OPINION
In these consolidated appeals, Respondents Vincente Anchondo and Tracy Nielsen appeal the district court’s order granting Petitioner Beatrice Miranda’s amended petition for writ of habeas corpus. The Pascua Yaqui Tribal Court convicted Petitioner of eight criminal violations arising from a single criminal transaction. The tribal court sentenced her to two consecutive one-year terms, two consecutive ninety-day terms, and four lesser concurrent terms, for a total term of 910 days’ imprisonment. On habeas review, the district court concluded that the Indian Civil Rights Act, 25 U.S.C. § 1302(7) (2009), 1 prohibited the tribal court from imposing consecutive sentences cumulatively exceeding one year for multiple criminal violations arising from a single criminal transaction. Respectfully, we disagree with the district court and hold that § 1302(7) unambiguously permits tribal courts to impose up to a one-year term of imprisonment for each discrete criminal violation. We reverse.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Petitioner is an enrolled member of the Pascua Yaqui Tribe (the Tribe). On the evening of January 25, 2008, while drunkenly wandering the Pascua Yaqui Indian Reservation, Petitioner stumbled upon M.V., 2 a minor teenager. Apparently be *914 lieving that M.V. was laughing at her, Petitioner drew a knife and initiated a profanity-laden chase scene across the reservation.
M.V. ran home and alerted her sister, Bridget, that a woman was chasing her with a knife. Bridget went outside to investigate, where she observed an agitated Petitioner, yelling and brandishing the knife. Petitioner ignored Bridget’s pleas to leave; instead, she raised the knife and threatened to throw it at the girls. In a last-ditch effort to protect herself and her sister, M.V. took aim with a basketball and launched it at Petitioner, hitting Petitioner squarely in the face.
Petitioner retreated across the street but continued to shout obscenities and threats. She finally left after Bridget called the police, who quickly apprehended Petitioner near the girls’ home.
The Tribe filed a criminal complaint charging Petitioner with eight violations of the Pascua Yaqui Tribal Criminal Code: two counts of endangerment, two counts of threatening and intimidating, two counts of aggravated assault, and two counts of disorderly conduct. Petitioner appeared pro se at trial, and the Pascua Yaqui Tribal Court found her guilty on all eight counts. The tribal court sentenced her to a determinate term of 910 days’ imprisonment as follows: (1) two consecutive 365-day terms on the aggravated assault counts; (2) two consecutive ninety-day terms on the threatening and intimidating counts; (3) two concurrent sixty-day terms on the endangerment counts; and (4) two concurrent thirty-day terms on the disorderly conduct counts. The sentence was reduced by 114 days for time served.
Petitioner appealed her conviction and sentence to the Pascua Yaqui Tribe Court of Appeals, arguing, inter alia, that her 910-day sentence violated the Indian Civil Rights Act (ICRA), 25 U.S.C. § 1302(7). The tribal appellate court rejected Petitioner’s arguments and affirmed her conviction on all counts.
Petitioner subsequently filed an amended petition for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 25 U.S.C. § 1303 and 28 U.S.C. § 2241, again arguing that her sentence violated § 1302(7). The parties cross-moved for summary judgment, and the magistrate judge issued a report and recommendation (R & R) advising the district court to grant Petitioner’s motion for summary judgment, deny Respondents’ cross-motion, and grant Petitioner’s amended petition. The magistrate judge explicitly adopted the reasoning of
Spears v. Red Lake Band of Chippewa Indians,
The magistrate judge ordered Respondents to file written objections to the R & R within ten days, subsequently extended to “no later than noon” on January 11, 2010. Both Respondents ultimately filed objections, but did so over four hours late.
On January 12, 2010, the district court adopted the magistrate judge’s R & R, granted Petitioner’s amended petition, and ordered the tribal court to reduce Petitioner’s sentence to one year and release her from custody. Noting the untimeliness of Respondents’ objections, the district court nevertheless considered them and found them unpersuasive. The district court agreed with the magistrate judge that “the ‘any one offense’ language of ... § 1302(7) [was] properly interpreted to include all tribal code violations committed during a single transaction.”
*915 ANALYSIS
1. Respondents did not waive their right to appeal by filing untimely objections to the magistrate judge’s R&R.
Petitioner argues that Respondents’ untimely objections to the magistrate judge’s R&R waived Respondents’ right to appeal the district court’s adoption of the R&R. We disagree.
Whether an appellant has waived her statutory right to appeal is a matter of law reviewed de novo.
United States v. Gianelli
Here, Respondents objected to the R & R; granted, they were a little late. Even so, the district court addressed Respondents’ objections on their merits, concluding that it was “unpersuaded by the respondents’ objections.” Moreover, Respondents’ arguments on appeal implicate the district court’s legal conclusions regarding the meaning of § 1302(7). They do not challenge the magistrate judge’s factual findings. Unlike the appellant in
Martinez,
Respondents raised their arguments in their opening appellate briefs.
Id.
at 1156. “Thus, [they are] entitled to the ‘ordinary’ presumption that failure to object to the magistrate judge’s report, ‘standing alone,’ does not constitute waiver.”
Robbins,
2. Section 1302(7) unambiguously permits imposition of up to a one-year term of imprisonment for each criminal violation.
