Indian Tax

Gabe Galanda: "The State Tax Man Cometh"

The Indian Country Today Media Network has published a column by Gabe Galanda, "The State Taxman Cometh."

[T]ribal governments and their business partners must redouble their efforts to prevent taxation by the state and its little sibling. Indian leaders should reevaluate the terms of their revenue allocation plans and business partnerships, and related tax laws, to ensure tribal intramural and external dealings are insulated from non-tribal taxation. Tribal laws should be amended and business deals restructured as necessary. Policies of tribal taxation, or not, should also be reexamined, insofar as tribal excise taxation of various reservation-based economic activities will create factors that militate against state or local taxation.

In 2011, the state taxman cometh. Indian country, be prepared.

Gabriel "Gabe" Galanda is a partner at Galanda Broadman PLLC, of Seattle, an American Indian majority-owned law firm.  He is an enrolled member of the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Covelo, California.  He can be reached at 206.691.3631 or gabe@galandabroadman.com, or via galandabroadman.com.

It's High Time to Talk Tribal Marijuana Legalization, and Taxation

The Washington State Legislature is considering a bill that would legalize, regulate and tax marijuana:

House Bill 1550, filed Tuesday, would regulate marijuana much like alcohol. It proposes that pot be sold through state liquor stores to adults age 21 and older, that the sales be taxed and that the state Liquor Control Board issue licenses to commercial growers. Most of the revenue would go to health care, and substance-abuse treatment and prevention.

Washington State's House Bill 1550 follows California's Proposition 19, a failed ballot initiative that had enough voter momentum last fall to cause U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to state that, if passed, the law would violate the federal ban on marijuana manufacture or possession. Even so, state (and in turn federal) legalization of marijuana is a matter of when, not if.

With that reality in mind, tribal governments should begin considering whether to also legalize and regulate marijuana. Any state regulation of marijuana would not extend to Indian Country, even in so-called P.L. 280 states. Instead, tribal laws could govern the production, distribution or sale of marijuana on tribal lands, by tribal entrepreneurs.

Better yet, if states legalize marijuana and attempt to tax it, state taxes would not apply to tribal marijuana business activity. States are limited, if not outright barred, from taxing even non-Indian purchases when value generated on the reservations by activities in which Indians have a significant interest are involved. Washington v. Confederated Tribes of the Colville Indian Reservation, 447 U.S. 134, 156-57 (1980).

Pursuant to the Colville case (an otherwise unmitigated catastrophe for tribal commerce), many tribes and tribal members are manufacturing tobacco products, and doing so free of ever-increasing state sales or business gross revenue taxes. The same legal rationale would apply to the tribal production, distribution and sale of marijuana from the reservation, so long as it is tribal members who are actively engaged in those commercial activities.

Independent of state tax exemption, tribal governments can impose their own excise taxes on tribal members' tobacco business activities. Many tribes do so, although at lower tax rates than imposed by state government. Likewise, tribes could tax tribal member marijuana commercial activities, perhaps at lower rates than states.

Tax abatement is of course how governments balance their goals of attracting and growing industry and jobs within their territory, with raising revenues for governmental programs and services. Tribal marijuana tax revenues could fund traditionally underfunded tribal governmental services and programs, including Indian health care, just as the proponents of House Bill 1550 intend any state marijuana excise taxes to fund state social services.

Indian Country has the sovereignty, tax status, land base, agricultural savvy and business intangibles to really make legalized marijuana happen. For some rural tribes, those attributes are all they have to leverage economically.

Best of all, any state-tax-exempt tribal purveyor of legalized marijuana would have a potentially significant competitive tax advantage over any non-Indian purveyor who would be subject to state marijuana excise taxation. In turn, the tribal private sector would grow.

This is not to say that legalizing tribal marijuana on the reservation will immunize tribal communities from the negative socio-economic effects of drug activity. Native Americans are afflicted with some of the highest rates of drug and alcohol abuse, most recently at the hands of methamphetamine. So great care must be taken to not exacerbate that epidemic. Even so, the business case for tribal marijuana legalization, as for tribal tobacco or Indian gaming commerce, is premised upon tax-exempt sales, from tribal lands, to non-Indians -- non-Indians who would take their purchased marijuana with them back to wherever it was they came from.

