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    MASAYESVA v HALE, No. 9417022

    U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals

    MASAYESVA v HALE
    No. 9417022

    VERNON MASAYESVA, Chairman of
    the Hopi Tribal Council of the
    Hopi Indian Tribe, for and on
                                                          No. 94-17022
    behalf of the Hopi Indian Tribe,
                                                          D.C. No.
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
                                                          CV-76-00936-EHC
    v.
                                                          OPINION
    ALBERT HALE, President of the
    Navajo Nation; NAVAJO NATION,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    
    FERRELL SECAKUKU, Chairman of
    the Hopi Tribal Council of the
    Hopi Indian Tribe,
    Plaintiff-Appellant-Cross-Appellee,
                                                          Nos. 94-17031
                                                          95-15015
    v.
                                                          D.C. No.
    ALBERT HALE, President of the
                                                          CV-58-00579-EHC
    Navajo Nation; NAVAJO NATION;
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendants-Appellees-Cross-
    Appellants.
    
    FERRELL SECAKUKU, Chairman of
    the Hopi Tribal Council of the
    Hopi Indian Tribe,
    Plaintiff-Appellee-Cross-Appellant,
                                                          Nos. 94-17032
                                                               95-15029
    v.
                                                          D.C. No.
    ALBERT HALE, President of the
                                                          CV-58-00579-EHC
    Navajo Nation; NAVAJO NATION;
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendants-Appellants-Cross-
    Appellees.
    
    
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the District of Arizona
    Earl H. Carroll, District Judge, Presiding
    
    Argued and Submitted
    October 17, 1995--San Francisco, California
    
    Filed July 8, 1997
    
    Before: Mary M. Schroeder, Betty B. Fletcher, and
    Pamela Ann Rymer, Circuit Judges.
    
    Opinion by Judge Schroeder; Partial Concurrence and
    Partial Dissent by Judge Fletcher
    
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    OPINION
    
    SCHROEDER, Circuit Judge:
    
    I. INTRODUCTION
    
    These appeals are part of the long running and emotion
    scarring controversy between the Navajo Nation and the Hopi
    Tribe, in which the legislative, executive and judicial
    branches of the United States have all figured prominently.
    The dispute has centered on the ownership, control and use of
    nearly 2 million acres of the Native American reservation
    land occupying the northeast portion of Arizona and neigh-
    boring portions of Utah and New Mexico.
    
    These particular cases arise out of specific remedial provi-
    sions of the Navajo-Hopi Settlement Act of 1974, 25 U.S.C.
    S 640d, et seq. (1980) (the "Settlement Act"). The Settlement
    Act allows partition of reservation land that the courts had
    declared jointly shared by both tribes, but which had been
    used for grazing exclusively, and excessively, by the Navajo.
    The Navajo overgrazing was fostered, in large part, by the
    Department of Interior, which refused to grant the Hopi graz-
    ing permits while simultaneously providing the Navajo with
    permits for more grazing than the land could reasonably sup-
    port. Hamilton v. MacDonald, 503 F.2d 1138, 1146 n.10 (9th
    Cir. 1974) (explicitly affirming the district court's factual
    findings regarding the government's responsibility for Navajo
    overgrazing). In the 1974 Act, Congress expressly authorized
    litigation between the Hopi and the Navajo for enumerated
    damages; Congress intended for money to leaven the land-
    related inequalities between the Hopi and the Navajo.
    
    The background of this litigation has been recited in nearly
    35 years of court decisions and in numerous books and
    periodicals.1 We provide only a summary here.
    
    In 1882, President Chester Arthur by executive order cre-
    ated a 2.5 million acre reservation for the Hopi and "such
    other Indians as the Secretary of Interior saw fit to settle
    thereon." Exec. Order of Dec. 16, 1882, reprinted in, Healing
    v. Jones, 210 F.Supp. 125, 129 n.1 (D. Ariz. 1962), aff'd, 373
    U.S. 758 (1963). Under this executive order, the Hopi Tribe
    enjoyed the right to use and occupy the entire reservation. By
    contrast, the Navajo who had already settled in the reservation
    did not gain any immediate rights to the land. Nevertheless,
    the Navajo continued to use and occupy parts of the 1882 res-
    ervation. By 1900, the Navajo population had increased to
    1,826. Healing, 210 F.Supp. at 145. In 1920, it reached
    approximately 2,600, and by 1958, it exceeded 8,800. Id.
    Despite the Navajo's continued use of the reservation, their
    right to use the land during this period was unclear, and this
    caused an ongoing and bitter dispute.
    In 1958, Congress authorized litigation to settle title to the
    1882 reservation. Id. at 130. A three-judge district court thus
    examined the question in Healing and found that the Navajo
    had no right to use the land until 1931, when the Interior Sec-
    retary impliedly exercised his authority under the executive
    order to "settle" the Navajo on the reservation. Id. at 157. The
    Healing court further observed that all Navajo who immi-
    grated to the reservation between 1931 and 1958 were also
    impliedly "settled" in the reservation. Id. at 169. Healing held
    that the Hopi occupied the area known as "land district 6"
    exclusively, but that the two Tribes held a joint, undivided
    and equal interest in the remainder, known as the Joint Use
    Area (JUA). Id. District 6 is 600,000 acres. The JUA is
    greater than 1.8 million acres.
    
    Unfortunately, the 1962 order did not resolve the dispute.
    Between 1962 and 1972, the federal government continued to
    grant grazing permits to the Navajo, while rejecting all Hopi
    applications. Hamilton, 503 F.2d at 1146 n.10. At the same
    time, the Navajo intimidated the Hopi and mutilated their cat-
    tle. Id. Together, the federal government and the Navajo
    excluded the Hopi from what Healing had declared a "joint
    use area."
    
