Cosentino v. Fuller ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 5/28/15
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    BENEDICT COSENTINO,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                          G050923
    v.                                            (Super. Ct. No. MCC1300396)
    STELLA FULLER et al.,                                 OPINION
    Defendants and Respondents.
    Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Riverside County, Richard J.
    Oberholzer, Judge. (Retired judge of the Kern Superior Court assigned by the Chief
    Justice pursuant to art. VI, § 6 of the Cal. Const.) Reversed.
    Law Office of Andrew W. Twietmeyer and Andrew W. Twietmeyer for
    Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Law Office of Frank Lawrence and Frank Lawrence for Defendants and
    Respondents.
    *            *             *
    Plaintiff and appellant Benedict Cosentino appeals from an order
    dismissing his claims against defendants and respondents Stella Fuller, John R. Magee,
    Jason P. Maldonado, William R. Ramos, and Robert B. Vargas (collectively, Defendants)
    based on the sovereign immunity afforded to Indian tribes and their officials. Cosentino
    was a table games dealer at an Indian tribal casino and Defendants were the five members
    of the tribe’s gaming commission responsible for licensing individuals involved in the
    tribe’s gaming activities and overseeing those activities.
    Shortly after he began working at the casino, Cosentino observed ongoing
    criminal activity on the casino floor. Based on his observations, Cosentino became a
    confidential informant for the California Department of Justice and the information he
    provided lead to several criminal convictions. Defendants later sought to learn what
    information Cosentino provided the Department of Justice, but he followed the
    Department’s instructions and declined to divulge the information. When Cosentino
    balked, Defendants revoked his gaming license and the casino terminated his
    employment because he could not work at the casino without a valid license.
    Cosentino brought this action against Defendants, claiming they revoked
    his gaming license without cause and in retaliation for acting as an informant.
    Defendants specially appeared to make a motion to quash and dismiss, arguing sovereign
    immunity deprived the court of subject matter jurisdiction because Cosentino based all of
    his claims on Defendants’ official actions as members of the tribe’s gaming commission.
    The trial court agreed and granted the motion.
    We reverse. For sovereign immunity to bar claims against tribal officials,
    the claims must be based on actions the officials took in their official capacity and within
    the scope of their official authority. An official’s actions that exceed the scope of his or
    her authority are not protected. Although the parties do not dispute that as members of
    the tribe’s gaming commission Defendants had the authority to revoke a gaming license
    if they received reliable information the licensee no longer satisfied the requirements for
    2
    obtaining a license or had engaged in conduct that reflected poorly upon the tribe or its
    gaming activities, the record lacks evidence showing Defendants received any such
    information about Cosentino or explaining why they revoked his gaming license.
    Cosentino, however, presented evidence supporting his claim Defendants exceeded the
    scope of their authority by revoking his license without cause in retaliation against him.
    Sovereign immunity prevents us from inquiring into the reliability of information
    Defendants may have relied upon in revoking Cosentino’s license or any other errors they
    may have made, but it does not prevent inquiry into whether Defendants exceeded their
    authority by using their official position to intentionally harm Cosentino.
    I
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    The Pechanga Band of Luiseño Mission Indians (Pechanga Band) is a
    sovereign Indian tribe recognized by the United States of America. It owns and operates
    the Pechanga Resort and Casino (Pechanga Casino) as an Indian gaming casino. The
    Pechanga Gaming Commission (Gaming Commission) is a five-member elected body of
    the Pechanga Band responsible for overseeing and monitoring all gaming activities on
    tribal land, including the licensing of certain employees directly involved in gaming
    activities. Defendants were the five Gaming Commission members during the relevant
    time period.
    In April 2007, the Gaming Commission issued Cosentino a Class A gaming
    license to work as a table games dealer at the Pechanga Casino. Within his first few
    months, Cosentino witnessed several instances of criminal misconduct on the casino
    floor. He reported his observations to his licensing agent, who referred him to McKinney
    Investigations, LLC, a group of private investigators the Pechanga Band had hired to
    investigate criminal corruption at the Pechanga Casino. The private investigators asked
    Cosentino if he would work with the California Department of Justice as a confidential
    3
    informant. Cosentino agreed to do so and the information he shared with the Department
    of Justice lead to several criminal convictions.
    In March 2011, the Gaming Commission e-mailed the Pechanga Casino
    director of table games to request a private meeting with Cosentino at 11:00 a.m. on
    April 1, 2011. The Gaming Commission did not contact Cosentino directly to request a
    meeting and the director of table games did not forward the request to Cosentino. His
    April 1 shift originally was scheduled to start at 12:00 noon, but the day before
    Cosentino’s supervisor switched his start time to 10:00 a.m. without informing Cosentino
    of his 11:00 a.m. meeting with the Gaming Commission. Cosentino timely reported to
    work for his April 1 shift. At approximately 11:30 a.m., another dealer relieved
    Cosentino and the floor supervisor told him to report to the table games office. When he
    arrived at the office, a secretary told Cosentino he missed his scheduled meeting with the
    Gaming Commission at 11:00 a.m. A shift supervisor then told Cosentino the Pechanga
    Casino was suspending him pending an investigation and he was escorted from the
    building.
