reservation as that term is defined in 18 U.S.C. 1151(a).
14
Countys Rule 12(c) Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs Complaint for Lack of Subject
Matter Jurisdiction (doc. no. 250), Plaintiffs Rule 12(b) Motion to Dismiss the State
of Utahs Counterclaim (doc. no. 270), Plaintiffs Rule 12(b) Motion to Dismiss
Duchesne Countys Counterclaim (doc. no. 271), and Plaintiffs Rule 12(b) Motion
to Dismiss Uintah Countys Amended Counterclaim. Doc. no. 278.
By order entered on November 14, 2013, doc. no. 326, Judge Jenkins
consolidated the motion for preliminary injunction with the trial on the merits
pursuant to Rule 65(a)(2), Fed. R. Civ. P., set six of the Rule 12 motions for hearing
on January 10, 2014, and established a schedule calling for completion of discovery
and filing of post-discovery motions in early 2014, to be followed by a pretrial
conference in early April, 2014. Doc. no. 362, at 7-8.
After the entry of the scheduling order, the matter proceeded to get ever
more complex. After the entry of the scheduling order on November 14, 2013, scores
of motions, substantive and non-substantive, were filed, including motions for
sanctions and numerous discovery motions. All of that is aside from appeals and
cross-appeals, as well as new or renewed motions for injunctive relief.
The
substantive motions included, on November 27, 2013 (doc. no. 335), The Ute Tribes
Motion for Partial Summary Judgment and a Permanent Injunction Barring
Defendants From Relitigating Issues That Have Been Conclusively Adjudicated and
From Exercising Criminal Jurisdiction Over Native Americans Inside the Uintah and
Ouray Reservation. In many respects, this motion duplicated the previously-filed
motion for preliminary injunction at doc. no. 176. On December 20, 2013, plaintiff
filed The Ute Tribes Second Renewed Motion For Preliminary Injunctive Relief.
Doc. no. 361. At least in terms of the relief sought, this motion again substantially
duplicated the requests for relief that had been previously advanced. From a
jurisdictional and procedural standpoint, the matter was complicated further, on
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January 21, 2014, with the filing of The Ute Tribe and Third-Party Defendants
Motion and Supporting Memorandum to Dismiss Duchesne Countys Counterclaim
and Third-Party Complaint Under Rule 12(b), Or Alternatively for a Summary
Judgment of Dismissal. Doc. no. 417.
On February 14, 2014, the state of Utah filed a Motion for Partial Summary
Judgment (doc. no. 458), and Duchesne County filed a Motion for Partial Summary
Judgment on the same day. Doc. no. 459. These substantive motions were followed
by Duchesne Citys Motion for Summary Judgment and Memorandum in Support.
Doc. no. 465. On February 24, 2014, Judge Jenkins entered an order substantially
granting plaintiffs motion to dismiss the counterclaims filed by Duchesne County.
Count 1 of Duchesne Countys counterclaim was dismissed with leave to file an
amended pleading. The Countys racketeering claims under Count 2 were dismissed
for being facially deficient and failing to state a cause of action, and the court
denied the motion to dismiss the remaining claims under Counts 2 through 5. Doc.
no. 481. This order drew a notice of appeal by plaintiff, doc. no. 488, appealing the
order denying the tribes motion to dismiss the counterclaims. Jurisdiction was
asserted under the collateral order doctrine. Doc. no. 488. In turn, Uintah County
filed a notice of cross-appeal on March 13, 2014 (doc. no. 516), appealing that portion
of the January 10, 2014 ruling denying Uintah Countys motion to dismiss plaintiffs
complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, to the extent that that order reflected
a holding that Uintah County lacked sovereign immunity from suit by the tribe.
Given the scheduling complexities resulting from the pendency of the
multitude of motions, many of which were themselves exceptionally complex, Judge
Jenkins held a status conference on March 17, 2014. The conference ran for nearly
three hours. The result of that conference was that plaintiffs deadline for responding
to motions for summary judgment was extended to March 31, discovery was reopened
17
to April 22, the stipulated final pretrial order was due on April 30, a final pretrial
conference was set for May 5 and 6, 2014, as well as May 7, if necessary. The order
also stated that all other pending motions will be continued and considered within the
context of Pretrial. Doc. no. 520, filed on March 17, 2014.
On April 24, 2014, Judge Jenkins entered an order clarifying, in part, rulings
previously made on motions to dismiss, including particularly the rulings
memorialized in the order at doc. no. 481 which had been filed on February 24, 2014.
In the April 24 order, expanding on his ruling with respect to motions to dismiss
Uintah Countys amended counterclaim and Uintah Countys third party complaint,
Judge Jenkins stated that he had dismissed Uintah Countys allegations concerning
tribal participation in the filing of purportedly frivolous tribal court lawsuits against
Uintah County officials for lack of sufficient facts to state a plausible claim for relief,
granting twenty days leave to amend. He also stated that he had denied plaintiffs
motion to dismiss as to core jurisdictional issues raised by Uintah Countys amended
counterclaim. Doc. no. 582, at 3. Judge Jenkins also concluded that:
The legal question of the respective scope of State, local
and tribal jurisdiction within the existing Ute reservation
boundaries rests at the core of this case, and will be fully
addressed in the context of the plenary hearing to be
conducted later this year. That question demands full and
definitive resolution.
The State of Utahs Counterclaim joins issue on the
jurisdictional question, as do the plaintiffs own pleadings.
Each is entitled to a thoughtful and reasoned determination
on the merits.
Doc. no. 582, at 5.
