Lead Opinion
Amerind Risk Management Corporation (Amerind) is a federally chartered corporation that assumed the rights and obligations of its tribally chartered predecessor, also named Amerind Risk Management Corporation (ARMC). Amerind appeals the federal district court’s adverse grant of summary judgment in this declaratory judgment action. Amerind sought a determination in federal district court that the Turtle Mountain Tribal Court (Tribal Court) lacked jurisdiction over tort litigation between Amerind and three enrolled members of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians (Tribe), and requested an order enjoining the plaintiffs from proceeding in the Tribal Court. The district court held that, although Amerind was a nonmember of the Tribe, the Tribal Court had jurisdiction over the tort litigation based on ARMC’s contractual relationship with the Turtle Mountain Housing Authority (TMHA), an entity of the Tribe.
We hold that the Tribal Court does not have jurisdiction over the plaintiffs’ direct suit against Amerind because Amerind is entitled to tribal immunity and the plaintiffs have failed to meet their burden of showing that Amerind waived such immunity. Accordingly, we reverse the district court and remand with directions to enjoin the plaintiffs from proceeding against Amerind in Tribal Court.
I. BACKGROUND
In 1986, at the encouragement of the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, ARMC was incorporated under the laws of the Red Lake Band of Chippewa Indians as a self-insurance risk pool for Indian Housing Authorities and Indian tribes. TMHA joined the ARMC risk pool and, on December 28, 2001, ARMC issued TMHA a “Certificate of Coverage” and a “Scope of Coverage” document outlining TMHA’s property damage and personal injury coverage from January 1, 2002, through December 31, 2002.
On October 19, 2002, a fire destroyed a house on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation being leased from TMHA, killing two house guests and seriously injuring a third. Three enrolled members of the Tribe—Myrna Malaterre and Carol Bel-garde, mothers of the deceased house guests; and Lonnie Thompson, the injured house guest (plaintiffs)
On July 1, 2004, the plaintiffs filed a declaratory judgment action in federal district court seeking a determination that the ARMC self-insurance policy covered their claims. Amerind filed a motion to dismiss, asserting that the plaintiffs failed to exhaust their tribal remedies and, alternatively, that Amerind was entitled to tribal sovereign immunity as a § 477 corporation. The federal district court dismissed the case without prejudice, holding that pursuant to the tribal exhaustion doctrine, the Tribal Court should be given the first opportunity to address the factual and legal issues presented in the case, including the tribal sovereign immunity issue. Malaterre v. Amerind Risk Mgmt.,
On October 20, 2005, the plaintiffs filed a stipulation to dismiss TMHA with prejudice in the Tribal Court. The Tribal Court granted the motion, leaving Amerind as the sole defendant in the case. Amerind then filed a motion to dismiss, asserting inter alia that it was entitled to tribal sovereign immunity as a § 477 corporation, and that the plaintiffs’ action could not proceed directly against Amerind because they were not parties to ARMC’s contract with TMHA. The Tribal Court denied Amerind’s motion to dismiss, holding that Amerind was not entitled to sovereign immunity because it “does not stand in the same position as TMHA or the [Tribe].” The court also held that the plaintiffs could proceed directly against Amerind because, under Turtle Mountain tribal law, claimants may proceed directly against an insurer if the insured was required by federal law to obtain insurance designed to protect the public against losses. The Tribal Court’s decision did not address Amerind’s specific contention that it was entitled to sovereign immunity in its own right as a § 477 corporation. Amerind appealed to the Turtle Mountain Tribal Court of Appeals (Tribal Court of Appeals).
Before the Tribal Court of Appeals, Amerind again asserted that it was entitled to sovereign immunity as a § 477 corporation, and that the plaintiffs were prohibited from maintaining a direct suit against Amerind. The Tribal Court of Ap
On September 4, 2007, Amerind commenced a declaratory judgment action in federal district court, seeking a determination that the Tribal Court exceeded its jurisdiction by exercising authority over Amerind, a nonmember of the Tribe, under Montana v. United States,
The district court denied Amerind’s motion for summary judgment, concluding that under Montana, the Tribal Court had jurisdiction over Amerind because ARMC entered into a consensual contractual relationship with TMHA to insure TMHA against personal injury and property loss. Amerind Risk Mgmt. Corp. v. Malaterre,
Amerind appeals, asserting in part that the Tribal Court lacked jurisdiction over Amerind under Montana. Amerind did not raise the tribal immunity issue in its appellate brief, and we directed the parties to address whether tribal immunity barred the plaintiffs’ action against Amerind in the Tribal Court. See Taylor v. Alabama Intertribal Council Title IV J.T.P.A.,
II. DISCUSSION
We have held that tribal sovereign immunity is a threshold jurisdictional question.
