People ex rel. Becerra v. Huber
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Opinion
Streeter, Acting P.J.
*528I. INTRODUCTION
This appeal is from a summary adjudication order and permanent injunction entered in an enforcement action by the Attorney General on behalf of the People of the State of California against Ardith Huber, a member of the Wiyot Band of Indians. Huber owns and operates a tobacco smokeshop on the Table Bluff Rancheria, an area where the Wiyots live just outside of Crescent City, in Humboldt County.
The Attorney General's complaint alleges a claim for violation of the Unfair Competition Law, Business and Professions Code section 17200 et seq. (the UCL) and cites as predicate "unlawful acts" violations of three statutes applicable to cigarette sales and marketing, the Tax Stamp Act ( Rev. & Tax. Code, § 30161 ), the Directory *81Act ( Rev. & Tax. Code, § 30165.1, subd. (e)(2) ), and the Fire Safety Act ( Health & Saf. Code, § 14951, subd. (a) ). He also pleads, as separate claims, violations of the Directory Act and the Fire Safety Act. The trial court granted summary adjudication to the People, denied it to Huber, and entered a permanent injunction on all three claims.
Although Huber's position has evolved in the course of this appeal, her primary argument is an attack on subject matter jurisdiction. She contends that, under a federal statute granting California courts plenary criminal jurisdiction but limited civil jurisdiction over cases arising on Indian reservations, the trial court lacked power to proceed on any of the three claims in this case. She also argues that, under the doctrine of Indian preemption, which limits the reach of state law to conduct by Indians on Indian reservations, all the statutes the Attorney General seeks to enforce here are preempted by paramount federal authority.
We affirm.
II. BACKGROUND
A. Huber Enterprises and the Table Bluff Rancheria
Huber runs a sole proprietorship out of her home called Huber Enterprises, selling cigarettes at retail and wholesale. Although Huber once sold other brands of cigarettes, after 2007 she has sold exclusively Native American *529brands, which she describes as "cigarettes manufactured by Indians on Indian lands, ... shipped and sold through Indian and tribally-owned distributors to Indian and tribally-owned retail smokeshops located on Indian lands."
The retail component of Huber's enterprise is onsite business. Customers include tribe members and nonmembers who come to the Table Bluff Rancheria to make purchases there. The wholesale component of the enterprise is with "over two dozen Indian smokeshops owned either by Indian tribes or [i]ndividual tribal members and operated within [other] ... recognized Indian reservation[s]." Deliveries are made to these "inter-tribal" customers by truck, using California highways.
Huber Enterprises is licensed to do business pursuant to the Wiyot Tribal Business Code and the Wiyot Tribal Tobacco Licensing Ordinance (Ordinance No. 01-10). Ordinance No. 01-10 was promulgated June 14, 2010, for purposes of, inter alia, "promot[ing] tribal economic development," "regulat[ing] and licens[ing] the manufacture, distribution, wholesaling, and retailing of tobacco products," "complement[ing] and enforc[ing] federal standards relating to or prohibiting the sale, distribution, possession, exposure to, access to, advertising and promotion of, and use of tobacco products," and "encourag[ing] and foster[ing] traditions and culture of the Tribe."
Ordinance No. 01-10 requires licensees to pay-and Huber Enterprises does pay-a quarterly excise tax administered through a tribal tax stamp system. Taxes collected in this manner are deposited into a dedicated Tribal Tobacco Fund, earmarked solely for the expenses of "[t]obacco-related school and community health education programs," "[s]moking and tobacco-use prevention measures," and "[a]ssistance to tribal and community members for cessation of smoking and tobacco use."
There is no dispute in this case that today the Wiyot Band of Indians is a federally recognized tribe and that the Table Bluff Rancheria falls within the broad definition of "Indian country" under federal law, as do individual allotments of land to enrolled tribe members such as Huber. ( *82
At the center of the appeal are three sets of statutes governing different aspects of the sale and distribution of cigarettes in California. In order to provide some general legal context and set the stage for the specific issues framed by the appeal, we begin by summarizing these statutes.