Accordingly, Judge Jenkins ordered that the plaintiffs Rule 12(b) motion
to dismiss Uintah Countys amended counterclaim is GRANTED IN PART as to
18
19
member of the Navajo Nation in Uintah County State Court for an offense allegedly
occurring within the boundaries of the Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation. The
location of the alleged offense was asserted to be Indian country as evidenced by a
Land Status Verification from the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Doc. no. 619, at 2.
The May 5 and 6 proceedings were memorialized by way of a docket entry
entered on May 6, which noted that: There are fact questions to be resolved.
Counsel were directed to prepare and submit a proposed pretrial order within ten days,
and an evidentiary hearing was set for July 28, 2014 at 9:30 a.m.
On July 18, Judge Jenkins ordered that an amended pretrial order, approved
by all counsel, should be submitted by August 22, with a final pretrial conference to
be held on September 22, 2014. The docket entry for this action noted that: All
parties agreed to the dates set.
On September 10, 2014, prior to the September 22 final pretrial conference,
plaintiff filed a motion to bifurcate. Doc. no. 671. For purposes of this motion to
recuse, it is of more than passing significance that, by that motion, plaintiff asked the
court to hold a separate trial on the fact-intensive issue of identifying the
jurisdictional status of particular land parcels within the Uintah Valley Indian
Reservation, thereby allowing the Court to proceed on an expedited basis on the
Tribes pressing and long-pending claims for injunctive relief. Doc. no. 671, at 2.
In support of the motion to bifurcate, plaintiff noted that in the Ute V decision in
1997, the Court of Appeals had said that a title search may be necessary to determine
which lands were opened under the 1902-1905 legislation. Id. Accordingly, plaintiff
asserted that: Apart from the immediate and pressing need to rule on the Tribes
pending motions for injunctive relief, the Court is also faced with the separate, but no
less important task, of determining what lands within the Uintah Valley Reservation
remain within the Reservation pursuant to the three-part test set forth by the Tenth
20
a particular area to perform exhaustive title research and to identify and interpret land
records dating back to the early 1900. Id.
In light of the filing of yet more motions, on September 12, 2014, the court
entered an order for hearing with respect to Uintah Countys Motion to Stay Pending
Appeals (doc. no. 668), plaintiffs Motion for Ruling that the District Court has
Continuing Jurisdiction Over Uintah County in the Original Action (at doc. no. 670),
plaintiffs Motion to Bifurcate (doc. no. 671), plaintiffs Motion for Appointment of
Special Master (at doc. no. 672) and Richard Douglas Hackfords Motion for
Preliminary Injunction. Doc. no. 675. These motions were set for hearing at the
previously set pretrial and motion hearing, scheduled for September 22, 2014. Doc.
no. 677.
The pretrial and motion hearing began, as scheduled, on September 22,
2014. The court took action on some of the pending motions, then recessed for the
day, requesting counsel to meet and determine what issues remained to be adjudicated.
The hearing resumed on September 23, 2014, at 1:30 p.m. Doc. no. 707. On
September 23, at the continued pretrial conference, the court stayed the matter as to
all remaining parties except Duchesne City. The court directed counsel to meet and
submit a suggested form of a pretrial order within 20 days. Doc. no. 708. The stay
was the result of the pendency of appellate proceedings and was entered at the
suggestion of counsel for plaintiff. At the September 23 hearing, counsel for plaintiff
told the court that it would make sense to stay the whole case (doc. no. 709, at 30),
but deferred to Duchesne City as to whether the stay should include proceedings
relating to Duchesne City. Id. See also, doc. no. 709, at 31 (Mr. Rasmussen: OK.
Our view is that the court should at this point stay the whole case.)
On December 3, 2014, a hearing was had, predominantly focused on issues
relating to the form of an order memorializing action previously taken in the case by
22
Judge Jenkins. Those proceedings, for which the transcript is at doc. no. 747, shed
light on several aspects of the matter before the undersigned.
First, the December 3, 2014 proceedings probably present the prime example
of pointed exchanges between Judge Jenkins and counsel for plaintiff, specifically Mr.
Rasmussen. The discussion evolved into some give and take as to the status of lots
in the City of Myton townsite. The discussion between Judge Jenkins and Mr.
Rasmussen proceeded on a fairly even keel (albeit not without some tension here and
there) until Mr. Rasmussen, referring to most of the land within that presidential
townsite (doc. no. 747, at 19), told Judge Jenkins that he was trying to give it to the
City of Myton. Id. Judge Jenkins responded: Im not trying to give it to anybody.
Id. To which Mr. Rasmussen replied: We respectfully disagree. Id. To which
Judge Jenkins responded: Quit putting words in the Courts mouth. Thats one of
your bad habits. Id. This is decidedly not the first or only instance of Mr.
Rasmussens provocative choice of words. Mr. Rasmussen provided the bait; Judge
Jenkins rose to the bait in that instance, although there have been many other
instances, as disclosed by the transcripts in this case, in which Judge Jenkins did not
rise to the bait. This exchange, viewed either in isolation or within the total context
of the case, is not indicative of bias cognizable under 455(a). Judge Jenkins
succeeded in clearing the air, to facilitate a reasoned discussion of the issues then
before the court, by observing that:
The Court has diminished nothing, it has taken nothing,
and, quite frankly, counsel, has stolen nothing. And the use
of inflammatory words on the part of counsel is
inappropriate. I dont want any more of it. You can talk
factually and you can talk legal propositions. But Ive tried
to be tolerant and Ive tried to be appropriate in considering
matters that are in conflict. But after a while, the Court
even gets tired of inflammatory matters. And be suitably
warned, Ive been sitting here for over three decades and I
23
The tone of Judge Jenkins exchanges with Mr. Rasmussen differed noticeably from
the tone of his exchanges with plaintiffs other lead counsel, Ms. Bassett, as indicated by the
placid discussion at pages 77-79 of the December 3, 2014 transcript. Doc. no. 747.
