Lead Opinion
Opinion by Judge GOULD; Concurrence by Judge GOULD; Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge FERNANDEZ.
Plaintiff Christopher Cook (“Cook”), a California resident, seeks recovery for damages suffered as a result of a motor vehicle accident in which, while on a motorcycle, he was hit by a drunk driver. The driver was an employee of defendant Avi Casino Enterprises, Inc. (“ACE”), a tribal corporation, and she allegedly became intoxicated at an Avi Casino function. Cook sued the tribal corporation and several of its employees, alleging negligence and dram shop liability. Defendants asserted defenses based on federal Indian law. Defendants claim (1) that there is an absence of subject matter jurisdiction because the Indian tribe that owns ACE is, like Cook, a California citizen and (2) that tribal sovereign immunity shields ACE and its employees from suit.
We affirm the district court, in part on alternate grounds supported by the record. We agree with Cook that we have jurisdiction over ACE because there is diversity of citizenship. However, we affirm the dismissal of Cook’s claims against ACE on the alternate ground of tribal sovereign immunity. We affirm the district court’s dismissal of defendants Ian Dodd (“Dodd”) and Debra Purbaugh (“Purbaugh”) on the same ground and do not reach Defendants’ other arguments for dismissal.
I
A
Christopher Cook seeks relief because employees of Avi Casino gave an intoxicated fellow employee free drinks, then drove her to her car; she drove her car into Cook minutes later.
Defendants let Christensen board a casino-run shuttle bus to the employee parking lot so that she could drive home. Christensen headed north on Aztec Road, which was located within the Fort Mojave reservation. Leading to the tragic accident, Cook was driving his motorcycle southbound on the same road; he was heading home after visiting his mother-in-law. Minutes after leaving the parking lot, Christensen swerved across the center line and hit Cook’s motorcycle.
B
Avi Casino is owned and operated by Avi Casino Enterprises, Inc., a corporation organized under the Fort Mojave Business Corporation Ordinance, which is a tribal law of the Fort Mojave Indian Tribe (the “Tribe”). The Tribe is a federally recognized Indian tribe, and its reservation spans California, Nevada, and Arizona. The Tribe’s seat of government is in Nee-dies, California, but Avi Casino is located on reservation lands in Nevada, and ACE’s headquarters is in Laughlin, Nevada. Avi Casino operates under an intergovernmental agreement between the Tribe and the state of Nevada that permits the Tribe to operate casinos on tribal lands within the state.
ACE is wholly owned and controlled by the Tribe. ACE shareholder functions are performed by the Fort Mojave Tribal Council on behalf of and for the benefit of the Tribe. A majority of ACE’s board of directors must be Tribe members. ACE’s articles of incorporation state that all capital surplus not used for corporate development must be deposited in the Tribe’s general fund.
C
Cook sued ACE, Christensen, Dodd, Purbaugh, and other casino employees in Arizona federal district court. Cook sought compensatory and punitive damages for negligence and dram shop liability under Arizona’s liquor liability statute and Fort Mojave tribal law.
All defendants but Christensen filed a motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), claiming a lack of diversity jurisdiction. Cook argued that Dodd and Purbaugh wrere citizens of Arizona but conceded that the other employees named in the complaint were, like Cook, California citizens. On Cook’s recommendation, the district court dismissed all claims against these other employees, as well as claims against 25 unnamed defendants. Defendants argued that ACE was a citizen of California because it was
Dodd and Purbaugh then filed a second motion to dismiss, alleging that as ACE employees they were shielded from liability by the Tribe’s sovereign immunity, which should extend to ACE and Avi Casino. The district court granted the motion, concluding that the Tribe’s sovereign immunity covered ACE because the corporation functioned as an arm of the Tribe. It further held that the tribal sovereign immunity covered Dodd and Purbaugh as tribal employees acting within the scope of their employment. Although Christensen remains a defendant in the action, the district court entered a separate judgment dismissing ACE, Dodd, and Purbaugh. Cook appealed.
