Lead Opinion
AMENDED OPINION
The court’s amended opinion of August 20, 1986, reported at
This appeal presents the question whether Pinetop Logging Company (“Pinetop”) and the White Mountain Apache Tribe (the “Tribe”) have stated a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983
I
The facts of this case are set out more fully in White Mountain Apache Tribe v. Bracker,
In December 1973, after the Tribe had agreed to reimburse Pinetop for the assessed taxes, id. at 140,
Shortly after commencement of the federal action, the State of Arizona filed a motion requesting the district court to abstain on the ground that “the Arizona tax statutes here in question may be susceptible to an authoritative construction by the state courts in the pending state court action that would avoid or modify the Federal constitutional questions raised.” The district court granted the motion, relying on the Supreme Court’s decision in Railroad Commission v. Pullman Co.,
Although not required to do so, Pinetop and the Tribe then elected to submit their federal preemption, due process, and equal protection claims to the Arizona courts along with the questions of state law. In May 1975, the Arizona Superior Court rejected all their claims, state and federal, and entered judgment for the state. The federal district court then dismissed the federal action sua sponte. In early 1976, however, upon the motion of Pinetop and the Tribe, the district court vacated the dismissal order and entered a consent preliminary injunction pending final outcome of the state proceedings. In 1978, the Arizona Court of Appeals affirmed the state trial court judgment, characterizing the Tribe’s arguments as “pure sophistry.” White Mountain Apache Tribe v. Bracker,
After the Arizona Supreme Court declined review, the state returned to federal district court with a motion to quash the consent preliminary injunction and to
II
We first address the question whether Pinetop and the Tribe have stated a claim under § 1983 for which attorney’s fees are available under § 1988. Pinetop and the Tribe argue that a claim of preemption of the state’s power to tax Pinetop’s logging operations on the reservation constitutes a claim of deprivation of “rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws” within the meaning § 1983. The Supreme Court decided in Bracker, supra, that the federal laws regulating the harvest and sale of tribal timber did preempt the Arizona tax statutes, reasoning that
Where ... the Federal Government has undertaken comprehensive regulation of the harvesting and sale of tribal timber, where a number of policies underlying the federal regulatory scheme are threatened by the taxes respondents seek to impose, and where respondents are unable to justify the taxes except in terms of a generalized interest in raising revenue, we believe that the proposed exercise of state authority is impermissible.
Bracker,
The question whether the Supremacy Clause (U.S. Const, art. VI cl. 2) may be used as a sword in bringing a § 1983 action is, of course, different from that decided by the Supreme Court in Bracker — whether the Supremacy Clause may be invoked as a shield against the imposition of state taxes on tribal logging operations heavily regulated by the federal government. It is the former question that we must address.
Pinetop and the Tribe argue that because the federal laws that regulate timber operations on tribal lands are intended to benefit the Tribe, the laws may serve as the basis for a § 1983 claim. That the Tribe benefits from the federal timber regulations, however, is not dispositive of the issue. In this case, Pinetop and the Tribe did not prevail in the Supreme Court on a theory that the state had violated any of the federal laws or regulations governing logging operations on tribal lands. Rather, the Supreme Court in Bracker reasoned that state taxes were preempted because the federal government had pervasively regulated tribal logging operations and because state taxation would interfere with the goals and purposes of the federal regulatory scheme.
Thus the question presented is whether the Tribe’s preemption claim, based on federal occupation of a regulatory field and
A
The Supreme Court has never directly addressed the question whether the Supremacy Clause creates “rights, privileges or immunities” within the ambit of § 1983. In Chapman v. Houston Welfare Rights Organization,
The primary function of the Supremacy Clause is to define the relationship between state and federal law. It is essentially a power conferring provision, one that allocates authority between the national and state governments; thus, it is not a rights conferring provision that protects the individual against government intrusion. The distinction between the two categories of constitutional controls has been enunciated by Professor Choper:
When a litigant contends that the national government (usually the Congress, but occasionally the executive, either alone or in concert with the Senate) has engaged in activity beyond its delegated authority, or when it is alleged that an attempted state regulation intrudes into an area of exclusively national concern, the constitutional issue is wholly different from that posed by an assertion that certain government action abridges a personal liberty secured by the Constitution. The essence of a claim of the latter type — which falls into the individual rights category of constitutional issues ... — is that no organ of government, national or state, may undertake the challenged activity. In contrast, when a person alleges that one of the federalism provisions of the constitution has been violated, he implicitly concedes that one of the two levels of government — national or state — has the power to engage in the questioned conduct. The core of the argument is simply that the particular government that has acted is the constitutionally improper one. To put it another way, a federalism attack on conduct of the national government contends that only the states may so act; a federalism challenge to a state practice asserts that only the central government possesses the exerted power; neither claim denies government power altogether.
J. Choper, Judicial Review in the National Political Process, 174-75 (1980) (quoted with approval in United Nuclear Corp. v. Cannon,
We believe that § 1983 was not intended to encompass those constitutional provisions which allocate power between the state and federal government. See Consolidated Freightways v. Kassel, supra,
*849 Most of the provisions of the Constitution which restrain and directly relate to the States, such as those in tenth section of first article, that “no State shall make a treaty,” “grant letters of marque”, “coin money,” “emit bills of credit,” & c., relate to the divisions of the political powers of the State and General Governments. They do not relate directly to the rights of persons within the States and as between the States and such persons therein. These prohibitions upon the political powers of the States are of such a nature that they can be, and even have been, when the occasion arose, enforced by the courts of the United States declaring void all State acts of encroachment on Federal Powers. Thus, and thus sufficiently, has the United States “enforced” these provisions of the Constitution. But there are some that are not of this class. These are where the court secures the rights or liabilities of persons within the States, as between such persons and the States.