    In mid-April, 2011, the Gaming Commission sent Cosentino a letter stating
    it had suspended his license with the intent to revoke it, and he had a right to a hearing on
    the suspension and possible revocation. Cosentino did not receive this letter because the
    Gaming Commission mailed it to Cosentino’s former address, although Cosentino had
    provided and received mail at his current address from the Pechanga Casino.
    In early May, 2011, Cosentino phoned Ramos to ask if he had been fired
    from his job at the Pechanga Casino. Ramos told Cosentino he had not been fired, and
    the Gaming Commission merely wanted to meet with him. During this conversation,
    Ramos did not tell Cosentino he and the other members of the Gaming Commission had
    suspended Cosentino’s license. Ramos put Cosentino in contact with the Gaming
    Commission secretary to arrange a meeting. The secretary scheduled a meeting and
    informed Cosentino she had a letter for him from the Gaming Commission. When
    4
    Cosentino arrived at the Gaming Commission’s office to pick up the letter, the secretary
    gave him a copy of the April letter sent to his old address, and Cosentino learned for the
    first time that his license had been suspended.
    Cosentino met with the five Defendants at the Gaming Commission’s
    offices in mid-May 2011. When he arrived for the meeting, the Gaming Commission’s
    secretary gave him a letter dated May 4, 2011. The letter stated he had requested the
    meeting as a hearing on his license suspension, although Ramos arranged the meeting and
    told Cosentino Defendants just wanted to talk to him. Cosentino was anxious about the
    meeting because Fuller recently joined the Gaming Commission, and the California
    Department of Justice had informed him members of Fuller’s family may have been
    involved in some on the cases on which Cosentino had provided information.
    Cosentino nonetheless met with the five Defendants privately and asked
    them if he had been fired from his job at the Pechanga Casino. Defendants responded he
    had not, and that was the end of their discussion about Cosentino’s license and his job.
    Instead, Defendants proceeded to pressure him for over an hour to disclose the
    information he gave to McKinney Investigations and the Department of Justice. Fuller
    appeared agitated throughout the meeting and at one point yelled at Cosentino. As Fuller
    left the room when the meeting ended, she told Cosentino the Gaming Commission
    would notify him of its decision. Cosentino asked Fuller which decision she was talking
    about, and she responded the decision on whether to revoke his gaming license.
    A few days later, Ramos phoned to pressure Cosentino to resign his
    position at the Pechanga Casino, and warned the Gaming Commission would revoke
    Cosentino’s gaming license if he did not resign. Ramos also explained that Cosentino
    would not be able to get a job at any other casino if his license was revoked. When
    Cosentino asked why the Gaming Commission was going to suspend his license, Ramos
    responded the reasons were “‘personal’” and he could not share them with Cosentino.
    Cosentino refused to resign and a few days later he received a notice from the Pechanga
    5
    Casino explaining his employment had been involuntarily terminated. A week later,
    Cosentino received a letter from the Gaming Commission revoking his license.
    In December 2011, the Pechanga Band Tribal Council arranged a meeting
    with Cosentino to discuss his experience at the Pechanga Casino and with the Gaming
    Commission. Cosentino met privately with the council and shared the foregoing events.
    The council apologized for what Cosentino had been through and thanked him for
    helping the Department of Justice.
    In March 2012, the Pechanga Band Tribal Council called a meeting of the
    tribe’s general membership to hear McKinney Investigations discuss its investigation into
    criminal activity at the Pechanga Casino. Without disclosing Cosentino’s identity,
    McKinney Investigations described his role as a confidential informant in the
    investigation and his mistreatment by the Gaming Commission. When the presentation
    was over, Fuller addressed the general membership and identified Cosentino as the
    confidential informant. A few days later, Fuller resigned from the Gaming Commission
    under pressure from the Pechanga Band Tribal Council.
    After Fuller’s resignation, the Pechanga Band’s general counsel arranged a
    meeting with Cosentino. Counsel provided Cosentino with a letter from the Gaming
    Commission explaining it had reconsidered its decision and Cosentino’s “Gaming
    License status with the Pechanga Gaming Commission is no longer considered to be
    revoked.” Despite this letter, Cosentino has been unable to obtain employment at any
    Indian casino because he must disclose that his license previously had been revoked.
