*1 K EARSE , L YNCH , AND C HIN , Circuit Judges .
Plaintiffs-Counter-Defendants-Appellees Cayuga Nation (the “Nation”) and certain of its officials brought this action against Defendants-Counter- Plaintiffs-Appellants the Village of Union Springs and certain of its officials (the “Village”) seeking a declaratory judgment that, as relevant here, the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (“IGRA”) preempts the Village’s ordinance regulating gambling as applied to the Nation’s operation of a bingo parlor on a parcel of land located within both the Village and the Nation’s federal reservation, and for corresponding injunctive relief. The United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Hurd, J. ) granted summary judgment to the Nation. We agree with the district court that neither issue nor claim preclusion bars this suit and that IGRA preempts contrary Village law because the parcel of land at issue sits on “Indian lands” within the meaning of that Act.
We therefore AFFIRM the judgment of the district court, without reaching the Nation’s alternate theories of immunity.
D AVID W. D E B RUIN (Zachary C. Schauf, on the brief ), Jenner & Block LLP, New York, NY, for Plaintiffs-Counter- Defendants-Appellees.
D AVID H. T ENNANT , The Law Office of David Tennant PLLC, Rochester, NY, for Defendants-Counter-Plaintiffs- Appellants.
G ERARD E. L YNCH , Circuit Judge :
This case marks the latest installment of a decades-long dispute between
the Cayuga Nation (the “Nation”), a federally recognized Indian tribe, and the
Village of Union Springs, New York (the “Village”), concerning the Nation’s
ownership and use of a parcel of land located at 271 Cayuga Street (the “Parcel”),
*3
which sits within the bounds of both the Village and the Cayugas’ historic
reservation. In 2003, the Nation sued the Village seeking declaratory and
injunctive relief on the theory that the reunification of the Nation’s aboriginal title
to the Parcel with the fee title revived the Nation’s sovereignty over it so as to
preclude the Village’s application of its laws to regulate construction occurring
there. After initially obtaining a judgment in its favor and while the Village’s
appeal of that judgment was pending before this Court, the Nation opened a
gambling parlor, Lakeside Entertainment (“Lakeside”), on the Parcel. Thereafter,
however, we remanded the case to the district court in light of the Supreme
Court’s decision in
City of Sherrill v. Oneida Indian Nation
,
At least for a time. In July 2013, much to the Village’s chagrin (and in apparent violation of its gambling laws), Lakeside reopened for business, precipitating another round of litigation. Again, the Nation seeks to preclude the application of Village law, but on a different, and narrower, basis than before. *4 Rather than claiming broad immunity based on its assertion of inherent sovereignty, the Nation now argues that Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (“IGRA”) preempts the Village’s anti-gambling laws. The Village contends that, in light of the prior litigation, preclusion doctrines bar the federal courts from considering the Nation’s latest theory and that, in any case, IGRA does not apply to the Parcel because it does not qualify as “Indian lands,” which IGRA defines as “all lands within the limits of any Indian reservation.” 25 U.S.C. § 2703(4)(A).
After considering the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (David N. Hurd, J. ) agreed with the Nation. So do we. We therefore affirm the judgment of the district court.
BACKGROUND
The history of relations between and among the federal and state governments (and their respective predecessors) and the indigenous peoples of North America, and the changing legal regimes that have governed those relations, is far too complex and lengthy a topic to be described in detail within the confines of a single judicial opinion. Nevertheless, because it is difficult to understand the issues presented in this appeal without at least some appreciation *5 of the context underlying the dispute, we begin with a brief, and necessarily incomplete, recitation of that history, drawing primarily from statutory history as well as prior decisions of the Supreme Court and of this Court. We then turn to the operative facts of this case, as established in the summary judgment record.
A. Historical Background
Prior to European settlement of North America, the Nation, one of the six
tribes of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy (also known as the Iroquois Nations),
[1]
lived on lands now comprising,
inter alia
, central New York. In February 1789,
weeks before government under the Constitution began, members of the Nation
entered into a treaty with New York whereby the Nation ceded all of its land to
the State save for approximately 64,000 acres (the “Cayuga Reservation”).
See
Cayuga Indian Nation of N.Y. v. Pataki
,
The promises in the Treaty of Canandaigua were backed up, at least in
theory, by the provisions of the Indian Trade and Intercourse Act, commonly
referred to as the Nonintercourse Act. Passed in 1790 pursuant to Congress’s
authority under the Indian Commerce Clause of the Constitution, the
Nonintercourse Act provided that “no sale of lands made by any Indians, or any
nation or tribe of Indians within the United States, shall be valid to any person or
persons, or to any state . . . unless the same shall be made and duly executed at
some public treaty, held under the authority of the United States.” Acts of July
22, 1790, ch. 33, § 4, 1 Stat. 137, 138.