Cong. Globe, 42d Cong. 1st Sess., App. 69 (1871). As the Eighth Circuit has observed, “the implication of Rep. Shellabar-ger’s statement is that § 1983 was enacted to provide a remedy for the latter category of constitutional violation he mentions, and not the former.” Consolidated Freight-ways v. Kassel, supra,
Following the lead of the Supreme Court in Chapman and the framers of § 1983, the District of Rhode Island has answered in the negative the question whether the Supremacy Clause will support an action based on § 1983. In United Nuclear Corp. v. Cannon,
An analogous question is posed by the invocation of § 1983 in cases based on the dormant Commerce Clause, another constitutional provision that has as its primary function the allocation of power between national and state governments. The most extensive treatment of the issue was provided by the Eighth Circuit in Consolidated Freightways v. Kassel, supra, a case in which a trucking firm sought § 1988 attorney’s fees based on its successful dormant Commerce Clause challenge to an Iowa statute banning 65-foot twin trailer trucks. The Eighth Circuit held that
Although the Commerce Clause differs from the Supremacy Clause in that the Commerce Clause is a specific grant of legislative power to Congress, the two clauses are analogous in the sense that both clauses limit the power of a state to interfere with areas of national concern. Just as the Supremacy Clause does not secure rights within the meaning of § 1983, neither does the Commerce Clause.
Id. at 1144. The Eighth Circuit’s reasoning implies that the Supremacy Clause alone will not support a § 1983 action.
A similar question was addressed in Con-nor v. Rivers, 25 F.Supp. 937 (N.D.Ga. 1938), aff'd,
We thus come down on the side of the weight of authority that preemption of state law under the Supremacy Clause — at least if based on federal occupation of the field or conflict with federal goals — will not support an action under § 1983, and will not, therefore, support a claim of attorney’s fees under § 1988.
B
Pinetop and the Tribe do not directly confront the question whether the actual ground on which the decision in Bracker was made — preemption based on federal “occupation of the field” and “conflict with federal goals” — will support a § 1983 action. Rather, their argument seems to assume that there is a direct conflict between Arizona’s tax and the federal regulations governing timbering on tribal lands. Thus, the Tribe’s argument emphasizes the statutory scheme regulating logging operations on tribal lands — an emphasis that would be appropriate were this a direct conflict case. Because Arizona tax does not directly violate any federal law or regulation, the Tribe’s argument does not confront the crucial issue.
In developing their argument, Pinetop and the Tribe rely on Maine v. Thiboutot,
Recognizing the Supreme Court’s limitation of Thiboutot imposed by Sea Clam-mers and Pennhurst, Pinetop and the Tribe contend that our decision in Boat-owners and Tenants Association v. Port
The relevant focus for inquiry, however, is not primarily whether the regulatory scheme was designed to benefit the Indians. Indeed it may have been so designed. Rather the focus must be on the basis of the Supreme Court’s decision in Bracker —preemption pursuant to the Supremacy Clause. So directed, our inquiry leads to the conclusion that the Bracker decision is grounded not on individual rights but instead on considerations of power —the division of authority between the states and the national government. As the Court noted, “At the most general level, the taxes would threaten the overriding federal objective of guaranteeing Indians that they will ‘receive ... the benefit of whatever profit [the forest] is capable of yield-ing____’” Bracker, supra,
Moreover, the Tribe’s exemption from state taxation of its timber business does not implicate individual rights; rather the exemption derives from its status as a sovereign.
In sum, the Arizona tax on Pine-top’s logging operations did not violate any federal statute. Nor is the existence of a federal “goal” or “policy”, standing alone, sufficient to create a right cognizable under § 1983. Rather, the tax ran afoul of the Supremacy Clause because it was deemed to interfere in a general way with the authority and policies of the federal government. To be sure, the Supremacy Clause shielded the Tribe’s timber business from state taxation, giving the Tribe a federal defense to any action brought by the state to collect the taxes; it does not follow, however, that in enacting the regulatory legislation, Congress intended to confer on the Tribe the right to use § 1983 as a sword to enjoin the collection of state taxes. The Tribe’s § 1983 claim, rooted as it is in the power conferring function of the Supremacy Clause, must fail.
We therefore hold that the preemption claim of Pinetop and the Tribe does not give rise to a claim cognizable under § 1983. Accordingly, we conclude that the preemption claim does not support an award of attorney’s fees under § 1988.
III
Plaintiffs argue in the alternative that even if their preemption claim does not give rise to a fee award under § 1988, they are entitled to fees on the basis of pendent Fourteenth Amendment claims pleaded in their original federal complaint. Plaintiffs rely upon Maher v. Gagne,
We reject this claim principally because plaintiffs have failed to provide us with any meaningful basis for evaluating their Fourteenth Amendment claims. All we have to go on in trying to understand and analyze the claims are the bare allegations in the complaint filed at the outset of the federal court action. Plaintiffs tell us nothing more about the claims other than that the complaint “specifically alleges claims under the Equal Protection Clause, Due Process Clause, and Indian Commerce Clause.” Appellees’ Answering Brief, at
The merit of plaintiffs’ constitutional claims is rendered suspect not only by plaintiffs’ failure to present this court with anything beyond a reference to the bare bones allegations of the complaint, but also by plaintiffs’ failure to litigate these claims in the state courts. After the district court entered its Pullman absention order, plaintiffs tendered their due process and equal protection claims along with their preemption claim to the state court by copying verbatim their complaint filed before the district court. See Appellees’ Answering Brief, at 7. However, plaintiffs never pressed either their due process or equal protection claims, despite the fact that they were consistently receiving unfavorable judgments from the state courts on their preemption claim.
