Brown v. Garcia ( 2017 )


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  • Filed 10/31/17; Certified for Publication 11/29/17 (order attached)
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    ROSE BROWN et al.,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    A150374
    v.
    AUGUSTIN GARCIA et al.,                                        (Lake County
    Super. Ct. No. CV415928)
    Defendants and Respondents.
    This action is between two groups of the Elem Indian Colony Pomo Tribe (the
    Tribe), the “Brown faction” (plaintiffs) and the “Garcia Council” (defendants).
    Plaintiffs sued the Garcia Council over allegedly defamatory statements published in a
    notification that warned they would be disenrolled if the Tribe’s General Council found
    them guilty of specified crimes. The trial court ruled the lawsuit was barred by sovereign
    immunity and dismissed the complaint. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    This action arose against a decades-long backdrop of disputes over Tribal
    leadership. In 2016 defendants disseminated an “Order of Disenrollment” (the Order)
    that accused plaintiffs of multiple violations of tribal, state and federal laws. The Order
    stated, “ ‘[i]f you are found guilty by the General Council of these offenses against the
    Tribe, you may be punished by: a. DISENROLLMENT—loss of membership.’ ”
    1
    Plaintiffs sued defendants for defamation and false light based on the allegations
    of misdeeds described in the Order. The complaint stated that defendants “purport to be
    the elected Executive Council of the Tribe,” but asserted they were unprotected by
    sovereign immunity because they acted in their personal capacities outside the scope of
    their tribal authority and “[t]his is not an internal tribal dispute or a membership dispute.”
    Plaintiffs further alleged the tribal ordinance pursuant to which defendants published the
    Order was invalid because it lacked the approval from the Bureau of Indian Affairs
    required by the Tribe’s constitution.
    Defendants moved to quash the summons and complaint as barred by sovereign
    immunity. They asserted the allegedly defamatory statements were made pursuant to
    their lawful authority as tribal officials, which includes “culling from the active
    membership voting list tribal members who are alleged to have conducted crimes against
    the Tribe pursuant to tribal ordinance #GCORD08412.” Further, “Plaintiffs’ allegations
    concern a non-justiciable intra-tribal matter upon which this court has no jurisdiction and
    which should be resolved in the proper tribal forum, i.e. before Plaintiffs’ Tribal Council
    per the Tribe’s ordinance. As such, the Court should not allow this matter to move
    forward because it will require the Court to review and interpret tribal law, custom and
    practice.” Accordingly, defendants contended, the Tribe’s sovereign immunity shielded
    them from being sued in state court.
    In opposition, plaintiffs argued sovereign immunity was inapplicable because they
    were suing defendants only in their individual capacities and sought relief only from
    them as individuals, not from the Tribe. Plaintiffs denied that their action would require
    the court to adjudicate an intra-tribal dispute or insert itself in tribal law, custom, practice
    or tradition. Rather, they argued, “Plaintiffs are simply asking that the Defendants, in
    their individual capacities, be held accountable for their defamation of fellow
    Californians.” Alternatively, plaintiffs asserted it was premature to dismiss the case
    based on sovereign immunity in light of factual questions as to whether defendants acted
    within their official or personal capacities when they issued the Order.
    2
    The court granted the motion to quash. It concluded defendants’ evidence
    established they acted within the scope of their tribal authority in publishing the allegedly
    defamatory Order and that plaintiffs failed to overcome that showing. “[T]he evidence
    shows that the Tribe is a federally recognized Indian Tribe. Additionally, Defendants
    have provided evidence that all named Defendants are tribal officials. Specifically,
    Defendants provided a letter from Superintendent Troy Burdick from the U.S. Dept. of
    the Interior, in which Superintendent Burdick states that all named Defendants are
    recognized by the United States Government as the Executive Committee members for
    purposes of a government-to-government relationship. Garcia also attests that he was
    elected to tribal office in 2014 and currently serves as the Chairman pursuant to a 2014
    tribal election, and that the other Defendants were acting under color of tribal authority
    when the Ordinance was issued. As a result, there is evidentiary support for Defendants’
    position that they were tribal officials at the relevant time.
