Lead Opinion
Opinion by Judge FLETCHER; Dissent by Judge RYMER.
This case concerns the jurisdiction of a tribal court over claims against state -officials for tribal common law torts and federal and tribal civil rights violations. The events giving rise to these claims took place on Indian-owned land on a reservation.
The State of Nevada and named state officials appeal the decision of the district court denying them summary judgment and granting summary judgment to Floyd Hicks and the tribal court. The district court held that the tribal court had jurisdiction to hear the suit brought by Hicks against state officials for tribal common law torts and federal and tribal civil rights violations occurring on Indian-owned land. It also held that the tribal court action against the state officials in their individual capacities was not barred by sovereign immunity. It declined to review on the merits the officials’ claims of qualified immunity from suit because they had not been exhausted before the tribal court. We affirm the district court’s holding that the tribal court has jurisdiction, and we affirm its holding that the issue of qualified immunity was not exhausted before the tribal court and therefore was not properly before the district court or this court. We conclude the district court similarly should have refrained from addressing sovereign immunity, leaving the issue to the tribal court in the first instance.
I.
Floyd Hicks is an enrolled member of the Fallon Paiute-Shoshone Tribe (“Tribe”), a federally recognized Indian tribe with over 900 members. The Tribe’s reservation in western Nevada consists of about 8,000 acres of land held by the federal government in trust for the Tribe and for individual tribal members. Hicks lives within the Tribe’s reservation on allotted land held by the government in trust for him.
On August 30, 1990, Michael Spencer, a Nevada state game warden, obtained a search warrant from the New River Justice Court to search Hicks’ property for evidence of the possession or killing of a big horn sheep of the California subspecies, a gross misdemeanor under Nev.Rev. Stat. § 501.376. The warrant provided, however, that the state court lacked jurisdiction over the Fallon Paiute-Shoshone reservation and that the warrant was valid only if approved by the Fallon Tribal Court.
That same day, a tribal judge approved the warrant but limited the search to the “exterior premises and any vehicles thereon.” Spencer, accompanied by a tribal
Hicks filed two complaints in Fallon Tribal Court for money damages alleging damages resulting from the actions of the state and tribal officials on August 30, 1990, and June 12, 1991. The complaints named William Molini, Director of the Nevada Department of Wildlife, Michael Spencer, Rick [sic] Ellington, and Bill Fitz-morris as defendants in both their official and individual capacities, and alleged a variety of claims under the Indian Civil Rights Act (“ICRA”), 25 U.S.C. § 1302, as well as tort claims under tribal common law. By amended complaint, Hicks claimed violation of unspecified federal and tribal civil rights.
The tribal court held, in a written order, that it had jurisdiction over the actions. Following a challenge to Hicks’ service of process by publication, the tribal court quashed the service as ineffective. Fol-pellate Court reversed and remanded for trial, upholding both the service of process and the jurisdiction of the tribal court. Two weeks later, the State of Nevada and the named state officials (hereinafter “Nevada”) filed the present action in federal district court against Hicks, the tribal court and tribal judge (hereinafter “tribal appellees”), for declaratory relief regarding the issue of tribal court jurisdiction.
Before the district court, the parties presented cross-motions for summary judgment on whether the tribal court had jurisdiction over the claims against the state officials. Meanwhile, the tribal court granted Hicks’ motions voluntarily to dismiss the claims against the state officials in their official capacity. The district court then held that the dismissal mooted the issue of tribal court jurisdiction over the state officials in their official capacities.
After oral argument and supplemental briefing, the district court issued an order denying Nevada’s motion for summary judgment and granting the motion for summary judgment made by Hicks and the tribal appellees. In its order, the district court held that the Intertribal Court of Appeals did not err in holding that service of process was in accordance with tribal law.
II.
As a threshold issue, the district court correctly held that it had federal question jurisdiction to determine whether the tribal court had jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C. § 1331; see also National Farmers Union Ins. Cos. v. Crow Tribe of Indians,
In determining the tribal court’s jurisdiction, the district court first noted that no federal statutes provide guidance on the extent of tribal court jurisdiction over civil matters. The district court then adopted as basic guiding principles the distinction between civil and criminal jurisdiction, and the recognition by the courts of “a strong geographic component” distinguishing incidents occurring on Indian-owned land from those on non-Indian owned land. The district court also acknowledged the “general proposition” of Montana v. United States,
The district court suggested instead that the applicable rule on the facts before it was that of Williams v. Lee: where the underlying incidents occur on Indian-owned land, tribal court jurisdiction is presumed unless affirmatively limited by an act of Congress. See Williams v. Lee,
Subsequent to the district court’s decision, the Supreme Court decided Strate v. A-1 Contractors,
We now affirm the district court’s determination that the tribal court has jurisdiction over the actions underlying the instant case. We also affirm the district court’s rulings on the issues of sovereign immunity and qualified immunity.
