Acres Bonusing, Inc. v. Marston, No. 20-15959 (9th Cir. 2021)
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Blue Lake, a federally-recognized Tribal Nation, sued Acres and his company in Tribal Court over a business dispute involving a casino gaming system. Acres prevailed in tribal court. Acres then brought suit in federal court against the tribal judge, tribal officials, employees, and casino executives and lawyers who assisted the tribal court, and Blue Lake’s outside lawyers, alleging malicious prosecution, with allegations under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 U.S.C. 1961. According to the complaint, “Blue Lake and its confederates sought ruinous judgments, within a court they controlled, before a judge they suborned, on conjured claims of fraud and breach of contract.” The district court concluded that tribal sovereign immunity shielded all of the defendants.
The Ninth Circuit reversed in part, holding that tribal sovereign immunity did not apply because Acres sought damages from the defendants in their individual capacities; the Tribe was not the real party in interest. Some of the defendants were entitled to absolute personal immunity; the district court properly dismissed Acres’s claims against them on that basis. The Blue Lake judge, law clerks, and the tribal court clerk were entitled to absolute judicial or quasi-judicial immunity. The court remanded for further proceedings as to the remaining defendants not entitled to absolute personal immunity.
Court Description: Tribal Sovereign Immunity. The panel affirmed in part and reversed in part the district court’s dismissal on the ground of tribal sovereign immunity and remanded for further proceedings in a RICO action brought by Acres Bonusing, Inc., and James Acres. Blue Lake Rancheria, a federally recognized Tribal Nation, sued Acres and his company in Blue Lake Tribal Court over a business dispute involving a casino gaming system. Acres and Acres Bonusing prevailed in tribal court but brought suit in federal court against the tribal court judge and others. The defendants fell into two general groups. The Blue Lake Defendants consisted of tribal officials, employees, and casino executives and lawyers who assisted the tribal court. The second group consisted of Blue Lake’s outside law firms and lawyers. The district court concluded * The Honorable Gary Feinerman, United States District Judge for the Northern District of Illinois, sitting by designation. ACRES BONUSING, INC. V. MARSTON 3 that tribal sovereign immunity shielded all of the defendants from suit. Reversing in part, and following the framework set forth in Lewis v. Clarke, 137 S. Ct. 1285 (2017), the panel held that tribal sovereign immunity did not apply because Acres sought money damages from the defendants in their individual capacities, and the Tribe therefore was not the real party in interest. The panel held that Lewis and similar Ninth Circuit case law were not distinguishable on the ground that the alleged tortious conduct occurred in the tribal court, which is part of the Tribe’s inherently sovereign functions. The panel concluded that California Court of Appeal cases cited by the district court did not follow a proper analysis. Affirming in part, the panel held that some of the defendants were entitled to absolute personal immunity, and the district court properly dismissed Acres’s claims against them on that basis. As to the Blue Lake Defendants, the panel held that the judge, his law clerks, and the tribal court clerk were entitled to absolute judicial or quasi-judicial immunity. The panel remanded for further proceedings as to the remaining defendants not entitled to absolute personal immunity. Concurring in part and concurring in the judgment, Judge Feinerman wrote that he agreed with his colleagues on the disposition of this appeal, and parted company with only a certain aspect of the majority’s analysis. Judge Feinerman wrote that a tribe is the real party in interest in a suit against tribal officers or agents, requiring dismissal on sovereign immunity grounds, if the judgment sought would (1) expend itself on the public treasury or domain, or (2) interfere with 4 ACRES BONUSING, INC. V. MARSTON the public administration, or (3) have the effect of restraining the tribe from acting, or compelling it to act. Judge Feinerman agreed that this test’s second component did not apply because a retrospective monetary judgment against the named defendants, based wholly on liability for their past conduct, would not interfere with the Tribe’s administration of its own affairs. Judge Feinerman, however, could not endorse the majority’s suggestion that tribal sovereign immunity did not apply because “[a]ny relief ordered by the district court will not require Blue Lake to do or pay anything.” Judge Feinerman wrote that this rationale paid heed to the first and third components of the sovereign immunity test but left no room for independent operation of the second component.
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