Nebraska SCT Holds Tribal Officials with “Apparent Authority” (Not Actual Authority) May Waive Tribal Immunity

Here is today’s opinion in StoreVisions v. Omaha Tribe (as first reported in Indianz).

An excerpt:

As noted, this separate waiver was signed in the presence offive of the seven members of the tribal council and lends even more weight to an appearance that the signatories to the document—the chairman and vice chairman—were vested with theauthority to waive the tribe’s sovereign immunity.

The court refused to take judicial notice of tribal laws for some reason, and gave great weight to the mere presence of tribal council members in finding a waiver. Fairly remarkable decision.

Tenth Circuit Briefing in Somerlott v. Cherokee Nation Distributors

Here (reply brief not due yet):

Somerlott Brief

Cherokee Nation Distr Brief

Lower court materials here.

Briefing in City of Temecula v. Pechanga Band Gaming Dispute

Here are the materials:

Pechanga Motion to Dismiss

Temecula Opposition

Pechanga Reply

The complaint is here.

News coverage from Pechanga.net.

Oklahoma Supreme Court Affirms Miami Tribe’s Immunity in Seneca Telephone Suit

Here is the opinion in Seneca Telephone v. Miami Tribe.

An excerpt:

In the present matter the Tribe was not engaged in any telecommunication activity. The Tribe was engaged in excavation work for another tribe on land held in fee as well as in trust by the United States Government. The United States Congress has not unequivocally waived sovereign immunity for the activities involved in the instant matter. The Tribe has not waived its sovereign immunity at any level in the present case and all issues herein presented are fully satisfied by our finding of immunity and, therefore, the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals is vacated and the trial court is reversed and remanded with instructions to dismiss.

Lower court materials here.

Katherine Florey on Rule 19 after Pimentel

Katherine Florey has published “Making Sovereigns Indispensable: Pimentel and the Evolution of Rule 19” in the UCLA Law Review.

Here is the abstract:

Though Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 19 might appear to be one of the more esoteric of the Federal Rules, it is actually an exceptionally powerful device: It permits defendants to obtain dismissal of cases over which the court has valid jurisdiction, even when no other forum exists in which the action can be brought.  This Article argues that, while Rule 19 was originally intended to facilitate the consolidation of litigation by requiring joinder of absent parties, it has evolved in an important subset of cases to serve a nearly opposite purpose.  That is, in many cases in which a party may be affected by the litigation but cannot be joined because it is a sovereign possessing immunity from suit, courts have developed a near-categorical rule that the entire case may be dismissed—even if that means that the plaintiff is permanently denied a remedy.  Further, the U.S. Supreme Court recently appeared to endorse this approach, holding that Philippine human rights victims’ claims to their former regime’s assets could not be litigated because two Philippine governmental entities could not be joined in the case.

In such situations, this Article argues, Rule 19 functions almost as an abstention doctrine, permitting courts to avoid decisions in cases that may raise sensitive intergovernmental or foreign-relations issues.  This use of the rule is problematic for several reasons.  It is not authorized by (or even discussed in) Rule 19’s text, and it appears at odds with the original purpose of Rule 19: to promote consolidated litigation of disputes, not to dispose of them entirely.  Further, it permits the interests of the plaintiff—and the public interest in resolution of disputes—to be systematically slighted.  Thus, although there may be situations in which an absent party’s sovereign immunity should be taken into account, courts have gone too far in their solicitude for absent sovereigns.  This Article explores how this phenomenon has evolved and suggests ways in which courts’ analysis of Rule 19 factors should be modified to take account of the rule’s fundamental purposes

Federal Court Dismisses Police Brutality Complaint against Walker River Tribal Police

Here are the materials in Lantry v. Walker River Tribal Police (D. Nev.):

Walker River Motion to Dismiss

Lantry Response

Walker River Reply

DCT Order Dismissing Lantry Complaint

State Law Claim to Recover Gaming Losses from Seminole Tribe and Other Dismissed

Here is the opinion in Crawley v. Clear Channel (M.D. Fla.):

DCT Order Dismissing Crawley Complaint

Technically, Seminole Tribe was not a defendant, but intervened for purposes of filing a motion to dismiss under Rule 19:

Seminole Motion to Dismiss

The court deemed Seminole’s motion to dismiss moot, as it dismissed the claims on other grounds.

New Mexico Appellate Court Dismisses Worker’s Comp Claim against Inn of the Mountain Gods

Here is the unpublished opinion in Pena v. Inn of the Mountain Gods.

New Mexico Appellate Court Finds Tribal Waiver of Immunity in Gaming Compact

Here is the unpublished decision in Bowen v. Mescalero Apache Tribe.

An excerpt:

Plaintiff has properly pled the conjunctive elements of waiver required by the Compact.  Consequently, Defendant’s sovereign immunity from suit has been waived, and the district court improperly granted Defendant’s motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

Not sure if this means immunity is waived simply by pleading certain jurisdictional facts, or if the tribe’s immunity is reinstated assuming those jurisdictional facts are later disproven. Interesting conundrum.

Federal Court Dismisses Tort Claim against Chukchansi

Here is the opinion in Merrill v. Picayune Rancheria of Chukchansi Indians (E.D. Cal.):

DCT Order Dismissing Merrill Complaint

Chukchansi had waived its immunity in tribal court, but not in federal or state courts.