Plaintiffs in this case seek enforcement of several preliminary injunction orders issued by a court of the Navajo Nation. Although the decision to enforce a non-final tribal court judgment is a matter of discretion, federal courts will ordinarily err on the side of enforcement of such judgments in the name of comity. We will not enforce a tribal court judgment, however, when the tribal court lacked subject matter jurisdiction. In the realm of tribal court jurisdiction, the regulatory authority of the tribe is often the issue which looms largest, and this case is no exception. Among other things, these appeals require us to examine the regulatory authority of the Navajo Nation over the activities of a nonmember of the tribe when the regulated entity is another independent sovereign acting in its governmental capacity.
Plaintiffs-Appellants Donna Singer, Fred Riggs, and Alison Dickson (collectively “Plaintiffs”) appeal the federal district court’s refusal to enforce three preliminary injunction orders issued by a Navajo district court against San Juan County, San Juan Health Services District (“SJHSD”), and numerous employees of those entities (collectively “Defendants”). Although the district court’s judgment was ultimately in their favor, SJHSD and certain of its employees involved in the litigation also cross-appeal from the district court’s judgment that the Navajo Nation possessed civil jurisdiction over several of the claims asserted against SJHSD, Roger Atcitty, and Reid Wood. In its opinion below, the district court explained that it would not enforce the preliminary injunction orders because, inter alia, the Navajo Nation lacks regulatory authority over many of the Defendants, the preliminary injunction is interlocutory in nature, much of the preliminary injunction is now moot, and Defendants are nearly all entitled to sovereign immunity.
See MacArthur v. San Juan County,
Background
Because Plaintiffs do not appear to challenge the federal district court’s factual recitation, we rely primarily on its version of the facts. Donna Singer, Fred Riggs, and Alison Dickson brought suit against San Juan County, SJHSD, and several employees of those entities in Navajo district court in August 2000. The specific defendants in that case relevant to these appeals were as follows: San Juan County,
SJHSD is a special service district organized pursuant to Utah Code § 17A-2-1304 (1999), and is tasked with providing health care services to the citizens of San Juan County, Utah. At all relevant times, SJHSD operated the Montezuma Creek Health Clinic (“the Clinic”), which is located in San Juan County and within the exterior boundaries of the Navajo Nation. The record indicates that the land on which the Clinic is located is fee land owned by the State of Utah as part of the Navajo Trust Fund. SJHSD relinquished operation of the Clinic as of January 1, 2000, at which time Utah Navajo Health Systems, an entity affiliated with the Navajo tribe, took over operation.
Ms. Singer is the non-Indian spouse of an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation. She lives outside, but near, the Navajo reservation. Ms. Singer was employed as the manager of the Clinic from 1995 until her termination in December 1998. In the Navajo district court, Ms. Singer alleged that although she was an exempt employee, she was required to keep time cards, allegedly in violation of SJHSD policies. She claimed that on November 13, 1998, a mistake was made on her time card but that she promptly provided a written explanation for the error. Shortly thereafter, she was handed a memorandum by Reid Wood, CEO of SJHSD, referring to allegations of time card fraud and informing her that she was being placed on administrative leave. A second memorandum from Mr. Wood accused her of employment-related misconduct—namely that the number of hours worked, as reflected on her time cards, was inflated— and notified her of the scheduling of a pre-diseiplinary hearing. Following a meeting with Ms. Singer on December 4, 1998, Mr. Wood prepared yet another memorandum to her, dated December 7, explaining that due to the inconsistencies in her time cards, she was being terminated. Ms. Singer later filed a complaint with the Office of Navajo Labor Relations (“ONLR”) seeking reinstatement. Eventually, Ms. Singer was rehired at the Clinic after its operation was handed over to Utah Navajo Health Systems.
