Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 25, Number 11, 1 November 2008 — U.S. Supreme Court to hear ceded lands case [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]
U.S. Supreme Court to hear ceded lands case
OHA, attorneys confident law is on their side
By Lisa Asatū Public lūformatioū Specialist
With oral arguments in a ceded lands case headed for the U.S. Supreme Court likely in Ianuary or February, Ionathan Osorio, one of four individual plaintiffs in the 1994 case along with OHA, reaffirmed his belief that the state should not sell ceded lands. "If the U.S. Supreme Court decides to hear a case, they're going to hear a case, and what we need to do is prepare ourselves," Osorio said, following the high court's Oct. 1 decision to hear a case regarding the state's ability to sell ceded lands before Native Hawaiians' claims to those lands
are resolved. "I have a lot of faith in ourattorney, (William) Meheula. And I have faith in the justice of our position. Those lands are ours. Ceded lands are stolen lands." Osorio, a professor at the University of Hawai'i's Kamakakūokalani Center for Hawaiian Studies, said he hopes to fly to Washington, D.C., to attend the court's review of the case. Other individual plaintiffs in the case are Pia Thomas Aluli, Charles Ka'ai'ai and Keoki Kamaka Ki'ili. Earlier this year, the state
appealed to the nation's high court, asking it to overturn a unanimous January ruling by the Hawai'i Supreme Court that barred the state from selling ceded lands until Native Hawaiian claims to those lands have been resolved. In its decision, the state Supreme Court relied heavily on the 1993 Apology Resolution, passed by Congress and signed by then-Pres-ident Bill Clinton - apologizing for the United States' role in the illegal overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom in 1893. The case stems from a 1994 lawsuit to stop the sale of two parcels on Maui and Hawai'i Island of about 1,500 acres of ceded lands. Ceded lands refer to lands taken from the Kingdom of Hawai'i following the overthrow, whieh eventually made their way into state control. The Admission Act, whieh admitted Hawai'i as a state, spells out that 1.4 million acres of ceded lands be held in trust by the state for five purposes, including the betterment of the conditions of Native Hawaiians. "We eonhnue to believe that
the Hawai'i Supreme Court ruled correctly," said OHA Chairperson Haunani Apoliona. "We firmly stand behind the state Supreme Court's opinion, whieh says the state should keep the ceded land trust intact until Native Hawaiian claims to these lands are settled." She added, "OHA will eonhnue its tireless efforts to protect and defend the rights and entitlements of its beneficiaries - the Native Hawaiian people." A ruling is expected by June 2009. In a statement issued Oct. 1 , state Attorney General Mark Bennett said Congress did not bar the sale of ceded lands in the Apology Bill. "Congress had expressly granted Hawai'i that right in the 1959 Admission Act," he said. "Hawai'i's ceded lands are held by the state for the benefit of all of Hawai'i's citizens, and for a number of purposes, including for the betterment of the conditions of native Hawaiians," Bennett said. "We believe that prudent manSee C0UKT on pags lū
Osorio
Bennett
agement of those lands for the benefit of all of Hawai'i's citizens must include, on occasion, the right to sell or exchange land. We hope the United States Supreme Court will return that right to the state of Hawai'i." Meanwhile, University of Hawai'i law professor lon Van Dyke said Native Hawaiians have on their side a 1919 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Lane v. Puehlo of Santa Rosa in whieh "the U.S. Supreme Court did a comparable thing putting a freeze on disputed lands pending the adjudication of the claims of the native people in Arizona." "This is a well-established law," said Van Dyke, a member of OHA's legal team in this case known as State of Hawai'i v. Office of Hawaiian Affairs, and the author of Who Owns the Crown Lands ofHawai'il
The U.S. Supreme Court last heard a case involving Native Hawaiians in 2000, when it ruled in favor of Harold Rice, in Rice v. Cayetano, thereby opening up elections for OHA trustees to all Hawai'i residents, not just those of Native Hawaiian ancestry. An attorney who defended the state and OHA in that case is now the chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, said OHA attorney Sherry Broder, referring to Chief Iustice lohn Roberts Ir. But she said neither that nor the makeup of the court reveals mueh on how the justices might rule on the current case. "I don't think we ean second-guess the court before oral arguments are had and decisions are made," she said, adding that she hopes that this will be "a time that Hawaiians will eome together to support the Office of Hawaiian Affairs in its efforts to have the decision of the Hawai'i Supreme Court affirmed." □
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