Dine Citizens Against Ruining v. Bureau of Indian Affairs , 932 F.3d 843 ( 2019 )


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  •                     FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    DINE CITIZENS AGAINST RUINING                    No. 17-17320
    OUR ENVIRONMENT; SAN JUAN
    CITIZENS ALLIANCE; AMIGOS                          D.C. No.
    BRAVOS; SIERRA CLUB; CENTER FOR                 3:16-cv-08077-
    BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY,                                SPL
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.                             OPINION
    BUREAU OF INDIAN AFFAIRS; UNITED
    STATES DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR;
    UNITED STATES OFFICE OF SURFACE
    MINING RECLAMATION AND
    ENFORCEMENT; UNITED STATES
    BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT;
    DAVID BERNHARDT, * in his official
    capacity as Secretary of the U.S.
    Department of Interior; UNITED
    STATES FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE,
    Defendants-Appellees,
    ARIZONA PUBLIC SERVICE
    COMPANY; NAVAJO TRANSITIONAL
    ENERGY COMPANY LLC,
    Intervenor-Defendants-Appellees.
    *
    David Bernhardt has been substituted for his predecessor, Sally
    Jewell, under Fed. R. App. P. 43(c)(2).
    2                          DCAR V. BIA
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Arizona
    Steven Paul Logan, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted March 7, 2019
    Phoenix, Arizona
    Filed July 29, 2019
    Before: Sandra S. Ikuta and Michelle T. Friedland, Circuit
    Judges, and Frederic Block, ** District Judge.
    Opinion by Judge Friedland
    SUMMARY ***
    Joinder / Tribal Sovereign Immunity
    The panel affirmed the district court’s dismissal,
    pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 19 and
    12(b)(7), of an action brought by a coalition of tribal,
    regional, and national conservation organizations who sued
    the United States Department of the Interior, its Secretary,
    and several bureaus within the agency, challenging a variety
    of agency actions that reauthorized coal mining activities on
    land reserved to the Navajo Nation.
    **
    The Honorable Frederic Block, United States District Judge for
    the Eastern District of New York, sitting by designation.
    ***
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It
    has been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    DCAR V. BIA                          3
    Plaintiffs alleged that the agency actions violated the
    Endangered Species Act and the National Environmental
    Policy Act. The Navajo Transitional Energy Company, a
    corporation wholly owned by the Navajo Nation that owns
    the Navajo Mine, intervened in the action for the limited
    purpose of moving to dismiss under Rules 19 and 12(b)(7).
    The Navajo Transitional Energy Company asserted that it
    was a required party but that it could not be joined due to
    tribal sovereign immunity, and that the lawsuit could not
    proceed without it.
    The panel held that the Navajo Transitional Energy
    Company has a legally protected interest in the subject
    matter of this suit that would be impaired in its absence. The
    panel reasoned that if plaintiffs succeeded in their challenge
    and the agency actions were vacated, the Navajo
    Transitional Energy Company’s interest in the existing
    lease, rights-of-way, and surface mining permits would be
    impaired. Without the proper approvals, the Mine could not
    operate, and the Navajo Nation would lose a key source of
    revenue in which the Navajo Transitional Energy Company
    had already substantially invested.
    The panel next held that because no other party to the
    litigation could adequately represent the Navajo Transitional
    Energy Company’s interests, the district court did not err in
    determining that the Company was a party that must be
    joined if feasible under Rule 19(a). The panel held that the
    Federal Defendants could not be counted on to adequately
    represent the Company’s interests because although the
    Federal Defendants had an interest in defending their
    decisions, their overriding interest must be in complying
    with environmental laws. This interest differed in a
    meaningful sense from the Navajo Transitional Energy
    Company’s and the Navajo Nation’s sovereign interest in
    4                       DCAR V. BIA
    ensuring that the Mine and the Four Corners Power Plant,
    which buys coals exclusively from the Mine, continued to
    operate and provide profits to the Navajo Nation. The panel
    further held that defendant, the Arizona Public Service
    Company, did not share the Navajo Nation’s sovereign
    interests in controlling its own resources and in the
    continued operation of the Mine and Power Plant.
    The panel held that due to tribal sovereign immunity, the
    Navajo Transitional Energy Company could not feasibly be
    joined as a party to this litigation. The panel held that the
    district court correctly determined that the Navajo
    Transitional Energy Company was an “arm” of the Navajo
    Nation that enjoyed the Nation’s immunity from suit. The
    panel noted that the Company is wholly owned by the
    Navajo Nation and is organized pursuant to Navajo law. It
    was created specifically so that the Navajo Nation could
    purchase the Mine. Applying the Rule 19(b) factors, the
    panel held that the district court did not err in concluding that
    the litigation could not, in good conscience, continue in the
    Navajo Transitional Energy Company’s absence.
    The panel rejected plaintiffs’ and United States’ request
    to apply the “public rights” exception to hold that this
    litigation could continue in the National Transitional Energy
    Company’s absence. The panel held that although plaintiffs
    nominally sought only a renewed National Environmental
    Policy Act and Endangered Species Act process, the
    implication of their claims was that Federal Defendants
    should not have approved the mining activities in their exact
    form. The result plaintiffs sought, therefore, threatened the
    National Transitional Energy Company’s legal entitlements,
    and accordingly, the public rights exception did not apply.
    DCAR V. BIA                       5
    COUNSEL
    Shiloh Silvan Hernandez (argued) and Matt Kenna, Western
    Environmental Law Center, Helena, Montana; Michael Saul,
    Center for Biological Diversity, Denver, Colorado; John
    Barth, Hygiene, Colorado; for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
    Aukjen T. Ingraham (argued), Sara Kobak, Brien J.
    Flanagan, and Sarah Roubidoux Lawson, Schwabe,
    Williamson & Wyatt P.C., Portland, Oregon, for Intervenor-
    Defendant-Appellee Navajo Transitional Energy Company,
    LLC.
    Stacey L. VanBelleghem (argued), Claudia M. O’Brien,
    Roman Martinez, and Devin M. O’Connor, Latham &
    Watkins LLP, Washington, D.C., for Intervenor-Defendant-
    Appellee Arizona Public Service Company.
    Rachel Heron (argued) and Andrew C. Mergen, Attorneys;
    Eric Grant, Deputy Assistant Attorney General; Jeffrey H.
    Wood, Acting Assistant Attorney General; United States
    Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.; for Amicus
    Curiae United States.
    Ethel B. Branch, Attorney General; Paul Spruhan, Assistant
    Attorney General; Navajo Nation Department of Justice,
    Window Rock, Arizona; for Amicus Curiae Navajo Nation.
    6                            DCAR V. BIA
    OPINION
    FRIEDLAND, Circuit Judge:
    A coalition of tribal, regional, and national conservation
    organizations (“Plaintiffs”) sued the U.S. Department of the
    Interior, its Secretary, and several bureaus within the agency,
    challenging a variety of agency actions that reauthorized
    coal mining activities on land reserved to the Navajo Nation.
    Plaintiffs alleged that these actions violated the Endangered
    Species Act (“ESA”), 
    16 U.S.C. § 1531
     et seq., and the
    National Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”), 
    42 U.S.C. § 4321
     et seq. The Navajo Transitional Energy Company
    (“NTEC”), a corporation wholly owned by the Navajo
    Nation that owns the mine in question, intervened in the
    action for the limited purpose of moving to dismiss under
    Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 19 and 12(b)(7). NTEC
    argued that it was a required party but that it could not be
    joined due to tribal sovereign immunity, and that the lawsuit
    could not proceed without it. The district court agreed with
    NTEC and dismissed the action. 1 We affirm.
    1
    At the parties’ joint request, we take judicial notice of the existence
    of the following documents and their contents: (1) Record of Decision
    for the Four Corners Power Plant and Navajo Mine Energy Project (July
    14, 2015); (2) Final Environmental Impact Statement for the Four
    Corners Power Plant and Navajo Mine Energy Project (May 1, 2015);
    and (3) Environmental Assessment and Finding of No Significant Impact
    for Navajo Mine Permit Transfer Application, Navajo Reservation, New
    Mexico (Nov. 2013). See Ariz. Libertarian Party v. Reagan, 
    798 F.3d 723
    , 727 n.3 (9th Cir. 2015).
    DCAR V. BIA                         7
    I.
    A.
    The Navajo Mine (“Mine”) is a 33,000-acre strip mine.
    It produces coal from which the Four Corners Power Plant
    (“Power Plant”) generates electricity. The Mine and Power
    Plant are both on tribal land of the Navajo Nation within
    New Mexico. The Mine operates pursuant to a surface
    mining permit issued by the Department of the Interior’s
    Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement
    (“OSMRE”) under the Surface Mining Control and
    Reclamation Act of 1977, 
    30 U.S.C. § 1201
     et seq.
    Transmission lines that distribute electricity from the Power
    Plant run west into Arizona through lands reserved to the
    Navajo Nation and Hopi Tribe. The Mine, Power Plant, and
    transmission lines were built in tandem and have operated
    since the early 1960s.
    The Navajo Nation is a federally recognized Indian tribe
    with its seat of government in Arizona and territory spanning
    areas of Arizona, Utah, and New Mexico. For many years,
    the Navajo Nation granted a coal mining lease to BHP
    Billiton Navajo Coal Company (“BHP Billiton”), a private
    company that owned and operated the Mine. In 2013, the
    Navajo Nation Council created the Navajo Transitional
    Energy Company (again, “NTEC”) for the purpose of
    purchasing the Mine from BHP Billiton.
    The Power Plant is owned by several utility companies,
    including Public Service Company of New Mexico, Tucson
    Electric Company, Salt River Project, and Intervenor-
    Defendant Arizona Public Service Company (“APS”). APS
    operates the Power Plant on behalf of all co-owners subject
    to a lease agreement, originally executed in 1960, with the
    Navajo Nation. Under the agreement, the Mine sells coal
    8                      DCAR V. BIA
    exclusively to the Power Plant, and the Power Plant buys its
    coal exclusively from the Mine. The Navajo Nation also
    authorizes easements for rights-of-way over Navajo lands
    for the Power Plant, and both the Navajo Nation and Hopi
    Tribe authorize easements for rights-of-way for power
    transmission lines that cross tribal lands.
