This is a dispute between the estates of deceased members of an Indian tribe and an off-reservation insurer over the insurer’s allegedly bad faith denial of insurance coverage for a fatal automobile accident. The accident occurred on a road maintained by the tribe and located on tribal land. The insurer, Allstate, filed this declaratory judgment action in district court to challenge tribal court jurisdiction over the estates’ suit against Allstate for failure to settle. The district court held that the tribal court had jurisdiction and entered judgment for the defendant estates.
We hold that there is a genuine dispute over whether the estates’ claim arose on the reservation, where the accident occurred and the insureds resided, or off the reservation, where the insurer was located. Because it is not plain that the tribal court lacks jurisdiction, we conclude that the insurer is required to exhaust its remedies in tribal court before challenging tribal jurisdiction in federal court, and we order the district court to stay this declaratory judgment action. See Strate v. A-l Contractors,
I. Facts
This dispute stems from a 1995 car accident on a tribal road in the Rocky Boy Reservation in Montana. The accident occurred when Dennis Sangray, a member of the Chippewa Cree Tribe, lost control of his vehicle, killing his two passengers, Harold Stump and Vernon The Boy, who were also enrolled members of the Tribe. Sangray held an Allstate liability policy that he had purchased from the independent Erickson-Baldwin Insurance Agency in Havre, Montana, which is outside the Rocky Boy Reservation. Sangray habitually paid the insurance premiums in cash at the Erickson-Baldwin office. The policy itself bore Sangra/s reservation address, and Allstate mailed the policy and premium statements to that address.
The representatives of the victims’ estates filed claims with Allstate for recovery under Sangra/s liability policy. Allstate denied coverage, taking the position that the accident occurred on the early morning hours of April 1 and that Sangray’s policy had expired on midnight on March 31. Various off-reservation communications took place between Allstate and counsel for the estates of the deceased. Relatives of the deceased made inquiries from the reservation by telephone.
II. Analysis
We begin with the general rule that a party may not sue in federal court to challenge tribal court jurisdiction until it has first exhausted its remedies in tribal court. See Iowa Mut. Ins. Co. v. LaPlante,
Allstate argues that appellees have waived or effectively conceded the exhaustion issue by not raising it in the district court, which did not even address exhaustion in its order. Exhaustion, however, cannot be waived. A district court has no discretion to relieve a litigant from the duty to exhaust tribal remedies prior to proceeding in federal court. See Burlington Northern R.R. Co. v. Crow Tribal Council,
El Paso Natural Gas Co. v. Neztsosie, — U.S. —,
Analysis of Indian jurisdiction over cases involving non-Indians generally turns on whether the tribe controls the land on which the dispute arose. The leading case on Indian jurisdiction is Montana v. United States,
The Supreme Court recently expanded the Montana rule in Strate. There, the Court considered whether a tribe could exercise jurisdiction over an accident injury claim where the accident involved non-Indians and occurred on a state highway that ran through a reservation. The United States had granted North Dakota a right-of-way across the reservation for maintenance of a highway. The right-of-way was open to the public and the traffic on it subject to state control. The tribe had forfeited the right to control the highway and to exclude others from the land. Thus, the Court held that the highway right-of-way was “equivalent, for nonmember governance purposes, to alienated, non-Indian land.” Strate,
As the Supreme Court stated in Strate, “tribes retain considerable control over nonmember conduct on tribal land.” Id. Although the Court in Montana endorsed “the general proposition that the inherent sovereign powers of an Indian tribe do not extend to the activities of nonmembers of the tribe,” the Court also stated that “Indian tribes retain inherent sovereign power to exercise some forms of civil jurisdiction over non-Indians on their reservations.” Montana,
In this case, the parties disagree as to whether the lawsuit arose on the tribal road, where the auto accident occurred, or at Allstate’s off-reservation offices, where it allegedly committed insurance bad faith. Allstate’s position, that the court must look to the off-reservation settlement activities, is foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s holding in Iowa Mut. Ins. Co. v. LaPlante,
LaPlante, a member of the Blackfeet Tribe, had been injured in an automobile accident on the Blackfeet reservation in the course of his employment for the Well-man Ranch, a company owned by Blackfeet Indians. After unsuccessful attempts to settle his claim for injuries, LaPlante sued Wellman’s off-reservation insurer, Iowa Mutual, in tribal court for bad faith refusal to settle. Iowa Mutual sued in federal district court for a declaration that LaPlante’s injuries were not covered by the policy in question. See id. at 11-13,
Allstate stands in the same position as Iowa Mutual. As in LaPlante, the insured and injured parties in this case were tribal members who lived on the reservation; the accident occurred on the reservation; and the insurer is an off-reservation entity that sold a policy to a tribal member. La-Plante thus indicates that exhaustion is required here.
We followed LaPlante in Stock West Corp. v. Taylor,
Allstate attempts to distinguish this case from LaPlante and its progeny, arguing that this case is more analogous to the facts underlying the Eighth Circuit’s decision in Hornell Brewing Co. v. Rosebud Sioux Tribal Court,
This case is on all fours with LaPlante, where an off-reservation insurer was sued for refusal to settle a claim arising in Indian country. The authorities thus suggest that the estates’ bad faith claim should probably be considered to have arisen on the reservation. At the least, they make it impossible to say that the claim plainly arose off the reservation.
In addition to its challenge on subject matter jurisdiction, Allstate contends that the tribal court lacks personal jurisdiction in this case. This argument is foreclosed entirely by Farmers Ins. Exchange v. Portage La Prairie Mut. Ins. Co.,
Allstate argues that a more rigorous test for personal jurisdiction should apply to tribal courts because of the diminished sovereignty of the tribes. Allstate fails to cite a single case suggesting that the tribes’ dependent status within this country affects the exercise of personal jurisdiction by their courts. Montana and Strate address the effect of the tribes’ limited sovereignty on tribal courts’ subject matter jurisdiction. Wilson v. Marchington,
The district court dismissed this case because it affirmatively concluded that the tribal court had jurisdiction. We decline to go so far, for it appears to us that the dispute arises not from the parties’ contractual relationship, as the first Montana exception requires, but from alleged conduct governed by the Montana Unfair Cal-ims Settlement Practices Act, MCA § 33-18-242(3). - See Tynes v. Bankers Life Co.,
VACATED and REMANDED.