II
We review de novo a district court’s dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Rattlesnake Coalition v. U.S. Envtl. Prot. Agency,
Ill
A
We have jurisdiction only if Cook, a resident of California, has citizenship which is diverse from that of every defendant. See Caterpillar, Inc. v. Lewis,
An Indian tribe or an unincorporated arm of a tribe is not a citizen of any state. American Vantage Cos. v. Table Mountain Rancheria,
We are left with what the district court called “an absolute dearth of case law” on this issue. District Court Order at 6. We find some guidance, however, in our decision in American Vantage. Although there we analyzed diversity jurisdiction over an unincorporated casino, we stated that an entity incorporated under tribal law “is the equivalent of a corporation created under state or federal law for diversity purposes.” American Vantage,
Under the federal diversity statute, a corporation is a citizen of (1) “any State by which it has been incorporated” and (2) “the State where it has its principal place of business.” 28 U.S.C. § 1332(c)(1). ACE is a Nevada citizen because its principal place of business is there. Defendants claim that ACE is also a citizen of California because it was incorporated at the tribal seat of government in Needles, California. The district court agreed, finding that under the Fort Mojave Business Corporation Ordinance ACE was incorporated by the tribal secretary, and Cook offered no evidence to indicate that the tribal secretary performed these acts anywhere besides tribal headquarters.
However, even if it is true that the tribal secretary performed the acts of incorporation in California, ACE is not a California citizen. The district court stated that a corporation is a citizen of “any state where it was incorporated.” District Court Order at 6 (emphasis added) But more precisely, under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(c)(1), a corporation is a citizen of the “state by which it has been incorporated” (emphasis added). Cf. Thomson v. Gaskill,
There is no conflict between our analysis and the established rule that a tribal corporation is a citizen of the state where it has its principal place of business. While a corporation is a citizen of the state “by which” it was created, it is also a citizen of the state “where” it has its principal place of business. 28 U.S.C. § 1332(c)(1). The principal place of business clause refers to location and does not require formative action by or authority of a state leading to creation of a corporation. Avi Casino is located inside the state of Nevada, and the business activities of ACE are primarily in Nevada. By contrast, the incorporation of ACE, its creation and continuation, is a tribal matter, an incident of tribal sovereignty.
We hold that, for diversity purposes, a tribal corporation formed under tribal law is not a citizen of a state merely because its incorporation occurred inside that state. ACE is thus only a citizen of Nevada, the location of its principal place of business. We therefore conclude that we have subject matter jurisdiction over this case because none of the defendants are citizens of California.
B
Even though we have diversity jurisdiction, we must nonetheless dismiss any defendants who are protected by the Fort Mojave Tribe’s sovereign immunity.
A sovereign can assert immunity “at any time during judicial proceedings.” In re Jackson,
Tribal sovereign immunity protects Indian tribes from suit absent express authorization by Congress or clear waiver by the tribe. Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma v. Manufacturing Technologies, Inc.,
Cook insists that tribal corporations competing in the economic mainstream should not enjoy the same immunity from suit given to Indian tribes themselves. Cook claims it is unfair to allow tribes to create commercial corporations that can compete in the marketplace while enjoying immunity from the legal liability that all other corporations must face, and he asserts that granting tribal corporations immunity is unnecessary to protect tribal autonomy and self-government. Cook cites language used by district courts in our circuit and others showing a reluctance to extend immunity to tribal business enterprises. See, e.g., Parker Drilling Co. v. Metlakatla Indian Cmty.,
Cook’s policy arguments are not without some insight but are foreclosed by our precedent. The Supreme Court has somewhat grudgingly accepted tribal immunity in the commercial context. Kiowa
The record supports the district court’s conclusion that ACE and Avi Casino function as an arm of the Fort Mojave Tribe.