Even upon their return to the district court to seek attorney’s fees, plaintiffs failed to put any flesh on the bare bones allegations of their complaint. Their motion for fees states merely that their “complaint also alleges violations of the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses and the Indian Commerce Clause.” Plaintiffs’ Motion for Award of Attorneys’ Fees Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988, at 11. The district court awarded fees on the basis of the preemption claim without mentioning the Fourteenth Amendment claims. Findings of Fact and Conclusions on the Plaintiffs’ Motion for an Award of Attorneys’ Fees Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988.
Finally, and perhaps most troublesome, is plaintiffs’ failure to take advantage of their opportunity in this court for further exposition of their constitutional claims. They provide us with no meaningful analysis; the sole authority relied upon is Justice Stevens’ dissent in White Mountain Apache Tribe v. Bracker,
The second reason plaintiffs’ reliance on Justice Stevens’ dissent is misplaced is that the record leaves no room for doubt that Justice Stevens was not addressing the Fourteenth Amendment claims alleged in plaintiffs’ federal complaint. Not only were those claims not before the Court in Bracker, which involved a review of the state court judgment, but also the dissent does not track the allegations of the federal complaint. Hence, whatever plaintiffs’ constitutional theories might be, Justice Stevens was not addressing them. Justice Stevens speculated about conceivable constitutional claims that Pinetop as a private corporation might have, whereas the allegations in the complaint focus on the Tribe’s status as a sovereign to enjoy treatment under Arizona tax laws on a par with the United States and the other states. Perhaps more importantly, Justice Stevens was speculating on possible constitutional implications of taxing vehicles used by Pi-netop solely on private property, whereas the gravamen of plaintiffs’ complaint is the state’s failure to give plaintiffs beneficial treatment in apportioning the fuel use tax and motor carrier tax based upon travel on public and private roads within the state.
We conclude on the basis of the record before us that the Fourteenth Amendment claims fail to meet the substantiality test of Hagans v. Levine and have been asserted in this action at this late date “solely for the purpose of obtaining fees in [an action] where ‘civil rights’ of any kind are at best an afterthought.” Maine v. Thiboutot,
IV
The state also appeals from the district court order granting a declaratory judgment and a permanent injunction. Plaintiffs contend that the injunction and declaratory judgment were appropriate because the district court’s findings reflected a sufficient threat that the state would impose the impermissible taxes even after the Supreme Court barred it from doing so in White Mountain Apache Tribe v. Bracker,
In the absence of a controversy “of sufficient immediacy and reality,” Maryland
Plaintiffs further contend, however, that the district court properly entered a declaratory judgment on the merits covering the 1968-71 tax period, since assessments covering that period were never adjudicated by either the state courts or the Supreme Court. The state court tax refund action that ultimately reached the Supreme Court dealt only with taxes paid under protest after November 1971, and Pinetop and the Tribe argue that “each year is the origin of a new [tax] liability and a separate cause of action,” Commissioner v. Sunnen, 333 US,. 591, 598,
REVERSED.
Notes
. 42 U.S.C. § 1983 states:
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State ... subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immu-*846 ilities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress.
. 42 U.S.C. § 1988, the Civil Rights Attorney’s Fees Award Act of 1976, provides:
In any action or proceeding to enforce a provision of sections 1981, 1982, 1983, 1985, and 1986 of this title, ... the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party, other than the United States, a reasonable attorney’s fee as part of the costs.
. The Anti-Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1341 (1982), denies federal courts jurisdiction to enjoin state taxes. Federal jurisdiction in this case, however, rests on 28 U.S.C. § 1362, as interpreted in Moe v. Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes,
. Because § 1988 was not enacted until October of 1976, over two years after plaintiffs submitted their substantive claims to the state court following the district court’s abstention order, plaintiffs’ original complaint did not include a prayer for attorney’s fees. Although the fees claim was raised for the first time upon plaintiffs’ return to federal court after Bracker, it is not untimely. See Hutto v. Finney,
. Section 1343(3) is the statutory provision conferring jurisdiction on federal district courts to hear actions commenced "[t]o redress the deprivation, under color of state law ... of any right, privilege or immunity secured by the Constitution of the United States or by any Act of Congress providing for equal rights.” 28 U.S.C. § 1343(3).
. At the time Connor was decided, § 1983 was codified as 8 U.S.C. § 43 and § 1343(3) was codified as 28 U.S.C. § 41(14).
. See Kennecott Corp. v. Smith,
. We emphasize that we are not dealing with a case where state action is in actual conflict with the explicit provisions of federal law. Therefore, we need not reach the question whether a Supremacy Clause claim might give rise to a § 1983 action where preemption was based on such actual conflict. Here we deal only with preemption based on federal occupation of the field and conflict between state law and federal goals and policies. For a discussion of the various branches of preemption doctrine, see generally L. Tribe, American Constitutional Law 376-89 (1978).