[2]
Despite these statutory protections for native
lands, however, New York purchased the entirety of the Cayuga Reservation in
*7
two transactions conducted in 1795 and 1807.
See Pataki
,
The Nonintercourse Act and the Treaty of Canandaigua were representative of federal Indian policy in the early days of the United States, commonly referred to as the “treaty era.” In broad terms, the treaty era was characterized by the establishment of treaties whereby a tribe would cede much of its territory while retaining a small reservation over which the tribe would, at least in theory, be permitted to exercise sovereignty without state interference. See generally F. Cohen, Handbook of Federal Indian Law § 1.03 (2012) (“Handbook”). [3] That policy persisted until the latter half of the 19th century and *8 formally came to an end with the passage of the Indian Appropriations Act of 1871. Acts of Mar. 3, 1871, ch. 120, 16 Stat. 544. That act, though affirming then- existing treaty obligations, provided that “[n]o Indian nation or tribe within the territory of the United States shall be acknowledged or recognized as an independent nation, tribe, or power with whom the United States may contract by treaty.” Id. at 566, codified at 25 U.S.C. § 71.
The conclusion of the treaty era marked the beginning of the allotment era,
which saw a shift in federal policy from forced segregation to forced assimilation
of Native Americans, culminating in the passage of the General Allotment Act of
1887, commonly referred to as the Dawes Act after its sponsor, then-Senator
Henry Dawes of Massachusetts. Acts of Feb. 8, 1887, ch. 119, 24 Stat. 388;
see also
Handbook § 1.04. The Dawes Act was intended to facilitate “the eventual
assimilation of the Indian population and the gradual extinction of Indian
reservations and Indian titles.”
Montana v. United States
,
(1981) (cleaned up). To that end, the Dawes Act authorized the President to
divide existing reservation lands into “allotments” for individual tribal members,
“whenever in his opinion any reservation or any part thereof of such Indians is
advantageous for agricultural and grazing purposes.” Dawes Act § 1,
In 1906, Congress amended the Dawes Act to permit the Secretary of the
Interior to “at any time . . . cause to be issued to [an] allottee a patent in fee
simple, and thereafter all restrictions as to sale, incumbrance, or taxation of said
land shall be removed.” Acts of May 8, 1906, ch. 2348, 34 Stat. 183. Thereafter,
Congress passed a series of acts concerning the allotment and division of surplus
lands on individual reservations.
See, e.g.
,
Solem v. Bartlett
,
The most recent shift in federal policy towards Native Americans came
with the passage of the Indian Reorganization Act (“IRA”) in 1934, which marked
the formal end of the allotment era.
See
Pub. L. No. 73-383, ch. 576, 48 Stat. 984,
codified as amended at 25 U.S.C. § 5101
et seq.
“The intent and purpose of the
Reorganization Act was ‘to rehabilitate the Indian’s economic life and to give him
a chance to develop the initiative destroyed by a century of oppression and
paternalism.’”
Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones
,
Following the passage of the IRA and the quasi-restoration of the
reservation system, the issue of whether and to what extent allotment-era policies
had worked to diminish reservations established by treaty was a frequent topic of
litigation. The Supreme Court, while acknowledging that the allotment-era
Congress “anticipated the imminent demise of the reservation and, in fact,
passed the [surplus lands] [a]cts partially to facilitate that process” and,
accordingly, had “failed to be meticulous in clarifying whether a particular piece
of legislation formally sliced a certain parcel of land off [a] reservation,”
nonetheless has held that the division and allotment of tribal lands did not by
itself terminate existing treaty reservations.
Solem
,
Instead, the Court has held that, because only Congress holds the power to
establish and terminate reservations, “[o]nce a block of land is set aside for an
Indian reservation and no matter what happens to the title of individual plots
within the area, the entire block retains its reservation status until Congress
explicitly indicates otherwise.”
Id.
at 470, citing
United States v. Celestine
, 215 U.S.
278, 285 (1909). Accordingly, treaty reservations persist unless Congress “clearly
evince[s] an intent to change [their] boundaries” through legislation.
Id.
(citation
*12
and internal quotation marks omitted);
compare also, e.g.
,
Mattz v. Arnett
, 412 U.S.
481, 506 (1973) (1892 act opening Klamath River Reservation to settlement under
Homestead Act did not disestablish reservation)
with, e.g.
,
Rosebud Sioux Tribe v.
Kneip
,
Separately, as will become relevant in this case, in the wake of the Supreme
Court’s decision in
Bryan v. Itasca Cty.