    “In response, Plaintiffs dispute that Defendants are members of the Elem Tribe’s
    federally recognized government. However, Plaintiffs provide no evidence in support of
    their contention that Defendants are not tribal officials or were not tribal officials at the
    relevant time. An unverified complaint may not be considered as supplying the necessary
    facts. [Citation.] Accordingly, the record supports a finding that Defendants were tribal
    officials at the time of the allegations.
    “Next, Defendants provide evidence that the Ordinance establishing a process for
    disenfranchisement was put into effect in 2012 by the Elem Indian Colony, and is still in
    effect as tribal law. And as discussed above, Defendants further provide evidence that
    they were acting within the scope of their tribal authority when they determined that
    Plaintiffs should be disenrolled from the Tribe pursuant to the Ordinance, for the reasons
    stated in the allegedly defamatory document that is the subject of this lawsuit.
    Consequently, Defendants’ evidence supports the conclusion that they were acting within
    the scope of their tribal authority, on the Tribe’s behalf, when they issued the allegedly
    defamatory statements.”
    3
    Turning to plaintiffs’ evidence, the trial court found it insufficient to rebut
    defendants’ showing. “Plaintiff’s counsel . . . attests in her declaration that the
    ‘Constitution and Bylaws of the Elem Indian Colony’ (the ‘Constitution’) does not grant
    tribal officials the right to publish criminal allegations against Tribal Members. Plaintiffs
    further provide evidence that the Constitution states that any new rules regarding the loss
    of membership must be approved by the Secretary of the Interior, and provide[] an email
    from Superintendent Burdick stating that he has ‘no evidence that [the ordinance] has
    been submitted to [the Office of the Interior] for approval.’ This purported evidence of
    Superintendent Burdick’s statement is hearsay, and even if considered, it is
    inconclusive.” The court further found plaintiffs’ evidence was insufficient to overcome
    defendants’ showing that the Ordinance, although disputed, was in effect when the
    alleged defamation occurred. “Accordingly, Plaintiffs have failed to show by
    preponderance of the evidence that Defendants were acting outside the scope of their
    official tribal capacities when they drafted and circulated the [Order], and thus all
    jurisdictional criteria are met.”
    “In sum, the record before the Court shows that Plaintiffs’ two causes of action
    arise from actions that Defendants took because of their official capacities as tribal
    officials, namely, disenrolling Plaintiffs on the basis of their alleged violations of tribal
    law. Plaintiffs do not provide sufficient evidence to meet their burden. Additionally, for
    the Court to litigate the dispute, the Court would have to determine whether Defendants
    were authorized to publish the document and disenroll Plaintiffs, which itself requires an
    impermissible analysis of Tribal law and constitutes a determination of a non-justiciable
    intra-tribal dispute. [Citations.] As a result, sovereign immunity applies.”
    Plaintiffs filed this timely appeal.
    DISCUSSION
    I. Legal Standards
    “On a motion to quash service of summons, the plaintiff bears the burden of
    proving by a preponderance of the evidence that all jurisdictional criteria are met.
    [Citations.] The burden must be met by competent evidence in affidavits and
    4
    authenticated documents; an unverified complaint may not be considered as supplying
    the necessary facts.” (Nobel Floral, Inc. v. Pasero (2003) 
    106 Cal. App. 4th 654
    , 657–
    658.) “In the absence of conflicting extrinsic evidence relevant to the issue, the question
    of whether a court has subject matter jurisdiction over an action against an Indian tribe is
    a question of law subject to our de novo review.” (Lawrence v. Barona Valley Ranch
    Resort and Casino (2007) 
    153 Cal. App. 4th 1364
    , 1369.) But “[w]hen the facts giving
    rise to jurisdiction are conflicting, the trial court’s factual determinations are reviewed for
    substantial evidence. [Citation.] Even then, we review independently the trial court's
    conclusions as to the legal significance of the facts.” (CenterPoint Energy, Inc. v.
    Superior Court (2007) 
    157 Cal. App. 4th 1101
    , 1117.) We affirm a trial court's order if
    correct on any theory. (J.B. Aguerre, Inc. v. American Guarantee & Liability Ins. Co.
    (1997) 
    59 Cal. App. 4th 6
    , 15–16.)
