Federal Court Dismisses Counterclaim to Tribal Land Claim

Here are the materials in Oneida Indian Nation v. Phillips (N.D. N.Y.):

1-complaint4.pdf

17-answer-counterclaim.pdf

24-2-tribe-motion-to-dismiss-counterclaim.pdf

27-response.pdf

28-reply.pdf

30-dct-order1.pdf

Student Scholarship on the Allergan/Mohawk Case

Seth W. R. Brickey has published “Rent-A-Tribe: Using Tribal Immunity to Shield Patents from Administrative Review” in the Washington Law Review.

Here is the abstract:

 In 2017, Allergan Pharmaceuticals entered into an agreement with the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe (SRMT). Allergan agreed to assign several patents to SRMT and to pay an initial sum of $13.75 million and annual royalties of approximately $15 million. SRMT, in exchange, licensed the rights to use the patents back to Allergan and agreed not to  waive its tribal immunity in any administrative proceeding challenging the patents. Two outcomes were expected as a result of this Allergan-Mohawk agreement. First, Allergan would retain the rights to manufacture and market a highly profitable drug while insulating the underlying patents from an unforgiving administrative inter partes review (IPR). Second, SRMT would embark on a new business venture of collecting and relicensing patents from third parties, effectively “renting out” its sovereign immunity. The response from lawmakers, the judiciary, the executive branch, and the public at large was acrimonious. The agreement was branded in public forums as a “sham” and the Patent Trial and Appeal Board held the patents assigned to SRMT were not shielded by tribal immunity. This Comment argues the Allergan-Mohawk agreement is a legally effective means of avoiding IPR. Absent an express waiver of tribal immunity by Congress or the tribe itself, a tribe may not be subject to a private claim. This rule extends to IPR proceedings which closely parallel private suits. Therefore, contracts like the Allergan-Mohawk agreement effectively shield patents from IPR.

Federal Court Dismisses Workers’ Comp Claim against Northern Circle Indian Housing Authority

Here are the materials in Luiz v. Northern Circle Indian Housing Authority (N.D. Cal.):

1 Habeas Petition

8 Motion to Dismiss

12 Response

14 Reply

16 DCT Order

Second Circuit Affirms Dismissal of Vendor Complaint against New York Oneida

Here is the unpublished opinion in Laake v. Turning Stone Casino.

Briefs:

laake-brief.pdf

tribe-brief.pdf

Federal Court Dismisses Tort Claim against Crow Health Care Center

Here are the materials in Wilhite v. Awe Kualawaache Care Center (D. Mont.):

29 Motion to Dismiss – sovereign immunity

30 Response

33 Reply

35 Motion to Dismiss – FTCA

38 Response

39 DCT Order

Prior post here.

Federal Court Allows Fraud Claims against Tribal Employees to Proceed

Here are the materials in JW Gaming Development LLC v. James (N.D. Cal.):

1-1 Complaint

6 Motion to Dismiss

18 Response

22 Reply

55 DCT Order

Federal Court Dismisses FLSA Claim against EBCI Casino

Here are the materials in Clark v. Harrah’s NC Casino Company, LLC (W.D. N.C.):

1 Complaint

18-1 Motion to Dismiss

29 Amended Complaint

34-1 Motion to Dismiss

39 Response

43 Reply

45 Individual Defendant MTD

51 Response

52 Reply

53 Magistrate Report

54 Defendants Limited Objections

55 Plaintiff Objections

56 Plaintiff Reply

57 Defendants Reply

58 DCt Order

California COA Affirms Attorney Fees Award against Tribe

Here is the opinion in Findleton v. Coyote Valley Band of Pomo Indians:

A150444

Prior posts here.

En Banc Petition Materials in St. Regis Mohawk Tribe v. Mylan Pharmaceuticals

Here:

En Banc Petition

States Amicus Brief

University of Minnesota Brief

University of New Mexico Amicus Brief

Prior posts here.

Federal Court Orders Tribal Exhaustion in Title VII Case against Tribal Entity

Here are the materials in Romero v. Wounded Knee LLC (D.S.D.):

56 Motion to Dismiss

59 Motion to Strike

62 Response to 59

63 Reply in Support of 59

67 Response to 56

68 Reply in Support of 56

77 Plaintiff’s Brief on Tribal Exhaustion

78 Defendant’s Brief on Exhaustion

79 DCT Order on Motion to Strike

80 DCT Order on Exhaustion