Wippert v. Blackfeet Tribe of Blackfeet Indian Reservation

859 P.2d 420, 260 Mont. 93, 50 State Rptr. 973, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 250
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 25, 1993
Docket92-531
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 859 P.2d 420 (Wippert v. Blackfeet Tribe of Blackfeet Indian Reservation) 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
Wippert v. Blackfeet Tribe of Blackfeet Indian Reservation, 859 P.2d 420, 260 Mont. 93, 50 State Rptr. 973, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 250 (Mo. 1993).

Opinions

JUSTICE HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Loretta and Verlin Wippert (Wipperts) appeal from an order of the Ninth Judicial District Court, Glacier County, granting the Blackfeet Tribe’s motion to dismiss the Wipperts’ claims, which originally took the form of a declaratory judgment action filed in the District Court in 1977. We affirm.

This is the Wipperts’ third appeal to this Court. After the first appeal, we remanded the case to the District Court for further proceedings. Wippert v. Blackfeet Tribe (1982), 201 Mont. 299, 654 P.2d 512 ('Wippert I)- On remand, the District Court entered judgment for the Tribe and the Wipperts appealed again. We reversed. Wippert v. Blackfeet Tribe (1985), 215 Mont. 85, 695 P.2d 461 (Wippert II). The Tribe then moved to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, leading to the appeal now before us (Wippert III),

Following is the history of this case so far as it is relevant to the subject of the present appeal and to the issue of subject matter jurisdiction.

Wippert I

In 1974 the Wipperts, who owned a 2,400-acre ranch on the Blackfeet Reservation, borrowed $46,773 from the Blackfeet Tribe. The loan was secured by “all cattle now owned or hereafter acquired by the [Wipperts],” and the security agreement provided that the debtors would have at least five days’ notice of any sale of the collateral. The loan, plus interest at ten percent, was due on Novem[96]*96ber 1, 1975, but on that date the Wipperts had paid only $2,043 on the principal.

On March 8,1976, the Tribe notified the Wipperts that they were in default and that the Tribe intended to have the cattle picked up and taken to market, pursuant to the security agreement. The Tribe moved the cattle to another ranch on March 12,1976, to be held until they could be sold. On April 15,1976, the Tribe obtained a judgment in the Blackfeet Tribal Court for $44,730, authorizing the Tribe to sell the cattle and apply the proceeds of the sale first to the cost of feeding and shipping the cattle, and second to the judgment balance. Notice of this judgment was filed with the Glacier County clerk and recorder on April 21,1976.

The cattle were sold at public auction in Shelby, Montana, on April 19, 1976, for $38,400, of which $27,031 was applied to the principal balance due on the Wipperts’ loan. Two months later, the Wipperts agreed to sell their ranch to a third party (the Robertsons), but when the Robertsons discovered the Tribe’s notice of judgment they refused to accept title. The Wipperts then agreed to hold $20,000 from the sale of the property in an interest-bearing escrow account, pending release of the tribal court judgment. If necessary to clear the judgment, the money was to be used for that purpose; otherwise, it was to be returned to the Wipperts. Because of this agreement, a title insurance policy was issued without listing the tribal court judgment as an exception. The ranch was conveyed to the Robertsons on July 1, 1976.

On June 29,1977, the Wipperts filed a declaratory judgment action against the Tribe, the Robertsons, and the title company’s agent, asking the District Court to quiet title to the real property in the Robertsons and to declare, among other things, that the Tribe had no right, title or interest in, nor any lien or encumbrance on the real property or the $20,000 escrow account. The complaint alleged that the Tribe’s judgment was void as to the Wipperts because it was obtained through fraud and because the Wipperts had been deprived of their property — the collateral — without due process of law.

In its answer, the Tribe counterclaimed for $17,172, the amount still due on the Wipperts’ loan, and raised as an affirmative defense the District Court’s lack of jurisdiction over the Blackfeet Tribe. The Tribe asserted that it had not consented to the District Court’s jurisdiction and that as a federally recognized Indian tribe, it could not be subjected to suit without the express consent of Congress. The Wipperts moved to strike this defense on the grounds that the Tribe [97]*97had not raised it in its first response to the complaint, which was a motion to dismiss for failure to state a cause of action, filed on July 14,1977 and denied for lack of a supporting brief.

The District Court, by order dated September 19,1977, granted the Wipperts’ motion to strike the Tribe’s affirmative defense, stating that the defense was waived as provided in Rules 12(g) and 12(h), M.R.Civ.P., “with one exception, should counsel for the Blackfeet Tribe be able to show the court that immunity from suit is applicable herein and not waived, and therefore ought to be viewed as lack of jurisdiction over the subject matter rather than person, the defense will [be] and hereby remains available.”

In November 1979, after a hearing on pre-trial motions, the District Court dismissed the title company’s agent and ordered that the escrowed funds, which then amounted to $23,444, be placed in an interest-bearing money market certificate pending further order of the court. The court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law on August 19,1981.

In its 1981 memorandum, the District Court found that it had subject matter jurisdiction because the subject ofthe lawsuit was title to fee patent land; because it had jurisdiction to remove a cloud from title to such land; and because it had jurisdiction over the office of the Glacier County clerk and recorder, where the document purporting to create a hen against the land — the Tribe’s tribal court judgment — had been filed.

The court also found that the “judgment record” filed by the Tribe in the Glacier County clerk and recorder’s office was “invalid and void” as to the Wipperts and “expunged from this court’s records,” because it had not been reduced to judgment in the District Court. In general, the court determined, tribal court judgments are not entitled to full faith and credit in a state court because Article IV, Section 1 of the United States Constitution does not mention tribal court judgments. The court concluded, however, that if a state court were to rule that a tribal court judgment is invalid, it would “infringe on the right of reservation Indians to make their own laws and be guided by them;” that the State of Montana should give effect to a tribal court judgment as a matter of comity; and that the Blackfeet Tribe therefore had “a valid and enforceable judgment” and did not need a valid lien to reach the escrow account.

Accordingly, the court entered judgment for the Tribe on September 17,1981, awarding the Tribe $16,630 plus interest from the date of the tribal court judgment, attorney’s fees in the amount of $4,566, and $23 in costs out of the escrowed funds. By then, the amount [98]*98originally due the Tribe as a deficiency judgment had been reduced by amounts the Tribe had withheld from income from the Wipperts’ 120 acres of trust land. The Wipperts appealed.

We affirmed in part, holding that neither a sister state nor an Indian tribe could enforce a judgment in a Montana court without instituting an action in district court, pursuant to § 26-3-203, MCA, but that even though the Tribe had not instituted such an action, the tribal court judgment was entitled to deference as a matter of comity.

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Wippert v. Blackfeet Tribe of Blackfeet Indian Reservation
859 P.2d 420 (Montana Supreme Court, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
859 P.2d 420, 260 Mont. 93, 50 State Rptr. 973, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wippert-v-blackfeet-tribe-of-blackfeet-indian-reservation-mont-1993.