The Timpanogos Tribe, Snake Band of Shoshone Indians of Utah Territory and aboriginal inhabitants of the region, filed suit against Kevin Conway, Assistant Director of the Utah Department of Natural Resources, and Governor Michael Leavitt of Utah. The district court denied defendants’ motion to dismiss on the basis of, inter alia. Eleventh Amendment immunity. Defendants filed an interlocutory ap
I.
The Tribe’s complaint originally sought to quiet title on the Uintah Valley Reservation and obtain the following: a declaration that the Timpanogos Tribe, and not the Ute Tribe, are the “Indians of Utah” contemplated in the Executive Order, see Exec. Order, 1 Kappler 900 (Oct. 3, 1861), and Congressional Act, see Act of May 5, 1864, ch. 77, 13 Stat. 63, creating the Reservation; recognition of their rights under the Order and Act, specifically rights to hunt, fish, and gather; and a declaration that Messrs. Conway and Leavitt have no authority to regulate or control the hunting, fishing, or gathering rights of the Timpanogos Tribe on Indian lands within the Reservation, except as such authority is explicitly granted to the State of Utah by Act of Congress or consented to by the Tribe. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) raising five issues: (1) Eleventh Amendment immunity; (2) res judiсata; (3) lack of subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331; (4) failure to join indispensable parties; and (5) laches.
Over the course of a hearing on the motion and at the suggestion of the district court, the Tribe narrowed its complaint to come within the Ex parte Young exception to Eleventh Amendment sovereign immunity. See Ex parte Young,
II.
Our initial concern on appeal is jurisdictional. Courts of appeals normally have jurisdiction only over final decisions of the district courts. 28 U.S.C. § 1291. There are exceptions to the final judgment rule. A judgment that is not the complete and final judgment in a case is immediately appealable if it “fall[s] in that small class which finally determine claims of right separable from, and collateral to, rights asserted in the action, too important to be denied review and too independent of the cause itself to require that appellate consideration be deferred until the whole case is adjudicated.” Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Auth. v. Metcalf & Eddy,
It is well-established that orders denying individual officials’ claims of absolute and qualified immunity are among those that may be immediately appealed. See Mitchell v. Forsyth,
Defendants also urge us to exercise pendant appellate jurisdiction over the other claims asserted in their motion to dismiss, although none оf them would warrant an interlocutory appeal on its own. Those issues include res judicata, subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331, failure to join necessary and indispensable parties under Fed.R.Civ.P. 19(b), and laches. In addition, defendants contend the complaint should be dismissed for the alleged failure of the Tribe to exhaust administrative remedies for federal tribal recognition under 25 C.F.R. Part 83.
We have jurisdiction over an extremely narrow class of claims raised interlоcutorily. The collateral order doctrine sets a high bar for any interlocutory appeal, allowing appeal from only those decisions that are conclusive, resolve important questions separate from the merits, and are effectively unreviewable on appeal from final judgment. See Cohen,
In urging us to take jurisdictiоn over their pendent claims, defendants cite to only one case: the Fifth Circuit’s pre-Swint decision in In re Nissan Motor Corp. Antitrust Litigation,
We have recognized that the exercise of pendent appellate jurisdiction “is generally disfavored.” Armijo By and Through Chavez v. Wagon Mound Pub. Sch.,
[A] pendent appellate claim can be regarded as inextricably intertwined with a properly reviewable claim on collateral appeal only if the pendent claim is coterminous with, or subsumed in, the claim before the court on interlocutory appeal — that is, when the appellate resolution of the collateral appeal necessarily resolves the pendent claim as well.
Id.
Defendants do not provide any reasons why their pendent claims based on res judicata, Rule 19(b), exhaustion, and laches are “inextricably intertwined” with their Eleventh Amendment interlocutory claim. In fact, they do no more than cite to Nissan. Having reviewed these claims in light of the precedents in this circuit, we are unable to find any justification that would allow us to exercise appellate jurisdiction over them.
We reach a different result with respect to defendants’ claim that the Tribe
In concluding we must address defendants’ argument that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the Tribe’s claim, we agree with the Second Circuit’s determination in Merritt v. Shuttle, Inc.,
The existence of subject matter jurisdiction goes to the very power of the district court to issue the rulings now under consideration. Indeed, as the Supreme Court recently reminded, “[f]or a court to pronounce uрon [the merits] when it has no jurisdiction to do so is, by very definition, for a court to act ultra vires.”
Merritt,
In sum, because we have appellate jurisdiction over the interlocutory appeal of defendants’ assertion of Eleventh Amendment immunity, we also have appellate jurisdiction to determine whether the district court had subject matter jurisdiction over the Tribe’s underlying claim against defendants in the first instance.
III.
Defendants assert the district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction because plaintiffs have failed to state a claim that raises a cognizable federal question. The crux of defendants’ contention, described in more detail below, is that the Tribe has no federal right on which to base a claim because it is not a “federally recognized” tribe.