24
candid acknowledgment, toward the end of the hearing that (referring to an order
addressing the jurisdictional status of a mixed-blood):
And it seems to me that I may have issued a premature
order dealing with his mixed blood nature and the
consequence to him of a particular statute that Congress
passed without first looking at the question of location.
Because if hes in Salt Lake City, for example, his status as
a mixed blood is of no moment. If he's at a different
location, where it may or may not have some significance,
then at that point in time his status as a mixed blood is
meaningful. I may have jumped the gun.
Id. at 82-83.
By order entered on January 28, 2015 (doc. no. 786), Judge Jenkins
dismissed plaintiffs claims against the City of Myton, consistent with the Supreme
Courts decision in Hagan, 510 U.S. 399, at 421-22 (the Town of Myton is not in
Indian country), and his understanding of the mandate of the Court of Appeals in Ute
V. Doc. no. 786, at 6.
On September 11, 2015, in the wake of the Tenth Circuits Ute VI decision
in June Judge Jenkins entered a preliminary injunction enjoining a criminal
prosecution then pending in Wasatch County Justice Court. Doc. no. 944. In that
order, Judge Jenkins specifically noted the mandate of the Court of Appeals to enter
appropriate preliminary injunctive relief forthwith. Id. That September 11 order
obviously did not resolve all of the remaining issues in the case. Far from it. But that
order, focusing on a particular prosecution, illustrated the need for comprehensive and
definitive resolution of the jurisdictional status of tracts of land as to which
jurisdictional uncertainty remained.
On October 12, 2015, again in the wake of the Tenth Circuits decision in
Ute VI, plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment, seeking the following relief:
25
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
8)
9)
27
a relatively narrow set of issues, the proceedings before Judge Jenkins on October 22,
2015 once again illustrate the problems which continue to bedevil this case, this time
in the context of a discussion in which Judge Jenkins was clearly attempting to define
the issues, at least for purposes of the matters before the court that day. The following
exchange occurred:
THE COURT: Okay. Now you say its the Tribes land.
Okay. Other than that, are there any problems with
Duchesne City?
MR. RASMUSSEN: Other than them trying to take our land?
THE COURT: Other than the fact that youve got a dispute
as to land.
MR. RASMUSSEN: We dont have a dispute, Your Honor.
We already have Ute III, Ute V and Ute VI. We have them
trying not to abide by it.
THE COURT: Okay. Well, thats a question that I guess is
yet to be determined as to Duchesne City.
MR. RASMUSSEN: And thats going to be determined by
the Court of Appeals. That issue is on appeal and not
before this Court anymore.
THE COURT: Well, that depends.
MR. RASMUSSEN: No, that does not.
THE COURT: Im sorry. When you address the Court, you
address the Court courteously. Ill address counsel
courteously. But if I make a statement, youre welcome to
respond to it. But Im trying to figure out what youre
talking about, particularly in reference to Duchesne City.
Doc. no. 1010, at 7-8.
When Judge Jenkins said Well, that depends, he was clearly making
reference to the fact that even though appellate proceedings were then pending, it was
by no means a foregone conclusion that given the nature of the appeal and of the
28
proceedings underway in the district court the mere filing of a notice of appeal froze
the litigation in the district court. Mr. Rasmussens curt and demonstrably
incorrect response (No, that does not) invited, and got, a tart response from the
presiding judge. More importantly for present purposes, Judge Jenkins concluded his
response to Mr. Rasmussens unjustifiably confrontational statement by attempting
to get the matter back on track: But Im trying to figure out what youre talking
about, particularly in reference to Duchesne City. Id. at 8. Once again, the tone by
which Mr. Rasmussen addressed the court bears comparison to Ms. Bassetts
demeanor in the courtroom. See, e.g., the October 28, 2015 transcript, doc. no. 1010,
at 47-51, 55-56 and 66-70. The passage at pages 66-70 is especially telling. Ms.
Bassett directly and respectfully answered Judge Jenkins questions, without quibbling
about the relevance of the question to the proceedings at hand and without verbally
poking a sharp stick in the eye of the presiding judge.
The October 28 proceedings also shed light on Judge Jenkins continuing
desire to bring the case to a conclusion consonant with the rights of the parties as
adjudicated by the Court of Appeals. The following passages from Judge Jenkins
comments at the conclusion of the hearing are illustrative:
The primary reason, of course, is that we have yet to
comply about mandate in the 75 case. First, that mandate
is many years old. It found first life in Ute III. It was
discussed extensively by this Court in Ute IV including the
meaning of the mandate and the requirements under
mandate. It was modified by the Court of Appeals at in Ute
V. The form and content of a mandated permanent
injunction has yet to be decided in this case. It was
postponed for years because of the agreement of the parties,
the agreement of the parties purportedly to get along, and
found new life only after the agreement of the parties
expired or was ignored, and the 75 case was reopened.
29
Lest there be any doubt as to whether, during the post-Ute VI proceedings in the
district court, Judge Jenkins considered the defendants to be under effective restraint pendente
lite, the following exchange (in the context of a discussion of a stay of a Uintah County
prosecution) from the October 22, 2015 motion hearing) is worthy of note:
THE COURT: But you've agreed that they could prosecute him for state lands.