Mr. Riggs is an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation who resides within the exterior boundaries of the Navajo reservation in New Mexico. SJHSD terminated his employment on November 4, 1998 as part of a reduction in force, but immediately rehired him in a lesser position and at a lesser rate of pay on the condition that he keep time cards. According to Mr. Riggs, he was unaware that on his very first time card he underreported the number of hours of leave taken. As with Ms. Singer, Mr. Wood advised Mr. Riggs in writing that he was accused of time card fraud and placed Mr. Riggs on paid administrative leave. Mr. Riggs likewise had a pre-disei-plinary hearing with Mr. Wood on December 4, 1998, but, unlike Ms. Singer, who was terminated, Mr. Wood placed Mr. Riggs on probation for thirty days. Mr. Riggs alleges, however, that he was kept on probation longer than thirty days. On or about December 15, 1998, Mr. Riggs filed a grievance with SJHSD regarding
Mr. Dickson, the third plaintiff, is an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation residing within the exterior boundaries of the Navajo Reservation in Utah. Mr. Dickson was initially hired by SJHSD in March 1998 as a full-time, temporary office clerk. He applied for full-time, permanent employment in November or December of 1998 but was refused. Mr. Dickson claims that the refusal to make him a permanent employee violated internal SJHSD policies. He also alleges he was denied a hearing on his grievance. In the Navajo district court, Mr. Dickson also complained about racially insensitive and derogatory remarks allegedly made by Mr. Wood. Like Ms. Singer and Mr. Riggs, Mr. Dickson was permanently employed by Utah Navajo Health Systems at the Clinic after its takeover.
In their complaint filed in the Navajo district court, Plaintiffs asserted numerous claims arising primarily out of their employment at the Clinic. Those claims included the following: violation of the right to free speech as protected by the Navajo Nation, the United Nations, and the United States; violation of the right to freedom of assembly as protected by the Navajo Nation, the United Nations, and the United States; violation of the right to due process as protected by the Navajo Nation, the United Nations, and the United States; wrongful hiring; defamation and tortious interference with future contractual relations; theft; violation of the right to equal protection as protected by the Navajo Nation, the United Nations, and the United States; discrimination as part of an ongoing pattern; intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress; violation of fiduciary duties; misfeasance; malfeasance in office; obstruction of justice; misuse of judicial process; defamation per se; and the endangerment of Navajo patients.
On December 28, 1999, after holding at least one evidentiary hearing, the Navajo district court found that Plaintiffs’ claims had a high likelihood of success on the merits and issued a preliminary injunction ordering Defendants to undertake the following actions: reinstate Ms. Singer and Mr. Riggs to their former positions with full back-pay; offer Mr. Dickson full-time employment with full back-pay and benefits; delete and expunge all disciplinary comments regarding the incidents at issue from Plaintiffs’ personnel files; refrain from placing all Physician Assistants on time card requirements; refrain from interfering with clinic operations or moving clinic personnel; pay all attorney’s fees, costs, and expenses related to the litigation; and assist, in any manner necessary, diabetic patients’ return to the Clinic for treatment. The court also prohibited Defendants from eliminating emergency medical technician services within the Navajo Nation or interfering with laboratory or pharmaceutical services to the Clinic.
Following Defendants’ submission of a motion to dissolve/modify the preliminary injunction, the tribal court issued another order on March 1, 2000, which reiterated the conditions of the prior preliminary injunction and also required Defendants to carry out the conditions of the prior injunction by March 3, 2000, to immediately make payment of past due billings of the Clinic, to refi’ain from interfering with any form of patient care being provided at the Clinic, and to immediately cease billing
Shortly thereafter, Plaintiffs filed a motion for a special order, and, in response, the tribal court issued a third order on March 6, 2000. That order required Defendants to take the following additional actions: refrain from alienating any money, property, or assets of any type until the relief granted in the preliminary injunction was satisfied; provide an accounting of all Defendants’ assets to Plaintiffs; list Plaintiffs first in order of priority as secured creditors on Defendants’ files with the County Recorder of San Juan County; and provide Defendants’ 1998 and 1999 tax returns to Plaintiffs. The court further explained that any disobedience of the order would result in the issuance of arrest warrants for Defendants, and it also granted Plaintiffs leave to seek enforcement of the court’s orders in Utah or federal court.
Plaintiffs accepted the tribal court’s invitation to seek enforcement of the orders and filed suit in federal district court on July 25, 2000. They sought both a declaratory judgment and a preliminary injunction enforcing the tribal court’s orders. Less than twro months later, Defendants filed a motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ declaratory judgment claims on grounds of sovereign immunity and Plaintiffs filed a cross-claim for summary judgment. The district court granted Defendants’ motion to dismiss on October 30, 2000, reasoning that Defendants enjoyed sovereign immunity from suit in tribal court and that their sovereign immunity had not been waived vis-vis the Navajo Nation. For the same reason, the district court also denied Plaintiffs’ request for a preliminary injunction and their cross-claim for summary judgment. Plaintiffs appealed from that order.
