Section 4(e) of the Federal Power Act (FPA) authorizes the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Commission to issue licenses
for the construction, operation, and maintenance of hydroelectric
project works located on the public lands and reservations of the
United States, including lands held in trust for Indians. The
section contains a proviso that such licenses shall be issued
"within any reservation" only after a finding by the Commission
that the license will not interfere or be inconsistent with the
purpose for which the reservation was created or acquired, and
"shall be subject to and contain such conditions as the
Secretary of the department under whose supervision such
reservation falls shall deem necessary for the adequate protection
and utilization of such reservations."
Section 8 of the Mission Indian Relief Act of 1891 (MIRA),
pursuant to which six reservations were established for respondent
Indian Bands (respondents), provides that any United States
citizen, firm, or corporation may contract with the Bands for the
right to construct a flume, ditch, canal, pipe, or other appliances
for the conveyance of water over, across, or through their
reservations, which contract shall not be valid unless approved by
the Secretary of the Interior (Secretary) under such conditions as
he may see fit to impose. When the original license covering
hydroelectric facilities located on or near the six reservations,
including a canal that crosses respondent La Jolla, Rincon, and San
Pasqual Bands' reservations, was about to expire, petitioner
Escondido Mutual Water Co. (Mutual) and petitioner city of
Escondido filed an application with the Commission for a new
license. Thereafter the Secretary requested that the Commission
recommend federal takeover of the project, and respondents applied
for a nonpower license. After hearings on the competing
applications, an Administrative Law Judge concluded that the
project was not subject to the Commission's licensing jurisdiction.
The Commission reversed and granted a license to Mutual, Escondido,
and petitioner Vista Irrigation District, which had been using the
canal in question. The Court of Appeals in turn reversed the
Commission, holding, contrary to the Commission, (1) that §
4(e) of the FPA required the Commission to accept without
modification any license conditions recommended by the Secretary;
(2) that the Commission was required to satisfy its § 4(e)
obligations with respect to all six of the reservations,
Page 466 U. S. 766
and not just the three through which the canal passes; and (3)
that § 8 of the MIRA required the licensees to obtain
right-of-way permits from respondent La Jolla, Rincon, and San
Pasqual Bands before using the license facilities located on their
reservations.
Held:
1. The plain command of § 4(e) of the FPA requires the
Commission to accept without modification conditions that the
Secretary deems necessary for the adequate protection and
utilization of the reservations. Nothing in the legislative history
or statutory scheme is inconsistent with this plain command. Pp.
466 U. S.
772-779.
2. But the Commission must make its "no inconsistency or
interference" findings and include the Secretary's conditions in
the license only with respect to projects located "within" the
geographical boundaries of a federal reservation. It is clear that
Congress concluded that reservations were not entitled to the
protection of § 4(e)'s proviso unless some of the licensed
works were actually within the reservation. Thus, the Court of
Appeals erred in holding that the Commission's § 4(e)
obligation to accept the Secretary's conditions and to make such
findings applied to the three reservations on which no licensed
facilities were located. Pp.
466 U. S.
780-78.
3. Section 8 of the MIRA does not require licensees to obtain
respondents' consent before they operate licensed facilities
located on reservation lands. While § 8 gave respondents
authority to determine whether to grant rights-of-way for water
projects, that authority did not include the power to override
Congress' subsequent decision in enacting the FPA that all lands,
including tribal land, could, upon compliance with the FPA, be
utilized to facilitate licensed hydroelectric projects. Pp.
466 U. S.
784-787.
692 F.2d 1223 and 701 F.2d 826, affirmed in part, reversed in
part, and remanded.
WHITE, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
Page 466 U. S. 767
JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Section 4(e) of the Federal Power Act (FPA), 41 Stat. 1066, as
amended, 16 U.S.C. § 797(e), authorizes the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (Commission) [
Footnote 1] to issue licenses for the construction,
operation and maintenance of hydroelectric project works located on
the public lands and reservations of the United States, including
lands held in trust for Indians. The conditions upon which such
licenses may issue are contained in § 4(e) and other
provisions of the FPA. The present case involves a dispute among
the Commission, the Secretary of the Interior (Secretary), and
several Bands of the Mission Indians over the role each is to play
in determining what conditions an applicant must meet in order to
obtain a license to utilize hydroelectric facilities located on or
near six Mission Indian Reservations.
I
The San Luis Rey River originates near the Palomar Mountains in
northern San Diego County, Cal. In its natural condition, it flows
through the reservations of the La
Page 466 U. S. 768
Jolla, Rincon, and Pala Bands of Mission Indians. The
reservations of the Pauma, Yuima, [
Footnote 2] and three-quarters of the reservation of the
San Pasqual Bands of Mission Indians are within the river's
watershed. These six Indian reservations were permanently
established pursuant to the Mission Indian Relief Act of 1891
(MIRA), ch. 65, 26 Stat. 712.
Since 1895, petitioner Escondido Mutual Water Co. (Mutual) and
its predecessor in interest have diverted water out of the San Luis
Rey River for municipal uses in and around the cities of Vista and
Escondido. The point of diversion is located within the La Jolla
Reservation, upstream from the other reservations. Mutual conveys
the water from the diversion point to Lake Wohlford, an artificial
storage facility, by means of the Escondido canal, which crosses
parts of the La Jolla, Rincon, and San Pasqual Reservations.
[
Footnote 3]
In 1915, Mutual constructed the Bear Valley powerhouse
downstream from Lake Wohlford. Neither Lake Wohlford nor the Bear
Valley plant is located on a reservation. In 1916, Mutual completed
construction of the Rincon powerhouse, which is located on the
Rincon Reservation. Both of these powerhouses generate electricity
by utilizing waters diverted from the river through the canal.