Why should we stay that if you've agreed to it?
MS. BASSETT: Because the order does not prevent them from going back to
their state court and prosecuting him for the on reservation.
THE COURT: Actually it does, and I think they understand that very well. And
they recognize that if they play around with nonsense like that they would be here
and I'd put them in jail.
Doc. no. 1010, at 55 - 56.
31
amounted to an assertion, repeated later at the pretrial conference, that the case could
and should be closed in the district court without identification of the geographic areas
that are off limits for purposes of prosecution by Utah state authorities. Continuing
that discussion, Judge Jenkins, commenting on the effect of Ute V, observed that:
THE COURT: To the extent that [Ute V] modified Ute III,
it pointed out in Uintah the possibility that some of the
lands within the original boundaries may have changed in
character. And the question then becomes well, okay, if its
changed in character, what portion of those lands are still
Indian Country, if any? What portion of those lands are no
longer Indian lands, Indian Country, if any? You know,
that is a factual question and that's a question, that's a
legitimate question.
Doc. no. 1106, at 16.
That comment by Judge Jenkins plainly indicates an understanding that,
under Ute V, the task which falls to the district court (in giving effect to the
overarching legal principles that had by then been clearly established by the Supreme
Court and the Tenth Circuit) was the task of determining what lands fell within state
criminal jurisdiction and what lands did not.
This continuing discussion at the pretrial conference brought into high relief
the necessity of resolving geographic jurisdiction within the context of the federal
litigation. Shortly after Judge Jenkins made his comment about the need to sort out
geographic jurisdiction (doc. no. 1106, at 16, quoted above), Ms. Bassett observed
that:
And I think that it is incumbent upon the state parties that
if there is a prosecution of someone who claims to be an
Indian, and it is in the boundary areas, checkerbordered
[sic] areas of the Uintah Valley Reservation, it is incumbent
upon them to verify state jurisdiction before they proceed
with that prosecution. And we believe that a permanent
33
34
Id. at 32.
Counsel for Uintah summarized his clients position as follows:
I think as a result of that language, that in whatever
permanent injunctive relief is measured, that first there has
to be a determination, a conclusive determination, of what
is and is not Indian Country applying the principles in Ute
V. That would be the mandate from Ute V that I see.
Id. at 33.
The discussion of these relief-related issues at the pretrial conference
inevitably led to references to situations involving state criminal prosecutions in
which serious practical difficulties arose from jurisdictional uncertainty. Counsel for
Uintah county, in that context, made reference to what was referred to as the Blake
Nez case, among others:
The Blake Nez case was always within county jurisdiction.
The Tribe sought an injunction in this court on that matter
and then later we voluntarily agreed to stay it at the request
of the court and avoid further argument. They have since
withdrawn their claims because factually there is no dispute
whatsoever that it occurred within county and state
jurisdiction. But when the Tribe talks about all of the
interference with tribal sovereignty, and I understand their
point and concern, I mean in no way to belittle it, its a
valid concern, its just as valid with the state and counties.
When a county officer makes a citation or arrest, and it
takes three years for the charges to be brought to trial or
longer because of stays and all of the other things, there is
an interference with the countys sovereignty, with the
states sovereignty.
Id. at 38.
The position of counsel for Uintah County as to the nature of the task
remaining for the district court was substantially echoed by counsel for Duchesne
County and Wasatch County:
35
37
that the mandates of Ute V and Ute VI would be implemented by a grant of substantial
judicial relief. Much of the pretrial conference was devoted to discussion of the extent
to which relief could be granted without further delay, versus the extent to which
either the broader relief sought by plaintiff in its motions for summary judgment or
the resolution of specific geographic jurisdiction issues as to specific parcels would
entail further delay, including the delay inherent in holding an evidentiary hearing.
But, as will be seen, one thing was certain about Judge Jenkins approach to the
matter. He was interested in bringing the case to a conclusion. As he said on January
20, 2016: And Im as interested in finality before Im dead as anybody in the
courtroom. Doc. no. 1188, at 140.
In the pretrial conference on January 21, 2016, the discussion returned to the
checkerboard jurisdiction issue, commonly referred to by Judge Jenkins and counsel
as the carveout. Judge Jenkins made it very clear that, as far as he was concerned,
deferring resolution of the geographic jurisdiction issues as to the carveout parcels
was an open invitation to trouble again. Doc. no. 1120, at 23. Shortly after that he
elaborated:
Well, weve got to get those competing maps down to one so that
they accurately and commonly define whats there. We've got to do
our work as mandated in Ute V as to the carveout and not leave it to
new generations to do what we are supposed to do ourselves.
Doc. no. 1120, at 24.
Judge Jenkins was also interested in exploring the possibility of granting any
relief that could appropriately be granted without the delay that would inhere in
further proceedings: Well, are we in a position at this point to talk about the entry
of at least some measure of the mandate in Ute V? Id. at 25. On that score, Judge
Jenkins mentioned the possibility that a carveout can wait until the next hearing so
people can do their work on both sides, even though we sat together months and
38
months and months ago where the Tribe asked for making sure they had plenty of time
to do their work in reference to the checkerboard area, and we extended that time.
Id.
Later in the January 21 proceedings, the subject of adjudication of the
jurisdictional status of the carveout parcels the checkerboard tracts arose once
again, resulting in this significant exchange:
[Ms. Bassett:] So what we ask for is for this Court to go ahead and
enter a permanent injunction as to the lands that are already
delineated. In the interim, we would, and without we are -- without
waiving our position, because our position is, is that no further
adjudicatory process is required as to the carveout areas. So without
waiving that
THE COURT: Thats a changed position. It was an earlier position
otherwise.
