People v. Miami Nation Enterprises ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 1/21/14
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SEVEN
    THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF                       B242644
    CALIFORNIA,
    (Los Angeles County
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                 Super. Ct. No. BC373536)
    v.
    MIAMI NATION ENTERPRISES et al.,
    Defendants and Respondents.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Yvette M.
    Palazuelos, Judge. Affirmed.
    Uche L. Enenwali, Senior Corporations Counsel, and Mary Ann Smith, Deputy
    Commissioner, California Corporations Counsel; Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General,
    Sara J. Drake, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Jennifer T. Henderson, Deputy
    Attorney General, for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Fredericks Peebles & Morgan, John Nyhan, Nicole E. Ducheneaux and Conly J.
    Schulte for, MNE and SFS, Inc., Defendants and Respondents.
    ___________________
    Applying the arm-of-the-tribe analysis as we directed in Ameriloan v. Superior
    Court (2008) 
    169 Cal. App. 4th 81
    (Ameriloan), the trial court dismissed for lack of
    subject matter jurisdiction this action by the Commissioner of the California Department
    of Corporations against five “payday loan” businesses owned by Miami Nation
    Enterprises (MNE), the economic development authority of the Miami Tribe of
    Oklahoma, a federally recognized Indian tribe, and SFS, Inc., a corporation wholly
    owned by the Santee Sioux Nation, also a federally recognized Indian tribe. Because the
    two tribal entities and their cash-advance and short-term-loan businesses are sufficiently
    related to their respective Indian tribes to be protected from this state enforcement action
    under the doctrine of tribal sovereign immunity, we affirm.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    1. The Commissioner’s Complaint and the Initial Ruling on the Motions To Quash
    Following an investigation by the Department of Corporations, in August 2006 the
    1
    Commissioner issued desist-and-refrain orders to Ameriloan, United Cash Loans, US
    Fast Cash, Preferred Cash and One Click Cash, directing them to cease their unlicensed
    and unlawful loan activities in California. In June 2007, after the businesses failed to
    comply with the desist-and-refrain orders, the Commissioner filed a complaint in the
    name of the People of the State of California for injunctive relief, restitution and civil
    penalties against Ameriloan, United Cash Loans, US Fast Cash, Preferred Cash and One
    Click Cash alleging they were providing short-term, payday loans over the Internet to
    California residents in violation of several provisions of the California Deferred Deposit
    2
    Transaction Law (DDTL) (Fin. Code, § 2300 et seq.). Specifically, the complaint
    1
    Effective July 1, 2013 the Department of Corporations and Department of
    Financial Institutions combined and became the Department of Business Oversight within
    the Business, Consumer Services and Housing Agency pursuant to the Governor’s
    Reorganization Plan (G.R.P.) No. 2 of 2012. (See Gov. Code, §§ 12080.2, 12080.5.)
    The Corporations Commissioner is now the Commissioner of Business Oversight.
    2
    “Payday loans are controversial. They typically offer about two weeks of credit, due
    in full on the borrower’s next payday, at annual interest rates of around 400 percent. While
    2
    alleged the five businesses engaged in deferred deposit transactions within California
    without being licensed (Fin. Code, § 23005, subd. (a)), originated loans in excess of the
    $300 statutory maximum (Fin. Code, § 23035, subd. (a)), charged excessive loan fees
    (Fin. Code, § 23036, subd. (a)), and failed to provide their customers with various
    required written notices (Fin. Code, § 23001, subds. (a), (e)). The trial court granted the
    Commissioner’s ex parte request for a temporary restraining order against each of the
    businesses and set a date for them to show cause why the request for a preliminary
    injunction should not be granted.
    MNE and SFS specially appeared and moved to quash service of summons and to
    dismiss the complaint on the ground the five payday loan businesses named as defendants
    were simply trade names (or “dba’s”) of the two tribal entities and, as wholly owned and
    controlled entities of their respective tribes operating on behalf of the tribes, they were
    protected from this state enforcement action under the doctrine of tribal sovereign
    borrowers find fast relief, they are often left indebted for months, struggling to repay a loan
    that was marketed as a short-term solution. Proponents argue that payday loans are a useful
    form of credit for consumers who lack access to more conventional banking services, but
    opponents claim they overburden people who are already struggling to make ends meet.”
    (The Pew Charitable Trusts, Payday Lending in America, Series Summary (Oct. 2013)
    Ameriloan, supra
    ,
    