    The Hopi thus brought a supplemental action in which they
    obtained an order of compliance and a writ of assistance
    enforcing the Healing decision. Our decision affirming the
    order and the writ, Hamilton, 503 F.2d 1138, documents in
    greater detail the exclusion of the Hopi from the JUA. In
    Hamilton, we noted that although the permits enabled the
    Navajo only to eke out an existence, terrible and destructive
    overgrazing occurred nonetheless; the carrying capacity of the
    range was simply insufficient. Id. at 1145 (JUA is "an over-
    grazed, harsh and inhospitable area which yields little above
    a subsistence living").
    
    The Hamilton order required the Navajo to, among other
    things, reduce its livestock and to allow the Hopi to share the
    land. Id. at 1142 n.2. It also required the federal government
    to cancel all grazing permits and issue new ones, without giv-
    ing either the Hopi or the Navajo permits for more than their
    half of the land's carrying capacity. Id. Additionally, the order
    required the government to adopt a plan to achieve the broad
    goals of the compliance order, including restoration of the
    range, within 90 days. Id. Both the government and the Nav-
    ajo failed to do as ordered. In 1974, the Navajo were held in
    contempt of court. Sekaquaptewa v. MacDonald, No. Civ.
    579 PCT (JAW) (D. Ariz. May 29, 1974), aff'd, 544 F.2d 396
    (9th Cir. 1976), cert. denied, 
    430 U.S. 931
     (1977). At that
    time, the Navajo's livestock exceeded, by approximately
    seven times, the JUA's carrying capacity. Id. at 3-4.
    
    Against this background, Congress in 1974 passed the Set-
    tlement Act, authorizing partition by court order in the event
    mediation failed, which it did. A court order of partition was
    entered, and after appeal and remand, see Sekaquaptewa v.
    MacDonald, 575 F.2d 239 (9th Cir. 1978), was reconfirmed.
    
    The Settlement Act itself called for partition to achieve as
    equal a division as was practicable, 25 U.S.C. S 640d-5(d),
    while at the same time expressly directing that population
    centers should not be divided, 25 U.S.C. S 640d-5(b). The
    legislation also called for measuring the value of the land, for
    purposes of division, as if the grazing capacity were restored.
    25 U.S.C. S 640d-5(d). In an effort to adjust any imbalance
    that might result from an unequal division, and to compensate
    the Hopi for both past exclusion from grazing the land and
    damage done to the land by Navajo overgrazing, Congress
    authorized several actions for money damages. So that the
    Hopi and the Navajo could sue one another and join the
    United States as a party, Congress waived immunity for all
    three sovereigns. 25 U.S.C. S 640d-5.
    
    In Hopi Tribe v. Navajo Tribe, 46 F.3d 908 (9th Cir.) (the
    "rent case"), cert. denied, 116 S.Ct. 337 (1995), we affirmed
    a judgment awarding the Hopi rent, pursuant to S 640d-15(a)
    of the Settlement Act, for the post-partition presence of Nav-
    ajo homesites on the Hopi half of the partitioned land. We
    also remanded the Hopi's award of rent for the post-partition
    (1979 to 1984) grazing of Navajo cattle and sheep on the
    Hopi half of the partitioned land, so that the district court
    could review the merits of the Navajo challenge to the award.
    
    We now have three Settlement Act cases before us on
    appeal. We review first a judgment entered in favor of the
    Hopi, pursuant to S 640d-17(a)(2), for the "fair value of the
    grazing and agricultural use" by the Navajo of the Hopi's one-
    half interest in the JUA from 1962 to 1979; this is known as
    the "use case." The second appeal, known as the "owelty
    case", arises under S 640d-5(d), in which Congress authorized
    an action for the difference in value between the land awarded
    to the Hopi Tribe (the HPL) and the land awarded to the Nav-
    ajo Nation (the NPL). The district court ruled the division was
    roughly equal and entered judgment denying any relief. In the
    third appeal, we consider an action pursuant toS 640d-17(a)
    (3) by the Hopi against both the United States and the Navajo
    to recover damage to the JUA caused prior to partition (the
    "damage case"). In the damage case, the district court entered
    judgment against the Navajo but refused to hold the federal
    government liable, finding that the United States had not
    acted unreasonably in its efforts to protect the JUA from dam-
    age.
    
    The Navajo appeal the judgment in the use case and the
    Navajo and the Hopi both appeal the judgments in the owelty
    and damages cases. We affirm the use case in its entirety, and
    in large part, we affirm the owelty and damages cases as well.
    We discuss each case separately.
    
    II. THE USE CASE, No. 94-17022
    
    A. Background
    
    The district court awarded the Hopi $18,187,132 for the
    Navajo's combined grazing and agricultural use of the Tribe's
    one-half interest in the JUA from 1962 to 1979. The case was
    litigated pursuant to 25 U.S.C. S 640d-17(a)(2), which
    allowed the Hopi to recover one-half the "fair value of the
    [Navajo] grazing and agricultural use" between the time of
    the JUA's creation (Healing decision of September 28, 1962)
    and the partition of the JUA on April 18, 1979. 2
    
    In this appeal, the Navajo's principal contention is that the
    Settlement Act itself is unconstitutional because it divests the
    Navajo of a vested property right to graze animals on the
    entire JUA. Additionally, the Navajo, for the first time on
    appeal, contend that the district court lacked jurisdiction
    because the determination of the fair value in this case consti-
    tutes a non-justiciable political question. The Navajo also
    challenge several evidentiary rulings and factual findings con-
    cerning the valuation of their grazing and agricultural use. We
    affirm the judgment.
    
    B. Constitutional Challenges
    
    Relying on the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment,
    the Navajo argue that the Settlement Act undermines their
    property rights, as secured by the judgment in Healing. The
    Navajo also suggest that the statute is a retroactive impair-
    ment of their rights under the Contracts Clause of Article I.
    Whether the statute is constitutional is a question of law
    reviewed de novo, and as we have recently said, a court
    should invalidate a statutory provision "only for the most
    compelling reasons." Gray v. First Winthrope Corp., 989 F.2d
    1564, 1567 (9th Cir. 1993) (internal quotations omitted).
    