This is also not to say that there would not be collateral sovereign and self-governance challenges associated with tribal marijuana legalization. In states where medicinal marijuana has been legalized, tribal employers are already facing awkward requests from employees who claim the need to use marijuana to treat disabilities and thus, seek some form of "reasonable accommodation" to exempt them from anti-drug personnel policies. Such requests beg questions about the applicability of federal employment laws of general applicability, to tribal employers, and represent the perfect storm for the next legal challenge to sovereignty. Even more profound is the potential attraction of drug-related criminal or other undesirable activity on law enforcement-thin reservations.

[Update: An August 23, 2011 Seattle Times feature highlights the law enforcement dilemma yet implicitly underscores how the current federal prohibition on marijuana creates a black market, which a legalization, regulation and taxation regime would help eradicate both in and beyond Indian Country.]

This is also not to say that a tribal law that legalizes, regulates and taxes reservation-based marijuana commerce, even parallel with such state law, would be legally bullet-proof. Most notably, while the U.S., according to Attorney General Holder, currently turns a blind eye to medicinal marijuana activities that do not rise to the level of cartel-style drug trafficking, the Feds would most certainly give heightened legal scrutiny to tribally-legalized marijuana commercial activities. This is especially critical given the federal character of much of Indian Country, and the likelihood that the U.S. would invoke its federal trust responsibility in this regard (after centuries of conveniently ignoring that duty).

But Indian Country has faced such concerns and potential impediments before, with cigarettes, alcohol, fireworks, gaming, you name it. Yet Indian people have forged ahead. And notwithstanding the double standards that have emerged from tribal citizens pushing the legal and political envelope -- e.g., "value generated from the reservation" and "essential governmental function" -- the Tribes have prevailed, and Native American economies have resurged.

It is high time for Indian Country to begin seriously talking about legalizing marijuana as a means to diversify and sustain the tribal private sector and perhaps create a tribal excise tax base.

Gabriel "Gabe" Galanda is a partner at Galanda Broadman PLLC, of Seattle, an American Indian majority-owned law firm.  He is an enrolled member of the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Covelo, California.  He can be reached at 206.691.3631 or gabe@galandabroadman.com, or via galandabroadman.com. This information is not intended to create an attorney/client relationship and shall not be construed as legal advice.

Oh, That Old Line

According to Frank Fisher, Seneca County attorney:

“We just want … everyone to pay their fair share of taxes. Who could argue with that?’’

That is in reference to Seneca County's "push to foreclose on the five [Cayuga Nation] properties before the federal appeals court rules in the Oneida Indian Nation case."

You see, Seneca County conveniently (or perhaps ignorantly) ignores the fact that it is likely already getting its "fair share" of taxes, for use in providing local services. In fact, the County is probably overcompensated for any services that they provide to local tribal members.

Under the economics of “tax exporting,” it is frequently tribal governments – not state or local governments – that bear a disproportionate financial burden associated with taxation vis-à-vis local services rendered. One study, for example, found that

On most reservations, there are few retail stores and tribal members must go off reservation and pay state taxes on everything they buy. Nationwide, this amounts to $246 million annually in tax revenues to state governments, while states expend only $226 million annually on behalf of reservation residents.

That reality begs the question: why isn't Seneca County interested in negotiating some form of compact with the Cayuga Indian Nation, to resolve its property tax dispute? Intergovernmental tax compacting -- as suggested by the U.S. Supreme Court in Oklahoma Tax Commission v. Citizen Band of Potawatomi Tribe of Oklahoma, 498 U.S. 505, 515 (1991) -- allows for taxation to be commensurate with services rendered, taking into account the unique situations that exist between tribes and their neighbor governments.

Mr, Fisher, perhaps it is Seneca County who is not "paying its fair share of taxes" -- for services rendered to Cayuga Indian Nation citizens.

Gabriel "Gabe" Galanda is a partner at Galanda Broadman PLLC, of Seattle, an American Indian majority-owned law firm.  He is an enrolled member of the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Covelo, California.  He can be reached at 206.691.3631 or gabe@galandabroadman.com, or via galandabroadman.com.