MS. BASSETT: Yes. And I think maybe that was before we
recognized the massiveness of the job that would be entailed.
Doc. no. 1120, at 45 (emphasis added).
This turnabout, taken together with Mr. Rasmussens proposal that the parties
could just come back if they had a dispute, doc. no. 1106, at 69, vividly illustrates
what the predominant problem is in this case. Ute V, common sense, and the obvious
need for jurisdictional certainty, all require a definitive determination, by contested
adjudication if necessary, of the jurisdictional status of all parcels whose jurisdictional
status might be open to question. Judge Tacha unmistakably recognized that need in
Ute V. State and tribal law enforcement officers simply cannot function effectively
without that degree of clarity, and Judge Jenkins repeatedly recognized the need for
clarity as to the jurisdictional status of all parcels whose status might be in question.
In September, 2014, as is discussed in more detail on p. 20, above, plaintiffs counsel
spoke of the separate, but no less important task, of determining what lands within
39
the Uintah Valley Reservation remain within the Reservation pursuant to the threepart test set forth by the Tenth Circuit in Ute V. Doc. no. 671, at 4. Plaintiff said
correctly that it was critical to comprehensively determine the jurisdiction status
of all lands within the original Uintah Valley Reservation. Only then will the parties
have certainty and finality about the jurisdictional status of lands within the
Reservation. Id. But, at least as early as the pretrial conference in January, 2016,
plaintiffs counsel struggled to avoid tackling that tedious and unglamourous task. As
will be seen, their strategy for avoiding that task became, when all other options were
unavailing, a strategy of delay. That strategy went hand in hand with the adoption of
an even more strident tone in Mr. Rasmussens treatment of the presiding judge.
Then, when ordinary methods of getting some delay were unavailing, plaintiffs
counsel filed the present motion.
If anything is clear from the record in this case, it is clear that there are
numerous parcels whose jurisdictional status has not been determined. It is equally
clear that once the parties actually sit down and work through the operative
documents, the status of numerous parcels can be determined without the necessity
of a contested adjudication. But the record also plainly demonstrates that, ultimately,
there will be some parcels as to which there will be no meeting of the minds, resulting
in the need for a contested adjudication of jurisdictional status. The fact that
plaintiffs counsel changed their minds about the need for an adjudicatory process
when they recognized the massiveness of the job explains much but changes
nothing.
The pretrial conference continued on January 22, 2016. With the benefit of his
discussions with counsel, on the preceding days, of the legal and practical issues
presented by the case, Judge Jenkins made it clear that he thought a stepwise approach
to granting final relief might well be appropriate. In the context of a discussion of the
40
confusion resulting from conflicting jurisdictional maps, Judge Jenkins observed that
the diminished items referred to in Ute V have yet to be itemized and specifically
defined. Doc. no. 1114, at 164. But he observed that, even so: we could end up
with a reasonable mandated final order, at least in part, awaiting the completion of the
work to which weve all been assigned. Id. at 164-65. To that end, Judge Jenkins
indicated his desire for the preparation of a common and agreed to map that tracks
Ute III and Ute V with a recognition of the carveout section that is still a work in
process. And I would like to have that done in three weeks. Id. at 165. He
recognized that one map attached to an order implementing Ute V would be the
beginning point. Id. Consequently, he said that he would like the Indian Tribe to
prepare a suggested form of order having to do with the determination in Ute V, and
to do so within ten days. Id. He invited the defendants to do likewise, within ten
days after presentation of plaintiffs proposed order. Id. Thus, Judge Jenkins was
clearly intent on granting relief effectuating the principles expounded in Ute V
without having to await the completion of the process necessary to adjudicate the
jurisdictional status of carveout parcels.
That brought the discussion to a point, on January 22, which has drawn much
pointed comment and argument in plaintiffs papers in support of the present motion.
Judge Jenkins announced his intent to hold an evidentiary hearing on the motion for
summary judgment. Doc. no. 1114, at 168. He solicited the estimates of counsel as
to the time required for that hearing. Mr. Rasmussen, co-counsel for plaintiff,
commented that he had never been in a situation where theres been any substantial
amount of testimony at a summary judgment motion. Id. Judge Jenkins explained
(somewhat confusingly): Were going to trial. But were having a hearing on the
motions for summary judgment because there are evidentiary questions that are in
conflict. Id. at 169. At that point, counsel for one of the defendants inquired as to
41
whether the hearing contemplated by Judge Jenkins would deal with the carveout
areas, to which Judge Jenkins responded as follows:
THE COURT: No. Heavens no. Thats absolutely post. We're
going to enter at least a partial. That's why Ive asked them to
prepare and suggest a form of order implementing Ute V. Thats
separate and a different evidentiary position to begin with.
Id.
In responding to a comment by plaintiffs counsel, Judge Jenkins elaborated
on his intentions:
THE COURT: There are disputed issues of fact, primarily because
of the large relief[6] that youre asking for. There are some facts that
are not in dispute. There are other facts that are very much in dispute.
So weve got to have an evidentiary hearing.
Doc. no. 1114, at 170.
Mr. Rawson, counsel for Uintah County, estimated that the length of the
hearing contemplated by Judge Jenkins would be at least three weeks, given all the
witnesses. Id. at 172. As this discussion drew to a close, Judge Jenkins set the
hearing to begin on Monday the 21st of March, ten oclock in the morning, hearing
on motions for summary judgment, including the last one. Id. at 174.