    The Mine and the Power Plant are key sources of revenue
    for the Navajo Nation. Under the federally approved leases
    and permits that are at issue in this case, operations at the
    Mine and the Power Plant are expected to generate between
    40 and 60 million dollars per year in revenue for the Navajo
    Nation.
    B.
    This lawsuit stems from changes and renewals to the
    lease agreements, rights-of-way, and government-issued
    permits under which the Mine and Power Plant operate.
    In 2011, APS and the Navajo Nation amended the lease
    governing Power Plant operations, including by extending
    the term of the lease through 2041. BHP Billiton (which at
    the time still owned the Mine) then sought a renewal of the
    existing surface mining permit for the Mine and a new
    surface mining permit that would allow operations to move
    to an additional area within the Mine lease area. 2
    The lease amendment and accompanying rights-of-way
    could not go into effect, and the surface mining permits
    could not be granted, without approvals from several
    bureaus within the Department of the Interior. First,
    2
    When NTEC purchased the Mine from BHP Billiton, NTEC
    became the applicant for these permits.
    DCAR V. BIA                          9
    OSMRE needed to approve the surface mining permits.
    Second, approval by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (“BIA”)
    was required to effectuate the lease amendment. Third, BIA
    had ultimate responsibility to grant the associated rights-of-
    way for the Power Plant facilities and transmission lines that
    the tribes had approved. Finally, approval of the Bureau of
    Land Management (“BLM”) was required to ensure
    adequate resource recovery and protection on the tribal
    lands.
    OSMRE took the lead on considering the approval
    requests for the Mine. It cooperated with BIA and BLM, as
    well as with two additional bureaus within the Department
    of the Interior: the National Park Service and the Fish and
    Wildlife Service (“Fish and Wildlife”). OSMRE also
    coordinated with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the U.S.
    Environmental Protection Agency, the Navajo Nation, and
    the Hopi Tribe on the review process.
    OSMRE engaged in formal consultation with Fish and
    Wildlife, as required by the ESA when a project “may affect
    listed species or critical habitat.” 
    50 C.F.R. § 402.14
    (a). In
    April 2015, Fish and Wildlife completed formal consultation
    and issued a Biological Opinion concluding that the
    proposed action would not jeopardize the continued
    existence of any of the threatened and endangered species
    evaluated. Relying on Fish and Wildlife’s assessments in
    the Biological Opinion, OSMRE produced an
    Environmental Impact Statement (“EIS”) in May 2015.
    OSMRE and BIA issued a Record of Decision in July
    2015, which included the approvals by OSMRE, BIA, and
    BLM necessary for the continued operation and expansion
    of the Mine. The Deputy Secretary of the Interior approved
    the decisions of each of these bureaus within the Department
    of the Interior.
    10                         DCAR V. BIA
    Since obtaining the required permits and approvals, APS
    and NTEC have made significant financial investments in
    the Power Plant and Mine, including by implementing
    conservation measures required by the Record of Decision.
    NTEC also moved mining operations into the areas
    designated in the new surface mining permit. 3 Additionally,
    NTEC secured a new $115 million line of credit in July 2016
    that paid off the original note with which NTEC had
    purchased the Mine, and that provided additional capital.
    This line of credit is secured by, among other things, the
    Mine itself as an asset of NTEC.
    C.
    In April 2016, the plaintiff conservation organizations
    sued BIA, OSMRE, BLM, Fish and Wildlife, and the
    Department of the Interior, along with its Secretary
    (collectively, “Federal Defendants”). Plaintiffs challenged
    the opinions and approvals that authorized continued
    operations at the Mine and the Power Plant. Specifically,
    Plaintiffs alleged that Fish and Wildlife’s Biological
    Opinion violated the requirements of the ESA, and that BIA,
    OSMRE, and BLM violated the ESA by relying on the faulty
    Biological Opinion in deciding to approve the activities at
    issue. Plaintiffs also alleged that Federal Defendants
    violated NEPA by crafting an unlawfully narrow statement
    of purpose and need for the project in the EIS, failing to
    consider reasonable alternatives, and failing to take the
    requisite “hard look” at various impacts of the mining
    3
    Although the details of APS’s and NTEC’s investments and
    mining activities that have taken place since issuance of the Record of
    Decision are not before us, APS states in its brief that it and NTEC have
    invested hundreds of millions of dollars in upgrades, improvements, and
    conservation measures in reliance on the Record of Decision. Plaintiffs
    have not disputed this assertion.
    DCAR V. BIA                          11
    complex. See Marsh v. Or. Nat. Res. Council, 
    490 U.S. 360
    ,
    374 (1989) (“NEPA . . . require[s] that agencies take a ‘hard
    look’ at the environmental effects of their planned action.”).
    Plaintiffs sought: (1) declarations that Federal
    Defendants violated NEPA and the ESA; (2) orders setting
    aside Fish and Wildlife’s Biological Opinion and Federal
    Defendants’ Record of Decision and EIS and remanding the
    matter to the agencies for further analysis; (3) prospective
    injunctive relief prohibiting Fish and Wildlife from
    authorizing any adverse modification to critical habitat for,
    or take of, two types of fish; and (4) prospective injunctive
    relief prohibiting Federal Defendants from authorizing any
    element of the mining operations pending compliance with
    NEPA.
    After Federal Defendants answered, APS filed a motion
    to intervene, which the district court granted. NTEC also
    sought to intervene in the action for the limited purpose of
    filing a motion to dismiss under Federal Rules of Civil
    Procedure 19 and 12(b)(7). The court granted NTEC’s
    motion to intervene as a matter of right as owner of the Mine,
    and NTEC then moved to dismiss. NTEC asserted that it
    was a required party because of its economic interest in the
    Mine, that it could not be joined due to tribal sovereign
    immunity, and that the action could not proceed in its
    absence. Even though dismissal would have left their
    decisions intact, Federal Defendants opposed NTEC’s
    motion to dismiss, arguing that the federal government was
    the only party required to defend an action seeking to enforce
    compliance with NEPA and the ESA.
    The district court granted NTEC’s motion to dismiss.
    The court concluded that NTEC had a legally protected
    interest in the subject matter of this suit, because the “relief
    Plaintiffs seek could directly affect the Navajo Nation
    12                     DCAR V. BIA
    (acting through its corporation, Intervenor-Defendant
    NTEC) by disrupting its ‘interests in [its] lease agreements
    and the ability to obtain the bargained-for royalties and
    jobs.’” The court held that Federal Defendants could not
    adequately represent NTEC’s interest in the litigation,
    because although the agencies had an interest in defending
    their analyses and decisions, “NTEC’s interests in the
    outcome of this case far exceed” those of the agencies. The
    court observed that, although NTEC’s interests were
    currently aligned with those of Federal Defendants, there
    could be a “later divergence of interests” during the course
    of the litigation. The court further concluded that NTEC
    could not be joined due to the Navajo Nation’s sovereign
    immunity, and that the litigation could not, “in equity and
    good conscience,” continue in NTEC’s absence.
    Plaintiffs timely appealed, arguing that NTEC did not
    have a legally protected interest in Federal Defendants’
    compliance with environmental laws; that even if NTEC did
    have such an interest, Federal Defendants would adequately
    represent that interest; and that even if NTEC were a
    required party, the litigation could continue in its absence
    under the “public rights exception” to traditional joinder
    rules.
    II.
    We review a “district court’s decision to dismiss [an]
    action for failure to join” a required party for abuse of
    discretion, but we review its underlying legal conclusions de
    novo. Paiute-Shoshone Indians of Bishop Cmty. of Bishop
    Colony, Cal. v. City of Los Angeles, 
    637 F.3d 993
    , 997 (9th
    DCAR V. BIA                               13
    Cir. 2011). 4 When reviewing an order dismissing a case
    under Rule 12(b)(7) for failure to join a party, “we accept as
    true the allegations in Plaintiff[s’] complaint and draw all
    reasonable inferences in Plaintiff[s’] favor.” 
    Id.
     at 996 n.1.
    We review de novo the question whether a tribe feasibly can
    be joined. E.E.O.C. v. Peabody W. Coal Co., 
    400 F.3d 774
    ,
    778 (9th Cir. 2005).
    III.
    A person or entity is a “required party” and “must be
    joined” if feasible if either “in that [party]’s absence, the
    court cannot accord complete relief among existing parties”;
    or if “that [party] claims an interest relating to the subject of
    the action and is so situated that disposing of the action in
    the [party]’s absence may . . . as a practical matter impair or
    impede the [party]’s ability to protect the interest” or “leave
    an existing party subject to a substantial risk of incurring
    double, multiple, or otherwise inconsistent obligations
    because of the interest.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 19(a)(1). Under
    Rule 19, if the party “who is required to be joined if feasible
    cannot be joined, the court must determine whether, in
    equity and good conscience, the action should proceed
    among the existing parties or should be dismissed.” Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 19(b). If it cannot proceed, a motion to dismiss under
    Rule 12(b)(7) for failure to join a party is properly granted. 5
    4
    We need not decide here precisely which parts of the Rule 19
    analysis are underlying legal conclusions entitled to de novo review and
    which parts are entitled to abuse of discretion review, because even if we
    reviewed every component of the Rule 19 analysis here de novo, we
    would affirm the district court’s decision.
    5
    Before 2007, parties that are now called “required” under Rule 19
    were referred to as “necessary,” and parties without whom the litigation
    14                         DCAR V. BIA
    A.
    NTEC argues that it is a required party that must be
    joined if feasible because: (1) it has a legally protected
    interest in the subject matter of this litigation, and
    (2) proceeding with the lawsuit in NTEC’s absence would
    impair that interest. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 19(a)(1)(B). We
    agree.
    1.
    In determining whether NTEC claims a legally protected
    interest in the subject matter of this suit, we must “carefully
    . . . identify [NTEC’s] interest at stake.” Cachil Dehe Band
    of Wintun Indians of the Colusa Indian Cmty. v. California,
    