A.
The Court in Strate held that a tribal court lacked jurisdiction to hear civil tort claims against a non-Indian brought by the widow of a tribal member, and her five adult tribal member children, for injuries occurring on a public highway maintained by the State of North Dakota under a federally granted right-of-way over tribal reservation land.
The Court emphasized in Strate that the decision in Montana related to “reservation land acquired in fee simple by non-Indian owners.” Id. at 446,
Again in El Paso Natural Gas Co. v. Neztsosie,
Our post-Strate opinions are consistent with evolving Supreme Court precedent that stresses membership and rights of land ownership as sources of tribal power. See, e.g., William C. Canby, Jr., American Indian Law 72-78,128-41 (1998);
In County of Lewis v. Allen,
We saw the Agreement as “a significant alienation of tribal sovereignty and control.” Id. Our analogizing to Strate was explicit: “Like the tribes in Strate, which consented to and received payment for a highway easement, the Nez Perce Tribe ceded its ‘gatekeeping right,’ by consenting to and receiving the benefits of state law enforcement protection.” Id. We
Finally, in State of Montana v. King,
Unlike Montana, Strate, Wilson, County of Lewis, and King, the incidents underlying the instant case occurred on Indian-owned, Indian-controlled land, over which the Tribe retained its right to exclude non-members.
In this case, as part of his investigation into a suspected violation of a state game law, Warden Spencer filed an affidavit of probable cause in the New River Township, County of Churchill on August 30, 1990. The state court issued a warrant that stated:
YOU ARE HEREBY ORDERED, SUBJECT TO OBTAINING APPROVAL FROM THE FALLON TRIBAL COURT IN AND FOR THE FALLON PAIUTE-SHOSHONE TRIBES, to search the said premises....
This Court has no jurisdiction on the Fallon Paiute-Shoshone Indian Reservation and, before any search is conducted in furtherance hereof, an approval authorizing same must be obtained from the Fallon Tribal Court in and for the Fallon Paiute-Shoshone Tribes of the Fallon, Churchill County, Nevada.
The same application and approval procedure was followed on June 12, 1991. On both occasions, Spencer was accompanied by a tribal police officer when he executed the warrant at Hicks’ residence.
Unlike the Agreement in County of Lewis, the warrant in this case bestows no broad grant of authority upon the State of Nevada. The Tribe retained sovereignty
Each authorization of the execution of the warrants marked an isolated incident wherein the tribal court granted a state official permission to enter the reservation as part of a state investigation into an alleged violation of state law. There was no cession of criminal law jurisdiction, or indeed of any law enforcement jurisdiction at all. Unlike in County of Lewis, no benefit was conferred on the Tribe. Law enforcement on the reservation remained in the hands of the Tribe. The tribal court merely granted a state official’s request to come onto the reservation for a limited, clearly delineated purpose under circumstances where all inherent jurisdictional authority lay with the Tribe. We emphasize that the tribal court modified the original search warrant by restricting the authorized search to “exterior premises only and to vehicles thereon,” demonstrating that the Tribe retained authority to direct the state officers’ activities on tribal land.
This case then, involves no “significant alienation of tribal sovereignty and control” over law enforcement or over Indian-owned land within the reservation. See County of Lewis,
We find that the Montana presumption against tribal court jurisdiction does not apply in this case. Instead, in line with Strate and County of Lewis, we look to the tribe’s power to exclude state officers from the land at issue. The Tribe’s unfettered power to exclude state officers from its land implies its authority to regulate the behavior of non-members on that land. See Strate,
Once a tribe’s authority to regulate activities on its land has been demonstrated, civil jurisdiction regarding those activities follows. The Supreme Court made clear in Strate that “where the tribes possess authority to regulate the activities of nonmembers, ‘[c]ivil jurisdiction over [disputes arising out of] such activities presumptively lies' in the tribal courts.’” Strate,
In this case, the Tribe clearly had the power to exclude state officers from its land and to regulate the behavior of state officials present on its land pursuant to limited tribal permission. There was no general cession of jurisdiction by the Tribe; instead there was a controlled, limited permission for state officials to come onto tribal land and comport themselves within to the parameters of that permission. Disputes regarding the officials’ behavior under this permission are within the jurisdiction of the Tribe.
Because the tribal court has already ruled on the issue of tribal court jurisdiction, Nevada exhausted its tribal remedies on that issue. The question of tribal court jurisdiction is therefore ripe for federal review. We conclude that the tribal court has subject matter jurisdiction over the claims brought by Hicks against the state officials.
