Updates to American Indian Probate Regulations, 58353-58356 [2019-23748]
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 211 / Thursday, October 31, 2019 / Proposed Rules
By direction of the Commission.
April Tabor,
Acting Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019–23560 Filed 10–30–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Indian Affairs
25 CFR Part 15
Office of the Secretary
43 CFR Parts 4, 30
[Docket No. DOI–2019–0001]
RIN 1094–AA55; 190A2100DD/AAKC001030/
A0A501010.999900253G; 19XD0120OS/
DS68241000/DOTN00000.000000/
DX68201.QAGENLAM
Updates to American Indian Probate
Regulations
Bureau of Indian Affairs, Office
of the Secretary, Interior.
ACTION: Advance notice of proposed
rulemaking; request for comments.
AGENCY:
The Department of the
Interior (Department) is considering
potential updates to regulations
governing probate of property that the
United States holds in trust or restricted
status for American Indians. Since the
regulations were revised in 2008, the
Department identified opportunities for
improving the probate process. The
Department is seeking Tribal input and
public comment on its ideas for
improvements in the regulations in
general, and on the potential regulatory
changes identified below in particular.
DATES: Submit written comments by
December 30, 2019.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by any one of the following methods:
• Federal rulemaking portal:
www.regulations.gov. The rule is listed
under Agency Docket Number DOI–
2019–0001.
• Email: consultation@bia.gov.
• Mail, Hand Delivery, or Courier: Ms.
Elizabeth Appel, Office of Regulatory
Affairs & Collaborative Action, U.S.
Department of the Interior, 1849 C Street
NW, Mail Stop 4660, Washington, DC
20240.
We cannot ensure that comments
received after the close of the comment
period (see DATES) will be included in
the docket for this rulemaking and
considered. Comments sent to an
address other than those listed above
will not be included in the docket for
this rulemaking.
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SUMMARY:
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Public Availability of Comments
Before including your address, phone
number, email address, or other
personal identifying information in your
comment, you should be aware that
your entire comment—including your
personal identifying information—may
be made publicly available at any time.
While you can ask us in your comment
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Elizabeth K. Appel, Director, Office of
Regulatory Affairs & Collaborative
Action—Indian Affairs,
Elizabeth.appel@bia.gov, (202) 273–
4680.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Department probates thousands
of estates each year for American Indian
individuals who own trust or restricted
property. The Bureau of Indian Affairs
(BIA), the Office of Hearings and
Appeals (OHA), and the Office of the
Special Trustee for American Indians
(OST) each play a role in the probate
process. BIA compiles the information
necessary to build a case record (i.e., the
probate file) and then transfers the
record to OHA for a judge to hold a
hearing and issue a final probate
decision. In accordance with the judge’s
final probate decision, BIA distributes
the trust or restricted real property
(‘‘land’’) and OST distributes the trust
personalty (‘‘trust funds’’) from the
estate.
After the American Indian Probate
Reform Act (AIPRA) was enacted in
2004, the Department codified
regulations implementing it at 43 CFR
part 30 for the OHA adjudication
process and at 25 CFR part 15 for the
BIA and OST portions of the probate
process. In an effort to streamline the
process and benefit Indian heirs and
devisees, the Department is in the
process of identifying where
improvements can be made through
regulatory change.
Identified Issues and Potential
Regulatory Changes
The Department has identified parts
of the current regulations that are
unclear and/or create uncertainty and
recognizes that such problems can
lengthen the time it takes to process
probates. The Department is considering
potential approaches to changing these
parts of the regulations and welcomes
Tribal input, comment from individuals
who hold trust or restricted property,
and comment from the general public.
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58353
The issues and potential approaches to
improving the probate process are listed
below, in no particular order.
Issue 1: Gaps in AIPRA Intestacy
Distribution
AIPRA sets out how a decedent’s
estate should be distributed when the
decedent dies without a will (i.e.,
intestate) at 25 U.S.C. 2206(a). AIPRA
addresses how the judge should
distribute an estate to any surviving
spouse, individual heirs, and/or Tribal
heirs, but fails to account for
distribution of trust funds under two
circumstances when there are no
eligible familial heirs under AIPRA: (1)
The estate contains trust personalty but
no trust real property; and (2) more than
one Tribe has jurisdiction over trust real
property in the estate. The current 43
CFR 30.254 implements AIPRA and the
pre-AIPRA Federal statute for how a
judge will distribute the trust real
property of a person who dies without
a will (i.e., intestate) and has no heirs.
a. Distribution of Trust Personalty When
There Are No AIPRA Heirs
AIPRA’s intestacy scheme at 25 U.S.C.
2206(a)(2) is limited explicitly by the
presumption that a decedent’s estate
contains interests in trust or restricted
land, such that the distribution of a
decedent’s trust personalty will follow
the distribution of the trust land
interests. AIPRA provides that if there
are no other heirs, the interests will pass
to the Tribe with jurisdiction over the
trust land interests. See 25 U.S.C.
