Lead Opinion
I. INTRODUCTION
Tina Marie Somerlott appeals from the district court’s dismissal of her claims against CND, LLC (“CND”) for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. See Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1). Somerlott brought federal employment discrimination claims against CND, alleging violations of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. After allowing discovery by both parties, the district court concluded CND was immune from suit under the doctrine of tribal sovereign immunity and, therefore, dismissed Somerlott’s complaint in its entirety. Exercising jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, this court affirms.
II. BACKGROUND
Somerlott worked as a chiropractic technician at a clinic which was part of the Reynolds Army Community Hospital in Fort Sill, Oklahoma. At the time of her termination in January of 2007, her employer was CND, which provided staffing pursuant to a Department of Defense contract to provide chiropractic care at the Army Hospital. CND is a limited liability corporation organized under the laws of the state of Oklahoma, wholly owned by Cherokee Nation Businesses, Inc. (“CNB”). CNB is a tribal corporation wholly owned and regulated by the Cherokee Nation (the “Nation”). The Nation is a federally recognized Indian Tribe. Indian Entities Recognized and Eligible To Receive Services From the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs, 75 Fed.Reg. 60810, 60810 (Oct. 1, 2010). CND was originally formed as Cherokee Nation Distributors, Inc. (“CNDI”), a wholly owned subsidiary of Cherokee Nation Industries.
Somerlott brought suit against CND on April 23, 2008, alleging employment discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2, and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, 29 U.S.C. § 623. CND moved to dismiss, arguing it was protected from suit under the doctrine of tribal sovereign immunity and that it was not an “employer” under Title VII, see 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(b)(l) (excluding Indian tribes from definition of “employer”). The district court deferred ruling on the motion, granting limited discovery on the issue of whether CND is shielded by the Nation’s sovereign immunity. During the pendency of this discovery period, Somerlott amended her complaint and CND filed a new motion to dismiss arguing not only that it was protected by tribal sovereign immunity and the tribal exemption to Title VII, but also that it was exempt from the ADEA. See EEOC v. Cherokee Nation,
Somerlott’s response to CND’s motion focused primarily on the statutory exemption issue. She argued: “The Indian Tribe’s relationship to CND is so attenuated that CND cannot be entitled to the Tribe’s exemption from the strictures of Title VII and the ADEA.” She attempted to distinguish EEOC v. Cherokee Nation by arguing CND’s activities were not intramural and did not implicate the Nation’s treaty-protected rights to self-governance. After discussing several cases concerning the applicability of the ADEA to tribes and tribal entities: Somerlott stated: “A review of the relevant case law where a tribe or arm of a tribe is given exemption has as a common element intramural disputes or matters affecting a tribe’s self-governance.” Because the activities giving rise to her claim — the operation of a chiropractic clinic serving non-Indian clients — are not normally considered governmental functions, Somerlott argued, neither the Title VII exemption nor the ADEA exemption should apply to CND.
In analyzing CND’s motion to dismiss, the district court undertook to determine whether CND constituted a “subordinate economic entity” of the Nation entitled to share in the Nation’s sovereign immunity. Noting that, “[ajlthough the subordinate economic entity analysis has been widely adopted, its implementation is rarely uniform,” the district court considered a variety of factors used by other courts to determine whether the relationship between a tribe’s economic entities and the tribe itself is sufficiently close for immunity to apply. The court concluded CND met “most, if not all” of the criteria used by courts to determine whether a tribal commercial enterprise is a subordinate economic entity of a tribe. The court also rejected Somerlott’s argument that CND’s activities were too attenuated from the Nation’s interest in self-governance. See Kiowa Tribe of Okla. v. Mfg. Techs., Inc.,
On appeal, Somerlott identifies three issues for review. First, she states: “The district court erred in extending tribal sovereign immunity to the defendant corporations, which have a tribal stakeholder, without regard to whether their activities were sufficiently connected with the self-governance of the tribe to warrant such immunity.” Second, she argues: “The court erred in finding that CND/CNDI are exempt from the ADEA, where Congressional enactment of the [Small Business
This court ordered the parties to submit supplemental briefs addressing whether CND’s organization as a separate legal entity under Oklahoma’s Limited Liability Company Act precluded it from sharing in the Nation’s immunity. The parties were also ordered to discuss whether the argument that such organization precluded CND from sharing in the Nation’s immunity was properly before this court in light of the prior briefing to the district court and to this court.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
Ordinarily, determining whether CND shares the Nation’s sovereign immunity from suit involves a mixed question of law and fact. BMG,
B. Sovereign Immunity
It is well-established that “Indian tribes are distinct, independent political communities, retaining their original natural rights in matters of local self-government. Although no longer possessed of the full attributes of sovereignty, they remain a separate people, with the power of regulating their internal and social relations.” Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez,