. The dissent argues that the violation of federal regulations governing the harvest of tribal timber would give rise to a § 1983 action because those statutes were designed to benefit the Tribe. Dissent at 856-58. While we disagree that these regulations intended to create rights enforceable under § 1983, it is perhaps more important that the Tribe has never contended — and no court has ever found-that these statutes were ever violated. In our view, therefore, the Tribe fails to clear the first hurdle presented by the Thiboutot-Pennhurst-Sea Clam-mers line of cases. Unlike the situation in Thi-boutot, or in Boatowners, no federal statute or regulation was violated by the Arizona tax on plaintiffs’ logging operations. Rather, we have a case in which pervasive federal regulation precludes any state regulation. See Bracker,
. Indeed, the Tribe’s right to invoke the power of federal courts to enjoin Arizona from taxing Pinetop's logging operations rests on considerations of sovereignty, not individual rights. Any plaintiff other than an Indian tribe would be-barred by the Tax Injunction Act from bringing a § 1983 action to enjoin state taxation and hence from obtaining attorney’s fees under § 1988. While we do not address the question whether the Tribe may bring a § 1983 action to enjoin state taxation, we do note the hoops that the dissent is forced to jump through to make this determination. See Dissent, at 860-866 & n. 16. The dissent recognizes that a tribe can
. Plaintiffs pleaded their equal protection claim in the federal and state courts as follows:
The denial of equal protection results from the state’s attempt to impose unapportioned taxes on the plaintiffs’ logging operations occurring partly over roads maintained by the State of Arizona, but not on other operations that occur in part over state roads and part over non-state roads. There is no attempt to impose similar unapportioned taxes on carriers that operate partly in the State of Arizona and partly within some other state, and A.R.S. § 40-641 expressly exempts "receipts from property transported under a star route contract of the federal government.”
There is no legal basis for the taxation; the taxation is arbitrary and discriminatory, lacking any rational basis. First Amended Complaint, ¶ XXIII.
Plaintiffs’ due process claim was pleaded in its entirety as follows:
The unapportioned application of these taxes to the plaintiffs’ operations constitutes a taking in contravention of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution as due process is denied. First Amended Complaint, f XXIV.
. Although we do not have before us the record in the state cotut action, we infer that plaintiffs did not press the Fourteenth Amendment claims before the state courts because plaintiffs have not disputed the state’s contention that the plaintiffs "never argued in the state courts nor in the Supreme Court any constitutional violation.” Reply Brief of Appellant, at 16. The record is clear that the claims are not mentioned in the published opinion of the Arizona Court of Appeals, White Mountain Apache Tribe v. Bracket,
. Plaintiffs’ response to this argument by Ami-ci is grossly misleading. Plaintiffs say that their failure to raise the Fourteenth Amendment claims before the Supreme Court “proves only that the Supreme Court is the master of its docket, [because the Court] granted certiorari only on the federal preemption issue, and the plaintiffs briefed nothing more.” Appellees’ Answering Brief at 51-52 (emphasis in original). The clear implication of this explanation is that plaintiffs raised the due process and equal protection claims in their Petition for Certiorari, but that the Court’s order granting certiorari excluded those claims from consideration. Upon recalling and reviewing the Petition for Certiorari and the various briefs in White Mountain Apache Tribe v. Bracker, we learned what plaintiffs failed to tell us: They did not raise any Fourteenth Amendment claims in their Petition for Certiorari. Moreover, neither due process nor equal protection was mentioned in any of the various briefs filed in the case. Thus the true explanation for plaintiffs’ failure to argue the Fourteenth Amendment claims to the Supreme Court is not that the Court is the master of its docket, but that plaintiffs never asked the Court to consider those claims.
. The dissent overlooks this crucial distinction in concluding that the plaintiffs were treated differently from other similarly situated parties in the state because taxes were being imposed for vehicles used solely on private property. Dissent, at 863. In fact, the vehicles involved
In pleading their Fourteenth Amendment claim, plaintiffs’ allege that the Tribe and its partner Pinetop have a constitutional entitlement to be treated in the same manner as interstate truckers whose state fuel use taxes are apportioned to capture only that portion of fuel use actually attributable to travel on roads within the state. See note 10, supra. Thus, the Tribe contended that, for the purpose of the Arizona tax, tribal roads should be treated as though they were in a separate state. Arizona refused to do this, asserting that Pinetop's activities took place solely within Arizona and that Pinetop should be taxed in the same manner as are all other commercial entities that use vehicles on both public and private roads in Arizona. Thus, contrary to the dissent’s assertions, plaintiffs were not “singled out” for disparate treatment and taxed “differently from other landowners in the State.” Dissent, at 863 n. 11. Rather, they were taxed in exactly the same fashion as all others who use both public and private roads within Arizona — without apportionment. The only exception was the United States government, which was expressly exempted from the taxes. Ariz.Rev.Stat. § 40-641 (1982).
. The state argues that the district court lacked jurisdiction over the issue of attorney’s fees when plaintiffs presented their substantive federal claims to the Arizona courts. The state relies upon England v. Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I respectfully dissent.
There are three separate and independent bases to support the district court’s award of attorney’s fees to the Tribe under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1982). The Tribe has raised civil rights claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1982) sufficient to support the section 1988 award based upon (1) Arizona’s alleged violations of the federal laws regulating the harvest and sale of reservation timber, 25 U.S.C. §§ 406-407, 466 (1982); (2) its alleged due process violations; and (3) its alleged equal protection violations by the state.
The Tribe raised these claims in its district court complaint,
A. The Tribe’s Presentation of Its Section 1983 Claims to the Arizona State Courts
The State of Arizona contends that because the Tribe filed a complaint containing its due process and equal protection claims in the Arizona state courts after the district court entered its Pullman abstention order, the Tribe is somehow precluded from litigating its claim to section 1988 attor
In England, the Supreme Court provided that in cases where a federal district court enters an abstention order, “[i]f a party freely and without reservation submits his federal claims for decision by the state courts, litigates them there, and has them decided there, then ... he has elected to forgo his right to return to the District Court.” England, 375 U.S. at 419,
The State contends that because the Tribe filed its federal-court complaint in the Arizona state courts and thereby “presented” its section 1983 claims to the Arizona courts, it is automatically precluded from “relitigating” those claims now in federal district court. However, the Tribe’s decision to file its federal complaint in its state-court action is not tantamount to litigating all of the claims contained in that complaint in the state courts and therefore does not automatically extinguish its right to reserve its federal claims for decision by the federal courts. The Supreme Court expressly contemplated such a procedure in England, stating that once an abstention order has been entered, a party “must inform th[e State] courts what his federal claims are, so that the state statute [involved] may be construed ‘in light of' those claims.” England,
mere compliance with [this directive] will not support a conclusion, much less create a presumption, that a litigant has freely and without reservation litigated his federal claims in the state courts and so elected not to return to the District Court____ [even in the absence of an] explicit reservation ... the litigant is in no event to be denied his right to return to the District Court unless it clearly appears that he voluntarily did more than [this directive] require[s] and fully litigated his federal claims in the state courts.