On appeal, we vacated the district court’s order and remanded for further proceedings.
1
See MacArthur v. San Juan County,
Although deciphering Plaintiffs’ arguments on appeal is an extremely difficult task, 2 they appear to argue that: (1) Defendants may not challenge the propriety of the Navajo district court’s orders because they failed to exhaust their remedies in tribal court; (2) the Navajo district court’s preliminary injunction is entitled to full faith and credit; (3) federal courts lack the authority to question whether the Navajo district court possessed subject matter jurisdiction and must enforce its preliminary injunction orders without independent review; (4) laws enacted, and policies followed, by Congress and the President subsequent to Montana nullified its framework for defining the inherent sovereignty of Indian tribes; and (5) sovereign immunity does not apply to shield Defendants from liability.
Discussion
I. Standard of Review
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same legal standard as below.
Jencks v. Modern Woodmen of Am.,
We also review a district court’s dismissal for failure to state a claim de novo.
Lovell v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
II. Enforcement of the Navajo District Court’s Preliminary Injunction Orders
While Plaintiffs have sought both a declaratory judgment and a preliminary injunction, their primary objective in this litigation is to enforce the Navajo district court’s preliminary injunction orders granting them broad relief. The primary issue on appeal, therefore, is whether there is anything to prevent us from recognizing and enforcing those orders. But before we address that question head-on, there are a number of threshold issues to be resolved.
To begin, Plaintiffs argue that Defendants may not challenge the enforceability of the tribal court orders because they failed to exhaust available tribal court remedies. “The Supreme Court ... has required litigants to exhaust their tribal court remedies before a district court may evaluate the existence of a tribal court’s jurisdiction.”
Burrell v. Armijo,
Next, we must determine the proper mechanism by which we might enforce the Navajo district court’s orders. Plaintiffs assert that the proper mechanism is the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the Constitution,
see
U.S. Const. art. IV, § 1, and the full faith and credit principles found within 28 U.S.C. § 1738. While the Constitution only requires that states grant full faith and credit to the judgments of sister states, § 1738 extends that requirement to the courts of the United States and its territories and possessions.
See
U.S. Const. art. IV, § 1; 28 U.S.C. § 1738. As we noted in our prior decision in this case, the Supreme Court has broadcast mixed signals as to whether the tribes are to be considered territories or possessions of the United States and thus included within the language of § 1738.
See MacArthur I,
Plaintiffs also argue that we have no power to do anything other than enforce the Navajo district court’s orders. In other words, once the tribal court issued its preliminary injunction orders and Plaintiffs arrived at federal court to enforce them, the jurisdiction of the federal courts is limited to enforcement, which is mandatory on our part. This argument misunderstands federal court jurisdiction and the discretion we possess under the doctrine of comity. The question of the regulatory and adjudicatory authority of the tribes—a question bound up in the decision to enforce a tribal court order—is a matter of federal law giving rise to subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331.
4
See Nat’l Farmers Union,
The basic dilemma the doctrine of comity is meant to solve is that “[n]o law has any effect, of its own force, beyond the limits of the sovereignty from which its authority derived.”
Hilton v. Guyot,
Although recognition and enforcement of tribal court judgments as a matter of comity also lies within our discretion, “[t]he importance of tribal courts and the dignity we accord their decisions will weigh in favor of comity.”
Bird v. Glacier Elec. Coop., Inc.,
In this case, we must refrain from enforcing much of the Navajo district court’s orders because that court lacked subject matter jurisdiction (i.e. adjudicatory authority) over nearly all of Defendants’ activities. Additionally, under the unique circumstances of this case, we will exercise our discretion to similarly refuse to enforce the tribal court judgment even as to those claims over which the tribal court arguably had subject matter jurisdiction (those asserted against Mr. Ateitty).
A. Tribal Court Subject Matter Jurisdiction—The Analytical Framework
“Originally the Indian Tribes were separate nations within what is now the United States.”
Williams v. Lee,
Despite the fact that the Navajo Nation retains control over its self-government, “ [i]t is true that hi the exercise of the powers of self-government, as in all other matters, the Navajo Tribe, like all Indian Tribes, remains subject to ultimate federal control.”