In BMG, this court sought to determine whether a tribally owned casino and devel
In concluding a subordinate economic entity analysis applied to this case, the district court overlooked a crucial distinction between CND and the entities at issue in previous cases in which the test has been applied: CND is incorporated under state law. By contrast, the entities to which a subordinate economic entity test has traditionally been applied, like the Casino and Authority in BMG, have all been organized, in some form or another, under tribal law. See id. at 1191; Allen v. Gold Country Casino,
Thus, the subordinate economic entity test is inapplicable to entities which are legally distinct from their members and which voluntarily subject themselves to the authority of another sovereign
C. Preservation
While this court has no doubt the subordinate economic entity doctrine is inapplicable on the facts of this case, after reviewing the record the court concludes Somerlott did not properly preserve this basis for reversal before the district court. “An issue is preserved for appeal if a party alerts the district court to the issue and seeks a ruling.” Ecclesiastes 9:10-11-12, Inc. v. LMC Holding Co.,
In her response to the motion to dismiss, Somerlott admittedly emphasized CND’s status as a corporation and business entity, but she never argued this fact in itself precluded CND from sharing in the Nation’s immunity. More importantly, she did not argue CND’s status as a separate legal entity rendered the subordinate economic entity test inapplicable. She made no reference to Oklahoma’s Limited Liability Corporation Act or its provisions stating such entities may “sue and be sued.” Moreover, she advanced no argument concerning the coextensive nature of
A panel of this court recently held that arguments raised for the first time in a civil appeal may be reviewed only for plain error. Richison,
Even assuming the district court’s erroneous application of the subordinate economic entity analysis was plain and affected Somerlott’s substantial rights, Somerlott wholly fails to argue the district court’s decision meets the fourth prong of the plain error test in her opening brief, her reply brief, or even her supplemental brief after having been specifically ordered to brief plain error. Instead, Somerlott summarily argues the case implicates a matter of great public importance and that failure to reverse would result in “manifest injustice.” She cites Rademacher v. Colorado Association of Soil Conservation Districts Medical Benefit Plan,
Finally, although Somerlott repeatedly asserts “manifest injustice” would result if the court declined to reverse on her newly raised theory, she fails to identify any particular injustice beyond the loss of her possibly meritorious claim. This argument relates to the third prong of plain error review; something more is needed to satisfy the fourth prong. See United States v. Olano,
D. Rule 59(e) Issue
Somerlott contends the district court erred in dismissing her claim “before CND/CNDI provided required responses to [her] outstanding discovery.” As a threshold matter, the court agrees with CND that the issue before the court for review is not the denial of discovery but rather the propriety of the district court’s order denying Somerlott’s Motion to Set Aside Order of Dismissal. The district court properly characterized this motion as a motion to alter or amend a judgment under Rule 59(e) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. See Phelps v. Hamilton,
The court reviews the denial of Rule 59(e) relief for abuse of discretion. Comm. for the First Amendment v. Campbell,
Somerlott filed her complaint against CNDI on April 23, 2008. On June 16, 2008, CNDI moved to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1) arguing the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction under the doctrine of tribal sovereign immunity. When considering a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(1) the court may consider evidence extraneous to the complaint itself without converting the motion to a Rule 56 motion for summary judgment. Wheeler v. Hurdman,
Between then and April 17, 2009, the district court granted five requests for extensions of time for Somerlott’s response to the motion to dismiss. On May 26, 2009, three days after her Response to the Motion to Dismiss was due, Somerlott amended her complaint, adding CND as a defendant. Defendants filed a superseding motion to dismiss on June 23, 2009,
On September 17, Somerlott filed yet another motion for an extension of time as well as motions to compel discovery responses. The district court struck the motions to compel because Somerlott failed to comply with the court’s local rules. It also denied the motion for an extension of time, concluding Somerlott had “received ample opportunity to conduct any discovery she deemed necessary, and she has not acted diligently to pursue any outstanding discovery materials that she desired.” On September 22, Somerlott filed two amended motions to compel, as well as another motion for an extension of time. The district court summarily denied the motion for a further extension of time. Undeterred, on September 24 Somerlott filed a motion for reconsideration of her original motion to continue. Although the district court “[found] that Plaintiff has not presented any new fact or other proper basis for reconsideration of the prior orders denying Plaintiff a third extension of time ... to complete discovery and respond to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss,” it nonetheless “grant[ed] Plaintiffs alternative request for a brief enlargement of time to prepare and file her response.”