    547 F.3d 962
    , 973 (9th Cir. 2008) (“Colusa”). “The inquiry
    under Rule 19(a) ‘is a practical one and fact specific,’” White
    v. Univ. of Cal., 
    765 F.3d 1010
    , 1026 (9th Cir. 2014)
    (quoting Makah Indian Tribe v. Verity, 
    910 F.2d 555
    , 558
    (9th Cir. 1990)), and “few categorical rules inform[] this
    inquiry,” Colusa, 
    547 F.3d at 970
    .
    To satisfy Rule 19, an interest must be legally protected
    and must be “more than a financial stake.” Makah, 
    910 F.2d at 558
    . “[A]n interest that ‘arises from terms in bargained
    contracts’ may be protected, but . . . such an interest [must]
    be ‘substantial.’” Colusa, 
    547 F.3d at 970
     (quoting Am.
    Greyhound Racing, Inc. v. Hull, 
    305 F.3d 1015
    , 1023 (9th
    Cir. 2002)). “[A]n absent party has no legally protected
    could not, in good conscience, continue, were referred to as
    “indispensable.” See Republic of Philippines v. Pimentel, 
    553 U.S. 851
    ,
    855–56 (2008). Rule 19 was revised in 2007, but the revisions were
    intended to be only “stylistic,” and the Supreme Court has interpreted
    them as such. 
    Id. at 855
    .
    DCAR V. BIA                         15
    interest at stake in a suit merely to enforce compliance with
    administrative procedures.” 
    Id. at 971
    .
    “If a legally protected interest exists, the court must
    further determine whether that interest will be impaired or
    impeded by the suit.” Makah, 
    910 F.2d at 558
    . “As a
    practical matter, an absent party’s ability to protect its
    interest will not be impaired by its absence from the suit
    where its interest will be adequately represented by existing
    parties to the suit.” Alto v. Black, 
    738 F.3d 1111
    , 1127 (9th
    Cir. 2013) (quoting Washington v. Daley, 
    173 F.3d 1158
    ,
    1167 (9th Cir. 1999)). Three factors are relevant to whether
    an existing party may adequately represent an absent
    required party’s interests:
    whether the interests of a present party to the
    suit are such that it will undoubtedly make all
    of the absent party’s arguments; whether the
    party is capable of and willing to make such
    arguments; and whether the absent party
    would offer any necessary element to the
    proceedings that the present parties would
    neglect.
    