After reiterating his desire for an order generally implementing the Ute V
mandate, id. at 175, Judge Jenkins inquired of Mr. Rasmussen as to how soon he
could be prepared to address the issues as to the carveout parcels. Id. at 176. Mr.
Rasmussen suggested that each countys parcels be dealt with separately. Id. He also
suggested that Duchesne City could be dealt with much sooner because it looks like
42
theres only about 20 lots within Duchesne City where theres really an issue. Id.
And Judge Jenkins summarized his thoughts as to the process relating to the carveouts
as follows: Those things that you can agree upon 99 percent, thats fine. If there is
a one-percent problem, the Court will try to resolve it for you. Id. at 177.
As the pretrial conference neared completion, Judge Jenkins returned once
again to the task of maintaining the status quo pending the entry of final relief:
Now, in the interim, so we maintain the status quo and try to get
along, I have previously stayed things, sometimes formally,
sometimes informally. Were interested in good faith on both sides.
I will indicate that if it is obvious within the meaning of Ute V, that
basically incorporates Ute III, at least in most part, where a state
trooper, or someone similarly situated, is faced with a problem and
information is accurately available, he act in good faith. And the
tribal representatives, when they are asked for information, supply
that information promptly and act in good faith.
And I will indicate that from the bench here right now as an order
until this matter is finally settled. I recognize, as has counsel for the
Tribe, that it depends on the facts and circumstances, but one should
not knowingly violate Ute III or Ute V as modified.
Id. at 179-180.
As the hearing drew to a conclusion, Judge Jenkins made his intent clear:
THE COURT: Yes. Its Ute V. Ute V. Ute V. Yes. Thats what
we've got to -- you see, thats why we have to segment it. Weve got
to get that implementing order, that final order taken care of. We all
recognize that we havent done the work that needs to be done to deal
with the carveout section. So at least we can get most of it done.
Weve gone even a little further on the carve out, as you know.
Id. at 184.
In summary as to the pretrial conference, and those aspects of it that are
prominently discussed in plaintiffs motion papers, it is reasonably clear that, as far
as Judge Jenkins was concerned, three types of relief were in play:
43
In the January 27 order, Judge Jenkins elaborated as follows with respect to the
second category of relief (the expansive relief):
The second matter a court determination on the expansive relief
requested by the Tribe in its complaint, as consolidated, and several
summary judgment motions requires an evidentiary hearing. In the
Tribes most recent summary judgment motion (CM/ECF No. 1088),
the Tribe seeks a permanent injunction enjoining Defendants to
refrain from ten very broad areas of behavior. This requested relief
parallels the relief sought in the Tribe's prior summary judgment
motions. The expansive nature of such relief goes beyond and is in
contrast to the fairly limited task of implementing the Mandate.
When parties seek permanent injunctive relief particularly of the
expansive nature sought by the Tribe in its complaint, as
consolidated, and summary judgment motions and when conflicts
and evidentiary questions arise, parties are entitled to a hearing to
resolve those questions.
Id. at 2.
Consistent with his oft-repeated desire to enter an order implementing the Ute
III and Ute V mandate, Judge Jenkins directed the plaintiff to submit a proposed form
of order within ten days, and granted defendants ten days thereafter within which to
respond with their proposed forms of order. Id. Judge Jenkins January 27 order also
called for submission of proposed maps implementing Ute III and Ute V as to the
exterior boundaries of the reservation and, importantly, directed the parties to meet on
four days in the latter part of February to resolve the carveout issues remaining from
Ute V. Id. Finally, as relevant here, the January 27 order reaffirmed the setting for
the evidentiary hearing as follows: A three week allotted evidentiary hearing on the
permanent injunctive relief sought in the Tribes summary judgment motions shall
commence at 10:00 a.m. on March 21, 2016. Id. at 3.
On February 8, plaintiff filed a notice of appeal (doc. no. 1127) with respect to
Judge Jenkins January 27 order. That appeal was assigned No. 16-4021 in the Court
45
of Appeals. The Tribe wasted no time asserting that the filing of the notice of appeal
divested the District Court of jurisdiction. Doc. no. 1135, at 2, filed on February
11, 2016. Accordingly, the Tribe also moved for an order vacating the order directing
the parties to meet in late February to address carveout issues. Doc. no. 1143, filed
on February 19, 2016.
Also on February 19, 2016, the Court of Appeals entered an order denying the
Tribes emergency motion for a stay of the district court proceedings. The Court of
Appeals briefly recounted the four factors ordinarily relevant to the issue of whether
a stay should be entered and concluded that: Upon consideration of [the Tribes]
motion, appellees responses, and appellants replies, we conclude appellant has failed
to justify the grant of a stay under the governing factors. Doc. no. 1145 (dated
February 19, 2016, in Tenth Circuit Nos. 15-4154 and 16-4021).
It is fair to say that, following the pretrial conference and motion hearing, and
with the January 27 order in hand, the parties had their marching orders and were left
with no reason to doubt Judge Jenkins resolve to push the case to a conclusion. By
the time the January hearings ended, and, in any event, by the time they read Judge
Jenkins January 27 order, there should have been no question in the minds of
plaintiffs counsel that the three week trial on summary judgment mystery was no
longer a mystery at all. As is discussed above, Judge Jenkins plainly intended to
summarily (e.g., under Rule 56) grant the overarching relief that could be granted with
no further ado (to implement, at the district court level, the legal principles expounded
in Ute V) and to hold a trial on the residual fact issues relevant to the other relief
sought by plaintiff. Yet, as late as February 22, 2016, three days after the Tenth
Circuit had denied a stay of proceedings before Judge Jenkins, and in the context of
a discussion of plans for proceedings consistent with Judge Jenkins January 27 order,
Mr. Rasmussen reiterated that you cannot set a motion for summary judgment for an
46
47
or resolution of a promptly filed petition for writ of mandamus to the Tenth Circuit,
through which the Tribe would seek appellate review of any order by this Court
refusing to recuse itself. Doc. no. 1165, at 2. On March 9, 2016, on his own motion,
Judge Jenkins vacated the hearings that had been set for March 11 and March 21.