Id.
at 327,
In the absence of congressional legislation, however, tribal governments retain regulatory authority over all matters falling within their inherent sovereignty. In
Montana v. United States,
Although
Montana
dealt exclusively with the tribes’ regulatory authority over non-Indians,
see Strate v. A-1 Contractors,
Before conducting this analysis, we must resolve two matters. First, there does not appear to be, and Plaintiffs have not identified any, congressional legislation expressly authorizing the Navajo Nation to exercise regulatory authority over Defendants in this case. Stated slightly differently, Congress has passed no law which permits the Navajo Nation to exercise regulatory authority over nonmember entities or individuals who employ members of the tribe within the confines of the reservation; nor has it passed a broader statute which arguably encompasses nonmember employers. Consequently, any regulatory authority the Navajo Nation might possess
Second, Plaintiffs contend that laws and/or policies enacted by Congress and the Executive Branch subsequent to
Montana
nullified its framework for defining the inherent sovereignty of Indian tribes. This argument is unavailing. Many of the sources on which Plaintiffs rely predate
Montana
and thus cannot serve as the basis for overturning that decision. We have, nonetheless, reviewed each policy, statute, treaty, and contract relied upon by Plaintiffs and can find no indication whatsoever that
Montana
has been altered in any way.
6
Finally, as recently as 2001, the Supreme Court applied the
Montana,
framework in determining whether the Navajo Nation possessed regulatory authority over nonmembers of the tribe,
see Atkinson Trading Co.,
B. Whether Montana’s General Rule Applies
As previously stated,
Montana,
only applies insofar as the tribe in question is seeking to assert regulatory authority over the activities of a nonmember.
See
The notion that
Montana’s
applicability turns, in part, on whether the regulated activity took place on non-Indian land was finally put to rest in
Ricks.
In that case, the Navajo Nation attempted to assert regulatory authority over nonmembers’ activities unquestionably occurring on Indian land.
See Hicks,
Montana’s
presumption against tribal civil jurisdiction over nonmembers applies nearly across the board in this case because, with the exception of Mr. Atcitty, Defendants are all nonmembers of the Navajo Nation.
7
Mr. Atcitty, who was a member of SJHSD’s Board of Trustees, is an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation and resides within the borders of the Navajo reservation. As a result, while it is unclear whether the Navajo Nation possessed civil jurisdiction over Mr. Ateitty’s activities, given that they were undertaken exclusively in his capacity as a state official,
cf. id.
at 362,
C. Application of Montana
The starting point under
Montana,
is, of course, with the general rule “that the inherent sovereign powers of an Indian tribe do not extend to the activities of nonmembers of the tribe.”
1. Ms. Singer
Ms. Singer’s status as a nonmember of the Navajo Nation renders application of the two
Montana,
exceptions exceedingly straightforward in her case. There is no indication, and Plaintiffs do not contend, that any of the Defendants in this case entered into a consensual relationship with the Navajo Nation itself, and accordingly we are only concerned here with consensual relationships between Defendants and the tribe’s members. Because she is a nonmember, however, there is no possibility that Defendants’ actions with respect to Ms. Singer could have resulted in a consensual relationship with a member of the Navajo Nation. Moreover, Defendants’ employment-related activities in regard to another nonmember on non-Indian land in no way affects the Navajo Nation’s right to govern itself. Thus, neither
Montana
exception applies and the Navajo Nation did not possess regulatory authority
2. Mr. Riggs and Mr. Dickson
The fact that Mr. Riggs and Mr. Dickson are enrolled members of the Navajo Nation renders application of the Montana exceptions more complicated than in Ms. Singer’s ease.
a. The Consensual Relationship Exception
Our first task is to determine whether any of the Defendants entered into a consensual relationship with Mr. Riggs or Mr. Dickson “through commercial dealing, contracts, leases, or other arrangements.”
Id.
at 565,
There is no doubt that an employment relationship between two parties is contractual in nature.
See, e.g., Perry v. Woodward,
But not just any consensual employment relationship will do. Rather, Supreme Court precedent clearly limits the regulatory authority of tribes—at least that which is derived solely from their inherent sovereignty—to the reservation’s borders.