    169 Cal. App. 4th 81
    we granted the petition in part and directed the trial court to vacate its
    order denying the motions to quash and granting the preliminary injunction and to
    conduct a new evidentiary hearing to determine the applicability of the doctrine of tribal
    4
    sovereign immunity in the particular circumstances of this action.
    3
    In addition to asserting their immunity to suit, MNE and SFS contended their
    businesses, utilizing automated clearing house transactions, were not subject to the
    provisions of the DDTL, which, by its terms, applies to transactions involving “personal
    checks”—an issue we identified but did not resolve in Ameriloan in light of the
    uncertainty as to the court’s subject matter jurisdiction. (See 
    Ameriloan, supra
    ,
    169 Cal.App.4th at pp. 99-100.)
    4
    We had initially issued a summary denial of MNE and SFS’s petition. The
    Supreme Court granted MNE and SFS’s petition for review and transferred the matter to
    us with directions to issue an alternative writ and hear the matter. (See 
    Ameriloan, supra
    ,
    169 Cal.App.4th at p. 88.)
    4
    Our opinion briefly summarized the tribal sovereign immunity doctrine,
    explaining, “An Indian tribe’s sovereign nation status confers an absolute immunity from
    suit in federal or state court, absent an express waiver of that immunity or congressional
    authorization to sue.” (
    Ameriloan, supra
    , 169 Cal.App.4th at p. 89.) We then quoted the
    key language from the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Kiowa Tribe v.
    Manufacturing Tech. (1998) 
    523 U.S. 751
    [
    118 S. Ct. 1700
    , 
    140 L. Ed. 2d 981
    ] (Kiowa),
    which held a federally recognized Indian tribe enjoys immunity from suit in state court
    even if the subject of the action is purely commercial activity that occurs on nontribal
    lands. Based on Kiowa we concluded the trial court had erred in ruling as a matter of law
    the doctrine of tribal sovereign immunity did not apply to the payday loan companies’
    5
    commercial activities occurring outside of Indian country. (Ameriloan, at pp. 89-90.)
    We also held the trial court had erred in concluding tribal sovereign immunity had been
    waived based on a “sue or be sued” clause in the resolution establishing MNE as an
    economic subdivision of the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma or the arbitration provision
    contained in each of the payday loan companies’ loan agreements with consumers. (Id. at
    pp. 94-96.)
    To decide the motion to quash—that is, to decide whether the tribal entities,
    operating through the named payday loan companies, are entitled to the benefits of tribal
    sovereign immunity—we explained, the trial court “must first determine whether those
    entities, in fact, are acting on behalf of federally recognized tribes.” (
    Ameriloan, supra
    ,
    169 Cal.App.4th at p. 97.) “Tribal sovereign immunity extends not only to the Indian
    tribes themselves but also to those for-profit commercial entities that function as ‘arms of
    the tribes.’ [Citations.] The doctrine, however, does not ‘“cover tribally chartered
    5
    Relying on 
    Kiowa, supra
    , 
    523 U.S. 751
    , we explained the question was not
    whether state regulatory laws, here the DDTL, apply to commercial activities conducted
    outside Indian country by a tribal entity, but whether the tribal entity is protected from a
    government enforcement action under the doctrine of tribal sovereign immunity.
    (
    Ameriloan, supra
    , 169 Cal.App.4th at pp. 90-91; see Kiowa, at p. 755 [“[t]here is a
    difference between the right to demand compliance with state law and the means
    available to enforce them”].)
    5
    corporations that are completely independent of the tribe.”’” (Ibid.) In light of the trial
    court’s failure to make findings pertinent to the arm-of-the-tribe analysis, we directed it
    to conduct a new evidentiary hearing and to consider whether the two tribal entities are
    sufficiently related to their respective tribes to be entitled to the protection of tribal
    sovereign immunity. “To this end, the court should consider the criteria expressed by the
    Courts of Appeal in Trudgeon [v. Fantasy Springs Casino (1999)] 71 Cal.App.4th [632,]
    638 and [Redding] Rancheria [v. Superior Court (2001)] 88 Cal.App.4th [384,] 389,
    including whether the tribe and the entities are closely linked in governing structure and
    characteristics and whether federal policies intended to promote Indian tribal autonomy
    are furthered by extension of immunity to the business entity. (See also Allen v. Gold
    Country Casino (9th Cir. 2006) 
    464 F.3d 1044
    , 1046 [the relevant question for purposes
    of applying tribal sovereign immunity ‘is not whether the activity may be characterized
    as a business, which is irrelevant under Kiowa, but whether the entity acts as an arm of
    the tribe so that its activities are properly deemed to be those of the tribe’].)” (Ameriloan,
    at pp. 97-98.)
    In response to the Commissioner’s request to be permitted discovery into the
    assertion that profits from the payday loan operations benefit the two tribes that created
    MNE and SFS, we observed, “we see no reason why limited discovery, directed solely to
    matters affecting the trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction, should impact the payday
    loan companies’ special appearance . . . .” (
    Ameriloan, supra
    , 169 Cal.App.4th at p. 98.)
    Nonetheless, because no issue relating to discovery was raised in the petition for writ of
    mandate, we made no express ruling on the permissible scope of any discovery when the
    matter returned to the trial court. (Id. at pp. 98-99.)
    3. The Parties’ Evidentiary Presentations Regarding the Arm-of-the-Tribe Issue
    Following our Ameriloan decision, discovery was conducted in the trial court,
    ultimately under the supervision of a discovery referee appointed pursuant to the parties’
    6
    6
    stipulation under Code of Civil Procedure section 639. Thereafter, MNE and SFS
    renewed their motion to quash service and to dismiss the action for lack of subject matter
    jurisdiction, submitting with the moving papers extensive supporting documentary
    evidence. In response, the Commissioner filed a motion for a preliminary injunction,
    which the trial court deemed an opposition to the motion to quash. After further
    consideration the trial court then conducted an evidentiary hearing on May 10, 2012.
    a. Evidence from the tribal entities
    i. The Miami Tribe of Oklahoma
    According to the tribal entities’ evidence, the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma was
    organized in 1936 pursuant to the Oklahoma Indian Welfare Act of 1936 (25 U.S.C.
    § 501) and is governed by a constitution and by-laws approved by the Secretary of the
    Interior. Its ancestral homelands included much of the upper Midwest (what is now
    Indiana, Illinois, Ohio and lower Michigan and Wisconsin), but the Miami people were
    forcibly removed from this area in 1846 and relocated several times thereafter, ultimately
    to “Indian Territory,” now Oklahoma. Its headquarters are located on land held in trust
    for the tribe’s benefit by the United States in rural northeastern Oklahoma, approximately
    90 miles from Tulsa. The United States Small Business Administration has included this
    land within its designations of historically underutilized business zones.
    Recognizing “a critical need for the development of economic activities . . . to
    provide for the well-being of the citizens of the Miami Tribe,” the tribe organized MNE
    as a wholly owned and controlled tribal entity pursuant to the May 2005 Amended Miami
    Nation Enterprises Act. That Act specifies MNE “shall be a subordinate economic
    enterprise of the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma” and provides the tribe’s governing body, the
    Tribal Business Committee, has delegated its authority to MNE: “[T]he creation and
    6
    In a companion, nonpublished opinion we affirm the separately appealed
    August 12, 2011 order imposing $34,437.50 in discovery sanctions against the
    Commissioner after the court denied in substantial part her motion to compel further
    responses to a second set of requests for production of documents. (People v. MNE
    (Jan. 21, 2014, B236547).)
    7
    operation of Miami Nation Enterprises serves an essential government function of the
    Miami Tribe of Oklahoma by allowing the Miami Tribe to provide directly for the
    development of tribal revenue generating activities and to acquire property.” The Miami
    Tribe expressly provided MNE would enjoy all privileges and immunities of the tribe
    itself, including “the right of sovereign immunity from unconsented civil suit.”
    MNE’s initial board of directors consisted of the members of the Tribal Business
    Committee; the chief of the Miami Tribe appointed all successor members of the MNE
    board with the approval of the Tribal Business Committee; the current members of the
    board are members of the Miami Tribe; and the initial officers of MNE were hired by the
    Tribal Business Committee, including its current chief executive officer. MNE Services,
    Inc. is a wholly owned subsidiary of MNE, created in 2008 pursuant to the Amended
    Miami Nation Enterprises Act. MNE Services, Inc. processes and approves loan
    applications pursuant to underwriting criteria approved by MNE. MNE/MNE Services,