    In March 2013, Cosentino filed this action against Defendants, alleging
    claims for (1) intentional interference with prospective economic advantage; (2) negligent
    interference with prospective economic advantage; (3) intentional interference with the
    right to pursue a lawful occupation; (4) violation of Civil Code section 52.1;
    (5) intentional infliction of emotional distress; and (6) negligent infliction of emotional
    distress. Cosentino alleges Defendants unlawfully retaliated against him for serving as a
    6
    confidential informant by suspending and then revoking his gaming license without
    explanation or cause. Defendants specially appeared and moved to quash service of
    summons and dismiss the complaint based on sovereign immunity. Defendants argued
    they were immune from suit and liability because Cosentino sued them based on actions
    they took in their official capacity as members of the Gaming Commission. The trial
    court granted the motion, finding Cosentino sued Defendants for improperly revoking his
    gaming license without identifying any reason. Cosentino timely appealed. 1
    II
    DISCUSSION
    A.     Legal Background
    1.     Indian Gaming
    “Indian tribes have the exclusive right to regulate gaming activity on Indian
    lands if the gaming activity is not specifically prohibited by Federal law and is conducted
    within a State which does not, as a matter of criminal law and public policy, prohibit such
    gaming activity.” (25 U.S.C. § 2701, subd. (5).) Congress enacted the Indian Gaming
    Regulatory Act (25 U.S.C. § 2701 et seq.; IGRA) “to provide a statutory basis for the
    regulation of gaming by an Indian tribe adequate to shield it from organized crime and
    other corrupting influences, to ensure that the Indian tribe is the primary beneficiary of
    the gaming operation, and to assure that gaming is conducted fairly and honestly by both
    the operator and players.” (25 U.S.C. §2702, subd. (2).)
    1      Cosentino did not name the Gaming Commission or the Pechanga Band as
    defendants in this action because the Tribal-State Compact requires arbitration of any
    claims against the Pechanga Band. The Gaming Commission and the Pechanga Band
    refused to arbitrate Cosentino’s claims and he filed a petition in federal court to compel
    arbitration. The U.S. District Court denied his petition, and Cosentino’s appeal from that
    decision is pending in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
    7
    The IGRA authorizes three categories or classes of Indian gaming on tribal
    lands: class I, which includes social, traditional, and ceremonial games; class II, which
    includes bingo and certain limited types of card games; and class III, which includes all
    other forms of gaming. (25 U.S.C. § 2703, subds. (6) – (8).) A tribe may conduct
    class III gaming activities if it (1) adopts a gaming ordinance that regulates all gaming
    activities on tribal lands consistent with the standards established by the IGRA and the
    Chairman of the National Indian Gaming Commission approves the ordinance; and
    (2) enters into a tribal-state compact agreeing to conduct all gaming activities according
    to the terms and conditions negotiated between the tribe and the state where the tribe’s
    lands are located. (25 U.S.C. § 2710, subd. (d)(1).) To satisfy these requirements, the
    Pechanga Band adopted the “Pechanga Gaming Act of 1992” (Pechanga Ordinance) and
    entered into the “Tribal-State Compact Between the State of California and the Pechanga
    Band of Luiseño Mission Indians” (Tribal-State Compact).2 The Pechanga Band also
    formed the Gaming Commission to carry out its regulatory responsibilities under the
    IGRA. (See Tribal-State Compact at §§ 2.20, 6.4.1; Pechanga Ordinance at § 4.)
    The IGRA requires a tribe’s gaming ordinance to establish a licensing
    system for all “primary management officials and key employees of the gaming
    enterprise.” The system must (1) require a background investigation before any
    individual may be licensed as a management official or key employee; (2) ensure that all
    licensed individuals are monitored on an ongoing basis; and (3) establish “a standard
    whereby any person whose prior activities, criminal record, if any, or reputation, habits
    and associations pose a threat to the public interest or to the effective regulation of
    gaming, or create or enhance the dangers of unsuitable, unfair, or illegal practices and
    methods and activities in the conduct of gaming shall not be eligible for employment.”
    2     We grant Cosentino’s request to judicially notice the Tribal-State Compact
    and an amendment thereto. (Evid. Code, § 452, subds. (a), (c), (d); see Big Valley Band
    of Pomo Indians v. Superior Court (2005) 
    133 Cal. App. 4th 1185
    , 1192.)
    8
    (25 U.S.C. § 2710, subds. (b)(2)(F) & (d)(1)(A)(ii).) Consistent with these requirements,
    the Tribal-State Compact and the Pechanga Ordinance require all key employees,
    including table game dealers like Cosentino, to obtain a gaming license from the Gaming
    Commission after the employees undergo a background check. (Tribal-State Compact at
    §§ 6.4.1, 6.4.4, 6.4.8, 6.5; Pechanga Ordinance at § 10.)
