MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
BACKGROUND
The Chemehuevi Indian Tribe (“Tribe”) commenced this action by filing a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief on December 15, 1977. The California State Board of Equalization (“Board”) had previously determined that the Tribe owed the state amounts totaling $11,702.95 for taxes that it allegedly should have collected from non-Indian purchasers of cigarettes on the reservation, including interest and penalties on the taxes owed. The Board then issued *57 a “withhold notice” asking that the Bank of America withhold from the Tribe’s funds twice the amount of the claimed delinquency. It also recorded liens against all tribal property and assets located in San Bernardino and Los Angeles Counties, including property held in trust for the Tribe by the United States, and had a warrant issued to the Sheriff of Los Angeles County directing him to seize and sell such tribal assets as may be necessary to satisfy the claimed liens. After the Tribe filed its complaint, the Board filed a counterclaim for the amount of taxes allegedly owing from the Tribe.
The court granted a preliminary injunction on January 19, 1978 prohibiting the Board from collecting any taxes, past or future, from the Tribe and ordering the Tribe to pay into an escrow account the approximate tax that would be collected from non-Indians if the California Cigarette Tax Law were to be applied. Following a trial on stipulated facts, the court vacated the submission by order dated July 9, 1979 to await the Supreme Court’s decision in Confederated Tribes of Colville v. Washington. The court simultaneously modified the preliminary injunction to relieve the Tribe of the obligation to make further deposits into the escrow account pending the outcome of this litigation. At that time the Tribe had deposited $19,174.17 into the escrow account.
On October 5, 1979, the Tribe filed a motion to reconsider and amend the court’s order of July 9, asking either that judgment be entered in favor of the Tribe on the ground that it is not a “person” within the meaning of the California Cigarette Tax Law and that the law is therefore inapplicable to its cigarette sales, or, in the alternative, that the Board’s counterclaim be dismissed and the funds in the escrow account be released to the Tribe on the ground that the Tribe, as a sovereign, is immune from unconsented suit. This motion was submitted to the court after oral argument on November 5, 1979.
In support of the first ground for reconsideration, the Tribe cited the recent Supreme Court case of
Wilson v. Omaha Indian Tribe,
The Tribe cites the recent decision of the Ninth Circuit in
People v. Quechan Tribe of Indians,
The Tribe’s claim of sovereign immunity has considerable merit. The state’s counterclaim must therefore be dismissed, and the court’s order of July 9 modified to release to the Tribe the funds held in the escrow account. 1
*58 ANALYSIS
The sovereign status of the Tribe has ramifications that potentially reach almost every issue presented in this lawsuit. The decision of the Supreme Court in the Col-ville case might make it unnecessary for this court to decide whether the state is precluded on grounds of intergovernmental immunity or tribal preemption from taxing the Tribe’s sales of cigarettes on the reservation. However, the Supreme Court is not presented with the procedural issues of sovereign immunity that the Tribe raises in this motion since the retailers in Colville are individual Indians licensed as dealers by the tribes rather than the tribes themselves. The Colville decision is therefore unlikely to shed any light on these issues.
The sovereign immunity of the Tribe has two procedural aspects that require dismiss-, al of the counterclaim and modification of the court’s order. First, it limits the court’s jurisdiction over the counterclaim. Second, it limits the remedy the court might award even if it should hold in favor of the state in the Tribe’s declaratory judgment action. Although as a practical matter these two limitations are obviously interdependent, for analytical purposes it is useful to consider them separately.
1. Sovereign Immunity From Suit
It has long been recognized that Indian tribes enjoy sovereign immunity from unconsented suit,
2
subject to the plenary control of Congress.
United States v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.,
The standard articulated by the Supreme Court for finding a Congressional waiver of tribal sovereign immunity is that there be an “unequivocal expression of . legislative intent.”
Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez,
Judged by this standard, rule 13(a) cannot be construed as a Congressional waiver of tribal sovereign immunity for compulsory counterclaims. First, the statutory authority under which the Supreme Court may prescribe the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure expressly states that “[s]uch rules shall not abridge, enlarge or modify any substantive right.” 28 U.S.C.A. § 2072 (West Supp.1979). Thus a waiver of tribal sovereign immunity would be beyond the scope of the statutory authority for promulgating the Federal Rules.