By January 7, 2010, CND’s motion to dismiss was fully briefed, including supplemental declarations and notices of authority filed by both parties. The motions to compel were set for a February 4, 2010, hearing. At the hearing, the parties informed the court they had resolved almost all discovery issues by agreement with the exception of one Interrogatory and a related Request for Production concerning CND’s financial records.
The parties now dispute their respective obligations under this agreement. While they agree CND’s obligation to provide additional discovery was conditioned on the court’s entry of a protective order, Somerlott argues she was under no obligation to cooperate with CND in submitting a joint motion for such an order. The parties initially did cooperate and submitted a joint motion for an agreed-upon protective order on February 12, 2010. The district court, however, denied the motion without prejudice because of several deficiencies, most generally because the proposed order was overbroad in scope. No revised order was submitted. Pursuant to the parties’ agreement announced at the February 4 hearing, on February 23, 2010, the district court denied as moot substantially all of the motion to compel. Nearly seven weeks later, on April 16, 2010, the district court granted CND’s motion to dismiss.
Grounds for granting a Rule 59(e) motion include “(1) an intervening change in the controlling law, (2) new evidence previously unavailable, and (3) the need to correct clear error or prevent manifest injustice.” Servants of Paraclete v. Does,
This determination did not “exceed the bounds of permissible choice” under the circumstances. See Wright,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the court AFFIRMS the decision of the district court.
Notes
. Somerlott initially named CNDI in her complaint, but later amended her complaint to include CND. The distinction between these entities is not material to the court's resolution of this appeal.
. The Cherokee Nation Limited Liability Company Act, Legislative Act 32-04, was passed in 2004, and the Cherokee Nation General Corporation Act, Legislative Act 96-16, was passed in 1996.
. Recently, the United States District Court for South Dakota applied the BMG test to a tribal entity incorporated under state law, concluding the entity's organization as a state corporation was merely one consideration among others when weighing the BMG factors. See J.L. Ward Assocs. v. Great Plains Tribal Chairmen's Health Bd.,
. In addition to her central argument that CND’s activities were insufficiently connected to tribal government functions, Somerlott also argued CND could not share in the Nation's immunity because it was not organized pursuant to the Oklahoma Indian Welfare Act. This position, too, was forfeited before the district court, because Somerlott made no mention of OIWA whatsoever.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I am pleased to join the court’s opinion. I agree with the court’s first holding — that under clear and long entrenched federal law a chiropractic business is no surreptitious sovereign entitled immunity from suit. I also agree with the court’s second holding — that Ms. Somerlott failed to preserve the arguments necessary to prevail on this score. I write separately to explain my reasons for reaching the first conclusion because both parties have exhibited considerable confusion about it.
Sometimes the solution to a problem comes clear by stating it. CND, LLC wants sovereign immunity. But CND, LLC is in the business of manipulating spines for profit. It serves mostly non-Indians and operates off reservation. It was formed under Oklahoma’s limited liability statutes. Those statutes define it as a “separate legal entity” from its shareholder (currently, the Cherokee Nation); one that can “sue, be sued, complain and defend in all courts”; and one whose assets can be sold to private persons at any time. See 18 Okla. Stat. § 2004(B)(1); id. § 2003(1) and (4). Given all this, it’s no wonder CND is unable to cite any authority that might immunize it from suit as some sort of secret sovereign.