,
B. Prior Litigation and The Sherrill Decision
Perhaps because the affected tribes were dispossessed of their lands long
before allotment even began, no allotment era legislation (nor any legislation
passed since) disestablished the Cayuga Reservation or any of the other
reservations established through the Treaty of Canandaigua, including the
Oneida Nation’s reservation (the lands comprising which New York State
acquired in the early 19th century, again without federal ratification).
See Oneida
Indian Nation v. Oneida Cty
.,
York acquired their respective reservations were void
ab initio
because they
violated the Nonintercourse Act. The Oneida Nation first pursued – and
ultimately succeeded on – a fairly narrow claim for damages in the form of fair-
market rental value for the land comprising its reservation for the two years prior
to the initiation of its action. That dispute wound up before the Supreme Court
twice. In its first decision, the Court reversed the district court’s dismissal for lack
of federal jurisdiction.
See Oneida Indian Nation v. Oneida Cty.
,
Building on this early success, the Oneida Nation pursued another strategy
*16
to reassert its rights over its historic reservation: purchasing land within the
reservation’s bounds in open market transactions. The Oneida Nation then
refused to pay local property taxes levied on the properties it had purchased on
the theory that its repurchase of the properties had unified the fee titles to the
properties with the Oneida Nation’s aboriginal title and thus worked a
restoration of its sovereignty to the exclusion of local regulation. In February
2000, the Oneida Nation sued the City of Sherrill, which was attempting to evict
the Oneida Nation from one such property for unpaid taxes, in the Northern
District of New York. The Oneida Nation sought a declaration that the parcel in
question qualified as “Indian country” within the meaning of the Major Crimes
Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1151
et seq
. (the “MCA”), and was thus exempt from state and
local taxation.
[6]
See Oneida Indian Nation of N.Y. v. City of Sherrill
, 145 F. Supp. 2d
*17
226, 237 (N.D.N.Y. 2001). That case (along with other related cases with which it
was consolidated) was assigned to Judge Hurd, who, in 2001, entered judgment
for the Oneida Nation on the tax immunity claim.
Id.
at 267-68. In 2003, a divided
panel of this Court affirmed that judgment.
See Oneida Indian Nation of N.Y. v. City
of Sherrill
,
While that case was wending its way through the judicial system, the Cayuga Nation pursued similar efforts, which we recount in greater detail. Beginning in 2002, the Nation began purchasing properties within the bounds of the Cayuga Reservation in open-market transactions. In April 2003, the Nation purchased the Parcel, which had most recently been used as an auto parts store. In early October 2003, the Cayugas appointed a tribal code officer and began construction on the Parcel; the Nation did not consult the Village or otherwise engage in the ordinary permitting process established by state and local law before beginning construction. Soon after the Nation began construction, the Village issued a series of stop work orders citing the lack of required permits. The *18 last such order was dated October 15, 2003.
On October 19, 2003, the Nation sued the Village, the Town of Springport, and the County of Cayuga in the Northern District of New York. See Complaint, Cayuga Indian Nation of N.Y. v. Vill. of Union Springs , No. 03-cv-1270 (N.D.N.Y. Oct. 19, 2003), ECF No. 1 (the “2003 Complaint” and “2003 Litigation”). The 2003 Complaint sought a declaration that the Village’s attempts to regulate the Nation’s activity on the Parcel “violate the 1794 Treaty of Canandaigua; the Nation’s sovereignty, which derives from Article I, Section 8 and Article II, Section 2, Clause 2 of the United States Constitution and from federal common law, and the Nonintercourse Act (25 U.S.C. § 177); and 25 C.F.R. 1.4” id. ¶ 32, and an injunction against future enforcement actions. That complaint did not reference IGRA or any plans to conduct gambling on the Parcel. In its answer and counterclaim, the Village alleged that “the Village Clerk received an anonymous telephone call indicating that the Nation was planning on opening a gaming operation on the [Parcel].” 2003 Litigation, ECF No. 9 ¶ 86. The case was assigned to Judge Hurd, who had also presided over the Oneida Nation’s tax immunity case.
On November 12, 2003, the Nation adopted a class II gaming ordinance, a *19 prerequisite for tribes seeking to operate class II gaming facilities on Indian land under IGRA. See 25 U.S.C. § 2710(b)(1)(B). Six days later, the National Indian Gaming Commission (“NIGC”), the agency within the Department of the Interior that regulates IGRA gambling, approved the Nation’s gaming ordinance. On December 11, 2003, the Nation moved for summary judgment. The following month, the NIGC’s acting general counsel sent a letter to the Village’s then- Mayor advising him that the NIGC had approved the Nation’s gaming ordinance.
