AMENDED ORDER
The Order (# 41) filed on July 1,1999, is amended to read as follows.
On December 9, 1998, Respondent United States filed an amended notice of removal (# 6) pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1442. Petitioners then filed, on December 11, 1998, a motion to strike (# 8) Respondent United States’ amended notice of removal, and an amended motion to remand (# 16). On June 2, 1999, this Court denied (# 32) Petitioners’ motion to strike Respondent United States’ amended notice of removal. By filing an amended notice of removal, the U.S. has substituted § 1442 as its primary basis for removal, while continuing to argue that removal under § 1441 is also valid. The arguments raised in Petitioners’ original motion to remand, which were solely directed against the applicability of § 1441, are now moot. Therefore, we deny Petitioners’ original motion to remand (# 6A) as moot.
However, remaining before the Court is the amended motion to remand (# 16) filed by Petitioners, which is directed against Respondent United States’ amended notice of removal (# 8). Two parties have opposed the Petitioners’ amended motion to remand: Respondent South Fork Band of the Te-Moak Tribe filed its response (# 17) on January 20, 1999, and Respondent United States filed its response (#20) on February 1, 1999. Petitioners have replied (# 21) on February 16, 1999. For the reasons outlined below Petitioners’ amended motion to remand (# 16) is DENIED.
BACKGROUND
This action was removed from the Sixth Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada, in and for the County of Humboldt, by Respondent United States. Prior to removal, Petitioners State Engineer and Water Commissioners had filed a petition for an amended order to show cause why the South Fork Band of the Te-Moak Tribe of Western Shoshone Indians, and the United States of America, should not be held in contempt for violating the Humboldt Decree. The asserted violations of the Decree were based upon the South Fork Band’s refusal to allow the Water Commissioners of the Sixth Judicial District Court onto its reservation to regulate the Humboldt River, and its refusal to pay assessment fees.
Between 1937 and 1942, the United States of America purchased land in Nevada for the South Fork Band of the Te-Moak Tribe of the Western Shoshone Indians (“Tribe”). The land had appurtenant water rights that were adjudicated in the Humboldt Decree, a stream system adjudication decree that was issued in 1931 and amended in 1935 by the Sixth Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada. Since the purchase of lands for the Tribe, the United States and the Tribe have received their appurtenant water rights pursuant to the Humboldt Decree. During those years, the Water Commissioners have entered upon the Tribe’s reservation to regulate the Humboldt River system pursuant to the decree, and have collected an annual assessment fee as provided in the decree.
On October 17, 1997, all water right holders in the South Fork of the Humboldt River were given their annual assessment for Humboldt water distribution for the period July 1, 1998, to June 30, 1999. The Tribe’s assessment totaled $2,717.72. On March 8,1998, the South Fork Band Council of the Tribe resolved that the Water Commissioners would not be allowed to regulate any of the upstream turnouts that supply the South Fork Reservation with irrigation water, and that the Council will not pay for water with money allocated to the Tribe for its use. Since the date of
On June 11, 1998, the Nevada State Engineer filed a Motion for Order to Show Cause with the Sixth Judicial District Court of Nevada. On August 17, 1998, the Sixth Judicial District Court held a hearing to show cause why the Tribe should not be held in contempt and compelled to comply with State Engineer’s Order 1145, which ordered the Tribe to permit the Water Commissioners of the Sixth Judicial District Court access to regulate the upstream turnouts that supply the Tribe with water, and to pay the October 17, 1997 assessment. On August 21, 1998 the court issued an Order granting the Tribe fourteen days in which to rescind its March 8 resolution, to allow the Water Commissioners access to the upstream turnouts, and to pay the annual assessment. The Tribe was warned that if it did not comply, the Sixth Judicial District Court would find it in contempt.
On September 18, 1998 the Tribe filed a motion to vacate the Order on the grounds that the State Engineer failed to join the United States as an indispensable party pursuant to Nevada Rules of Civil Procedure 19b. On October 19, 1998, the Nevada State Engineer filed a Petition for Amended Order to Show Cause in the Sixth Judicial District Court of Nevada joining the United States as a party. On November 16, 1998, Respondent United States removed the action from the Sixth Judicial District Court of Nevada to this Court (# 1). Subsequently, on December 16,1998, Respondent Tribe filed a notice of removal joinder (# 9) joining in Respondent United States’ notice of removal.