Following the enactment of the Federal Water Power Act of 1920,
ch. 285, 41 Stat. 1063 (codified as Part I of the FPA,
Page 466 U. S. 769
16 U.S.C. § 791a
et seq.), Mutual applied to the
Commission for a license covering its two hydroelectric facilities.
In 1924, the Commission issued a 50-year license covering the
Escondido diversion dam and canal, Lake Wohlford, and the Rincon
and Bear Valley powerhouses.
The present dispute began when the 1924 license was about to
expire. In 1971, Mutual and the city of Escondido filed an
application with the Commission for a new license. In 1972, the
Secretary requested that the Commission recommend federal takeover
of the project after the original license expired. [
Footnote 4] Later that year, the La Jolla,
Rincon, and San Pasqual Bands, acting pursuant to § 15(b) of
the FPA, [
Footnote 5] applied
for a nonpower license under the supervision of Interior, to take
effect when the original license expired. The Pauma and Pala Bands
eventually joined in this application.
After lengthy hearings on the competing applications, [
Footnote 6] an Administrative Law Judge
concluded that the project was not subject to the Commission's
licensing jurisdiction, because
Page 466 U. S. 770
the power aspects of the project were insignificant in
comparison to the project's primary purpose -- conveying water for
domestic and irrigation consumption. 6 FERC � 63,008 (1977).
[
Footnote 7] The Commission,
however, reversed that decision and granted a new 30-year license
to Mutual, Escondido, and the Vista Irrigation District, which had
been using the canal for some time to convey water pumped from Lake
Henshaw, a lake located some nine miles above Mutual's diversion
dam. 6 FERC � 61,189 (1979).
In its licensing decision, the Commission made three rulings
that are the focal point of this case. First, the Commission ruled
that § 4(e) of the FPA did not require it to accept without
modification conditions which the Secretary deemed necessary for
the adequate protection and utilization of the reservations.
[
Footnote 8] Accordingly,
despite the Secretary's insistence, the Commission refused to
prohibit the licensees from interfering with the Bands' use of a
specified quantity of water,
id. at 61,415, and n. 146, or
to require that water pumped from a particular groundwater basin
[
Footnote 9] not be transported
through the licensed facilities without the written consent of the
five Bands,
id. at 61,145, and n. 147. Other conditions
proposed by the Secretary were similarly rejected or modified.
See id. at 61,414-61,417. Second,
Page 466 U. S. 771
although it imposed some conditions on the licensees in order
to
"preclude any possible interference or inconsistency of the
power license . . . with the purpose for which the La Jolla,
Rincon, and San Pasqual reservations were created, [
Footnote 10]"
id. at 61,424-61,425, the Commission refused to impose
similar conditions for the benefit of the Pala, Pauma, and Yuima
Reservations, ruling that its § 4(e) obligation in that
respect applies only to reservations that are physically occupied
by project facilities. Finally, the Commission rejected the
arguments of the Bands and the Secretary that a variety of
statutes, including § 8 of the MIRA, required the licensees to
obtain the "consent" of the Bands before the license could
issue.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reversed
each of these three rulings.
Escondido Mutual Water Co. v.
FERC, 692 F.2d 1223,
amended, 701 F.2d 826 (1983).
The court held that § 4(e) requires the Commission to accept
without modification any license conditions recommended by the
Secretary, subject to subsequent judicial review of the propriety
of the conditions, that the Commission is required to satisfy its
§ 4(e) obligations with respect to all six of the reservations
affected by the project, and not just the three through which the
canal passes, and that § 8 of the MIRA requires the licensees
to obtain right-of-way permits from the La Jolla, Rincon, and San
Pasqual Bands before using the licensed facilities located on the
reservations. [
Footnote
11]
Page 466 U. S. 772
Mutual, Escondido, and Vista filed the present petition for
certiorari, which we granted, 464 U.S. 913 (1983), challenging all
three of the Court of Appeals' rulings. [
Footnote 12] We address each in turn.
II
Section 4(e) provides that licenses issued under that
section
"shall be subject to and contain such conditions as the
Secretary of the department under whose supervision such
reservation falls shall deem necessary for the adequate protection
and utilization of such reservations."
16 U.S.C. § 797(e). The mandatory nature of the language
chosen by Congress appears to require that the Commission include
the Secretary's conditions in the license even if it disagrees with
them. Nonetheless, petitioners [
Footnote 13] argue that an examination of the statutory
scheme and legislative history of the Act shows that Congress could
not have meant what it said. We disagree.
We first note the difficult nature of the task facing
petitioners. Since it should be generally assumed that Congress
expresses its purposes through the ordinary meaning of the words it
uses, we have often stated that,
"'[a]bsent a clearly expressed legislative intention to the
contrary, [statutory] language must ordinarily be regarded as
conclusive.'"
North Dakota v. United States, 460 U.
S. 300,
460 U. S. 312
(1983) (quoting
Consumer Product Safety Comm'n v. GTE Sylvania,
Inc., 447 U. S. 102,
447 U. S. 108
(1980)). Congress' apparent desire that the Secretary's conditions
"shall" be included in the license must therefore be given effect
unless there are clear expressions of legislative intent to the
contrary.
Page 466 U. S. 773
Petitioners initially focus on the purpose of the legislation
that became the relevant portion of the FPA. In 1920, Congress
passed the Federal Water Power Act in order to eliminate the
inefficiency and confusion caused by the "piecemeal, restrictive,
negative approach" to licensing prevailing under prior law.
First Iowa Hydro-Electric Cooperative v. FPC, 328 U.
S. 152,
328 U. S. 180
(1946).