Second, even if it were possible to effectuate a Congressional waiver of sovereign immunity via the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, rule 13 cannot be construed to do so. The rule makes no mention of tribal sovereign immunity, but rule 13(d) expressly disclaims any intention to limit federal sovereign immunity:
These rules shall not be construed to enlarge beyond the limits now fixed by law the right to assert counterclaims or to claim credits against the United States or an officer or agency thereof.
The Supreme Court requires that any waiver of sovereign immunity be express and unequivocal, Santa Clara Pueblo, supra; the text of rule 13 fails to satisfy this requirement.
Finally, the provisions of rule 13 are subject to the limitations of rule 82. See Advisory Committee note 5 to rule 13. Rule 82 states in part:
These rules shall not be construed to extend or limit the jurisdiction of the United States district courts .
The advisory committee notes to rule 82 further clarify the significance of the rule for jurisdiction over counterclaims:
These rules grant extensive power of joining claims and counterclaims in one action, but, as this rule states, such grant does not extend federal jurisdiction. [Emphasis added.]
The doctrine of tribal sovereign immunity limits the jurisdiction of the courts over claims against Indian tribes.
See, e. g., Puyallup Tribe v. Department of Game,
II. Sovereign Immunity as a Limitation on Relief
The Tribe’s sovereign immunity does not deprive this court of jurisdiction to de *60 cide the substantive issues presented in the Tribe’s claim for declaratory and injunctive relief. Even if the court should hold in favor of the Board of Equalization, however, it could not award any relief to the state against the Tribe.
Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones,
The more recent decision of the Supreme Court in
Puyallup Tribe v. Department of Game,
In reaching its decision, the Court acknowledged the practical problem presented by limiting the number of fish that all tribal members could catch while simultaneously refusing to require that the tribe provide the information necessary for the state to enforce the limitation. The Court observed that
although it properly resists the authority of the state court to order it to provide information with respect to the status of enrolled members of the Tribe and the size of their catch, it may find that its members’ interests are best served by voluntarily providing such information to respondent and to the court in order to minimize the risk of an erroneous enforcement effort.
Id.
at 178,
Similarly, in this case even if the court were to decide in favor of the Board in the declaratory judgment action brought by the Tribe, it would still not have jurisdiction to adjudicate a counterclaim against the Tribe, nor to award money damages or injunctive relief against the Tribe. *61 The Tribe’s sovereign immunity might create practical difficulties for the Board in attempting to enforce its cigarette tax laws against the Tribe, but these potential enforcement problems cannot override the Tribe’s claim of sovereign immunity. Since this court would not have jurisdiction to award the funds in the escrow account to the Board, the funds must be released to the Tribe.
CONCLUSION
The Tribe’s claim of sovereign immunity is well-founded and requires that the counterclaim of the defendant Board of Equalization be dismissed and the funds currently held in the escrow account be released to the Tribe. The court’s order of July 9,1979 and the preliminary injunction should be modified accordingly.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Since the Tribe has dropped its claim for monetary damages against the Board and now seeks only declaratory and injunctive relief and nominal damages, the recoupment exception to the doctrine of sovereign immunity does not apply.
See Bull v. United States,
Although a counterclaim may be asserted against a sovereign by way of set off or recoupment to defeat or diminish the sovereign’s recovery, no affirmative relief may be given against a sovereign in the absence of consent.
United States v. Agnew,
. Although Justice Blackmun has suggested that the doctrine of tribal sovereign immunity “may well merit re-examination in an appropriate case,”
Puyallup Tribe of Indians v. Department of Game,
. Rule 13(a) reads in part as follows:
(a) Compulsory Counterclaims. A pleading shall state as a counterclaim any claim which at the time of serving the pleading the pleader has against any opposing party, if it arises out of the transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter of the opposing party’s claim and does not require for its adjudication the presence of third parties of whom the court cannot acquire jurisdiction.