DISCUSSION
There are three jurisdictional thresholds to cross in our consideration of the question of the propriety of Respondent’s removal. First, there must be statutory authority granting removal under the removal provisions of 28 U.S.C. §§ 1441-1452.
Nebraska Dept. of Soc. Serv. v. Bentson,
Second, once statutory authority for removal has been established, the subject matter jurisdiction of the district court must then be determined. Id. (“Once a case is properly removed, a district court has the authority to decide whether it has subject matter jurisdiction over the claims.”).
Third, a district court having subject matter jurisdiction over the claims must then determine if it should exercise that jurisdiction, in light of the doctrines of abstention and comity.
Burford v. Sun Oil Co.,
I. Statutory Authority Granting Removal
The statutory authority granting removal of cases from state court to federal district court is set forth in the removal provisions of 28 U.S.C. §§ 1441-1452. Respondent United States originally removed pursuant to § 1441(# 1), and subsequently filed an amended notice of removal (# 6) asserting removal under § 1442. In Respondent’s response (# 15) to Petitioner’s motion to remand (# 6A) they argue that removal is valid under both § 1441 and § 1442.
Prior to 1996, the United States as a defendant could not remove a case from state to federal court.
See
28 U.S.C.
Removal of this case was proper under the plain language of § 1442, giving this Court the authority to determine whether it has subject matter jurisdiction over the claims of this case. Because removal was proper under 28 U.S.C. § 1442(a)(1), there is no need for this Court to address the question of removal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441.
II. This Court Has Subject Matter Jurisdiction Over This Action
“Once a case is properly removed, a district court has the authority to decide whether it has subject matter jurisdiction over the claims.”
Nebraska Dept. of Soc. Serv.,
' Petitioners raise three arguments in support of their claim that this Court does not have subject matter jurisdiction, and that the action should thus be remanded to the Sixth Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada: (1) the state court has exclusive jurisdiction over the enforcement of the Humboldt Decree, (2) removal interferes with Nevada’s sovereign right to regulate waters within its borders, and (3) the Eleventh Amendment bars the removal of this action.
The Tribe asserts in its response (# 14) to Petitioners’ initial motion to remand (# 6A), and in its response (# 17) to Petitioners’ amended motion to remand (# 16), that the matter is properly removable to this Court, but that this Court should immediately dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction due to the Tribe’s federal common law immunity from suit in federal court.
Respondent United States vigorously asserts that this Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this case, and does not assert, either in its response (# 6) to Petitioners’ amended order to show cause, or in its response (# 15) to Petitioners’ motion to remand, or in its response (# 20) to Petitioners’ amended motion to remand, that it enjoys sovereign immunity in this action. Thus there is no need for us to consider the potential sovereign immunity of Respondent United States in deciding this matter.
We will accordingly address Petitioners’ three arguments, and Respondent Tribe’s assertion of immunity from suit, in turn below.
A. State Court Does Not Have Exclusive Jurisdiction to Enforce the Humboldt Decree
Petitioners argue that, due to the
in rem
nature of the Humboldt River adjudication, the state decree court holding the-
res
in a related contempt action has sole
Petitioners properly identify the three step procedure established by Nevada statute for the adjudication of the water rights held in a stream system such as the Humboldt River. First, the State Engineer initiates the administrative phase by defining the different appropriative rights and priority dates in the stream system and then enters an order of determination with the court having jurisdiction over the location of the stream system. NRS 533.090, 533.160 and 533.165. Second, in the judicial phase, the court then decrees a particular amount of water to each property for which proof existed of an appropriation for beneficial use. NRS 533.035. The judicial phase of an adjudication culminates in the entry of a final judicial decree of the water rights in the stream system and is conclusive upon all persons and rights lawfully embraced within the adjudication. NRS 533.210. Third, after the final decree is entered, the enforcement phase of the adjudication begins.
Petitioners correctly characterize the judicial phase of a stream adjudication as an in rem proceeding because the court’s jurisdiction is exercised over the res — the water in the stream system being adjudicated. The action names the river or stream system and not the individual claimants of water rights.