See H.R.Rep. No. 61, 66th Cong., 1st Sess., 4-5
(1919). Prior to passage of the Act, the Secretaries of the
Interior, War, and Agriculture each had authority to issue licenses
for hydroelectric projects on lands under his respective
jurisdiction. The Act centralized that authority by creating a
Commission, consisting of the three Secretaries, [
Footnote 14] vested with exclusive
authority to issue licenses. Petitioners contend that Congress
could not have intended to empower the Secretary to require that
conditions be included in the license over the objection of the
Commission, because that would frustrate the purpose of
centralizing licensing procedures.
Congress was no doubt interested in centralizing federal
licensing authority into one agency, but it is clear that it did
not intend to relieve the Secretaries of all responsibility for
ensuring that reservations under their respective supervision were
adequately protected. In a memorandum explaining the administration
bill, the relevant portion of which was enacted without substantive
change, [
Footnote 15] O. C.
Merrill, one of the chief draftsmen of the Act and later the first
Commission Secretary, explained that creation of the Commission
"will
Page 466 U. S. 774
not interfere with the special responsibilities which the
several Departments have over the National Forests, public lands
and navigable rivers."
Memorandum on Water Power Legislation from O. C. Merrill, Chief
Engineer, Forest Service, dated October 31, 1917, App. 371. With
regard to what became § 4(e), he wrote:
"4. Licenses for power sites within the National Forests to be
subject to such provisions for the protection of the Forests as the
Secretary of Agriculture may deem necessary. Similarly, for parks
and other reservations under the control of the Departments of the
Interior and of War. Plans of structures involving navigable
streams to be subject to the approval of the Secretary of War."
"This provision is for the purpose of preserving the
administrative responsibility of each of the three Departments over
lands and other matters within their exclusive jurisdiction."
Id. at 373-374.
Similarly, during hearings on the bill, Secretary of Agriculture
Houston explained that the Grand Canyon did not need to be exempted
from the licensing provisions, stating:
"I can see no special reason why the matter might not be handled
safely under the provisions of the proposed measure, which requires
that developments on Government reservations may not proceed except
with the approval of the three heads of departments -- the
commission --
with such safeguards as the head of the
department immediately charged with the reservation may deem
wise."
Water Power: Hearings before the House Committee on Water Power,
65th Cong., 2d Sess., 677 (1918) (emphasis added).
The Members of Congress understood that under the Act the
Secretary of the Interior had authority with respect to licenses
issued on Indian reservations over and above that
Page 466 U. S. 775
possessed by the other Commission members. Senator Walsh of
Montana, a supporter of the Act, explained:
"[W]hen an application is made for a license to construct a dam
within an Indian reservation, the matter goes before the
commission, which consists of the Secretary of War, the Secretary
of the Interior, and the Secretary of Agriculture. They all agree
that it is in the public interest that the license should be
granted, or a majority of them so agree.
Furthermore, the head
of the department must agree; that is to say, the Secretary of the
Interior in the case of an Indian reservation must agree that the
license shall be issued."
59 Cong.Rec. 1564 (1920) (emphasis added). It is thus clear
enough that, while Congress intended that the Commission would have
exclusive authority to issue all licenses, it wanted the individual
Secretaries to continue to play the major role in determining what
conditions would be included in the license in order to protect the
resources under their respective jurisdictions. The legislative
history concerning § 4(e) plainly supports the conclusion that
Congress meant what it said when it stated that the license
"shall . . . contain such conditions as the Secretary . . .
shall deem necessary for the adequate protection and utilization of
such reservations. [
Footnote
16] "
Page 466 U. S. 776
Petitioners next argue that a literal reading of the
conditioning proviso of § 4(e) cannot be squared with other
portions of the statutory scheme. In particular, they note that the
same proviso that grants the Secretary the authority to qualify the
license with the conditions he deems necessary also provides that
the Commission must determine that "the license will not interfere
or be inconsistent with the purpose for which such reservation was
created or acquired." 16 U.S.C. § 797(e). Requiring the
Commission to include the Secretary's conditions in the license
over its objection, petitioners maintain, is inconsistent with
granting the Commission the power to determine that no interference
or inconsistency will result from issuance of the license, because
it will allow the Secretary to "veto" the decision reached by the
Commission. Congress could not have intended to "
paralyze with
one hand what it sought to promote with the other,'"
American Paper Institute,
Inc. v. American
Page 466 U. S. 777
Electric Power Service Corp., 461 U.
S. 402,
461 U. S. 421
(1983) (quoting
Clark v. Uebersee Finanz-Korporation,
A.G., 332 U. S. 480,
332 U. S. 489
(1947)), petitioners contend.
This argument is unpersuasive, because it assumes the very
question to be decided. All parties agree that there are limits on
the types of conditions that the Secretary can require to be
included in the license: [
Footnote 17] the Secretary has no power to veto the
Commission's decision to issue a license, and hence the conditions
he insists upon must be reasonably related to the protection of the
reservation and its people. [
Footnote 18] The real question is whether the Commission
is empowered to decide when the Secretary's conditions exceed the
permissible limits. Petitioners' argument assumes that the
Commission has the authority to make that decision. However, the
statutory language and legislative history conclusively indicate
that it does not; the Commission "shall" include in the license the
conditions the Secretary deems necessary. It is then up to the
courts of appeals to determine whether the conditions are valid.