First, California, along with many other states, has enacted legislation designed to implement the provisions of the 1998 Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement (the MSA).2 Under the pertinent California statutes, cigarettes sold in this state must be produced by manufacturers who either (a) have signed the MSA and agreed to pay substantial sums to the state to cover, among other things, health care costs generated by tobacco use among Californians, or (b) in lieu of signing the MSA, have agreed to pay sufficient funds into a reserve fund in escrow to guarantee a source of compensation should liability arise. ( Health & Saf. Code, §§ 104555 - 104557.) Under the Directory Act, the Attorney General maintains a published list of all cigarette manufacturers who have annually certified their compliance with the requirements of the MSA or the alternative escrow funding requirements. ( Rev. & Tax. Code, § 30165.1, subds. (c) & (d).) It is categorically illegal for any "person" to "sell, offer, or possess for sale in this state, ship or otherwise distribute into or within this state" cigarettes that are not in compliance with the Directory Act. (
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Streeter, Acting P.J.
*528I. INTRODUCTION
This appeal is from a summary adjudication order and permanent injunction entered in an enforcement action by the Attorney General on behalf of the People of the State of California against Ardith Huber, a member of the Wiyot Band of Indians. Huber owns and operates a tobacco smokeshop on the Table Bluff Rancheria, an area where the Wiyots live just outside of Crescent City, in Humboldt County.
The Attorney General's complaint alleges a claim for violation of the Unfair Competition Law, Business and Professions Code section 17200 et seq. (the UCL) and cites as predicate "unlawful acts" violations of three statutes applicable to cigarette sales and marketing, the Tax Stamp Act ( Rev. & Tax. Code, § 30161 ), the Directory *81Act ( Rev. & Tax. Code, § 30165.1, subd. (e)(2) ), and the Fire Safety Act ( Health & Saf. Code, § 14951, subd. (a) ). He also pleads, as separate claims, violations of the Directory Act and the Fire Safety Act. The trial court granted summary adjudication to the People, denied it to Huber, and entered a permanent injunction on all three claims.
Although Huber's position has evolved in the course of this appeal, her primary argument is an attack on subject matter jurisdiction. She contends that, under a federal statute granting California courts plenary criminal jurisdiction but limited civil jurisdiction over cases arising on Indian reservations, the trial court lacked power to proceed on any of the three claims in this case. She also argues that, under the doctrine of Indian preemption, which limits the reach of state law to conduct by Indians on Indian reservations, all the statutes the Attorney General seeks to enforce here are preempted by paramount federal authority.
We affirm.
II. BACKGROUND
A. Huber Enterprises and the Table Bluff Rancheria
Huber runs a sole proprietorship out of her home called Huber Enterprises, selling cigarettes at retail and wholesale. Although Huber once sold other brands of cigarettes, after 2007 she has sold exclusively Native American *529brands, which she describes as "cigarettes manufactured by Indians on Indian lands, ... shipped and sold through Indian and tribally-owned distributors to Indian and tribally-owned retail smokeshops located on Indian lands."
The retail component of Huber's enterprise is onsite business. Customers include tribe members and nonmembers who come to the Table Bluff Rancheria to make purchases there. The wholesale component of the enterprise is with "over two dozen Indian smokeshops owned either by Indian tribes or [i]ndividual tribal members and operated within [other] ... recognized Indian reservation[s]." Deliveries are made to these "inter-tribal" customers by truck, using California highways.
Huber Enterprises is licensed to do business pursuant to the Wiyot Tribal Business Code and the Wiyot Tribal Tobacco Licensing Ordinance (Ordinance No. 01-10). Ordinance No. 01-10 was promulgated June 14, 2010, for purposes of, inter alia, "promot[ing] tribal economic development," "regulat[ing] and licens[ing] the manufacture, distribution, wholesaling, and retailing of tobacco products," "complement[ing] and enforc[ing] federal standards relating to or prohibiting the sale, distribution, possession, exposure to, access to, advertising and promotion of, and use of tobacco products," and "encourag[ing] and foster[ing] traditions and culture of the Tribe."
Ordinance No. 01-10 requires licensees to pay-and Huber Enterprises does pay-a quarterly excise tax administered through a tribal tax stamp system. Taxes collected in this manner are deposited into a dedicated Tribal Tobacco Fund, earmarked solely for the expenses of "[t]obacco-related school and community health education programs," "[s]moking and tobacco-use prevention measures," and "[a]ssistance to tribal and community members for cessation of smoking and tobacco use."
