People Ex Rel. Owen v. Miami Nation Enters.

386 P.3d 357, 211 Cal. Rptr. 3d 837, 2 Cal. 5th 222, 2016 Cal. LEXIS 9626
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 2016
DocketS216878
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 386 P.3d 357 (People Ex Rel. Owen v. Miami Nation Enters.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People Ex Rel. Owen v. Miami Nation Enters., 386 P.3d 357, 211 Cal. Rptr. 3d 837, 2 Cal. 5th 222, 2016 Cal. LEXIS 9626 (Cal. 2016).

Opinion

Liu, J.

*229 The practice of short-term deferred deposit lending-often called "payday" or "cash advance" lending-generally involves small sums that become due on the borrower's next payday. In return for the loan, the borrower provides the lender with a personal check for the amount of the loan plus fees or with direct access to his or her checking account. The lender then waits a specified amount of time to deposit the borrower's check or debit his or her account-hence the deferred deposit. Because of the short-term nature of these loans and the relatively high fees involved, effective annual percentage rates of 700 percent or higher are not unusual.

*842 In 2003, the Legislature enacted the California Deferred Deposit Transaction Law (Fin. Code, § 23000 et seq. ), which limits the size of each loan and the fees that lenders may charge. In response to this law and similar *230 legislation in other states, some deferred deposit lenders sought affiliation with federally recognized Indian tribes, which are generally immune from suit on the basis of tribal sovereign immunity. (See generally Martin & Schwartz, The Alliance Between Payday Lenders and Tribes: Are Both Tribal Sovereignty and Consumer Protection at Risk? (2012) 69 Wash. & Lee L.Rev. 751 (hereafter Martin & Schwartz).)

In this case, a pair of federally recognized tribes created affiliated business entities. Those entities or their subsidiaries then provided deferred deposit loans through the internet to borrowers in California under terms that allegedly violated the Deferred Deposit Transaction Law. The question is whether these tribally affiliated entities are immune from suit as "arms of the tribe." Applying a test that takes into account both formal and functional aspects of the relationship between the tribes and their affiliated entities, we conclude that the entities are not entitled to tribal immunity on the record before us.

I.

This case concerns business entities associated with two Indian tribes, the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma and the Santee Sioux Nation.

The Miami Tribe of Oklahoma is a federally recognized tribe. (79 Fed. Reg. (Jan. 24, 2014) 4748, 4750.) In 2005, it created Miami Nation Enterprises, Inc. (hereafter MNE), as a "subordinate economic enterprise of the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma." In 2008, MNE created MNE Services, a wholly owned subsidiary of MNE that is incorporated under tribal law. Shortly thereafter, MNE transferred Tribal Financial Services (TFS), its "financial lending" subdivision, to MNE Services. MNE Services holds tribal licenses to engage in the "cash advance service business" under the names Ameriloan, United Cash Loans, and U.S. Fast Cash.

The Santee Sioux Nation, located in northeastern Nebraska, is also a federally recognized tribe. (79 Fed. Reg. (Jan. 24, 2014) 4748, 4751.) In 2005, the tribe passed a resolution creating SFS, Inc. (hereafter SFS), "an economic and political subdivision of the Santee Sioux Nation." According to its articles of incorporation, SFS "is organized ... to facilitate the achievement of goals relating to the Tribal economy, self-government, and sovereign status of the Santee Sioux Nation" by "provid[ing] and/or administer[ing] short-term loans and cash advance services ('payday loans') and associated services." The tribe has issued licenses to SFS to "conduct a cash advance and lending business" under the names Preferred Cash and One Click Cash. These lenders provide "cash advance services, or short-term loans, to eligible borrowers **362 ... and the loan transactions are approved and consummated on Indian lands and within the jurisdiction of the Santee Sioux Nation." *231 Although the tribes and their business entities are based in Oklahoma and Nebraska, they offer deferred deposit loans through the internet to borrowers nationwide. In August 2006, the Commissioner of the California Department of Corporations (now Commissioner of Business Oversight) issued a desist and refrain order to various online deferred deposit lenders, including defendants here, directing them to cease "engaging in unlicensed deferred deposit transaction business." The lenders did not heed the desist and refrain order. *843 In June 2007, the Commissioner filed a complaint against the lenders in Los Angeles Superior Court, alleging violations of the Deferred Deposit Transaction Law and seeking injunctive relief, restitution, and civil penalties. According to the complaint, defendants made deferred deposit loans without a license, issued loans in excess of the $300 statutory maximum, charged borrowers unlawful fees, and violated the Commissioner's desist and refrain orders. MNE and SFS specially appeared and moved to quash service based on lack of jurisdiction. They asserted that Ameriloan, United Cash Loans, U.S. Fast Cash, Preferred Cash, and One Click Cash are merely trade names utilized by tribal entities immune from suit without their consent. The parties then conducted discovery regarding the relationship among the tribes, their subsidiary business entities (i.e., MNE and SFS), and the online deferred deposit lenders to determine whether the lenders were sufficiently related to the tribes to benefit from the application of sovereign immunity.

The Commissioner adduced evidence that a company called CLK Management, LLC, registered the trademarks to Ameriloan, United Cash Loans, U.S. Fast Cash, One Click Cash, and similar names between 2004 and 2006. In September 2006, one month after the Commissioner issued her desist and refrain orders, CLK Management conveyed the One Click Cash trademark to SFS. CLK Management also conveyed the Ameriloan, United Cash Loans, and U.S. Fast Cash marks to TFS, which later assigned them to MNE Services. The Commissioner requests that we take judicial notice of screenshots from the homepages of Ameriloan, United Cash Loans, U.S. Fast Cash, Preferred Cash Loans, and One Click Cash, as well as information from the United States Patent and Trademark Office regarding each of those trade names. We grant this unopposed request, because the information is publicly available and is "not reasonably subject to dispute." (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (h).)

The parties also produced documents relating to the entities' operations. Those documents show that since its creation in 2005, SFS has hired a series of management companies to operate its deferred deposit lending businesses. Initially, SFS contracted with Universal Management Services (UMS), a nontribal corporation. Since 2008, SFS "has contracted with AMG Services, *232 Inc. (AMG), a corporation wholly-owned by the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma, for the purpose of providing employees to provide loan servicing." MNE likewise contracted with UMS before the creation of AMG; today, AMG provides employees to service the loans issued by MNE Services.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
386 P.3d 357, 211 Cal. Rptr. 3d 837, 2 Cal. 5th 222, 2016 Cal. LEXIS 9626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-owen-v-miami-nation-enters-cal-2016.