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2019 Op. Or. Att'y Gen. 1 (2019)

handle is hein.sag/sagor0086 and id is 1 raw text is: 

ELLEN  F. ROSENBLUM                                                                          FREDERICK  M. BOSS
    ATTORNEY GENERAL                                                                         DEPUTY ATTORNEY GENERAL




                                         DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
                                                   Justice Building
                                                   1162 Court Street NE
                                                 Salem, OR 97301-4096
                                               Telephone: (503) 378-4400

                                               February 20, 2019

                                                                                           No.  8295


                 This opinion responds to a question from Governor Kate Brown about the off-reservation
          hunting rights of the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation of Oregon (the
          Tribe). It focuses on whether the Tribe's off-reservation hunting rights would be defined by the
          Treaty with the Tribes of Middle Oregon of June 25, 1855 (1855 Treaty)-which reserved
          those rights-or by the Treaty with the Middle Oregon Tribes of November 15, 1865 (1865
          Treaty)-which  on its face relinquished them.

                                          QUESTION PRESENTED

                 Does the doctrine of issue preclusion bar the State from disputing that the 1855 Treaty
          governs the Warm  Springs Tribe's off-reservation hunting rights?

                                              SHORT ANSWER

                 Yes. Issue preclusion would bar the State from litigating whether the Tribe holds off-
          reservation hunting rights based on the 1855 Treaty, including from arguing that the 1865 Treaty
          relinquished those rights. In U.S. v. Oregon, the State litigated, and lost, the issue of whether the
          earlier 1855 Treaty governs the Tribe's off-reservation fishing rights. The issue of whether the
          Tribe holds off-reservation hunting rights based on the 1855 Treaty is substantially identical to the
          issue earlier litigated. Therefore, the State would be precluded from litigating that hunting-rights
          issue with the Tribe, and accordingly, from arguing that the 1865 Treaty relinquished those rights.

                 Our analysis is specific to treaties, as opposed to generally applicable laws. It is also
          specific to potential civil litigation between the Tribe and the State construing the Tribe's off-
          reservation hunting rights. Issue preclusion is generally disfavored against the government
          where the parties are not the same as in the earlier litigation, or where preclusion would result in
          inequitable administration of the law. Neither of those circumstances is present here: the Tribe is
          the only entity whose off-reservation hunting and fishing rights are addressed by the 1855 and
          1865 treaties, and both the Tribe and the State were parties to the earlier U.S. v. Oregon
          litigation.


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