However, the enforcement phase, under the Nevada scheme, allows the State Engineer to initiate an enforcement action on “any claimant to the use of water.” N.R.S. 533.220(2). The State Engineer and Water Commissioners are officers of the court charged with enforcing the court’s decree, and any non-compliance or interference in the discharge of their duties is punishable as contempt of court.
Malone, State ex rel., v. District Court, 52
Nev. 270, 271,
In federal contempt actions the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide that “[a]n order of civil commitment of a person held to be in contempt of a decree or injunction issued to enforce the laws of the United States may be served and entered in any district.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 4.1(b).
In an enforcement action pursuant to a judicial stream decree, the underlying
res
of the action is the water, but the enforcement of the rights of claimants thereto is
in personam. City of Fresno v. Edmonston,
However, there is an another argument which the Petitioners could have raised— that is, that although this action is
in personam,
it is a contempt proceeding, and such proceedings are generally exclusive to the court whose order is being violated.
This exception is especially strong when the subjects of the state contempt order are Indian tribes.
White Mountain Apache v. Bracket,
Since the instant matter is an enforcement proceeding, it is not in rem even though the underlying adjudication of the Humboldt River may be. Thus Petitioners’ argument that the Nevada court has exclusive jurisdiction over this matter due to its in rem nature fails. Likewise, although this is a contempt proceeding, the argument that the Nevada court has exclusive jurisdiction over it on that basis also fails due to the involvement of federal entities.
B. This Court’s Exercise of Jurisdiction Will Not Frustrate Nevada’s Sovereign State Interests
Petitioners argue that the decree court’s contempt action should not be removable because it will frustrate the decree court’s sovereign right to determine how the water resource will be allocated. Petitioners are correct in asserting that the State of Nevada enjoys the right to regulate and distribute its water resources.
Humboldt Lovelock Irr. Light & Power Co. v. Smith,
Additionally, the exercise of federal court jurisdiction over these claims would constitute, at worst, a minor interference with Nevada’s State sovereignty, because in adjudicating water rights, federal courts must look to state law.
California v. United States,
Federal district courts are often called upon to construe the state law of the jurisdiction in which they sit.
O’Brien v. Skin
Thus, Nevada’s sovereign state law interests in allocating its water do not warrant staying the exercise of federal jurisdiction in this matter. This is due to the minor potential for federal interference and frustration of Nevada’s sovereign rights in this Court interpreting state law, and in light of the federal law issues present in the instant case.
C. Nevada’s Eleventh Amendment Immunity from Suit in Federal Court
Petitioners argue that the immunity granted by the Eleventh Amendment of the U.S. Constitution is an immunity against being made an involuntary party to an action in federal court. From this they argue that they should be able to invoke their immunity in this case, since, although the state chose to commence this action, it did not choose to do so in federal court. It has been dragged into federal court by the Respondents. However, this argument fails on two counts.
First, removal pursuant to § 1442 provides for removal of all civil actions against the United States, and does not require federal courts to have original jurisdiction over the action. Thus, while the “jurisdictional bar” of the Eleventh Amendment might prevent the district court from exercising original jurisdiction in this matter, which is required in a removal pursuant to § 1441, the lack of original jurisdiction does not bar removal pursuant to § 1442. Thus, Petitioners’ reliance on
Steelease
for the proposition that Eleventh Amendment immunity applies equally to a case in which a state brings a state court action as a plaintiff which is subsequently removed to federal court by the defendant is misplaced.
California v. Steelcase, Inc.,
The instant case is distinguishable from Steelease in two essential ways: (1) removal was pursuant to § 1442 which has no original jurisdiction requirement, and (2) this Court’s subject matter jurisdiction is grounded upon a federal question rather than diversity jurisdiction.
Second, Eleventh Amendment immunity does not extend to suits by the United States against a state.
Seminole Tribe v. Florida,
For the foregoing reasons, our continued exercise of jurisdiction in the instant case is not a violation of Nevada’s Eleventh Amendment immunity from suit in federal court. Therefore, we will not remand on this basis.
