The State of Nevada seeks to appeal from a declaratory judgment and an injunction prohibiting two of its officials from enforcing Statе hunting laws and regulations against Washoe Indians hunting on the Washoe Pinenut Allotments. 1 The plaintiffs were the Washoe Tribe and two of its members. The Director and the Chief of Law Enforcement of the Nevada Department of Wildlife, as individuals and in their official capacities, were the defendants. Thе State of Nevada was not named as a party to the action. It did not intervene or otherwise enter an appearance in the district court. The plaintiffs have filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the basis that the state has no standing to appeal. 2 We agree and dismiss the appeal.
In the district cоurt, the plaintiffs sought declaratory and injunctive relief against the Department of Wildlife officials. Basing their arguments on federal preemption and tribal sovereignty, the plaintiffs asserted that the State of Nevada had no jurisdiction to regulate hunting by tribal members on the Washoe Pinenut Allotments. Thе district court issued the requested injunction, permanently enjoining the named officials, their successors in office, and those acting in concert with them or under their direction and control, from enforcing the laws and regulations of the State of Nevada against members of the Washoe Tribе in connection with their hunting on the Wash-oe Pinenut Allotments. The injunction also permanently enjoined those parties from interfering with or infringing upon the еxercise of the powers of self-government of the Washoe Tribe in its regulation of hunting by its members on the allotments.
In its declaratory judgment the court held in part:
The Washoe Pinenut Allotments are not subject to the jurisdiction of the State of Nevada with respect to hunting activities of members of the Washoe Tribe within such allotments, and .. . the Stаte of Nevada has no jurisdiction to directly or indirectly enforce its hunting laws or regulations against members of the Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California in connection with the hunting activities of such members within the Pinenut Allotments.
The individual defendants filed no notice of appeal, but the Statе of Nevada did, and now argues that it should be permitted to maintain the appeal despite the
The general rule is that one who was not a party of recоrd before the trial court may not appeal that court’s judgment.
United States v. Conforte,
[I]n nearly every case where such an appeal was allowed to proceed, two elements were presented: (1) the appellant had participated in the district court proceedings even though not a party, and (2) the equities of the case weighed in favor of hearing the appeal.
The eleventh amendment forbids unсon-sented suits against a state in federal court. The plaintiffs accordingly brought this action in the tradition of
Ex Parte Young,
Nevertheless, the fictional distinction is rigidly observed. If the State had been named as a party defendant without its consent, the district court would have had to dismiss it from the litigation.
Alabama v. Pugh,
In the face of these stern reminders of the vitality of the eleventh amendment and the continued observance of the fictional distinction between the state and its officers, we do not feel free to ignore the distinction and hold that the litigаtion below was “really” one against the state from which the state can appeal. Nor can we hold that the State’s indirect partiсipation entitles it to appeal when its direct participation would so clearly have been subject to eleventh amendment rеstrictions.
In addition we find no equities in favor of permitting an appeal by the State. The State did not intervene below when it clearly could havе. Fed.R.Civ.P. 24.
Pellegrino v. Nesbit,
Appeal dismissed.
Notes
. The Washoe Pinenut Allоtments are lands located in two counties of Nevada. The lands were never part of a reservation, but rather were public domain рrior to their allotment. Pursuant to the General Allotment Act of February 8, 1887, 24 Stat. 388, as amended by Act of February 28, 1891, 26 Stat. 794, 25 U.S.C. §§ 331-358, these lands were allotted to individual Indians to be held in trust by the United States for their sole use and benefit. The allotments continue to be held in trust, some for the ' sole use and benefit of individual Washoe allot-tees and some for the Washoe tribe.
. The motion to dismiss was denied by a motions panel of this court, with the qualification that the merits panel was free to reopen the issue. Order of November 6, 1980.
. We do not accept the State’s argument that appearances made оn behalf of the state officials constituted appearances made on behalf of the State of Nevada. The attorney genеral had a statutory duty to appear to represent the officials and the appearance was made in satisfaction of that obligation. As a matter of record, the attorney general appeared on the officials’ behalf.