More Legal Challenges Ahead for Tribes in 2011

Anthony Broadman is featured in a column in Indian Gaming magazine, More Legal Challenges Ahead for Tribes in 2011.

Tribal governments have educated states regarding tribal sovereignty, tribal governmental gaming, and the risk of attacking tribes and their casinos in the courtroom. So much so that, while high profile tribal-state disputes remain and continue, a new generation of intergovernmental fight may soon outnumber them. States’ younger siblings – counties, cities, and municipalities – do not yet understand tribal sovereignty. And as local governments struggle to fund operations and please an increasingly fickle local electorate, look for more disputes like we’ve seen recently in the non-gaming context, at Oneida, Passamaquoddy, Cayuga, and elsewhere.

The tribal-federalist system puts tribes in the awkward position of possessing a right to government-to-government relations with the United States and the individual states, but still needing, at times, to act as local governments. The jurisdictional overlap with other local governments not surprisingly drives tax and services disputes, and can sour local relationships. Counties often fail to perceive tribes as governments. And when a tribe undertakes economic development “in” a county, casino or not, it should expect a fight. Even when a county first welcomes economic development, later versions of the same local government can see tribal ventures as potential revenue sources, which they attack accordingly.

Tribes can and will fight inappropriate local government activity in federal court. But litigation should be the last resort. Not only are federal (and state) courts unfriendly to tribal interests, but, as compared to cities and counties, tribes have far more to lose on their own behalf and on that of their sister tribes. Tribal governments should explore constructive government-to-government arrangements even at the local level, under which tribes can secure some measure of certainty by binding counties, cities, and their future leaders. The intergovernmental agreement may be commonplace with states, but it is difficult for their younger siblings to grasp. As difficult as it may seem to stoop the local governmental level, counties and cities will not educate themselves. It is up to Tribes to school local governmental actors, teach them how to behave like good neighbors, and secure the kind of jurisdictional and legal certainty necessary for sustainable economic growth.

Anthony Broadman is a partner at Galanda Broadman PLLC, of Seattle, an American Indian majority-owned law firm.  His practice focuses on company-critical business litigation and representing tribal governments. He can be reached at 206.691.3631 or anthony@galandabroadman.com, or via galandabroadman.com.

2011 Gaming Industry Forecast: Year of the ‘New Normal’

Gabe Galanda is featured in Casino Enterprise Magazine's 2011 Gaming Industry Forecast.

Indian Country, be warned: the state tax man cometh in 2011.

In the coming year, state and local government will aggressively attempt to tax tribal governmental gaming proceeds. The states are facing a $112 billion budget deficit maelstrom, and desperately looking for novel revenue sources. Offices of state governors, treasurers and revenue agents and local tax assessors, not to mention state legislators and county officials, are already looking to the tribal gaming industry to replenish state coffers.

Congress has declared that Indian gaming activities cannot be taxed. Period. States must remember that the United States Constitution vests the Federal Government with authority over tribal “commerce,” in recognition of the inherent sovereignty of tribal governments, and as such, Indian tribes and tribal members are exempt from state taxation within tribal territory. Period.

For these reasons, the federal appellate courts have time and again foreclosed efforts of states like California that demand a percentage of a tribe’s net gaming revenues, most recently saying that such a revenue-sharing demand constitutes not only bad faith, but an illegal tax on Indian gaming.

Still, as log as tribal governmental gaming is profitable, “rational actors” in state and local government will attempt to impose “fees” on tribal gaming manufacturers, distributors and service suppliers. To be clear, “fees” that resemble taxes on Indian gaming proceeds have also been struck down by the federal circuit courts. But that will not stop states from assessing fees and forcing the issue of whether the fees are illegal taxes into a state or federal – meaning non-tribal ¬ court. They will tax now, and sort out the illegalities later.

State and local tax collectors will also look for any opportunity to tax those net gaming revenues that tribes use for economic development (as expressly intended by IGRA) in partnership with private industry. Whether the subject of state or local taxation is tribal cigarettes, hotel rooms, concessions, or even property, the state tax man cometh.

Accordingly, tribal governments and their gaming enterprises and business partners must redouble their efforts to prevent taxation of the tribal treasury. Indian gaming leaders should re-evaluate the terms of their business partnerships, and related federal, state and tribal tax law, to make sure the deal is bulletproof regarding non-tribal taxation. If necessary to prevent against the possibility of non-tribal tax assessment, deals should be restructured. Do so now rather than wait for the inevitable attack.