[
Footnote 19]
Petitioners contend that such a scheme of review is inconsistent
with traditional principles of judicial review of administrative
action. If the Commission is required to include the conditions in
the license even though it does not agree with them, petitioners
argue, the courts of appeals will not be
Page 466 U. S. 778
in a position to grant deference to the Commission's findings
and conclusions because those findings and conclusions will not be
included in the license. However, that is apparently exactly what
Congress intended. If the Secretary concludes that the conditions
are necessary to protect the reservation, the Commission is
required to adopt them as its own, and the court is obligated to
sustain them if they are reasonably related to that goal, otherwise
consistent with the FPA, and supported by substantial evidence.
[
Footnote 20] The fact that,
in reality, it is the Secretary's, and not the Commission's,
judgment to which the court is giving deference is not surprising,
since the statute directs the Secretary, and not the Commission, to
decide what conditions are necessary for the adequate protection of
the reservation. [
Footnote
21] There is nothing in the statute
Page 466 U. S. 779
or the review scheme to indicate that Congress wanted the
Commission to second-guess the Secretary on this matter. [
Footnote 22]
In short, nothing in the legislative history or statutory scheme
is inconsistent with the plain command of the statute that licenses
issued within a reservation by the Commission pursuant to §
4(e)
"shall be subject to and contain such conditions as the
Secretary . . . shall deem necessary for the adequate protection
and utilization of such reservations."
Since the Commission failed to comply with this statutory
command when it issued the license in this case, the Court of
Appeals correctly reversed its decision in this respect. [
Footnote 23]
Page 466 U. S. 780
III
The Court of Appeals also concluded that the Commission's §
4(e) obligations to accept the Secretary's proposed conditions and
to make findings as to whether the license is consistent with the
reservation's purpose applied to the Pala, Yuima, and Pauma
Reservations even though no licensed facilities were located on
these reservations. Petitioners contend that this conclusion is
erroneous. We agree.
Again, the statutory language is informative and largely
dispositive. Section 4(e) authorizes the Commission:
"To issue licenses . . . for the purpose of constructing . . .
dams . . . or other project works . . . upon any part of the public
lands and reservations of the United States . . .
Provided, That licenses shall be issued within any
reservation only after a finding by the Commission that the license
will not interfere or be inconsistent with the purpose for which
such reservation was created or acquired, and shall be subject to
and contain such conditions as the Secretary of the department
under whose supervision such reservation falls shall deem necessary
for the adequate protection and utilization of such reservations. .
. ."
If a project is licensed "within" any reservation, the
Commission must make a "no interference or inconsistency" finding
with respect to "such" reservation, and the Secretary may impose
conditions for the protection of "such" reservation. Nothing in the
section requires the Commission to
Page 466 U. S. 781
make findings about, or the Secretary to impose conditions to
protect, any reservation other than the one within which project
works are located. The section imposes no obligation on the
Commission or power on the Secretary with respect to reservations
that may somehow be affected by, but will contain no part of, the
licensed project works.
The Court of Appeals, however, purported to discover an
ambiguity in the term "within." Positing that the term
"reservations" includes not only tribal lands, but also tribal
water rights, the Court of Appeals reasoned that, since a project
could not be "within" a water right, the term must have a meaning
other than its literal one. This effort to circumvent the plain
meaning of the statute by creating an ambiguity where none exists
is unpersuasive.
There is no doubt that "reservations" include "interests in
lands owned by the United States" [
Footnote 24] and that, for many purposes, water rights
are considered to be interests in lands.
See 1 R. Clark,
Waters and Water Rights § 53.1 P. 345 (1967). But it does not
follow that Congress intended the "reservations" spoken of in
§ 4(e) to include water rights. [
Footnote 25] The section deals with project works to be
located "upon" and "within" a reservation. As the Court of Appeals
itself indicated, the section does tend to "paint a geographical
picture in the mind of the reader," 692 F.2d at 1236, and we find
the
Page 466 U. S. 782
Court of Appeals' and respondents' construction of the section
to be quite untenable. Congress intended the obligation of the
Commission and the conditioning power of the Secretary to apply
only with respect to the specific reservation upon which any
project works were to be located, and not to other reservations
that might be affected by the project.
The Court of Appeals sought to bolster its conclusion by noting
that a literal reading of the term "within" would leave a gap in
the protection afforded the Bands by the FPA because
"a project may turn a potentially useful reservation into a
barren waste without ever crossing it in the geographical sense --
e.g., by diverting the waters which would otherwise flow
through or percolate under it."
Ibid. This is an unlikely event, for, in this respect,
the Bands are adequately protected by other provisions of the
statutory scheme. First, the Bands cannot be deprived of any water
to which they have a legal right. The Commission is expressly
forbidden to adjudicate water rights, 16 U.S.C. § 821, and the
license applicant must submit satisfactory evidence that he has
obtained sufficient water rights to operate the project authorized
in the license, 16 U.S.C. § 802(b). Second, if the Bands are
using water the rights to which are owned by the license applicant,
the Commission is empowered to require that the license applicant
continue to let the Bands use this water as a condition of the
license if the Commission determines that the Bands' use of the
water constitutes an overriding beneficial public use. 16 U.S.C.
§ 803(a).
See California v. FPC, 345 F.2d 917,
923-924 (CA9),
cert. denied, 382 U.S. 941 (1965). The
Bands' interest in the continued use of the water will accordingly
be adequately protected without requiring the Commission to comply
with § 4(e) every time one of the reservations might be
affected by a proposed project.
Respondents additionally contend that, under other provisions of
the FPA, the § 4(e) proviso at issue applies any time a
reservation is "affected" by a licensed project, even if none
of
Page 466 U. S. 783
the licensed facilities is actually located on the reservation.