    Inc. transact Internet lending under the trade names Ameriloan, US Fast Cash and United
    Cash Loans. Their lending activities are subject to tribal laws governing interest rates,
    loans and cash advance services. According to supporting declarations, all loan
    applications are approved by MNE on federal trust land under the sovereign jurisdiction
    of the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma; and profits from MNE/MNE Services, Inc. “directly or
    indirectly enable the Miami Tribe to fund critical governmental services to its members,
    such as tribal law enforcement, poverty assistance, housing, nutrition, preschool, elder
    care programs, school supplies and scholarships. . . . The cash advance business is a
    critical component of the Miami Tribe’s economy and governmental operations.”
    ii. The Santee Sioux Nation
    The Santee Sioux Nation was organized under section 16 of the Indian
    Reorganization Act of 1934 and is governed by a constitution approved by the Secretary
    of the Interior in 2002. The Santee Sioux reservation is located in an isolated, rural
    region of northeastern Nebraska. (The ancestral home of the Santee Sioux is in present-
    day Minnesota. They were forcibly relocated first to South Dakota and then to their
    8
    current site.) The United States Small Business Administration has also included this
    land within its designations of historically underutilized business zones.
    Acting through its governing body, the Tribal Council, in 2005 the tribe created
    SFS, Inc., a wholly owned chartered tribal corporation whose sole purpose is to generate
    revenue to help fund the Santee Sioux’s governmental operations and social welfare
    programs. SFS’s articles of incorporation expressly state it enjoys the tribe’s sovereign
    immunity from suit. SFS is licensed pursuant to tribal law to operate an online lending
    business (cash advance services and short-term loans) utilizing the trade names Preferred
    Cash Loans and One Click Cash. SFS’s articles of incorporation mandate that the board
    of directors of SFS, which consists of the members of the Tribal Council, manage SFS;
    and the Tribal Council appointed the tribe’s business manager as the chief executive
    officer of SFS.
    According to the declaration of Robert Campbell, an enrolled member of the
    Santee Sioux Nation, a member of the Tribal Council and the treasurer of SFS, “the loan
    transactions are approved and consummated in Indian lands and within the jurisdiction of
    the Santee Sioux Nation.” In addition, Campbell testified, “These cash advance services
    are the primary source of income for SFS.” “All profits earned by SFS go to the Santee
    Sioux to help fund its government operations and social welfare programs. . . . The
    Santee Sioux reservation is a severely economically depressed region, and the profits
    generated by SFS are essential to maintaining a functioning government that is able to
    provide the essential government services to its members.”
    b. The Commissioner’s evidence
    Without seriously questioning the close structural relationship between the Miami
    Tribe of Oklahoma and MNE or the Santee Sioux Nation and SFS, the Commissioner
    presented evidence to demonstrate the actual cash advance services and loan activities of
    the named defendants were actively operated and controlled by nontribal third parties, not
    the tribes themselves or their tribally owned corporations. At the outset, the
    Commissioner explained the various trade names used by the named defendants were
    9
    originally registered by one Scott Tucker to advertise and market payday lending services
    several years before they were adopted by MNE and SFS. In July 2008 SFS and MNE
    entered into management agreements with a Tucker-controlled company, N.M. Service
    Corp. (NMS) to direct and operate their lending activities. The Commissioner conceded
    MNE and SFS had final authority under these agreements for making the loans, but
    contended Tucker’s management company effectively exercised that authority through
    advance instructions or approval parameters; in fact, the Commissioner argued, Tucker
    and his company totally controlled, operated and managed the businesses as part of an
    interrelated network of companies that have common ownership, business functions and
    employees and that persistently commingle funds. According to the Commissioner’s
    information obtained independently from the Federal Trade Commission and other
    sources (that is, not through discovery in this proceeding), MNE and SFS received
    one percent of the gross revenues from their cash advance/loan businesses while Tucker’s
    company retained the “net cash flow of the Lending Business.”
    The Commissioner noted the officers, directors and shareholders of MNE Services
    and SFS are not personally liable to creditors or claimants of the corporations for
    corporate actions. Consequently, neither the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma nor the Santee
    Sioux Nation is potentially subject to liability for any misconduct in the cash advance,
    short-term lending businesses. The Commissioner also asserted MNE’s and SFS’s
    lending businesses regularly violated tribal laws in the areas of permissible interest rates,
    control of bank accounts and the commingling of funds.
    4. The Trial Court’s Order Dismissing the Commissioner’s Enforcement Action
    Following the evidentiary hearing, the trial court granted MNE and SFS’s motion
    to quash service of summons and dismissed the case for lack of subject matter
    jurisdiction. Applying the criteria articulated in Trudgeon v. Fantasy Springs 
    Casino, supra
    , 
    71 Cal. App. 4th 632
    for determining whether a tribal entity functions as an arm of
    the tribe for purposes of tribal sovereign immunity, as we had directed in Ameriloan, the
    trial court summarized the evidence and concluded the tribal entities were closely linked
    10
    in governing structure and characteristics to their respective tribes. The court rejected as
    unpersuasive the Commissioner’s argument the payday loan businesses were not arms of
    their tribes or entitled to tribal sovereign immunity because Tucker and his company
    completely controlled their operations and were the primary beneficiaries of the payday
    loan activities: “[C]ontrol of a corporation does not mean control of business minutiae;
    the tribe can be enmeshed in the direction and control of the business without being
    involved in the actual management. . . . [The Commissioner’s] arguments go beyond
    governing structure and characteristics and seek a determination that sovereign immunity
    does not apply because the Tribes have not exercised sufficient control of the Defendants
    or have allowed third parties to extract too much money (benefit) from the tribal entities.
    However, these concerns are the Tribes’ concerns. The fact that the Defendant tribal
    entities may be violating the Tribes’ own laws and regulations is a matter for the Tribes
    and is not a basis to determine the entities are not closely linked in governing structure
    and characteristics.”
    The court also ruled the federal policies intended to promote tribal autonomy were
    furthered by extension of immunity to MNE and SFS and their payday loan businesses
    notwithstanding the Commissioner’s contrary position based on the purportedly
    disproportionate benefits received by the nontribal managers: “It is undisputed that the
    Tribes receive some amount of the gross revenues, which allows the Tribes to fund
    important services and projects for their members. It is not the province of this court to
    determine that, because the Tribes did not make a better deal with [the nontribal third
    parties] in which they secured a greater percentage of gross revenues, Indian tribal
    autonomy is no longer furthered. Such an interpretation would substitute this court’s
    analysis of the Tribes’ interests for the Tribes’ own analysis of what is in their best
    interests. . . . Tribal immunity cannot be defeated simply because third parties who
    operate Tribe directed/controlled businesses also benefit substantially—even perhaps
    substantially more than the Tribes.”
    The Commissioner filed a timely notice of appeal.
    11
    DISCUSSION
    1. Standard of Review
    “On a motion asserting sovereign immunity as a basis for dismissing an action for
    lack of subject matter jurisdiction, the plaintiff bears the burden of proving by a
    preponderance of evidence that jurisdiction exists.” (Campo Band of Mission Indians v.
    Superior Court (2006) 
    137 Cal. App. 4th 175
    , 183; accord, American Property
    Management Corp. v. Superior Court (2012) 
    206 Cal. App. 4th 491
    , 498 (American
    Property).) If resolution of the jurisdiction question depends on disputed issues of fact,
    we review the trial court’s findings for substantial evidence. (Singletary v. International
    Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 18 (2012) 
    212 Cal. App. 4th 34
    , 41; see
    Professional Engineers in California Government v. Kempton (2007) 
    40 Cal. 4th 1016
    ,
    1032.) Absent conflicting extrinsic evidence, the question of subject matter jurisdiction
    over an action against an Indian tribe is purely one of law, subject to de novo review.
    (American Property, at p. 498; Warburton/Buttner v. Superior Court (2002)
    
