¶ 1 Petitioner Frankie R. Pales seeks review of an order of the Workers’ Compensation Court which dismissed Pales’s claim for compensation based on lack of jurisdiction.
¶ 2 Pales filed her Form 3 June 5, 2008, in which she sought compensation for an injury occurring April 12, 2008. Employer filed its Form 10 June 12, 2008, in which it denied Pales was covered by the Oklahoma Workers’ Compensation Act and asserted tribal sovereign immunity. Respondent filed a Form 13 Motion to Dismiss the same day.
¶ 3 Hearing on Employer’s Motion to Dismiss was held November 12, 2008, and the trial court entered its Order Dismissing Claim November 19, 2008. In dismissing the claim, the court found: 1) the Cherokee Nation is a federally-recognized tribe; 2) Employer is a wholly-owned entity of the Cherokee Nation; 3) the Cherokee Nation had enacted its own workers’ compensation laws; 4) the Cherokee Nation had not express3y waived its sovereign immunity in workers’ compensation matters; 5) nor had the U.S. Congress waived the Cherokee Nation’s immunity in such cases; and 6) Employer’s workers’ compensation insurance policy was issued pursuant to Cherokee Nation tribal law and not pursuant to the Oklahoma Workers’ Compensation Act, and therefore the estoppel provisions of the Act were not applicable.
¶4 Pales contends the trial court erred in finding Employer was entitled to tribal sovereign immunity and was not es-topped from denying coverage. The existence of subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law and we therefore review the trial court’s order
de novo. Hall v. Cherokee Nation,
¶ 5 The first five of the trial court’s findings were made by stipulation of the parties. The parties stipulated that Employer had not waived its tribal sovereign immunity; nevertheless, Pales notes that in some cases a tribal employer may be subject to the jurisdiction of the Workers’ Compensation Court pursuant to the estoppel provisions of the Oklahoma Workers’ Compensation Act.
1
Wahpepah v. Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma,
¶ 6 Initially, we must determine whether the insurance policy at issue provides for the payment of compensation pursuant to the Oklahoma Workers’ Compensation Act.
Hall, supra,
at ¶ 15. If so, then Pales has the burden of proving three elements to come within the estoppel provisions of the Act: (1) she sustained an injury while Employer maintained a compensation liability policy; (2) Employer made premium payments based on Pales’s salary; and (3) Pales’s injury arose out of and in the course of her employment.
Id.,
citing
Dominic v. Creek Nation, State Ins. Fund,
¶ 8 Even if we were to find an ambiguity and use the reasonable expectation test used in Squirrel, it is clear that the insured’s reasonable expectation of this policy was that it was not issued under the Oklahoma Workers’ Compensation Act specifically to insure the application of the sovereign immunity defense.
119 The parties also stipulated that Pales is not a tribal member. Pales argues that this case should be remanded to the trial court for reconsideration in light of the recent Oklahoma Supreme Court decision in
Cossey v. Cherokee Nation Enterprises, LLC,
¶ 10 On
de novo
review, we find that the policy in this case does not show it was issued to cover Employer under the Oklahoma Workers’ Compensation Act. And, the tribe has not waived its sovereign immunity
Notes
. The Workers’ Compensation Act provides that an employer is estopped from denying coverage for employees for whom the employer has paid workers’ compensation insurance premiums. 85 O.S.2001 § 65.2. That section provides:
§ 65.2. Estoppel of employer and insurance carrier
Every employer and every insurance carrier who schedules any employee as a person employed by the employer for the purpose of paying or collecting insurance premiums on a Workmen's Compensation insurance policy or who pays, receives or collects any premiums upon any insurance policy covering the liability of such employer under the Workmen's Compensation Law by reason of or upon the basis of the employment of any such employee shall be estopped to deny that such employee was employed by the employer in a hazardous employment subject to and covered by the Workmen's Compensation Law if such person receives an accidental personal injury arising out of and in the course of his employment, during the period for which such premium was so received, regardless of the type of business in which the employer was engaged or the type of employment in which the employee was engaged at the time of such injury.
. The policy provision on which Pales relies provides:
General Section
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C. Sovereign Nation Workers' Compensation Sovereign Nation Workers' Compensation means the workers’ or workmen’s compensation benefits as established by you. It does not include any state, federal worker or workmen’s compensation law, and federal occupational disease law or the provisions of any law that provide non-occupational disability benefits.
Recognizing the tribe as a sovereign nation, with its corresponding civil jurisdiction, the actual benefits provided by this policy are subject to the tribal ordinance related to workers’ compensation benefits, in effect as of the effective date of this policy.
In the absence of a tribal ordinance you may or may not elect to utilize a state's workers' compensation benefit levels as a guideline for the benefits payable under this policy. However, in no event shall benefits payable exceed such state level benefits. The mere use of a state’s benefit levels as a guide for payments, however, does not constitute an adoption of such state’s benefit levels and shall not be construed as a waiver of your sovereign immunity. (Emphasis added).
. The Oklahoma Supreme Court’s website indicates Cossey has not yet been released for publication in the permanent law reports. However, the docket indicates that mandate issued June 11, 2009.
