A tribal court’s jurisdiction over nonmembers of the tribe is limited. As a matter of comity, however, federal courts generally decline to entertain challenges to a tribal court’s jurisdiction until the tribal court has had a full opportunity to rule on its own jurisdiction. Finding that no exception to that general rule applies here, the district court held that exhaustion of tribal court remedies is required. On de novo review,
Boozer v. Wilder,
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In June 2002, Plaintiff Valinda Jo Elliott, a non-Indian, was riding in a private vehicle with her employer in the high desert of Arizona, in an area located within the borders of the White Mountain Apache Tribe’s reservation. They got lost and ran out of fuel. Unadvisedly, they split up to search for help. Forest rangers rescued Plaintiff’s employer but could not locale Plaintiff. For three days, she remained lost and without food, water, or proper clothing.
In her wanderings, Plaintiff saw a forest fire in the distance. On the third day, she spotted a news helicopter recording the fire, which had been named the Rodeo fire. In an understandable effort to attract the helicopter occupants’ attention, Plaintiff set a small signal fire.
Fortunately, her idea worked; the helicopter descended and rescued Plaintiff. Unfortunately, her signal fire grew into a substantial forest fire, wrhich was named the Chediski fire. That fire eventually merged with the Rodeo fire and was dubbed, naturally, the Rodeo-Chediski fire. The combined fire burned more than 400,000 acres of land and caused millions of dollars in damage.
The United States Attorney’s Office did not prosecute Plaintiff. 1 The tribe, howev *845 er, brought a civil action against Plaintiff in tribal court, seeking civil penalties and an order of restitution. The tribe brought eight claims against Plaintiff, alleging violations of tribal executive orders, the tribal game and fish code, the tribal natural resource code, and common law negligence and trespass. 2 Plaintiff (the defendant in that action) filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. The tribal trial court denied the motion, holding that it had jurisdiction under the relevant United States Supreme Court cases.
Plaintiff sought interlocutory appellate review of that decision in the tribal appellate court, but the tribal appellate court issued an order denying Plaintiffs request for appellate review. The tribal appellate court held that, under its rules of appellate procedure as promulgated by the tribal legislature, it cannot entertain interlocutory appeals. It therefore dismissed the appeal from a nonfinal order for lack of appellate jurisdiction and returned the case to the tribal trial court for further proceedings.
Plaintiff then brought this action in federal district court. Plaintiff seeks injunc-tive and declaratory relief against Defendants White Mountain Apache Tribe, Honorable John Doe Tribal Judge, and White Mountain Apache Tribal Court, and from conducting any further proceedings in tribal court. The district court held that Plaintiff must exhaust her tribal court remedies and granted Defendants’ motion to dismiss. The district court dismissed the action without prejudice to its refiling after Plaintiff has exhausted her tribal court remedies. Plaintiff timely appeals.
DISCUSSION
A. Appellate Jurisdiction
We have appellate jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 over the district court’s final decision that Plaintiff must exhaust her tribal court remedies before refiling. Defendants argue that the district court’s order and subsequent judgment are not “final” for purposes of § 1291 because those documents state that the action is dismissed “without prejudice.” According to Defendants, the present decision is not “final” because Plaintiff eventually could refile after exhausting her tribal court remedies. We reject Defendants’ hypertechnical reading of § 1291.
The Supreme Court has explained that its
cases long have recognized that whether a ruling is “final” within the meaning of § 1291 is frequently so close a question that decision of that issue either way can be supported with equally forceful arguments, and that it is impossible to devise a formula to resolve all marginal cases coming within what might well be called the “twilight zone” of finality. Because of this difficulty this Court has held that the requirement of finality is to be given a “practical rather than a technical construction.” 3
Gillespie v. U.S. Steel Corp.,
We have no trouble concluding that the district court intended that the order be the court’s final act in the matter. In National Distribution Agency, we expressed frustration with divining a court’s intent from ambiguous orders and offered a practical suggestion: “Had the court entered a separate final judgment subsequent to the dismissal order, we would be confident the court intended no further action in the case.” Id. at 434. Here, the district court followed our advice and helpfully entered a final judgment. The second prong of the finality test, which “focus[es] on the court’s intent,” id., is therefore met.
The first prong of the test, which is separate from the district court’s intent, is whether there has been a “full adjudication of the issues.” Id. at 433. Here, there has been a full adjudication of the issue whether Plaintiff must exhaust tribal court remedies. Unless and until Plaintiff exhausts her tribal court remedies, there is nothing further for the district court to do.
