TERENCE C. KERN, District Judge.
Before the Court are Defendants Ken Salazar and the United States Department of the Interior's Motion to Transfer Venue and to Suspend Obligation to Answer, or in the Alternative to Stay (Docs. 18 and 22); and Motion of the Cherokee Freedmen to Transfer Or, in the Alternative, Stay (Doc. 20). In these motions, Defendants move to transfer this action to the District Court for the District of Columbia ("D.D.C."), where the action of Vann v. Salazar, 1:03CV-1711-HHK, is currently pending ("D.C. Action") before the Honorable Henry H. Kennedy ("Judge Kennedy").
On August 11, 2003, six individual plaintiffs filed suit against the Secretary of the United States Department of the Interior ("Secretary") and the United States Department of the Interior ("DOI") in the D.C. Action.
On January 14, 2005, The Cherokee Nation ("Cherokee Nation") moved to intervene in the D.C. Action for the limited purpose of asserting that (1) it was a necessary party pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 19(a) ("Rule 19"); (2) it could not feasibly be joined because the Cherokee Nation's sovereign immunity
On December 19, 2006, with respect to the Cherokee Nation's motion to dismiss, Judge Kennedy held: (1) the Cherokee Nation was a necessary party that must be joined if feasible; (2) the Cherokee Nation could be joined because Congress, in the 1866 Treaty and the Thirteenth Amendment, "unequivocally indicated its intent to abrogate the tribe's immunity with regard to racial oppression prohibited by the Thirteenth Amendment"; and (3) the Secretary's decision to recognize the leaders elected in the 2003 Elections constituted a final agency action for purposes of the APA. Vann I, 467 F.Supp.2d at 65-72. With respect to the plaintiffs' motion to amend, Judge Kennedy held: (1) the plaintiffs need not exhaust tribal remedies prior to naming the proposed defendants; and (2) tribal officials are not shielded by sovereign immunity because (a) the Cherokee Nation's immunity was abrogated by Congress, and (b) alternatively, tribal officials are amenable to suit under the Ex parte Young
On July 17, 2007, while the appeal was pending, the plaintiffs filed a Third Amended Complaint, adding the Freedmen Band of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma ("Freedmen Band")
Following remand, on December 19, 2008, the D.C. Plaintiffs filed a Fourth Amended Complaint in accordance with Vann II, naming only Federal Defendants and Chief Smith. On January 30, 2009, Chief Smith filed a motion to dismiss the Fourth Amended Complaint, arguing: (1) the action should not proceed in the absence of the Cherokee Nation and should be dismissed pursuant to Rule 19(b); (2) there exists no private right of action upon which the plaintiffs can premise their claims, and the action should be dismissed pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6); and (3) the plaintiffs failed to allege facts establishing the court's venue over Chief Smith, and claims against him should be dismissed pursuant to Rule 12(b)(3). (See Freedmen's Mot. to Transfer, Ex. C., at 1-2.)
Shortly after Chief Smith filed his motion to dismiss in the D.C. Action, on February 3, 2009, the Cherokee Nation filed this action in the Northern District of Oklahoma. The Cherokee Nation filed a Complaint for Declaratory Relief against five individual Freedmen ("Freedmen Defendants"),
(Compl. ¶ 12.) The Cherokee Nation seeks a declaration that the "Five Tribes Act and federal statutes modified the Treaty of 1866 thereby resulting in non-Indian Freedmen descendants, including the individual defendants, no longer, as a matter of federal law, having rights to citizenship of the Cherokee Nation and benefits derived from such citizenship." (Id. ¶ 18.)
On February 6, 2009, in the D.C. Action, Chief Smith filed a supplement to his motion to dismiss the Fourth Amended Complaint, informing Judge Kennedy that the Cherokee Nation filed this action. Chief Smith argued that the pendency of this action was relevant to the fourth factor of the Rule 19(b) analysis, which is whether the plaintiff would have an adequate remedy if the D.C. Action were dismissed pursuant to Rule 19(b). (See Freedmen's Mot. to Transfer, Ex. I, at 2.)