    A person is eligible for a gaming license if employing the person does not
    “pose[] a threat to the public interest or to the effective regulation of gaming, [and does
    not] create[] or enhance[] dangers of unsuitable, unfair, or illegal practices and methods
    and activities in the conduct of gaming.”3 (Pechanga Gaming Ordinance at § 10,
    subd. (m).) All persons holding gaming licenses must “conduct themselves with honesty,
    integrity, and with such decorum and manners as may be necessary to reflect positively
    on the [Pechanga] Band, its members and the Gaming Activities involved.” (Id. at § 10,
    subd. (j).) A tribal gaming license must be renewed at least every two years.
    (Tribal-State Compact at §§ 6.4.4, 6.5.2; Pechanga Ordinance at § 10, subd. (f).)
    The Gaming Commission must suspend a gaming license if it receives
    reliable information the licensee no longer satisfies the standards for obtaining a license.
    The Gaming Commission must provide the licensee with written notice of the suspension
    and the possible revocation of the license, and the licensee may request a hearing on
    whether he or she continues to satisfy the standards for obtaining a gaming license. After
    3        The Tribal-State Compact provides a person is not eligible to receive a
    gaming license unless the Gaming Commission determines the person is “(a) A person of
    good character, honesty, and integrity. [¶] (b) A person whose prior activities, criminal
    record (if any), reputation, habits, and associations do not pose a threat to the public
    interest or to the effective regulation and control of gambling, or create or enhance the
    dangers of unsuitable, unfair, or illegal practices, methods, or activities in the conduct of
    gambling, or in the carrying on of the business and financial arrangements incidental
    thereto. [¶] (c) A person who is in all other respects qualified to be licensed as provided
    in this Gaming Compact, IGRA, the Tribal Gaming Ordinance, and any other criteria
    adopted by the Tribal Gaming Agency or the Tribe.” (Tribal-State Compact at § 6.4.3.)
    9
    the hearing, the Gaming Commission must determine whether to revoke or reinstate the
    license. (Tribal-State Compact at § 6.5.5; Pechanga Ordinance at § 10, subd. (p).)
    2.     Sovereign Immunity for Indian Tribes and Their Officials
    “The federal government has ‘plenary and exclusive power’ to deal with
    Indian tribes.” (Trudgeon v. Fantasy Springs Casino (1999) 
    71 Cal. App. 4th 632
    , 635
    (Trudgeon).) “Under federal law, an Indian tribe is a sovereign authority and, as such,
    has tribal sovereign immunity, not only from liability, but also from suit. [Citations.]
    Pursuant to tribal sovereign immunity principles, an Indian tribe is subject to suit only
    where Congress has so authorized or where the Tribe has waived its immunity by
    consenting to suit. [Citation.] Absent such authorization or consent, the courts do not
    have subject matter jurisdiction over suits against a tribe. [Citation.]” (Lawrence v.
    Barona Valley Ranch Resort & Casino (2007) 
    153 Cal. App. 4th 1364
    , 1368 (Lawrence);
    see Warburton/Buttner v. Superior Court (2002) 
    103 Cal. App. 4th 1170
    , 1182
    (Warburton).) “‘[S]overeign immunity is not a discretionary doctrine that may be
    applied as a remedy depending on the equities of a given situation. [Citation.]’
    [Citations.] Rather, it presents a pure jurisdictional question.” (Warburton, at p. 1182.)
    “Although Indian tribes enjoy broad sovereign immunity from lawsuits, the
    immunity of Indian tribal officials . . . is more limited.” (Boisclair v. Superior Court
    (1990) 
    51 Cal. 3d 1140
    , 1157 (Boisclair).) When tribal officials “act ‘in their official
    capacity and within their scope of authority,’” they are protected by sovereign immunity
    because their acts are the acts of the sovereign. (Turner v. Martire (2000) 
    82 Cal. App. 4th 1042
    , 1046 (Turner); see Boisclair, at p. 1157; Larson v. Domestic & Foreign Commerce
    Corp. (1949) 
    337 U.S. 682
    , 695 (Larson).) On the other hand, when “an officer of a
    sovereign acts beyond his or her delegated authority, his or her actions ‘are considered
    individual and not sovereign actions. The officer is not doing the business which the
    sovereign has empowered him to do or he is doing it in a way which the sovereign has
    10
    forbidden,’” and therefore sovereign immunity does not apply. (Turner, at p. 1055; see
    
    Trudgeon, supra
    , 71 Cal.App.4th at p. 644; Larson, at p. 689.)
    An official’s commission of a tort is not per se an act in excess of authority,
    and therefore is not necessarily exempt from immunity. “‘[I]f the actions of an officer do
    not conflict with the terms of his valid statutory authority, then they are actions of the
    sovereign, whether or not they are tortious under general law . . . .’ [Citation.]”