There is no dispute in this case that today the Wiyot Band of Indians is a federally recognized tribe and that the Table Bluff Rancheria falls within the broad definition of "Indian country" under federal law, as do individual allotments of land to enrolled tribe members such as Huber. ( *82
At the center of the appeal are three sets of statutes governing different aspects of the sale and distribution of cigarettes in California. In order to provide some general legal context and set the stage for the specific issues framed by the appeal, we begin by summarizing these statutes.
First, California, along with many other states, has enacted legislation designed to implement the provisions of the 1998 Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement (the MSA).2 Under the pertinent California statutes, cigarettes sold in this state must be produced by manufacturers who either (a) have signed the MSA and agreed to pay substantial sums to the state to cover, among other things, health care costs generated by tobacco use among Californians, or (b) in lieu of signing the MSA, have agreed to pay sufficient funds into a reserve fund in escrow to guarantee a source of compensation should liability arise. ( Health & Saf. Code, §§ 104555 - 104557.) Under the Directory Act, the Attorney General maintains a published list of all cigarette manufacturers who have annually certified their compliance with the requirements of the MSA or the alternative escrow funding requirements. ( Rev. & Tax. Code, § 30165.1, subds. (c) & (d).) It is categorically illegal for any "person" to "sell, offer, or possess for sale in this state, ship or otherwise distribute into or within this state" cigarettes that are not in compliance with the Directory Act. (
*83Second, under the Fire Safety Act, any manufacturer of cigarettes sold in California must meet specified testing, performance, and packaging standards *531established for the purpose of minimizing the fire hazards caused by cigarettes. ( Health & Saf. Code, §§ 14951, subd. (a)(1)-(3), 14952 - 14954.) This statute provides that all cigarettes sold in this state must, among other things, be packaged in a specified manner and certified with the State Fire Marshal as compliant with these safety standards. (
Third, to reduce smoking and fund healthcare research related to diseases caused by smoking (Rev. & Tax. Code, §§ 30131 & 30121 et seq.), California imposes excise taxes that "shall be paid by the user or consumer" (id., § 30107) but that must be collected by distributors at the time of sale and remitted by them to the state (id., § 30108). Compliance with this remittance obligation is administered under the Tax Stamp Act, which requires all cigarette packages sold in California to have tax stamps affixed to them. (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 30161.) Subject to exceptions, it is illegal for any "person" to "knowingly possess[ ], or keep[ ], store[ ], or retain[ ] for the purpose of sale, or sell[ ] or offer[ ] to sell, any package of cigarettes to which there is not affixed" a tax stamp required by the Tax Stamp Act. (Rev. & Tax. Code, § 30474, subd. (a).)
C. Procedural History
After sending two cease-and-desist letters charging Huber with violating various provisions of state law governing distribution and sales of cigarettes, the Attorney General filed this action in Humboldt County in March 2011. The complaint pleaded three causes of action. The first alleged violation of the Directory Act. The second alleged violation of the Fire Safety Act. And the third alleged violation of the UCL, specifying violations of the Tax Stamp Act, the Directory Act, and the Fire Safety Act as predicate "unlawful acts" warranting entry of a permanent injunction and an award of civil penalties.
Specifically, it was alleged that Huber Enterprises sold cigarettes in packages without an affixed tax stamp and failed to collect and remit excise taxes, all in violation of the Tax Stamp Act ( Rev. & Tax. Code, § 30161 ); sold cigarettes purchased from manufacturers not listed by the Attorney General on the statewide tobacco directory, in violation of the Directory Act (id , § 30165.1, subd. (e)(2)); and sold cigarettes in packaging that does not meet required safety standards, in violation of the Fire Safety Act ( Health & Saf. Code, § 14951, subd. (a) ).3
On cross motions for summary adjudication, the trial court denied Huber's motion; granted the Attorney General's motion in part, leaving open triable *532issues concerning civil penalties; and entered a permanent injunction. By its terms, the injunction applies only to sales to nonmembers of the Wiyot Tribe and permits Huber to continue operating so long as she complies with the Directory Act, the Fire Safety Act, and the Tax Stamp Act. This appeal followed.