On March 14, 2009, D.C. Plaintiffs moved for leave to file a Fifth Amended Complaint to re-name the Cherokee Nation as a defendant in the D.C. Action. D.C. Plaintiffs argued that, by filing the action before this Court, the Cherokee Nation "has abused its immunity privilege by attempting to invoke it for unfair tactical advantage, has therefore waived its immunity, and should be added to this action as
On May 29, 2009, Federal Defendants and Freedmen Defendants filed the motions to transfer currently pending before this Court, requesting transfer of this action to the D.D.C. pursuant to (1) the "first to file" rule ("first to file rule"); and (2) 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a) ("§ 1404(a)").
On June 18, 2009, Freedmen Defendants filed their Amended Answer, Counterclaims Against the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma, and Cross-Claims Against Federal Defendants. (See Doc. 31.) In their counterclaims, Freedmen Defendants allege that the Cherokee Nation violated various treaties, tribal laws, and federal laws by implementing policies denying Freedmen the right to vote and perpetuating badges of slavery. They seek numerous forms of declaratory and injunctive relief, including a declaration of Freedmen Defendants' rights under the 1866 Treaty and other laws, and an injunction enjoining the Cherokee Nation from holding any further elections until all Freedmen are entitled to vote. (See id. ¶¶ 21, 91-114.) In their cross-claims, Freedmen Defendants allege five causes of action against Federal Defendants, including violations of the APA, and ultimately seek a declaration that Federal Defendants may not approve any election or other act by the Cherokee Nation that violates Freedmen Defendants' rights as Cherokee citizens. (See id. ¶¶ 22, 115-150.) The Court granted the Cherokee Nation's and the Federal Defendants' motions to stay their deadlines to file a responsive pleading to Freedmen Defendants' counterclaims and cross-claims until following the Court's rulings on the motions to transfer or stay.
On June 10, 2010, the Court ordered Federal Defendants to provide a Status Report of any relevant events or orders in the D.C. Action occurring since May 29, 2009. According to such report, there have been no relevant events in the D.C. Action. (See Doc. 47.) Thus, Judge Kennedy has not decided whether the Cherokee Nation may be re-named as a defendant in the D.C. Action based on the Cherokee Nation's filing of this action; whether the D.C. Action may, in equity and good conscience, proceed in the absence of the Cherokee Nation; or whether venue is proper in the D.D.C. over Chief Smith.
The Tenth Circuit generally follows the first to file rule. See Hospah Coal Co. v.
The Fifth Circuit has provided a comprehensive explanation of the first to file rule. See Cadle Co. v. Whataburger of Alice, Inc., 174 F.3d 599, 603 (5th Cir. 1999); see also Michael Cicero, First-to-File and Choice-of-Forum Roots Run Too Deep for Micron to Curb Most Races to the Courthouse, 90 J. Pat. & Trademark Off. Soc'y 547, 560 (2008) [hereinafter "Cicero"] (citing Cadle as leading case on first to file rule).
The general rule of deference to a first-filed court presented with substantially overlapping parties and issues is not "an invariable mandate." Employers Ins. of Wausau v. Fox Entertainment Group, Inc., 522 F.3d 271, 276 (2d Cir.2008). "The inquiry still requires selection of the more appropriate forum, since the first-filed rule is only a presumption that may be rebutted by proof of the desirability of proceeding in the forum of the second-filed action." Id. (internal quotations omitted). Indeed, there are recognized exceptions to the first to file rule, which must be proved by the second-filing party. Id. For example, the Second Circuit has recognized two exceptions: (1) where the balance of convenience favors the second-filed action, and (2) where special circumstances warrant giving priority to the second suit, such as where a first-filing party engages in forum shopping or anticipatory filing. Id. at 275-76 (internal quotations and citations omitted).