    103 Cal. App. 4th 1170
    , 1180; see Vons Companies, Inc. v. Seabest Foods, Inc. (1996)
    
    14 Cal. 4th 434
    , 449.)
    2. Tribal Sovereign Immunity and the Arm-of-the-Tribe Analysis
    “Indian tribes are ‘domestic dependent nations’ that exercise inherent sovereign
    authority over their members and territories.” (Oklahoma Tax Comm’n v. Potawatomi
    Tribe (1991) 
    498 U.S. 505
    , 509 [
    111 S. Ct. 905
    , 
    112 L. Ed. 2d 1112
    ].) The recognition of
    tribes as sovereigns in a government-to-government relationship with other sovereign
    nations has its source in the United States Constitution and is a well-established principle
    of federal Indian law. (See 25 U.S.C. § 3601(1), (3) [“there is a government-to-
    government relationship between the United States and each Indian tribe”; “Congress,
    through statutes, treaties, and the exercise of administrative authorities, has recognized
    the self-determination, self-reliance, and inherent sovereignty of Indian tribes”]; see
    generally Judicial Council Comment, Cal. Rules of Court, rule 10.60.)
    12
    Tribal sovereign immunity “is a necessary corollary to Indian sovereignty and
    self-governance.” (Three Affiliated Tribes v. Wold Engineering (1986) 
    476 U.S. 877
    , 890
    [
    106 S. Ct. 2305
    , 
    90 L. Ed. 2d 881
    ].) “[I]n the absence of federal authorization, tribal
    immunity, like all aspects of tribal sovereignty, is privileged from diminution by the
    States.” (Id. at p. 890; see Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez (1978) 
    436 U.S. 49
    , 58 [
    98 S. Ct. 1670
    , 
    56 L. Ed. 2d 106
    ] [“Indian tribes have long been recognized as possessing the
    common-law immunity from suit traditionally enjoyed by sovereign powers. [Citations.]
    This aspect of tribal sovereignty, like all others, is subject to the superior and plenary
    control of Congress. But ‘without congressional authorization,’ the ‘Indian Nations are
    exempt from suit.’”].)
    “[A]n Indian tribe is not subject to suit in a state court—even for breach of
    contract involving off-reservation commercial conduct—unless ‘Congress has authorized
    the suit or the tribe has waived its immunity.’” (C & L Enterprises, Inc. v. Citizen Band
    Potawatomi Tribe of Okla. (2001) 
    532 U.S. 411
    , 414 [
    121 S. Ct. 1589
    , 
    149 L. Ed. 2d 623
    ];
    accord, 
    Kiowa, supra
    , 523 U.S. at p. 760 [tribal sovereign immunity applies without
    distinction between on- and off-reservation or governmental or commercial activities];
    see generally Cohen’s Handbook of Federal Indian Law (2012 ed.) Sovereign Immunity
    § 7.05[1][a] [“[t]he doctrine of tribal sovereign immunity is rooted in federal common
    law and reflects the federal Constitution’s treatment of Indian tribes as governments in
    the Indian commerce clause”].)
    Much as Eleventh Amendment immunity from suit in federal court applies not
    only to the states themselves but also to entities that are properly considered arms of the
    state (see, e.g., Alden v. Maine (1999) 
    527 U.S. 706
    , 756 [
    119 S. Ct. 2240
    , 
    144 L. Ed. 2d 636
    ]; Mt. Healthy City Board of Ed. v. Doyle (1977) 
    429 U.S. 274
    , 280 [
    97 S. Ct. 568
    , 
    50 L. Ed. 2d 471
    ]), tribal sovereign immunity protects not only a tribe itself but also
    subordinate governmental or commercial entities acting as arms of the tribe. (American
    
    Property, supra
    , 206 Cal.App.4th at p. 500; 
    Ameriloan, supra
    , 169 Cal.App.4th at p. 97;
    see Cohen’s Handbook of Federal Indian Law, supra, § 7.05[1][a] [tribal immunity
    13
    “extends to entities that are arms of the tribes”]; see generally Cook v. AVI Casino
    Enterprises, Inc. (9th Cir. 2008) 
    548 F.3d 718
    , 727 [comparing arm-of-the-tribe analysis
    to deciding whether a state instrumentality could invoke the state’s sovereign immunity].)
    The United States Supreme Court has acknowledged, but not yet analyzed, the
    arm-of-the-tribe concept. In Inyo County v. Paiute-Shoshone Indians of Bishop
    Community of Bishop Colony (2003) 
    538 U.S. 701
    , 705, fn. 1 [
    123 S. Ct. 1887
    ,
    
    155 L. Ed. 2d 933
    ], a federally recognized Indian tribe and its tribally chartered, wholly
    owned gaming corporation asserted in a civil rights action that tribal sovereign immunity
    precluded a county district attorney from executing a search warrant and seizing casino
    employment records. At the outset the Supreme Court noted, “The United States [as
    amicus curiae] maintains, and the County does not dispute, that the Corporation is an
    ‘arm’ of the Tribe for sovereign immunity purposes.” The Court did not thereafter
    discuss the status of the gaming corporation as an arm of the tribe, resolving the case
    7
    without deciding the immunity issue. However, opinions from a number of federal and
    state courts, including the California Supreme Court and this court in Ameriloan, have
    recognized the arm-of-the-tribe prong of the tribal sovereign immunity doctrine and
    identified a range of factors to consider in determining whether a subordinate entity is
    sufficiently related to a tribe to be protected by tribal sovereign immunity. (See Agua
    Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians v. Superior Court (2006) 
    40 Cal. 4th 239
    , 247-248
    [“‘immunity extends to entities that are arms of the tribes,’” but “‘apparently does not
    cover tribally chartered corporations that are completely independent of the tribe’”]; see
    generally Cohen’s Handbook of Federal Indian Law, supra, § 7.05[1][a] [arm-of-the-tribe
    analysis “considers tribal involvement in the creation and control of the entity, tribal
    intent to clothe the entity with immunity, and whether the entity serves tribal sovereign
    7
    The Court held only that the tribe did not qualify as a “person” who could sue
    under title 42 United States Code section 1983 “to vindicate the sovereign right it here
    claims.” (Inyo County v. Paiute-Shoshone Indians of Bishop Community of Bishop
    