On February 10, 2004, the Village cross-moved for summary judgment in that action or, in the alternative, for a preliminary injunction barring the Nation from operating a class II gaming facility on the Parcel until the Nation had complied with IGRA. The Village also argued that, assuming it could not generally regulate the Parcel without infringing upon the Nation’s sovereignty, the Parcel’s proximity to a school coupled with the Nation’s apparent plans to open a gaming facility thereon constituted exceptional circumstances justifying the application of local law. [7] This marked the first appearance of IGRA in the *20 2003 Litigation. The Nation argued in opposition that the Village had no standing to seek relief under IGRA and that exceptional circumstances did not exist because IGRA provides a comprehensive federal regulatory scheme that would govern any gaming that might occur on the Parcel.
On April 27, 2004, the district court granted summary judgment to the
Nation, reasoning that the Parcel qualified as “Indian country” within the
meaning of the MCA and, accordingly, was exempt from state jurisdiction.
See
Cayuga Indian Nation of N.Y. v. Vill. of Union Springs
,
On May 31, 2004, while the Village’s appeal of that decision was pending,
tribal members.”
New Mexico v. Mescalero Apache Tribe
,
the Nation opened Lakeside and began conducting class II gaming on the Parcel. The NIGC exercised its authority to regulate gaming at Lakeside, conducting regular site visits and requiring the payment of quarterly fees.
On March 29, 2005, however, the Supreme Court reversed this court’s
decision in the Oneida Nation’s tax immunity case.
See Sherrill
*22
Thereafter, we remanded the Village’s still-pending appeal of
Union
Springs I
for reconsideration in light of
Sherrill
. The Village did not invoke IGRA
in its brief on remand and instead took the position that, under
Sherrill
, it was
entitled to apply its laws to all activities on the Parcel. The Nation endeavored to
distinguish
Sherrill
but did not invoke IGRA except to emphasize that it had not
brought a claim under IGRA, that it was not seeking relief under IGRA, and that
no IGRA-related issues were before the district court. The Nation also did not
make any arguments specifically related to Lakeside or to gambling. Ultimately,
the district court concluded that the Nation’s efforts to preclude the application
of zoning and other local land use laws was “even more disruptive” than the
Oneida Nation’s efforts to avoid the payment of local taxes and, accordingly,
vacated the prior judgment entered for the Nation and entered judgment for the
Village.
Cayuga Indian Nation of N.Y. v. Vill. of Union Springs
,
Nation applied to the Department of the Interior to have the Parcel and other lands within its reservation taken into trust. The Department ultimately denied the application in July 2020. See July 31, 2020 Letter from Tara Sweeney to Clint Halftown, Dkt. No. 75.
B. Subsequent Developments and The Proceedings Below Some years later, the Nation determined that it was time to try its hand at gaming again. On May 30, 2013, the Nation informed the NIGC that it had renewed Lakeside’s class II gaming license and, in accordance with NIGC regulations, provided the agency with various environmental, public health, and safety attestations as well as background check materials on various employees. On July 3, 2013, Lakeside re-opened for business. That same day, the Nation, through its counsel, wrote to various state and local officials advising them of Lakeside’s reopening and of the Nation’s position that the class II gaming that the Nation would offer at Lakeside was governed by IGRA to the exclusion of state and local regulation because Lakeside sat on “Indian land” as defined therein.
Six days later, the Village issued the Nation an order to remedy zoning violations premised on the Nation’s operation of a bingo facility without a Village-issued license in violation of a 1958 games of chance ordinance (the “1958 Ordinance”). On August 8, the Nation wrote Defendant-Appellant Howard Tanner, Union Springs’ zoning officer, requesting the issuance of a certificate of occupancy. Tanner responded by letter seeking additional information and *24 advising that the 1958 Ordinance required the Nation to seek a license to run a bingo operation. The Nation submitted a new application for a certificate of occupancy that addressed the issues that Tanner had identified save for the alleged violation of the 1958 Ordinance the following December. Four days after that, the Village served additional orders to remedy citing the Nation’s lack of a certificate of occupancy authorizing a change in use of the Parcel and the Nation’s purported violation of the 1958 Ordinance.
On February 21, 2014, Tanner visited Lakeside and identified three building code issues. The Nation addressed the identified issues, and on a March 7 return visit, Tanner advised representatives of the Nation that Lakeside met code standards for fire/life safety. On March 24, however, Tanner sent a letter advising the Nation that he could not issue a certificate of occupancy for Lakeside because it was in violation of the 1958 Ordinance and because the Nation had not obtained a use variance. Shortly thereafter, the Nation, through counsel, responded by letter setting forth its position that it need not obtain a use variance under local zoning law and, in any event, to the extent that the Village believed that the use variance was required under the 1958 Ordinance, IGRA preempted that requirement. On October 27, the Village advised the Nation of its *25 intent to take enforcement action against Lakeside and Nation officials.