III. DISCUSSION
Only the grant of the permanent injunction is on appeal. " 'A permanent injunction is a determination on the merits that a plaintiff has prevailed on a cause of action ... against a defendant and that *84equitable relief is appropriate. A permanent injunction ... is a final judgment on the merits.' " ( Dawson v. East Side Union High School Dist. (1994)
Because the order granting summary adjudication in favor of the Attorney General and denying it to Huber supplies the basis for the permanent injunction, we must in turn review whether summary adjudication was correctly granted as to each of the three causes of action. We review de novo an order granting summary judgment or summary adjudication. ( Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (2001)
A. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
The United States Supreme Court "first addressed the sovereign status of [Indian] tribes in three opinions known today as the Marshall Trilogy after their author, Chief Justice John Marshall. (See Worcester v. The State of Georgia (1832) 31 U.S. [6 Pet.] 515 [
Huber's legal position in the course of this appeal has been a bit of a moving target. Her main argument below, and here on appeal-until she retained new counsel and began shifting ground-is that California courts have no subject matter jurisdiction over this case because it involves her on-reservation activities as a member of the Wiyot Tribe. Central to that argument is a federal statute known as Public Law 280. (Pub.L. No. 83-280 (Aug. 15, 1953)
But in her reply brief, Huber began to change tack. While still citing Bryan and Public Law 280, she made no mention of adjudicative jurisdiction and instead argued the case can and should be decided in her favor on preemption grounds, a secondary line of argument in her opening brief. Because Ordinance No. 01-10 authorized her to operate as she did, she claimed, the Attorney General seeks to "nullify"
*86tribal law in derogation of tribal sovereignty. The thrust of Huber's argument, as reframed in reply, is that the People "seek[ ] to inflict upon [her] a comprehensive civil regulatory regime that egregiously violates the letter and spirit of Public Law 280" and violates the right of the Wiyots to " 'make their own laws and be governed by them.' " So thoroughgoing is the intrusion on Wiyot sovereignty, Huber tells us, it is difficult to imagine a "more invasive and coercive regulatory regime ... short of military occupation of the reservation."
Huber's position shifted again at oral argument, where she announced her agreement with the People that "Public Law 280 is irrelevant," stated "we're ... assuming for the sake of argument there is jurisdiction," and urged that the appeal should rise or fall on the question of preemption. We initially declined to accept this concession-subject matter jurisdiction, of course, is not a matter for litigants to control by consent or waiver-and we filed an opinion agreeing in part with the jurisdictional position advanced in Huber's opening brief. Given the narrow construction placed on the scope of state court adjudicatory jurisdiction in Bryan , supra ,
Following a grant of rehearing, the Attorney General supplied additional authority addressing the threshold issue of adjudicative jurisdiction. Based on *535that authority, we are now persuaded that the key United States Supreme Court case here is not Bryan , but Williams .
At issue in Williams was whether a state court had jurisdiction to adjudicate a debt collection action brought by a non-Indian against a Navajo Reservation Indian for debts the Indian incurred at the non-Indian's on-reservation store. ( Williams,
If Public Law 280 is viewed through the prism of Williams , what Section 4 of the statute did was authorize state court adjudicative jurisdiction in specified civil cases where the exercise of such jurisdiction would infringe Indian sovereignty, unless authorized by Congress. But absent infringement under Williams , there is no need to consider Public Law 280 and the general jurisdiction of state courts is the default rule. (See Powell v. Farris (1980)
There are no California cases applying Williams in this way, but there does appear to be a deep vein of out-of-state case law doing so. ( C'Hair v. Court of Ninth Judicial District (Wyo. 2015)
The Attorney General argues that the claims he asserts arose off-reservation, while Huber argues the opposite. To resolve the jurisdictional issue presented here, we see no need for binary analysis of where the claims arose. Under the *89Williams test, " '[a]s the activity in question moves off the *538reservation the state's governmental and regulatory interest increases dramatically, and federal protectiveness of Indian sovereignty lessens.' " ( Begay v. Roberts (Ariz.Ct.App. 1990)
Applying Williams to the facts presented on this record, the exercise of jurisdiction here does not infringe tribal sovereignty. The case implicates no issues of tribal self-governance, tribal membership, ownership of any tribe member's real property, or domestic relations among tribe members. Huber's business is located on the Wiyot reservation, but all the claims at issue are directed to her sales of contraband cigarettes to non-members of the Wiyot tribe, both at the retail level (based on promotions directed to off-reservation customers enticing them to visit her on-reservation business) and at the wholesale level (based on deliveries by truck off the reservation to other tribes). While these claims involve a Native American residing and doing business in Indian country, they cannot be said to have arisen entirely there. Nor does the Wiyot tribe have a court system that might be undermined by a California court's assertion of jurisdiction involving a Wiyot tribe member and a business she operates on Wiyot tribal lands. Unlike the situation in Williams with Navajos in Arizona, there has never been any disclaimer by the state of California of any aspect of its jurisdiction over Indian country within the territorial boundaries of this state.