Id. at 420-21,
Thus, the Tribe’s decision to identify, but not litigate, its section 1983 claims in the Arizona courts did not preclude it from litigating those claims in the district court after the state court litigation was completed. A fortiori, the Tribe was not precluded from litigating its section 1988 attorney’s fees claim in the district court, since that claim was never even identified in the state-court litigation.
The majority maintains that even if the Tribe’s claims were properly before the district court, violations of the federal laws regulating the harvest and sale of reservation timber, such as those alleged by the Tribe in this case, cannot give rise to a civil rights action under section 1983. I disagree. Section 1983 provides a cause of action for state officials’ violations of federal statutes whenever (1) the statutes create “enforceable rights,” and (2) Congress did not, in the statutes themselves, foreclose private enforcement of those rights through a section 1983 action. Middlesex County Sewerage Authority v. National Sea Clammers Association,
As the majority acknowledges, sections 406, 407, and 466 require the Secretary of the Interior to manage tribal timber resources based “upon a consideration of the needs and best interests” of the tribe, and to ensure that proceeds from any timber sales be paid to the tribe “or disposed of for [its] benefit,” subject only to limited deductions for “administrative expenses” incurred by the federal government. 25 U.S.C. §§ 406(a), 413; 25 C.F.R. § 163.18 (1985); see United States v. Mitchell,
Our court recently held that a federal act establishing a land trust for the betterment of native Hawaiians created rights enforceable by those individuals under section 1983 against parties who interfere with or deprive them of their rights or benefits under the trust.
I also conclude that Congress did not. intend to foreclose private enforcement under section 1983 of the rights it created for Indian tribes in sections 406, 407 and 466. We have held that “there is a presumption that a federal statute creating enforceable rights may be enforced in a section 1983 action,” and that the burden is on the “governmental defendant [to] show that Con
On the contrary, these provisions do not explicitly mention any remedies at all-the damages remedy against the federal government for breach of fiduciary duty that the Supreme Court recognized in Mitchell was based upon inferences the Court drew from the provisions’ structure and legislative history. See 25 U.S.C. §§ 406, 407, 466; Mitchell,
Since both conditions required by the Supreme Court for establishing the availability of a section 1983 cause of action are satisfied, I conclude that the Tribe was entitled to enforce its section 406, 407, and 466 rights against the defendants in a section 1983 action. See Middlesex,
C. The Tribe’s Section 1983 Claims Based on Due Process and Equal Protection
The majority asserts that the Tribe’s due process and equal protection claims are
claims are constitutionally insubstantial only if ... prior decisions inescapably render the claims frivolous; previous decisions that merely render claims of doubtful or questionable merit do not render them insubstantial____A claim is insubstantial only if “ ‘its unsoundness so clearly results from ... previous decisions ... as to foreclose the subject and leave no room for the inference that the questions sought to be raised can be the subject of controversy.’ ”
Hagans,
The dissenting opinion in Bracker,
The majority opinion in Bracket demonstrates that all the necessary elements are present for the Tribe, acting in its corporate capacity,
Second, Arizona conceded during oral argument in Bracket that its taxes do not apply to the use of vehicles on private roads and property in the state. Bracket,
Since the Tribe has asserted viable section 1983 claims based upon the Indian reservation timber laws and the due process and equal protection clauses, it is enti-tied to recover section 1988 attorney’s fees if (1) it has the capacity to bring a section 1983 action based on those claims; and (2) such an action is not barred in the federal courts by the Tax Anti-Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1341 (1982).
Since the Tribe is acting as a business corporation, it qualifies as a “citizen or other person” entitled to bring an action under section 1983 to enforce its rights under the Indian timber laws and the due process and equal protection clauses. Our court and others have held that private corporations qualify as “citizens” or “other persons” entitled to bring section 1983 actions. See California Diversified Promotions, Inc. v. Musick,
I also conclude that the Tribe’s action is not barred by section 1341, because it qualifies for the “Indian tribes” exception to that provision. The Supreme Court ruled in Moe that if an action challenging the imposition of state taxes can be brought under the “Indian tribes” jurisdictional provision, 28 U.S.C. § 1362 (1982), it automatically qualifies for the “Indian tribes” exception to section 1341. See Moe,
The plain language of section 1362 authorizes actions “brought by any Indian tribe or band with a governing body duly recognized by the Secretary of the Interior”:
This circuit’s decision in Navajo Tribal Utility Authority v. Arizona Department of Revenue,
If the leadership of a tribe or band decides that litigation is necessary to protect the rights of the tribe or band, then section 1362 will provide federal court access to the tribe or band when the other jurisdictional requirements of that section are also met.
Id. at 1232 (emphasis added). We also indicated that “[t]o the extent that [the
In the present action, the Tribe has followed the precise guidelines suggested in Navajo Tribal Utility. The Tribe has brought the action in its own name on behalf of a tribal enterprise that it totally controls. There is nothing in the record to suggest that FATCO is semi-autonomous, or that its interests diverge from the Tribe’s in any way. Thus, the Tribe’s action can be brought in federal court under section 1362 and qualifies under the “Indian tribes” exception to section 1341.