    [1] The common flaw in all of the Navajo's constitutional
    arguments is that the Navajo never had, either by court decree
    or contractual promise, an unfettered right to use the JUA to
    the exclusion of the Hopi. Rather, the Healing decision
    granted the Hopi and the Navajo joint and undivided interests
    in the JUA. Therefore the statute is a legitimate effort by Con-
    gress to implement the Healing decree, and to rectify wrong-
    ful conduct that has occurred in the wake of Healing.
    
    [2] The Navajo next argue, for the first time on appeal, that
    the district court lacks jurisdiction to determine the "fair
    value" of "grazing and agricultural use" because this is a non-
    justiciable political question. Assuming the Navajo did not
    waive the political question issue, their contention is without
    merit. The Navajo position boils down to an assertion that the
    determination of "fair value" is not an issue that courts are
    capable of resolving. See Baker v. Carr, 
    369 U.S. 186
    , 217,
    82 S.Ct. 691, 710 (1962) (issue may be a non-justiciable polit-
    ical question if it lacks judicially discoverable and manage-
    able standards for resolution). The Navajo, however,
    recognize that courts frequently address the concept of "fair
    market value." See, e.g., Eales v. Environmental Lifestyles,
    Inc., 958 F.2d 876, 880 (9th Cir. 1992), (calculating "fair mar-
    ket value" of architectural plans); cert. denied, 113 S.Ct. 605
    (1992) Doherty v. C.I.R., 16 F.3d 338 (9th Cir. 1994) (calcu-
    lating "fair market value" of painting); Seravalli v. U.S., 845
    F.2d 1571 (Fed. Cir. 1988) (estimating "fair market value" of
    real property). We see no material difference between evalu-
    ating "fair value," as set forth in the Settlement Act, and eval-
    uating "fair market value," the more common standard. See
    also Koohi v. United States, 976 F.2d 1328, 1332 (9th Cir.
    1992) ("damage actions are particularly judicially
    manageable"), cert. denied, 
    508 U.S. 960
     (1993).
    
    [3] For similar reasons, we are not swayed by the argument
    that the "fair value" determination is non-justiciable because
    it calls for a "policy determination of a kind clearly for non-
    judicial discretion." See Baker, 
    369 U.S. at 217
    , 82 S.Ct. at
    710. Congress already made the policy decision that the Nav-
    ajo should compensate the Hopi for excluding them from the
    JUA. What Congress left for the courts, calculating "fair
    value," is within the expertise of the judiciary.
    
    [4] Finally, the Navajo, again citing Baker, maintain that
    "the determination [of fair value] is impossible without
    expressing a lack of `respect' due" the Executive Branch
    because the Secretary of the Interior decided not to charge the
    Navajo for grazing privileges. This argument is misplaced. As
    the Hopi point out, there is no indication that the Executive
    Branch ever took the position that the Navajo need not pay
    the Hopi for their extraordinary overgrazing of the JUA. The
    Executive Branch's decision that the Navajo need not pay the
    federal government for grazing permits is consistent with the
    Congressional mandate that the Navajo compensate the Hopi
    for overgrazing. In sum, we reject each of the Navajo's con-
    stitutional challenges.
    
    C. Evidentiary challenges to expert testimony
    
    The Navajo contest the district court's admission of Hopi
    expert Dr. John Workman's testimony regarding the fair value
    of Navajo grazing (as opposed to agricultural growth) on the
    JUA. They argue that Workman lacked sufficient foundation
    to support his testimony, since he is not a real estate appraiser
    but an economist. They further contend that his methodology
    did not satisfy the test for expert scientific testimony in
    Daubert v. Merrill Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
    ,
    113 S.Ct. 2786 (1993). We review a decision to admit expert
    testimony for abuse of discretion. Dang Vang v. Vang Xiong
    X. Toyed, 944 F.2d 476, 480 (9th Cir. 1991)."A trial court has
    broad discretion to admit and exclude expert testimony [under
    Fed. R. Evid. 702] and its decision will be sustained unless it
    is `manifestly erroneous.' " Id. (citation omitted).
    
    [5] The court was well within its discretion to conclude that
    Dr. Workman is qualified to offer an opinion regarding the
    fair value of Navajo grazing. Dr. Workman has been a profes-
    sor of Range Economics for twenty-five years, teaching
    courses in "rangeland appraisal" and "range economic
    analysis." He has written a textbook on range economics and
    dozens of peer-reviewed publications on subjects related to
    his testimony. He has been qualified as an expert on range
    economics in a case where he gave similar valuation testi-
    mony. See White Mountain Apache Tribe v. United States, 11
    Cl. Ct. 614, 665-66 (1987) (qualifying Dr. Workman as "an
    expert in appraisal and range management" and characterizing
    his proposed measure of damages as "especially persuasive"),
    aff'd, 5 F.3d 1506 (Fed. Cir. 1993), cert. denied, 114 S. Ct.
    1538 (1994).
    
    [6] The district court thoughtfully examined the methodol-
    ogy and opinion of each expert, and accepted Dr. Workman's
    measure of damages only after making appropriate downward
    adjustments. The Navajo's reliance on Daubert is misplaced
    because Dr. Workman's testimony derives from his relatively
    straightforward application of range economics, rather than on
    a novel scientific theory. See Dang Vang, 944 F.2d at 482.
    
    [7] The Navajo also challenge the district court's decision
    to admit testimony from Hopi expert Robert Francy, an
    appraiser, on the value of corn grown on the JUA. Francy for-
    mulated his opinion from what others told him about corn
    prices. The Navajo argue that this constituted an improper use
    of inadmissible hearsay. However, the Navajo failed to raise
    any timely, specific hearsay objection to the expert's testi-
    mony and thus waived their right to assign error on appeal.
    See Fed. R. Evid. 103. The record, moreover, reveals that no
    statements from third parties were admitted for their truth.
    The third party statements only provided the Hopi expert with
    background information about corn sales, from which he fash-
    ioned his testimony. Such reliance is permissible, since
    experts in the field, i.e. appraisers, regularly go to third parties
    for sales figures, as the Hopi expert did here. See Fed. R.
    Evid. 703.
    