    II. Analysis
    Plaintiffs assert the court misapplied the law when it considered whether
    defendants issued the alleged defamatory statements in the scope of their official
    capacities and whether allowing the case to proceed in state court would interfere with
    tribal administration. In their view, the only relevant facts are that they sued defendants
    in their individual, not tribal, capacities, and sought relief only from them as individuals,
    not from the Tribe. Plaintiffs also assert it was procedurally improper on a motion to
    quash for the court to make factual determinations as to whether defendants made the
    allegedly defamatory statements within the scope of their official authority. Rather, they
    contend, any factual disputes should have been resolved by a jury or, at a minimum, by
    the court under a summary judgment standard. None of these points have merit.
    We first address procedural contentions that it was improper for the court to make
    evidence-based factual determinations and that, at a minimum, the court should have
    assessed the evidence under a summary judgment standard. That is not the law.
    Because sovereign immunity deprives a court of subject matter jurisdiction,
    California courts have authorized Indian tribes and their officials to specially appear and
    invoke their immunity from suit by using a “hybrid motion to quash/dismiss.” (Boisclair
    5
    v. Superior Court (1990) 
    51 Cal. 3d 1140
    , 1144, fn. 1; Great Western Casinos, Inc. v.
    Morongo Band of Mission Indians (1999) 
    74 Cal. App. 4th 1407
    , 1418. (Morongo Band).)
    “ ‘Generally, in entertaining a motion to dismiss, the district court must accept the
    allegations of the complaint as true, and construe all inferences in the plaintiff’s favor.
    [Citation.] Where the motion to dismiss is based on a claim of . . . sovereign immunity,
    which provides protection from suit and not merely a defense to liability, however, the
    court must engage in sufficient pretrial factual and legal determinations to “ ‘satisfy itself
    of its authority to hear the case’ before trial”. . . .’ . . .[W]hen a defendant challenges
    personal jurisdiction, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to prove the necessary
    jurisdictional criteria are met by competent evidence in affidavits and authenticated
    documentary evidence; allegations in an unverified complaint are inadequate.” Morongo
    
    Band, supra
    , 74 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1418, italics added, internal citations omitted; see
    Smith v. Hopland Band of Pomo Indians (2002) 
    95 Cal. App. 4th 1
    , 7, fn. 8 [“when faced
    with a conflict on the question whether the defendants have waived their sovereign
    immunity, it is necessary and appropriate ‘to go beyond the pleadings and contract
    language to consider the testimonial and documentary evidence’ ”].) In light of this
    specific authority, plaintiffs’ reliance on cases that do not address tribal sovereign
    immunity is unavailing. (See Dill v. Berquist Construction Co. (1994) 
    24 Cal. App. 4th 1426
    ; R.E. Sanders & Co. v. Lincoln-Richardson Enterprises, Inc. (1980) 
    108 Cal. App. 3d 71
    ; Borsuk v. Appellate Division of the Superior Court. (2015) 
    242 Cal. App. 4th 607
    .) Tribal sovereign immunity may be decided in a hybrid motion to
    quash that takes into account factual assertions that bear on jurisdiction.
    Plaintiffs’ substantive argument is no more persuasive. They assert the court erred
    in finding the litigation barred by sovereign immunity because the complaint seeks
    damages only from the individual plaintiffs, not the Tribe, and because there is no
    allegation the allegedly defamatory statements were made on the Tribe’s behalf.
    Plaintiffs assert that these points are determinative. Here, too, the law does not support
    their position.
    6
    Maxwell v. County of San Diego (9th Cir. 2013) 
    708 F.3d 1075
    (Maxwell) states
    the relevant principles. The plaintiffs alleged that paramedics from a tribal fire
    department were grossly negligent in treating a gunshot victim, resulting in her death.
    (Id. at pp. 1081, 1087.) The Ninth Circuit adopted and applied a “remedy-focused
    analysis,” rejecting more “categorical” tests under which sovereign immunity extends to
    tribal officials sued as individuals for acts done “in their official capacity and within the
    scope of their authority” or that involved a policy or discretionary function. (Id. at pp.