The next day, the Nation and its officials (then styled as John Doe Plaintiffs) brought this action against the Village, its board, and various Village officials in the Northern District of New York, where the matter was assigned to Judge Hurd. The Nation sought a declaration that: (1) the 1958 Ordinance is preempted by IGRA, (2) even if the 1958 Ordinance itself is not preempted by IGRA, IGRA’s criminal enforcement provisions vest the federal government with exclusive jurisdiction to enforce the 1958 Ordinance, and (3) any civil action against the Nation or its officials to force compliance with the 1958 Ordinance would be barred by sovereign immunity. The Nation also sought injunctive relief precluding the Village from taking further action against it or its officials. Soon after filing the complaint, the Nation sought and obtained a temporary restraining order, which the parties extended by joint stipulation throughout the course of the action. [9]
*26 While the action was pending, the Nation continued to expand its footprint in the Cayuga Reservation. In 2018, the Nation promulgated a penal code, created a police force and court system to enforce it, and contracted for a prison to incarcerate those convicted of violating it. In a 2019 letter, the director of the Bureau of Indian Affairs affirmed the federal government’s position that the Nation was entitled to enforce its penal code against Native Americans within the boundaries of the Cayuga Reservation because the Reservation constituted “Indian country” under the MCA. That same year, the chairman of the NIGC determined that the NIGC would again regulate gaming at Lakeside; since then, the NIGC has conducted regular site visits and has accepted the Nation’s payment of quarterly fees pursuant to IGRA and its implementing regulations.
On May 22, 2019, the Nation amended its complaint; the amended
complaint identified named tribal officials as Plaintiffs and alleged facts
also held that the individual plaintiffs – who at that point were still styled as John
Does – also lacked standing because they had failed to plead a credible threat of
imminent prosecution.
Id.
at *5 n.8. On appeal, we reversed that dismissal,
reasoning that it was appropriate to defer to the Bureau of Indian Affair’s
decision to recognize Clint Halftown, who brought both this suit and the 2003
Litigation on behalf of the tribe, as the Nation’s authorized representative.
See
Cayuga Nation v. Tanner
,
occurring since the Nation filed suit in 2014 but sought no additional relief. On
September 4, the parties cross-moved for summary judgment. On March 24, 2020,
the district court granted summary judgment to the Nation.
Cayuga Nation v.
Tanner
,
DISCUSSION
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo.
See, e.g.
,
Mitchell v. City
of New York
,
For the reasons discussed herein, we agree with the district court that neither claim nor issue preclusion bars this action and that the Parcel sits on “Indian lands” within the meaning of IGRA. We therefore affirm the judgment of the district court.
I. Preclusion Doctrines
The Village asserts, as threshold defenses, both issue and claim preclusion, contending that IGRA preemption was actually litigated in 2003 or, in the alternative, that the Nation was required to litigate it then and cannot do so now. Like the district court, we disagree.
A. Issue Preclusion
Issue preclusion, also referred to as collateral estoppel, bars “successive
litigation of an issue of fact or law actually litigated and resolved in a valid court
determination essential to [a] prior judgment.”
New Hampshire v. Maine
, 532 U.S.
742, 748-49 (2001). “The preclusive effect of a federal-court judgment is
determined by federal common law.”
Taylor v. Sturgell
,
To support its argument that IGRA preemption was both litigated and
decided in the prior action, the Village points to an isolated passage of
Union
Springs I
in which, holding that the Parcel’s proximity to a school was not an
exceptional circumstance justifying the application of local law, the district court
observed that “[t]he Nation correctly points out that it is governed by IGRA,
*30
which preempts state and local attempts to regulate gaming on Indian lands, and,
thus, such a consideration is irrelevant here.”
But the district court’s passing reference to IGRA in Union Springs I did not decide whether IGRA preempted any specific local law. Indeed, there was no need for it to do so. The 2003 Litigation arose out of the Nation’s claim of tribal immunity from the Village’s jurisdiction to enforce its zoning laws, and the district court ruled for the Nation on that issue. The Nation had not begun gaming, the Village had not invoked the 1958 Ordinance, and the Nation did not premise its immunity claim on preemption.
Further, even assuming,
arguendo
, that
Union Springs I
actually had decided
IGRA preemption, that judgment was later vacated, and "[a] judgment vacated or
set aside has no preclusive effect."