2206(a)(2)(B)(v). The current regulation
at § 30.254 incorporates the statutory
provision at § 2206(a)(2) but does not
identify trust personalty as a standalone category of trust property for
distribution. In practice, this creates
instances where AIPRA’s intestacy
scheme fails to resolve how trust
personalty will be distributed. Those
instances occur when there are no
eligible person heirs and the decedent
has no land interests where a Tribe
could have jurisdiction and be
considered the ‘‘heir.’’ OHA judges have
declined to distribute a decedent’s trust
personalty estate if it is the only trust
estate asset and there are no eligible
person heirs. Instead, OHA judges
dismiss these estates on the basis that a
statutory or regulatory change is
required to provide authority for
distribution of the trust personalty.
b. Distribution of Trust Personalty When
More Than One Tribe Has Jurisdiction
As mentioned above, AIPRA provides
that if there are no other heirs, the
interests will pass to the Tribe with
jurisdiction over the trust land interests.
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 211 / Thursday, October 31, 2019 / Proposed Rules
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See 25 U.S.C. 2206(a)(2)(B)(v). Neither
AIPRA nor the implementing
regulations specify which Tribe will
receive the trust personalty if more than
one Tribe has jurisdiction over trust
land interests in the estate.
• Potential Regulatory Change: To
address these gaps in AIPRA’s default
intestacy scheme, the Department is
considering revising 43 CFR 30.254 and
adding additional sections. Specifically,
the Department is considering having
these additional sections provide clear
authority for an OHA judge to order
distribution of trust funds when there
are either no land interests in a
decedent’s estate or there are land
interests within the jurisdiction of more
than one Tribe. The rule under
consideration identifies potential
recipients of the trust personalty: Close
relatives who do not inherit under
AIPRA as ‘‘eligible heirs,’’ followed by
nieces and nephews, and then by the
Tribe where the decedent was enrolled.
If a decedent does not have close
relatives, nieces or nephews, and was
not enrolled in any Tribe, then the
potential recipients would include the
Tribe(s) in which the decedent’s parents
or grandparents were enrolled. If the
decedent was not enrolled in any Tribe,
and none of the decedent’s parents or
grandparents were enrolled in any
Tribe, then the judge would exercise
discretion by determining the Tribe
with whom decedent was most closely
affiliated. Such a determination could
take into account the Tribal enrollment
or affiliation of a decedent’s ancestors
from whom he or she inherited trust or
restricted real property or trust
personalty.
Issue 2: Overly Burdensome ‘‘purchase
at probate’’ Process
AIPRA authorizes certain ‘‘eligible
purchasers’’ to purchase trust and
restricted interests in a parcel of land in
the decedent’s estate under certain
circumstances. See 25 U.S.C. 2206(o).
The regulations set out this ‘‘purchase at
probate’’ process at 43 CFR subpart G.
See §§ 30.160 through 30.175. A number
of issues have arisen in implementing
these regulations.
a. The current regulations establishing
the purchase at probate process are not
in chronological order.
• Potential Regulatory Change:
Rewrite subpart G of the regulations to
list the purchase at probate steps in
chronological order.
b. Currently if someone seeks to
purchase interests in one tract that is
included in an estate, the purchase at
probate process proceeds for the
interests in that tract but the entire
estate is kept open in the meantime.
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• Potential Regulatory Change: Allow
for final distribution of all parts of an
estate not subject to purchase at probate
while the purchase at probate process
takes place.
c. The current regulations require the
purchase at probate to occur before
OHA issues its final decision. This
forces OHA to make provisional
determinations of heirs or devisees,
which opens the possibility of having to
redo the already-lengthy purchase at
probate process in situations such as
will contests or objections regarding
determinations of heirs that are made
when the final decision is issued. The
problems of completing the purchase at
probate process before the heirs/
devisees are determined is intensified in
situations in which the purchase may
only be approved if the heirs/devisees
consent. If the preliminary
determination of heirs/devisees is
incorrect, the wrong individuals have
consented or refused to consent.
• Potential Regulatory Change: Allow
OHA to issue the final decision to
determine the heirs/devisees before
beginning the purchase at probate
process.
d. The current regulations do not
include a provision to seek initial
consent from heirs/devisees as to their
willingness to consider bids to purchase
property interests. Instances occur in
which heirs/devisees do not indicate
intent to participate in the purchase at
probate process. When initial consent is
not included, the purchase at probate
process may progress for a long time
before the heir/devisee’s consent is
sought, thus resulting in process delays.
• Potential Regulatory Change: For
purchases in which consent is required,
add provisions stating that OHA will
issue an initial order to heirs/devisees to
provide written notification of their
willingness to consider bids that may be
made by potential purchasers, and that
if written notification is not received by
a deadline, OHA may presume the
heirs/devisees do not consent to the
purchase of the property interest(s) and
may deny the request to purchase.
e. When OHA receives a request to
purchase at probate, the current
regulations require OHA to notify all
‘‘eligible purchasers.’’ ‘‘Eligible
purchasers’’ include persons who own
undivided trust or restricted interests in
the same parcel of land involved in the
probate proceeding, i.e., co-owners. For
co-owners who have not submitted a
purchase request, OHA provides notice
by posting in multiple places. This
posting adds significant time to the
process, while resulting in few, if any,
co-owner requests to purchase. AIPRA
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does not require notice in such a
scenario.
• Potential Regulatory Change: Revise
the regulations to require co-owner
notice only to co-owners who have
submitted prior notice to the BIA that
they want to receive notice of probates
involving specified allotments, and to
establish that such notice will be made
by mailing rather than posting. These
potential changes would work to reserve
notice to co-owners only for situations
in which a co-owner has requested to
receive notice, while continuing to meet
due process requirements and reducing
complexities in the probate process.
f. AIPRA prohibits approval of a
purchase at probate interest for less than
fair market value, and the current
probate regulations state that market
value will be determined by an
appraisal or valuation method
developed by the Secretary. At this time
the Department is able to provide the
fair market value of a real property
interest only via an appraisal. The
Department is unable to perform
appraisals for minerals-only interests.