Tribal leaders should legislate what matters are, and are not, taxable, as a matter of tribal law. The tribe may desire to impose excise taxes on the on-reservation sales of various commodities, such as cigarettes, fuel or lodging; yet explicitly bar any taxation of certain business activities or of any form of property on tribal lands. In this way, the tribe will help exclude state and local taxation of reservation-based transactions.

Tribes and their gaming business partners must also be vigilant in attacking any state legislation or administrative rulemaking that seeks to impose taxes or “fees” against tribal gaming vendors.

Will your tribe and tribal gaming enterprise be ready when the state tax man cometh in 2011?

Gabriel "Gabe" Galanda is a partner at Galanda Broadman PLLC, of Seattle, an American Indian majority-owned law firm.  He is an enrolled member of the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Covelo, California.  He can be reached at 206.691.3631 or gabe@galandabroadman.com, or via galandabroadman.com.

Oneida: Why An In Rem Exception Would Have Been Wrong

When the Supreme Court remanded Madison County v. Oneida Indian Nation to the Second Circuit yesterday morning, Indian-tax watchers, and adherents to the Court’s long recognition of robust Tribal sovereign immunity, breathed a sigh of relief. No good could have come from this case, and many expected the Court to fashion a new exception to Tribal sovereign immunity, very possibly adopting petitioners’ “immovable property” or in rem exception to Tribal sovereign immunity. Had the Court done so, it would have been wrong. The Court decided to hear the case, in part, to determine “whether tribal sovereign immunity from suit, to the extent it should continue to be recognized, bars taxing authorities from foreclosing to collect lawfully imposed property taxes.” Even from the cert grant, this case spelled disaster.

The Oneida Indian Nation seems to have recognized what was at risk, and wisely mooted the dispute before the Roberts Court could rule on it. After cert was granted to determine whether a state could ignore a tribe’s immunity in foreclosing on tribal property, the Nation waived its sovereign immunity for enforcement of real property taxation through foreclosure. Yesterday the Court remanded the case to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.

Petitioners Madison and Oneida Counties had argued in their merits brief that “Tribal sovereign immunity does not bar in rem foreclosure for nonpayment of real property taxes[.]” Petitioners synthesized City of Sherrill v. Oneida Indian Nation of New York, 544 U.S. 197 (2005) and County of Yakima v. Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakima Indian Nation, 502 U.S. 251 (1992), into a new rule that would be laughable if it weren’t so terrifying. They argued that (1) the Court’s strongest sovereign immunity cases were inapplicable as in personam rather than in rem cases (nevermind sovereign immunity is a matter of subject matter jurisdiction) and (2) that the Court had already allowed something like what Petitioners were asking for when it found congressional authorization for taxation in County of Yakima. But that case didn’t deal directly with sovereign immunity, let alone an in rem exception.

An in rem exception could have swallowed tribal sovereign immunity. States, counties, and other enemies of tribal self-governance might have still been barred from suing tribes. But the exception would have allowed them to “sue,” take, and sell tribes’ property. In adopting the rule, the Court would have destroyed the very purpose of sovereign immunity – whether tribal, federal, or state. That is, to protect assets of many from depredation by few.

In their attack, petitioners ignored precedent dealing directly with the in rem exception to sovereign immunity and holding that it doesn’t exist. United States v. Nordic Village, Inc., 503 U.S. 30, 38 (1992). As Justice Scalia wrote: “[W]e have never applied an in rem exception to the sovereign-immunity bar against monetary recovery, and have suggested that no such exception exists.” Id. Thankfully, we don’t have to witness the intellectual acrobatics necessary to retreat from such a clear statement of the law.

Anthony Broadman is a partner at Galanda Broadman PLLC, of Seattle, an American Indian majority-owned law firm.  His practice focuses on company-critical business litigation and representing tribal governments. He can be reached at 206.691.3631 or anthony@galandabroadman.com, or via galandabroadman.com.