Since I conclude that the Tribe was entitled to bring its present section 1983 action in federal court, that its claims based on the Indian reservation timber laws are meritorious, and that its due process and equal protection claims are not “frivolous” under the definition provided in Hagans v. La-vine, I would affirm the district court’s award of attorney’s fees to the Tribe.
. The majority maintains that "[t]he Tribe never contended and no court has ever found that the[ ] statutes [regulating Indian reservation-timber] were ever violated.” Majority Opinion at 851 n. 9. However, the Tribe explicitly alleges in its complaint that “[t]he taxes and regulations attempted to be imposed by the State of Arizona are in direct contravention of the stated objectives of [the] Federal regulations" that were promulgated by the Secretary in order to fulfill his trust responsibilities under the reservation-timber laws. First Amended Complaint, § XXVII (emphasis added). Moreover, the Supreme Court expressly stated in Bracker that "the [Arizona] taxes would threaten the overriding federal objective " and “would undermine [th[e] policy ” for which the reservation-timber laws were enacted. Bracker,
. In determining whether the Tribe’s section 1983 claims support an award of section 1988 attorney’s fees, the standards for evaluating claims based on alleged violations of federal statutes and claims based on alleged constitutional violations appear to be different. The legislative history of section 1988 provides that:
[when] a plaintiff joins a claim under one of the statutes enumerated in [section 1988, for which attorney’s fees are available,] with a claim that does not allow attorney fees, that plaintiff, if it prevails on the non-fee claim, is entitled to a determination on the other claim for the purpose of awarding counsel fees. In some instances, however, the claim with fees may involve a constitutional question which the courts are reluctant to resolve if the non-constitutional claim is dispositive. In such cases, if the claim for which fees may be awarded meets the “substantiality" test [enunciated in] Hagans v. Lavine [,415 U.S. 528 ,94 S.Ct. 1372 ,39 L.Ed.2d 577 (1974),] attorney’s fees may be allowed even though the court declines to enter judgment for the plaintiff on that claim, so long as the plaintiff prevails on the non-fee claim arising out of a “common nucleus of operative fact.”
H.R.Rep. No. 1588, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 4 n. 7 (1976) (citations omitted and emphasis added), quoted in Maher v. Gagne,
This language appears to suggest that for the Tribe to recover section 1988 attorney’s fees based on its claims relating to the reservation-timber statutes, those claims must be determined to be meritorious, whereas to recover based on its constitutional due process and equal protection claims, those claims merely must be found to be "substantial," or non-frivolous. See Hagans,
. Because I reject the majority’s conclusions that the Tribe’s section 1983 claims are procedurally barred and are either non-meritorious or frivolous, I am required to address three issues that the majority is not required to resolve. First, I must determine whether the Tribe is precluded from litigating its section 1988 claims in federal court because it originally presented to, but did not litigate, its section 1983 claims in the Arizona State courts. I conclude that it is not. See Section A, infra. Second, I must determine whether, under the circumstances involved in this case, the Tribe qualifies as a “citizen” or "person” entitled to bring an action under Section 1983. I conclude that it does. See Section D, infra. Finally, I must determine whether the Tribe’s present section 1983 action can be brought in federal court under the “Indian tribes" exception to the Tax Anti-Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1341 (1982). I conclude that it can. See id.
. The majority suggests that although England creates an exception to traditional res judicata principles, it may be essentially an all-or-nothing proposition under which parties, like the Tribe, are required to litigate either all or none of their federal claims in state court, and cannot opt to litigate some federal claims in state court while reserving others. No such requirement has ever been imposed under the England doctrine. We stated in Tovar that "free and unreserved submission to the state court of all federal claims for complete and final resolution is
The majority also criticizes the Tribe for maintaining that its failure to raise its section 1983 claims before the Supreme Court was due to the limited nature of the Court’s order granting certiorari in Bracker. Majority opinion at 851. This issue is irrelevant to the disposition of the present case. The Tribe did not litigate its section 1983 claims in the Arizona state courts, and therefore could not have raised them in the Bracker appeal. Yet, as noted above, based upon the decisions in England and Tovar, this tactical decision by the Tribe does not preclude it from relying on those claims as a basis for section 1988 attorney’s fees in the present action.
. The Court’s conclusion in Mitchell that sections 406, 407, and 466 create a trust relationship between tribes and the federal government was foreshadowed in Bracker, where the Court not only suggested that such a trust relationship existed, but also concluded that Arizona’s challenged taxes interfered with the Tribe’s rights under that trust relationship:
*860 [T]he [challenged] taxes would threaten the overriding federal objective of guaranteeing Indians that they will "receive the ... benefit of whatever profit [the forest] is capable of yielding ...” 25 C.F.R. § 141.3(a)(3) (1979). Underlying the federal regulatory program rests a policy of assuring that the profits derived from timber sales will inure to the benefit of the Tribe, subject only to administrative expenses incurred by the federal government. That objective is part of the general federal policy of encouraging Tribes "to revitalize their self-government” and to assume control over their "business and economic affairs." Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones, 411 U.S. [145] at 151 [93 S.Ct. 1267 at 1271,36 L.Ed.2d 114 at 144]. The imposition of the taxes at issue would undermine that policy in a context in which the federal government has expressed a firm desire that the Tribe should retain the benefits derived from the harvesting and sale of reservation timber.