Defendants counter that there are more issues before the district court than just exhaustion of tribal court remedies. They correctly point out that, if Plaintiff exhausts her tribal court remedies and returns to district court, there will be other issues on which the district court must rale (i.e., the merits of whether the tribal court has jurisdiction). According to Defendants, those issues remain before the district court now and the order dismissing the action without prejudice is therefore not final.
We reject Defendants’ strained understanding of the issues before the district court. First, those additional issues may eventually come before the district court, but that is far from certain. It cannot be said that the district court will necessarily have to rule on them (for instance, the tribal appellate court could hold that it lacks jurisdiction or the parties could settle their dispute). Second, those issues are plainly not before the district court at the -present time. Having dismissed the action, the district court is powerless to rule on the issues that might eventually come before it if a new action is filed in the future. Third, as discussed above, the Supreme Court has directed that appellate courts give a practical construction to the finality requirement. That guidance undermines Defendants’ technical argument. We therefore turn to the merits of this appeal.
B. Exhaustion of Tribal Court Remedies
“Non-Indians may bring a federal common law cause of action under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 to challenge tribal court jurisdiction.”
Boozer,
Plaintiff acknowledges the doctrine generally but argues that it does not apply for two reasons. First, she argues that she *847 already exhausted her tribal court remedies. In the alternative, she argues that she need not exhaust tribal court remedies because of an exception to the doctrine.
1. Full Exhaustion of Tribal Court Remedies
Plaintiff argues that she exhausted her tribal court remedies because she sought—and received—a ruling by the tribal trial court on jurisdiction and because she sought a ruling by the tribal appellate court. Plaintiff argues that exhaustion is complete notwithstanding the fact that the tribal appellate court has not yet ruled on the merits of the jurisdictional issue because it lacks authority to accept interlocutory appeals.
This issue is controlled by
Iowa Mutual.
The relevant facts were identical: “Although the Blackfeet Tribal Code establishes a Court of Appeals, see ch. 11, § 1, it does not allow interlocutory appeals from jurisdictional rulings. Accordingly, appellate review of the Tribal Court’s jurisdiction can occur only after a decision on the merits.”
[t]he federal policy of promoting tribal self-government encompasses the development of the entire tribal court system, including appellate courts. At a minimum, exhaustion of tribal remedies means that tribal appellate courts must have the opportunity to review the determinations of the lower tribal courts. In this case, the Tribal Court has made an initial determination that it has jurisdiction over the insurance dispute, but Iowa Mutual has not yet obtained appellate review, as provided by the Tribal Code, ch. 1, § 5. Until appellate review is complete, the Blackfeet Tribal Courts have not had a full opportunity to evaluate the claim and federal courts should not intervene.
Id.
at 16-17,
Plaintiff makes policy arguments as to why the Iowa Mutual rule should be different, but she does not, and cannot, cite a case standing for the proposition that the Iowa Mutual rule has been overruled. 4 We therefore hold that Plaintiff has not exhausted her tribal court remedies.
2. Exceptions to Exhaustion of Tribal Court Remedies
The Supreme Court has outlined four exceptions to the exhaustion rule: (1) when an assertion of tribal court jurisdiction is “motivated by a desire to harass or is conducted in bad faith”; (2) when the tribal court action is “patently violative of express jurisdictional prohibitions”; (3) when “exhaustion would be futile because of the lack of an adequate opportunity to challenge the [tribal] court’s jurisdiction”; and (4) when it is “plain” that tribal court jurisdiction is lacking, so that the exhaustion requirement “would serve no purpose other than delay.”
Nevada v. Hicks,
Plaintiff makes brief arguments concerning the first three exceptions, none of which is persuasive. The district court correctly held that there is no evidence of bad faith or harassment in the record. *848 Plaintiff has failed to identify—and the record does not reveal—any “express jurisdictional prohibition! ]” against tribal court jurisdiction. And, as discussed above, Plaintiff will have an adequate opportunity to challenge the tribal court’s jurisdiction in the tribal appellate court; she simply must wait until trial is complete. Exhaustion therefore is not “futile.”
We focus on the fourth exception: whether it is “plain” that the tribal court lacks jurisdiction. If “jurisdiction is ‘color-able’ or ‘plausible,’ ” then the exception does not apply and exhaustion of tribal court remedies is required.