See Atkinson Trading Co. v. Shirley,
Applying the foregoing principles to this case, the only Defendant arguably falling within the consensual relationship exception is SJHSD itself. SJHSD entered into contractual employment relationships with Mr. Riggs and Mr. Dickson, and they were employed at the Clinic within the exterior boundaries of the Navajo reservation. Mr. Riggs and Mr. Dickson did not enter into a contractual employment relationship with any other Defendant. While some of the Defendants admittedly played a tangential role in SJHSD’s employment relationships with the two, none of the Defendants, other than SJHSD, entered into the type of consensual relationship with Mr. Riggs or Mr. Dickson sufficient to fall within the exception. In other words, it is self-evident that none of them entered into “commercial dealing, contracts, [or] leases” with either Mr. Riggs or Mr. Dickson. And being one’s coworker or superior standing alone cannot possibly constitute the type of “other arrangements” the Supreme Court had in mind in
Montana.
If those relationships were sufficient, “the exception would swallow the rule.”
Atkinson Trading Co.,
Apart from finding that SJHSD fell within the consensual relationship exception, the district court also held that Reid Wood was subject to the regulatory authority of the Navajo Nation at least insofar as Mr. Riggs’s defamation claim was concerned.
8
See MacArthur II,
Although at first blush it appears that SJHSD’s consensual employment relationships with Mr. Riggs and Mr. Dickson fall within
Montana’s
consensual relationship exception, this case is unique in that the consensual relationship at issue involves a political subdivision of the State of Utah, and it was entered into pursuant to an exercise of the police power on non-Indian land. Relying upon
Hicks,
SJHSD contends its status as a state entity removes it from
Montana’s
first exception. In
Hicks,
Justice Scalia, writing for the majority, stated in a footnote that, “Read in context, an ‘other arrangement’ is clearly another
private consensual
relationship, from which the official actions in this case are
SJHSD’s argument finds strong support in
Hicks.
In her concurrence in that case, Justice O’Connor read the majority opinion as disavowing civil jurisdiction based on non-private consensual relationships. She further expressed reservation that the Court’s disavowment created a per se rule that consensual relationships entered into between state governments and tribes, “such as contracts for services or shared authority over public resources,” could no longer give rise to tribal civil jurisdiction.
See id.
at 393-94,
The [Montana ] Court ... obviously did not have in mind States or state officers acting in their governmental capacity; it was referring to private individuals who voluntarily submitted themselves to tribal regulatory jurisdiction by the arrangements that they (or their employers) entered into. This is confirmed by the fact that all four of the cases in the immediately following citation involved private commercial actors. See Confederated Tribes,447 U.S., at 152 ,100 S.Ct. 2069 (nonmember purchasers of cigarettes from tribal outlet); Williams v. Lee,358 U.S., at 217 ,79 S.Ct. 269 (general store on the Navajo reservation); Morris v. Hitchcock,194 U.S. 384 ,24 S.Ct. 712 ,48 L.Ed. 1030 (1904) (ranchers grazing livestock and horses on Indian lands “under contracts with individual members of said tribes”); Buster v. Wright,135 F. 947 , 950 (8th Cir.1905) (challenge to the “permit tax” charged by a tribe to nonmembers for “the privilege ... of trading within the borders”).
Id.
at 372,
Justice Scalia is not the only one to have observed that the cases relied upon in support of
Montana’s
consensual relationship exception dealt exclusively with private conduct. Three years prior to
Hicks,
the Ninth Circuit observed that all of the cases cited to support
Montana?s
first exception “involve either direct regulation by a tribe of non-Indian activity on the reservation or lawsuits between a private party and the tribe or tribal members arising from an on-reservation transaction or agreement.”
County of Lewis v. Allen,
We too adhere to the distinction between private individuals or entities who voluntarily submit themselves to tribal jurisdiction and “States or state officers acting in their governmental capacity.” The power to exercise regulatory authority over another independent sovereign on that sovereign’s land, even where a consensual relationship is involved, closely resembles the “freedom independently to determine their external relations,” which the tribes necessarily relinquished as a result of their dependent status.
See Wheeler,
In the instant case, the employment relationships at issue involved two members of the Navajo Nation and SJHSD, a political subdivision of the State of Utah. SJHSD is strictly a creature of Utah law,
see
Utah Code Ann. § 17A-2-1304 (1999), and nearly all of its board members were state employees. The employment relationships at issue were entered into exclusively in SJHSD’s governmental capacity, and those relationships were part and parcel of SJHSD’s duty to provide medical services to residents of San Juan County.