D. Indian Federal Common Law Immunity From Suit
Respondent Tribe argues that once this matter is properly removed to this Court, we should immediately dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction due to the Tribe’s federal common law immunity from suit in federal court.
1. Nature of Indian Immunity
“The issue of tribal sovereign immunity is jurisdictional in nature.”
Individual tribal members, however, enjoy no such immunity.
Puyallup Tribe, Inc. v. Department of Game,
2. The Tribe Waived Its Immunity Because United States Purchased Water Rights for it Subject to the Humboldt Decree and the Tribe Engaged in Actions Over the Fifty Years Since the Purchase Continually Ratifying Its Waiver
Indian tribes can waive their sovereign immunity by consenting to be sued.
United States v. Oregon,
However, the Eighth Circuit has found that “an arbitration clause in a contract constituted a waiver of sovereign immunity.”
Val-U Constr. Co. v. Rosebud Sioux Tribe,
Further, several courts have held that certain actions taken in relation to specific litigation may waive tribal immunity. In fact, it has even been held that immunity can be waived by the United States acting on a tribes’ behalf. “[I]nitiation of litigation by the United States [in its capacity as Tribal trustee] could result in waiver of tribal sovereign immunity despite the fact that the Tribe was not formally a party to the action.”
McClendon,
Here Washington and the tribe have a definite dispute over the management of anadromous fisheries; Washington believes that complete cessation of fishing is necessary to preserve the spring chi-nook and the tribe believes the opposite. This is exactly the type of dispute envisioned in [the] 1977 [decree] when the Yakimas agreed to submit any dispute to the Oregon district court.
Id. at 1016.
In the instant case, the Respondent Tribe is the successor in interest to decreed water right owners under the terms of the Humboldt Decree, similar to the tribe’s decreed anadromous fishing rights in United States v. Oregon. The Humboldt Decree was issued in 1931 by the Sixth Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada. The parties who owned the instant water rights at that time participated in the litigation leading to the Humboldt Decree, and these rights were fully adjudicated in the Humboldt Decree. After the Decree was issued, these rights were held by their owners subject to the requirements of the Decree, and the Sixth Judicial District Court retained jurisdiction over the Decree, the rights adjudicated therein, and the parties thereto for enforcement, etc. When the United States purchased the rights for the Tribe, it could only purchase what the prior owners owned — that is, the rights subject to the Decree. By choosing to purchase such rights, the U.S./Tribe chose to put itself in a position where it would be subject to the Decree, and thus waived its immunity.
Additionally, for over fifty years, the Humboldt Decree has been enforced in recognition of the U.S./Tribe’s entitlement to receive water in the quantities defined by the decree. A water commissioner from the decree court has entered onto the Tribe’s reservation to regulate the Humboldt River to assure that the Tribe and all non-Indian users receive their decreed water rights. Assessment fees have been paid as provided in the decree, initially by the U.S. and later by the Tribe itself. If there remained any doubt as to the United State’s express and unequivocal waiver in behalf of the Tribe, in its initial purchase of the decreed rights, the Tribe’s actions over the ensuing fifty years since the purchase of their decreed water rights clearly demonstrate a continuing ratification of its initial waiver of immunity. We follow the Ninth Circuit in finding that “[t]o hold at this stage that tribal immunity blocks modification [or enforcement] of an equitable decree would impermissibly violate a central tenet of equity jurisprudence, that of flexible decrees.”
United States v. Oregon,
3. Analogous to Eleventh Amendment Immunity
While the Tribe has thus clearly waived its immunity with regard to enforcement of the Humboldt Decree in the Sixth Judicial District Court of Nevada, an argument could be made that this waiver does not extend to enforcement actions in this Court. Nonetheless, the Tribe has clearly waived its immunity to suit in this Court by its actions in this case.
In the instant case, Respondent Tribe filed a notice of removal joinder (# 9) on December 16, 1998, joining Respondent United States’ notice of removal to this Court. We have found no Ninth Circuit case law directly on point regarding the question of whether a defendant Indian tribe’s removal of a case to federal court
By voluntarily agreeing to participate in arbitration proceedings, a state waived immunity to a suit in federal court.