V. Discussion and analysis under 455(a)
The controlling legal standards are stated beginning at p. 2, above. Suffice it
to say for present purposes that the test under 455(a) is objective. Disqualification
is appropriate only where a reasonable person, were he to know all the circumstances,
would harbor doubts about the judges impartiality.
After thorough consideration of the Motion to Recuse, the responses, the
replies, and the voluminous record, the undersigned is persuaded that the motion is
without merit. An objective observer, were he to know all of the circumstances,
would not harbor doubts about Judge Jenkins impartiality. To the contrary, the
record shows, time and again, a judge who wants, at long last, to get this case to a
final and definitive conclusion, effectuating the mandates of the Court of Appeals. In
the latest chapter of this long-running litigation, Judge Jenkins has had to deal not
only with the challenges presented by an extraordinarily complex case but with the
persistent efforts of plaintiffs counsel in seeking to avoid, or, failing that, delay, the
tedious but essential work incident to bringing this case to a conclusion.
a. The judges interactions with plaintiffs counsel tone and disparate
treatment
As for the tone of Judge Jenkins dealings with plaintiffs counsel, plaintiff
correctly points out that, in some instances the tone of the judges interactions with
one of plaintiffs counsel differed noticeably from the tone of his interactions with
defendants counsel. For that matter, as has been noted, the tone of the judges
interactions with one of plaintiffs lead counsel Ms. Bassett also differed from the
tone of his interactions with plaintiffs other lead counsel, Mr. Rasmussen. But it is
48
plain from the record that these differences do not give rise to an appearance of bias.
These differences in tone (and, on the whole, notable examples are isolated) are
readily explainable by the gratuitously antagonistic and provocative way in which Mr.
Rasmussen addressed the judge. Even a cold transcript demonstrates that, on more
than a few occasions, Mr. Rasmussen chose to be confrontational, stopping just short
if short at all of impudence, in responding to unexceptionable questions or
comments from the bench. Mr. Rasmussens treatment of Judge Jenkins called for
remarkable forbearance on the part of Judge Jenkins. As it became increasingly
obvious that Mr. Rasmussen would not succeed in persuading Judge Jenkins to forego
adjudication of the jurisdictional status of the carveout parcels (a task plainly required
by Ute V), Mr. Rasmussens tone grew yet more strident. Behavior like that would
test the patience of any judge and would, without doubt, elicit at least some indication
of irritation from all but the most patient. That is what happened here. Judge Jenkins
occasional sharp responses to gratuitous provocation prove only that he is human.
The fact that Mr. Rasmussen stood alone as the recipient of those responses proves
only that Judge Jenkins was not inclined to accord similar treatment to dissimilar
behavior.
Some elaboration on this point is appropriate. It is commonplace, in district
court proceedings (or, for that matter, at oral argument in Denver), that there will be
easily perceptible differences in the repartee as between the court and counsel for the
two opposing parties. This can be traced, variously, to the merits of the case, to
procedural frustrations, to the behavior of counsel, or to judicial bias. Moreover, there
will be times that the degree of forbearance that might be desirable is not forthcoming.
For instance, in a hearing on December 18, 2015, Judge Jenkins referred to Mr.
Rasmussens local counsel as your [Mr. Rasmussens] fountainhead of information
(as to a matter which seemingly should have been within Mr. Rasmussens
49
knowledge). Doc. no. 1222, at 12 - 13. If that was sarcasm or a gibe (difficult to
determine one way or the other from a transcript), the undersigned does not applaud
it. But, viewed in isolation or in context, that sort of a comment is indicative of
exasperation, not bias within the meaning of 455(a).
An objective observer, with knowledge of the circumstances, would not
conclude that Judge Jenkins treatment of plaintiffs counsel is indicative of partiality.
To the contrary, it would not be lost on an objective observer that most of the sharp
exchanges between Judge Jenkins and plaintiffs counsel occurred in the context of
discussions that clearly reflected the judges resolve to push this case to a final and
definitive conclusion, with entry of a final judgment granting substantial injunctive
relief to plaintiff, thus effectuating the mandates of Ute V and Ute VI.
b. Delay in granting relief
As is discussed above (pp. 44-45), Judge Jenkins concluded that bringing the
case to a conclusion would involve three steps: (1) a grant of the relief specifically
contemplated by Ute V, (2) consideration of the broader relief sought by plaintiff to
augment the relief specifically contemplated by Ute V, and (3) adjudication of the
jurisdictional status of the carveout parcels.
At first blush, it would seem that the first species of relief could have been
granted summarily maybe within days after the Tenth Circuits emphatic decision
in Ute VI. Theoretically, Judge Jenkins could have summarily entered an injunction
barring any criminal prosecution by the defendants on the basis of acts allegedly
occurring on lands having the status of Indian country under Ute III and Ute V. But
even this sort of injunctive relief would be virtually meaningless without a definitive
determination of the location of the outer boundaries of the reservations, let alone an
adjudication of the jurisdictional status of those tracts asserted to be carveout parcels.
