Here is the petition in Decker v. United States:
Question presented:
Here is the petition in Decker v. United States:
Question presented:
The best line (from a very good analysis):
The outcome of this case is tough to call after the argument. It looks to be a case that may be decided on a tight vote. But one thing is absolutely certain. Regardless of the outcome, sophisticated tribes and businesses will spend increasing amounts of energy at the bargaining table fashioning partnerships where consents to applicable law and forum are clear and express.
Here.
Based on these authorities, we are persuaded that the
heightened standard of “clear and convincing” evidence should apply when Arizona courts decide whether good cause exists to deviate from ICWA foster or adoptive placement preferences. Because it is unclear what standard of proof the juvenile court applied here, we remand the good cause determination for reconsideration. Although we need not reach some of the parties’ remaining arguments, we address certain issues likely to recur on remand.
The authorities cited are 2015 Guidelines and case law from across the states.
Link to Education Week article by Jared Hautamaki here.
Excerpt:
The interim superintendent of the Montgomery County district responded to me. He said that in a large, diverse school district, not everyone is going to like what they see. He said that given the system’s values of equity and respect and students’ right of free expression, district officials would continue to monitor the impact and respond to the issue by benchmarking their actions against those of other Washington-area school districts. He hoped I would continue to collaborate with my son’s principal and still be “respectful and kind.” He didn’t address the academic research that I had shared. He didn’t address the comments of the district spokesman, who said the board addresses complaints like mine on a school-by-school basis. He didn’t address the dress code. He didn’t address the offensiveness of the name. But, he also didn’t use the name itself.
…
In the Washington region, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the U.S. Department of the Interior, the U.S. Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, the Indian Health Service, tribal lobby offices, and tribal law firms all employ a steady number of Native Americans who leave their tribal homes and uproot their families to serve their communities and their two nations—their tribe and the United States government. Native American student enrollment in the Montgomery County schools is around 280 students. The fact that we are a minority among minorities in the region is not an excuse for ignoring our children’s rights to an education environment free of racist imagery and discrimination.
The Ute Mountain Ute Tribe is seeking an Associate General Counsel to work in-house with the Tribe’s Justice Department. Assignments cover a broad range of Indian Law topics, including natural resources, energy development, taxation, water, litigation, code development and economic development, just to name a few.
Tribal headquarters is located in Towaoc, Colorado, and the Tribe’s jurisdiction extends into New Mexico and Utah. Interested candidates may contact Peter Ortego, General Counsel, at (970) 564 5641 or portego@utemountain.org. Deadline for submission is January 11, 2016.
For the first time, I attended an argument live at the Supreme Court. I haven’t even read the transcript yet, and so my commentary is even more idiosyncratic than usual. But here goes.
On Judicial Discipline
If the Justices collectively had more judicial discipline, this would be one of their easiest cases, and likely would not be a candidate for certiorari review at all. But the oral argument, coupled with previous positions taken by certain Justices, suggests that there is a judicial discipline problem in federal Indian law.
First. Why this case is easy should have been adamantly clear when counsel for the tribe read the language of the business license in which Dollar General consented to the application of all manner of tribal laws, and agreed to abide by those laws. It doesn’t clear any clearer or express. Nor should it have to.
Second. Why there is a judicial discipline problem is evident where Justice Kennedy insisted from the outset that tribal sovereignty and Congression authority in relation to tribal sovereignty was in the table Monday, an issue not before the Court if the statement of questions presented is to be believed. Moreover, that Justices Scalia, Kennedy, and Thomas (who as usual did not speak but has written as such) suggested that the Supreme Court is in a position to second-guess or undo inherent tribal sovereign authority where Congress and the Executive branch have made considered judgments that tribes do have civil jurisdiction power on their own land is another expression of a lack of judicial discipline — the Supreme Court is not allowed to undo policy judgments expressed by the other branches because it disagrees with them. Finally, that Justices Kennedy, Scalia, Thomas (likely, as noted above), and possibly Alito were to disregard or significantly modify the Montana 1 analysis in the manner offered by counsel for Dollar General, it would mean that the Court’s statements favoring and assuming tribal jurisdiction in Mazurie, Colville, Montana itself, Merrion, Mescalero, National Farmers, Iowa Mutual, Strate, and Plains Commerce are to be ignored because those three or four Justices don’t agree with them now.