    Id.
     at 1127–28 (quotation marks omitted).
    2.
    Although an absent party has no legally protected
    interest at stake in a suit seeking only to enforce compliance
    with administrative procedures, our case law makes clear
    that an absent party may have a legally protected interest at
    stake in procedural claims where the effect of a plaintiff’s
    successful suit would be to impair a right already granted.
    Under that case law, NTEC has a legally protected interest
    16                        DCAR V. BIA
    in the subject matter of this suit that would be impaired in its
    absence.
    In Northern Alaska Environmental Center v. Hodel,
    
    803 F.2d 466
     (9th Cir. 1986), we held that absent miners
    with mining plans and access permits pending before (but
    not yet approved by) the National Park Service (“NPS”) did
    not have a legally protected interest in a suit brought by
    environmental groups seeking to enjoin NPS from approving
    such plans and permits until NPS complied with NEPA and
    NPS regulations. 
    Id. at 469
    . 6 We explained that “[t]he
    subject matter of th[e] dispute concern[ed] NPS procedures
    regarding mining plan approval,” and that although “all
    miners [were] interested in how stringent the requirements
    [would] be,” “miners with pending plans ha[d] no legal
    entitlement to any given set of procedures.” 
    Id.
     (quotation
    marks omitted).
    In Makah, we likewise held that absent tribes lacked a
    legally protected interest in a suit brought by the Makah
    Indian Tribe challenging the Secretary of Commerce’s ocean
    fishing allotment “[t]o the extent that the Makah [sought
    prospective injunctive] relief that would affect only the
    future conduct of the administrative process.” 
    910 F.2d at 559
     (emphasis added). We also held, however, that absent
    tribes did have a legally protected interest “to the extent the
    Makah [sought] a reallocation of [a particular prior year’s]
    harvest or challenge[d] the Secretary’s [prior] inter-tribal
    allocation decisions.” 
    Id.
     We accordingly held that the suit
    could proceed but that “the scope of the relief available to
    the Makah on their procedural claims [was] narrow” and
    6
    We did not need to reach whether the miners had a legally
    protected interest in already approved plans, because we held that any
    claims related to those plans were moot. Hodel, 
    803 F.2d at
    469 n.2.
    DCAR V. BIA                          17
    limited to prospective relief relating to such future processes.
    
    Id.
    Similarly, in Colusa, we held that absent tribes, whose
    gaming compacts with California provided for the operation
    of “gaming devices” but limited the number of state licenses
    for such devices, had legally protected interests in the
    licenses that they already held under the compacts. Still, we
    held that such interests would not be impaired by a lawsuit
    brought by another compact-holding tribe (Colusa) against
    California “[t]o the extent that Colusa [sought] prospective
    relief” relating to the issuance of future licenses, such as
    Colusa’s request for higher priority in the draw for licenses.
    
    547 F.3d at 974
    . We explained that “Rule 19 necessarily
    confine[d] the relief that [could] be granted on Colusa’s
    claims to remedies that [did] not invalidate the licenses that
    [had] already been issued to the absent . . . Tribes.” 
    Id. at 977
    .
    In Kescoli v. Babbitt, 
    101 F.3d 1304
     (9th Cir. 1996), by
    contrast, we affirmed dismissal of a lawsuit in which there
    were legally protected interests at stake that we concluded
    were threatened by the retroactive effect of the relief sought
    in the litigation. Specifically, we held that the Navajo Nation
    and Hopi Tribe both had a legally protected interest and were
    necessary parties to a Navajo Nation member’s suit
    challenging a settlement reached between those tribes and
    the government that modified special conditions required by
    a mining permit issued to a company that operated a mine
    under lease agreements with the two tribes. 
    Id. at 1310
    . We
    reasoned that because the settlement dictated the conditions
    under which mining operations could be conducted, the
    litigation “could affect the amount of royalties received by
    the Navajo Nation and the Hopi Tribe and employment
    opportunities for their members.” 
    Id.
     at 1309–10. We
    18                     DCAR V. BIA
    explained that, unlike the prospective claim in Makah, the
    plaintiff’s challenge to the settlement “could affect the
    Navajo Nation’s and the Hopi Tribe’s interests in their lease
    agreements and the ability to obtain the bargained-for
    royalties and jobs.” 
    Id. at 1310
    .
    Applying these precedents, NTEC has a legally protected
    interest in the subject matter of this action. Although
    Plaintiffs’ challenge is to Federal Defendants’ NEPA and
    ESA processes (rather than to anything that NTEC has
    done), it does not relate only to the agencies’ future
    administrative process, but instead may have retroactive
    effects on approvals already granted for mining operations.
    If Plaintiffs succeeded in their challenge and the agency
    actions were vacated, NTEC’s interest in the existing lease,
    rights-of-way, and surface mining permits would be
    impaired. Without the proper approvals, the Mine could not
    operate, and the Navajo Nation would lose a key source of
    revenue in which NTEC has already substantially invested.
    This case is therefore like Kescoli, where we concluded that
    absent tribes were necessary because the litigation could
    affect already-negotiated lease agreements and expected
    jobs and revenue. And it is unlike either Makah or Colusa,
    in which we could tailor the scope of relief available to being
    prospective only, preventing any impairment to a legally
    protected interest.
    3.
    The question whether any existing party adequately
    represents NTEC’s interest in this litigation is closer, but we
    conclude that none does.
    In White v. University of California, we affirmed a
    district court’s dismissal of a suit against the Department of
    the Interior under the Native American Graves Protection
    DCAR V. BIA                          19
    and Repatriation Act (“NAGPRA”) for failure to join absent
    tribes that we concluded could not be adequately represented
    by the existing defendant in the case. 765 F.3d. at 1015.
    White involved a custody dispute over human remains
    uncovered on land belonging to the University of California
    that was aboriginally occupied by members of the
    Kumeyaay Nation, which consists of several federally
    recognized tribes. Id. The University determined that it was
    required, under NAGPRA, to repatriate the remains to the
    Kumeyaay Cultural Repatriation Committee, which had
    requested repatriation. Id. at 1015–16. Several University
    professors sued to enjoin repatriation, and the district court
    dismissed the claim for failure to join the Repatriation
    Committee, which could not be joined due to tribal
    immunity. Id.
    We affirmed, holding that absent Kumeyaay tribes and
    the Repatriation Committee had an interest that would be
    impaired if the suit proceeded in their absence. As we
    explained, if the plaintiffs “succeed[ed] in their efforts to
    enjoin transfer of the remains . . . then the claims of the
    Tribes and the Repatriation Committee [to the human
    remains] [would] be extinguished without the opportunity
    for them to be heard.” Id. at 1027. We held that even though
    the University had determined that NAGPRA obligated it to
    repatriate the remains to the Kumeyaay, “the University
    [could not] sufficiently represent the interests of the Tribes
    or Repatriation Committee” in the litigation, because the
    University’s and the absent tribes’ interests would “not
    necessarily remain aligned.” Id. The University’s interest
    and the absent tribes’ interest were of a different nature: the
    University had “a broad obligation to serve the interests of
    the people of California, rather than any particular subset,
    such as the people of the Kumeyaay tribes.” Id. We
    theorized that if, contrary to the University’s own
    20                     DCAR V. BIA
    assessment of its obligations under NAGPRA, “a court were
    to determine that the [] remains should not be transferred to
    the Kumeyaay under NAGPRA, it [was] questionable
    whether—perhaps even unlikely that—the University and
    the Kumeyaay would pursue the same next course of action.”
    Id. (emphasis added). We therefore upheld the district
    court’s determination that the Kumeyaay tribes and
    Repatriation Committee were necessary parties.
    In Southwest Center for Biological Diversity v. Babbitt,
    