As to those broad areas that were, and are, clearly Indian country, it does not appear
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that the defendants, at least after Ute VI, have any remaining inclination to test the
jurisdictional rules that had been established by the Tenth Circuit and the Supreme
Court. But the problem is at the margins, as is so often the case. Consequently, even
on the first species of relief, the entry of an injunction having any more meaning than
a wave of the judicial hand is a demanding task. As is shown at length above, Judge
Jenkins unquestionably sought to get the case in a posture for a prompt grant of relief
of the first type. In that effort, he was thwarted in no small measure by plaintiffs
counsel.
As for the third7 type of relief the adjudication of the carveout parcels
sorting out those issues (e.g., identifying those parcels that actually should be treated,
for purposes of criminal jurisdiction, as carveout parcels) was, and remains, a
prerequisite to giving practical effect to the Tenth Circuits mandates. That task is
decidedly not the fun part of this case. It is quite clear from their explicit statements
that plaintiffs counsel are not enthusiastic about tackling the tedious, technical and
unglamourous work which will be necessary to fill in the colors on the checkerboard.8
The parcels as to which there is remaining jurisdictional uncertainty represent, in
terms of areal extent, a relatively small portion of the total acreage, but those tracts
clearly have been a disproportionately abundant source of disputed prosecutions. For
that reason, the legal outcomes that can now be regarded as final as a conceptual
matter cannot actually be put into practical effect literally, on the ground without
the resolution of residual issues as to the status of the carveout parcels.
A quick look at the parties jurisdictional maps9 shows beyond doubt that,
regardless of how geographic jurisdiction is ultimately sorted out by the court, a
7
Delay in granting the second type of relief is discussed in section (c), below.
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resolution of this litigation which fails to determine the jurisdictional status of the
carveout parcels would, as a practical matter, be no resolution at all. This is so as a
legal matter, see, Ute V, 114 F.3d at 1529 - 31, and, of at least equal importance, as
a matter of day to day (and night to night) practicality, from the standpoint of tribal,
BIA and state law enforcement officers (to say nothing of those who depend on them
for their safety and security). On this point, it is telling that plaintiffs counsels
approach (which is the main underpinning of their delay strategy, the failure of which,
in turn, goes far to explain the filing of the present motion) would expose individual
members of the plaintiff tribe to sitting in jail while jurisdictional disputes are sorted
out at length by state courts in state prosecutions, by tribal courts, or by the federal
court in contempt proceedings.
complexities with which plaintiff must, like it or not, deal as a prerequisite to actually
getting the benefit of the legal relief to which it is entitled. Under the best of
circumstances which presupposes a genuine commitment of counsel on all sides to
completing the task the adjudication of the carveout parcels will take time. The
delay in getting there, in the face of plaintiffs counsels disinclination (demonstrated
by their actions and by their express statements) to move the process along, can hardly
be laid at the feet of the judge. Even less is that delay a sign of a biased judge. The
plaintiff tribe, not to be confused with its counsel, may genuinely feel itself
dissatisfied with Judge Jenkins. But that dissatisfaction is not rooted in any cause
cognizable under 455(a).
c. Three-week trial on motions for summary judgment
Plaintiffs oft-repeated complaint that the judges bias is demonstrated by his
unheard of action in scheduling a three-week trial on the motions for summary
judgment is equally without merit. The record clearly shows that the judge recognized
that the case is ripe for a summary grant of some forms of relief, but that he had
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concluded that there were factual issues to be resolved as to the broader forms of
equitable relief sought by plaintiff.10 There is nothing remarkable or indicative of
bias about that. The short of the matter is that, if there is to be a Ute VII, any trial
judge would not want the Tenth Circuit, in Ute VII, to send the case back for some
non-substantive reason such as overlooking a fact issue.
To be sure, in the opinion of the undersigned, any potential for confusion
would have been reduced if Judge Jenkins had made clear, at an earlier point in the
January pretrial conference, just what he meant when he referred to an evidentiary
hearing on the motions for summary judgment. But what is important for present
purposes is the fact that, by the time the late January proceedings were over, there
could have been no real doubt about the fact that Judge Jenkins intent was to conduct
an evidentiary hearing to resolve disputed fact issues. Plaintiff may take issue with
Judge Jenkins conclusion that fact issues were afoot with respect to the broader forms
of equitable relief sought by plaintiff, but the fact that a litigant is required to try a
case that it thought should be adjudicated in all respects under Rule 56 is hardly an
indicator of bias.
VI. Ancillary matters
Plaintiff has requested oral argument on its motion to recuse. The undersigned
is convinced that oral argument is not necessary. The motion has been thoroughly
briefed on both sides. The undersigned has thoroughly reviewed the massive record.
Oral argument would, without doubt, afford an opportunity for rhetoric. But oral
argument would not shed meaningful light on the question of whether plaintiff has
demonstrated, on this record, that an objective observer, with knowledge of the
circumstances, would reasonably question the presiding judges impartiality.
Accordingly, the motion at doc. no. 1206 is DENIED.
10
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with conduct which was, at a minimum, exasperating, chose to stay focused on the
merits and on the challenges of bringing this case to a conclusion consonant with the
mandates of the Court of Appeals. The undersigned is confident that will not change.
For the reasons set forth in this order, plaintiffs Motion to Recuse, doc. no.
1166, is, in all things, DENIED.
Dated this 25th day of July, 2016.
BY THE COURT:
75-0408p005.wpd
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