B.
Nevada suggests that the actions of the state officials in this case were undertaken as part of their official duties and that therefore the officials should be shielded from liability under a derivative of the doctrine of sovereign immunity. This argument concerns an affirmative defense and is not properly before the court, since the state did not exhaust its remedies regarding the sovereign immunity defense before the tribal court.
Nevada also argues that the district court erred in holding that it was precluded by considerations of comity from ruling on the state officials’ claims of qualified immunity. Nevada contends that the state officials sued by Hicks were entitled to summary judgment on the issue of tribal court jurisdiction because Hicks failed to overcome their claims of qualified immunity from suit. However, Nevada does not argue that its claim fits into any of the exceptions to the exhaustion requirement. Suggesting that no case has yet determined the existence or nature of the qualified immunity available to state officials in tribal court, Nevada instead invites this court to define the applicable test. We decline to do so.
The Supreme Court in Strate reaffirmed its earlier decisions requiring, as a matter of comity and with very narrow exceptions,
The district court correctly applied this exhaustion requirement to the issue of qualified immunity. See, e.g., Stock West Corp. v. Taylor,
Alternatively, Nevada argues that the issue of qualified immunity was in fact exhausted before the tribal court. To this end, Nevada quotes the ruling by the Inter-Tribal Appellate Court affirming the decision of the tribal judge that “the doctrine of ... qualified immunity does not prevent the Fallon Tribal Court from exerting personal jurisdiction over the State Defendants,” and argues that this constitutes a decision on the merits and thus satisfies the exhaustion requirement. However, this argument likewise disregards the fact that qualified immunity is an affirmative defense, and not a jurisdictional bar. A holding by the tribal court that it has jurisdiction cannot be construed as a ruling on the merits. The district court did not err in finding that the exhaustion requirement had not been satisfied.
Nevada also argues that, even if the issue of qualified immunity was not exhausted in the tribal courts, it should be treated as having been since Hicks had ample opportunity to respond to the claims of qualified immunity. Nevada suggests that if the tribal court record is bereft of supportive evidence for Hicks’ effort to overcome the state officials’ individual immunity, it is his own fault.
However, we have never required a party to anticipate another party’s qualified immunity defense before the question of subject matter jurisdiction had been decided. See, e.g., McDonald v. United States,
Lastly, Nevada argues that Hicks failed to state a claim against William Mol-ini, Director of the Nevada Department of Wildlife, because Molini was not alleged to have participated personally in the acts of the game wardens in obtaining and executing the search warrants and seizing Hicks’ property.
The district court noted that “[t]he voluntary dismissal of the official capacity claims by the tribal court may well have made personal and subject matter jurisdiction over Molini ... inappropriate.” However, since “[t]his issue was never before the tribal court because when the motion to quash rulings were made, claims against the state defendants in their official capacities had not yet been voluntarily dismissed,” the district court declined to rule on whether a claim had been stated against Molini, “leaving this unexhausted issue to the tribal court.” The analysis of the exhaustion requirement set out above applies with equal force here. The district court did not err.
III.
The tribal common law torts and federal and tribal civil rights violations underlying this case occurred on Indian-owned land, the allotment on the Fallon Paiute-Shoshone Reservation held in trust by the federal government for Floyd Hicks. The tribal court has civil jurisdiction in this
Nevada’s claims of sovereign and qualified immunity on behalf of the state officials and of Hicks’ failure to state a claim against William Molini have not been exhausted in tribal court. Although exhaustion is not a jurisdictional prerequisite, it is required as a matter of comity. Strate,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The district court determined that "the parties have proceeded as if the federal civil rights claim alleged is a § 1983 claim for a fourth amendment violation,” and assumed for the purposes of the motions before it that a § 1983 claim was alleged. The district court also assumed that the tribal civil rights claims were alleged under ICRA.
. The Tribe waived the sovereign immunity of the Fallon Tribal Court and of the tribal judge, Judge Van Walraven, for the limited purpose of defending against Nevada's claims in federal court. Judge Van Walraven issued orders staying each of Hicks' actions pending final resolution of the issue of tribal jurisdiction in federal court.
. Nevada asserts before this court that it does not appeal this issue.
. Montana v. United States involved tribal regulation of hunting and fishing by non-Indians in a river running through the reservation.