Notably, state courts around the country in a line of cases involving public enforcement actions against Native American cigarette sellers operating smokeshops on their reservations while offering tobacco products for sale off-reservation, have all rejected challenges to subject matter jurisdiction. In State v. Maybee (2010)
Maybee confirms that where there is no infringement of tribal sovereignty, Public Law 280 does not figure into the jurisdictional analysis. Oregon, like California, is a mandatory Public Law 280 state. But similar cases involving Native American smokeshops "exporting" tobacco products off-reservation have arisen in optional Public Law 280 states and in non-Public Law 280 states. Appellate courts in several of these cases have reached the same conclusion that the Oregon Court of Appeals did in Maybee , adopting similar reasoning. (See Health and Human Services v. Maybee (Maine 2009)
B. Preemption
1. Applicable Principles
"The relation between the Indians and the states has by no means remained constant since the days of John Marshall." ( Organized Village of Kake v. Egan (1962)
The high court summarized the applicable principles in White Mountain Apache Tribe v. Bracker (1980)
"The unique historical origins of tribal sovereignty make it generally unhelpful to apply to federal enactments regulating Indian tribes those standards of pre-emption that have emerged in other areas of the law. Tribal reservations are not States, and the differences in the form and nature of their sovereignty make it treacherous to import to one notions of pre-emption that are properly applied to the other. The tradition of Indian sovereignty over the reservation and tribal members must inform the determination whether the exercise of state authority has been pre-empted by operation of federal law. [Citation.] ... [T]his tradition is reflected and encouraged in a number of *541congressional enactments demonstrating a firm federal policy of promoting tribal self-sufficiency and economic development. Ambiguities in federal law have been construed generously in order to comport with these traditional notions of sovereignty and with the federal policy of encouraging tribal independence. [Citation.] We have thus rejected the proposition that in order to find a particular state law to have been pre-empted by operation of federal law, an express congressional statement to that effect is required. [Citation.] At the same time any applicable regulatory interest of the State must be given weight [citation], and 'automatic exemptions "as a matter of constitutional law" ' are unusual. [Citation.]
"When on-reservation conduct involving only Indians is at issue, state law is generally inapplicable, for the State's regulatory interest is likely to be minimal and the federal interest in encouraging tribal self-government is at its strongest.[16 ]... More difficult questions arise where ... a State asserts authority over the conduct of non-Indians engaging in activity on the reservation. In such cases we have examined the language of the relevant federal treaties and statutes in terms of both the broad policies that underlie them and the notions of sovereignty that have developed from historical traditions of tribal independence. This inquiry is not dependent on mechanical or absolute conceptions of state or tribal sovereignty but has called for a particularized inquiry into the nature of the state, federal, and tribal interests at stake, an inquiry designed to determine whether, in the specific context, the exercise of state authority would violate federal law. [Citations.]" ( Bracker , supra , 448 U.S. at pp. 142-145,
*922. Moe , Colville , and Milhelm
Bracker,
Moe,
Citing cases barring states from directly taxing Indian-owned property or income earned by Indians on a reservation, the district court held Montana could not apply its tax on vehicles, its vendor licensing scheme, or its cigarette taxing scheme, with one significant exception: Montana "may require a pre-collection of the tax imposed by law upon the non-Indian purchaser of the cigarettes." ( Moe , supra , 425 U.S. at pp. 468-469,
Essentially, what the court held is that, to prevent tax evasion by non-Indians who purchase cigarettes, Montana may enlist tribal sellers in an effort to collect tax owed by these shoppers. ( Moe , supra , 425 U.S. at pp. 481-483,
Colville expands the core holding in Moe in a number of ways. The appeal there was from a district court judgment in consolidated cases, both involving cigarette sales by Indian smokeshops on reservation land in the State of Washington. (Colville,
The holdings in Colville on this complex array of issues are noteworthy in three respects. First, Washington's scheme of taxing nonmembers who make on-reservation purchases was found to be valid and not preempted. ( Colville,