    150 F.3d 1152
     (9th Cir. 1998), by contrast, we held that the
    government could adequately represent a tribe’s interest in
    litigation brought by an environmental organization
    challenging, under NEPA and the ESA, the Secretary of the
    Interior’s plan to begin using a new water storage facility.
    
    Id. at 1153
    . We recognized that the Salt River Pima-
    Maricopa Indian Community (“Community”) had an interest
    in the facility’s “becoming available for use as soon as
    possible” to store water, and we concluded that this interest
    would be impaired if an injunction issued in the case. 
    Id.
    But, we reasoned, the government “share[d] a strong interest
    in defeating [the] suit on the merits and ensuring that the
    [facility was] available for use as soon as possible.” 
    Id. at 1154
    . We held that this made the government an adequate
    representative of the Community’s interest. 
    Id. at 1154
    . We
    also noted that although the government did not “share the
    Community’s interest in protecting [the Community’s]
    sovereignty,” there was no explanation of “how the
    Community’s sovereignty would be implicated” in the suit.
    
    Id.
     at 1154–55.
    In Alto v. Black, we likewise held that the United States
    could represent a tribe’s interest in a suit challenging a BIA
    order upholding the tribe’s decision to disenroll certain
    individuals as members of the tribe. 738 F.3d at 1128. As
    DCAR V. BIA                           21
    we explained, the tribe’s own governing documents vested
    BIA with ultimate authority over the tribe’s membership
    decisions. Id. at 1115. We also relied on the government’s
    shared interest in defending its own decision, which it had
    already “vigorously defended,” and its obligation to protect
    tribal interests as part of its general “trust responsibility” to
    tribes. Id. at 1128 (citation omitted). The tribe had not
    “presented any arguments that it would offer . . . which [the
    government] ha[d] not or would not make.” Id.
    The Tenth Circuit in Manygoats v. Kleppe, 
    558 F.2d 556
    (10th Cir. 1977), held, in contrast, that the government could
    not adequately represent a tribe’s interests. In Manygoats,
    the Navajo had granted Exxon Corporation the right to mine
    uranium on tribal lands, and the Secretary of the Interior
    approved the agreement after completing an EIS. 
    Id. at 557
    .
    Individual Navajo tribal members sought to enjoin
    performance of the mining agreement between the tribe and
    Exxon, claiming that the EIS was inadequate under NEPA.
    
    Id.
     The Tenth Circuit held that the Secretary of the Interior
    could not adequately represent the absent tribe because
    “[t]he Secretary must act in accord with the obligations
    imposed by NEPA,” and the environmental goals of that
    statute were “not necessarily coincidental with the interest of
    the Tribe in the benefits which the Exxon agreement
    provides.” 
    Id. at 558
    .
    Applying the lessons from these cases, we agree with the
    district court that Federal Defendants cannot be counted on
    to adequately represent NTEC’s interests. Although Federal
    Defendants have an interest in defending their decisions,
    their overriding interest, as it was in Manygoats, must be in
    complying with environmental laws such as NEPA and the
    ESA. This interest differs in a meaningful sense from
    NTEC’s and the Navajo Nation’s sovereign interest in
    22                     DCAR V. BIA
    ensuring that the Mine and Power Plant continue to operate
    and provide profits to the Navajo Nation. If the district court
    were to hold that NEPA or the ESA required more analysis
    that would delay mining activities, or that one of the federal
    agencies’ analyses underlying the approval was flawed,
    Federal Defendants’ interest might diverge from that of
    NTEC. As we suggested in White, a holding that one or both
    of these statutes required something other than what Federal
    Defendants have interpreted them to require could similarly
    change Federal Defendants’ planned actions, affecting the
    lease, rights-of-way, and permits at stake.
    This case is unlike Southwest, because while Federal
    Defendants have an interest in defending their own analyses
    that formed the basis of the approvals at issue, here they do
    not share an interest in the outcome of the approvals—the
    continued operation of the Mine and Power Plant. And no
    party in Southwest had explained how the tribe’s
    “sovereignty would be implicated,” 
    150 F.3d at 1154
    , as the
    Navajo Nation has explained here. This case is also
    distinguishable from Alto, where the tribe had specifically
    granted BIA final decisionmaking authority over tribal
    membership issues, making it more plausible that the
    government would represent the tribe’s interest—or that the
    government’s interest and the tribe’s interest had become
    one and the same.
    Plaintiffs resist the conclusion that no existing party can
    adequately represent NTEC’s interest, arguing that APS, as
    operator and part owner of the Power Plant, can do so even
    if Federal Defendants cannot. In Southwest, we noted that
    the presence of other cities that were financially invested in,
    and dependent for their water supply upon, the facility
    lessened the risk that the Community’s interest would be
    impaired. Here, APS shares at least some of NTEC’s and
    DCAR V. BIA                             23
    the Navajo Nation’s financial interest in the outcome of the
    case. But APS does not share the Navajo Nation’s sovereign
    interest in controlling its own resources, and in the continued
    operation of the Mine and Power Plant and the financial
    support that such operation provides. The Navajo Nation’s
    interest is tied to its very ability to govern itself, sustain itself
    financially, and make decisions about its own natural
    resources. Because no other party to the litigation can
    adequately represent these interests, the district court did not
    err in determining that NTEC is a party that must be joined
    if feasible under Rule 19(a).
    B.
    Rule 19 requires us next to ask whether NTEC can
    feasibly be joined as a party to this litigation. Reviewing de
    novo, see Peabody W. Coal Co., 
    400 F.3d at 778
    , we hold
    that, due to tribal sovereign immunity, it cannot be.
    “Tribal sovereign immunity protects Indian tribes from
    suit absent express authorization by Congress or clear waiver
    by the tribe. This immunity applies to the tribe’s commercial
    as well as governmental activities.” Cook v. AVI Casino
    Enters., Inc., 
    548 F.3d 718
    , 725 (9th Cir. 2008) (citation
    omitted). “[T]he settled law of our circuit is that tribal
    corporations acting as an arm of the tribe enjoy the same
    sovereign immunity granted to a tribe itself.” 
    Id.
    Here, it is undisputed that Congress has not abrogated
    any relevant aspect of the Navajo Nation’s tribal immunity,
    and that the Navajo Nation has not waived its immunity. The
    question is thus whether NTEC shares that immunity.
    In Allen v. Gold Country Casino, 
    464 F.3d 1044
     (9th Cir.
    2006), we had “little doubt that [a] Casino function[ed] as an
    arm of the Tribe” that owned and operated it, and that the
    24                           DCAR V. BIA
    casino therefore “enjoy[ed] the Tribe’s immunity from suit.”
    