In so ruling, the Court articulated a "general proposition” that, on non-Indian owned fee lands, "the inherent sovereign powers of an Indian tribe do not extend to the activities of nonmembers of the tribe,” with two exceptions: (1) "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 dealings, contracts, leases or other arrangements"; and (2) “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 and welfare of the tribe.” Id. at 565-66,
. The first exception, the Court explained, did not apply, despite the fact that A-1 Contractors had a "consensual relationship” with the Tribe through subcontract on the reservation, because the driver of the car was not a party to the subcontract and unaffiliated with the Tribe. Id. at 457,
. In her dissent, Judge Rymer relies on Judge Canby’s discussion of Yellowstone County v. Pease,
. It is undisputed that Hicks' residence lies within the Reservation on an allotment held in trust for him by the federal government. Allotments are former tribally held lands that were divided by order of Congress in 1887 into small farm-sized tracts to be held by individuals. See Canby, at 270 (1988). For jurisdictional purposes, allotments are considered "Indian country." See 18 U.S.C. § 1151; see also Oklahoma Tax Comm'n v. Sac and Fox Nation,
. In fact, the tribal court amended the state court’s warrant of August 30, 1990, and restricted its scope “to exterior premises only and to vehicles thereon.... ”
. Though all of the land at issue in Brendale was non-Indian fee land, some of the land was within the “closed” portion of the reservation to which the tribe would limit access. Three justices would have found the tribe had inherent authority to zone all reservation land. Four justices would have found no authority under Montana to zone non-Indian fee land whether or not the tribe controlled access to the land. Justices Stevens and O’Connor, the deciding votes, held the zoning power of the tribe depends on its ability to control access to the land.
. The Supreme Court denied certiorari in Ñamen over the dissent of Justices Rehnquist and White, who hinted that they believed the tribes had no regulatory authority over nonmembers even when acting on Indian land. See
. We note that attempting to enforce the state's criminal laws against a tribal member on the Reservation directly implicates the sovereignty of the Tribe. See Arizona ex rel. Merrill v. Turtle,
. Sovereign immunity has been treated by this court as an affirmative defense, “whatever its jurisdictional attributes.” ITSI TV Productions, Inc. v. Agricultural Associations,
. The tribal court’s ruling cited here was issued on May 5, 1993. The tribal court granted the plaintiff's motion to dismiss the State of Nevada and all state defendants named in their official capacity on October 10, 1995.
. For example, the Court explained that "[w]e do not suggest that exhaustion would be required where an assertion of tribal jurisdiction 'is motivated by a desire to harass or is conducted in bad faith' or where the action is patently violative of express jurisdictional prohibitions, or where exhaustion would be futile because of the lack of opportunity to challenge the court’s jurisdiction.” National Farmers Union Ins. Cos. v. Crow Tribe of Indians,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I part company on subject matter jurisdiction, because I board the train from a different station. As I see it, we have to start with Yellowstone County v. Pease,
Along with Strate v. A-1 Contractors,
Pease rejects the argument Hicks makes here, that Montana only imposes restrictions on a tribe’s jurisdiction over fee lands owned by or aligned with non-Indians. In Pease we held that a tribal court lacked jurisdiction to entertain a civil action brought by a tribe member against Yellowstone County seeking to enjoin the County’s imposition of state property taxes on his (Indian-owned) reservation property.
Strate further bolsters this view. Strate called Montana “the pathmarking case concerning tribal civil authority over nonmembers,” and reiterated that Montana “establishes that, absent express authorization by federal statute or treaty, tribal jurisdiction over the conduct of nonmembers exists only in limited circumstances.”
County of Lewis v. Allen,
In Hicks’s action, Spencer, Ellington and Fitzmorris had obtained Fallon Tribal Court permission to execute the search warrant of Hicks’s residence (Spencer receiving permission twice), and thus they had a right to be on the reservation that was no less absolute than Deputy Myers’s right in Allen and the non-member defendants’ in Strate. The fact that the Fallon Pauite-Shoshone Tribe granted permission to Nevada law enforcement personnel to come onto the reservation on a case-by-case basis instead of in a blanket agreement does not materially change the analysis. Just as the Nez Perce formally consented to Deputy Myers’s presence on their reservation through a prior agreement establishing concurrent criminal jurisdiction within the reservation, see Allen,
So, the Fallon Tribal Court’s consent to execution of the Nevada search warrants “aligned” Hicks’s property, albeit temporarily, with the state of Nevada. The Tribe had surrendered its right to exclude Spencer, Ellington and Fitzmorris (at least for the time being), giving them the unqualified right to be on Hicks’s property. This case is thus indistinguishable from Allen in all material respects. Therefore, I would apply Montana and Allen and hold that Spencer, Ellington and Fitzmor-ris’s conduct did not imperil the tribe’s power to control its internal affairs, and no applicable exception exists. Spencer only sought to execute the search warrants after obtaining the tribe’s consent and assistance.
Accordingly, I would reverse and hold that the tribal court lacks subject matter
. For this reason I do not reach the immunity issues.