The tribes' reliance on their own local schemes of taxing and regulating cigarette sales failed. ( Colville,
Second, the court found that Washington was empowered "to apply its sales and cigarette taxes to Indians resident on the reservation but not *544enrolled in the governing *94Tribe." ( Colville,
Milhelm picked up where Moe and Colville left off, but specifically addressed the wholesale level of distribution. Historically, under federal legislation known as the Indian Trader Statutes, enacted pursuant to the Indian Commerce Clause and designed to protect against exploitation of tribes by Indian traders, and under prior Supreme Court case law, federally licensed trading agents have been exempt from state taxation, just as tribe members are exempt from state taxation. ( Milhelm, supra, 512 U.S. at pp. 68, 70,
Reviewing a decision of the New York Court of Appeals that held New York's regulations preempted by the Indian Trader Statutes, the high court framed the issue as follows. "Because New York lacks authority to tax cigarettes sold to tribal members for their own consumption, see Moe [, supra ,
*545The court reversed, extending Moe and Colville with the following explanation: "The specific kind of state tax obligation that New York's regulations are designed to enforce-which falls on non-Indian purchasers of goods that are merely retailed on a reservation-stands on a markedly different footing from a tax imposed directly on Indian traders, on enrolled tribal members or tribal organizations, or on 'value generated on the reservation by activities involving the Tribes,' Colville,
"Although Moe and Colville dealt most directly with claims of interference with tribal sovereignty, the reasoning of those decisions requires rejection of the submission that [a provision of the Indian Trader Statutes] bars any and all state-imposed burdens on Indian traders.... [¶] ... [¶] ... We are persuaded ... that New York's decision to stanch the illicit flow of tax-free cigarettes early in the distribution stream is a 'reasonably necessary' method of 'preventing fraudulent transactions,' one that 'polices against wholesale evasion of [New York's] own valid taxes without unnecessarily intruding on core tribal interests.' Colville,
3. Preemption Analysis
Arguing for preemption, Huber emphasizes that this case involves solely on-reservation conduct among Indians, and, to the extent her operations extended beyond the border of the Table Bluff Rancheria, her business was with other tribes on other reservations. In her account of the facts, all she did was make wholesale deliveries to other tribes on their reservations "as a courtesy," while contractually taking and accepting every order at the only store location she had, in her house on the Table Bluff Rancheria. She insists the trial court made no finding that she conducted business off-reservation. What the trial court actually found, she says, is that her business involved *546extensive "off-reservation contacts," a concept she contends might be relevant to an issue of personal jurisdiction, but that has no legal significance here.
Huber relies heavily on our Supreme Court's decision in People ex rel. Dept. of Transportation v. Naegele Outdoor Advertising Co. (1985)
The Attorney General bases his argument against preemption on the general idea that Indian reservations are not legal islands unto themselves and that whatever vestiges of sovereignty they still enjoy must give way in matters of commerce affecting the welfare of state citizens outside their borders. "Absent express federal law to the contrary," he points out, "Indians going beyond reservation boundaries have generally been held subject to nondiscriminatory state law otherwise applicable to all citizens of the State." ( Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones (1973)
The Attorney General also draws our attention to the scale of Huber's enterprise. What she portrays as a "small storefront" operation run out of her house is not, in fact, some tiny, exclusively on-reservation business, he points out. Huber "sold huge quantities of noncompliant cigarettes. Between November 23, 2009 and October 1, 2013, she sold, distributed, and transported at least 14,727,290 packs of Seneca, Opal, King Mountain, Couture, and Sands brand cigarettes to other stores within the state but beyond her reservation. [She] invoiced over $30 million for these sales. Several days a week her employees delivered these cigarettes using her own vehicles on state roads and highways. Between March 8, 2007 and October 1, 2013, [Huber] also sold at least 1,969,279 packs of Seneca, Opal, King Mountain, Couture, and Sands brand cigarettes at her retail store. [Huber's] tribe has about 600 members of all ages." (Fns. omitted.)