    Id. at 1047
    . In that case, the casino had been authorized by
    tribal ordinance and an interstate gaming compact; the
    casino served to promote the tribe’s self-sufficiency,
    economic development, and employment opportunities; and
    the economic advantages of the casino inured to the benefit
    of the tribe such that “[i]mmunity of the Casino directly
    protect[ed] the sovereign Tribe’s treasury.” 
    Id.
     at 1046–47;
    see also Cook, 
    548 F.3d at 726
     (holding that a corporation
    created by a tribe through tribal ordinance and
    intergovernmental agreement that was wholly owned and
    managed by the tribe, and from which the benefits flowed to
    the tribe, enjoyed the tribe’s sovereign immunity).
    Here, NTEC is wholly owned by the Navajo Nation and
    is organized pursuant to Navajo law. It was created
    specifically so that the Navajo Nation could purchase the
    Mine. NTEC’s profits go entirely to the Navajo Nation, and
    those profits support the Navajo Nation’s ability to govern
    and financially sustain itself. The district court was therefore
    correct that NTEC is an “arm” of the Navajo Nation that
    enjoys the Nation’s immunity from suit and cannot be joined
    to this action. 7
    7
    Plaintiffs argue that the court could order joinder of NTEC’s chief
    executive officer pursuant to the Ex parte Young doctrine. That doctrine
    “permits actions for prospective non-monetary relief against state or
    tribal officials in their official capacity to enjoin them from violating
    federal law, without the presence of the immune State or tribe.” Salt
    River Project Agric. Improvement & Power Dist. v. Lee, 
    672 F.3d 1176
    ,
    1181 (9th Cir. 2012) (citing Ex parte Young, 
    209 U.S. 123
     (1908)); see
    also Vann v. U.S. Dep’t of Interior, 
    701 F.3d 927
     (D.C. Cir. 2012). But
    both Salt River and Vann, on which Plaintiffs rely in making this
    argument, involved claims against tribes as defendants, so it was possible
    for a tribal official, rather than the tribe itself, to be named as defendant
    DCAR V. BIA                                25
    C.
    Because NTEC is a required party that cannot feasibly
    be joined, we must next determine “whether, in equity and
    good conscience, the action should proceed among the
    existing parties or should be dismissed.” Fed. R. Civ. P.
    19(b).
    1.
    To evaluate whether an action could fairly proceed
    without a required party, we consider the following factors:
    (1) the extent to which a judgment rendered
    in the [party’s] absence might prejudice that
    [party] or the existing parties;
    (2) the extent to which any prejudice could be
    lessened or avoided by:
    (A) protective          provisions       in    the
    judgment;
    (B) shaping the relief; or
    (C) other measures;
    (3) whether a judgment rendered in the
    [party’s] absence would be adequate; and
    pursuant to Ex parte Young. Plaintiffs’ claims here are that Federal
    Defendants violated environmental laws—not that the Navajo Nation
    itself did. The Ex parte Young doctrine therefore has no role to play here.
    26                     DCAR V. BIA
    (4) whether the plaintiff would have an
    adequate remedy if the action were dismissed
    for nonjoinder.
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 19(b). The Rule 19(b) factors “are
    nonexclusive.”    Republic of Philippines v. Pimentel,
    
    553 U.S. 851
    , 862 (2008).
    In general, “[i]f no alternative forum exists, [a court]
    should be ‘extra cautious’ before dismissing an action.”
    Kescoli, 
    101 F.3d at 1311
     (quoting Makah, 
    910 F.2d at 560
    ).
    But “[i]f the necessary party is immune from suit, there may
    be ‘very little need for balancing Rule 19(b) factors because
    immunity itself may be viewed as the compelling factor.’”
    
    Id.
     (quoting Confederated Tribes v. Lujan, 
    928 F.2d 1496
    ,
    1499 (9th Cir. 1991)); see also Am. Greyhound Racing, Inc.,
    
    305 F.3d at 1025
     (“[S]ome courts have held that sovereign
    immunity forecloses in favor of tribes the entire balancing
    process under Rule 19(b), but we have continued to follow
    the four-factor process even with immune tribes.”). Indeed,
    we have observed that there is a “wall of circuit authority”
    in favor of dismissing actions in which a necessary party
    cannot be joined due to tribal sovereign immunity—
    “virtually all the cases to consider the question appear to
    dismiss under Rule 19, regardless of whether [an alternate]
    remedy is available, if the absent parties are Indian tribes
    invested with sovereign immunity.” White, 765 F.3d
    at 1028.
    2.
    Applying the Rule 19(b) factors, we hold that the district
    court did not err in concluding that the litigation could not,
    in good conscience, continue in NTEC’s absence.
    DCAR V. BIA                          27
    Prejudice, the first factor in the Rule 19(b) analysis,
    “largely duplicates the consideration that made a party
    necessary under Rule 19(a),” Am. Greyhound Racing, Inc.,
    