Of course, Indian tribes are entitled to sovereign immunity absent congressional abrogation. See Kiowa Tribe of Okla. v. Mfg. Techs., Inc.,
Take the federal government. When the federal government chooses to act through a state-incorporated entity, courts hold those corporations to be just what they appear to be and subject to suit under the terms specified by state law. So if (as here) the state in question conditions the privilege of creating a corporate entity under its laws on an agreement the new entity will be amenable to suit, that condition must be respected even when the incorporator is the federal government. One sovereign, after all, cannot usually
The same principle holds with foreign sovereigns. At common law, a foreign government’s decision to incorporate a business under a state’s commercial laws didn’t afford that business immunity but subjected it to suit according to the terms prescribed by state law. “When a [foreign] government becomes a stockholder in a [state] corporation, it does not exercise its sovereignty as such. ‘It acts merely as a corporator, and exercises no other power in the management of the affairs of the corporation than are expressly given by the [state law] incorporating act.’ ” Amtorg Trading Corp. v. United States,
Even a state is generally held to the terms of its own corporate laws when it chooses to incorporate an entity. See, e.g., Bank of the U.S. v. Planters’ Bank of Ga., 22 U.S. (9 Wheat) 904, 907,
And this point leads to a related one. CND’s claim to immunity is not only inconsistent with longstanding rules governing sovereign immunity. It is also at odds with the reasons for those rules. The great innovation and advantage of the corporate form (and surely the cause of some problems, too) lies in the fact that it involves the creation, the embodiment, the bringing into being of a new entity with responsibilities and liabilities legally distinct from those of its incorporators and shareholders. See James D. Cox & Thomas Lee Hazen, Treatise on the Law of Corporations § 7.1 (2011) (“Recognition of a corporate personality is considered to be
CND’s claim to immunity is inconsistent with this foundational feature of corporate law. It chose to incorporate under Oklahoma’s general limited liability company statute. And that statute expressly: (1) defines corporations created under its terms as “separate legal entities]” with rights and responsibilities separate and distinct from those of their shareholders; and (2) specifies that the rights and responsibilities of corporations created under its terms include the duty to answer lawsuits in any court. 18 Okla. Stat. §§ 2003, 2004. These traits thus came part and parcel with CND’s birth. They are part of its charter, entwined in its corporate DNA. And no one does (or could) suggest these statutorily defined characteristics infringe any privileges, constitutional or otherwise, necessarily incidental to a corporation’s creation. Cf. First Nat'l Bank of Bos. v. Bellotti,
Neither is that the end of it. While it wishes to disregard certain fundamental features of its Oklahoma corporate charter, no doubt CND wishes to retain and rely on others it finds useful. It seems highly likely, for example, that CND wants to retain the right given to it by state law to sell its assets or even ownership to private purchasers if and when it chooses to do so. See 18 Okla. Stat. § 2003. And absent immunity from suit, CND would surely insist courts respect (not ignore) its legal independence from its shareholders (whoever they may be at the time) and shield them from potential liability accordingly. In this way, then, CND asks us to codify an entirely new and different corporate law than Oklahoma has, one that picks and chooses the privileges CND finds advantageous without the responsibilities it finds nettlesome. Neither can CND explain how the attributes it wants to retain comport with its claim to sovereignty. After all, how might it really be part of a tribal sovereign but at the same time be freely tradable to private owners? And how can it claim to be identical to the tribe yet sufficiently distinct from the tribe that tribal assets may not be placed at risk? See Providence Eng’g Corp. v. Downey Shipbuilding Corp.,
The overlay of a second sovereign highlights and exacerbates these problems. When the Nation chose to create CND it chose to do so according to the terms another sovereign prescribed. And as a creature of Oklahoma law, CND has no authority to commandeer that State’s legislative processes and rewrite the statutory terms and conditions of its formation — any more than the State of Oklahoma may rewrite the laws of the Cherokee Nation. To allow CND the relief it seeks, to permit it to revise Oklahoma’s statutory code to suit its preferences, would, clearly viewed, represent an infringement on the rights of only one sovereign — Oklahoma. See Amtorg Trading Corp.,
Not only is CND’s claim to immunity inconsistent with the principles of sovereign immunity and corporate law and the rationales undergirding them, it is inconsistent as well with the more particular reasons the Supreme Court has given for recognizing tribal sovereign immunity. Tribal sovereign immunity seeks “to promote the goal[s] of Indian self-government, ... tribal self-sufficiency, [and] economic development.” Okla. Tax Comm’n v. Citizen Band Potawatomi Indian Tribe of Okla.,
Neither can we doubt that the Nation lacked for choices when it came to organizing CND — or that good reasons exist for the choice it made. The Nation could have chosen to operate the chiropractic clinic itself and enjoy immunity for its operations. See Kiowa Tribe,
Finally, nothing in the “subordinate economic entity analysis” discussed in Breakthrough Management Group,
. To be sure, courts sometimes pierce the corporate veil and disregard the corporate form. But we do so to prevent the corporation’s owners from abusing the legal privilege of the corporate form when they seek to use that privilege to perpetrate a fraud or injustice. See First Nat’l City Bank v. Banco Para El Comercio,
In fact, the parties can point us to only one recorded case in which a court has found that an entity incorporated under the law of a second sovereign was entitled to tribal immunity — Ransom v. St. Regis Mohawk Educ. & Comm. Fund, Inc.,
. Beyond BMG, the remaining authority CND cites is no more persuasive. United States v. Logan,