Stone v. Williams
,
True, the Nation affirmatively invoked IGRA during the 2003 Litigation; it
did so, however, in response to the “exceptional circumstances” argument that
the Village raised in support of its summary judgment motion. The Nation’s
argument was premised on the mere existence of IGRA’s comprehensive
regulatory scheme as opposed to the scope of any of its specific provisions. On
remand after
Sherrill
, the Village, buoyed by a favorable change of law,
abandoned the exceptional circumstances argument altogether; there was,
indeed, no reason for the Village to invoke it, nor, therefore, for the Nation to
pursue its response to that point. The district court, limiting itself to the claims
made by the Nation and the arguments advanced by both sides, held that, under
Sherrill
, the Nation could not invoke its inherent sovereignty to claim immunity
from local zoning and land use laws.
Union Springs II
,
Of course, issue preclusion extends not only to issues that are expressly
decided but also to those issues that are “by necessary implication adjudicated in
the prior litigation.”
Rezzonico v. H&R Block, Inc.
,
By any measure, thus, the Village’s assertion of issue preclusion fails. B. Claim Preclusion
The Village argues in the alternative that, even if the issue of IGRA *33 preemption was not actually litigated and decided in the 2003 Litigation, the Nation was required to raise it at that time and cannot do so now. Again, we disagree.
“Under the doctrine of . . . claim preclusion, a final judgment on the merits
of an action precludes the parties or their privies from relitigating issues that
were or could have been raised in that action.”
TechnoMarine SA v. Giftports, Inc.
,
The Village argues that, even though the Nation had not begun gaming (nor had it passed a gaming ordinance that the NIGC would need to approve *34 before the Nation could legally commence gaming under IGRA) when it filed the 2003 Complaint, it had formed an intention to do so and, accordingly, was required to interpose an IGRA preemption claim at that point. Under this view, the “transaction” is the Nation’s course of conduct from its purchase of the Parcel until the opening (and closing, and reopening) of Lakeside. But even assuming that the pre-enforcement challenge proposed by the Village would have been ripe – a contention that the Nation rejects but that we need not and thus do not resolve – the Village’s argument reaches too far.
We and several of our sister circuits have long held that, for the purpose of
analyzing claim preclusion, “the scope of the litigation is framed by the
complaint at the time it is filed.”
Computer Assocs. Int’l v. Altai, Inc.
,
Here, the current litigation arises out of facts that have accumulated since the first action that are more than enough on their own to support it. When the 2003 Complaint was filed, the Nation had not begun gaming, and the Village had not sought to enforce the 1958 Ordinance. Instead, the Village cited the Nation for failing to comply with altogether different regulations – those relating to zoning and construction – and the Nation claimed complete immunity from local jurisdiction. IGRA, notably, would not have provided the Nation with a defense against any of the ordinances that the Village was seeking to enforce, none of which related to gambling.
By 2013, the state of play had changed significantly. The Supreme Court’s
decision in
Sherrill
having undermined its claim to broad immunity from local
regulation, the Nation had endeavored to comply with various applicable
*36
building codes and the like – the precise sort of regulations from which it had
claimed immunity in 2003 – but was actively conducting a gambling operation on
the Parcel. It was at that point that the Village sought to enforce the 1958
Ordinance; in response to that enforcement effort, the Nation sought a
declaration not that it is
immune
from Village law as a quasi-sovereign entity, but
that the specific sliver of local law that the Village was attempting to enforce is
preempted
by a specific federal statute. Although the two proceedings may
“involve[] the same parties, similar or overlapping facts, and similar legal
issues,”
Interoceanica Corp. v. Sound Pilots, Inc.
,
Nor does our decision in
Waldman v. Village of Kiryas Joel
command a
contrary result.
Ultimately, the Village mistakes its plausible argument that the Nation could have litigated this claim in 2003 as providing support for its assertion that the Nation therefore was required to litigate this claim in 2003. But claim preclusion has never been so broad as to require a party to do what the Village insists that the Nation should have done in 2003: comb the books for every *38 ordinance that could be enforced against any use the Nation might make of the property and challenge them all or forever forego the right to challenge any of them. Thus, while we do not foreclose the possibility that claim preclusion might appropriately bar a case where a party “launch[es] a series of lawsuits to challenge different local laws . . . despite the lawbreaker knowing the full universe of laws that apply to its actions,” Appellants’ Br. at 36, the litigation history between the parties here falls short of that characterization. We therefore reject the Village’s assertion of claim preclusion.
II. The Merits
This case turns on a straightforward question of statutory interpretation.