    (Boisclair, at p. 1157; see Turner, at p. 1055; 
    Trudgeon, supra
    , 71 Cal.App.4th at p. 644;
    
    Larson, supra
    , 337 U.S. at p. 695.) Accordingly, to determine whether a tribal official is
    entitled to the protection of sovereign immunity for a tortious act, courts must determine
    whether the official (1) committed the act in his or her official capacity and (2) within the
    scope of his or her official authority. (Boisclair, at pp. 1157-1158; Turner, at p. 1046;
    Great Western Casinos, Inc. v. Morongo Band of Mission Indians (1999) 
    74 Cal. App. 4th 1407
    , 1421 (Great Western Casinos); Trudgeon, at pp. 643-644.) “A tribal official also
    may forfeit immunity where he or she acts out of personal interest rather than for the
    benefit of the tribe.” (Turner, at p. 1055.)
    Because sovereign immunity deprives a court of subject matter jurisdiction,
    California courts have authorized Indian tribes and their officials to specially appear and
    invoke their immunity from suit by using a “hybrid motion to quash/dismiss.” 
    (Boisclair, supra
    , 51 Cal.3d at p. 1144, fn. 1; Great Western 
    Casinos, supra
    , 74 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1417.) On such a motion, “‘the plaintiff bears the burden of proving by a
    preponderance of evidence that jurisdiction exists.’ [Citation.]” 
    (Lawrence, supra
    ,
    153 Cal.App.4th at p. 1369.) “In the absence of conflicting extrinsic evidence relevant to
    the issue, the question of whether a court has subject matter jurisdiction over an action
    against an Indian tribe [and its officials] is a question of law subject to our de novo
    review.” (Ibid.; 
    Warburton, supra
    , 103 Cal.App.4th at p. 1180.)
    11
    B.     The Trial Court Erroneously Concluded Defendants Are Immune From Liability
    for Cosentino’s Claims
    Cosentino contends the trial court erred in applying sovereign immunity to
    dismiss his claims because Defendants exceeded the scope of their authority as members
    of the Gaming Commission by revoking his gaming license without cause and in
    retaliation for serving as a confidential Department of Justice informant. We agree.
    In Turner, the Court of Appeal elaborated on the showing required for
    dismissing a tort action against tribal officials on sovereign immunity grounds. The
    plaintiffs were labor union organizers who came to an Indian tribe’s gaming casino to
    speak with employees, and the defendants were tribal law enforcement officers who
    confronted the plaintiffs and demanded to see their camera. When the plaintiffs refused,
    the defendants forced the plaintiffs to the ground, seized the camera, struck and kicked
    the plaintiffs, and used pepper spray on them. The defendants then exposed the camera’s
    film, forced the plaintiffs into a trailer office, arrested the plaintiffs, and called the county
    sheriff to detain the plaintiffs without probable cause. The plaintiffs sued the defendants
    individually for assault, battery, false imprisonment, conversion, and civil rights
    violations, alleging the defendants assaulted and detained the plaintiffs because the
    defendants opposed the plaintiffs’ efforts to inform the casino employees about their
    collective bargaining rights. The trial court found that tribal sovereign immunity
    deprived the court of personal and subject matter jurisdiction. The Court of Appeal
    reversed, concluding the record failed to establish the defendants qualified as tribal
    officials or acted within the scope of their official authority. 
    (Turner, supra
    ,
    82 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1044-1045.)
    The Turner court explained that extending sovereign immunity
    automatically to all individuals associated with an Indian tribe would contravene the
    purpose for sovereign immunity, and would contravene the basic tenet that individuals
    should be held accountable for their wrongful conduct. The purpose of extending
    12
    sovereign immunity to individual officials is to encourage them to exercise their
    independent judgment for the tribe’s benefit without fear of personal liability, and
    therefore immunity applies only to those officials who perform discretionary or
    policymaking functions that require the exercise of independent judgment for the tribe’s
    benefit. 
    (Turner, supra
    , 82 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1048-1049.) Nothing in the record
    showed the defendants exercised the sort of discretionary or policymaking authority that
    would justify applying sovereign immunity. (Id. at p. 1054.)
    The Turner court further explained it could not conclude the defendants
    acted within the scope of their official authority as tribal law enforcement officers
    because the record lacked evidence showing the defendants were authorized to use force
    or detain visitors to the tribe’s casino, the circumstances under which the defendants
    could use force to detain visitors, and that the plaintiffs’ conduct justified the defendants
    in using force to detain them. Without evidence on each of these points, the defendants’
    assertion of sovereign immunity was overcome by the plaintiffs’ allegations the
    defendants exceeded the scope of their authority by engaging in intentional brutality
    motivated by their personal opposition to the plaintiffs’ efforts to inform casino
    employees about their collective bargaining rights. As the Turner court observed, a tribal
    official who acts out of personal interest rather than for the tribe’s benefit forfeits the
    protections of sovereign immunity. 