• Potential Regulatory Change: Revise
the purchase at probate regulations to
clarify that no minerals-only property
may be purchased at probate and to
accurately reflect the Department’s
current appraisal practice.
Issue 3: Notice to Co-Owners Who Are
‘‘potential heirs’’
Under AIPRA’s intestate distribution
scheme, co-owners of allotments are
potential heirs in some circumstances.
For example, if a decedent dies without
any eligible person heirs as listed in
AIPRA’s order of succession, and there
is no Tribe with jurisdiction over the
allotment, a surviving co-owner of a
trust or restricted interest in the
allotment can potentially be an ‘‘heir’’ of
last resort. Allotments often have many
co-owners; some have over one
thousand, for example. The current
regulations require OHA to provide all
interested parties—including coowners—with mailed notice of probate
proceedings. Mailing notice to all coowners who are potential heirs in a
probate case makes the process
unnecessarily complex.
• Potential Regulatory Change:
Modify the regulations to state that
potential heirs who may inherit solely
based on their status as co-owners will
not receive mailed notice of a probate
proceeding, unless they have previously
filed a request for notice with BIA or
OHA. Public notice will continue to be
posted.
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Issue 4: Insufficient Trust Funds for
Funeral Services
The current regulations allow
whoever is responsible for making the
funeral arrangements on behalf of the
decedent’s family to obtain up to $1,000
from the decedent’s Individual Indian
Money (IIM) account to pay for funeral
services. (See 25 CFR 15.301). This
amount has repeatedly proven to be
insufficient. The current regulations
further require there to be at least $2,500
in the decedent’s IIM account at the date
of death in order to request the $1,000
distribution.
• Potential Regulatory Change: Allow
individuals to request up to $5,000 from
the decedent’s IIM account to pay for
funeral services and eliminate the
requirement for a certain amount of
trust funds to be in the IIM account as
of the date of death. This change
recognizes the increase in the costs of
funeral services and would ensure that
family members are able to pay such
costs immediately.
Issue 5: No Current Regulatory Process
for Exercise of ‘‘tribal purchase’’ Option
Aside from the ‘‘purchase at probate’’
provisions discussed above, AIPRA also
authorizes a Tribe with jurisdiction to
purchase an interest in trust or
restricted land, if the owner of that
interest devises it to a non-Indian. See
25 U.S.C. 2205(c)(1)(A). No current
regulations implement this statutory
Tribal purchase option. Cases in which
the Tribal purchase option is available
could be processed more efficiently if
there are provisions addressing such
topics as notice procedures to a Tribe
and other interested parties, timeframes
that a Tribe must meet to exercise the
option, and the process by which fair
market value will be determined.
Regulations would also ensure
uniformity of process from one case to
the next.
• Potential Regulatory Change: Add
new regulations to implement the 25
U.S.C. 2205(c)(1)(A) Tribal purchase
option in an efficient and uniform
manner.
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Issue 6: Cumbersome Process for Minor
Estate Inventory Corrections
In the course of its probate work, BIA
sometimes determines after a probate
decision has been issued that trust or
restricted property belonging to a
decedent was either omitted from or
incorrectly included in the inventory of
an estate. Such circumstances require an
inventory correction, so that the probate
decision can be applied to the property
interest in question. The current
regulations, at 43 CFR 30.126, require
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OHA to issue a modification order for
these inventory corrections to occur.
The regulations also require that the
modification order be appealable to the
Interior Board of Indian Appeals (IBIA).
As a result, it can take significant time
to make minor estate inventory
corrections to include omitted property.
• Potential Regulatory Change: Revise
the probate regulations to improve
probate process efficiency and reduce
the amount of time for estate inventory
corrections to be made. Potential
revisions could be to authorize BIA to
make minor estate inventory corrections
or to streamline the process that OHA
follows before issuing an inventory
modification order. One such
streamlining measure could involve an
heir or devisee being allowed to—prior
to the exercise of an IBIA appeal
option—request that an OHA judge
reconsider a modification order, thus
reducing the number of cases that might
result in such an IBIA appeal.
Issue 7: Unclear Judicial Authority To
Access Necessary Information
In probate cases involving a challenge
to a will—such as on the basis of
testamentary capacity or one’s ability to
make a valid will—the presiding OHA
judge may need to order medical
records. Under the current regulations,
it is unclear what authority an OHA
judge has to order such information.
Likewise, it is unclear under the current
regulations what authority a judge has
to issue interrogatories in cases
involving will contests. (See 25 CFR
15.204 and 43 CFR 30.114). Recipients
of such orders and information requests
sometimes challenge OHA’s authority
and may even refuse to provide
information necessary for a probate
decision to be made. This adds the time
necessary to complete the probate
process and may result in a final probate
decision based on a minimally sufficient
record.
• Potential Regulatory Change: Add
provisions explicitly allowing the OHA
judge to order medical records and vital
records from State and local entities as
needed, and to issue interrogatories in
cases involving will contests.
Issue 8: Indian Status Determinations
Not Necessary in Every Case
Under current probate regulations, a
final probate decision must determine
the Indian status of every heir or
devisee. A determination of Indian
status is often not necessary and
applying the definition of ‘‘Indian’’ can
be complicated.