    D. Challenges to the district court's valuation
           calculations 
    
    The district court separately valued Navajo "agricultural"
    use and "grazing" use, as contemplated by the statute. 25
    U.S.C. S 640d-17(a)(2). The Navajo challenge the agricultural
    use valuation on two grounds. First, they argue that the dis-
    trict court clearly erred when it adopted Hopi expert Robert
    Francy's conclusion that the Navajo had actually farmed the
    JUA between 1962 and 1979. They contend that Francy's
    conclusion was based only on speculation. However, the
    record shows that Francy's conclusion was premised on two
    reports from the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), aerial photo-
    graphs, maps, documents, and personal spot checks. The court
    did not clearly err. Second, the Navajo contend that there was
    insufficient evidence to support a finding that there was a
    commercial market for the approximately 200,000 pounds per
    year of corn attributable to Navajo farming. This argument,
    however, spuriously assumes that the corn consumed by the
    Navajo themselves lacks value. The evidence clearly estab-
    lished that the market for most of the corn was in the nature
    of personal consumption, and only a small percentage of the
    crops were sold commercially. Thus, the evidence supported
    a finding that there was a market for the corn.
    
    [8] The Navajo challenge to the district court's calculation
    of the value of Navajo grazing on the JUA is slightly more
    complicated than their other contentions, but no more valid.
    First, the Navajo contend that the value of their grazing on the
    JUA should be computed from the land's carrying capacity,
    i.e., the amount of grazing the land can sustain without irrepa-
    rable damage. This is how ranch land is typically valued for
    leasing purposes. Because longtime Navajo overgrazing dras-
    tically decreased the carrying capacity of the JUA, the rental
    value of the land between 1962 and 1979 was only one-fifth
    the typical rate in Arizona. The district court thus rejected the
    Navajo's approach and estimated the actual amount of grazing
    from the number of Navajo animals on the JUA. At times,
    actual grazing by Navajo livestock exceeded the carrying
    capacity by approximately seven-fold. The district court then
    valued the Navajo's use of the land by reference to the actual
    amount of Navajo grazing. The Navajo argue that in so doing,
    the district court improperly charged them more than they
    would have paid on the open market, as the open market rate
    is pegged to carrying capacity, a lower figure. As the Hopi
    point out, consumption beyond the carrying capacity should
    exact a premium charge. The district court did not clearly err
    when it charged the Navajo for this excessive use.
    
    [9] Second, the Navajo argue that the court overestimated
    the number of animals on the JUA. The district court counted
    the number of animals in units of cattle. For most years, the
    court converted sheep to cattle using a ratio of five sheep per
    one head of cattle, and adjusted downward for low animal
    weight. The court did not make these adjustments for 1966,
    1968 through 1971 and 1974, because it lacked information
    about the number of sheep and the weight of cattle on the
    range. The Navajo contend that the district court should have
    made the 5:1 conversion and the weight adjustment during
    these years because it had sufficient information. The record,
    however, reveals that the court did not have precise sheep
    counts during those years, and therefore could not make an
    accurate conversion. In addition, the court had information on
    only three cattle sales for those years, and therefore could not
    accurately adjust downward for low animal weight. The
    court's estimates of the number of animals on the JUA were
    not clearly erroneous.
    
    [10] Third, the Navajo argue that the district court errone-
    ously valued grazing by using adjusted private Arizona lease
    rates instead of federal land lease rates. There were, however,
    no federal rates between 1962 and 1972; therefore, rates for
    those years could be estimated only through statistical projec-
    tions. Moreover, federal rates reflect policy decisions, not
    market dynamics. The district court's use of private Arizona
    rates was not clearly erroneous. We affirm the district court's
    award to the Hopi in the use case.
    
    III. THE OWELTY CASE, Appeal Nos. 94-17031,
    95-15015
    
    A. Background
    
    Owelty is a sum of money paid by one former joint tenant
    to another after a partition results in an unequal division of
    their land; the owelty compensates the former tenant who
    received the lesser value for the disparity. See Black's Law
    Dictionary (4th Ed.); 68 C.J.S. Partition S 142 at 232-3 (1950
    & 1988 Supp.); 59A Am.Jur.2d Partition SS 2, 253 (1987). In
    this owelty case, the district court held that after partition
    there was no statistically meaningful difference in value
    between the Hopi half of the land and the Navajo half. Thus,
    it ordered no owelty award.
    
    [11] The owelty action was brought pursuant to S 640d-
    5(d) of the Settlement Act, which authorizes the district court
    to award damages for any difference in value between the
    halves of the partitioned land with "improvements and graz-
    ing capacity fully restored."3 The Hopi appeal from the judg-
    ment, arguing that the district court undervalued the Navajo
    land because it misinterpreted the owelty statute. The Hopi
    also contend that they are entitled to prejudgment interest, if
    they succeed on their claim for owelty.
    
    In the cross-appeal, the Navajo assert that the Hopi should
    be judicially estopped from seeking owelty. Moreover, the
    Navajo want an owelty payment from the Hopi, and argue
    that the Hopi got the better land. We hold that the district
    court erred in its interpretation of the statute and remand for
    a determination of the amount of owelty due the Hopi. We
    affirm the district court's denial of owelty to the Navajo. We
    further hold that the Hopi are not judicially estopped from
    seeking owelty, and that they must receive prejudgment inter-
    est on it.
    