    (Turner, supra
    , 82 Cal.App.4th at p. 1055
    [allegations in plaintiff’s complaint “raises a factual issue whether defendants acted for
    the benefit of the Tribe or merely for personal reasons”].)
    In Boisclair, the Supreme Court emphasized that sovereign immunity only
    applies to tribal officials when they act in their official capacity and within the scope of
    their official authority. 
    (Boisclair, supra
    , 51 Cal.3d at p. 1157.) There, the plaintiff sued
    tribal officials for blocking the only road providing access to a granite mine the plaintiff
    operated on property adjacent to the tribe’s reservation. The trial court denied the tribal
    officials’ motion to dismiss the action based on sovereign immunity. (Id. at
    13
    pp. 1145-1146.) The Boisclair court denied the officials’ petition for writ of mandate
    because the record lacked evidence showing whether the officials’ alleged actions in
    blocking the road fell within the scope of their authority. The Supreme Court explained
    any tribal official action to block the plaintiff’s access that occurred where the road
    crossed tribal property would come within the scope of the officials’ authority because
    the tribal officials had the power to control the boundaries to tribal property and to
    exclude those seeking access. But any tribal official action to block the plaintiff’s access
    to the road outside of tribal property would exceed the officials’ authority and therefore
    sovereign immunity would not protect the tribal officials because they lacked the
    authority to deny access to nontribal property. (Id. at pp. 1157-1158.) The Boisclair
    court remanded the matter for the trial court to determine the precise nature of the
    officials’ actions. (Id. at pp. 1158-1159.)
    Here, there is no dispute Defendants’ positions as Gaming Commission
    members made them tribal officials for sovereign immunity purposes, and that they had
    the authority to suspend and revoke Cosentino’s gaming license if they received reliable
    information he no longer satisfied the standards for obtaining a license or had conducted
    himself in a manner that did not reflect positively on the Pechanga Band or its gaming
    activities. Nothing in the record, however, shows Cosentino no longer qualified for a
    gaming license or that he had engaged in any inappropriate conduct warranting
    suspension or revocation of his license. Moreover, Cosentino alleged and presented
    evidence showing Defendants exceeded their authority by revoking his license without
    cause and in retaliation for acting as a Department of Justice informant.
    Specifically, Cosentino presented evidence that he served as confidential
    informant and provided information that led to several criminal convictions for illegal
    activities at the Pechanga Casino. Defendants suspended his gaming license without
    notifying him after he failed to appear for a meeting with Defendants because his
    supervisor did not inform him of the meeting and did not provide another dealer to cover
    14
    Cosentino’s gaming table until well after the scheduled meeting. When Cosentino later
    met with Defendants to discuss his activities as an informant, they served him with a
    letter belatedly informing him the meeting was convened to determine whether they
    should revoke his license. Defendants nonetheless did not ask Cosentino about his
    license, but instead questioned him extensively about the information he had shared with
    the Department of Justice. When Cosentino declined to answer some of their questions
    based on the Department’s instructions not to divulge the information, Defendants
    revoked Cosentino’s gaming license without identifying any reason for doing so. The
    revocation forced the Pechanga Casino to terminate his employment. Cosentino later
    asked Ramos why Defendants revoked his license and Ramos responded he could not say
    because the reasons were personal. After the Pechanga Band’s Tribal Council forced
    Fuller to resign as a Gaming Commission member, the Commission informed Cosentino
    it no longer considered his license revoked, but it failed to restore his job.
    In the face of this evidence, Defendants presented no evidence to rebut or
    deny Cosentino’s claim they revoked his license in retaliation and without cause.
    Similarly, Defendants presented no evidence showing they received any information
    about Cosentino’s qualification to hold a gaming license or why they suspended and
    revoked his license. Defendants also failed to present any authority showing they had the
    power to revoke Cosentino’s license without cause. Accordingly, as in Turner,
    Cosentino’s allegations and evidence that Defendants exceeded their authority by
    revoking his license without cause defeat Defendants’ claim of sovereign immunity.
    
    (Turner, supra
    , 82 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1054-1055.)
    Defendants contend sovereign immunity applied because all of Cosentino’s
    claims are based on the revocation of his license and Defendants indisputably had the
    authority as Gaming Commission members to revoke Cosentino’s license. Defendants
    misconstrue the scope of sovereign immunity for tribal officials and the scope of their
    authority as Gaming Commission members.
    15
    Sovereign immunity is not absolute and does not apply every time a tribal
    official acts in his official capacity. For sovereign immunity to apply, the tribal official
    must not only act in his or her official capacity, the official also must act within the scope
    of his or her official authority. 