    Colony, supra
    , 538 U.S. at p. 712.) Whether the action could be maintained under the
    “‘federal common law of Indian affairs’” was remanded for further consideration. (Ibid.)
    14
    interests such as economic development”]; Martin & Schwartz, The Alliance Between
    Payday Lenders and Tribes: Are Both Tribal Sovereignty and Consumer Protection at
    Risk? (2012) 69 Wash. & Lee L.Rev. 751, 776 [observing that “[c]ourts have articulated
    numerous variations on the test for whether a tribal business enterprise is entitled to the
    tribe’s immunity and identifying six “common factors” used in arm-of-the-tribe
    analysis].)
    In Trudgeon v. Fantasy Springs 
    Casino, supra
    , 
    71 Cal. App. 4th 632
    our colleagues
    in Division Two of the Fourth District adopted a three-factor analysis developed by the
    Supreme Court of Minnesota: “‘1) whether the business entity is organized for a purpose
    that is governmental in nature, rather than commercial; [¶] ‘2) whether the tribe and the
    business entity are closely linked in government structure and other characteristics; and
    [¶] ‘3) whether federal policies intended to promote Indian tribal autonomy are furthered
    by the extension of immunity to the business entity.’” (Id. at p. 638, quoting Gavle v.
    8
    Little Six, Inc. (Minn. 1996) 
    555 N.W.2d 284
    , 294-295.) Applying this test the court
    held sovereign immunity barred plaintiff’s state court personal injury lawsuit against
    Cabazon Bingo, Inc., a corporation organized by the Cabazon Band of Mission Indians, a
    federally recognized Indian tribe, to operate a gaming and entertainment complex on
    9
    tribal land.
    8
    The Trudgeon court recognized whether the purpose of the tribal entity is
    governmental or commercial might no longer be germane after Kiowa. Nonetheless, the
    court explained: “[I]t is possible to imagine situations in which a tribal entity may engage
    in activities which are so far removed from tribal interests that it no longer can
    legitimately be seen as an extension of the tribe itself. Such an entity arguably should not
    be immune, notwithstanding the fact it is organized and owned by the tribe.” (Trudgeon
    v. Fantasy Springs 
    Casino, supra
    , 71 Cal.App.4th at p. 639.)
    9
    The court suggested the claim could be pursued in a tribal court “which has civil
    jurisdiction over all disputes within reservation boundaries” and presumed the tribal court
    “can and will fairly adjudicate the matter.” (Trudgeon v. Fantasy Springs 
    Casino, supra
    ,
    71 Cal.App.4th at p. 645.)
    15
    In American 
    Property, supra
    , 
    206 Cal. App. 4th 491
    , a panel of Division One of the
    Fourth District employed the set of six factors set forth in the Tenth Circuit’s decision in
    Breakthrough Management Group, Inc. v. Chukchansi Gold Casino & Resort (10th Cir.
    2010) 
    629 F.3d 1173
    , 1181, 1187-1188, for examining the relationship between a
    subordinate economic entity and the tribe: “‘(1) their method of creation; (2) their
    purpose; (3) their structure, ownership, and management, including the amount of control
    the tribe has over the entities; (4) whether the tribe intended for the entities to have tribal
    sovereign immunity; (5) the financial relationship between the tribe and the entities; and
    (6) whether the purposes of tribal sovereign immunity are served by granting immunity to
    the entities.’” (American Property, at p. 501.) Applying those factors, which it found
    “accurately reflect[ed] the general focus of the applicable federal and state case law”
    (ibid.), but also quoting from several other decisions considering the arm-of-the-tribe
    question including Trudgeon, the court held U.S. Grant, LLC, the owner of a historic
    hotel in downtown San Diego, was not an arm of the Sycuan Band of the Kumeyaay
    Nation, a federally recognized Indian tribe, and thus not protected by the tribe’s
    sovereign immunity. The “dispositive fact” for the court was that U.S. Grant, LLC was a
    California limited liability company, separated by several other layers of California
    limited liability companies from the Sycuan Tribal Development Corporation (STDC), a
    corporation charter under Sycuan’s tribal laws. (See American Property, at pp. 495, 501,
    505.) From the complex structure created to insulate STDC from any possible liability in
    connection with ownership of the hotel, the court concluded “STDC was not primarily
    concerned about sovereign immunity with respect to the entities that it created to
    facilitate its investment. . . .” (Id. at p. 505.) The court expressly noted it was not
    expressing any view on whether STDC itself was protected by tribal sovereign immunity.
    (Id. at p. 505, fn. 10.)
    The Colorado Supreme Court in Cash Advance and Preferred Loans v. Colorado
    ex rel. Suthers (Colo. 2010) 
    242 P.3d 1099
    , after reviewing decisions from a number of
    federal courts of appeals, articulated its own variation of the arm-of-the-tribe analysis in
    16
    considering the precise question presented by the case at bar: Are MNE, conducting a
    short-term loan business under the trade name Cash Advance, and SFS, conducting a
    similar business under the trade name Preferred Cash Loans, arms of the Miami Nation of
    Oklahoma and the Santee Sioux Nation, respectively, and therefore protected by the
    tribes’ sovereign immunity from state investigatory enforcement actions? Remanding the
    matter to the trial court to resolve that question in the first instance, the Supreme Court
    identified three factors, “each of which focuses on the relationship between the tribal
    entities and the tribes, to help guide the trial court’s determination whether the entities in
    this case [MNE and SFS] act as arms of the tribes so that their activities are properly
    deemed to be those of the tribes: (1) whether the tribes created the entities pursuant to
    tribal law; (2) whether the tribes own and operate the entities; and (3) whether the
    entities’ immunity protects the tribes’ sovereignty.” (Id. at p. 1110.)
    3. The Law of the Case Doctrine Does Not Restrict the Factors Appropriately
    Considered in the Arm-of-the-Tribe Analysis
    Under the law of the case doctrine, “a matter adjudicated on a prior appeal
    normally will not be relitigated on a subsequent appeal in the same case.” (Davies v.
    Krasna (1975) 
    14 Cal. 3d 502
    , 507; People v. Barragan (2004) 
    32 Cal. 4th 236
    , 246
    [“when an appellate court ‘“states in its opinion a principle or rule of law necessary to the
    decision, that principle or rule becomes the law of the case and must be adhered to
    throughout [the case’s] subsequent progress, both in the lower court and upon subsequent
    appeal”’”].) The doctrine applies to decisions of intermediate appellate courts as well as
    courts of last resort (People v. Murtishaw (2011) 
    51 Cal. 4th 574
    , 589) and “even if the
    court that issued the opinion becomes convinced in a subsequent consideration that the
    former opinion is erroneous.” (Santa Clarita Organization for Planning the Environment
    v. County of Los Angeles (2007) 
    157 Cal. App. 4th 149
    , 156; see Morohoshi v. Pacific
    Home (2004) 
    34 Cal. 4th 482
    , 491 [“‘it is only when the former rule is deemed erroneous
    that the doctrine of law of the case becomes at all important’”].) The doctrine promotes
    finality by preventing relitigation of issues previously decided. (George Arakelian
    17
    Farms, Inc. v. Agricultural Labor Relations Bd. (1989) 
    49 Cal. 3d 1279
    , 1291; see Searle
    v. Allstate Life Ins. Co. (1985) 
    38 Cal. 3d 425
    , 434.)
    In 
    Ameriloan, supra
    , 
    169 Cal. App. 4th 81
    we held MNE and SFS’s motion to
    quash should be granted if the tribal entities and the lending businesses they operate are
    sufficiently related to their respective tribes to be protected by tribal immunity and
    specifically referred to the criteria expressed in Trudgeon v. Fantasy Springs 
    Casino, supra
    , 
    71 Cal. App. 4th 632
    for analyzing the arm-of-the-tribe doctrine. (Ameriloan, at
    10
    p. 98.)        In urging us to reverse the trial court’s order dismissing the case for lack of
    subject matter jurisdiction, the Commissioner analyzes the evidence primarily in light of
    the six factors for evaluating the immunity question set forth in the Tenth Circuit’s
    decision in Breakthrough Management Group, Inc. v. Chukchansi Gold Casino & 
    Resort, supra
    , 
    629 F.3d 1173
    , as restated by Division One of the Fourth District in American
    