As we and our sister circuits have held, IGRA preempts all state and local
legislation and regulation relating to gambling conducted on “Indian lands,” as
defined in that statute.
See Mashantucket Pequot Tribe v. Town of Ledyard
, 722 F.3d
457, 469-70 (2d Cir. 2013) (noting that IGRA “was intended to expressly preempt
the field in the governance of gaming activity on Indian lands”), quoting
Gaming
Corp. of Am. v. Dorsey & Whitney
,
“In interpreting a statute, we look first to the language of the statute itself.
When the language of the statute is unambiguous, judicial inquiry is complete.”
Marvel
,
IGRA defines “Indian lands” as:
(A) all lands within the limits of any Indian reservation; and
(B) any lands title to which is either held in trust by the United States for the benefit of any Indian tribe or individual or held by any Indian tribe or individual subject to restriction by the United States against alienation and over which an Indian tribe exercises governmental power.
25 U.S.C. § 2703(4). That definition is notably expansive, encompassing “
all
lands
within the limits of
any
Indian reservation.” Taken alone or in combination, the
terms “any” and “all” convey nearly limitless breadth.
See, e.g.
,
United States v.
Gonzales
,
In the face of this clear language, the Village contends that the term
“reservation” implies the exercise of tribal jurisdiction, which, the Village
reasons, the Cayugas cannot lawfully do within their reservation under
Sherrill
.
But we need not resolve whether the Nation’s apparent exercise of, at a
minimum, concurrent jurisdiction over the Parcel and other property that it owns
within the Cayuga Reservation (represented, for example, by its police force and
court system) may be logically squared with
Sherrill
’s holding because the
relevant definition of “Indian lands” contains no requirement that a tribe exercise
jurisdiction or other governmental power over reservation property. That
*41
conclusion is reinforced by the fact that IGRA’s secondary definition of Indian
lands, which applies to restricted fee and trust lands,
does
contain a requirement
that the tribe “exercise[] governmental power” over those lands. 25 U.S.C.
§ 2703(4)(B). And “[w]here Congress includes particular language in one section
of a statute but omits it in another section of the same Act, it is generally
presumed that Congress acts intentionally.”
Russello v. United States
,
Equally unpersuasive is the Village’s contention that Congress could not
have intended the term “reservation” to encompass what it characterizes as a
“not disestablished ancient reservation that is stripped of tribal jurisdiction.”
Appellants’ Br. at 45. Setting aside the basic principle that we have “no roving
license, in even ordinary cases of statutory interpretation, to disregard clear
language simply on the view that . . . Congress must have intended something
*42
[narrower],”
Michigan v. Bay Mills Indian Cmty.
,
Finally, the Village’s position is irreconcilable with the Supreme Court’s
recent decision in
McGirt v. Oklahoma
, in which the Court held that the Creek
reservation, encompassing a significant portion of northeastern Oklahoma,
*43
including much of the city of Tulsa, remained “Indian country” under the MCA
and, accordingly, that the State of Oklahoma lacked authority to prosecute
Native Americans for crimes committed against other Native Americans
committed thereon.
Moreover, while McGirt does not cite or otherwise mention Sherrill , the Court’s forceful reaffirmation in McGirt of Congress’s singular power to disestablish a reservation further underscores the infirmity of the Village’s position here. The Village would have us read Sherrill to hold that the Cayuga Reservation is a “de facto former reservation[]” that “[does not] exist today in any *44 real world sense.” Appellants’ Br. at 45 (emphasis in original). Adopting the Village’s position, however, would be akin to interpreting Sherrill to have effectively disestablished the Cayuga Reservation. To the extent that were ever a plausible interpretation of Sherrill , McGirt forecloses it. [13]
Accordingly, we hold that the Parcel qualifies as “Indian lands” within the meaning of IGRA and that IGRA accordingly preempts any and all state or local laws that directly or indirectly purport to regulate or limit gaming on the Parcel, including the 1958 Ordinance. Because the 1958 Ordinance is preempted entirely, we need not decide whether IGRA’s criminal enforcement provision vesting exclusive jurisdiction in the federal government to enforce state gambling law in “Indian country” as defined under the MCA, 18 U.S.C. § 1166, supersedes 25 U.S.C. § 232’s grant of criminal jurisdiction over tribal members to New York *45 State. [14]
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated herein, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
[1] The others being the Oneidas, the Mohawks, the Senecas, the Onondagas, and,
as of the early 18th century, the Tuscaroras.
See Cayuga Indian Nation of N.Y. v.