    1087–1088.) “Tribal sovereign immunity derives from the same common law immunity
    principles that shape state and federal sovereign immunity. [Citations.] Normally, a suit
    like this one—brought against individual officers in their individual capacities—does not
    implicate sovereign immunity. [Citation.] The plaintiff seeks money damages ‘not from
    the state treasury but from the officer[s] personally.’ [Citation.] Due to ‘the essential
    nature and effect’ of the relief sought, the sovereign is not “ ‘the real, substantial party in
    interest.’ ” (Ibid.) Applying this “ ‘remedy sought’ ” test, the court held sovereign
    immunity did not apply because the lawsuit named the paramedics as individual
    defendants and sought monetary damages for their negligence that would “come from
    their own pockets, not the tribal treasury.” (Id. at p. 1089.)
    The Ninth Circuit clarified Maxwell in Pistor v. Garcia (9th Cir. 2015) 
    791 F.3d 1104
    (Pistor). The plaintiffs in Pistor, “advantage” gamblers who employed legal
    techniques to limit their play to casino games that statistically favor the player, were
    detained and handcuffed at a tribal casino and their winnings were seized. The gamblers
    sued the tribal police chief, the tribal gaming office inspector and the casino’s general
    manager in their individual capacities for violating plaintiffs Fourth and Fourteenth
    Amendment rights and under state tort law for battery, false imprisonment, conversion,
    defamation, trespass to chattels and negligence. (Id. at pp. 1108–1109.)
    The Ninth Circuit applied Maxwell’s “remedy-focused” analysis and concluded,
    as in Maxwell, that sovereign immunity did not shield the defendants from suit. But the
    court also reinforced Maxwell’s caveat that sovereign immunity will nonetheless apply in
    appropriate circumstances even though the complaint names and seeks damages only
    7
    from individual defendants. It explained: “In any suit against tribal officers, we must be
    sensitive to whether ‘the judgment sought would expend itself on the public treasury or
    domain, or interfere with the public administration, or if the effect of the judgment would
    be to restrain the [sovereign] from acting, or to compel it to act.’ [¶] [Citations.] [¶] As
    examples of such suits, Maxwell pointed to Cook, 
    548 F.3d 718
    , and Hardin v. White
    Mountain Apache Tribe, 
    779 F.2d 476
    (9th Cir.1985). [Citation.] . . . [In]
    Hardin, sovereign immunity barred the plaintiff from litigating a case against high-
    ranking tribal council members seeking to hold them individually liable for voting to
    eject the plaintiff from tribal land. To hold otherwise, we ruled, would interfere with the
    tribe’s internal governance. [Citation.] ‘Hardin was in reality an official capacity suit,’
    barred by sovereign immunity, because the alternative, to “[h]old[ ] the defendants liable
    for their legislative functions[,] would . . . have attacked “the very core of tribal
    sovereignty.” ’ ” 
    (Pistor, supra
    , 791 F.3d at p. 1113; see Kaw Nation ex rel. McCauley v.
    Lujan (10th Cir. 2004) 
    378 F.3d 1139
    , 1143 [no subject matter jurisdiction over federal
    court action asserting tribal judges were appointed in violation of tribal law]; see also
    Longie v. Spirit Lake Tribe (8th Cir. 2005) 
    400 F.3d 586
    , 589 [no subject matter
    jurisdiction over intra-tribal dispute concerning alleged transfer of tribal land.)
    Internal governance concerns were not implicated by the Pistor plaintiffs’
    allegations that tribal officials and employees allegedly detained and stole from them, so
    the court rejected the defendants’ invocation of tribal sovereign immunity under “‘the
    general rule that individual officers are liable when sued in their individual capacities.’
    [Citation.] So long as any remedy will operate against the officers individually, and not
    against the sovereign, there is ‘no reason to give tribal officers broader sovereign
    immunity protections than state or federal officers.’ ” 
    (Pistor, supra
    , 791 F.3d at p. 1113;
    accord, Lewis v. Clarke (2017) 
    137 S. Ct. 1285
    , 1289, __ U.S.__ [sovereign immunity of
    tribe does not on its own bar individual-capacity damages against tribal employees for
    torts committed within the scope of their employment].)
    Here, plaintiffs contend their lawsuit falls under the remedy-focused general rule
    applied in Maxwell, Pistor and Lewis, and hence that the court erred in finding the action
    8
    barred by sovereign immunity. We disagree. The wrongs alleged in those cases were
    garden variety torts with no relationship to tribal governance and administration. In those
    circumstances, sovereign immunity does not shield individually named tribal officers or
    employees from state tort liability.