    Property, supra
    , 
    206 Cal. App. 4th 491
    . In their respondents’ brief MNE and SFS argue
    the Commissioner’s reliance on American Property violates the law of the case doctrine,
    11
    which, they assert, requires use of a “two-part test” based on the analysis in Trudgeon to
    the exclusion of any other arm-of-the-tribe analysis.
    MNE and SFS misapprehend the import of our prior decision in Ameriloan. As
    discussed, in Ameriloan we mandated the trial court vacate its ruling that tribal sovereign
    immunity did not apply simply because MNE and SFS were conducting off-reservation,
    10
    We also cited Redding Rancheria v. Superior 
    Court, supra
    , 
    88 Cal. App. 4th 384
    , a
    case that discusses the arm-of-the-tribe doctrine and the factors identified as dispositive
    in Trudgeon: “Trudgeon specifically held an Indian casino (a tribal corporation) was
    entitled to immunity because of the importance of gaming in promoting tribal self-
    determination, the close link between the tribe and the casino, and the existence of federal
    law promoting Indian gambling.” (Redding Rancheria, at p. 389.)
    11
    As discussed in footnote 8, above, Trudgeon identified three factors, not two, but
    questioned the continued significance of evaluating whether the purpose of the tribal
    entity is governmental or commercial. (Trudgeon v. Fantasy Springs 
    Casino, supra
    ,
    71 Cal.App.4th at p. 639.) In directing the trial court to consider the criteria expressed in
    Trudgeon, our Ameriloan opinion omitted any express reference to that element of the
    arm-of-the-tribe analysis. (See 
    Ameriloan, supra
    , 169 Cal.App.4th at p. 98.)
    18
    for-profit commercial activities (
    Ameriloan, supra
    , 169 Cal.App.4th at pp. 89-91). We
    also rejected the arguments that application of tribal sovereign immunity in this case
    would intrude on California’s exercise of its reserved powers under the Tenth
    Amendment (
    id. at pp.
    91-94) and tribal sovereign immunity had been waived (
    id. at pp.
    94-96). Accordingly, under the law of the case, as the trial court recognized when it
    revisited the motion to quash, the only question remaining was whether MNE and SFS
    and the businesses they operate function as “arms of the tribe.” (Id. at pp. 97-99.)
    Although we directed the trial court to consider the criteria expressed in Trudgeon in
    making that determination, nothing we said prohibited the trial court—or restricts this
    court in deciding the appeal now before us—from considering additional aspects of the
    relationship between the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma and the Santee Sioux Nation, on the
    one hand, and MNE and SFS and their payday loan businesses, on the other hand, in
    deciding the immunity issue. Regardless of how many nonexclusive and overlapping
    factors a court identifies, the relevant inquiry is ultimately the same: Are the tribal
    entities sufficiently related to their respective tribes to be protected by tribal sovereign
    immunity? Ameriloan established the governing legal principle. It did not prescribe a
    precise analytic process to apply that principle to the facts developed at the evidentiary
    hearing we authorized.
    4. MNE and SFS Are Protected by Tribal Sovereign Immunity from the
    Commissioner’s Enforcement Action
    There can be little question that MNE and SFS, considered initially by themselves
    and without regard to the payday lending activities at issue in this enforcement action,
    function as arms of their respective tribes. In marked contrast to the situation considered
    in American 
    Property, supra
    , 
    206 Cal. App. 4th 491
    , where the dispositive fact was that
    U.S. Grant, LLC had been organized under California law and was separated from the
    STDC, an entity created under tribal law, by several other lawyers of California limited
    liability companies (see 
    id. at pp.
    495, 501, 505), MNE was created directly under the
    Miami Tribe’s tribal law as a subordinate unit of the tribe itself to provide for its
    economic development. Also unlike the Sycuan Band’s relationship to U.S. Grant, LLC
    19
    (see 
    id. at p.
    505), the Miami Tribe expressly intended for MNE to be covered by tribal
    sovereign immunity. Like our colleagues in Division One of the Fourth District, we
    believe the tribe’s method and purpose for creating a subordinate economic entity are the
    most significant factors in determining whether it is protected by a tribe’s sovereign
    immunity and should be given predominant, if not necessarily dispositive, consideration.
    (See American Property, at p. 501 [quoting a number of court decisions that “have
    considered creation of an entity under tribal law as a factor weighing significantly in
    12
    favor of a conclusion that the entity shares in the tribe’s sovereign immunity”].)
    Other elements of the various tests appearing in the case law also support the trial
    court’s arm-of-the-tribe conclusion as applied to MNE. As discussed, MNE’s initial
    board of directors consisted of the Miami Tribe’s business committee, and the chief of
    the tribe has appointed all successor members of the MNE board in consultation with the
    business committee; all five members of the board are members of the Miami Tribe.
    Profits earned by MNE are utilized by the Miami Tribe to fund critical governmental
    services to its members including tribal law enforcement, poverty assistance, preschool
    and elder care programs. In addition, any tribal funds and other resources used to create,
    capitalize and operate MNE are necessarily at risk in its business operations. That tribal
    assets might not be directly jeopardized if MNE were allowed to be sued does not appear
    to be significant since the very purpose of creating any subordinate corporate entity is to
    create the opportunity for economic gain while protecting the tribe from potential
    liabilities; in the absence of a tribal guarantee, a judgment against a corporation will
    never impact a tribal treasury. (Cf. Cook v. AVI Casino Enterprises, 
    Inc., supra
    , 548 F.3d
    at p. 725 [tribal corporation “competing in the economic mainstream” protected by tribal
    immunity if it functions as an arm of the tribe; here, economic benefits produced by tribal
    12
    Identifying the weight to be given the various factors in the arm-of-the-tribe
    analysis is important; for, as Judge Frank H. Easterbrook of the Seventh Circuit Court of
    Appeals colorfully observed in a far different context, a “list of factors without a rule of
    decision is just a chopped salad.” (In re Synthroid Marketing Litigation (7th Cir. 2001)
    
