Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 78.djvu/784

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[78 STAT. 742]
PUBLIC LAW 88-000—MMMM. DD, 1964
[78 STAT. 742]

742

Land acquisition for relocation purposes.

Land descriptions, recording.

PUBLIC LAW 88-533-AUG. 31, 1964

[78

STAT.

laws and procedures applicable to the determination of just compensation in condemnation proceedings in the Federal courts. No court or statutory costs, but all other costs and expenses, including attorney's fees, shall be at the contesting individual's expense. (b) Where the sum rejected by an individual Seneca Indian has been tendered under section 3(a) of this Act, and the United States has instituted condemnation proceedings, the Seneca Nation within sixty days shall deposit in court the total amount paid to it pursuant to section 2(a), less any credit given the United States under section 2(e), for the interests in land acquired by the United States which are the subject of the contesting individual's claims. Any excess of the sum so deposited over the amount finally determined as just compensation for the interests in land, if any, of the contesting individual shall be paid back to the Seneca Nation. If the amount finally determined as just compensation for all interests in land acquired by the United States which are the subject of the contesting individual's claim exceeds the sum deposited by the Seneca Nation, the difference shall be paid into court by the United States, and the total amount so paid and deposited shall be distributed as directed by the court. (c) Where the sum rejected by an individual Seneca Indian has been tendered under section 3(c) of this Act, and the issue of just compensation is litigated, the United States shall not assert as a defense that any interest in the property is owned by the Seneca Nation. (d) For the purposes of this section, any individual Seneca Indian eligible to file suit, who is a minor or under any other legal disability, shall be represented by his legal guardian or, if no guardian has been appointed, by an attorney appointed by the Court. SEC. 13. The Secretary of the Interior is hereby authorized, with the funds provided under section 4 of this Act, to purchase or to acquire through condemnation proceedings lands, and interests in lands, within the Allegany Reservation, for the relocation of houses and community facilities or for recreational, commercial, or industrial development. Any lands or interests in lands so acquired shall have the same legal status as other lands within the reservation. SEC. 14. The interests in land required for the Allegheny Reservoir project within the Allegany Indian Reservation are generally identified and delineated on a map entitled "Allegheny River Basin, Allegheny Reservoir, New York, General Map". Detailed legal descriptions of the lands shown thereon, together with tract maps, are or shall be filed in condemnation proceedings which have been instituted by the United States in the United States District Court for the Western District of New York for the acquisition of easements, interests in land, and other property within the Allegany Indian Reservation. The estates taken shall be as specifically set forth in the complaints filed in said proceedings, except insofar as the court may determine that the condemnation by the United States of any easement, interest in land, or other property identified therein for the construction of a limited access highway to be made a part of the New York State Southern Tier Expressway has not b»Bn authorized, in which event said estate shall not be taken. Copies of the final decree and other appropriate papers in said condemnation proceedings setting forth legal descriptions of the lands and the estates taken, together with identifying tract maps, shall be filed among the land records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington, District of Columbia, and recorded in the office of the county clerk of Cattaraugus County, New York. A true and correct copy of said papers shall be furnished by the Secretary of the Army without cost to the Seneca Nation.