Coushatta Tribe v. Meyer & Assoc. a “Petition to Watch”

SCOTUSBlog lists Coushatta Tribe v. Meyer & Assoc. as a petition to watch for the April 3, 2009 conference. A cursory review of the cert petition shows that there may be a conflict in the state courts about whether the tribal court exhaustion doctrine enunciated by National Farmers Union and Iowa Mutual applies to state courts. The conflict seems to be with the Connecticut courts, and perhaps the New York and Wisconsin courts (though there are good reasons to doubt whether those courts have really embraced the doctrine), which have held that the tribal court exhaustion doctrine applies to its courts. Other courts — Louisiana, Arizona, and others — have rejected the application of the doctrine to their courts.

My sense is that the Court will deny this petition, though it is definitely worth watching. Three key reasons: (1) Louisiana’s course of action was to treat this common law doctrine as applying only to federal courts, preserving its own choice whether or not to adopt this federal court doctrine (a choice it made in the negative, just as Connecticut chose to adopt it, presumably of its own free will), making this dispute more a state law question than a federal law question; (2) the tribe is the petitioner; and (3) this is a common law case, rather than a federal statutory interpretation case or a federal constitutional case.

If a state court followed National Farmers Union, complaining loudly that it had no choice because of federal bullying or something, then there probably would be more Supreme Court interest. There doesn’t seem to be a federal government interest in the tribal court exhaustion doctrine that would be apparent to the Court, a serious problem I suspect is behind much of the Court’s recent 25-year retreat from its earlier federal Indian law jurisprudence.

A potential wildcard is that the state court’s opinion seems to run a little roughshod over the tribe’s immunity, but this seems to be limited to the tribe’s own laws, something that wouldn’t be likely to interest the Court.

From SCOTUSblog:

Docket: 08-985
Title: Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana, v. Meyer & Associates, Inc
Issue: Are state courts required to apply and follow the Tribal Exhaustion Doctrine and can a Native American tribe be forced to litigate claims in a state court when an ostensible waiver of sovereign immunity is not valid under that tribe’s law?

2 thoughts on “Coushatta Tribe v. Meyer & Assoc. a “Petition to Watch”

  1. Jason Oberle March 30, 2009 / 10:21 am

    Matt,

    Your work here at Turtle Talk is important. I commend you for it.

    Jason

  2. James Moore June 24, 2009 / 6:53 pm

    All I have to say is whoever was counsel of record for Meyer did one heck of a job with the La Supremes and the Opposition to the US Writ. Kudos!!

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