To determine whether Amerind is immune from the plaintiffs’ suit in Tribal Court, we must first determine whether Amerind is entitled to sovereign immunity. While Amerind is not itself a tribe, “[i]t is ... undisputed that a tribe’s sovereign immunity may extend to tribal agencies.” Hagen,
We also note that Amerind is not an ordinary insurance company. Indeed, Amerind’s purpose is to administer a self-insurance risk pool for Indian Housing Authorities and Indian tribes. See Self-Insurance Plans Under the Indian Housing Block Grant Program, 71 Fed. Reg. 11464, 11464 (proposed Mar. 7, 2006) (“AMERIND continues to administer the approved self-insurance plan for properties funded under NAHASDA, pursuant to 24 CFR 1000.138.”). Because Amerind is a § 477 corporation that administers a tribal self-insurance risk pool, we hold that Amerind “serves as an arm of the [Charter Tribes] and not as a mere business and is thus entitled to tribal sovereign immunity.” Hagen,
Given that Amerind is entitled to tribal immunity, our next question is whether Amerind’s immunity has been waived.
The plaintiffs assert that Amerind waived its sovereign immunity by failing to raise the issue before the district court in Amerind II. However, our court has held that sovereign immunity is a “threshold jurisdictional matter” and a “jurisdictional prerequisite.” Hagen,
The plaintiffs’ second waiver argument is more complex. The plaintiffs begin their argument by pointing out that Amerind’s federal charter authorizes Amerind to “assume the obligations and liabilities of [ARMC].” The plaintiffs then assume, without citing any supporting authority, that this provision constitutes an express waiver of Amerind’s sovereign immunity so long as ARMC was amenable to the plaintiffs’ pending suit in Tribal Court. Finally, the plaintiffs point to provisions in the contract between ARMC and TMHA that purportedly waive ARMC’s, and by extension Amerind’s, tribal immunity. Because we hold that the general assumption of ARMC’s obligations and liabilities in Amerind’s federal charter does not constitute an express waiver of Amerind’s sovereign immunity, we need not address the plaintiffs’ arguments regarding ARMC’s purported waiver of its sovereign immunity.
To determine whether Amerind waived its sovereign immunity when it expressly
Precedent from our circuit also supports the conclusion that Amerind’s general assumption of ARMC’s “obligations and liabilities” was, at most, an implied waiver of sovereign immunity. In American Indian Agricultural Credit Consortium, Inc. v. Standing Rock Sioux Tribe,
Like the promissory note in Standing Rock, and like the federal statute in Aso-ciación de Empleadas, Amerind’s federal charter does not state that Amerind, in assuming ARMC’s obligations and liabilities, consents to submit to a particular forum, or consents to be bound by its judgment. Cf. Rosebud Sioux Tribe v. Val-U Const. Co. of S.D., Inc.,
Any waiver [of tribal immunity] by the Corporation ... shall be in the form of a resolution d,uly adopted by the Board of Directors, which resolution shall not require the approval of the Charter Tribes or the Secretary of the Interior. The resolution shall identify the party or parties for whose benefit the waiver is granted, the transaction or transactions and the claims or classes of claim for which the waiver is granted, the property of the Corporation which may be subject to execution to satisfy any judgment which may be entered in the claim, and shall identify the court or courts in which suit against the Corporation may*688 be brought. Any waiver shall be limited to claims arising from the acts or omissions of the Corporation, its Directors, officers, employees or agents, and shall be construed only to effect the property and Income of the Corporation.
(emphasis added). The plaintiffs have provided no evidence that Amerind’s Board of Directors ever adopted a resolution waiving Amerind’s immunity as to the plaintiffs’ pending suit, and absent such a resolution, we cannot say that Amerind unequivocally waived its sovereign immunity when it generally assumed ARMC’s “obligations and liabilities.”
Thus, we hold that Amerind is entitled to sovereign immunity and that the plaintiffs have failed to show that Amerind expressly waived such immunity as to the underlying personal injury/wrongful death action in this ease. Given that Amerind did not waive its sovereign immunity, we need not decide whether ARMC was amenable to the plaintiffs’ suit.