They rely in particular on § 23(b), which provides that
project works can be constructed without a license on nonnavigable
waters over which Congress has jurisdiction under its Commerce
Clause powers only if, among other things, [
Footnote 26] "no public lands or reservations
are affected." 16 U.S.C. § 817. Respondents argue that it
would make no sense to conclude that Congress intended to require
the Commission to exercise its licensing jurisdiction when a
reservation is "affected" by such a project if it did not also
intend to afford those reservations all of the protections outlined
in § 4(e). However, that is exactly the conclusion that the
language of § 4(e) compels, and, contrary to respondents'
argument, there is nothing illogical about such a scheme.
Under § 4(e), the Commission is authorized to license
projects in two general types of situations -- when the project is
located on waters (navigable or nonnavigable) over which Congress
has jurisdiction under the Commerce Clause and when the project is
located upon any public lands or reservations. It is clear that the
Commission's obligations to make a "no inconsistency or no
interference" determination and to include the Secretary's
conditions in the license apply only in the latter situation --
when the license is issued "within any reservation." The fact that
a person is required to obtain a license in the former situation
any time a project on nonnavigable waters affects a reservation
indicates only that Congress concluded that, in such circumstances,
the possible disruptive effects of such a project were so great
that the Commission should regulate the project through its
licensing powers. That is not, as respondents seem to imply, a
meaningless gesture if all of the provisions of § 4(e) do not
apply.
Page 466 U. S. 784
Even if the Commission is not required to comply with all of the
requirements of § 4(e) when it issues such a license, it is
still required to shape the license so that the project is best
adapted, among other things, for the improvement and utilization of
water power development and for "other beneficial public uses,
including recreational purposes." 16 U.S.C. § 803(a). In
complying with that duty, the Commission is clearly entitled to
consider how the project will affect any federal reservations and
to require the licensee to structure the project so as to avoid any
undue injury to those reservations.
See Udall v. FPC,
387 U. S. 428,
387 U. S. 450
(1967). As noted
supra at
466 U. S. 782,
the Commission can even require that, as a condition of the
license, the licensee surrender some of its water rights in order
to protect such reservations if the Commission determines that such
action would be in the public interest. However, it is clear that
Congress concluded that reservations were not entitled to the added
protection provided by the proviso of § 4(e) unless some of
the licensed works were actually within the reservation.
The scheme crafted by Congress in this respect is sufficiently
clear to require us to hold that the Commission must make its "no
inconsistency or interference" determination and include the
Secretary's conditions in the license only with respect to projects
located "within" the geographical boundaries of a federal
reservation.
IV
The final issue presented for review is whether § 8 of the
MIRA requires licensees to obtain the consent of the Bands before
they operate licensed facilities located on reservation lands.
Section 8 provides in relevant part:
"Subsequent to the issuance of any tribal patent, [
Footnote 27] or of any individual
trust patent . . any citizen of the United States, firm, or
corporation may contract with the tribe,
Page 466 U. S. 785
band, or individual for whose use and benefit any lands are held
in trust by the United States, for the right to construct a flume,
ditch, canal, pipe, or other appliances for the conveyance of water
over, across, or through such lands, which contract shall not be
valid unless approved by the Secretary of the Interior under such
conditions as he may see fit to impose."
26 Stat. 714. The Court of Appeals concluded that this
provision, which by its terms authorizes private parties to enter
into a contract with the Bands, precludes the Commission from
licensing those parts of the project that occupy reservation land
without the consent of the Indians. When the legislative histories
of § 8 and of the FPA are considered, however, the Court of
Appeals' interpretation cannot stand.
Section 8 appeared in the MIRA just prior to its passage.
Several irrigation companies were seeking rights-of-way across the
reservations. The Secretary had concluded that irrigation ditches
and flumes would benefit both the settlers and the Indians.
H.R.Rep. No. 3282, 50th Cong., 1st Sess., 3-4 (1888). Two Attorneys
General, however, had ruled that only Congress could authorize the
alienation of Indian lands.
Lemhi Indian Reservation, 18
Op.Atty.Gen. 563 (1887);
Dam at Lake Winnibigoshish, 16
Op.Atty.Gen. 562 (1880). In light of these opinions, the Secretary
prepared an amendment to the bill, authorizing the Bands to
contract for the sale of rights-of-way, subject to Interior's
approval. H.R.Rep. No. 3282,
supra, at 2. Section 8 was
therefore designed to authorize the Indians and the Secretary to
grant rights-of-way to third parties; it was not intended to act as
a limit on the sovereign authority of the Federal Government to
acquire or grant rights-of-way over public lands and
reservations.
In essence, § 8 increased the Bands' authority over its
land, so that they had almost the same rights as other private
landowners. [
Footnote 28]
The Bands were authorized to negotiate with any
Page 466 U. S. 786
private party wishing to acquire rights-of-way and to enter into
any agreement with those parties, something they were previously
unable to do. And until some overriding authority was invoked, the
Bands, like private landowners, had complete discretion whether to
grant rights-of-way for hydroelectric project facilities. However,
there is no indication that, once Congress exercised its sovereign
authority to use the land for such purposes, the Bands were to have
more power to stop such action than would a private landowner in
the same situation -- both are required to permit such use upon
payment of just compensation. [
Footnote 29] Therefore, the only question is whether
Congress decided to exercise that authority with respect to Indian
lands when it enacted the FPA. The answer to that inquiry was
clearly articulated in a somewhat different context more than 20
years ago.
"The Federal Power Act constitutes a complete and comprehensive
plan . . . for the development, transmission and utilization of
electric power in any of the streams or other bodies of water over
which Congress has jurisdiction under its commerce powers, and upon
the public lands and reservations of the United States under its
property powers.
See § 4(e). It neither overlooks nor
excludes Indians or lands owned or occupied by them. Instead, as
has been shown, the Act specifically defines and treats with lands
occupied by Indians -- 'tribal lands embraced within Indian
reservations.'