Bracker,
. The act at issue in Keaukaha-Panaewa, the Hawaiian Admission Act, Public Law No. 86-3, 73 Stat. 4 (1959), required that lands originally held by the United States in trust for native Hawaiians be maintained "as a public trust ... for the betterment of the conditions of native Hawaiians ... and their use for any other object shall constitute a breach of trust." Hawaiian Admission Act, § 5(f); see Keaukaha-Panaewa,
. Section 465 authorizes Indians or Indian tribes to convey their lands in trust to the Secretary of the Interior in order to avoid state and local property taxes. See 25 U.S.C. § 465; Chase v. McMasters,
. The majority’s conclusion that the "regulatory legislation involved in this case is analogous to that involved in Boatowners [and Tenants Association, Inc. v. Port of Seattle,
language and legislative history [of the statute at issue, the River and Harbor Improvements Act, 33 U.S.C. §§ 540-633 (1982),] indicate an intent to improve navigation, enhance commerce, and reduce vehicle-vessel traffic problems, all to the benefit of the general public. There is no evidence whatsoever of an intent to provide economical moorage or to create any special benefit for the class of pleasure craft owners. BOATA thus has no enforceable rights under the Act.
Boatowners,
. The majority states that the Tribe’s allegations concerning its fourteenth amendment claims in its complaint are "far too meager” for this court to determine whether or not they satisfy the Hagans "substantiality” test and support the district court's award of attorney’s fees. Majority opinion at 852. I do not agree. While the Tribe's presentation of these claims in its complaint and subsequent pleadings has not been especially detailed, a reading of the Tribe’s pleadings, along with the Supreme Court’s opinions in Bracker and recent due process and equal protection cases, makes it clear that the Tribe’s fourteenth amendment claims satisfy the Hagans test.
However, given that the majority believes that it has no meaningful basis for determining whether the Tribe’s fourteenth amendment claims support a fee award under § 1988,1 find it inexplicable that the majority does not remand this case for further development on this issue. Instead, the majority has simply discarded a considered fee-award judgment by the district court and vacated a $206,000 award to the Tribe.
The majority states that the district court awarded attorney’s fees based exclusively on the Tribe’s preemption claim and did not mention the Tribe’s constitutional claims in making its fee award, majority opinion at 856, but this is simply not true. The district court's findings and conclusions on the Tribe’s section 1988 request plainly state that the court awarded attorney's fees based on all the Tribe’s section 1983 claims. The court did not single out any one claim for special mention. Even if the district court’s award had been based on the Tribe’s preemption claim, we are required to affirm the award as long as the Tribe’s section 1983 claims based on the Indian timber laws are meritorious or its fourteenth amendment claims are not frivolous.
. Although purporting to apply the Hagans test in evaluating the district court’s fee award, the majority questions whether the Tribe’s fourteenth amendment claims have “sufficient merit” to justify a section 1988 award. This suggests that the majority has applied too strict a standard in reviewing the Tribe’s fourteenth amendment claims, and has not simply examined whether those claims are "inescapably ... frivolous,” as Hagans requires. Hagans,
. The majority contends that the statements in the Bracker dissent concerning possible due process and equal protection claims arising out of the challenged Arizona taxes do not support the Tribe’s fourteenth amendment claims, because these statements refer to claims potentially available to Pinetop as a private corporation rather than to claims potentially available to the Tribe. Majority opinion at 856-57. The majority maintains that the Tribe’s fourteenth amendment claims, in contrast to Pinetop’s, arise out of the Tribe’s "status as a sovereign" and are based on the assumption that the Tribe is entitled to receive beneficial or preferential treatment above and beyond that of other individuals and entities. Id.
However, the majority has misinterpreted the Tribe’s due process and equal protection claims and has confused them with the preemption claim it advanced in Bracker. Although the underlying premise of the Tribe’s preemption claim in Bracker was that the State must accord
The Tribe has raised its fourteenth amendment claims in its capacity as a corporation seeking to make commercial use of its reservation lands. See Section D, infra. Its due process and equal protection claims are identical to those that any corporate entity would raise if it were treated disparately under a state taxing scheme. These claims have nothing to do with the Tribe’s status as a sovereign entity. They arise out of the Tribe’s joint commercial venture with Pinetop, see id., and are therefore identical to any fourteenth amendment claims that Pine-top would be entitled to raise as a corporation. Therefore, any statements in the Bracket dissent relating to possible due process and equal protection claims available to Pinetop would be equally applicable to the Tribe.
. See the discussion relating to the Tribe's corporate or proprietary capacity in Section D, infra.
. The majority asserts that the challenged Arizona taxes are typically assessed “without apportionment” between mileage driven on state-maintained roads and non-state-maintained roads for entities or landowners based in Arizona. Majority opinion at 854 n. 14. Thus, according to the majority, the Tribe is not entitled under Arizona law to have the taxes chargeable to its and Pinetop’s timber operations apportioned, and its demand for tax apportionment in its complaint represents a request for preferential treatment, as opposed to equal protection. Id. The majority interprets the Tribe’s equal protection claim as alleging that the Tribe and Pinetop are constitutionally entitled to be treated “in the same manner as interstate truckers" passing through Arizona, and that the "tribal roads [on its reservation] should be treated as though they [are] in a separate state.” Id.
However, the majority has misinterpreted the challenged Arizona taxing scheme, and oversimplified the Tribe’s equal protection claim. Contrary to the majority’s assertion, Arizona’s fuel taxes are assessed for in-state taxpayers based upon the types of roads on which they use their vehicles. Section 28-1552 provides that "an excise tax [shall be] imposed [at the rate of eight cents per gallon] on use fuel used in the propulsion of a motor vehicle on any highway within this state.” Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 28-1552 (1985) (emphasis added); see Bracket,
Moreover, Arizona's assistant attorney general made a series of statements and concessions during the Supreme Court argument in Bracker indicating that Arizona apportions mileage when assessing its challenged taxes. He stated initially that " 'so long as road[s] remain[ ] private thoroughfare[s, the] use of those road[s] would not be subject to the State tax.’ ’’ Bracker,
The Tribe’s equal protection claim in this action arises out of Arizona’s refusal to apportion the Tribe’s and Pinetop’s mileage in assessing their fuel taxes, even though it apportions mileage for "other operations that occur in part over state roads and part over non-state roads.” First Amended Complaint, f XXIII. Despite the majority’s claims, these "other operations” include Arizona-based as well as non-Arizona-based individuals and entities. The subsequent reference in the Tribe’s complaint to "carriers that operate [only] partly in the State of Arizona,” upon which the majority relies, does not signify that the Tribe’s equal protection claim is entirely premised upon the treatment received by “interstate truckers,” as the majority contends-it merely states an alternative equal protection argument. See id.