In Cadle, the Fifth Circuit indicated that a second-filed court plays a limited role when presented with a motion to transfer or stay based on the first to file rule. See Cadle, 174 F.3d at 605. This role is to decide whether the moving party in the second-filed court has demonstrated a "substantial overlap" between the two suits. Id. If the moving party satisfies this overlap requirement, the second-filed court allows the first-filed court to "resolve the question of whether both [cases] should be allowed to proceed." Id. (internal quotations omitted) (explaining that first-filed court performs the "balancing act" in deciding how to maximize judicial economy between two suits and that, by playing a limited role, the second-filed court avoids "entrenching on the authority of its sister court").
The Tenth Circuit has not expressly spoken on the role of the second-filed court when presented with a motion to transfer pursuant to the first to file rule. District courts within the Tenth Circuit have stated that "the preference is for the court of first-filing to decide the application of the first to file rule." See Wallace B. Roderick Revocable Living Trust v. XTO Energy, Inc., 679 F.Supp.2d 1287, 1296 (D.Kan. 2010) (explaining general preference for first-filed court to decide where secon-dfiled case will proceed, but finding that the
Second-filed courts in other jurisdictions have also expressed a general preference for deferring to first-filed courts for deciding where the second case should proceed. See Daimler-Chrysler Corp. v. General Motors Corp., 133 F.Supp.2d 1041, 1044 (N.D.Ohio 2001) ("It is more appropriate, as a matter of judicial comity, for the court of first filing to determine whether to retain or relinquish jurisdiction, rather than leave it to the court of later filing to make that decision."); Cicero, 90 J. Pat. & Trademark Off. Soc'y at 561-62 (explaining that courts generally "grant forms of relief deferring to the first-filed court to determine the fate of the second-filed action" and that the first to file rule functions as a "traffic regulator" dictating "which forum would decide the fate of the second-filed case"). This general rule of deference includes deferring to first-filed courts for the application of any equitable exceptions to the first to file rule, once the second-filed court has determined that there is a sufficient overlap between the two cases. See id. at 561-62 (explaining that the "first-filed court decides not only venue issues generally [such as convenience factors presented by § 1404(a) motions], but also specifically whether the second-filer sustained its burden to establish exceptions to the [first to file rule].") (citing cases); id. at 563 (explaining flow chart attached to article and stating that "most courts require that analysis of [first to file rule] exceptions occur in the first-filed courts"). But see Sotheby's, Inc. v. Garcia, 802 F.Supp. 1058, 1065-66 (S.D.N.Y.1992) (second-filed court deciding that movant had demonstrated "special circumstances" exception to the first to file rule and enjoining proceedings in first-filed court).
Based on the above law, the Court concludes that: (1) a second-filed court presented with a motion to transfer or stay pursuant to the first to file rule must make the initial determination of whether the first to file rule generally applies, i.e., whether there is sufficient overlap of parties and issues between the two cases; (2) if the second filer argues for application of an equitable exception to the first to file rule, a second-filed court within the Tenth Circuit has discretion to either (a) allow the first-filed court to decide whether an exception applies, or (b) decide for itself whether an exception applies; and (3) there is a preference for allowing the first-filed court to decide whether an exception applies.
As an initial matter, the Court must determine if movants Freedmen Defendants and Federal Defendants have shown that the first to file rule generally applies. This requires analysis of three considerations: (1) the chronology of actions; (2) the similarity of parties, and (3) the similarity of issues. See Shannon's Rainbow, LLC, 683 F.Supp.2d at 1278 (citing Alltrade, Inc., 946 F.2d at 625); Wallace B. Roderick Revocable Living Trust,
The D.C. Action was filed in 2003, and this action was filed in 2009. Nonetheless, the Cherokee Nation argues that this action should be considered the "first filed" action because the "[t]he D.C. Court never acquired jurisdiction of the Cherokee Nation." (Pl.'s Resp. to Mot. to Transfer 15.) According to the Cherokee Nation, the case before this Court was the "first, and only to acquire jurisdiction over all the parties to the 1866 Treaty as modified by statute," and therefore the first to file rule should "not operate to divest this Court of its jurisdiction over this action." (Id.) In essence, the Cherokee Nation argues that this case should be considered the "first-filed" action because the first-filed court currently lacks jurisdiction over it.