Despite his vigorous arguments that, as a matter of policy, tribal corporations should be held to lack sovereign immunity, Cook does not persuasively distinguish Allen's holding that these entities already do have sovereign immunity, an issue squarely presented and decided in Allen. Cook does not discuss Allen in his brief, and his response at oral argument was that he was prevented from finding factual distinctions from Allen by an incorrect discovery order. But we see no evidence in the record of Cook’s objection to the discovery order, nor was the issue preserved for appeal. Moreover, the cases Cook cites in support of his position acknowledge a tribal entity’s sovereign immunity and concern only whether the entity had waived that immunity. See, e.g., Parker Drilling,
Allen controls this case and we hold that as a tribal corporation and an arm of the Fort Mojave Tribe, ACE enjoys sovereign immunity from Cook’s suit.
C
The final question is whether ACE’s tribal immunity extends to two of
We have not yet addressed whether tribal immunity extends beyond tribal officials to employees of a tribe acting in their official capacity and within the scope of their authority, but we have extended federal sovereign immunity to employees of the United States. See Gilbert v. DaGrossa,
IV
Our conclusion that Cook has established diversity jurisdiction does not change the outcome. The district court properly dismissed Cook’s claims against ACE and individual defendants Dodd and Purbaugh because all these defendants are protected by tribal sovereign immunity. Each party shall bear its own costs on appeal,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Facts regarding the accident are taken from Cook's complaint. Because the district court
. By 4:30 a.m. the following morning, Christensen had a blood alcohol content of at least 0.25 percent.
. Our treatment of tribal corporations as distinct sovereign entities does not imply that Indian tribes themselves are foreign states. See Allen v. Gold Country Casino,
. We need not address Cook’s claims that ACE was actually incorporated in Arizona.
. We see no importance in the distinction that here ACE is a tribal corporation while the casino in Allen may have been unincorporated. See American Vantage,
. In a decision subsequently vacated in pertinent part, we once held that a “sue and be sued” clause in a tribal enabling ordinance may waive tribal immunity in entities created under that ordinance. Marceau v. Blackfeet Hous. Auth. (Marceau I),
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I am sorry to say that the austerity of our jurisprudence concerning tribal sovereign immunity leaves me with the conclusion that an unjust result is reached that our law might better preclude. As the case comes to us, we see Christopher Cook, catastrophically injured as the result
In my view it would be desirable if (1) the United States Supreme Court on review were to establish a new rule limiting tribal sovereign immunity in this gaming context; or (2) the Congress were to pass new legislation limiting the sovereign immunity of tribal entities involved in ubiquitous commercial gaming activities across the United States; (3) the Tribe itself were to take responsibility for its casino employees’ actions, and affirmatively waive sovereign immunity in this case permitting Cook’s action to be resolved under a litigated adversarial process. Alternatively, my concerns would be alleviated if one were to hold that the “sue and be sued” clause in a tribal enabling ordinance effectuated a waiver of tribal sovereign immunity (an issue we think not raised on Cook’s appeal).
Lest it appear that I am offering a general challenge to the concept of sovereign immunity for Indian tribes, I clarify that is not my aim. I have no disagreement with applying the doctrine of sovereign immunity to any important actions of Indian tribes, their officials, corporate arms, and employees when those actions are aimed at matters of governance of the Indian nation or policy matters that are critical to their continuation as a tribe. However, I question whether that doctrine can sensibly be applied to actions wholly commercial in the gaming area where the tribe has undertaken to compete and to provide services for the general public. In this sphere our law can be modified to ensure that the needs of justice for injured individuals limit the scope of the sovereign immunity doctrine for Indian tribes engaged in commercial gaming activities.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring and dissenting:
I concur in parts IIIB and C of the majority opinion and in the result.
I do not concur in part IIIA. To the extent that it is necessary to opine on diversity jurisdiction, which it probably is not, I do not agree that there is diversity. We know that a tribe is not a foreign state. See Stock W., Inc. v. Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation,
Therefore, I respectfully concur in part and dissent in part.