    305 F.3d at 1025
    , and clearly favors dismissal in this case.
    The Navajo Nation and NTEC would be prejudiced if this
    lawsuit were to proceed and Plaintiffs were to prevail—at
    stake is an estimated 40 to 60 million dollars per year in
    revenue for the Navajo Nation, as well as its ability to use its
    natural resources how it chooses.
    The second factor, the court’s ability to shape relief so as
    to avoid prejudice, likewise favors dismissal. Although
    relief could be shaped to avoid prejudice in the short term,
    such as by remanding for further administrative review
    without vacating the permits and approval decisions in the
    meantime, the Navajo Nation inevitably would be prejudiced
    if Plaintiffs ultimately succeeded and if, after further NEPA
    and ESA processes, Federal Defendants were not able to
    come to the same decisions without imposing new
    restrictions or requirements on the Mine or Power Plant.
    The third factor, on the other hand, weighs against
    dismissal. A judgment rendered in NTEC’s absence would
    be adequate and would not create conflicting obligations,
    because it is Federal Defendants’ duty, not NTEC’s, to
    comply with NEPA and the ESA.
    The fourth factor depends on whether Plaintiffs would
    have an alternate remedy if this suit is dismissed. Were this
    suit dismissed, Plaintiffs would have no alternate forum in
    which to sue Federal Defendants for their alleged procedural
    violations under NEPA and the ESA. NTEC argues,
    however, that Plaintiffs may be able to “raise environmental
    claims in Navajo courts” under Navajo law.
    28                          DCAR V. BIA
    We need not decide whether any alternate remedy is
    available in the Navajo Nation courts for the environmental
    concerns motivating Plaintiffs’ challenge to the mining
    operations at issue here. Even assuming that no alternate
    remedy exists, and that both the third and fourth factors
    therefore weigh against dismissal, we would hold that
    dismissal is proper. We have recognized that the lack of an
    alternative remedy “is a common consequence of sovereign
    immunity.” 
    Id.
     Accordingly, “we have regularly held that
    the tribal interest in immunity overcomes the lack of an
    alternative remedy or forum for the plaintiffs.” 
    Id.
     Mindful
    of the “wall of circuit authority” in favor of dismissing an
    action where a tribe is a necessary party, White, 765 F.3d
    at 1028, we agree with the district court that this litigation
    cannot, in good conscience, continue in NTEC’s absence.
    3.
    Finally, Plaintiffs and the United States urge us to apply
    the “public rights” exception to hold that this litigation can
    continue in NTEC’s absence. 8 The public rights exception
    is a limited “exception to traditional joinder rules” under
    which a party, although necessary, will not be deemed
    “indispensable,” and the litigation may continue in the
    absence of that party. Conner v. Burford, 
    848 F.2d 1441
    ,
    1459 (9th Cir. 1988). We hold that the exception does not
    apply here.
    The public rights exception is reserved for litigation that
    “transcend[s] the private interests of the litigants and seek[s]
    8
    Federal Defendants did not file an answering brief; instead the
    United States filed a brief as amicus curiae arguing that “federal agencies
    and officers are normally the only necessary defendants in” federal suits
    challenging agency action. Answering briefs defending the grounds of
    the district court’s dismissal were filed by only NTEC and APS.
    DCAR V. BIA                         29
    to vindicate a public right.” Kescoli, 
    101 F.3d at 1311
    . The
    public rights exception may apply in a case that could
    “adversely affect the absent parties’ interests,” but “the
    litigation must not ‘destroy the legal entitlements of the
    absent parties’” for the exception to apply. 
    Id.
     (emphasis
    added) (quoting Conner, 
    848 F.2d at 1459
    ).
    The doctrine derives from the Supreme Court’s decision
    in National Licorice Co. v. N.L.R.B., 
    309 U.S. 350
     (1940),
    in which the Court allowed a suit to proceed in the absence
    of necessary parties because it involved enforcement of
    public rights. In National Licorice, a company was the
    subject of a National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”)
    action challenging as violative of federal labor laws
    contracts the company had procured from its employees. 
    Id.
    at 351–56. The defendant company argued that those absent
    employees were necessary and indispensable parties to the
    NLRB action. 
    Id. at 356
    . The Court held that the employees
    did not need to be joined because the case was “narrowly
    restricted to the protection and enforcement of public
    rights”—specifically, the public’s interest in “the prevention
    of unfair labor practices.” 
    Id.
     at 363–64. Analogizing to
    actions brought by the government under the Sherman
    Antitrust Act or orders entered by the Federal Trade
    Commission, 
    id.
     at 365–66, the Court held that “the public
    right was vindicated by restraining the unlawful actions of
    the defendant.” 
    Id. at 366
    . It also reasoned that the absent
    employees’ legal entitlements would not be destroyed
    because the employees “were left free to assert such legal
    rights as they might have acquired under their contracts.” 
    Id.
    We applied the public rights exception to allow suit to
    proceed in Conner v. Burford, where the plaintiffs sued
    BLM alleging that its sale of oil and gas leases in two
    national forests violated NEPA and the ESA. 
    848 F.2d at
    30                     DCAR V. BIA
    1442–43. BLM had sold two different types of leases: for
    one type, lessees were prohibited “from occupying or using
    the surface of the leased land without further specific
    approval from . . . BLM”; for the other, the government was
    authorized to impose conditions on surface-disturbing
    activities, but not to altogether preclude such activities. 
    Id. at 1444
    . During the ESA consultation process, Fish and
    Wildlife and the U.S. Forest Service decided to analyze the
    environmental effects of the lease sales only, and not those
    of post-leasing activities. 
    Id. at 1444
    . The district court
    entered judgment in the plaintiffs’ favor, reasoning that
    NEPA required a comprehensive EIS that evaluated not only
    the sale of a lease but also “the cumulative effects of
    successive, interdependent steps culminating in oil and gas
    development and production.” 
    Id.
     Several lessees attempted
    to intervene, arguing that they were necessary and
    indispensable parties. 
    Id. at 1445
    .
    Clarifying the district court’s order, we “enjoin[ed] the
    federal defendants from permitting any surface-disturbing
    activity to occur on any of the leases [of either type] until
    they ha[d] fully complied with NEPA and [the] ESA.” 
    Id. at 1461
    . We recognized that the contracts themselves,
    however, “were not invalidated and further actions
    construing rights under them [were] not precluded.” 
    Id.
    at 1460–61. We thus held that the only thing foreclosed by
    the district court’s judgment was the “lessees’ ability to get
    ‘specific performance’ [on their contracts] until the
    government complie[d] with NEPA and the ESA,” which
    was “insufficient to make the lessees indispensable to [the]
    litigation.” 
    Id. at 1461
    . The leaseholders still retained
    “many of the fundamental attributes of their contracts,”
    given that “significant economic value inheres in the
    exclusive right to engage in oil and gas activities, should any
    be allowed.” 
    Id.
     Because “[t]he appellees’ litigation against
    DCAR V. BIA                         31
    the government [did] not purport to adjudicate the rights of
    current lessees,” but rather to “enforce the public right to
    administrative compliance with the environmental
    protection standards of NEPA and the ESA,” the public
    rights exception applied. 
    Id. at 1460
    .
    In Kescoli, by contrast, we declined to apply the public
    rights exception and thus affirmed dismissal of the suit. 
    101 F.3d at 1312
    . We reasoned that “if the action proceeded in
    the absence of the Navajo Nation and the Hopi Tribe, the
    rights of their members under the lease agreements could be
    significantly affected.” 
    Id.
     at 1311–12. “The litigation also
    threaten[ed] the Navajo Nation’s and the Hopi Tribe’s
    sovereignty by attempting to disrupt their ability to govern
    themselves and to determine what is in their best interests
    [by] balancing potential harm caused by the mining
    operations against the benefits of the royalty payments.” 
    Id. at 1312
    . The litigation therefore was “not limited to ensuring
    an agency’s future compliance with statutory procedures,”
    and was “not one in which the risk of prejudice to the Navajo
    Nation and the Hopi Tribe [was] nonexistent or minimal.”
    