See §§ 3(2) and 10(e). The Act
gives every indication that, within its comprehensive plan,
Congress intended to include lands owned or occupied by any person
or persons, including Indians."
FPC v. Tuscarora Indian Nation, 362 U. S.
99,
362 U. S. 118
(1960).
Page 466 U. S. 787
It is equally clear that, when enacting the FPA, Congress did
not intend to give Indians some sort of special authority to
prevent the Commission from exercising the licensing authority it
was receiving from Congress. Indeed, Congress squarely considered
and rejected such a proposal. During the course of the debate
concerning the legislation, the Senate amended the bill to require
tribal consent for some projects. Section 4(e) of the Senate
version of the bill provided that,
"in respect to tribal lands embraced within Indian reservations,
which said lands were ceded to Indians by the United States by
treaty, no license shall be issued except by and with the consent
of the council of the tribe."
59 Cong.Rec. 1534 (1920). However, that amendment was stricken
from the bill by the Conference, the conferees stating that
they
"saw no reason why water power use should be singled out from
all other uses of Indian reservation land for special action of the
council of the tribe."
H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 910, 66th Cong., 2d Sess., 8 (1920).
In short, while § 8 of the MIRA gave the Bands extensive
authority to determine whether to grant rights-of-way for water
projects, that authority did not include the power to override
Congress' subsequent decision that all lands, including tribal
lands, could, upon compliance with the provisions of the FPA, be
utilized to facilitate licensed hydroelectric projects. Under the
FPA, the Secretary, with the duty to safeguard reservations, may
condition, but may not veto, the issuance of a license for project
works on an Indian reservation. We cannot believe that Congress
nevertheless intended to leave a veto power with the concerned
tribe or tribes. The Commission need not, therefore, seek the
Bands' permission before it exercises its licensing authority with
respect to their lands. [
Footnote 30]
Page 466 U. S. 788
V
The Court of Appeals correctly determined that the Commission
was required to include in the license any conditions which the
Secretary of the Interior deems necessary for the protection and
utilization of the three reservations in which project works are
located. It was in error, however, in concluding that the
Commission was required to fulfill this and its other § 4(e)
obligations with respect to the other three reservations affected
by the project, and that § 8 of the MIRA empowered the Bands
to prevent the licensing of facilities on their lands. The court's
judgment is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the case is
remanded to the court for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
The term "Commission" refers to the Federal Power Commission
prior to October 1, 1977, and to the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission thereafter.
See 42 U.S.C. §§ 7172(a),
7295(b).
[
Footnote 2]
The Yuima tracts of land are under the jurisdiction of the Pauma
Band. Thus, while there are six Mission Indian Reservations
involved in the present dispute, only five Indian Bands are
represented.
[
Footnote 3]
Various agreements, dating back to 1894, among the Secretary,
the Bands whose land the canal traverses, and Mutual and its
predecessor purportedly grant Mutual rights-of-way for the canal in
exchange for supplying certain amounts of water to the Bands. The
validity of these agreements is the subject of separate, pending
litigation instituted by the Bands in 1969.
Rincon Band of
Mission Indians v. Escondido Mutual Water Co., Nos. 69-217-S,
72-276-S, and 72-271-S (SD Cal.).
In addition, the Bands have sued the United States pursuant to
the Indian Claims Commission Act, ch. 959, 60 Stat. 1049, 25 U.S.C.
§ 70
et seq. (1976 ed.), for failure to protect their
water rights.
Long v. United States, No. 80-A1 (Cl.Ct.).
That proceeding is also pending.
[
Footnote 4]
Section 14(b), 16 U.S.C. § 807(b), of the FPA authorizes
the Commission to recommend to Congress that the Federal Government
take over a project following expiration of the license. If
Congress enacts legislation to that effect, the project is operated
by the Government upon payment to the original licensee of its net
investment in the project and certain severance damages.
[
Footnote 5]
Section 15(b), 16 U.S.C. § 808(b), authorizes the
Commission to grant a license for use of a project as a "nonpower"
facility if it finds the project no longer is adapted to power
production. In that event, the new licensee must make the same
payments to the original licensee that are required of the United
States pursuant to § 14(b).
See n 4,
supra.
[
Footnote 6]
Earlier, the Secretary and the La Jolla, Rincon, and San Pasqual
Bands filed complaints with the Commission, alleging that Mutual
violated the provisions of the 1924 license by permitting the Vista
Irrigation District to use the project facilities and by using the
canal to divert water pumped from a lake created by Vista nine
miles above Mutual's diversion dam. They sought, among other
things, an increase in the annual charges paid to the Bands under
the license. These complaints were considered in conjunction with
the competing applications, and the Commission awarded readjusted
annual charges to the three Bands. The Commission's resolution of
that issue is not before us.
[
Footnote 7]
The Bear Valley powerhouse has a generating capacity of only 520
kilowatts. The Rincon powerhouse is capable of producing only 240
kilowatts. The Administrative Law Judge noted that "[t]he
horsepower generated by the entire project is not even the
equivalent to that produced by a half dozen modern automobiles." 6
FERC at 65,093.
[
Footnote 8]
The Commission concluded that § 4(e) required it "to give
great weight to the judgments and proposals of the Secretaries of
the Interior and Agriculture," but that, under § 10(a), it
retained ultimate authority for determining "the extent to which
such conditions will in fact be included in particular licenses." 6
FERC at 61,414.
[
Footnote 9]
Groundwater is water beneath the surface of the earth. The
condition suggested by the Secretary applied to water which Vista
pumped from the Warner groundwater basin underlying Lake Henshaw
and its headwaters in order to augment the natural flows into the
lake.
