Office of the Navajo Nation President v. Navajo Nation Council

9 Am. Tribal Law 46
CourtNavajo Nation Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 2010
DocketNo. SC-CV-02-10
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 9 Am. Tribal Law 46 (Office of the Navajo Nation President v. Navajo Nation Council) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Navajo Nation Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Office of the Navajo Nation President v. Navajo Nation Council, 9 Am. Tribal Law 46 (navajo 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

Joe Shirley, Jr., in his capacity as President of the Navajo Nation and individually, filed an action for an ex parte temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction against the Navajo Nation Council and Lawrence T. Morgan, in his capacity as Speaker and individually, in the Window Rock District Court, to enjoin enforcement of Navajo Nation Council Resolution CO-41-09 placing him on administrative leave. The district court ruled that Resolution CO-41-09 is null and void and, therefore, unenforceable. We affirm the judgment invalidating Resolution CO-41-09 on different grounds.

I

BACKGROUND

This appeal concerns a clash between the Executive and Legislative Branches of our government. On October 26, 2009, the President, Joe Shirley, Jr., was placed on administrative leave by the Navajo Nation Council (Council) by enactment of an emergency legislation CO-041-09 pursuant to 11 N.N.C § 240(C). The measure was based on an investigative report returned by two law firms into the President’s role in two business dealings that has never been made public, nor shared with the President. President Shirley filed for emergency injunctive relief in the district court on December 7, 2010, claiming that the legislation putting him on administrative leave is invalid as mandatory statutory enactment procedure was not followed; that the measure is a bill of attainder; that it violates Dim bi beenahaz’ámm by disabling a naat’áanii chosen by the People from carrying out the responsibilities entrusted to him; that it violates separation of powers; that it violates his right to due process under statutory and fundamental law; and that irreparable harm has occurred and will continue to occur in the absence of the President. On December 14, 2009, the court applied the six-factor test in Chapo v. Navajo Nation, 8 Nav. R. 447, 461, 5 Am. Tribal Law 384 (Nav.Sup. Ct.2004) and determined that the Speaker of the Navajo Nation Council (Speaker) and Council had failed to strictly comply with statutory enactment procedure pursuant to 2 N.N.C. § 164 and acted outside the scope of their legislative authority. The court further invalidated CO-41-09 for the same reason.

The Speaker and Council appealed on January 13, 2010, claiming that the President had initiated the action in violation of 2 NNC 1964 by not first seeking the approval of the Attorney General; that the President had failed to give the Navajo Nation timely notice of intent to file suit as required by the Sovereign Immunity Act; that the President failed to serve the complaint and application on Appellants; that the President alleged no basis justifying preliminary relief; that the district court denied Appellants reasonable opportunity to respond; that the court’s grant of a “directed verdict” was error; that the Sovereign Immunity Act deprived the court of jurisdiction over the injunction proceeding; and that the court misapplied the Chapo test or the test was, otherwise, not controlling.

This appeal comes to us at a critical time of great disharmony between the branches of the Navajo Nation government that is evident to the Navajo People. The leadership of the branches have been in conflict over governmental reform, and unable to sit down with each other and talk things out for almost two years, with the Executive and Legislative Branches [53]*53each claiming interference with their inner operations and the very structure of their respective authority.

There is obviously a great difference between the branches as to what is the source of authority to govern on the Navajo Nation. The underlying difference is about whether the authority to govern comes from the Council or the People. The Council has become so intransigent in its position that it now purports to have authority to enact a new statute that would reduce the discretion of our courts to question the sources and complexion of our laws and governmental authority.

Our People who remember our previous governmental unrest in 1989 have said that we have entered a similar, and more prolonged, period of turmoil in our history. While the 1989 turmoil involved only the Council and its internal officers, the present crisis now involves separate, coordinate branches. The adversarial process is a system of absolutes—there is a winning side whose claims may be enforced, and a side that does not win. In reviewing this case, due to the governmental role of the parties, we are, in fact, sitting in review of governmental powers.

II

PRELIMINARY MATTERS

This case between the Executive and Legislative Branches presents preliminary questions of jurisdiction (application of the Sovereign Immunity doctrine), the public interest in balancing the powers and rights asserted by the Executive and Legislative Branches (application of the Separation of Powers doctrine and Due Process under the Navajo Nation Bill of Rights) and the ultimate issue on the merits.

We have said that the primary principle that informs this Court’s interpretation of procedural due process is K’é, which fosters fairness through mutual respect, and requires that an individual is fully informed and provided an opportunity to speak. Atcitty v. The District Court for the Judicial District of Window Rock, 7 Nav. R. 227, 230 (Nav.Sup.Ct.1996); and Fort Defiance Housing Corp. v. Lowe, 8 Nav. R. 463, 475, 5 Am. Tribal Law 394 (Nav.Sup.Ct.2004). In any dispute between the Navajo Nation leadership that is brought before our courts, we will consider and apply k’é as the primary principle under Diñé bi beenahaz’áanii, which is the Fundamental Law of the Navajo People. K’é is the high standard which the People hold our leadership in their enactments and exercise of powers during the period they hold Office, in service of the Navajo People who have chosen them, and in dealings with each other.

As we begin examining the doctrines and principles applicable to this case, we state uneategorically that the courts will not become entangled in the political maneuvering that we and the People are now observing. The courts will take its proper role-that of an independent decision—maker which has been summoned by the branches and the People to move this dispute forward and bring it to an end with a final resolution consistent with our teachings, values, principles, and tradition.

Ill

JURISDICTION

Appellants contend that the district court lacked jurisdiction under the Navajo Nation Sovereign Immunity Act (the Act) because Appellees failed to send a timely Notice of Intent to File Suit, which is a “jurisdictional condition precedent” under the Act. This means that in any matter covered under the Act, the condition must be complied with as a matter of law before the court may hear the matter. The rules [54]*54of the Navajo Nation Courts do not, otherwise, require the filing of such a notiee. There is no dispute that the notice was not timely filed under the terms of the Act.

Appellees and Amicus contend that the Act was never intended to apply in internal litigation for injunctive relief by and between coordinate governmental branches. If their position is correct and the Act does not apply, then Appellees need not comply with the Act for this action to proceed. We look to the language of the Act itself to see if the intent on this issue may be clearly inferred.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Am. Tribal Law 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/office-of-the-navajo-nation-president-v-navajo-nation-council-navajo-2010.