All in all, we conclude that the Attorney General has the better of the argument on the issue of preemption. While we do not agree that Bracker preemption analysis may be short-circuited under Wagnon by characterizing the conduct at issue as off-reservation17 *97-what we have here is a mix of on-reservation and off-reservation activity-we are nonetheless persuaded that the Bracker test tips in favor of the People on this record. In circumstances involving conduct that is partially on-reservation and partially off-reservation, "a State may validly assert authority over the activities of nonmembers on a reservation" if a balancing of interests under Bracker , supra,
A key teaching of Moe , Colville , and Milhelm is that the high court views the issue of state regulation of cigarette sales on Native American reservations through an economic lens, looking not only at the cost advantages of selling noncomplying cigarettes, but to the incentives to lawbreaking that such sales create and the impact of upstream purchasing in the wholesale market for illicit cigarettes. ( Moe , supra , 425 U.S. at pp. 481-483,
Huber argues that Moe , Colville , and Milhelm are merely "tax" cases that have no application outside the "special area of State taxation." (See California v. Cabazon Band of Mission Indians (1987)
The trial court correctly concluded that the balance of federal, tribal, and state interests weighs in favor of California.19 Huber points to no federal *549interest, expressed by statute or regulation, in promoting reservation sales of cigarettes, and makes no claim that Congress, by statute or regulation, delegated to the Wiyots some form of authority that might oust the authority of the state in this area. To the extent the Wiyot Tribe, independently, has an interest in carving out a domain for its members in the cigarette sales business-Ordinance No. 01-10 appears to evidence just such an interest-the holding in Colville tells us that does not matter, absent a direct conflict. Huber insists that there is such a conflict, and that it is irreconcilable, but we do not agree. None of the California statutes the Attorney General seeks to enforce in this case blocks Huber outright from engaging in that which Ordinance No. 01-10 licenses her to do. Nothing in these statutes prevents her from selling tobacco products on any basis Ordinance No. 01-10 permits, solely to members of the Wiyot tribe, and solely on the Table Bluff Rancheria. California did not "impose" added burdens on her. Rather, by her choice of business strategy, she elected a path that triggered compliance obligations beyond those required by Ordinance No. 01-10.
To extent Huber wishes to sell tobacco products to non-tribe members on the Rancheria, or to ship products to customers off the Rancheria, she must comply with California law as well as Ordinance No. 01-10. That may make it more expensive for her to pursue the business strategy she chose, but it does not place her in a dilemma between warring legal imperatives.
*99Colville is directly on point in this respect. The court there rejected an invitation to use tribal cigarette tax and marketing regulations as a consideration weighing in favor of preemption. ( Colville,
Huber argues that, by obtaining an injunction, which carries with it the threat of contempt, the enforcement steps the Attorney General has taken here-causing the shutdown of her business-go far beyond the "minimal" burdens the Moe , Colville , and Milhelm courts approved. We cannot agree. The burden of complying with the Directory Act and the Fire Safety Act, as the Attorney General points out, falls on manufacturers. Huber's only "burden," if it can even be called that, is to choose product sourcing from manufacturers who comply with those statutes. Huber points out that the court's injunction left her no choice but to shutter her business, but if that is the case the decision to close her business rather than offer cigarettes that comply with California law was her election, apparently looking at the economics of continued operation in compliance with state law. Colville is quite clear that the burden was on her to show that enforcement of the Directory Act and the Fire Safety Act against her, directly and through the UCL, is "not reasonably necessary as a means of preventing fraudulent transactions." ( Colville, supra, 447 U.S. at p. 160,
Finally, returning full circle to Williams , since the test for infringement of Indian sovereignty is embedded within the Bracker preemption test as a "backdrop" consideration ( Three Affiliated Tribes II , supra , 476 U.S. at p. 884,
Putting aside the overstatement-the People make no attempt to enforce any laws against the Wiyot tribe itself-we are not persuaded that this case presents the "invasive" threat to "tribal law and policy" that Huber decries. She has pointed to no on-reservation enforcement activity of any kind, at least not so far. In Colville , the high court upheld the State of Washington's power to seize illegal cigarettes by off-reservation interdiction but saw no need to address whether the state had power to "enter onto the reservations, seize stocks of cigarettes which are intended for sale to nonmembers, and sell those stocks in order to obtain payment of the taxes due." ( Colville , supra , 447 U.S. at p. 162,
IV. DISPOSITION
Affirmed.
We concur:
Reardon, J.
Smith, J.
Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, First Appellate District, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
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