Respondents argue that the district court erred in interpreting § 1302(7) to prohibit tribal courts from imposing consecutive sentences cumulatively exceeding one year for multiple criminal violations arising from a single transaction. More specifically, Respondents contend that the statutory language “any one offense” has a plain meaning, and that the district court erred in relying on the statute’s legislative history to manufacture ambiguity in this otherwise clear language. We agree.
We review de novo a district court’s decision to grant a petition for writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241.
United States v. Lemoine,
“The preeminent canon of statutory interpretation requires us to ‘presume that [the] legislature says in a statute what it means and means in a statute
*916
what it says there.’ ”
BedRoc Ltd., LLC v. United States,
“[U]nless otherwise defined, words [of a statute] will be interpreted as taking their ordinary, contemporary, common meaning.”
Perrin v. United States,
Section 1302(7) provides, in relevant part, that an Indian tribe exercising powers of self-government shall “in no event impose for a conviction of any one offense any penalty or punishment greater than imprisonment for a term of one year.” 25 U.S.C. § 1302(7) (emphasis added). The pre-2010 version of the ICRA did not define “offense” as used in § 1302(7). 3 But see 25 U.S.C. § 1302(e) (2011) (defining “offense”). Accordingly, we must determine whether the term had an ordinary, contemporary, common meaning in 1968, when Congress enacted the ICRA.
Contrary to Petitioner’s contention, “offense” had an established meaning in 1968: “A crime or misdemeanor; a breach of the criminal laws.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1232 (4th ed.1968);
accord
Webster’s Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary 586 (1965) (defining “offense” as “an infraction of law; crime”); Webster’s New International Dictionary 1690 (2d ed.1959) (defining “offense” as “[a] breach of moral or social conduct; an infraction of law; a crime; ... any public wrong, whether a crime or misdemeanor”). Contemporary case law illustrates that courts used the term to refer to a violation of a criminal law, in a manner consistent with its established meaning.
See, e.g., United States v. Ewell,
The ordinary meaning of “offense” in 1968 is also consistent with the meaning of that term in the ICRA’s double jeopardy provision.
See
25 U.S.C. § 1302(3). In
Blockburger v. United States,
The contemporary usage of “offense” to uniformly refer to a violation of a criminal law and its similar meaning in the statute’s double jeopardy provision confirm that the phrase “any one offense” in § 1302(7) is not ambiguous. Section 1302(7)’s one-year sentencing cap for “any one offense” means that a tribal court may impose up to a one-year sentence for each violation of a criminal law. As it is undisputed that Petitioner committed multiple criminal violations, the district court erred in concluding that her 910-day sentence violated § 1302(7).
*918 Petitioner provides no principled reason to conclude that “offense” was susceptible of multiple meanings in 1968. First, although Petitioner faults Respondents for “myopically focusfing]” on the term “offense,” Petitioner fails to explain how the prefatory words “any one” affect the interpretation inquiry. “Any one” does not modify “offense” in any salient respect other than to indicate that § 1302(7)’s sentencing cap applies to a single indiscriminate “offense,” however “offense” is interpreted. Cf 25 U.S.C. § 1302(e) (2011) (defining “offense” in statute containing phrase “any 1 offense”).
Second, contrary to Petitioner’s contention,
Bell v. United States,
Third, the lower court cases Petitioner cites do not demonstrate that “offense” was ambiguous in 1968. In fact, each case recognized that the term had an ordinary, contemporary, common meaning — “a breach of law established for the protection of the public,”
Dugan & McNamara, Inc. v. United States,
Finally, although Petitioner criticizes Respondents for citing “decisions in which
courts
have used the term ‘offense’ in a manner broadly consistent with [Respondents’] preferred interpretation,” she does not identify any authority requiring this court to look to cases addressing “the question of how the term ‘offense’ should be construed when used in a
statute
” when interpreting § 1302(7). Rather, the statutory interpretation inquiry’s focus, in the first instance, is whether “offense” had an “ordinary, contemporary, common meaning” in 1968.
Perrin,
CONCLUSION
Because § 1302(7) unambiguously permits tribal courts to impose up to a one-year term of imprisonment for each discrete criminal violation, and because it is undisputed that Petitioner committed multiple criminal violations, we reverse the district court’s decision to grant Petitioner’s amended habeas corpus petition.
REVERSED.
Notes
. Unless otherwise noted, all subsequent references to § 1302 are to the version that was in effect when Petitioner was sentenced. See infra note 3.
. Because the victim is a minor, we refer to her using only her initials.
. In 2010, Congress rewrote § 1302. See Tribal Law and Order Act of 2010, Pub.L. No. 111-211, § 234(a), 124 Stat. 2258, 2279-81. Unlike the former version, the amended statute permits up to a three-year term for "any 1 offense” in certain circumstances. 25 U.S.C. § 1302(a)(7)(C), (b) (2011). It also explicitly defines “offense” to mean "a violation of a criminal law,” id. § 1302(e), and permits consecutive sentences up to a cumulative total of nine years, id. § 1302(a)(7)(D). However, if a tribal court metes out this enhanced punishment in a single "criminal proceeding,” the defendant must receive something akin to the full panoply of procedural rights that would be due a criminal defendant prior to conviction. Id. § 1302(c).