    B. Improvements
    
    The principal legal contention we must resolve is the
    Hopi's argument that the district court misconstrued the statu-
    tory language directing that the value of the partitioned land
    "shall be based on not less than its value with improvements
    and its grazing capacity fully restored." S 640d-5(d). The dis-
    trict court determined the land's worth with its grazing capac-
    ity fully restored and with only those improvements that, as
    described by the district court, were necessary to restore the
    grazing potential to the maximum extent feasible. Presum-
    ably, the district court was referring to improvements such as
    roads, stream diversions, irrigation canals, and fences, which
    can help improve the land's grazing capacity.
    
    On appeal, the Hopi assert that the district court wrongly
    interpreted the plain language of the statute calling for the val-
    uation of "improvements." The Hopi argue that the district
    court should have valued all improvements, including hospi-
    tals, schools, churches, hogans, trading posts and other struc-
    tures. The Hopi contend that these improvements all
    contribute to the value of the land as an Indian reservation. At
    trial, the Hopi expert agreed that the land should be appraised
    as an Indian reservation, with potential for, inter alia,
    agriculture, grazing, rural residential habitation and limited
    commercial enterprise. The Navajo's competing expert took
    the view that the land should be valued strictly as a cattle
    ranching operation and that most buildings were of no signifi-
    cance.
    
    [12] The legislative history does little to answer the ques-
    tion of whose valuation is correct, as it refers to improve-
    ments without ever giving any indication of what type of
    improvements Congress contemplated. See, e.g., H.R. Rep.
    No. 909, 93rd Cong., 2d Sess. (1974); S. Rep. No. 1177, 93rd
    Cong. 2d Sess. (1974). Thus, we focus on the statute itself.
    The Navajo's valuation appears to do violence to the statutory
    language, for it ignores the Congressional directive to value
    "improvements." The district court's view that
    "improvements" should be limited to those necessary to
    restore the land to full grazing capacity also finds no support
    in the statute. Indeed, the statute's conjunctive structure sug-
    gests that an independent value should be assessed for
    "improvements" and for the land fully restored. Moreover,
    Congress did not qualify the word "improvements; " the stat-
    ute contains no express limitation on the type of improve-
    ments that can comprise the value of the partitioned land, or
    the purpose that the improvements must serve before they can
    be included in value.
    
    [13] Nevertheless, we cannot add the full value of the
    buildings on the NPL to the value of the Navajo land, since
    most of the structures on the NPL are privately owned and are
    not part of the real property that was given to the Navajo
    Nation at partition. For example, the residences, primarily
    hogans or smaller structures, are owned and were paid for by
    individual Navajo. The same is true of the barns, sheds and
    corrals on the NPL. Moreover, even if these structures were
    not privately owned, they likely would have no appreciable
    value for owelty purposes, as the Hopi expert testified that the
    Hopi routinely demolish such structures once the Navajo have
    abandoned them.
    
    The buildings on the NPL that have the most significant
    intrinsic value include schools and hospitals that belong to the
    United States and which, like the private residences, cannot
    be added directly to the value of the NPL because they were
    not partitioned to the Navajo. The same logic applies to
    churches and missions on the NPL, which are owned and
    managed by their respective religious organizations, and to
    structures erected on the NPL by third party entrepreneurs,
    such as the Peabody coal mining operation.
    
    [14] The Hopi therefore alternatively contend that the dis-
    trict court should not value the improvements themselves, but
    rather the land's enhanced value because those improvements
    are on it. We believe this is the only interpretation of the stat-
    ute that gives meaning to all of its terms and the one that best
    accords with Congressional intent. The district court con-
    cluded that "there is no competent evidence that the NPL had
    more improvements than the HPL which were necessary to
    restore the partitioned lands" because it had first (erroneously)
    interpreted what "improvements" means. Consequently, the
    district court made no findings of fact regarding the contribut-
    ing value of such things as schools, churches, and hospitals,
    to the value of the JUA. Nor did the court evaluate the meth-
    odology underlying the competing expert opinions about such
    contributing value. For this reason, we remand to the district
    court so that, guided by the correct interpretation of
    "improvements," it may consider and evaluate the conflicting
    expert opinions, and decide what owelty payment, if any, is
    due the Hopi based on the contributing value of all improve-
    ments.
    
    C. Grazing capacity
    
    Finally, we turn to the Navajo's Rule 59(e) motion, essen-
    tially a request for owelty, which the district court denied. The
    Navajo argue that because the district court accepted the opin-
    ion of an expert who opined that the HPL fully restored would
    support more grazing than the NPL fully restored, the district
    court was obligated to award the Navajo owelty relief. The
    district court, however, correctly noted in accepting that opin-
    ion that the same expert also testified to a 10 to 15 percent
    margin of error in his restored grazing capacity figures. Any
    difference between the HPL and the NPL was within that
    margin of error, and hence not statistically relevant. The dis-
    trict court did not err in denying the Rule 59(e) motion.
    
    D. Judicial Estoppel
    
    The doctrine of judicial estoppel bars a party from taking
    inconsistent positions in the same litigation. Morris v. State of
    Cal., 966 F.2d 448, 452 (9th Cir. 1991), cert. denied, 506 U.S.
    831 (1992). The Navajo argue that the Hopi should be judi-
    cially estopped from seeking owelty because, prior to parti-
    tion, the Hopi represented to the district court that the
    partition would not result in an owelty payment. We agree
    with the district court that this argument should be rejected
    because no court ever adopted the original Hopi position that
    the partition would not result in an owelty payment. See
    Migard Tempering, Inc. v. Selas Corp., 902 F.2d 703 (9th Cir.
    1990) (court must adopt position for judicial estoppel to
    apply).
    
    E. Prejudgment interest
    
    Our decision here is controlled by Hopi Tribe, 46 F.3d 908.
    There, we held that S 640d-17(e) of the Settlement Act, which
    allows the Hopi and the Navajo to sue one another for all rem-
    edies available in federal district court, allows for recovery of
    prejudgment interest. Although that decision was reached in
    the context of a suit for fair rental value of post partition use
    of the HPL by the Navajo, its logic applies with equal force
    in this context. Thus, we hold that the Hopi are entitled to pre-
    judgment interest.
    
