Outsource Services Management, Llc. v. Nooksack Business Corporation

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 3, 2017
Docket74764-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of Outsource Services Management, Llc. v. Nooksack Business Corporation (Outsource Services Management, Llc. v. Nooksack Business Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Outsource Services Management, Llc. v. Nooksack Business Corporation, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE

OUTSOURCE SERVICES ) No. 74764-9-1 MANAGEMENT, LLC., ) :70 ) --r1

Respondent, ) t-, ..tr.^-3 Cal Trn ) v. ) C") ) NOOKSACK BUSINESS ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION CORPORATION, ) ) FILED: April 3, 2017 Appellant. ) ) VERELLEN, C.J. — The Nooksack Business Corporation (NBC) borrowed more than $15 million to finance construction of and improvements to a casino on Nooksack

Indian Tribe land. 25 U.S.C. § 81(b)(Section 81) requires preapproval by the Secretary

of the Interior for any agreement or contract that "encumbers" tribal land. NBC's limited

recourse loan is secured by a pledge of revenue to the lender. But because the

lender's right to collect pledged revenues does not deprive the tribe of its exclusive

proprietary control of its land, the loan agreements do not encumber tribal land for

purposes of Section 81.

Under the broad language of the loan agreements, the lender may execute upon

future revenues and rents whether or not the facilities are used as a casino.

Additionally, merger does not preclude the lender from executing upon assets pledged

as security for the loan. And, consistent with our Supreme Court's decision in a prior No. 74764-9-1/2

appeal between the lender and NBC,the state court has subject matter jurisdiction to

adjudicate the lender's right to enforce its judgment.

The loan agreement provides for attorney fees to the prevailing party. Because

the lender is the prevailing party, it is entitled,to attorney fees on appeal.

Therefore, we affirm.

FACTS

NBC, wholly-owned by the Nooksack tribe, borrowed funds to build and improve

a casino on tribal land. Outsource Services Management(OSM)is the successor of the

original lender. NBC,the tribe, and the lenderl entered into several written agreements,

including the terms of the loans and the lender's collection rights upon default. The loan

agreements were limited recourse agreements, which restricted the lender's collection

rights to the pledged assets. The pledged assets include pledged revenues, defined as:

11/Whether now existing or hereafter arising, and wherever located, all receipts, revenues and rents from the operation of any portion of the Facilities, including, without limitation, receipts from:

(a) class Hand class Ill gaming... including, without limitation, receipts from bingo, slot machines, and card games;

(b) on-site facilities for dining, food service, beverage, restaurant and other concessions derived therefrom;

(c) any other facilities financed in whole or in part with Recourse Debt;

(d) the lease or sublease of space or Equipment within, on or at the Facilities;

(e) the disposition of all or any portion of any Facilities; and

(f) any other activities carried on within the Facilities, including license fees or the net proceeds of business interruption insurance (or its

1 The original lender, BankFirst, and OSM,as BankFirst's successor.

2 No. 74764-9-1/3

equivalent) obtained by or on behalf of the Borrower with respect to the Facilities.Pi

"Facilities" are defined as "all Equipment and Improvements used in connection with the

Nooksack River Casino."3 "Improvements" are defined as "any buildings and

improvements to land."

The agreements "continue in full force and effect until all outstanding Secured

Obligations shall have been paid in full."5 The lender expressly agreed it has no control

over the management of the facilities.6 And the agreement "does not encumber any

land of the Borrower or to otherwise subject this [agreement]to the requirements of 25

U.S.C.§ 81."7

OSM sued NBC after it defaulted in 2010. NBC challenged the state court's

subject matter jurisdiction in a prior appeal. Our Supreme Court held the waiver of

sovereign immunity and consent to be sued in state court provided Whatcom County

Superior Court with subject matter jurisdiction "for claims related to the contract."5 On

remand, NBC filed a counterclaim for declaratory judgment, including a determination

that pledged assets and revenues do not extend to any funds received by NBC or the

2 CP at 674(emphasis added). 3 CP at 669. Because this loan is secured only by limited recourse debt, see Section 9.21, CP at 702, the alternate definition of "facilities" including equipment, land and improvements does not apply. 4 CP at 670. 5 CP at 696. 6CP at 701. 7 CP at 701.

8 Outsource Servs. Mornt., LLC v. Nooksack Bus. Corp., 181 Wn.2d 272, 277, 333 P.3d 380 (2014).

3 No. 74764-9-1/4

tribe for activity after the casino ceased operations. OSM moved for summary

judgment.

On May 7, 2015, the court granted OSM summary judgment for the amount of

the outstanding debt.9 The trial court also limited enforcement of the judgment "by the

terms of the loan documents and the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act,"19 stayed execution

of the judgment until the parties identified the assets available for execution, and

prohibited NBC and the tribe from transferring, disposing of, or interfering with pledged

assets from the casino.11

On January 13, 2016, the court issued a letter opinion finding the loan

agreements valid and enforceable. The court also ruled OSM has "the right to revenues

received by NBC or the Tribe from activities at the Facilities," even though the casino

closed.12 The court reasoned:

NBC argues that the loan agreements are not valid because making Facilities revenues available to collection would be the equivalent of giving OSM a legal interest in the Facilities themselves—an interest prohibited by the loan agreements and by the law. But there are significant differences between a legal ownership interest and the right to collect revenues, and the loan agreements recognize this fact. The agreements make it clear that NBC and the Tribe are the Facilities'sole owners and decision makes. They give the lender no authority to determine or influence the use of the Facilities. NBC and the Tribe may choose to use the Facilities in a manner that generates no income; the agreements give them that opinion. If the Facilities are used in a manner that generates income, however, that income is a Pledged Revenue subject to collection. The loan agreements are consistent with the 1aw.[131

9 The judgment included $20,725,716.90, plus interest of $3,523.86 per day after February 9, 2015. CP at 1077. 19 25 U.S.C. chapter 29.

11 CP at 1078. 12 CP at 1674.

13 CP at 1673(emphasis added).

4 No. 74764-9-1/5

The trial court denied NBC's motion for reconsideration, emphasizing that

"OSM's right to enforce the Judgment through execution on Pledged Revenues includes

the right to all revenue from activities conducted at the Facilities."14

NBC appeals.

ANALYSIS

I. Section 81

NBC argues the loan agreements are invalid under Section 81 because they

encumber the tribe's trust property and lack the required preapproval from the Secretary

of the Interior.16

Statutory interpretation is a question of law that we review de novo.16 The

fundamental objective in interpreting a federal statute is to ascertain congressional

intent.17 The traditional rules of statutory interpretation apply." If the statute's meaning

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