This argument misses the mark for two reasons. First, as explained below, the parties need not be identical in order to transfer pursuant to the first to file rule. The inquiry is whether there is a substantial overlap between the parties and issues, and the overarching goal is to avoid inconsistent rulings between the two cases. Therefore, the Cherokee Nation's current absence from the D.C. Action does not mandate a finding that this was the "first-filed" action between the two cases.
Second, this Court need not address the D.C. Action's jurisdiction, or lack thereof, before taking action pursuant to the first to file rule. See Cadle, 174 F.3d at 603 (party seeking to avoid application of the first to file rule argued that rule did not apply because first-filed court "never had jurisdiction over the claims") (rejecting argument that the first to file rule includes a "precondition that requires the district court to find proper jurisdiction in the first-filed court before applying the rule at all"). The Cadle court explained that such a requirement would undercut the "values of economy, consistency, and comity that the rule is designed to maximize" because any "jurisdictional ruling of the second-filed court would either conflict with a ruling already made, rehash an issue already decided, or trench on a sister court's treatment of the issue before it has been reached there." Id. at 604. In this case, were the Court to preclude application of the first to file rule based on the D.D.C.'s lack of jurisdiction over the Cherokee Nation, it would be both (1) "rehashing" the D.C. Circuit's ruling regarding the Cherokee Nation's immunity, and (2) "trenching"
In its current procedural posture,
The Court concludes that D.C. Individual Plaintiffs are substantially similar to Freedmen Defendants in this case because they are all representative Freedmen who desire a certain status within the Cherokee Nation. Further, the D.C. Individual Plaintiffs and Freedmen Defendants are represented by the same counsel. For purposes of deciding the questions presented in both lawsuits, it makes little difference which individual Freedmen are parties. D.C. Individual Plaintiffs are simply other Freedmen asserting rights contrary to the declaratory relief sought by the Cherokee Nation in this case, and they could be readily substituted as the defendants in this case without effecting any substantive change in the declaratory action. In addition, the presence of Freedmen Band as a plaintiff in the D.C. Action renders the parties in the two suits even more similar because all Freedmen Defendants are members of this political organization, as evidenced by the uncontroverted affidavits of Freedmen Defendants. (See Freedmen's Mot. to Transfer, at Exs. N-Q; Freedmen's Resp. to Mot. to Intervene, at Ex. I.)
The Court further concludes that Chief Smith is "substantially similar" to the Cherokee Nation for purposes of the first to file rule. Chief Smith and Cherokee Nation are represented by the same counsel in both suits, and the Court has no reason to believe Chief Smith has any conflicting interests with the Cherokee Nation. In other words, Chief Smith's position in the D.C. Action with respect to Freedmen's status and rights under the 1866 Treaty is identical to the Cherokee Nation's position asserted in this declaratory judgment action. There is of course one glaring difference between the Cherokee Nation and Chief Smith—the Cherokee
With respect to the issues presented in each suit, Federal Defendants contend that "both cases involve a single core merits issue—whether the Treaty of 1866 guarantees the Cherokee Freedmen certain rights within the Cherokee Nation." (Fed. Defs.' Mot. to Transfer 12.) Similarly, Freedmen Defendants argue:
(Freedmen's Mot. to Transfer 9.) Freedmen Defendants are referring to Chief Smith's "supplement" to his motion to dismiss in the D.C. Action, wherein he argues that the pendency of this action is relevant to the fourth factor of his Rule 19(b) motion. Specifically, Chief Smith argued:
(Freedmen's Mot. to Transfer, Ex. I, at 2 (emphasis added).)