    F. Conclusion
    
    We therefore reverse the district court's denial of owelty
    and remand so that the Hopi may seek compensation for any
    disparity in value and prejudgment interest thereon. In all
    other respects, we affirm the district court's valuation of
    owelty.
    
    IV. THE DAMAGES CASE, Appeals Nos. 94-17032,
    95-15029
    
    A. Background
    
    In the action giving rise to these appeals, the Hopi sued the
    Navajo and the United States to recover for damages to the
    HPL caused by Navajo overgrazing prior to the 1979 parti-
    tion. The district court held that while the conduct creating
    liability occurred before the 1979 partition, the Hopi's com-
    pensation would be measured by the value of the lost grazing
    opportunity that the Hopi suffered after partition. In other
    words, the Hopi could recover the post-partition difference in
    value between the land "as is" and the land fully restored.
    None of the parties contest this ruling on appeal.
    
    [15] After trial, the district court awarded the Hopi
    $3,167,388.84 in damages against the Navajo, and absolved
    the United States of liability on the ground that the govern-
    ment made reasonable efforts to protect the range. Both the
    Hopi and the Navajo challenge the district court's calcula-
    tions. Their contentions lack merit, except for the Hopi com-
    plaint that the district court wrongly denied damages for lost
    grazing opportunity on lands that the Hopi set aside for wild-
    life. Accordingly, we remand so the district court can add the
    value of that lost opportunity to the damages award. Further,
    the Navajo argue that the United States should be held liable
    for its failure to adequately protect the range. We agree with
    the district court's application of a reasonableness standard
    and affirm the district court's denial of liability on the basis
    of factual findings that are not challenged as clearly errone-
    ous.
    
    B. Calculation of damages
    
    We turn first to the contentions concerning the district
    court's calculation of damages. The court computed the lost
    grazing opportunity using the following method. First, it esti-
    mated the fully restored annual grazing capacity of the HPL,
    finding that the HPL could be restored to excellent condition,
    but maintained as grazing land at only 75% of that condition.
    The Hopi challenge this finding on appeal. Second, the court
    determined that the HPL would be fully restored by 1995.
    Third, it estimated the total lost grazing capacity by calculat-
    ing the difference between the fully restored grazing capacity
    and the actual annual grazing capacity for each year between
    1979 and 1995, and then adding up the lost opportunity for
    each of these years. Fourth, it put a price on the lost grazing
    opportunity by referring, as in the use case, to adjusted private
    Arizona lease rates instead of federal lease rates. Finally, the
    court discounted the future damages to their present value.
    These three steps are not challenged.
    
    When estimating the total lost grazing capacity, the court
    made several adjustments that the Hopi challenge here. It
    decreased its estimate of the lost grazing opportunity by mak-
    ing "management cuts" to account for the Hopi practice of
    grazing cattle instead of sheep. Sheep typically graze all avail-
    able forage. Cattle, by contrast, do not spontaneously graze
    hard-to-reach forage, prefer certain kinds of terrain over oth-
    ers, and tend to congregate within one-and-a-half miles of
    water sources. Because cattle use less acreage, reasoned the
    district court when making the cuts, the Hopi lost less grazing
    opportunity than they would have if they grazed sheep. In
    addition, the court excluded the lost opportunity associated
    with seven range units that the Hopi reserved for wildlife
    rather than livestock; we refer to these exclusions as the
    "vacant range cuts."
    
    The district court also made an adjustment that the Navajo
    challenge on appeal: it increased its estimate of lost grazing
    to account for the eventual completion of water development
    programs on the HPL. Completion of these projects increases
    the acreage accessible to cattle, thereby increasing the Hopi's
    lost opportunity.
    
    [16] We address the Hopi challenges first. The Hopi argue
    that the district court clearly erred in setting potential grazing
    capacity at 75%, rather than 100%, of excellent condition.
    However, several experts, including the Hopi's own, testified
    that the range could not be grazed at 100% of excellent condi-
    tion. The court's finding was not clearly erroneous.
    
    The Hopi also challenge the district court's management
    and vacant range cuts, arguing that the value of the lost graz-
    ing opportunity should be premised on the Hopi's right or
    opportunity to use the land, rather than how the Hopi actually
    used the land. They contend that the management cuts were
    inappropriate because they could have fully utilized the
    HPL's grazing capacity by raising sheep instead of cattle. Fur-
    ther, they contend that the vacant range cuts were inappropri-
    ate because they could have used their seven vacant range
    units for grazing, but chose to leave that land fallow in order
    to accelerate the restoration process. The Navajo and the gov-
    ernment respond that damages should be limited to real
    opportunity costs, which are tied to the Hopi's actual use of
    the land.
    
    [17] The Restatement (Second) of TortsS 929, concerning
    Harm to Land from Past Invasions, provides the most relevant
    authority. It states that "[i]f one is entitled to judgment for
    harm to land resulting from past invasion . . ., the damages
    include compensation for . . . the loss of use of the land . . . ."
    Comment d to S 929 explains that "the plaintiff is entitled to
    recover for the past or prospective loss of use . . . as stated in
    S 931." (emphasis added). Comment b toS 931 provides:
    
           The owner of the subject matter is entitled to recover
           as damages for the loss of the value of the use, at
           least the rental value of the . . . land during the
           period of deprivation. This is true even though the
           owner in fact has suffered no harm through the
           deprivation, as when he was not using the subject
           matter at the time . . . . The use to which . . . the land
           is commonly put . . . [is] to be taken into consider-
           ation as far as [it] bear[s] upon the value of the use
           to the owner or the rental value.
    
