Appellants Gilbert and Bernadine McClendon and Norman and Connie McDa-nel (collectively, “McClendon”) brought an action in U.S. District Court against the United States and the Colorado River Indian Tribal Council (“Tribe”), alleging that the Tribe breached the terms of a lease agreement. The district court dismissed the action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. We affirm.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
The lease agreement at issue in this case has its origins in a dispute over ownership of certain lands claimed on behalf of the Tribe. In 1972, the United States filed a complaint for ejectment against McClen-don’s predecessors-in-interest, Robert and Laura Clark. In that suit, the U.S. sought to establish permanent title, in trust for the Tribe, to certain lands in Riverside County, California. The Tribe and McClendon were not parties to the initial suit.
In 1974, the parties agreed to settle the case. According to McClendon, the settlement consisted of two key provisions: (1) the U.S. and the Tribe would obtain undisputed title to the lands; and (2) the Clarks would obtain a long-term lease of the lands at a favorable rental rate. McClendon claims that the lease permitted partial assignment of the Clarks’ leasehold interest, as well as commercial/recreational use of portions of the property.
Having been informed of the agreement to settle, the district court dismissed the action with prejudice by order dated October 25, 1974. However, the parties took over two years to formulate the written settlement agreement. On April 13, 1977, a “Stipulation for Entry of Judgment and Filing of Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law” was filed with the court. The stipulation included proposed findings of
In 1984, the Clarks assigned a portion of their leasehold interest to McClendon. Following this assignment, McClendon signed a business lease with the Tribe governing this property. The terms of this 1984 lease were basically identical to the terms of the earlier Clark lease. McClendon then applied for, and received from the Tribe, various permits to construct a mobile home park. According to McClendon, during the course of construction the Tribe withdrew the previously issued permits and demanded submission of new development plans. McClendon also alleges that during the course of review of the new plans, the Tribe sought to increase the rent fixed by the lease, and to compel McClendon to abandon the mobile home project.
McClendon then brought this action, seeking damages, a declaration that the Tribe’s actions constitute a breach of the lease agreement, and injunctive relief. The district court dismissed the action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction on the basis of tribal sovereign immunity. It rejected McClendon’s argument that sovereign immunity was waived through participation in the stipulated judgment entered into in settlement of the Clark lawsuit. It also noted that the stipulated judgment and accompanying findings contained no express reservation of district court jurisdiction over the lease, and that there is in these documents no reference of any sort to the Clark lease. Finally, the court found that the lease, itself, contains no waiver of sovereign immunity and that, in fact, the Clark lease documents were drafted specifically to avoid such waiver. McClendon filed a timely notice of appeal. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review
de novo
the district court’s conclusion that it lacks subject matter jurisdiction over this action.
Peter Starr Prod. Co. v. Twin Continental Films, Inc.,
II.
JURISDICTION OVER THE TRIBE
A. Tribal Sovereign Immunity
Because they are sovereign entities, Indian tribes are immune from uncon-sented suit in state or federal court.
Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez,
McClendon asserts that the Tribe waived its sovereign immunity by initiating the 1972 suit against the Clarks.
1
Stated another way, McClendon claims that “[i]f the District Court had subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate the rights of the United
Initiation of a lawsuit necessarily establishes consent to the court’s adjudication of the merits of that particular controversy. By initiating the 1972 action, the Tribe accepted the risk that it would be bound by an adverse determination of ownership of the disputed land. However, the “terms of [a sovereign’s] consent to be sued in any court define that court’s jurisdiction to entertain the suit.”
Jicarilla Apache Tribe v. Hodel,
Jicarilla Tribe is instructive in this regard. The Jicarilla Tribe brought suit to cancel certain oil and gas leases on reservation lands awarded by the Department of the Interior. While that suit was pending, Dome Petroleum Corporation brought an independent action seeking to pay adjusted bonuses to preserve its interest in certain of these leases. The district court dismissed Dome’s suit for lack of jurisdiction over the Jicarilla Tribe, and the court of appeals affirmed, noting:
Although the Tribe’s filing of the Jicaril-la litigation may have waived its immunity with regard to Dome’s intervention in that suit, we cannot construe the act of filing that suit as a sufficiently unequivocal expression of waiver in subsequent actions relating to the same leases .... Waiver of immunity in the present action was not one of the terms of the Tribe’s initial suit; it therefore cannot be made a party to this subsequent litigation.
Jicarilla Tribe,
Similarly, we consistently have held that a tribe’s participation in litigation does not constitute consent to counterclaims asserted by the defendants in those actions.
See, e.g., Squaxin Indian Tribe v. Washington,
McClendon argues that the 1972 suit constituted a waiver of immunity against actions to enforce the terms of the lease agreement. McClendon relies particularly upon the rationale of
United States v. Oregon,
Eleven years after initial judgment was entered, the state of Washington applied to the district court for an injunction against tribal fishing of spring chinook. The court granted the injunction and the Tribe appealed, contending, inter alia, that Washington’s suit was barred by sovereign immunity. This court rejected that argument, affirming the district court.
First, we noted that the initial action was analogous to an action in rem, 3 with the fishery constructively in possession of the court. We stated that “[b]y seeking equity, this Tribe assumed the risk that any equitable judgment secured could be modified if warranted by changed circumstances.” Id. at 1015. We then concluded:
Here, Washington alleged that the very resource sought to be protected, the ana-dromous fishery, was in jeopardy. Since the existence of the salmon was inextricably linked to the res in the court’s constructive custody, the court was empowered to enjoin interference with that custody.
