Edwаrd Michael Moore, a member of the Yurok Indian Tribe, filed a petition for habeas corpus in the federal district court to challenge a judgment of the Hoоpa Valley Tribal Court ordering Moore to pay a penalty of $18,508.50 for cutting timber on the Hoopa Valley Reservation without a permit. The petition was filed pursuant to a provision of the Indian Civil Rights Act that makes the writ of habeas corpus available in federal court to any person “to test the legality of his detention by order of an Indian tribe.” See 25 U.S.C. § 1303. The district court dismissed the petition because Moore was not subject to “detention.” We affirm.
BACKGROUND
Moore is a member of the Yurok Indian Tribе who resides on the Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation in California. On April 11, 1996, Hoopa Valley tribal officers found Moore’s logging truck loaded with timber and other lоgging equipment near an abandoned homesite on the reservation. An officer later interviewed Moore at his residence. After receiving Miranda warnings, Moore stated that he had hauled several loads of logs off the reservation. Moore was then cited for trespass and for logging without a permit, in violation of 25 C.F.R. § 163.29 and Title 15 of the Hoopa Valley Tribal Code.
After a hearing in which Moore represented himself, the Hoopa Valley Tribal Court entered an order imposing treble damages against Moore in the total amount of $18,508.50. Moore did not satisfy the judgment or file an appeal. Some months later, on application of the Tribe, the court issued an order to enforce the judgment. Moore unsuccessfully appealed the enforcement order to the tribal Court of Appeals.
Moore v. Hoopa Valley Tribe,
Moore then filed this petition for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 25 U.S.C. § 1303, and the district court dismissed for lack of jurisdiction on the ground that Moore was not subject to “detention” within the meaning of that statute. Moоre now appeals.
DISCUSSION
I.
The district court properly dismissed Moore’s petition. The petition was brought pursuant to 25 U.S.C. § 1303, which provides:
The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall be available to any person, in a court of the United States, to test the legality of detention by order of an Indian tribe.
25 U.S.C. § 1303 (emphasis added). As the district court found, Moore was never arrested, imprisoned, or otherwise held by the Tribe. No personal restraint has been imposed upon him as a means of enforcing the money judgment, and he has not been excluded or otherwise restricted in his movements on the Reservation.
Cf Poo-
*791
dry v. Tonawanda Band of Seneca Indians,
At the most, Moore has been subjected to a fine. The Tribe contends, with considerable support in the record, that the judgment was a purely civil one for damages, but that point makes no difference. Even if we assume that the judgment is a fine, it does not amount to detention. We so held in
Edmunds v. Won Bae Chang,
We trust that whatever Congress meant by the word “custody” when it enacted the habеas corpus statute, it did not intend to authorize federal intervention into state judicial proceedings to review a “fine only” sentence.
Id.;
see also Hensley v. Municipal Court,
There is no reason to conclude that the requirement of “detention” set forth in the Indian Civil Rights Act § 1303 is any more lenient than the requirement of “custody” set forth in the other federal habeas stаtutes.
See Poodry,
II.
Moore argues that his right to habeas review of a tribal fine is established by two Ninth Circuit cases,
Settler v. Yakima Tribal Court,
Settler I is on point, but subsequent Supreme Court decisions make clear that, on this issue, it is no longer good law. Because Settler I arose before the effective date of the Indian Civil Rights Act, the petitioner sought habeas review under 28 U.S.C. § 2241. We held in that case that a petitioner who had been fined by a tribal court was sufficiently in “custody” to maintain a petition for habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2241. Our reasoning was simple:
The availability of habeas corpus appears partiсularly appropriate where the petitioner, although not held presently in physical custody, has no other procedural recourse for effective judicial review of the constitutional issues he raises. That is the predicament faced by the appellant here; if habeas corpus is not available, the Yakima Indian Nation can conceivably avoid the imposition of any due process safeguards merely by rendering fines rather than prison sentences.
Settler I,
The first decision is
Santa Clara Pueblo,
It is true that
Santa Clara Pueblo
necessarily left in place the habeas corpus remedy, because Congress expressly provided for it in § 1303. But the Court’s assumption that habeas requires custody is apparent from its statement that “since the respondent in a habeas corpus action is the individual custodian of the prisoner, the provisions of § 1303 can hardly be read as a general waiver of the tribe’s immunity.”
Id.
at 59,
The second decision of the Supreme Court that erodes
Settler I
is
Hensley,
We conclude, therefore, that the ruling of Settler I that a fíne alone constitutes “custody” for purposes of habeas corpus review is no longer the law of this circuit. Edmunds controls, and Moore fails to meеt the “detention” requirement of § 1303. 1
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court dismissing Moore’s habeas corpus petition for lack of jurisdiction is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Our determination that Moore fails to meet the requirement of detention makes it unnecessary for us to address the question whether Moore failed to exhaust tribal court remedies.