    This case is different. As the trial court noted, Maxwell and Pistor make clear that
    the general rule is not dispositive if the lawsuit will encroach upon the tribe’s
    sovereignty. (See 
    Maxwell, supra
    , 708 F.3d at p. 1088.) Here, substantial evidence
    established that defendants were tribal officials at the time of the alleged defamation and
    that they were acting within the scope of their tribal authority when they determined that,
    for the reasons stated in the allegedly defamatory Order of Disenrollment, plaintiffs
    should be disenrolled from the Tribe pursuant to a validly enacted tribal ordinance. On
    this record, which we have carefully reviewed, the trial court concluded that plaintiffs
    sought to hold defendants liable for actions they took as tribal officials in pursuing
    plaintiffs’ disenrollment from the Tribe on the basis of plaintiffs’ alleged unlawful acts.
    The court further found that adjudicating the dispute would require the court to determine
    whether tribal law authorized defendants to publish the Order and disenroll plaintiffs,
    “which itself requires an impermissible analysis of Tribal law and constitutes a
    determination of a non-justiciable inter-tribal dispute.”
    We agree. “ ‘A tribe’s right to define its own membership for tribal purposes has
    long been recognized as central to its existence as an independent political community.’ ”
    (Lamere v. Superior Court (2005) 
    131 Cal. App. 4th 1059
    , 1064 (Lamere), quoting Santa
    Clara Pueblo v. Martinez (1978) 
    436 U.S. 49
    , 72, fn. 32.) It is thus not dispositive here
    that the complaint sought relief only from individual defendants. Despite the plaintiffs’
    careful pleading, their action sought to hold defendants liable for their legislative
    functions and is thus “in reality an official capacity suit” properly subject to sovereign
    immunity. (
    Maxwell, supra
    , 708 F.3d at p. 1089, citing 
    Hardin, supra
    , 
    779 F.2d 476
    .)
    While it may be true that, as plaintiffs assert, their suit does not ask the court to
    take any actions regarding their disenrollment, the action seeks to assess liability for torts
    tribal officials allegedly committed in effectuating that disenrollment. Notwithstanding
    9
    plaintiffs’ assertion that their action is “purely about harmful publications” and “does not
    require a court to interfere with any membership or governance decisions,” entertaining
    the suit would require the court to adjudicate the propriety of the manner in which tribal
    officials carried out an inherently tribal function. This is so whether or not, as plaintiffs
    assert (without reference to the record), some of the defendants are no longer members of
    the Tribe’s governing body.
    Finally, plaintiffs assert the trial court “had a duty to allow them to conduct
    discovery to assist in determining whether it had jurisdiction to proceed.” They have
    supplied neither relevant authority nor cogent legal analysis to support this claim, so it is
    forfeited. In any event, plaintiffs fail even to suggest what relevant evidence such
    discovery might have produced. The court ruled correctly.
    DISPOSITON
    The judgment is affirmed.
    10
    _________________________
    Siggins, J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    McGuiness, P.J.
    _________________________
    Jenkins, J.
    11
    Filed 11/29/17
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    ROSE BROWN et al.,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    A150374
    v.
    AUGUSTIN GARCIA et al.,                            (Lake County
    Super. Ct. No. CV415928)
    Defendants and Respondents.
    ORDER CERTIFYING OPINION
    FOR PUBLICATION
    BY THE COURT:
    The opinion filed in the above-entitled matter on October 31, 2017, was not
    certified for publication in the Official Reports. For good cause, the request for
    publication filed November 20, 2017, is granted.
    Pursuant to rule 8.1105(b) of the California Rules of Court, the opinion in the
    above-entitled matter is ordered certified for publication in the Official Reports.
    DATE:                                             _________________________P.J.
    1
    Trial Court:                                    Lake County Superior Court
    Trial Judge:                                    Honorable Richard C. Martin
    Counsel:
    Ceiba Legal, Little Fawn Boland for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
    Duran Law Office, Jack Duran, Jr., Lyle D. Solomon for Defendants and Respondents.
    2