SCOTUS Remand in Oneida Should Yield a Win for Cayugas

Today's decision by the U.S. Supreme Court to remand Madison County v. Oneida Indian Nation to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals leaves intact that Circuit's affirmation of tribal sovereign immunity from state property right enforcement action, at least for the time being. Accordingly, the Cayuga Indian Nation's pending motion to dismiss property tax foreclosure proceedings initiated against them should be dismissed by the U.S. District Court. Gabriel "Gabe" Galanda is a partner at Galanda Broadman PLLC, of Seattle, an American Indian majority-owned law firm.  He is an enrolled member of the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Covelo, California.  He can be reached at 206.691.3631 or gabe@galandabroadman.com, or via galandabroadman.com.

SCOTUS Remands Madison County v. Oneida Case

Today, the U.S. Supreme Court remanded the Madison County v. Oneida Indian Nation of New York case to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, in a per curiam decision.

We granted certiorari, 562 U. S.___(2010), on the questions “whether tribal sovereign immunity from suit, to the extent it should continue to be recognized, bars taxing authorities from foreclosing to collect lawfully imposed property taxes” and “whether the ancient Oneida reservation in New York was disestablished or diminished.” Pet. for Cert. i. Counsel for respondent Oneida Indian Nation advised the Court through a letter on November 30, 2010,that the Nation had, on November 29, 2010, passed a tribal declaration and ordinance waiving “its sovereign immunity to enforcement of real property taxation through foreclosure by state, county and local governments within and throughout the United States.” Oneida Indian Nation, Ordinance No. O-10–1 (2010). Petitioners Madison and Oneida Counties responded in a December 1,2010 letter, questioning the validity, scope, and permanence of that waiver; the Nation addressed those concerns in a December 2, 2010 letter.

We vacate the judgment and remand the case to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. That court should address, in the first instance, whether to revisit its ruling on sovereign immunity in light of this new factual development, and—if necessary—proceed to address other questions in the case consistent with its sovereign immunity ruling. See Kiyemba v. Obama, 559

Indian Country should breath a sigh of relief, at least for the time being.

Gabriel "Gabe" Galanda is a partner at Galanda Broadman PLLC, of Seattle, an American Indian majority-owned law firm.  He is an enrolled member of the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Covelo, California.  He can be reached at 206.691.3631 or gabe@galandabroadman.com, or via galandabroadman.com.

New York Counties Threaten Attack On Indian Lands

Indian Country, this new story is yet more reason to believe that the state tax man cometh and that New York State and its counties, in particular, have returned to being the deadliest enemies of tribal sovereignty.

Seneca and Cayuga counties have initiated a foreclosure action against the Cayuga Nation of New York in an attempt to collect delinquent property taxes owed by the tribe since 2008.

Cayuga County Attorney Fred Westphal said the tribe has until roughly June to pay the taxes owed on five properties in Union Springs and Springport, or the county will move to have the properties foreclosed and sold at auction.

Gabriel "Gabe" Galanda is a partner at Galanda Broadman PLLC, of Seattle, an American Indian majority-owned law firm.  He is an enrolled member of the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Covelo, California.  He can be reached at 206.691.3631 or gabe@galandabroadman.com, or via galandabroadman.com.

Taxing Times in Native America

In "Taxing Times in Native America," which is featured in the January 2011 edition of Bar News, we offer a primer on Indian tax law, especially in Washington State.

The rumors of tax-free Native America have been greatly exaggerated. Ironically, for an ostensibly tax-free zone, Indian tribes and lands are rife with nuanced tax issues that both tribal clients and non-Indian entities interacting with them must confront.

The commonly held but mistaken belief that individual tribal members are exempt from federal income tax tells only the beginning of the story. Both tribal governments and non-tribal parties doing business in Indian Country must carefully navigate the pitfalls of Indian tax law, which can often hinge on subtle factor-based tests and sprawling inquiries into the character of a putative taxable event and its players. If they and their counsel are successful, significant federal, state, and local tax savings can flow from Indian reservation-based transactions.

The article was reposted by indianz.com.

Gabriel "Gabe" Galanda is a partner at Galanda Broadman PLLC, of Seattle, an American Indian majority-owned law firm.  He is an enrolled member of the Round Valley Indian Tribes of Covelo, California.  He can be reached at 206.691.3631 or gabe@galandabroadman.com, or via galandabroadman.com.