Id. at 1016.
The rationale of
United States v. Oregon
does not extend to this case. The 1972 action merely sought a declaration of land ownership. Unlike the initial action in
United States v. Oregon,
no ongoing equitable remedy was necessary; there was no
res
over which the district court had to maintain control in order to do equity.
4
By initiating the 1972 action, the Tribe merely consented to the court’s jurisdiction to decide ownership of the land in question. The initiation of the suit, in itself, does not manifest broad consent to suit over collateral issues arising out of the settlement of the litigation, such as interpretation or enforcement of the lease agreement.
See Jicarilla Tribe,
McClendon argues that allowing the Tribe to sue without exposing itself to suit for subsequent related matters is unfair. However, as the Supreme Court has noted, “[t]he perceived inequity of permitting the Tribe to recover from a non-Indian for civil wrongs in instances where a non-Indian allegedly may not recover against the Tribe simply must be accepted in view of the overriding federal and tribal interests in these circumstances.”
Three Affiliated Tribes v. Wold Eng’g,
Although we hold that initiation of the 1972 Clark litigation does not, in itself, constitute waiver of sovereign immunity with respect to this action, our inquiry does not end there. We must also determine whether the Tribe consented to this suit in the settlement documents filed with the district court, the Clark lease, or the McClendon lease. We conclude that nothing in any of these documents manifests the Tribe’s consent to suit over disputes involving interpretation of the lease provisions.
Nothing in the settlement documents presented to the district court indicates an intent to waive sovereign immunity with respect to any further disputes arising between the Tribe and the Clarks or their successors-in-interest. Moreover, the leases themselves contain no provision governing sovereign immunity or consent to suit. Thus, the second rationale for finding waiver of sovereign immunity in
United States v. Oregon,
Not only are the relevant documents in this case silent with respect to the Tribe's consent to suit, but the Tribe presented evidence to the district court indicating that certain language in an early draft of the Clark lease which could possibly have been read as a waiver of sovereign immunity was deleted from the lease. After the Tribe’s attorneys discovered this language, it was removed, and the redrafted language was incorporated into the lease executed by the Clarks and the Tribe. Thus, as the district court noted, the possibility of waiver of sovereign immunity was expressly contemplated, and rejected, by the Tribe. There was no consent to suit over the terms of the Clark lease, or the later McClendon lease.
B. Inherent Jurisdiction Analysis Does Not Change the Result
McClendon argues vigorously that the district court has inherent jurisdiction to enforce the terms of the lease because these terms were an integral part of the agreement settling the original litigation brought before the district court.
See Aro Corp. v. Allied Witan Co.,
III.
JURISDICTION OVER THE UNITED STATES
McClendon sued the United States as well as the Tribe. Although we have determined that there is no jurisdiction over the Tribe, we must decide whether this action can be maintained against the United States alone. We hold that it cannot. Because the Tribe is a party to. the lease agreement sought to be enforced, it is an indispensable party under Fed.R.Civ.P. 19.
See Lomayaktewa v. Hathaway,
IV.
CONCLUSION
The initiation of the 1972 suit against the Clarks does not, in itself, constitute waiver of the Tribe’s sovereign immunity against this action to enforce the terms of a lease, even though the lease was entered into as a result of an agreement to settle the earlier suit. The Tribe did not manifest unequivocal consent to suit in the settlement documents, the Clark lease, or the McClendon lease. Thus, McClendon’s action against the Tribe is barred by sovereign immunity. The Tribe is an indispensable party under Rule 19, so the action cannot be maintained solely against the United States. The district court’s judgment is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Tribe contends that this argument has no merit because it was not formally a party to the 1972 action, which was brought by the United States in its capacity as trustee. According to the Tribe, it cannot be deemed to have waived its immunity by virtue of the initiation of a suit to which it was not even a party. Citing
Heckman v. United States,
. We also held in
United States v. Oregon
that the Tribe explicitly agreed to submit disputes
. “The original action, by seeking a declaration of treaty fishing rights, sought to apportion the Columbia River anadromous fishery among competing sovereigns. It thus has been recognized as analogous to an equitable action
in rem." United States v. Oregon,
. Characterizing the Clarks’ leasehold interest as part of the bundle of rights in the disputed land, McClendon argues that the in rem analogy is appropriate here. We conclude that this analogy cannot be stretched so far. The nature of the dispute in United States v. Oregon was such that the district court would be apportioning a scarce resource. This was foreseeable when the Tribe intervened in the original suit. Id. at 1015 (rejecting the Tribe’s argument that by entering the suit, it was entitled either to an injunction or no relief at all). The 1972 Clark suit merely required the district court to decide the legal question whether the Tribes or the Clarks owned the property. Thus, the Clark case was precisely the type of traditional private litigation that the United States v. Oregon case was not. The fact that the Tribe and McClendon ultimately entered into a settlement compromise that divided the property interests in a more complex fashion does not change the nature of the 1972 suit.
. The settlement agreement in that case contained a clause stating that
[i]n the event that significant management problems arise from this agreement that cannot be resolved by mutual agreement, the parties agree to submit the issues to federal court for determination. In any event, the Court shall retain jurisdiction over the case of U.S. v. Oregon, Civil 68-513 (D.C.Or.).
Id. at 1016 (emphasis added). As we noted earlier, such a provision could have been negotiated in this case, but it was not.
. McClendon acknowledges that the circuits are split over whether such inherent jurisdiction exists. The Fourth Circuit has held that it does not.
See Fairfax Countywide Citizens Ass’n v. County of Fairfax,