    264 F.3d 712
    , 719.)
    20
    corporation inure to the tribe’s benefit because “all capital surplus from the casino shall
    be deposited in the Tribe’s treasury and because the Tribe, as the sole shareholder, enjoys
    all of the benefits of an increase in the casino’s value”]; Memphis Biofuels v. Chickasaw
    Nation Industries Inc. (6th Cir. 2009) 
    585 F.3d 917
    , 920-921 [section 17 of the Indian
    Reorganization Act of 1934, 25 U.S.C. § 477, authorizing incorporation of a federally
    chartered tribe’s business activities, “creates ‘arms of the tribe’ that do not automatically
    forfeit tribal-sovereign immunity”]; but see American 
    Property, supra
    , 206 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 506 [“due to U.S. Grant, LLC’s status as a California limited liability company, the
    Sycuan tribe’s assets would not be exposed by any judgment against U.S. Grant, LLC”].)
    In sum, the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma and MNE are closely linked through method of
    creation, ownership, structure, control and other salient characteristics; and, although the
    operations of MNE are commercial rather than governmental—itself an essentially
    neutral consideration after Kiowa—extension of immunity to it plainly furthers federal
    policies intended to promote tribal autonomy. (See 
    Ameriloan, supra
    , 169 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 98; Trudgeon v. Fantasy Springs 
    Casino, supra
    , 71 Cal.App.4th at p. 638.)
    As with MNE, and again unlike the California limited liability company evaluated
    in American Property, SFS is a wholly owned corporation organized under tribal law and
    expressly protected from suit by the tribe’s immunity. Pursuant to SFS’s articles of
    incorporation, its board of directors consists of the members of the Tribal Council, who
    manage SFS; and the Tribal Council appointed the tribe’s business manager as the chief
    executive officer of SFS. All profits earned by SFS are used by the Santee Sioux to help
    fund its government operations and social welfare programs, furthering the tribe’s
    sovereign interest in economic development. Indeed, the evidence before the trial court
    was, because the reservation is in a severely depressed region, those profits are essential
    to maintaining a functioning tribal government able to provide necessary services to the
    tribe’s members. Thus, the Santee Sioux and SFS are also closely linked by virtue of
    SFS’s method of creation, ownership, structure and control, and extension of immunity to
    it substantially promotes tribal autonomy.
    21
    Although the tribes own and control MNE and SFS, their relationship to the cash
    advance and short-term loan businesses operated by those tribal entities under various
    trade names—Ameriloan, US Fast Cash, United Cash Loans, One Click Cash and
    Preferred Cash Loans—is slightly more complicated. According to the Commissioner’s
    evidence at the hearing on the motion to quash, those names had been registered and used
    to market payday lending services by Scott Tucker and/or his company NMS (or its
    predecessors) for several years prior to the entry of MNE and SFS into the short-term
    loan business in July 2008. More significantly, day-to-day operations of these fast-cash
    businesses—what the trial court referred to as “business minutiae”—have been
    effectively delegated pursuant to management agreements to NMS, a third-party,
    nontribal entity. Additionally, MNE and SFS do not participate in the net income from
    the businesses, receiving instead only a modest percentage of the gross revenues,
    characterized by the Commissioner as similar to a royalty. Thus, the Commissioner
    asserts in the opening brief, “The management agreements and bank records demonstrate
    that SFS and MNE, doing business as the Payday Lenders, are simply revenue-producing
    businesses created to facilitate Tucker’s ordinary for-profit payday lending business for a
    set fee”—disparagingly denominated as a “sham,” “rent-a-tribe” scheme by the
    Commissioner.
    Yet the Commissioner necessarily concedes, as the evidence demonstrated, under
    the management agreements MNE and SFS have final decisionmaking authority to
    approve or disapprove any loans; advance instructions or approval parameters are
    established by them to allow the third-party managers to function on a quick-turnaround
    basis. Indeed, the agreements expressly provide that the tribal entities have “the sole
    proprietary interest in and responsibility for the conduct of the business” and that NMS’s
    day-to-day management of the operations is “subject to the oversight and control of”
    MNE and SFS, respectively.
    In other words, MNE and SFS are not merely passive bystanders to the challenged
    lending activities. A tribal entity engaged in a commercial enterprise that is otherwise
    22
    entitled to be protected by tribal immunity does not lose that immunity simply by
    contracting with non-tribal members to operate the business. (See, e.g., Native American
    Distrib. v. Seneca-Cayuga Tobacco (10th Cir. 2008) 
    546 F.3d 1288
    , 1294 [recognizing
    tribal immunity protected tobacco business of Seneca-Cayuga Tribe of Oklahoma from
    suit by third-party distributor notwithstanding limited waiver of that immunity in separate
    agreement with management company engaged to operate tribal business]; Cabazon
    Band of Mission Indians v. County of Riverside (9th Cir. 1986) 
    783 F.2d 900
    , 901, affd.
    sub nom. California v. Cabazon Band of Mission Indians (1987) 
    480 U.S. 202
    [
    107 S. Ct. 1083
    , 
    94 L. Ed. 2d 244
    ] [noting with approval the tribal business was “operated by non-
    Indian professional operators, who receive a percentage of the profits”]; but cf. American
    
