MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING KIOWA TRIBE OF OKLAHOMA’S MOTION TO DISMISS
Pursuant to the Order of Recusal signed by the Honorable Paul Brown on November 17, 1994, before the undersigned is Defendant Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma a/k/а Kiowa Indian Nation’s Motion to Dismiss under Rules 12(b)(1) and/or 12(b)(6), Fed.R.Civ.P., filed on October 25, 1994. Plaintiffs response was timely filed on November 10, 1994. Upon consideratiоn of the motion, response, and attached memoranda of law, the court is of the opinion that the motion should be GRANTED as further explained herein.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs protest is straightforward, and alleges that he was bilked out of $200,000 (and interest) by Defendant Paisley, who held himself out to be the CEO оf Defendant Capital International Bank & Trust, which bank was chartered, governed, and owned by the Kiowa Defendants and reinsured by Defendants BVB аnd United Financial Operation. 1
Defendant Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma (“the Tribe”) has filed a Motion to Dismiss under Rules 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6), Fed.R.Civ.P., as *734 serting that the doctrinе of Tribal Sovereign Immunity divests this court of jurisdiction.
RULE 12(b)(1) MOTION
Plaintiff does not argue with the general proposition that, absent express congressional authorization or tribal whiver, Tribal Sovereign Immunity would prevent this action against the Tribe.
See Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez,
The main basis for jurisdiction in the present case is the extensive commercial activity engaged in by Defendants off the reservation. While it is true that Indian tribes generally enjoy tribal immunity, numerous courts hаve held that such immunity does not extend to cover commercial activities off the reservation.
Opposition at 3 (emphasis in original). Three cases are cited in support of the above excerpt.
Two of the three cases are readily distinguishable in that they did not involve suits against the tribe itself.
See Dixon v. Picopa Constr. Co.,
Moreover, the reasoning of the Padilla court has been severely criticized by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals:
If there were error in the Padilla court’s analysis, it was in failing to recognizе that the scope of tribal immunity in the courts of New Mexico was not wholly a question of New Mexico law. As the Padilla court itself noted, “[ajbsent federal authorization, tribal immunity is privileged from diminution by the states.” Thus, the court should have looked at the scope of tribal immunity under federal lаw, rather than the extent of comity afforded under state law.
In re Greene,
The court’s research has led it to the conclusion that the
Padilla
approach is generally rejected outside of the courts of that state.
See, e.g., American Indian Agriсultural Credit Consortium, Inc. v. Standing Rock Sioux Tribe,
The few Fifth Circuit opinions on this subject are similarly unhelpful to Plaintiffs argument. The most pertinent case,
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Citizens National Bank of West Hollywood,
The fact that the Seminole Tribe was engaged in an enterprise private or commercial in character, rather than governmental, is not material. It is in such enterрrises and transactions that the Indian tribes and the Indians need protection. The history of intercourse between the Indian tribes and Indians with whites dеmonstrates such need.... To construe the immunity to suit as not applying to suits on liabilities arising out of private transactions would defeat the vеry purpose of Congress in not relaxing the immunity, namely, the protection of the interests and property of the tribes and the individual Indians.
Id. at 521-22. Though such paternalistic justification may seem inappropriate in this *735 day, this court has discovered no subsequent retreat by the Fifth Circuit regаrding the court’s conclusion.
This court finally notes that, as
dicta,
Justice Stevens’ comments in his individual concurrence in
Oklahoma Tax Comm’n v. Citizen Band Potawatomi Indian Tribe of Oklahoma,
Plaintiff has provided no evidence of аn express waiver of sovereign immunity by the Tribe.
Cf. Weeks Construction, Inc. v. Oglala Sioux Housing Authority,
The court is aware thаt dismissal of the Tribe may leave Plaintiff — guilty perhaps of nothing more than unfamiliarity with a legal principle of tortured pedigree — with substantially-impaired prospects of recovering the $200,000 at issue. Nevertheless, as stated by the Eighth Circuit:
If injustice has been worked in this ease, it is not the rigid еxpress waiver standard that bears the blame, but the doctrine of sovereign immunity itself. But it is too late in the day, and certainly beyond the
competence of this court, to take issue with a doctrine so well-established. That justice may be done beyond this proceeding— that [the Kiоwa], by raising the shield of sovereign immunity expressly to avoid an obligation it voluntarily assumed and promised to fulfill, may have alienated [other рarties] on which it must rely— these are consequences we do not doubt. Nevertheless^] Santa Clara Pueblo and its lineage compel us to conclude thаt nothing short of an express an unequivocal waiver can defeat the sovereign immunity of an Indian nation.
Standing Rock Sioux Tribe,
CONCLUSION
Presented with no express waiver of sovereign immunity, this court must acquiesce to the Tribe’s protestations. Defendant Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma a/k/a Kiowa Indian Nation’s Motion to Dismiss under Rule 12(b)(1) is GRANTED.
Notes
. Less certain is the extent to which Plaintiff alleges that Defendant Paisley — recently convicted in a U.S. District Court in Pennsylvania for bank fraud — either misled (or, in contrast, was actively conspiring with) the Kiowa Defendants.
. Plaintiff similarly argues without citation that:
Despite the fact that the courts have often rеferred to Indian tribes as "domestic independent nations,” no case has ever held that the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act is inapplicаble to Indian tribes. Furthermore, Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss fails to cite a single case in support of this argument.
Opposition at 4-5. Notwithstanding the fаct that the burden of production on this issue rests with the party asserting jurisdiction,
Bradley v. U.S. Dep't of Commerce,