Fortunately, the Chief Justice is well known for guiding the Court in a manner that respects the function of an Article III court, evidenced by the decision in the Michigan v. Bay Mills Indian Community case a year ago.
Why Federal Constitutional Concerns Should Not Trouble the Court
The Chief Justice expressed concerns that nonmembers aren’t protected by federal constitutional law, an issue he mentioned in Plains Commerce Bank. He asked about a hypothetical scenario where a nonmember is held liable in tort by a tribal jury consisting entirely of tribal members. That’s a fair question.
First. Nonmembers like Dollar General have voluntarily entered Indian lands and engaged in commercial dealings that can subject them to tort and contract actions. Counsel for the tribe added that the tribe was asking the Court to acknowledge implied consent to tribal law for actions that the nonmember would “reasonably anticipate” given that context. Petitioners have lawyers, they knew what they were signing, and they knew that Indian tribes presumptively retain jurisdiction on Indian lands.
Second. Congress and the Court itself has already considered how to deal with the possibility that nonmembers should be protected in tribal court. Congress did so almost fifty years ago in the Indian Civil Rights Act, and the Court impliedly approved of that regime in all the cases mentioned above by assuming and presuming tribal jurisdiction over nonmembers, even in tort. There’s a very long history of tribal dispute resolution involving nonmembers going back to before the Founding. At times, Congress has definitely intervened, but the primary legislative judgment over these issues is contained in ICRA. In more recent decades, Congressional support for tribal court exercise of inherent power is unfailing. Both counsel for the tribe and the United States hit this point very effectively.
Third. Even assuming tribal laws, tribal court practices, and ICRA somehow aren’t enough, then there actually is a remedy in state or federal court for nonmembers in virtually all relevant situations — the default due process analysis employed by state and federal courts (called comity) when determining whether to enforce a foreign judgment. In most cases, and definitely here involving Dollar General, nonmember assets subject to tribal court judgments are off-reservation. Tribal court plaintiffs likely will be forced to secure money judgments in state or federal court in the jurisdiction where the nonmember holds those assets. Nonmembers complaining of due process irregularities in tribal court will get their day in state or federal court that way. If the nonmember is holding assets where the tribal court can reach, that is on reservation, then the nonmember has already consented in every meaningful way to tribal jurisdiction anyway.
All of those mechanisms ensure fundamental fairness, not to mention the impressive professionalization of tribal judiciaries in the last half century, exemplified by the Mississippi Choctaw judiciary.
Justice Kennedy’s repeated mantra that Indian tribes are, in his words, “nonconstitutional”, is the strongest evidence of a lack of judicial discipline (he and Justice Thomas I believe have used the phrase “extra constitutional” in opinions past). Mississippi Choctaw certainly isn’t “nonconstitutional” — its constitution and laws are all online. But I suspect that wasn’t his point. I suspect his point is that he doesn’t think the Court or Congress should allow Indian tribes to assert jurisdiction over nonmembers. But the United States or the Court cannot grant to Indian nations power the tribes already possess. Moreover, the United States disagrees with Justice Kennedy’s policy preference now and has presumed tribal jurisdiction since the Founding. Tribal self governance and sovereignty over Indian lands was a choice negotiated centuries ago by Indian nations and the US and that choice is simply not subject to Article III judicial review, especially 200+ years later and especially given that tribes have successfully complied with Congressional guidelines in this area.
How Far Tribes Have Come
That at least four and perhaps as many as seven Justices seemingly agreed (and even counsel for Dollar General conceded) that Indian courts are fully capable of guaranteeing fundamental fairness to all litigants shows that Indian nations have won the game of self governance. Millions of nonmembers have consented to at least some form of tribal jurisdiction in the last few decades, and no decision of the Supreme Court can stop that now. National legislation and all those Supreme Court decisions noted above have allowed Indian nations to craft legal systems that comport with fundamental fairness. And Indian nations are serious economic players. Even if the Court does what Dollar General asks of it, that decision will be quickly, and maybe even hilariously, irrelevant as soon as it is announced. Nonmembers and tribes will shrug, and go back to what they were doing before.
BTW, with deep respect to Justice O’Connor, the answer to Justice Breyer’s question is Braid of Feathers by Frank Pommersheim, Navajo Courts and Navajo Common Law by Ray Austin, and anything by Pat Sekaquaptewa or Sarah Deer or Mike Petoskey or Carole Goldberg or Wenona Singel or Kristen Carpenter or Angela Riley or Sarah Krakoff….