    (Boisclair, supra
    , 51 Cal.3d at p. 1157; 
    Turner, supra
    ,
    82 Cal.App.4th at p. 1046.) For example, in Turner, the inquiry was not simply whether
    the tribal law enforcement officers had the authority to use force and detain people;
    rather, the court also had to determine under what circumstances the officers could
    exercise their authority to use force and detain people, and whether those circumstances
    existed. (Turner, at pp. 1054-1055.) Similarly, in Boisclair, the inquiry was not simply
    whether the tribal officials had the authority to deny access to tribal property by blocking
    an access road, but whether the tribal officials blocked the road on tribal property, where
    they had authority to do so, or on nontribal property, which would exceed their authority.
    (Boisclair, at pp. 1157-1158.) Accordingly, our inquiry here is not limited to whether
    Defendants had the authority to revoke Cosentino’s gaming license, but also extends to
    under what circumstances Defendants had the authority to do so and whether those
    circumstances existed.
    The IGRA, the Tribal-State Compact, and the Pechanga Ordinance granted
    Defendants very broad authority to suspend and revoke Cosentino’s gaming license, but
    that authority was not unlimited. As explained above, Defendants could suspend or
    revoke Cosentino’s gaming license only if they received reliable information that (1) his
    licensure posed a threat to the public interest or the effective regulation of gaming; (2) his
    licensure created or enhanced dangers of unsuitable, unfair, or illegal practices, methods
    and activities in the conduct of gaming; or (3) he failed conducted himself with honesty,
    integrity, and with such decorum and manners as necessary to reflect positively on the
    Pechanga Band, its members, and its gaming activities. (25 U.S.C. § 2710,
    subds. (b)(2)(F) & (d)(1)(A)(ii); Tribal-State Compact at § 6.4.3; Pechanga Gaming
    Ordinance at § 10, subds. (j) & (m).) Nothing in the record shows Defendants had the
    16
    authority to revoke Cosentino’s license without cause or in retaliation for his cooperation
    with law enforcement. Accordingly, sovereign immunity does not protect Defendants
    from this action unless they revoked his license on a ground identified in the IGRA, the
    Tribal-State Compact, or the Pechanga Ordinance.
    Defendants also contend the IGRA, the Tribal-State Compact, and the
    Pechanga Ordinance did not require them either to explain why they revoked Cosentino’s
    license or to produce evidence to support their decision. Defendants miss the point. It is
    irrelevant whether the IGRA, the Tribal-State Compact, and the Pechanga Ordinance
    required Defendants to provide an explanation or produce evidence to justify their
    decision. We are not deciding whether Defendants followed the proper procedure or had
    sufficient evidence to support their decision to suspend and revoke Cosentino’s license.
    Rather, we must decide whether sovereign immunity applies so as to bar this action in its
    entirety. To make that decision, we must determine whether Defendants acted in their
    official capacity and within the scope of their authority. Cosentino presented evidence to
    show Defendants exceeded their authority under the IGRA, the Tribal-State Compact,
    and the Pechanga Ordinance because they revoked his license without cause in retaliation
    for him cooperating with law enforcement. Accordingly, to invoke sovereign immunity’s
    protections Defendants were required to produce evidence or law showing they acted
    within the scope of their authority in revoking Cosentino’s license regardless of whether
    IGRA, the Tribal-State Compact, and the Pechanga Ordinance required them to provide
    an explanation or cite evidence when making their decision.
    Defendants next contend they had no obligation to produce evidence or
    provide an explanation because sovereign immunity not only protects them from liability,
    but also from the burdens of litigation, such as discovery and the obligation to produce
    evidence. Again, Defendants miss the point. Sovereign immunity protects tribal official
    from both liability and suit only when it applies. To show sovereign immunity applies,
    tribal official may be required to participate in limited discovery and present evidence to
    17
    convince the court sovereign immunity deprives it of jurisdiction to hear the case.
    (
    Warburton, supra
    , 103 Cal.App.4th at p. 1181 [limited discovery may be required to
    determine whether sovereign immunity applies]; Great 
    Western, supra
    , 74 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1418 [“‘Where the motion to dismiss is based on a claim of . . . sovereign immunity,
    which provides protection from suit and not merely a defense to liability . . . the court
    must engage in sufficient pretrial factual and legal determinations to “‘satisfy itself of its
    authority to hear the case’ before trial”’”].)
    We emphasize the appropriate inquiry is not whether Defendants properly
    exercised their authority, but only whether they acted within the scope of their authority.
    As explained above, the purpose of extending sovereign immunity to tribal officials is to
    encourage the officials to exercise their independent judgment for the tribe’s benefit
    without concern they may be held personally liable for how they exercised their judgment
    or any mistakes they may have made. 