Premo v. Martin,
In the instant case Respondent Tribe joined in the removal to federal court, answered the complaint, and opposed a motion to remand on immunity grounds. If the Tribe were a state, that would clearly be sufficient to waive the state’s sovereign immunity. We see no reason to treat the Tribe differently. As such, we treat the Tribes’ actions as amounting to a clear and unequivocal waiver of immunity in this Court. Thus we find that the Respondent Tribe’s joinder in removal of this case to this Court, together with its voluntary assumption of .the contractual and judicial terms of the Humboldt Decree in purchasing the instant water rights, and in ratifying that initial waiver with over fifty years of actions demonstrating acquiescence to the Humboldt Decree, to constitute a multiple waiver of its tribal immunity. Therefore, this Court possesses subject matter jurisdiction to hear this matter.
However, we note that if there has been no waiver of tribal immunity in this case, the proper remedy is not the dismissal that the Tribe requests, but remand to state court.
Manufacturers Nat. Bank v. Brownstown Square Apartments,
We hold therefore that we have subject matter jurisdiction over this action.
III. The Doctrine of Abstention
The final threshold for this Court to cross in deciding whether to exercise its jurisdiction over the matter at hand is the doctrine of abstention. Petitioners argue that this Court, even if it finds that it has subject matter jurisdiction over these claims, should not exercise its jurisdiction due to the doctrines of abstention and comity, and should thus remand the case to the Sixth Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada. 1
“[Ajbstention is an extraordinary and narrow exception to the virtually unflagging obligation of federal courts to exercise the jurisdiction given them.”
In re Otter Tail Power Co.,
A. Pullman Abstention
Pullman
abstention applies where controlling state law is unclear and a state court’s clarification of that state law could make a federal court’s federal constitutional decision unnecessary.
Railroad Comm’n v. Pullman Co.,
B. Younger Abstention
Younger
abstention is implicated where federal jurisdiction has been invoked for the purpose of staying or enjoining state judicial proceedings.
Younger v. Harris,
Although Younger involved criminal proceedings, the Supreme Court has stated clearly that concerns of comity and federalism counsel restraint in civil proceedings as well, when important state interests are at stake.
Ohio Civil Rights Comm. v. Dayton Christian Schools, Inc.,
In
Dayton,
the Supreme Court confirmed that Younger principles also apply to pending state administrative proceedings that involve important state interests.
Dayton,
The Ninth Circuit has held that
Younger
abstention is proper where: “(1) there are ongoing state judicial proceedings; (2) that implicate important state interests; and (3) there is an adequate opportunity in the state proceedings to raise federal questions.”
Martinez v. Newport Beach City,
C. Burford Abstention
Burford
abstention is appropriate where “timely and adequate state-court review is available” and when (1) “there have been presented difficult questions of state law bearing on policy problems of substantial public import whose importance transcends the result in the case then at bar,” or when (2) “exercise of federal review of the question in a case and in similar cases would be disruptive of state efforts to establish a coherent policy with respect to a matter of substantial public concern.”
New Orleans Pub. Serv., Inc. v. Council of New Orleans,
The threshold analysis in
Burford
abstention is whether timely and adequate state-court review is available.
Id.
at 361,
The Ninth Circuit requires that each of the three following factors be present for
Burford
abstention to apply: (1) that the state has concentrated suits involving the local issue in a particular court; (2) the federal issues are not easily separable from complicated state law issues with which the state courts may have special competence; and (3) that federal review might disrupt state efforts to establish a coherent policy.
Tucker v. First Md. Sav. & Loan Inc.,
1.The State Has Concentrated Suits Involving Local Issue in a Particular Court
In
Burford,
the Court found it disposi-tive that Texas had established a complex administrative scheme to address issues of oil well drilling, supervised by an expert agency, the Railroad Commission, and that all direct review of the commission’s orders were consolidated in one state district court.
Burford,
2.Federal Issues Are Easily Separable from Complex State Law Issues with Which State Courts Have Special Competence
In the instant case the state law issues are neither unsettled nor complex. There is no particular Nevada state statute at issue, nor currently developing water law that will affect rights under the Humboldt Decree. Both Nevada water statutes and the Humboldt Decree Adjudication are long and well-established, unambiguous legal doctrines. The issue in the case at hand is whether a state can enforce the terms of an adjudicated water decree and state water law on an Indian Reservation. No questions bearing on unsettled state policy are presented for decision. Nor are the federal claims “entangled in a skein of state law that must be untangled before the federal case can proceed.”