    Property, supra
    , 206 Cal.App.4th at p. 505 [designation of a nontribal entity to manage
    business created under state law, rather than tribal law, is a further indication that the
    business should not be considered an arm of the tribe for the purpose of sovereign
    immunity].)13 Similarly, whether or not the Miami Tribe and the Santee Sioux negotiated
    good or poor management agreements for themselves—whether a share of net profits
    would be more beneficial under the circumstances than a percentage of gross revenues
    and whether they could have insisted on a higher percentage than they actually
    received—even if not minutiae, cannot serve as the basis to determine the tribal entities
    are not functioning as arms of their respective tribes.
    The recurring theme of the Commissioner’s briefing and oral argument is that
    online payday lenders engage in egregious, deceptive and exploitive practices prohibited
    by California law. That leitmotif is reinforced by the assertion MNE and SFS’s business
    activities also violate tribal laws and their own organizational documents with respect to
    13
    In part in response to California v Cabazon Band of Mission 
    Indians, supra
    ,
    
    480 U.S. 202
    , which held California lacked authority to regulate bingo gambling
    conducted by Indian tribes on Indian land within the state, Congress enacted the Indian
    Gaming Act of 1988 (IGRA) “to provide a statutory basis for the operation and regulation
    of gaming by Indian tribes.” (Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida (1996) 
    517 U.S. 44
    ,
    48 [
    116 S. Ct. 1114
    , 
    134 L. Ed. 2d 252
    ].) IGRA creates a cooperative federal-state-tribal
    scheme for regulation of gaming by federally recognized Indian tribes on Indian land.
    23
    interest rates as well as control of bank accounts and commingling of funds. Repeated
    commercial conduct the tribal entities concede violates tribal law or that is shown by
    uncontroverted evidence to be prohibited by the tribes as a matter of law may well be a
    factor properly considered in determining whether the entities are functioning as arms of
    the tribe. (Cf. Flatley v. Mauro (2006) 
    39 Cal. 4th 299
    , 316.) But the record here is far
    from undisputed, and it would offend all notions of tribal sovereignty for a state court to
    adjudicate whether MNE or SFS is violating tribal law. Moreover, as we explained in
    
    Ameriloan, supra
    , 169 Cal.App.4th at page 93, although we recognize the public policy
    considerations supporting the Commissioner’s efforts to protect poor and poorly educated
    consumers, “‘“sovereign immunity is not a discretionary doctrine that may be applied as
    a remedy depending on the equities of a given situation . . . .” Rather it presents a pure
    14
    jurisdictional question.’”
    In the end, tribal immunity does not depend on our evaluation of the respectability
    or ethics of the business in which a tribe or tribal entity elects to engage. Absent an
    extraordinary set of circumstances not present here, a tribal entity functions as an arm of
    the tribe if it has been formed by tribal resolution and according to tribal law, for the
    stated purpose of tribal economic development and with the clearly expressed intent by
    the sovereign tribe to convey its immunity to that entity, and has a governing structure
    both appointed by and ultimately overseen by the tribe. Such a tribal entity is immune
    from suit absent express waiver or congressional authorization. Neither third-party
    management of day-to-day operations nor retention of only a minimal percentage of the
    14
    Recognizing that online payday lending businesses owned and operated by tribal
    entities are likely to be found immune to enforcement actions by state authorities, several
    commentators have proposed federal legislation to regulate the industry. (See, e.g., Note,
    Usury on the Reservation: Regulation of Tribal-affiliated Payday Lenders (2011-2012)
    31 Banking & Fin. L.Rev. 1053, 1071-1077; Martin & Schwartz, The Alliance Between
    Payday Lenders and 
    Tribes, supra
    , 69 Wash. & Lee L.Rev. at pp. 790-791; Comment,
    Circumventing State Consumer Protection Laws: Tribal Immunity and Internet Payday
    Lending (2012) 91 N.C. L.Rev. 326, 342.)
    24
    profits from the enterprise (however that may be defined) justifies judicial negation of
    that inherent element of tribal sovereignty.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. MNE and SFS are to recover their costs on appeal.
    PERLUSS, P. J.
    We concur:
    WOODS, J.
    ZELON, J.
    25
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B242644

Filed Date: 1/21/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014

Authorities (21)

Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida , 116 S. Ct. 1114 ( 1996 )

Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma v. Manufacturing Technologies, Inc. , 118 S. Ct. 1700 ( 1998 )

Memphis Biofuels, LLC v. Chickasaw Nation Industries, Inc. , 585 F.3d 917 ( 2009 )

Mark S. Allen v. Gold Country Casino the Berry Creek ... , 464 F.3d 1044 ( 2006 )

Native American Distributing v. Seneca-Cayuga Tobacco Co. , 546 F.3d 1288 ( 2008 )

Inyo County, California v. Paiute-Shoshone Indians of the ... , 123 S. Ct. 1887 ( 2003 )

Vons Companies, Inc. v. Seabest Foods, Inc. , 14 Cal. 4th 434 ( 1996 )

PROFESSIONAL ENG'RS IN CAL. GOV. v. Kempton , 56 Cal. Rptr. 3d 814 ( 2007 )

Breakthrough Management Group, Inc. v. Chukchansi Gold ... , 629 F.3d 1173 ( 2010 )

People v. Murtishaw , 51 Cal. 4th 574 ( 2011 )

Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians v. Superior Court , 52 Cal. Rptr. 3d 659 ( 2006 )

Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Reservation v. ... , 106 S. Ct. 2305 ( 1986 )

Oklahoma Tax Comm'n v. Citizen Band of Potawatomi Tribe of ... , 111 S. Ct. 905 ( 1991 )

C & L Enterprises Inc. v. Citizen Band Potawatomi Indian ... , 121 S. Ct. 1589 ( 2001 )

In the Matter Of: Synthroid Marketing Litigation , 264 F.3d 712 ( 2001 )

Flatley v. Mauro , 46 Cal. Rptr. 3d 606 ( 2006 )

People v. Barragan , 9 Cal. Rptr. 3d 76 ( 2004 )

Morohoshi v. Pacific Home , 20 Cal. Rptr. 3d 890 ( 2004 )

Mt. Healthy City School District Board of Education v. Doyle , 97 S. Ct. 568 ( 1977 )

Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez , 98 S. Ct. 1670 ( 1978 )

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