Pataki
,
[2] The Nonintercourse Act remains on the books today. Amended over the course of the Nation’s history, its present iteration states, in relevant part, that “[n]o purchase, grant, lease, or other conveyance of lands, or of any title or claim thereto, from any Indian nation or tribe of Indians, shall be of any validity in law or equity, unless the same be made by treaty or convention entered into pursuant to the Constitution.” 25 U.S.C. § 177
[3] Though the overarching policy of forming treaties with tribes to establish reservations persisted until at least the end of the Civil War, beginning in the first half of the 19th Century, national expansion led to an increased use of the treaty process to remove eastern and southern tribes onto newly created western reservations. The best known example of this practice was the forcible removal of
[4] “IGRA divides gaming into three classes, subjecting the classes to varying
degrees of regulatory control.”
United States v. Cook
,
[5] The Cayuga Nation filed a separate action seeking considerably broader relief
including,
inter alia
, a declaration of its ownership rights over the Cayuga
Reservation, ejectment, and trespass damages in the form of fair rental value
from the time of the Nation’s dispossession through the date of judgment.
See
Cayuga Indian Nation of N.Y. v. Cuomo
,
[6] The MCA defines Indian country as, in relevant part, “all land within the limits
of any Indian reservation under the jurisdiction of the United States Government,
notwithstanding the issuance of any patent, and, including rights-of-way running
through the reservation.” 18 U.S.C. § 1151. Although the MCA itself governs the
prosecution of certain crimes committed in Indian country, the Supreme Court
has recognized that its definition of Indian country “generally applies as well to
questions of civil jurisdiction.”
DeCoteau v. District Cty. Ct. for Tenth Judicial Dist.
,
[7] Though states broadly lack authority to regulate the activity of tribal members on reservation lands, the Supreme Court has held that “in exceptional circumstances a State may assert jurisdiction over the on-reservation activities of
[8] In dictum, the Court observed that “Congress has provided a mechanism for the
acquisition of lands for tribal communities that takes account of the interests of
others with stakes in the area’s governance and well being. Title 25 U.S.C. § 465
authorizes the Secretary of the Interior to acquire land in trust for Indians and
provides that the land ‘shall be exempt from State and local taxation.’”
Id.
at 220,
quoting
Cass Cty. v. Leech Lake Band of Chippewa Indians
,
[9] Early on in the litigation, The Cayuga National Unity Council, which claims to
be the legitimate leadership of the Nation, moved to intervene and have the suit
dismissed. Although the Council was denied leave to intervene, the district court
granted the Village’s early motion to dismiss, reasoning that the Nation’s
standing to sue on behalf of the tribe was intertwined with questions of tribal law
that the federal courts lacked jurisdiction to resolve.
Cayuga Nation v. Tanner
, No.
14-cv-1317,
[10] The Village argues that this rule “evolved in the context of serial violations of
copyright, trademark, securities, antitrust and other laws perpetrated by a serial
wrongdoer . . . [and] is properly limited to serial violation cases.” Appellants’ Br.
at 36-37. While the Village may be correct that we have most frequently applied
this facet of claim preclusion doctrine in serial violation cases, neither we nor our
sister circuits have ever understood it to be limited to those contexts. Nor would
limiting the rule in that fashion serve its underlying purpose,
i.e.
, to bring
“certainty and predictability” to this area of the law by avoiding “disputes about
whether plaintiffs could have amended their initial complaints to assert claims
based on later-occurring incidents.”
Morgan v. Covington Twp.
,
[11]
See, e.g.
,
Cayuga Indian Nation of N.Y. v. Gould
,
[12] Of course, another provision of IGRA limits class II gaming to “Indian lands within such tribe’s jurisdiction,” 25 U.S.C. § 2710(b)(1). However, that provision is relevant only to whether gaming is legal under IGRA, which the Village lacks authority to enforce. Accordingly, we need not address the Village’s arguments regarding that provision. To the extent that the Village takes issue with the NIGC’s decision to authorize and regulate gambling at Lakeside, its remedy is to seek judicial review of that decision. See 25 U.S.C. § 2714.
[13] Even prior to McGirt , the Village’s reading of Sherrill would be hard to square with the actual holding of that case and the Court’s well established disestablishment jurisprudence. As the New York Court of Appeals succinctly put it in 2010, “ Sherrill dealt with whether a tribe could exercise sovereign power over reacquired land for purposes of avoiding real property taxes – not whether reacquired land is ascribed reservation status under federal law.” Gould , 14 N.Y.3d at 641-42.
[14] Though we need not resolve the Nation’s sovereign immunity claim for the
same reason, we note that all parties now agree that the portion of the judgment
below providing that “[t]he Nation enjoys tribal sovereign immunity from any
suit by defendants to enforce the [1958] Ordinance,”