Thus, the Cherokee Nation has conceded in the D.C. Action that there is a substantial overlap of core issues and that D.C. Plaintiffs' claims in the D.C. Action would be proper counterclaims in this action. In addition, the Freedmen Defendants have asserted counterclaims in this case against the Cherokee Nation that are nearly identical to those asserted by D.C. Individual Plaintiffs against Chief Smith in the D.C. Action. Based on these admissions by Chief Smith and review of pleadings in both cases, the Court finds that there is a sufficient degree of overlap and similarity between the issues presented in each case. Both actions ultimately turn on interpretation of the 1866 Treaty and subsequent congressional actions, and both cases seek a resolution to the question of whether Freedmen are entitled to rights originally bestowed in the 1866 Treaty.
For the above-stated reasons, Federal Defendants and Freedmen Defendants have met their initial burden of showing: (1) the D.C. Action was first filed; (2) there is sufficient similarity between the current parties in this action and the D.C. Action; and (3) there is sufficient similarity between the issues presented in this action and the D.C. Action. Therefore, the Court concludes that the first to file rule generally applies.
The Cherokee Nation's main argument against application of the first to file rule is that "special circumstances" exist, such that this action should proceed here despite the pendency of the D.C. Action. Specifically, the Cherokee Nation argues that "[s]overeign immunity is one of those special circumstances that warrants a departure from the first-filed rule here." (Pl.'s Resp. to Mots. to Transfer 12.) The Cherokee Nation relies principally on two district court decisions in support of its argument: Sotheby's Incorporated v. Garcia, 802 F.Supp. 1058 (S.D.N.Y.1992) (finding "special circumstances" warranted giving priority to the second-filed suit because, inter alia, first-filed suit did not include one of the defendants in the second-filed action; because such defendant was not amenable to suit in first-filed court; and because first-filed court did not intend to resolve issue of title relevant to the second-filed proceeding); and MEI Technologies. v. Detector Networks International, Memorandum Opinion and Order, at * 6 (D.N.M. July 24, 2009) (not available on electronic database) (attached as Ex. O to Pl.'s Resp. to Mots. to Transfer) (holding that party "cannot circumvent a forum selection clause simply by filing a lawsuit in a different forum and then asserting that the first-filed doctrine prevents a subsequent lawsuit in the proper forum"). The Cherokee Nation analogizes the forum selection clause at issue in MEI Technologies to its sovereign immunity.
As explained above, a second-filed court may defer to the first-filed court to determine whether the second action qualifies for any "exceptions" to the first to file rule, see supra Part II.B, and the Court finds it proper to do so here. In motions currently pending in the D.C. Action, D.C. Plaintiffs have argued that filing this action functions as a waiver of the Cherokee Nation's immunity in all federal forums, including in the D.C. Action. Thus, the "special circumstances" argued by the Cherokee Nation in support of a first to file exception—its immunity in the first-filed forum—may become non-existent if Judge Kennedy decides that filing of this action functions as a waiver of immunity in the D.C. Action. This issue is essentially whether the Cherokee Nation enjoys some type of "forum immunity" from suit, such that it may select not just whether it will allow adjudication of an issue against it but in what forum that issue must be adjudicated. (See Pl.'s Resp. to Mots. to Transfer 10 (arguing that "a tribe can be sued in one particular federal court on a claim and be protected by sovereign immunity from the claim proceeding forward against it in that court, but can waive its sovereign immunity to litigate that very claim in a different federal court").) The Cherokee Nation urges this Court to resolve that question prior to Judge Kennedy, grant a "special circumstances" exception to the first to file rule, and allow this case to proceed despite the existence of the D.C. Action. However, the first to file "exception" question being argued before this Court is completely intertwined with similar legal issues that are also pending before the first-filed court. Under these somewhat unique circumstances, the Court exercises its discretion to defer to the first-filed court to determine whether the Cherokee Nation's sovereign immunity from suit in the D.C. Action warrants an exception to the first to file rule.