Quackenbush v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
3.Federal Review Will Not Disrupt State Efforts to Establish a Coherent Policy
As previously stated, Nevada water law and the Humboldt Decree are long-established and unambiguous, and the only potential disruption of Nevada water policy that could conceivably be caused by federal review would be inconsistent enforce
Under the Ninth Circuit test for Bur-ford abstention, we have only one of the three necessary factors weighing in favor of abstention and two weighing against, and thus for the foregoing reasons Burford abstention is not applicable in this case.
D. Colorado River Abstention
The three traditional categories of abstention delineated above are based on weighty considerations of federal/state relations.
American Int’l, Underwriters v. Continental Ins. Co.,
These factors are to be applied in a pragmatic and flexible way, as part of a balancing process rather than as a “mechanical checklist,” with the balance heavily weighted in favor of the exercise of jurisdiction.
Id.
at 16,
“Piecemeal litigation occurs when different tribunals consider the same issue, thereby duplicating efforts and possibly reaching different results.”
American Int’l, Underwriters,
2. State Court Jurisdiction over Res or Property Involving Rights Governed by State Law
In proceeding
in rem or
quasi
in rem,
the forum first assuming custody of the property at issue has exclusive jurisdiction to proceed.
Donovan v. Dallas,
3.Geographic Inconvenience of the Federal Forum
In the instant case this factor seems to be a wash. The location of this Court in Reno is closer to Petitioner State Engineer’s offices in Carson City and to the offices of counsel for Respondent U.S., the U.S. Attorney, whose office is here in Reno. But this seems to be equally counterbalanced by the fact that the Court of the Sixth Judicial District in Winnemucca is much closer in location to both Petitioner Water Commissioners, and Respondent Tribe.
4.Order in Which Jurisdiction Was Obtained by the Concurrent State and Federal Forums
“[T]his factor must be applied in a pragmatic, flexible manner, so the priority is not measured exclusively in terms of which complaint was filed first, but rather in terms of how much progress was actually made in the state and federal actions.”
American Int’l. Underwriters,
5.Federal Law or State Law Provides the Rule of Decision on the Merits
The Ninth Circuit has affirmed a district court decision to limit its determinations to the matter of “ordering priority among reserved water rights arising under federal law” and to remand all other issues to state adjudication.
Adair,
6.Adequacy of the State-Court Proceedings to Protect the Litigant’s Rights
“Under the rules governing the
Colorado River
doctrine, the existence of a substantial doubt as to whether the state proceedings will resolve the federal action precludes the grant of a stay.”
Intel Corp. v. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.,
7.Forum Shopping
“In the
Colorado River
context, the Ninth Circuit has held that forum shopping weighs in favor of a stay [of federal court action] when the party opposing the stay seeks to avoid an adverse ruling made by the state court or to gain a tactical advantage from the application of federal court rules.”
Madonna,
8.McCarran Amendment
Section 666 of Title 43 of the United States Code, known as the McCarran Amendment, was passed July 10, 1952, amending Departments of State, Justice, Commerce and the Judiciary Appropriations Act of 1953. It provides in pertinent part:
(a) Consent is hereby given to join the United States as a defendant in any suit (1) for the adjudication of rights to the use of water of a river system or other source, or (2) for the administration of such rights, where it appears that the United States is the owner of or in the process of acquiring water rights by appropriation under State law, by purchase, by exchange, or otherwise, and the United States is a necessary party to any such suit.
43 U.S.C. § 666.
The purpose of this section, in which the United States consents to be sued in any court in actions involving the adjudication and administration of water rights, was to facilitate state adjudication of stream systems that contained both reserved and appropriated rights of the United States and Indian tribes.
Colorado River,
There are a number of points relevant to our analysis which are clearly established by federal cases interpreting the McCar-ran Amendment. The disjunctive “or” between subsections (a)(1) and (a)(2) refers to the rights adjudicated in (a)(1), and thus the waiver of immunity for “administration of rights” can only take place after a general stream determination under subsection (a)(1) has been made.