It very early became accepted doctrine in this Court that although fee title to the lands occupied by Indians when the colonists arrived became vested in the sovеreign-first the discovering European nation and later the original States and the United States-a right of occupancy in the Indian tribes was nevertheless recognized. That right, sometimes called Indian title and good against all but the sovereign, could be terminated only by sovereign act. Once the United States was organized and the Constitution adopted, these tribal rights to Indian lands became the exclusive province of the federal law. Indian title, recоgnized to be only a right of occupancy, was extinguishable only by the United States.
Oneida Indian Nation of N. Y. v. County of Oneida,
The federal government has formally recognized the rights of Indians to specified areas of land through treaties with tribes and by statute and executive order. See generally Felix S. Cohen, HANDBOOK OF FEDERAL INDIAN LAW, at 473-81 (1982 ed.).
Beyond general principles of liberal interpretation of treaties in favor of tribes, there are certain rules with re- ' spect to the interpretation of treaty provisions establishing tribal land ownership. So long as a treaty purports to recognize Indian title or permanent rights to particularly described land it creates a recognized Indian title. Accordingly, phrases in treaty grants such as “use and occupancy” or “as Indian lands are held” do not refer to original Indian title but are held to vest recognized and enforceable property rights in the tribes.”
Id. at 476.
The reservation at issue here was created by executive order аnd approved by an act of Congress.
In 1978, the Department of the Interior promulgated regulations establishing the procedures by which it would acknowledge “that certain American Indian groups exist as tribes.” 25 C.F.R. § 83.2.
Moreover, “[t]he Department of the Interior cannot under any circumstances abrogate an Indian treaty directly or indirectly. Only Congress can abrogate a treaty, and only by making absolutely clear its intention to do so.” United States v. Washington,
Defendants rely on Western Shoshone Bus. Council v. Babbitt,
Defendants’ remaining challenges to subject matter jurisdiction under section 1331 may be addressed summarily. Defendants contend the Tribe cannot claim rights under the Act establishing the Reservation because it is not a tribe for whose benefit the Reservation was created. It does not aрpear from the scant record before us on appeal that defendants presented this argument to the district court. In any event, as the district court observed, on a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) the court “must accept as true all the factual allegations in the reasonable inferences in plaintiffs favor.” Seamons v. Snow,
Defendants also assert that the Tribe may not maintain an action to enforce its rights under the Act which established the Reservation because the Act was not intended to create a private cause of action under the analysis of Cort v. Ash,
We conclude that the district court had subject matter jurisdiction over this action under section 1331 and we proceed to the merits of the court’s ruling on Eleventh Amendment immunity.
IY.
It is defendants’ position that, as state officials, they are protected by Eleventh Amendment immunity from suit by the Tribe. The Eleventh Amendment generally bars suits against a state in federal court commencеd by citizens of that state or citizens of another state. See Hans v. Louisiana,
The Tribe’s original complaint sought broad relief on a number of questions that would have impliсated Eleventh Amendment concerns. In the hearing on the motion to dismiss, the district court encouraged the Tribe to narrow its claims accordingly. The Tribe represented to the district court it would do so. Once amended, the complaint will seek no more than an injunction barring Utah state officials from prosecuting members of the Timpa-nogos Tribe for hunting, fishing, and gathering with Tribe-issued licenses on Indian lands within the Uintah Reservation. The Tribe acknowledges that it is obligatеd to file amended pleadings conforming to the trial court’s ruling. Aplee. Br. at 4. At oral argument, counsel for defendants responsibly conceded that if, as we believe is the case, the issue now before us involves no more than the Timpanogos Tribe’s right to hunt and fish on Indian land within the Uintah Valley Reservation, this case falls squarely within the exception set out by Ex parte Young and its progeny.
In applying the Ex parte Young doctrine, we follow a four-part framework. See Elephant Butte,
For the forgoing reasons, we AFFIRM the decision of the district court denying defendants’ motion to dismiss the Tribe’s claim against them for lack of subject matter jurisdiction or on the basis of Eleventh Amendment immunity.
Notes
. The district court made clear in the hearing on the motion to dismiss that the Tribe’s claims as to rights within the boundaries of the Uintah Valley Resеrvation do not relate to lands within the reservation that have been explicitly withdrawn.
. This is so notwithstanding the fact that the denial of a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction is not ordinarily entitled to interlocutory review. See Catlin v. United States,
. Indian reservations created by statute, agreement, or executive order generally have the same legal ramifications as those created by treaty. See United States v. Dion,
. These regulations cite as statutory authority for their promulgation 5 U.S.C. § 301; 25 U.S.C. §§ 2, 9; and 43 U.S.C. § 1457. See 25 C.F.R. Pt. 83. “The term tribe has no universal legal definition. There is no single federal statute defining an Indian tribe for all purposes, although the Constitution and many federal statutes make use of the term.” Cohen, at 3.