    (Turner, supra
    , 82 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1048-1049;
    see 
    Larson, supra
    , 337 U.S. at p. 695.) For example, sovereign immunity would apply to
    protect Defendants from liability if they revoked Cosentino’s license based on
    information he had helped a player cheat on a game, even if that information later turned
    out to be false or Defendants failed to conduct an adequate investigation. Similarly,
    sovereign immunity would apply if Defendants revoked Cosentino’s license based on an
    erroneous interpretation of the IGRA, the Tribal-State Compact, or the Pechanga Gaming
    Ordinance. Those mistakes are protected by sovereign immunity because they are errors
    in the judgment with which Defendants were entrusted. If mistakes in how Defendants
    performed their official duties exposed them to personal liability, then few if any people
    would be willing to serve on the Gaming Commission.
    Cosentino’s claims, however, are not based on Defendants’ reliance on
    questionable information, their failure to perform an adequate investigation, or their
    erroneous interpretation of a legal standard. Rather, Cosentino alleges Defendants
    engaged in intentional misconduct and revoked his license without cause to retaliate
    18
    against him. Defendants presented no authority, and we have found none, that extends
    tribal sovereign immunity to an intentional abuse of authority. To the contrary, the law
    withholds sovereign immunity for a tribal official who acts out of personal interest rather
    than to benefit the tribe. 
    (Turner, supra
    , 82 Cal.App.4th at p. 1055.)
    Although Defendants cite several cases to support their contention the trial
    court properly dismissed Cosentino’s claims based on sovereign immunity, Defendants
    fail to discuss or even cite Turner, the only analogous factual situation involving a claim
    of sovereign immunity by tribal officials who allegedly exceeded the scope of their
    authority by engaging in intentional misconduct designed to harm the plaintiff. The cases
    Defendants cite are readily distinguishable because they do not address that factual
    scenario. (See 
    Trudgeon, supra
    , 71 Cal.App.4th at pp. 643-644 [sovereign immunity
    barred negligence claim against tribal officials who allegedly failed to provide adequate
    security at gaming casino because plaintiff did not allege officials’ decision regarding
    security exceeded scope of their authority]; Great Western 
    Casinos, supra
    ,
    74 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1423, 1424 [outside counsel immune from liability to third party
    for advice given to Indian tribe because tribe must be able to hire agents to assist in its
    operations and expect loyalty and candor in advice agents provide]; Gaming Corp. of
    America v. Dorsey & Whitney (8th Cir. 1996) 
    88 F.3d 536
    , 550 [same]; Hardin v. White
    Mountain Apache Tribe (9th Cir. 1985) 
    779 F.2d 476
    , 479-480 [sovereign immunity
    applied because tribal officials acted within scope of their authority when removing
    plaintiff from tribal lands].)
    Finally, Defendants contend we should affirm the trial court’s dismissal of
    Cosentino’s claims even if we conclude sovereign immunity does not apply because
    (1) Cosentino assumed all risk and waived all claims relating to his gaming license;
    (2) Fuller’s statements disclosing Cosentino’s identity as the confidential informant are
    absolutely privileged because Fuller made her statements to a legislative body during a
    Pechanga Band general membership meeting; (3) the Pechanga Band and Gaming
    19
    Commission are indispensible parties that cannot be joined based on their sovereign
    immunity; and (4) the IGRA, the Tribal-State Compact, and the Pechanga Gaming
    Ordinance do not provide Cosentino a private right of action to challenge the propriety of
    Defendants’ decision to revoke his license. We decline to address these arguments for
    two reasons.
    First, Defendants failed to make these arguments in the trial court, and
    therefore cannot assert them for the first time on appeal. (In re Marriage of Harris
    (2007) 
    158 Cal. App. 4th 430
    , 440 [new theories of defense may not be raised for first time
    on appeal].) Second, Defendants have not cited any authority that allows them to
    specially appear and raise these arguments through their hybrid motion to quash/dismiss
    the action. As explained above, case authority expressly authorizes Indian tribes and
    their officials to make a special appearance to assert sovereign immunity through a
    hybrid motion to quash/dismiss because sovereign immunity deprives the trial court of
    subject matter jurisdiction. 
    (Boisclair, supra
    , 51 Cal.3d at p. 1144, fn. 1; Great Western
    
    Casinos, supra
    , 74 Cal.App.4th at p. 1417.) These arguments are affirmative defenses
    that only may be raised through an answer or demurrer after a defendant makes a general
    appearance.
    20
    III
    DISPOSITION
    The order is reversed. Cosentino shall recover his costs on appeal.
    ARONSON, ACTING P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    FYBEL, J.
    THOMPSON, J.
    21