    Restatement (Second) of Torts S 931 cmt. b (emphasis
    added). Thus, under the Restatement the value of the lost
    grazing opportunity turns on the type of use to which the land
    was "commonly put." The record reveals that the Hopi have
    "commonly put" the HPL to use for grazing cattle, rather than
    sheep. The district court made the management cuts to
    exclude forage that was inaccessible to cattle. This was in
    accordance with the Restatement principle. We affirm the dis-
    trict court's management cuts.
    
    [18] Our result differs with respect to the vacant range cuts.
    Unlike the acreage excluded by the management cuts, the land
    excluded under the vacant range cuts was accessible to cattle.
    Thus, the question is whether the Hopi should be awarded lost
    opportunity damages for land that could have been put to its
    common use, but which the Hopi chose not to use in the cus-
    tomary manner. We hold that the Hopi should be awarded
    damages for lost grazing opportunity on the vacant ranges. As
    the Restatement explains, an owner can suffer deprivation
    even if the owner "was not using the subject matter at the
    time." Id. We therefore reverse the district court's vacant
    range exclusion and remand for inclusion of the lost grazing
    opportunity on the vacant range units in the Hopi's damages
    award.
    
    The Navajo argue that the upward adjustment for the future
    completion of water development programs constituted clear
    error because such programs will have no impact on Hopi
    grazing. They contend that the programs are saddled with
    inadequate funding and resistance from the Hopi themselves,
    preventing their development. However, the Navajo's own
    expert testified that these programs had made substantial
    progress, and the Hopi's expert recommended the upward
    adjustment. The court did not clearly err in following that rec-
    ommendation.
    
    [19] The Navajo also argue that the damages award was
    excessive. The Navajo and the Hopi both agree that the dam-
    ages award, coupled with the post-partition rent, should equal
    the fully restored value of the HPL. In other words, they agree
    that the value of the HPL fully restored is equal to lost grazing
    opportunity (damages) plus available grazing opportunity
    (rent). The Navajo point out, however, that the payment they
    made in the rent case, Hopi Tribe, 46 F.3d 908, plus the dam-
    ages award here, adds up to more than the worth of the fully
    restored HPL. From this the Navajo conclude that the dam-
    ages award is excessive. The Navajo's argument is without
    merit. The rent award included considerations unrelated to
    actual grazing, such as financial penalties for trespassing live-
    stock. These penalties and other factors unrelated to grazing,
    rather than an excessive damages award, are what cause the
    appearance of overcompensation. The district court did not
    clearly err in finding that the damages award was not exces-
    sive.
    
    Finally, the Navajo challenge the testimony of expert John
    Workman, contending, as they did in the use case, that he is
    not qualified. See supra II.C. We reject their contention for
    the same reasons articulated in part II.C. Id. 
    
    C. Federal Government Liability
    
    Finally, we address the question of the United States' liabil-
    ity. We must decide whether the United States should bear
    any fiscal responsibility for the tragedy of these commons.
    The district court held that if the United States negligently
    failed to protect the JUA, the United States, together with the
    Navajo, would be jointly and severally liable for damages to
    the land. The district court concluded that the government was
    not negligent, stating that the Hopis failed to sustain their bur-
    den to show "that the damage to the HPL was caused by
    unreasonable government action or inaction."
    
    The Hopi appealed that judgment, arguing that the district
    court erred by using negligence, rather than strict liability, as
    the standard for government liability. After oral argument in
    these appeals, the United States settled with the Hopi for
    $2,400,000, and the Hopi moved to abandon the portion of
    their appeal contesting the decision in favor of the govern-
    ment. We granted that motion, but allowed the Navajo to rely
    on the arguments in the Hopi briefs with regard to joint liabil-
    ity. Additionally, the Navajo contend that the United States
    should be exclusively liable.
    
    [20] We agree with the district court that the government's
    behavior should be evaluated using reasonableness as the
    yardstick. The district court assessed government liability in
    accordance with the only available provision addressing dam-
    ages to the land, S 640d-5(d).4 That section provides that the
    government will be liable for damages to the land if the gov-
    ernment fails "to provide protection where such protection is
    or was required by law or by the demands of the trust
    relationship." Protections required by law are coterminous
    with those required by the trust relationship. See United States
    v. Mitchell, 
    463 U.S. 206, 224
    , 103 S.Ct. 2972 (1983) (statu-
    tory and regulatory provisions define contours of federal gov-
    ernment's trust obligations when it assumes responsibility as
    a trustee for Indian lands); accord 25 C.F.R. 153.3 (1976)
    (regulations are promulgated to "carry out the Secretary's
    trust responsibility" over the JUA). Since the government's
    liability is predicated on trust obligations, it need take those
    protective measures that a reasonable or prudent trustee would
    take. Navajo Tribe v. United States, 9th Cir. 336, 400 (1986);
    Restatement, (Second) Trusts, S 176.
    
    [21] The district court may well have erred in describing
    the appropriate standard as a negligence, or reasonable person
    standard, rather than a fiduciary, or reasonable trustee stan-
    dard, but the Hopi have not argued that the district court mea-
    sured the government's fault by the wrong standard. Rather,
    the Hopi ask that the government be held strictly liable, with-
    out regard to fault. We therefore hold that the district court
    did nor err in determining the government's liability using the
    reasonableness standard rather than a standard of strict liabil-
    ity. The Hopi do not challenge the findings as clearly errone-
    ous.
    CONCLUSION
    
    We affirm the entire judgment of the district court in the
    use case. In the owelty case, we remand so that the district
    court may determine the amount of owelty, if any, due the
    Hopi based on the value of the land and the contributing value
    of improvements, and affirm in all other respects. In the dam-
    ages case, we reverse the district court's decision not to credit
    the Hopi for lost opportunity on the seven vacant range units
    set aside for wildlife, but otherwise affirm the judgment.
    
    AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED and REMANDED in
    part. Each party shall bear its own costs on appeal.
    
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    FLETCHER, Circuit Judge: Partial Concurrence and Partial
    Dissent
    
    I concur substantially in the majority's opinion.
    
