Document Type

Article

Publication

Creighton Law Review

Year

2018

Abstract

Can American Indian nations sue and be sued in federal and state courts? Specific issues are whether tribes have corporate capacity to sue, whether a Native group has recognized status as a tribe, and whether and to what extent tribes and their officers have governmental immunity from suit. Tribal capacity to sue is now well established, and federal law has well-defined procedures and rules for tribal recognition. But tribal sovereign immunity is actively disputed.

This Article reviews retained tribal sovereignty in general and summarizes past contests over tribal capacity to sue and their resolution into today’s settled rule. Next is a concise statement of the law on federal recognition of tribal entities. Most of the Article explains and analyzes ongoing issues about tribal immunity from suit. Tribal immunity has been continuously recognized from the first reported decision, but tribes’ commercial activities, modern attacks on immunity generally, and states-rights proclivities of some justices jeopardize its existence. Much active litigation involves suits against tribal officers and possible application of the Ex parte Young doctrine. For many reasons, tribes are adopting carefully defined consents to suit, particularly in relation to tribal casinos. This Article’s essential purpose is to give tribes and their lawyers a full account of the law on tribal immunity and current disputes about it.

Comments

"Creighton University Law Review, “To Sue and Be Sued: Capacity and Immunity of American Indian Nations” published in Vol. 51, Issue 2 (2017-2018), pp. 391-424, reprinted with permission. Copyright © 2018 by Creighton University."

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