South Delta Water Agency v. United States,
The only federal case to clearly analyze § 666(a)(2) is a decision of this Court,
United States v. Hennen,
Once a legal proceeding within the purview of 666(a)(1), determining relative rights of claimants to the waters of a stream system or other source, has been had and a decree adjudicating such rights entered, Congress has given its consent to any suit properly commenced for the administration of such rights under 666(a)(2).
To administer a decree is to execute it, to enforce its provisions, to resolve conflicts as to its meaning, to construe and to interpret its language. Once there has been such an adjudication and a decree entered, then one or more persons who hold adjudicated water rights can, within the framework of 666(a)(2), commence among others such actions as described above, subjecting the United States, in a proper case, to the judgments, orders and decrees of the court having jurisdiction.... The sovereign immunity of the United States was waived and the Government is subject to the jurisdiction of the State Courts.
The Ninth Circuit adopted this holding in
Hennen
in
South Delta Water Agency v. United States,
The similarity of the instant case to
Hennen
is remarkable. The federal water rights at issue in
Hennen
were purchased by the United States and were subject to a decree adjudicated prior to purchase, similar to the Respondent Tribe’s water rights held in trust by the United States. The issue in
Hennen
was the right of enforcement of an order of the State Engineer of Nevada, just as in the instant case. We follow our earlier case, and find that the enforcement action in the instant case falls within the “administration clause” of the McCarran Amendment, giving the Sixth
Although no court has specifically addressed whether the subsection (a)(2) “administration clause” grants a state court jurisdiction over the Tribe itself, in an enforcement action, the Supreme Court has noted that “any judgment against the United States, as trustee for the Indians, would ordinarily be binding on the Indians.”
Arizona
v.
San Carlos Apache Tribe,
However, the McCarran Amendment “does no more than create concurrent jurisdiction” between state and federal fora.
National Audubon Soc. v. Department of Water & Power of L.A.,
Our McCarran Amendment analysis clearly establishes that the Sixth Judicial District Court of Nevada has jurisdiction over this matter, concurrent with the jurisdiction of this Court. As such, this Court’s decision in Hennen clearly emphasizes that this factor weighs heavily in favor of the state decree court retaining jurisdiction over its enforcement actions.
The six factors enunciated by the Supreme Court and the additional seventh utilized by the Ninth Circuit, which we analyzed above, must now be weighed “as part of a balancing process” to determine if the “exceptional circumstances” required for
Colorado River
abstention are present.
Colorado River,
Factors weighing in favor of the exercise of federal jurisdiction are: the policy of avoidance of piecemeal adjudication, the order in which jurisdiction was obtained, and whether federal law or state law provides the rule of decision on the merits. We found four factors to be neutral or inapplicable and only the McCarran Amendment to favor abstention.
These factors are to be applied in a pragmatic and flexible way, as part of a balancing process rather than as a “mechanical checklist,” with the balance heavily weighted in favor of the exercise of jurisdiction.
Moses H. Cone,
In our analysis of the four general categories of abstention enunciated by the Supreme Court, we find that none apply in the instant case. Thus we conclude that we must exercise our jurisdiction in this matter.
CONCLUSION
We therefore find that Respondent’s removal is proper pursuant to § 1442. We further find that this Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this action, concluding that Nevada’s sovereign state interests and Eleventh Amendment immunity and the Tribe’s Indian immunity are not a bar to this Court’s jurisdiction. And finally, we find that none of the four abstention doctrines enunciated by the Supreme Court require us to decline to exercise our jurisdiction.
IT IS, THEREFORE, HEREBY ORDERED THAT Petitioners’ motion to remand (# 6A) is DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED THAT Petitioners’ amended motion to remand (# 16) is DENIED.
Notes
. The doctrine of comity, the judicial .effect the courts of one jurisdiction give to another jurisdiction, not as a matter of obligation, but out of deference and respect, is included and subsumed in our analysis of the abstention doctrine.
. 43 U.S.C. 666 (waiver of United States sovereign immunity and consent to be joined as a defendant in state court proceedings for the adjudication and administration of water rights).
See Part III. D. 8., infra.
.
See Jicarilla Apache Tribe,