    Id.
    This case is more like Kescoli than Conner. Here, the
    leases and rights-of-way are valid only with approval by
    BIA. If the Record of Decision that granted such approval
    were vacated, then those agreements would be invalid, and
    NTEC would lose all associated legal rights. And, unlike in
    Conner where surface-disturbing activity had apparently not
    even been authorized or begun, the activities approved by
    the Record of Decision here are already taking place. This
    litigation therefore threatens to destroy NTEC’s existing
    legal entitlements. See Am. Greyhound Racing, Inc.,
    
    305 F.3d at 1026
     (rejecting application of the public rights
    exception, reasoning that the “litigation targeted the
    32                       DCAR V. BIA
    extension or renegotiation of the compacts themselves,” and
    did “not incidentally affect the gaming tribes in the course of
    enforcing some public right,” but rather was “aimed at the
    tribes and their gaming”); Kettle Range Conservation Grp.
    v. U.S. Bureau of Land Mgmt., 
    150 F.3d 1083
    , 1087 (9th Cir.
    1998) (distinguishing Conner and holding that where title to
    land transferred in a challenged transaction had already
    vested in private parties, an order declaring the land
    exchange void would destroy the parties’ legal entitlements,
    rendering the public rights exception inapplicable).
    We acknowledge that Plaintiffs’ claims relate to public
    rights insofar as they challenge only Federal Defendants’
    NEPA and ESA processes. We also recognize that the
    practical effect of this litigation on NTEC’s rights would
    depend on what, exactly, the outcome of the litigation would
    be if it proceeded. It is possible that, if the lawsuit continued,
    the district court might grant judgment in favor of Federal
    Defendants, or it might grant limited relief for Plaintiffs that
    would not substantially impact NTEC’s rights.
    We believe, however, that the question at this stage must
    be whether the litigation threatens to destroy an absent
    party’s legal entitlements. See Kescoli, 
    101 F.3d at
    1311–12
    (holding that the public rights exception was inapplicable in
    part because “if the action proceeded in the absence of [two
    tribes], the rights of their members under the lease
    agreements could be significantly affected” (emphasis
    added)); Shermoen v. United States, 
    982 F.2d 1312
    , 1319
    (9th Cir. 1992) (“Because of the threat to the absent tribes’
    legal entitlements, and indeed to their sovereignty, posed by
    the present litigation, application of the public rights
    exception . . . would be inappropriate.”). Here, although
    Plaintiffs nominally seek only a renewed NEPA and ESA
    process, the implication of their claims is that Federal
    DCAR V. BIA                          33
    Defendants should not have approved the mining activities
    in their exact form. The result Plaintiffs seek, therefore,
    certainly threatens NTEC’s legal entitlements.
    We also recognize, as the Tenth Circuit has pointed out,
    that refusing to apply the public rights exception arguably
    “produce[s] an anomalous result” in that “[n]o one, except
    [a] Tribe, could seek review of an environmental impact
    statement covering significant federal action relating to
    leases or agreements for development of natural resources
    on [that tribe’s] lands.” Manygoats, 
    558 F.2d at 559
    . Or, at
    least, no one could obtain such review unless the tribe were
    willing to waive its immunity and participate in the lawsuit.
    This result, however, is for Congress to address, should it see
    fit, as only Congress may abrogate tribal sovereign
    immunity. See Michigan v. Bay Mills Indian Cmty.,
    
    572 U.S. 782
    , 790 (2014). It is undisputed that Congress has
    not done so here.
    The public rights exception therefore does not apply.
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 17-17320

Citation Numbers: 932 F.3d 843

Filed Date: 7/29/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/29/2019

Authorities (21)

Paul Manygoats v. Thomas S. Kleppe, and Exxon Corporation, ... , 558 F.2d 556 ( 1977 )

american-greyhound-racing-inc-a-delaware-corporation-western-racing , 305 F.3d 1015 ( 2002 )

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. Peabody Western ... , 400 F.3d 774 ( 2005 )

Makah Indian Tribe v. C. William Verity , 910 F.2d 555 ( 1990 )

SALT RIVER PROJECT AGR. IMP. AND POWER v. Lee , 672 F.3d 1176 ( 2012 )

kettle-range-conservation-group-inland-empire-public-lands-council-v , 150 F.3d 1083 ( 1998 )

Mark S. Allen v. Gold Country Casino the Berry Creek ... , 464 F.3d 1044 ( 2006 )

Cook v. AVI Casino Enterprises, Inc. , 548 F.3d 718 ( 2008 )

Northern Alaska Environmental Center v. Donald P. Hodel, ... , 803 F.2d 466 ( 1986 )

james-r-conner-v-robert-burford-director-bureau-of-land-management , 848 F.2d 1441 ( 1988 )

99-cal-daily-op-serv-2432-1999-daily-journal-dar-3174-state-of , 173 F.3d 1158 ( 1999 )

southwest-center-for-biological-diversity-a-non-profit-organization-kieran , 150 F.3d 1152 ( 1998 )

confederated-tribes-of-the-chehalis-indian-reservation-shoalwater-bay , 928 F.2d 1496 ( 1991 )

lillian-mccovey-shermoen-carol-leigh-mcconnell-ammon-leslie-ammon-elsie , 982 F.2d 1312 ( 1992 )

National Licorice Co. v. National Labor Relations Board , 60 S. Ct. 569 ( 1940 )

Ex Parte Young , 28 S. Ct. 441 ( 1908 )

Cachil Dehe Band of Wintun Indians of Colusa Indian ... , 547 F.3d 962 ( 2008 )

Paiute-Shoshone Indians of Bishop Community of Bishop ... , 637 F.3d 993 ( 2011 )

maxine-kescoli-v-bruce-babbitt-the-office-of-surface-mining-reclamation , 101 F.3d 1304 ( 1996 )

Marsh v. Oregon Natural Resources Council , 109 S. Ct. 1851 ( 1989 )

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