• Potential Regulatory Change:
Require probate decisions to determine
the Indian status of an heir or devisee
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58355
only when such a determination is
necessary; for example, the
determination of Indian status may be
necessary in AIPRA cases involving a
will and where the devisee is not a
lineal descendant of the decedent.
Issue 9: Increase the Scope of
Opportunities to Use ‘‘renunciation’’ as
a Means for Maintaining Property Being
Held in Trust
The current regulations allow an heir
or devisee to renounce an inherited or
devised interest in trust or restricted
property. (See 43 CFR pt. 43 supt. H).
A renunciation must take place before a
probate decision is made. Once a
probate decision is made, renunciation
is not allowed. The current regulations
allow petitions for rehearing to be filed
within 30 days of a probate decision
being made but fail to list renunciation
among the bases for which an OHA
judge may grant a rehearing.
• Potential Regulatory Change: Revise
the regulations to allow for renunciation
at the rehearing stage, so that the
renunciation option can be exercised to
prevent property from going out of trust
even if renunciation was not sought
before an initial probate decision was
made.
Issue 10: Make More Relevant the
Presumption-of-Death Rule
The probate process obligates OHA—
in some circumstances—to determine
whether a person is deceased. Proof of
death is not always available. To
facilitate the decision-making process,
the current regulations allow OHA make
a presumption of death. The current
rule is that such a presumption may be
made if there has been no contact with
the absent person for the last six years,
dating back from the time of the hearing.
The hearing does not always occur until
well after a probate file is sent by BIA
to OHA.
• Potential Regulatory Change: Revise
the presumption-of-death provisions in
43 CFR 30.124(b)(2), keeping the sixyear rule but having it date back to the
last date of known contact with the
absent person. As needed for
practicality, these revisions could
include exceptions and/or rules about
what ‘‘known contact’’ entails and/or
how ‘‘known contact’’ is shown.
Issue 11: The Requirements for Filing
Petitions for Rehearing and Reopening
Need Clarification
In separate areas of the current
regulations, a party may file a petition
for rehearing or a petition for reopening
(see 43 CFR 30.240 and 30.125). A
petition for rehearing must be filed
within 30 days of the probate decision
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 211 / Thursday, October 31, 2019 / Proposed Rules
and the requirements for presenting new
evidence are very specifically laid out.
Petitions for reopening may be filed
much later by someone who had the
chance to participate in the initial
probate proceeding but did not do so.
Time spent processing a reopening
request reduces the time available for
other probate cases.
• Potential Regulatory Change: Revise
the current regulations to: (1) Limit the
ability of a party who did not use the
opportunity to participate in an initial
probate proceeding to later file a
petition for reopening; and (2) in a
rehearing and reopening proceedings,
make clear the circumstances under
which new evidence may be presented.
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Issue 12: Even Small, Simple Estates
Must Undergo a Probate Proceeding
Heirs and devisees often express
frustration at how long it takes the
Department to process a decedent’s
estate. One reason that probate takes
time is that the current regulations
require cases with any amount of trust
funds to be adjudicated by an OHA
decision maker.
• Potential Regulatory Changes:
Increase the scope of estates that are
subject to OHA’s summary process,
which does not require a formal hearing
(see 43 CFR part 30 subpart I), and/or
determine what would be considered a
small estate and, for estates within that
definition, create a streamlined
distribution scheme for such estates.
Issue 13: Current Regulations Fail To
Address Implementation of the AIPRA
Provision Regarding Descent of OffReservation Lands
AIPRA distinctly addresses the
descent of interests in trust or restricted
lands that are located outside the
boundaries of an Indian reservation and
are not subject to the jurisdiction of a
Tribe. See 25 U.S.C. 2206(d)(2). The
current regulations fail to address
implementation of this statutory
provision, however, which may be
applied inconsistently or not at all.
• Potential Regulatory Changes:
Address implementation of an AIPRA
provision (25 U.S.C. 2206(d)(2))
concerning off-reservation lands. The
purpose of such a change would be to
ensure consistency and transparency in
OHA decisions, and to increase the
public’s awareness about exceptions to
the AIPRA rules that exist.
Authority
The Department is issuing this
ANPRM under the authority of 5 U.S.C.
301, 25 U.S.C. 2, 9, 372, 373 and the
Indian Land Consolidation Act of 2000
(ILCA) as amended by the American
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Indian Probate Reform Act of 2004
(AIPRA), 25 U.S.C. 2201 et seq.
Susan Combs,
Assistant Secretary—Policy, Management
and Budget.
[FR Doc. 2019–23748 Filed 10–30–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4334–63–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 60 and 63
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2014–0741; FRL–10001–62–
OAR]
RIN 2060–AU53
National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants for Chemical
Recovery Combustion Sources at
Kraft, Soda, Sulfite, and Stand-Alone
Semichemical Pulp Mills; Standards of
Performance for Kraft Pulp Mill
Affected Sources for Which
Construction, Reconstruction, or
Modification Commenced After May 23,
2013
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to
amend the National Emission Standards
for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP)
for Chemical Recovery Combustion
Sources at Kraft, Soda, Sulfite, and
Stand-alone Semichemical Pulp Mills
and the New Source Performance
Standards (NSPS) for Kraft Pulp Mills
constructed, reconstructed, or modified
after May 23, 2013. This proposed rule
clarifies how operating limits are
required to be established for smelt
dissolving tank scrubbers and corrects
cross-reference errors in both rules.