    I respectfully dissent, however, from the majority's refusal
    to reverse the district court's holding that the United States is
    not liable for failure to protect the HPL from overgrazing
    prior to partition in 1979.
    
    The majority concludes as do I that the district court
    applied the wrong standard in assessing the government's lia-
    bility. The district court held the government to a negligence
    standard, holding the Hopi responsible for proof that "the
    damage to the HPL was caused by unreasonable government
    action or inaction," rather than to the duty of a reasonable
    trustee, who is under an affirmative duty "to the beneficiary
    to use reasonable care and skill to preserve the trust
    property." (Restatement (Second), Trusts,S 176(1959))
    (emphasis added).
    
    The government's obligation as trustee required it to take
    those protective measures that would have prevented the spo-
    liation of the trust land by overgrazing--the very conduct by
    the Navajo that proper oversight by the government should
    have prevented. The government as trustee had affirmative
    duties of oversight--an obligation to investigate and to be
    informed and to act affirmatively to assure the protection of
    the grazing land--a fragile ecosystem--from overgrazing.
    The government's obligation, in short, was to prevent the
    Navajo from doing the very acts that imposed liability on the
    Navajo.
    
    My disagreement stems from the majority's conclusion that
    despite the district court's error, its holding should stand
    because the Hopi have not challenged on appeal the district
    court's finding that the government acted reasonably.1 But
    that finding of reasonableness was in the context of the inap-
    propriate negligence standard--what is reasonable conduct
    for a non-fiduciary is not necessarily reasonable conduct for
    a trustee since the trustee has an affirmative duty to protect
    and preserve the trust res. That is the very point the Hopi
    make: they assert that the government breached its fiduciary
    duty to protect the HPL from overgrazing. They offer the
    proof of the breach in the condition of the land, a condition
    directly traceable to the overgrazing.
    
    "Reasonableness" as a standard is only meaningful when
    defined in context; a "reasonable" trustee must clearly do
    more than a "reasonable" person would to prevent the
    destruction of trust property.
    
    I would therefore remand to the district court so that it
    could determine the government's liability by properly apply-
    ing the reasonableness standard to which a trustee is held.
    Since the Hopi did not challenge the factual findings below as
    clearly erroneous, whether the government fulfilled its obliga-
    tions as trustee should be determined in light of those find-
    ings.
    
    I do not ignore the fact that the relationship of the United
    States to the Navajo and the Hopi is unique. It owes trust
    duties to each; if it failed in its duties, its failures were to both
    (failure to protect the trust property to the detriment of the
    land and to both the Hopi and the Navajo; failure to oversee
    and impose proper controls on the grazing practices of the
    Navajo).
    
    Upon remand, I would require the district court to deter-
    mine and assess the government's liability and fiscal obliga-
    tions and determine the effect, if any, on the amount owed to
    the Hopi by the Navajo.
    
    Accordingly, I dissent. the end
    
    _______________________________________________________________
    
    FOOTNOTES
    
    1 See, e.g., Emily Benedek, The Wind Won't Know Me: A History of the
    Navajo-Hopi Land Dispute (1992); Jerry Kammer, The Second Long
    Walk: The Navajo-Hopi Land Dispute (1980); Charles Miller, The Navajo
    Hopi Relocation and the First Amendment Free Exercise Clause, 23
    U.C.S.F. L. Rev. 97 (Fall, 1988); Healing v. Jones, 210 F.Supp. 125, 129
    n.1 (D. Ariz. 1962), aff'd, 
    373 U.S. 758
     (1963); Hopi Tribe v. Navajo
    Tribe, 46 F.3d 908 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 116 S.Ct. 337 (1995); Hamilton
    v. MacDonald, 503 F.2d 1138 (9th Cir. 1974).
    2 S 640d-17. Actions for accounting, fair value of grazing, and claims for
    damages to land
    
           (a) Authorization to commence and defend actions in District
           Court
    
    Either tribe, acting through the chairman of its tribal council, for and on
    behalf of the tribe, including all villages, clans, and individual members
    thereof, is hereby authorized to commence or defend in the District Court
    an action or actions against the other tribe for the following purposes if
    such action or actions are not settled pursuant to section 640d-2 or 640d-
    3 of this title:
    
           . . .
    
           (2) for the determination and recovery of the fair value of the
           grazing and agricultural use by either tribe and its individual
           members since the 28th day of September 1962 of the undivided
           one-half interest of the other tribe in the lands within the joint use
           area, together with interest at the rate of 6 per centum per annum
           compounded annually, notwithstanding the fact that the tribes are
           tenants in common of such lands . . .
    3 Section 640d-5(d) of the Settlement Act provides:
    
    In any partition of the surface rights to the joint use area, the lands shall,
    insofar as is practicable, be equal in acreage and quality: Provided, That
    if such partition results in a lesser amount of acreage, or value, or both to
    one tribe such differential shall be fully and finally compensable to such
    tribe by the other tribe. The value of the land for the 18 purposes of this
    subsection shall be based on not less than its value with improvements and
    its grazing capacity fully restored: Provided further, That, in the determi-
    nation of compensation for any such differential, the Federal Government
    shall pay any difference between the value of the particular land involved
    in its existing state and the value of such land in a fully restored state
    which results from damage to the land which the District Court finds
    attributable to a failure of the Federal Government to provide protection
    where such protection is or was required by law or by the demands of the
    trust relationship.
    4 Section 640d-5(d) is an owelty provision. However, it also discusses
    the government's liability for the difference in value between the land "as
    is" at the time of partition and the land fully restored. That is, 640d-5(d)
    covers damages as well as owelty. The parties on appeal do not dispute
    the district court's reliance on this section.
    1 After oral argument in these appeals, the United States settled with the
    Hopi for $2,400,000, and the Hopi moved to abandon this portion of their
    appeal. We granted that motion, but allowed the Navajo to rely on the
    Hopi's arguments with regard to joint liability.
    
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