[
Footnote 10]
For example, the Commission required the licensees to permit the
three Bands to use certain quantities of water under certain
circumstances.
See id. at 61,424-61,432.
[
Footnote 11]
Judge Anderson dissented from the order entered on petition for
rehearing, 701 F.2d at 827-831, concluding that neither § 8 of
the MIRA nor § 16 of the Indian Reorganization Act, 25 U.S.C.
§ 476, requires that tribal consent be obtained before the
Bands' lands can be used for a hydroelectric project licensed under
the FPA. He also concluded that the Secretary's § 4(e)
conditions have to be included in the license only to the extent
they are reasonable, and that the reasonableness determination is
to be made initially by the Commission.
[
Footnote 12]
The Court of Appeals affirmed the Commission's conclusion that
it had jurisdiction over the project, and the parties have not
sought review of that ruling.
[
Footnote 13]
The Commission did not petition for review of the Court of
Appeals' decision, but filed a brief and appeared at oral argument
urging reversal. Since the Commission's arguments largely parallel
those presented by Mutual, Escondido, and Vista, our use of the
term petitioners includes the Commission.
[
Footnote 14]
In 1930, the Commission was reorganized as a five-person body,
independent from the Secretaries. Act of June 23, 1930, ch. 672, 46
Stat. 797.
[
Footnote 15]
Between 1914 and 1917, four bills dealing with the licensing of
hydroelectric projects were introduced into Congress, none
successfully. In 1918, a bill prepared by the Secretaries of War,
the Interior, and Agriculture, at the direction of President
Wilson, was introduced. H.R. 8716, 65th Cong., 2d Sess. (1918). It
contained the language of the § 4(e) proviso basically as it
is now framed. Because of the press of World War I and other
concerns, the legislation was not enacted until 1920.
See
J. Kerwin, Federal Water power Legislation 217-263 (1926).
[
Footnote 16]
Petitioners note that, in 1930, when the structure of the
Commission was changed,
see n 14,
supra, James Lawson, then Acting Chief
Counsel of the Commission, stated that, under the structure then in
existence,
"[t]he Commission now has power to override the head of a
department as to the consistency of a license with the purpose of
any reservation."
Investigation of Federal Regulation of Power: Hearings pursuant
to S.Res. 80 and S. 3619 before the Senate Committee on Interstate
Commerce, 71st Cong., 2d Sess., 358 (1930). This snippet of
post-enactment history does not help petitioners' cause at all. All
parties agree that the Commission has the authority to make a
finding that "the license will not interfere
or be
inconsistent with the purpose for which such reservation was
created or acquired." 16 U.S.C. § 797(e) (emphasis added).
This is separate from the Secretary's authority to condition the
license for the adequate protection and utilization of the
reservation. Lawson's statement was clearly concerned with the
former. Indeed, a contemporaneous memorandum by the Commission's
legal staff (of which Lawson was the head), stated that the
Secretary of the Interior had authority under what is now §
4(e) "
to prescribe conditions to be inserted in the license for
the protection and utilization of the reservation.'" Brief for
Secretary of the Interior 33, quoting Memorandum of Sept. 20, 1929,
p. 23. It may well be that, in a particular case, the conditions
suggested by the Secretary will unduly undermine the Commission's
licensing judgment. However, as noted infra at
466 U.S. 777, and n.19,
that is a determination the court of appeals is to make.
Similarly misplaced is petitioners' reliance on the fact that,
once the bill was passed, President Wilson, at the request of the
Secretary, withheld his signature until Congress agreed that it
would pass legislation in its next session removing national parks
and monuments from the scope of the Act. Contrary to petitioners'
assertion, this does not show that the Secretary knew that §
4(e) did not grant him enough authority to protect these lands,
which were within his "conditioning" jurisdiction. Rather, the
Secretary objected to the inclusion of national parks and monuments
in the legislation because he believed that Congress, not the
Commission, should decide on a case-by-case basis whether any
hydroelectric development should occur in these areas. H.R.Rep. No.
1299, 66th Cong., 3d Sess., 2 (1921).
[
Footnote 17]
Even the Secretary concedes that the conditions must be
"reasonable and supported by evidence in the record." Brief for
Secretary of the Interior 37.
See also Tr. of Oral Arg.
20.
[
Footnote 18]
By its terms, § 4(e) requires that the conditions must be
"necessary for the adequate protection and utilization of such
reservations." At oral argument, the Secretary agreed that the
conditions should ultimately be sustained only if they
"are reasonably related to the purpose of ensuring that the
purposes of the reservation are adequately protected, and that the
reservation is adequately utilized."
Id. at 22.
[
Footnote 19]
Section 313(b) of the FPA provides that the Commission's orders,
including licenses, can be reviewed
"in the United States court of appeals for any circuit wherein
the licensee . . . is located or has its principal place of
business, or in the United States Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia."
16 U.S.C. § 8251(b).
[
Footnote 20]
Of course, the Commission is not required to argue in support of
the conditions if it objects to them. Indeed, it is free to express
its disagreement with them, not only in connection with the
issuance of the license, but also on review. Similarly, the
Commission can refuse to issue a license if it concludes that, as
conditioned, the license should not issue. In either event, the
license applicant can seek review of the conditions in the court of
appeals, but the court is to sustain the conditions if they are
consistent with law and supported by the evidence presented to the
Commission, either by the Secretary or other interested parties. 16
U.S.C. § 8251(b).