Atwood,
In their unique relationship with the United States, Indian tribes retain a certain amount of “inherent sovereign power.”
Montana v. United States,
We begin our analysis with
Montana,
“the pathmarking case concerning tribal eivil authority over nonmembers.”
Strate v. A-1 Contradors,
To be sure, Indian tribes retain inherent sovereign power to exercise some forms of civil jurisdiction over non-Indians on their reservations, even on non-Indian fee lands. A tribe may regulate, through taxation, licensing, or other means, the activities of nonmembers who enter consensual relationships with the tribe or its members, through commercial dealing, contracts, leases, or other arrangements. A tribe may also retain inherent power to exercise civil authority over the conduct of non-Indians on fee lands within its reservation when that conduct threatens or has some direct effect on the political integrity, the economic security, or the health or welfare of the tribe.
Id.
at 565-66,
The Court held that neither exception applied to hunting and fishing regulations concerning fee lands.
Id.
at 566,
The Court of Appeals held that the Tribe may prohibit nonmembers from hunting or fishing on land belonging to the Tribe ... and with this holding we *849 can readily agree. We also agree with the Court of Appeals that if the Tribe permits nonmembers to fish or hunt on such lands, it may condition their entry by charging a fee or establishing bag and creel limits.
Id.
at 557,
Ownership status of the land also played an important role in the Supreme Court’s decision in
Strate.
There, the Court held that tribal courts lack jurisdiction over claims against nonmembers arising out of traffic accidents on a state highway that passes through reservation lands.
Ownership status of the land is not necessarily dispositive. In
Hicks,
the Supreme Court addressed whether a tribe “can regulate state wardens executing a search warrant for evidence of an off-reservation crime.”
In responding to the concurrence’s argument that tribal ownership of the land should have played a larger role in the analysis, the majority stated: “[W]e acknowledge that tribal ownership is a factor in the
Montana,
analysis, and a factor significant enough that it may sometimes be dispositive. We simply do not find it dis-positive in the present case, when weighed against the State’s interest in pursuing off-reservation violations of its laws.”
Id.
at 370,
We have held repeatedly that determining the scope of tribal court jurisdiction is not an easy task.
See, e.g., Smith,
The tribe seeks to enforce its regulations that prohibit, among other things, trespassing onto tribal lands, setting a fire without a permit on tribal lands, and destroying natural resources on tribal lands. The Supreme Court has strongly suggested that a tribe may regulate nonmembers’ conduct on tribal lands to the extent that the tribe can “ ‘assert a landowner’s right to occupy and exclude.’ ”
Hicks,
533 U.S.
*850
at 359,
We reject Plaintiffs argument that the Court’s holding in
Hicks
forecloses tribal court jurisdiction. The Court did hold, in
Hicks,
that tribal courts lacked jurisdiction notwithstanding tribal ownership of the land. But the crux of the Court’s reasoning was that the state’s strong interest in executing its criminal warrants concerning an off-reservation crime outweighed the tribe’s interest in regulating the activities of “state wardens.”
Id.
at 370,
Furthermore, the tribe makes a compelling argument that the regulations at issue are intended to secure the tribe’s political and economic well-being, particularly in light of the result of the alleged violations of those regulations in this very case: the destruction of millions of dollars of the tribe’s natural resources.
See Montana,
CONCLUSION
We are sympathetic to Plaintiff’s concerns about defending her actions in an unfamiliar court system. But, because tribal court jurisdiction is plausible, principles of comity require us to give the tribal *851 courts a full opportunity to determine their own jurisdiction in the first instance.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The United Slates Attorney’s Office did prosecute Leonard Gregg, a part-time forest fire fighter who set the Rodeo fire in an effort: to seek work. He was convicted of arson, sentenced to 120 months of imprisonment, and ordered to pay more than $27 million in restitution.
. For simplicity, we refer to these sources of tribal law collectively as "tribal regulations.”
. A search for a blanket rule among our own cases on whether dismissals without prejudice are "final" leads one into this "twilight zone,” as we have given conclusory and somewhat contradictory statements on the subject.
Compare, e.g., Laub
v.
U.S. Dep't of Interior,
. This court recently held that, if the tribal appellate court has a
discretionary
interlocutory appeals process, that is sufficient for purposes of exhaustion.
See Ford Motor Co. v. Todecheene,
. It is an open question whether a tribe’s adjudicative authority is equal to its regulatory authority.
Hicks,