Transcript available here.
Here are some interesting passages:
Justice Sotamayor (questioning counsel for Dollar General at p 10):
States appoint judges. Sometimes they’re elected, but often they’re appointed. We don’t think it lacks being a neutral forum because the State can sue a citizen there. We think of it as neutral because the judges are neutral.
You’re just assuming that these judges are not neutral.
Counsel for Dollar general (asserting that tribal courts are not an inherent feature of sovereign tribal governments at p 16):
The United States obviously did not regard the Tribes’ judiciary as something that is purely a part of their government, because time and again, it has micromanaged them.
And, Justice Breyer, I do want to point out another example of that, and that is the Violence Against Women Act. There, we see the right way of doing this, and that Congress has developed systems that say if this tribal judiciary is a good one which affords due process, then it has jurisdiction over cases.
And we think that’s the right approach here. Congress has the institutional capacity to develop rules like the one you were talking about. It’s a much more […]
Justice Breyer (trying to frame Dollar General’s argument at p 18):
The nontribal member goes to the tribal land and signs an agreement that says tribal law would apply, and then commits a tort on the tribal lands, and even under those circumstances, and even if the court is functioning well, the tribal court cannot take jurisdiction over his claim. That’s your position. And then to that I say, if I haven’t got it already, why not?
Justice Kagan (characterizing Dollar General’s argument at p 23):
It’s a bit of an odd argument, isn’t it, Mr. Goldstein, that there’s less of a sovereign interest in protecting your own citizens than in enforcing your licensing laws?
Exchange between Justice Kennedy and Dollar General regarding the scope of Congress’s power to delegate jurisdiction to Indian tribes (p 25):
JUSTICE KENNEDY: My my hypothetical is that the Congress gives Indian powers Indian tribes complete powers, both civil and criminal, over all persons on tribal Reservations. No Federal review, nothing.
Mr. GOLDSTEIN: That’s unconstitutional because Congress is subject to the Constitution. It would violate the Supremacy Clause; it would violate Article III, which contemplate, sorry…
Neal Katyal, counsel to the Mississippi Band of Choctaw pushing back on Justice Scalia’s suggestion that the Supreme Court’s prior statements on tribal court jurisdiction are merely dicta (p 31):
So yes, I understand that they are dicta, but it is dicta of the most persuasive sort. It is the unbroken rule of this Court, frankly, that in all of these cases, this Court has said there is presumptively jurisdiction.
And indeed, the exhaustion cases would make no sense otherwise because twice this Court said, in tort cases, in Iowa Mutual and National Farmers Union, this Court said you’ve got to go to tribal court and exhaust your remedies.
And Justice Scalia, if the rule in those cases was, hey, tribal courts don’t have jurisdiction, they would have done what you did in your opinion in Hicks, because at page 369 you said, quote, “Since it’s clear tribal courts lack jurisdiction over State officials, adherence to the tribal exhaustion requirement would serve no purpose.
Chief Justice Roberts, on whether there can be due process with all-Indian juries in tribal courts (p 42):
If we’re if we’re going to evaluate the due process concerns on a casebycase basis, as a general matter, it does it violate due process for a nonmember to be subjected to a jury verdict where the jury consists solely of tribal members?
Chief Justice Roberts, again, on the same point (pp 43-44):
Kind of think that you think the concerns are on the same level: Forcing somebody in a State court to be subjected a New Yorker to be subject to jurisdiction where everyone’s from Massachusetts because it’s Massachusetts court. You think that’s the same as subjecting a nonmember accused of a terrible assault on an Indian to jurisdiction before a jury consisting solely of members of the Tribe.
The Chief Justice, one more time, on the same point when questioning the United States’ attorney Ed Kneedler (p 56):
Is it consistent with your concept of due process, as a general matter, to have a nonmember tried by a jury consisting solely of tribal members?
Justice Scalia, questioning Ed Kneedler on the scope of tribal regulatory jurisdiction in relation to tribal court jurisdiction over tort claims (p 58):
And so I could say that person was subject to tribal regulatory jurisdiction, which can be interpreted, narrowly, to mean the Tribe can regulate that person’s conduct. If he violates that conduct, the Tribe, as a tribe, can fine him. It doesn’t necessarily mean that the regulatory jurisdiction includes the the power to impose tort law and adjudicate tort law.
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