DATES:
Comments. Comments must be
received on or before December 30,
2019.
Public Hearing. If anyone contacts us
requesting a public hearing on or before
November 5, 2019, we will hold a
hearing. Additional information about
the hearing, if requested, will be
published in a subsequent Federal
Register document and posted at
https://www.epa.gov/stationary-sourcesair-pollution/kraft-soda-sulfite-andstand-alone-semichemical-pulp-millsmact-ii. See SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION for information on
requesting and registering for a public
hearing.
SUMMARY:
You may send comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
ADDRESSES:
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OAR–2014–0741, by any of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov/ (our
preferred method). Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
• Email: a-and-r-docket@epa.gov.
Include Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–
2014–0741 in the subject line of the
message.
• Fax: (202) 566–9744. Attention
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2014–
0741.
• Mail: U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, EPA Docket Center,
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2014–
0741, Mail Code 28221T, 1200
Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington,
DC 20460.
• Hand/Courier Delivery: EPA Docket
Center, WJC West Building, Room 3334,
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federal holidays).
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the Docket ID No. for this
rulemaking. Comments received may be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov/, including any
personal information provided. For
detailed instructions on sending
comments and additional information
on the rulemaking process, see the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
questions about this proposed action,
contact Dr. Kelley Spence, Sector
Policies and Programs Division (E143–
03), Office of Air Quality Planning and
Standards, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Research Triangle
Park, North Carolina 27711; telephone
number: (919) 541–3158; fax number:
(919) 541–0516; and email address:
spence.kelley@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Hearing. Please contact Ms.
Virginia Hunt at (919) 541–0832 or by
email at hunt.virginia@epa.gov to
request a hearing, to register to speak at
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documents in the docket are listed in
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E:\FR\FM\31OCP1.SGM
31OCP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 211 (Thursday, October 31, 2019)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 58353-58356]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-23748]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Indian Affairs
25 CFR Part 15
Office of the Secretary
43 CFR Parts 4, 30
[Docket No. DOI-2019-0001]
RIN 1094-AA55; 190A2100DD/AAKC001030/A0A501010.999900253G; 19XD0120OS/
DS68241000/DOTN00000.000000/DX68201.QAGENLAM
Updates to American Indian Probate Regulations
AGENCY: Bureau of Indian Affairs, Office of the Secretary, Interior.
ACTION: Advance notice of proposed rulemaking; request for comments.
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SUMMARY: The Department of the Interior (Department) is considering
potential updates to regulations governing probate of property that the
United States holds in trust or restricted status for American Indians.
Since the regulations were revised in 2008, the Department identified
opportunities for improving the probate process. The Department is
seeking Tribal input and public comment on its ideas for improvements
in the regulations in general, and on the potential regulatory changes
identified below in particular.
DATES: Submit written comments by December 30, 2019.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by any one of the following methods:
Federal rulemaking portal: www.regulations.gov. The rule
is listed under Agency Docket Number DOI-2019-0001.
Email: [email protected].
Mail, Hand Delivery, or Courier: Ms. Elizabeth Appel,
Office of Regulatory Affairs & Collaborative Action, U.S. Department of
the Interior, 1849 C Street NW, Mail Stop 4660, Washington, DC 20240.
We cannot ensure that comments received after the close of the
comment period (see DATES) will be included in the docket for this
rulemaking and considered. Comments sent to an address other than those
listed above will not be included in the docket for this rulemaking.
Public Availability of Comments
Before including your address, phone number, email address, or
other personal identifying information in your comment, you should be
aware that your entire comment--including your personal identifying
information--may be made publicly available at any time. While you can
ask us in your comment to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be
able to do so.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Elizabeth K. Appel, Director, Office
of Regulatory Affairs & Collaborative Action--Indian Affairs,
[email protected], (202) 273-4680.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Department probates thousands of estates each year for American
Indian individuals who own trust or restricted property. The Bureau of
Indian Affairs (BIA), the Office of Hearings and Appeals (OHA), and the
Office of the Special Trustee for American Indians (OST) each play a
role in the probate process. BIA compiles the information necessary to
build a case record (i.e., the probate file) and then transfers the
record to OHA for a judge to hold a hearing and issue a final probate
decision. In accordance with the judge's final probate decision, BIA
distributes the trust or restricted real property (``land'') and OST
distributes the trust personalty (``trust funds'') from the estate.
After the American Indian Probate Reform Act (AIPRA) was enacted in
2004, the Department codified regulations implementing it at 43 CFR
part 30 for the OHA adjudication process and at 25 CFR part 15 for the
BIA and OST portions of the probate process. In an effort to streamline
the process and benefit Indian heirs and devisees, the Department is in
the process of identifying where improvements can be made through
regulatory change.
Identified Issues and Potential Regulatory Changes
The Department has identified parts of the current regulations that
are unclear and/or create uncertainty and recognizes that such problems
can lengthen the time it takes to process probates. The Department is
considering potential approaches to changing these parts of the
regulations and welcomes Tribal input, comment from individuals who
hold trust or restricted property, and comment from the general public.
The issues and potential approaches to improving the probate process
are listed below, in no particular order.
Issue 1: Gaps in AIPRA Intestacy Distribution
AIPRA sets out how a decedent's estate should be distributed when
the decedent dies without a will (i.e., intestate) at 25 U.S.C.
