Lustre Oil v. Anadarko

2023 MT 62, 527 P.3d 586, 411 Mont. 349
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 2023
DocketDA 22-0034
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 MT 62 (Lustre Oil v. Anadarko) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lustre Oil v. Anadarko, 2023 MT 62, 527 P.3d 586, 411 Mont. 349 (Mo. 2023).

Opinion

04/06/2023

DA 22-0034 Case Number: DA 22-0034

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

2023 MT 62

LUSTRE OIL COMPANY LLC, and EREHWON OIL & GAS, LLC,

Plaintiffs and Appellants,

v.

ANADARKO MINERALS, INC. and A&S MINERAL DEVELOPMENT CO., LLC,

Defendants and Appellees.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Seventeenth Judicial District, In and For the County of Valley, Cause No. DV-2021-04 Honorable Yvonne Laird, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellants:

James Parrot, William E. Sparks (argued), Beatty & Wozniak, P.C., Denver, Colorado

James A. Patten, Patten, Peterman, Bekkedahl & Green, PLLC, Billings, Montana

For Appellees:

Ryan C. Rusche, Matthew L. Murdock (argued), Sonosky, Chambers, Sachse, Endreson & Perry LLP, Washington, District of Columbia

Argued: October 26, 2022 Submitted: November 1, 2022 Decided: April 6, 2023

Filed:

r-6tA•-if __________________________________________ Clerk Justice Beth Baker delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Lustre Oil Company LLC and Erehwon Oil & Gas, LLC (collectively “Lustre Oil”)

appeal the Montana Seventeenth Judicial District Court’s dismissal of their complaint for

lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. After jurisdictional discovery, the District Court found

A&S Mineral Development Company, LLC to be an arm of the Assiniboine and Sioux

Tribes entitled to sovereign immunity. Lustre Oil argues in the alternative: (1) that the

District Court “failed to utilize well-established law from the Tenth Circuit” when it found

that A&S could be an arm of the Tribes despite its incorporation under Delaware law;

(2) that the District Court improperly applied the Ninth Circuit’s balancing test to

determine that A&S was an arm of the Tribes; and (3) that the District Court erred when it

found that the Tribes did not waive A&S’s sovereign immunity.

¶2 We decline to adopt a firm rule that would automatically bar an entity incorporated

under state law from claiming tribal sovereign immunity, but we agree with Lustre Oil that

the District Court did not properly weigh the relevant jurisdictional factors when it

concluded that A&S was an arm of the Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes. We accordingly

reverse.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3 Between the 1950s and 1980s, the Fort Peck Indian Reservation, home to the

Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes (collectively “the Tribes”), experienced an influx of private

drilling and development of oil and gas wells. At the time, the private companies

conducting these activities were largely unregulated, and their operations resulted in

2 disastrous environmental impacts to the Reservation and the compromised health of the

residing Tribal communities. This abuse of Tribal resources led the Tribes to take control

of any further oil and gas development within the Reservation.

¶4 On March 9, 2009, through their Tribal Executive Board, the Tribes authorized the

formation of the A&S Mineral Development Company, LLC (“A&S”), incorporating it

under the laws of Delaware. The Tribes formed A&S to develop oil and gas resources on

the Tribes’ behalf. One such endeavor by A&S was to act as a holding company for the

Tribes’ interest in the Fort Peck Energy Company, LLC. The Tribes partnered with Native

American Resource Partners, LLC and Quantum Tribal Energy Capital, LLC to form Fort

Peck Energy Company, LLC for the purpose of furthering the Reservation’s oil and gas

resources. After Fort Peck Energy Company, LLC dissolved in 2017, A&S remained

dormant for three years.

¶5 Anadarko Minerals, Inc., a private company, operated oil and gas well leases on

privately owned land within the exterior boundaries of the Reservation. In 2018, after

spilling approximately 600 barrels of oil and 90,000 barrels of produced water within the

Reservation, Anadarko assigned those oil and gas leases to the Tribes as part of a settlement

agreement with the Tribes and the United States Environmental Protection Agency. The

Tribal Executive Board revived A&S in 2020 to develop the leases the Tribes acquired

from this settlement agreement. Additionally, as part of its revival, A&S assumed

responsibility for restoration and environmental cleanup efforts at abandoned well sites

within the Reservation, duties previously assigned to the Tribes’ Mineral Department and

the Tribes’ Office of Environmental Protection.

3 ¶6 In February 2021, Lustre Oil filed an action against A&S and Anadarko in District

Court seeking to quiet title and to invalidate A&S’s interests in forty-one of the fifty-seven

oil and gas leases A&S operates within the Reservation. Lustre Oil alleged that it obtained

valid interests to those leases from a third-party lease broker after Anadarko let the leases

expire prior to transferring the lease interests to A&S.

¶7 A&S and Anadarko moved the District Court to dismiss Lustre Oil’s action for lack

of jurisdiction, failure to join necessary and indispensable parties, and failure to state a

claim on which relief could be granted. A&S and Anadarko based their motions on A&S’s

sovereign immunity as an arm of the Tribes. The District Court weighed the five factors

from White v. University of California, 765 F.3d 1010 (9th Cir. 2014), to reach its

conclusion that A&S is an arm of the Tribes, entitling it to immunity. Because it concluded

that it did not have jurisdiction over A&S, the District Court dismissed Lustre Oil’s suit

after determining that A&S was an indispensable party.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶8 “We review de novo a district court’s ruling on a motion to dismiss for lack of

subject matter jurisdiction.” Crawford v. Couture, 2016 MT 291, ¶ 5, 385 Mont. 350, 384

P.3d 1038 (citations omitted). When a district court considers a motion to dismiss for lack

of subject-matter jurisdiction based on a claim of sovereign immunity, it must engage in

“sufficient pretrial factual and legal determinations to satisfy itself of its authority to hear

the case before trial.” Bradley v. Crow Tribe of Indians, 2003 MT 82, ¶ 18, 315 Mont. 75,

67 P.3d 306 (internal quotations omitted). We review these conclusions for correctness.

Crawford, ¶ 5.

4 DISCUSSION

¶9 As a threshold matter, Lustre Oil asks this Court to adopt a bright-line rule

preventing tribal entities from enjoying sovereign immunity when those entities are

incorporated under the laws of a state rather than under tribal law. Alternatively, Lustre

Oil argues that the District Court erred in its balancing of the White factors because none

of the factors favor A&S’s immunity. Finally, Lustre Oil argues that the District Court

erred because even if the White factors favor immunity, the Tribes waived this immunity

for A&S.

¶10 Issue One: Whether this Court should categorically bar entities that are incorporated under state law from enjoying tribal sovereign immunity.

¶11 Lustre Oil urges this Court to follow the Tenth Circuit’s decision in Somerlott v.

Cherokee Nation Distributors Inc., 686 F.3d 1144 (10th Cir. 2012), and categorically bar

an entity from claiming tribal sovereign immunity if incorporated under state law.

¶12 In Somerlott, Tina Marie Somerlott appealed a federal district court decision

dismissing her employment discrimination claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

686 F.3d at 1146.

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Bluebook (online)
2023 MT 62, 527 P.3d 586, 411 Mont. 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lustre-oil-v-anadarko-mont-2023.