III. CONCLUSION
We reverse the district court and remand with instructions to enjoin the plaintiffs from proceeding against Amerind in the Tribal Court.
Notes
. Lonnie Thompson was added as a plaintiff after the lawsuit was filed.
. 25 U.S.C. § 477 provides:
The Secretary of the Interior may, upon petition by any tribe, issue a charter of incorporation to such tribe: Provided, That such charter shall not become operative until ratified by the governing body of such tribe. Such charter may convey to the incorporated tribe the power to purchase, take by gift, or bequest, or otherwise, own, hold, manage, operate, and dispose of property of every description, real and personal, including the power to purchase restricted Indian lands and to issue in exchange therefor interests in corporate property, and such further powers as may be incidental to the conduct of corporate business, not inconsistent with law, but no authority shall be granted to sell, mortgage, or lease for a period exceeding twenty-five years any trust or restricted lands included in the limits of the reservation. Any charter so issued shall not be revoked or surrendered except by Act of Congress.
. In this declaratory judgment action, Mala-terre, Belgarde, and Thompson are lechnically "defendants,” but they are "plaintiffs” in the underlying Tribal Court action, and we refer to them as "plaintiffs” here to avoid confusion.
. Amerind concedes it voluntarily waived its tribal immunity in federal court by filing this
. Amerind is a § 477 corporation that is jointly owned by the Charter Tribes, not the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians. "The power to subject other sovereigns to suit in tribal court [is] ... not a part of the tribes' inherent sovereignty.” Montana v. Gilham,
. The plaintiffs assert that we may not consider Amerind’s federal corporate charter because it was not introduced into the record in Amerind II. We note that citations to and quotations from Amerind’s federal charter appear in the exhibits attached to the plaintiffs' response to Amerind’s motion for summary judgment in Amerind II. Moreover, the charter, which was issued by the Department of the Interior, was introduced into evidence in Amerind I and in the Tribal Court. Therefore, our consideration of the charter is appropriate. See Omaha Tribe of Neb. v. Miller,
. A sovereign entity does not automatically waive its sovereign immunity through the mere act of succeeding a corporation that is either not entitled to sovereign immunity or that has waived such immunity. See Asociacion de Empleados del Area Canalera v. Panama Canal Comm’n,
. We disagree with the dissent’s contention that we should remand to the district court for the plaintiffs to conduct further discovery. In Amerind I, Amerind’s motion to dismiss asserted that Amerind’s Board of Directors had not adopted a resolution to waive Amerind's tribal immunity and the plaintiffs were permitted discovery. Later, the parties litigated the tribal immunity issue in both the Tribal Court and the Tribal Court of Appeals. Now, more than six years after Amerind raised the tribal immunity issue in Amerind I, the plaintiffs can point to no evidence that Amerind’s Board of Directors ever passed a resolution to waive Amerind's sovereign immunity as to the plaintiffs’ claims. Under these circumstances, we find that remanding this case for another round of discovery is neither appropriate nor necessary.
. Although we need not decide whether ARMC was amenable to suit, we disagree with the dissent’s assertion that ARMC waived its immunity through the Scope of Coverage agreement's arbitration provision. The provision in question is housed under the heading "Non-Binding Arbitration” and provides: "If [TMHA] and [ARMC] do not agree whether coverage is provided by the Scope of Coverage document, then either party may make a written demand for arbitration.” (emphasis added). This provision is readily distinguishable from the arbitration provisions that operated as express waivers of tribal immunity in C & L Enterprises, Inc. v. Citizen Band Potawatomi Indian Tribe of Oklahoma,
The dissent also places undue emphasis on the Scope of Coverage document’s conformity provision, which provides that "[i]f any provision of this policy conflicts with the tribal laws of [the Tribe], this policy is amended to conform to those laws.” In order to drum up a conflict between the policy and Turtle Mountain tribal law, which permits direct suits against insurers under certain circumstances, the dissent relies on a remote provision housed in the policy’s "Tribal Housing Officials Liability Coverage” section. The provision provides: “No action shall be taken against the Insurer unless, as a condition precedent thereto, ... the Insureds’ obligation to pay shall have been fully and finally determined either by judgment against them
Concurrence Opinion
concurring specially.