2206(a). AIPRA addresses how the judge should distribute an estate to
any surviving spouse, individual heirs, and/or Tribal heirs, but fails
to account for distribution of trust funds under two circumstances when
there are no eligible familial heirs under AIPRA: (1) The estate
contains trust personalty but no trust real property; and (2) more than
one Tribe has jurisdiction over trust real property in the estate. The
current 43 CFR 30.254 implements AIPRA and the pre-AIPRA Federal
statute for how a judge will distribute the trust real property of a
person who dies without a will (i.e., intestate) and has no heirs.
a. Distribution of Trust Personalty When There Are No AIPRA Heirs
AIPRA's intestacy scheme at 25 U.S.C. 2206(a)(2) is limited
explicitly by the presumption that a decedent's estate contains
interests in trust or restricted land, such that the distribution of a
decedent's trust personalty will follow the distribution of the trust
land interests. AIPRA provides that if there are no other heirs, the
interests will pass to the Tribe with jurisdiction over the trust land
interests. See 25 U.S.C. 2206(a)(2)(B)(v). The current regulation at
Sec. 30.254 incorporates the statutory provision at Sec. 2206(a)(2)
but does not identify trust personalty as a stand-alone category of
trust property for distribution. In practice, this creates instances
where AIPRA's intestacy scheme fails to resolve how trust personalty
will be distributed. Those instances occur when there are no eligible
person heirs and the decedent has no land interests where a Tribe could
have jurisdiction and be considered the ``heir.'' OHA judges have
declined to distribute a decedent's trust personalty estate if it is
the only trust estate asset and there are no eligible person heirs.
Instead, OHA judges dismiss these estates on the basis that a statutory
or regulatory change is required to provide authority for distribution
of the trust personalty.
b. Distribution of Trust Personalty When More Than One Tribe Has
Jurisdiction
As mentioned above, AIPRA provides that if there are no other
heirs, the interests will pass to the Tribe with jurisdiction over the
trust land interests.
[[Page 58354]]
See 25 U.S.C. 2206(a)(2)(B)(v). Neither AIPRA nor the implementing
regulations specify which Tribe will receive the trust personalty if
more than one Tribe has jurisdiction over trust land interests in the
estate.
Potential Regulatory Change: To address these gaps in
AIPRA's default intestacy scheme, the Department is considering
revising 43 CFR 30.254 and adding additional sections. Specifically,
the Department is considering having these additional sections provide
clear authority for an OHA judge to order distribution of trust funds
when there are either no land interests in a decedent's estate or there
are land interests within the jurisdiction of more than one Tribe. The
rule under consideration identifies potential recipients of the trust
personalty: Close relatives who do not inherit under AIPRA as
``eligible heirs,'' followed by nieces and nephews, and then by the
Tribe where the decedent was enrolled. If a decedent does not have
close relatives, nieces or nephews, and was not enrolled in any Tribe,
then the potential recipients would include the Tribe(s) in which the
decedent's parents or grandparents were enrolled. If the decedent was
not enrolled in any Tribe, and none of the decedent's parents or
grandparents were enrolled in any Tribe, then the judge would exercise
discretion by determining the Tribe with whom decedent was most closely
affiliated. Such a determination could take into account the Tribal
enrollment or affiliation of a decedent's ancestors from whom he or she
inherited trust or restricted real property or trust personalty.
Issue 2: Overly Burdensome ``purchase at probate'' Process
AIPRA authorizes certain ``eligible purchasers'' to purchase trust
and restricted interests in a parcel of land in the decedent's estate
under certain circumstances. See 25 U.S.C. 2206(o). The regulations set
out this ``purchase at probate'' process at 43 CFR subpart G. See
Sec. Sec. 30.160 through 30.175. A number of issues have arisen in
implementing these regulations.
a. The current regulations establishing the purchase at probate
process are not in chronological order.
Potential Regulatory Change: Rewrite subpart G of the
regulations to list the purchase at probate steps in chronological
order.
b. Currently if someone seeks to purchase interests in one tract
that is included in an estate, the purchase at probate process proceeds
for the interests in that tract but the entire estate is kept open in
the meantime.
Potential Regulatory Change: Allow for final distribution
of all parts of an estate not subject to purchase at probate while the
purchase at probate process takes place.
c. The current regulations require the purchase at probate to occur
before OHA issues its final decision. This forces OHA to make
provisional determinations of heirs or devisees, which opens the
possibility of having to redo the already-lengthy purchase at probate
process in situations such as will contests or objections regarding
determinations of heirs that are made when the final decision is
issued. The problems of completing the purchase at probate process
before the heirs/devisees are determined is intensified in situations
in which the purchase may only be approved if the heirs/devisees
consent. If the preliminary determination of heirs/devisees is
incorrect, the wrong individuals have consented or refused to consent.
Potential Regulatory Change: Allow OHA to issue the final
decision to determine the heirs/devisees before beginning the purchase
at probate process.
d. The current regulations do not include a provision to seek
initial consent from heirs/devisees as to their willingness to consider
bids to purchase property interests. Instances occur in which heirs/
devisees do not indicate intent to participate in the purchase at
probate process. When initial consent is not included, the purchase at
probate process may progress for a long time before the heir/devisee's
consent is sought, thus resulting in process delays.