See Pueblo Aircraft, Serv., Inc. v. City of Pueblo,
b. The Right to Self-Government Exception
This brings us to
Montana's
second exception. Again, the exception requires that “the conduct of non-Indians on fee lands within [the] reservation ... has some direct effect on the political integrity, the economic security, or the health or welfare of the tribe.”
Montana,
Read in isolation, the Montana rule’s second exception can be misperceived. Key to its proper application, however, is the Court’s preface: “Indian tribes retain their inherent power [to punish tribal offenders,] to determine tribal membership, to regulate domestic relations among members, and to prescribe rules of inheritance for members.... But [a tribe’s inherent power does not reach] beyond what is necessary to protect tribal self-government or to control internal relations.”450 U.S., at 564 ,101 S.Ct. 1245 . Neither regulatory nor adjudicatory authority over the state highway accident at issue is needed to preserve “the right of reservation Indians to make their own laws and be ruled by them.” Williams,358 U.S., at 220 ,79 S.Ct. 269 . The Montana rule, therefore, and not its exceptions, applies to this case.
The proper question in this case, then, is whether regulatory authority over Defendants’ activities, with the exception of those of Mr. Atcitty, is needed to preserve the Navajo Nation’s right to make their owm laws and be governed by them. In regard to the County defendants, the district court accurately noted that the Navajo district court “did not find facts showing conduct on the part of any County defendant that threatened or had some direct effect on the political integrity, the economic security, or the health or welfare of the Navajo Nation.”
MacArthur II,
SJHSD’s activities also do not affect the Navajo Nation’s right to self-government. Despite Plaintiffs’ attempts to make more of it, this case essentially boils down to an employment dispute between SJHSD and three of its former employees, two of whom happen to be enrolled members of the Navajo Nation. While the Navajo Nation undoubtedly has an interest in regulating employment relationships between its members and non-Indian employers on the reservation, that interest is not so substantial in this case as to affect the Nation’s right to make its own laws and be governed by them. This is particularly evident here, when only two members of the Nation were involved and the employment relationships at issue were carried out on non-Indian land. The right at issue in this case is the Navajo Nation’s claimed right to make its own laws and have others be governed by them, not the right to self-government.
We are therefore left with Ms. Lauren Schafer (SJHSD Personnel Director of Nursing), members of SJHSD’s board, and Mr. Wood. Plaintiffs’ only complaint about Ms. Schafer is that she failed to do enough to help them in their conflict with SJHSD and Mr. Wood. Moreover, in its orders, the Navajo district court stated only that Ms. Schafer wrote a letter critical of Ms. Singer and that she testified she had discovered only one piece of evidence as to Ms. Singer’s intent to commit time card fraud. Failing to help others may violate the “golden rule,” but it in no way constitutes an affront to the Navajo Nation’s self-governance; and Ms. Schafer’s actions vis-vis Ms. Singer are irrelevant due to Ms. Singer’s lack of membership in the tribe. Next, because the Navajo district court’s orders make no mention of the individual members of SJHSD’s board and Plaintiffs make no attempt to explain how them activities pose a threat to the tribe’s right to make its own laws, it follows that the individual members of the board fall squarely within
Montana’s
general rule. Finally, as previously detailed, the federal district court held that the Navajo Nation possessed authority over Mr. Wood’s alleged defaming of Mr. Riggs. To be sure, that alleged defamation may have had a negative impact on Mr. Riggs individually, but based on the record before us we fail
In sum, with the arguable exception of Mr. Atcitty, the Navajo Nation did not possess regulatory authority over any of Defendants’ activities. Because there exists no adjudicatory authority in the absence of regulatory authority,
Strate,
D. Discretionary Enforcement With Respect to Mr. Atcitty
Although the Navajo district court arguably possessed regulatory authority over Mr. Atcitty as a member of the Navajo Nation, as previously emphasized, the decision whether to enforce the tribal court orders in regard to Mr. Atcitty lies entirely within our discretion. Under the limited circumstances of this case, we choose not to enforce the tribal court orders in this respect. 11 Several considerations guide our decision.