. The majority asserts that because the challenged Arizona use fuel tax “is expressly levied ‘in lieu of direct fuel taxes,” it is therefore "analytically indistinguishable from a direct fuel tax.” The majority contends as a result that the Tribe cannot challenge Arizona's unequal imposition of the use fuel tax, because it could "not seriously contend that Arizona should be forced to apportion direct fuel taxes collected at the pump.” Majority opinion at 854.
This argument is seriously flawed. The fact that a state can conceivably tax an individual or entity under one tax scheme does not automatically entitle it to impose taxes upon that individual or entity under a different tax scheme when other similarly situated individuals or entities are not being taxed under that scheme. Otherwise, there could never be due process or equal protection challenges to state taxing schemes, because it would always be possible to hypothe
Arizona chose to adopt its use fuel tax. It is responsible for administering that tax in an evenhanded, non-discriminatory fashion that will withstand due process and equal protection scrutiny. If Arizona chooses to change to a direct fuel tax so that it can tax the Tribe and other private landowners for fuel used on non-state-maintained roads and private property, it certainly would be entitled to do so. However, the fact that Arizona could conceivably change its tax system does not affect the resolution of this case.
. The Tax Anti-Injunction Act provides that: [Federal] district courts shall not enjoin, suspend or restrain the assessment, levy or collection of any tax under State law where a plain, speedy and efficient remedy may be had in the courts of such State.
28 U.S.C. § 1341. Courts have recognized a limited exception to this provision for "Indian Tribes." See Moe v. Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes,
. A tribe’s ability to bring an action in federal court challenging the imposition of state taxes depends on the capacity in which the tribe initiates the litigation and the basis of the tribe’s standing to bring such a challenge. The Supreme Court indicated in Moe v. Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes,
In the present action, the Tribe’s standing is based upon its proprietary, corporate activities; as a result, in order to maintain its action, the Tribe must be entitled to bring a section 1983 action and must qualify for the "Indian tribes” exception to section 1341 while acting in its corporate capacity. The Tribe could also have challenged Arizona’s taxes in its sovereign, governmental capacity, if the imposition of those taxes adversely affected its exercise of its powers of self-government, or if the taxes were imposed on the Tribe’s governmental operations. See id; see also Assiniboine & Sioux Tribes v. Montana,
Similarly, the Tribe could have brought an action challenging Arizona's vehicle taxes as a representative of or as parens patriae for its individual members, in order to vindicate their individual rights. See, e.g., Assiniboine & Sioux Tribes,
However, it would appear inconsistent with our prior decisions to allow tribes suing merely as representatives of their individual members to avoid the bar of section 1341. We have held that the "Indian tribes” exception to section 1341 does not apply to suits brought by individual Indians, see Comenout v. Washington,
. Section 17 of the IRA authorizes Indians to request the Secretary of the Interior to issue charters of incorporation to their tribes once the tribes have adopted constitutions and bylaws and organized tribal governments under section 16 of the IRA, 25 U.S.C. § 476 (1982). Congress enacted section 17 specifically "to rehabilitate the Indian’s economic life and to give him a chance to develop the initiative destroyed by a century of oppression and paternalism,” Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones,
The Supreme Court and other courts have recognized a distinction between tribes acting as business entities pursuant to IRA section 17 and as sovereign, governmental entities, pursuant to section 17, and have consistently indicated that the capacity in which a tribe is acting helps to determine its legal rights, privileges, and immunities. See Kerr-McGee Corp. v. Navajo Tribe of Indians,
The purpose of Congress in enacting section 16 of the Indian Reorganization Act was to facilitate and to stabilize the tribal organization of Indians residing on the same reservation, for their common welfare. It provided their political organization. The purpose of Congress in enacting section 17 of the Indian Reorganization Act was to empower the Secretary to issue a charter of business incorporation to such tribes to enable them to conduct business through this modern device, which charter cannot be revoked or surrendered except by act of Congress. This corpo*867 ration, although composed of the same members as the political body, is to be a separate entity, and thus more capable of obtaining credit and otherwise expediting the business of the tribe, while removing the possibility of federal liability for activities of that nature. As a result, the powers, privileges and responsibilities of these tribal organizations materially differ.
65 I.D. at 484 (emphasis added).
. The Supreme Court has suggested that to determine whether a tribe has acted in its business or its sovereign capacity, courts must look beyond the formalities of whether the tribe has actually incorporated itself under section 17, and must look instead to the substance of the conduct in question and the powers actually granted to the tribe in its constitution and bylaws. See Mescalero Apache Tribe,
. For example. Congress intended that tribal business corporations would be able to enter into contracts waiving any possible sovereign immunity from unconsented suits. Parker Drilling,
. The reference to a “duly recognized" governing body in section 1362 merely indicates that the Tribe must have an IRA government organized under IRA section 16. Since tribes can become incorporated under IRA section 17 only if they already have a section 16 government, this reference to section 16 does not mean that Congress intended section 1362 to apply only to tribes acting in a sovereign or governmental capacity.
. Navajo Tribal Utility contains dictum stating that "[s]uits brought by tribal corporations have also been found to fall outside the scope of section 1362.”