Potential Regulatory Change: For purchases in which
consent is required, add provisions stating that OHA will issue an
initial order to heirs/devisees to provide written notification of
their willingness to consider bids that may be made by potential
purchasers, and that if written notification is not received by a
deadline, OHA may presume the heirs/devisees do not consent to the
purchase of the property interest(s) and may deny the request to
purchase.
e. When OHA receives a request to purchase at probate, the current
regulations require OHA to notify all ``eligible purchasers.''
``Eligible purchasers'' include persons who own undivided trust or
restricted interests in the same parcel of land involved in the probate
proceeding, i.e., co-owners. For co-owners who have not submitted a
purchase request, OHA provides notice by posting in multiple places.
This posting adds significant time to the process, while resulting in
few, if any, co-owner requests to purchase. AIPRA does not require
notice in such a scenario.
Potential Regulatory Change: Revise the regulations to
require co-owner notice only to co-owners who have submitted prior
notice to the BIA that they want to receive notice of probates
involving specified allotments, and to establish that such notice will
be made by mailing rather than posting. These potential changes would
work to reserve notice to co-owners only for situations in which a co-
owner has requested to receive notice, while continuing to meet due
process requirements and reducing complexities in the probate process.
f. AIPRA prohibits approval of a purchase at probate interest for
less than fair market value, and the current probate regulations state
that market value will be determined by an appraisal or valuation
method developed by the Secretary. At this time the Department is able
to provide the fair market value of a real property interest only via
an appraisal. The Department is unable to perform appraisals for
minerals-only interests.
Potential Regulatory Change: Revise the purchase at
probate regulations to clarify that no minerals-only property may be
purchased at probate and to accurately reflect the Department's current
appraisal practice.
Issue 3: Notice to Co-Owners Who Are ``potential heirs''
Under AIPRA's intestate distribution scheme, co-owners of
allotments are potential heirs in some circumstances. For example, if a
decedent dies without any eligible person heirs as listed in AIPRA's
order of succession, and there is no Tribe with jurisdiction over the
allotment, a surviving co-owner of a trust or restricted interest in
the allotment can potentially be an ``heir'' of last resort. Allotments
often have many co-owners; some have over one thousand, for example.
The current regulations require OHA to provide all interested parties--
including co-owners--with mailed notice of probate proceedings. Mailing
notice to all co-owners who are potential heirs in a probate case makes
the process unnecessarily complex.
Potential Regulatory Change: Modify the regulations to
state that potential heirs who may inherit solely based on their status
as co-owners will not receive mailed notice of a probate proceeding,
unless they have previously filed a request for notice with BIA or OHA.
Public notice will continue to be posted.
[[Page 58355]]
Issue 4: Insufficient Trust Funds for Funeral Services
The current regulations allow whoever is responsible for making the
funeral arrangements on behalf of the decedent's family to obtain up to
$1,000 from the decedent's Individual Indian Money (IIM) account to pay
for funeral services. (See 25 CFR 15.301). This amount has repeatedly
proven to be insufficient. The current regulations further require
there to be at least $2,500 in the decedent's IIM account at the date
of death in order to request the $1,000 distribution.
Potential Regulatory Change: Allow individuals to request
up to $5,000 from the decedent's IIM account to pay for funeral
services and eliminate the requirement for a certain amount of trust
funds to be in the IIM account as of the date of death. This change
recognizes the increase in the costs of funeral services and would
ensure that family members are able to pay such costs immediately.
Issue 5: No Current Regulatory Process for Exercise of ``tribal
purchase'' Option
Aside from the ``purchase at probate'' provisions discussed above,
AIPRA also authorizes a Tribe with jurisdiction to purchase an interest
in trust or restricted land, if the owner of that interest devises it
to a non-Indian. See 25 U.S.C. 2205(c)(1)(A). No current regulations
implement this statutory Tribal purchase option. Cases in which the
Tribal purchase option is available could be processed more efficiently
if there are provisions addressing such topics as notice procedures to
a Tribe and other interested parties, timeframes that a Tribe must meet
to exercise the option, and the process by which fair market value will
be determined. Regulations would also ensure uniformity of process from
one case to the next.
Potential Regulatory Change: Add new regulations to
implement the 25 U.S.C. 2205(c)(1)(A) Tribal purchase option in an
efficient and uniform manner.
Issue 6: Cumbersome Process for Minor Estate Inventory Corrections
In the course of its probate work, BIA sometimes determines after a
probate decision has been issued that trust or restricted property
belonging to a decedent was either omitted from or incorrectly included
in the inventory of an estate. Such circumstances require an inventory
correction, so that the probate decision can be applied to the property
interest in question. The current regulations, at 43 CFR 30.126,
require OHA to issue a modification order for these inventory
corrections to occur. The regulations also require that the
modification order be appealable to the Interior Board of Indian
Appeals (IBIA). As a result, it can take significant time to make minor
estate inventory corrections to include omitted property.
Potential Regulatory Change: Revise the probate
regulations to improve probate process efficiency and reduce the amount
of time for estate inventory corrections to be made. Potential
revisions could be to authorize BIA to make minor estate inventory
corrections or to streamline the process that OHA follows before
issuing an inventory modification order. One such streamlining measure
could involve an heir or devisee being allowed to--prior to the
exercise of an IBIA appeal option--request that an OHA judge reconsider
a modification order, thus reducing the number of cases that might
result in such an IBIA appeal.