We note that, in the unlikely event that none of the parties to
the licensing proceeding seeks review, the conditions will go into
effect notwithstanding the Commission's objection to them, since
the Commission is not authorized to seek review of its own
decisions. The possibility that this might occur does not, however,
dissuade us from interpreting the statute in accordance with its
plain meaning. Congress apparently decided that, if no party was
interested in the differences between the Commission and the
Secretary, the dispute would best be resolved in a nonjudicial
forum.
[
Footnote 21]
Petitioners also contend that the Secretary's authority to
impose conditions on the license is inconsistent with the
Commission's authority and responsibility under § 10(a) to
determine that
"the project adopted . . . will be best adapted to a
comprehensive plan . . . for the improvement and utilization of
water power development, and for other beneficial public uses."
16 U.S.C. § 803(a). Our discussion of the alleged conflict
between the Commission's authority to make its "no interference or
inconsistency" determination and the Secretary's conditioning
authority applies with equal force to this contention. The ultimate
decision whether to issue the license belongs to the Commission,
but the Secretary's proposed conditions must be included if the
license issues. Any conflict between the Commission and the
Secretary with respect to whether the conditions are consistent
with the statute must be resolved initially by the courts of
appeals, not the Commission.
Petitioners' assertion that the conditions proposed by the
Secretary in this case were outside the Commission's authority to
adopt goes to the validity of the conditions, an issue not before
this Court. It may well be that the conditions imposed by the
Secretary are inconsistent with the provisions of the FPA, and that
they are therefore invalid (something we do not decide), but that
issue is not for the Commission to decide in the first instance,
but is reserved for the court of appeals at the instance of the
licensees and with the participation of the Commission if it is
inclined to present its views.
[
Footnote 22]
Petitioners also contend that the Commission's longstanding
interpretation of § 4(e) is entitled to deference, citing
language from its early decisions.
E.g., Pigeon River Lumber
Co., 1 F.P.C. 206, 209 (1935);
Southern California Edison
Co., 8 F.P.C. 364, 386 (1949). Petitioners concede, however,
that the Commission never actually rejected any of the Secretary's
conditions until 1975.
Pacific Gas & Electric Co., 53
F.P.C. 523, 526 (1975). Even then, the issue was not squarely
presented, because there was some question whether § 4(e) even
applied in that proceeding.
Ibid. It is therefore far from
clear that the Commission's interpretation is a longstanding one.
More importantly, an agency's interpretation, even if well
established, cannot be sustained if, as in this case, it conflicts
with the clear language and legislative history of the statute.
[
Footnote 23]
Mutual, Escondido, and Vista assert that § 4(e) is not at
issue in this case, because this is a relicensing procedure
governed by § 15(a). The Commission was of a different view,
and dealt with the case as an original licensing procedure, since
the new license included facilities not covered by the 1924 license
and since the project being relicensed was
"so materially different from the [p]roject . . . which was
initially licensed in 1924 that little more than the project number
remains the same."
6 FERC � 61,189, p. 61,411 (1979). The licensees did not
object to this conclusion in their petition for rehearing to the
Commission, and they may not challenge it now. 16 U.S.C. §
8251(b). Accordingly, we have no reason to decide whether §
4(e) applies to relicensing proceedings.
[
Footnote 24]
Section 3(2) of the FPA provides:
"'[R]eservations' means national forests, tribal lands embraced
within Indian reservations, military reservations, and other lands
and interests in lands owned by the United States, and withdrawn,
reserved, or withheld from private appropriation and disposal under
the public land laws. . . ."
16 U.S.C. § 796(2).
[
Footnote 25]
Indeed, in another provision of the Act, Congress provided that
the term "project" includes
"all water-rights . . . lands, or interests in lands the use and
occupancy of which are necessary or appropriate in the
maintenance"
of a "unit of improvement or development." 16 U.S.C. §
796(11). Had Congress thought that water rights were always covered
by the term "interests in land," it would not have felt it
necessary to refer to water rights.
[
Footnote 26]
The statute authorizes the construction of project works without
a license on nonnavigable waters over which Congress has Commerce
Clause jurisdiction if the Commission finds that
"the interests of interstate or foreign commerce would [not] be
affected by such proposed construction . . . and if no public lands
or reservations are affected."
16 U.S.C. § 817.
[
Footnote 27]
Trust patents were issued on September 13, 1892, for the La
Jolla and Rincon Reservations, and on July 10, 1910, for the San
Pasqual Reservation.
[
Footnote 28]
The Bands' situation was somewhat different, since it was
necessary to secure the approval of the Secretary for any such
contracts.
[
Footnote 29]
The FPA requires that, when licenses involve tribal lands within
a reservation, "the Commission shall . . . fix a reasonable annual
charge for the use thereof." 16 U.S.C. § 803(e). When a
licensed facility is on private land, the licensee must acquire the
appropriate right-of-way from the landowner either by private
negotiation or through eminent domain. 16 U.S.C. § 814.
[
Footnote 30]
The Bands suggest that, even in the absence of § 8 of the
MIRA, their consent would be necessary before the license could
issue because of their sovereign power to prevent the use of their
lands without their consent. Brief for Respondents La Jolla Band of
Mission Indians
et al. 37-39. However, it is highly
questionable whether the Bands have inherent authority to prevent a
federal agency from carrying out its statutory responsibility,
since such authority would seem to be inconsistent with their
status.
See Oliphant v. Suquamish Indian Tribe,
435 U. S. 191,
435 U. S.
208-209 (1978). In any event, it is clear that all
aspects of Indian sovereignty are subject to defeasance by
Congress,
United States v. Wheeler, 43 U.
S. 313,
44 U. S. 323
(1978), and, from the legislative history of the FPA,
supra, at
466 U. S. 787,
that Congress intended to permit the Commission to issue licenses
without the consent of the tribes involved.