In Nevada v. Hicks,
“We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, viewing the facts and all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.” Copeland v. Locke,
Under Montana and its progeny, a tribal court’s civil jurisdiction generally does not extend to the activities of nonmembers of the tribe. Montana,
Here, the district court agreed with the plaintiffs and found that their direct suit against Amerind fell under Montana’s consensual relationship exception. The court emphasized that the dispute between Amerind and the plaintiffs was “distinctively tribal in nature,” Amerind II,
While the scope of tribal courts’ jurisdiction over nonmembers is admittedly “ill-defined,” Hicks,
In Nord v. Kelly,
In the present case, the plaintiffs initially filed suit against TMHA in the Tribal
I disagree with the district court’s determination that “[t]he contract between [ARMC] and [TMHA] is directly at the heart of this dispute.” Amerind II,
While ARMC had a consensual relationship with TMHA, it was TMHA’s alleged negligence, not ARMC’s contractual relationship with TMHA, that gave rise to the plaintiffs’ personal injury/wrongful death suit. The Supreme Court has cautioned against broadly applying Montana’s exceptions and made it clear that when it comes to a nonmember’s consensual relationship with a tribe or its members, it is not “in for a penny, in for a Pound.” Atkinson,
. Amerind is jointly owned by three Charter Tribes, none of which is the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians (Tribe).
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent from the holding as to the Tribal Court lacking jurisdiction over the three tribal members’ direct suit against Amerind, a holding the majority justifies on the grounds Amerind is entitled to tribal immunity.
First, I believe Amerind waived its immunity in the contract between itself and the Turtle Mountain Housing Authority (TMHA). Second, even assuming Amerind did not waive its immunity, the procedural posture of this case demands us to allow the three tribal members an opportunity to conduct discovery to determine whether Amerind adopted a corporate resolution waiving its immunity, or otherwise waived its immunity with the requisite clarity by means of its conduct. Finally, I believe the result in this case is perverse. As a condition of receiving federal funds, Congress mandated tribes and tribal housing authorities be required to purchase insurance. As a practical matter, requiring the purchase of insurance is perhaps the consummate indication Congress intended tribes and tribal housing authorities would be subject to suit. The fact that we now recognize Amerind—the commercial entity created for the very purpose of fulfilling such Congressional mandate— to itself be immune from suit, may require the Supreme Court to re-examine the “wisdom of perpetuating the doctrine [of tribal
I
While I recognize a waiver of tribal immunity must either be “unequivocally expressed” by Congress, Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez,
The arbitration clause in the relevant insurance policy expressly states coverage disputes between Amerind and the TMHA were arbitrable “in the tribal jurisdiction in which the address shown in the Certificate of Coverage is located.” The arbitration clause further provided local tribal laws were applicable, and an arbitrator’s decision could be “appealed to a tribal court of competent jurisdiction.” In C & L Enterprises, the Supreme Court held a tribe clearly waived its tribal immunity by entering into a contract containing an arbitration clause in which the tribe expressly agreed to arbitrate disputes arising under the contract and to allow an arbitration award to be enforced “in any court having jurisdiction thereof.”
[W]e believe it is clear that any dispute arising from a contract cannot be resolved by arbitration, as specified in the contract, if one of the parties intends to assert the defense of sovereign immunity. ... The arbitration clause ... would be meaningless if it did not constitute a waiver of whatever immunity [the Tribe] possessed.
Id. at 422,
The Eighth Circuit had addressed this same issue prior to C & L Enterprises, also deciding a tribe clearly waived its immunity “with respect to claims under the contract” by entering into an agreement containing an arbitration clause, concluding “[b]y definition such disputes could not be resolved by arbitration if one party intended to assert sovereign immunity as a defense- The parties clearly manifested their intent to resolve disputes by arbitration, and the Tribe waived its immunity with respect to any disputes under the contract.” Rosebud Sioux Tribe v. Val-U Constr. Co. of S.D., Inc.,
Under Rosebud, Sioux Tribe and C & L Enterprises, the arbitration clause in the insurance policy issued by Amerind clearly manifests Amerind’s intent to waive immunity with respect to any disputes arising under the contract (i.e., coverage disputes) between itself and the TMHA.
The tribal court lawsuit did not, however, begin as a coverage dispute between Amerind and the TMHA; it was commenced as a wrongful death action filed by the three tribal members against the TMHA. Amerind was later added to the suit and, pursuant to tribal law, the suit
In addition to the arbitration clause, the policy also contained a clause stating the policy would conform to tribal law whenever the policy conflicted with such tribal law. As noted above, tribal law provides insurers of a tribal entity to be subject to direct actions when the tribal entity purchases the insurance pursuant to a mandate of federal law, and the federal law reflects an intent to provide remedies to third parties injured by the tribe. The policy’s prohibition on direct actions against an insurer (before the insured’s obligation to pay is finally determined) conflicts with this principle of tribal law. Thus, the conforming clause applies. Amerind agreed the policy would conform to tribal law.