Issue 7: Unclear Judicial Authority To Access Necessary Information
In probate cases involving a challenge to a will--such as on the
basis of testamentary capacity or one's ability to make a valid will--
the presiding OHA judge may need to order medical records. Under the
current regulations, it is unclear what authority an OHA judge has to
order such information. Likewise, it is unclear under the current
regulations what authority a judge has to issue interrogatories in
cases involving will contests. (See 25 CFR 15.204 and 43 CFR 30.114).
Recipients of such orders and information requests sometimes challenge
OHA's authority and may even refuse to provide information necessary
for a probate decision to be made. This adds the time necessary to
complete the probate process and may result in a final probate decision
based on a minimally sufficient record.
Potential Regulatory Change: Add provisions explicitly
allowing the OHA judge to order medical records and vital records from
State and local entities as needed, and to issue interrogatories in
cases involving will contests.
Issue 8: Indian Status Determinations Not Necessary in Every Case
Under current probate regulations, a final probate decision must
determine the Indian status of every heir or devisee. A determination
of Indian status is often not necessary and applying the definition of
``Indian'' can be complicated.
Potential Regulatory Change: Require probate decisions to
determine the Indian status of an heir or devisee only when such a
determination is necessary; for example, the determination of Indian
status may be necessary in AIPRA cases involving a will and where the
devisee is not a lineal descendant of the decedent.
Issue 9: Increase the Scope of Opportunities to Use ``renunciation'' as
a Means for Maintaining Property Being Held in Trust
The current regulations allow an heir or devisee to renounce an
inherited or devised interest in trust or restricted property. (See 43
CFR pt. 43 supt. H). A renunciation must take place before a probate
decision is made. Once a probate decision is made, renunciation is not
allowed. The current regulations allow petitions for rehearing to be
filed within 30 days of a probate decision being made but fail to list
renunciation among the bases for which an OHA judge may grant a
rehearing.
Potential Regulatory Change: Revise the regulations to
allow for renunciation at the rehearing stage, so that the renunciation
option can be exercised to prevent property from going out of trust
even if renunciation was not sought before an initial probate decision
was made.
Issue 10: Make More Relevant the Presumption-of-Death Rule
The probate process obligates OHA--in some circumstances--to
determine whether a person is deceased. Proof of death is not always
available. To facilitate the decision-making process, the current
regulations allow OHA make a presumption of death. The current rule is
that such a presumption may be made if there has been no contact with
the absent person for the last six years, dating back from the time of
the hearing. The hearing does not always occur until well after a
probate file is sent by BIA to OHA.
Potential Regulatory Change: Revise the presumption-of-
death provisions in 43 CFR 30.124(b)(2), keeping the six-year rule but
having it date back to the last date of known contact with the absent
person. As needed for practicality, these revisions could include
exceptions and/or rules about what ``known contact'' entails and/or how
``known contact'' is shown.
Issue 11: The Requirements for Filing Petitions for Rehearing and
Reopening Need Clarification
In separate areas of the current regulations, a party may file a
petition for rehearing or a petition for reopening (see 43 CFR 30.240
and 30.125). A petition for rehearing must be filed within 30 days of
the probate decision
[[Page 58356]]
and the requirements for presenting new evidence are very specifically
laid out. Petitions for reopening may be filed much later by someone
who had the chance to participate in the initial probate proceeding but
did not do so. Time spent processing a reopening request reduces the
time available for other probate cases.
Potential Regulatory Change: Revise the current
regulations to: (1) Limit the ability of a party who did not use the
opportunity to participate in an initial probate proceeding to later
file a petition for reopening; and (2) in a rehearing and reopening
proceedings, make clear the circumstances under which new evidence may
be presented.
Issue 12: Even Small, Simple Estates Must Undergo a Probate Proceeding
Heirs and devisees often express frustration at how long it takes
the Department to process a decedent's estate. One reason that probate
takes time is that the current regulations require cases with any
amount of trust funds to be adjudicated by an OHA decision maker.
Potential Regulatory Changes: Increase the scope of
estates that are subject to OHA's summary process, which does not
require a formal hearing (see 43 CFR part 30 subpart I), and/or
determine what would be considered a small estate and, for estates
within that definition, create a streamlined distribution scheme for
such estates.
Issue 13: Current Regulations Fail To Address Implementation of the
AIPRA Provision Regarding Descent of Off-Reservation Lands
AIPRA distinctly addresses the descent of interests in trust or
restricted lands that are located outside the boundaries of an Indian
reservation and are not subject to the jurisdiction of a Tribe. See 25
U.S.C. 2206(d)(2). The current regulations fail to address
implementation of this statutory provision, however, which may be
applied inconsistently or not at all.
Potential Regulatory Changes: Address implementation of an
AIPRA provision (25 U.S.C. 2206(d)(2)) concerning off-reservation
lands. The purpose of such a change would be to ensure consistency and
transparency in OHA decisions, and to increase the public's awareness
about exceptions to the AIPRA rules that exist.
Authority
The Department is issuing this ANPRM under the authority of 5
U.S.C. 301, 25 U.S.C. 2, 9, 372, 373 and the Indian Land Consolidation
Act of 2000 (ILCA) as amended by the American Indian Probate Reform Act
of 2004 (AIPRA), 25 U.S.C. 2201 et seq.
Susan Combs,
Assistant Secretary--Policy, Management and Budget.
[FR Doc. 2019-23748 Filed 10-30-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4334-63-P