After determining whether the first to file rule generally applies, courts within the Tenth Circuit have the option of staying the second-filed action pending the outcome of the first-filed action, rather than immediately transferring the case to the first-filed court. See, e.g., Cessna Aircraft
In this case, the Court concludes that transfer is superior to a stay. First, this Court has exercised its discretion to defer to Judge Kennedy as to whether the Cherokee Nation can demonstrate an exception to the first to file rule. A transfer more readily accomplishes this objective than a stay. Second, Judge Kennedy is in the best position to determine where this second-filed action (1) legally must proceed, and/or (2) in the interests of justice should proceed. This decision will be informed by relevant proceedings and rulings in the D.C. Action, and efficiency is advanced by having one judge decide the issues. Judge Kennedy knows the history of the D.C. Action, is intimately familiar with all appellate rulings, and has pending before him several motions that will impact the overall appearance and posture of the D.C. Action. Finally, the Court is not, as argued by the Cherokee Nation, depriving the Cherokee Nation of "the incidents of its sovereign immunity" by transferring this action pursuant to the first to file rule. The Cherokee Nation voluntarily filed this action and waived its immunity from suit. It did so while the D.C. Action was still pending. A transfer to the D.D.C., for that court to decide the proper venue for this action, does not somehow inject the Cherokee Nation as a party into the D.C. Action or otherwise deprive the Cherokee Nation of immunity asserted in the D.C. Action. This Court is simply allowing the first-filed court, which has been dealing with these parties and issues since 2003, to decide the consequences of the Cherokee Nation's decision to file this case while the D.C. Action was still pending. In short, for purposes of deciding whether this Court or Judge Kennedy should decide the proper venue for this action, the Cherokee Nation has presented no persuasive reason for ignoring the general rule of deference to the first-filed court.
By transferring this action pursuant to the first to file rule, the Court is not refusing to hear the merits, declining to hear the merits, or in any way indicating that it should not ultimately decide the merits. Nor is the Court making any rulings as to which forum is legally proper and/or will better serve the interests of justice. The Court is simply deferring to the first-filed forum to determine whether the related actions must and/or should proceed in the D.D.C., must and/or should proceed simultaneously in two different forums, must and/or should proceed in this Court, or some other formulation. See generally Cicero, 90 J. Pat. & Trademark Off. Soc'y at 562 (explaining that first to file rule merely functions as a "traffic regulator" and that "cases transferred [to the first-filed forum] pursuant [to the first-filed rule] may be freely re-transferred under § 1404(a), provided that one satisfies the requisites for such re-transfer"). Oklahoma may indeed be the proper or more desirable forum for adjudication of this action; however, the Court will defer to Judge Kennedy on this question due to the long history of similar litigation before him and the general rule of deference to a first-filed court.
Federal Defendants and Freedmen Defendants have met their burden of showing that the first to file rule generally applies to this action and the D.C. Action. Therefore, the Court exercises its discretion to transfer this action to the D.D.C. based on the first to file rule.
Federal Defendants and Freedmen Defendants' motions to transfer (Docs. 18 and 20) are GRANTED pursuant to the first to file rule. This action is hereby TRANSFERRED to the District Court for the District of Columbia as related to the first-filed case of Vann v. Salazar, 1:03CV-1711-HHK. Alternative requests to stay this action (Doc. 22) are DENIED as moot. This Order starts the clock for the Cherokee Nation and Federal Defendants to answer or otherwise respond to Freedmen Defendants' counterclaims and cross-claims. Cherokee Freedmen Class Representatives' Motion to Intervene (Doc. 8) remains pending.