The result is this coverage dispute is being litigated directly between the tribal members and Amerind rather than between the TMHA and Amerind (or as a personal injury suit between the tribal members and the TMHA). In other words, Amerind’s own contract operates in a manner in which coverage disputes may be resolved directly between itself and third party claimants, rather than between itself and the TMHA. This fact, coupled with Amerind’s waiver of immunity “with respect to any disputes under the contract,” Rosebud Sioux Tribe,
II
Even assuming the arbitration clause does not operate as a clear waiver of immunity, I believe the procedural posture of this case requires us to remand it to allow the three tribal members to conduct jurisdictional discovery in the district court.
Amerind initiated this federal declaratory judgment action against the three tribal members and, as the majority acknowledges, voluntarily waived its tribal immunity in federal court by doing so. See Rupp v. Omaha Indian Tribe,
The issue of tribal immunity was not raised in this federal action until October 13, 2009, when this court itself asked the parties to be prepared to address certain questions at the oral argument scheduled and held nine days later on October 22, 2009. Included among those questions were some pertaining to the issue of Amerind’s immunity in tribal court. While some of our questions asked about the absence in the record of a corporate reso
In addressing our questions, Amerind renewed the unsuccessful argument it had pursued in tribal court, which was based on its current corporate charter’s requirement that it must pass a resolution waiving immunity with respect to any particular lawsuit. The three tribal members responded by explaining the absence of a resolution under Amerind’s current charter was irrelevant, because the current charter did not become effective until April 15, 2004, well after the operative events involved in this dispute.
While I would decline the tribal members’ request to find Amerind waived its immunity by failing to raise the issue in the district court, see, e.g., In re Prairie Island Dakota Sioux,
As part of the grounds for concluding the tribal court lacked jurisdiction over Amerind in the tribal court, the majority relies upon the lack of evidence in the federal court record showing that Amerind’s Board of Directors ever adopted a resolution waiving Amerind’s immunity. However, the three tribal members never had a reason to look for that evidence (which may actually exist), because Amerind never raised the issue of immunity in the district court. Since Amerind was the party which failed to raise the issue in district court, it should not benefit from an incomplete factual record on the issue. Under these circumstances, the appropriate remedy should be to send this case back to the district court and allow the tribal members to conduct discovery. See Miller v. First Serv. Corp.,
Ill
Finally, I am compelled to comment on what I view as a perverse result. Amerind, a commercial entity created for the very purpose of insuring tribal entities, is permitted to rely upon tribal immunity as a ground for avoiding its contractual obligation to provide insurance coverage.
Prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in Kiowa, Tribe, some courts distinguished between the governmental functions of tribes and the commercial activities of tribal corporations when determining whether a particular tribal corporation was immune from suit. See, e.g., Dixon v. Picopa Constr. Co.,
While I acknowledge Kiowa Tribe renders irrelevant the distinction between governmental functions and commercial activities when determining whether a particular tribal entity enjoys immunity, I find it very significant the Supreme Court did not address the distinction between tribal business corporations formed under 25 U.S.C. § 477 and tribal governments organized under 25 U.S.C. § 476. In this case, Amerind’s corporate charter was issued pursuant to § 477, not § 476. There is some support for the argument that when Congress adopted the Indian Reorganization Act (IRA) in 1934, it did not intend tribal business corporations formed under § 477 to have the same immunity that tribal governments formed under § 476 would have. See Gaines v. Ski Apache,
In Kiowa Tribe, the Supreme Court questioned the “wisdom of perpetuating the doctrine [of tribal immunity]” noting it developed “almost by accident” and “with little analysis.”
Where, as here, the already infirm concept of tribal immunity is extended so far as to shield a corporate entity whose very existence is at odds with the concept of immunity, it seems perhaps the time is now upon us to abrogate the doctrine.
IV
For the reasons expressed above, I respectfully dissent.
. The fire giving rise to the tribal court lawsuit occurred on October 19, 2002. The applicable insurance policy was in effect from January 1, 2002, through December 31, 2002. The three tribal members filed suit on January 23, 2003. Amerind was added to the lawsuit on September 5, 2003.