First, as the district court observed, Utah Navajo Health Systems’s assumption of control over the operations of the Clinic and Plaintiffs’ employment there mooted much, though not all, of the relief afforded in the preliminary injunction orders. Also, while we are not required to refrain from enforcing interlocutory foreign judgments,
see Remington Rand Corp. v. Bus. Sys. Inc.,
Third, despite the fact that Mr. Atcitty’s status as an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation arguably imbued the Navajo district court with civil jurisdiction, the activities for which he was sued have little or nothing to do with his status as an enrolled member of the tribe. Normally the lack of a nexus between tribal membership and the claims at issue will not necessarily pose an impediment to enforcement, but here the lawsuit against Mr. Atcitty stems completely from his status as a government employee of the State of Utah. Thus, the same considerations which lead us to conclude that the tribes do not possess jurisdiction over States qua States on state land lead us to conclude that enforcement against Mr. Atcitty should be refused. Finally, it appears that Mr. Atcitty played an extremely minor role in the incidents at issue. His role was confined to membership on SJHSD’s board, and he is not even mentioned by name in any of the preliminary injunction orders. Thus, it would be inequitable to enforce the Navajo district court’s extremely broad orders against him alone. 12
Notes
. In a separate order, the district court dismissed Plaintiffs' claims against Truck Insurance and R. Dennis Ickes on grounds that the Navajo Nation did not possess regulatory authority over their activities. We affirmed that decision on appeal.
See MacArthur
I,
. We note that Plaintiffs' briefing in this case has in common many of the problems identified with regard to the briefing in appeal OS-4317. Nonetheless, we reach the merits because we are able to sufficiently decipher Plaintiffs’ arguments, and those arguments are non-frivolous enough to warrant full review and response.
. Although the orders at issue did award attorney's fees, back-pay, and other monetary awards, the amount of those awards was never reduced to a sum certain and thus the orders are not final with respect to those awards.
See Harbert
v.
Healthcare Servs. Group,
. In this case, Plaintiffs argue that federal law has not divested the Navajo Nation of its civil jurisdiction over Defendants' activities—in fact, they allege federal law has granted it such jurisdiction and seek a declaratory judgment saying as much. As a result, we agree with the district court's observation that “the action ... is one arising under federal law because it turns on substantial questions of federal law."
MacArthur II,
. Under Utah law, foreign judgments not entitled to full faith and credit may only be enforced under the doctrine of comity.
See Mori v. Mori,
. At oral argument, and in a motion for summary disposition filed since, Plaintiffs primarily relied upon a Bureau of Indian Affairs contract with the Navajo Nation in arguing that the jurisdiction of the Navajo courts has been expanded and Montana no longer controls. We have carefully reviewed the copy of that contract provided by Plaintiffs, see Aplt. App. at 178-92, and find no mention of Montana, the inherent sovereignty of the Navajo Nation, or the jurisdiction of its courts, and thus Plaintiffs' reliance on that contract is misguided.
. Even assuming the rule laid down in
Strate
were still operable,
Montana
would nevertheless apply because Plaintiffs have made no showing that the Navajo Nation could “assert a landowner's right to occupy and exclude” others from the trust land on which the Clinic sits.
See
. Both SJHSD and Mr. Wood have cross-appealed the district court’s judgment holding that the Navajo Nation possessed regulatory authority over each of them.
. When we use the term "non-Indian land," we use it in the sense that the Supreme Court does: The land involved is non-Indian fee land or akin to non-Indi an fee land in that the tribe may not "assert a landowner's right to
. As a result of our limited holding, we need not decide whether Montana's first exception encompasses consensual agreements between tribal members and governmental entities acting in a proprietary, rather than a governmental, capacity. We also express no opinion regarding the ability of the tribes to exercise regulatory authority over States qua States when the regulated activity occurs on Indian land.
. As a result of our refusal to enforce the Navajo district court's orders on other grounds, the portion of Mr. Atcitty’s cross-appeal arguing that the Navajo Nation did not possess regulatory authority over him is moot. Nonetheless, we vacate that portion of the federal district court’s decision issuing a declaratory judgment that the Navajo district court possessed jurisdiction over Mr. Atcitty.
. Because we decide the case on alternative grounds, we need not address the parties' arguments regarding Defendants' sovereign immunity.
