http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/6420AP_WA_Colvilles_Sued.html
Thursday, May 18, 2006 · Last updated 12:00 a.m. PT
White construction worker sues Colville tribe
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SPOKANE, Wash. -- A white construction worker is suing two Colville tribal corporations, contending that racial slurs by American Indian co-workers caused him to quit his job.
Tribal attorneys say that Christopher Wright's employer, as a tribal entity, is entitled to sovereign immunity and cannot be sued in state court.
Arguments in the case were heard Tuesday before the state Supreme Court in Olympia. It is the first time in more than 25 years that the high court has heard a tribal sovereign immunity case. A ruling is likely months away.
Wright's case hinges on convincing justices that tribes' immunity unfairly shields tribal for-profit corporations doing off-reservation work.
They "can be just running around the state and just not following the law," said Wright's attorney, Breean Beggs. "They can be polluting, they can be manufacturing products that are dangerous, and you can't do anything about it, under their theory."
Tribal attorneys insist that the Colville corporations are immune to state suits.
Tribal attorney Michael Griffin told the high court that Wright is welcome to file his case in tribal court in Nespelem.
"The tribal court is wide open to litigants like Mr. Wright," said Griffin, a lawyer for the Colville Tribal Enterprise Corp. "If Mr. Wright invokes the jurisdiction of the tribal court, he will be heard."
Beggs said Colville tribal law is unclear about whether a non-Indian can sue the tribe in such a case.
Wright, a pipe layer, took a construction job in Oak Harbor in 2002 replacing a water system at Navy housing on Whidbey Island. His employer was the Colville Tribal Services Corp.
The company is one of 14 business enterprises run by the Colville Tribal Enterprise Corp.
[color="Red"]Wright contended that one co-worker "constantly spat on me when I was working in the ditch below him and shouted things at me like 'You're my white bitch.'"
He said two co-workers, without permission, took his Honda for a joyride. Another allegedly called him a "Nazi German bastard" and threatened to kill whites and burn their homes.
He said he repeatedly complained to his boss. Court records show that Colville Tribal Enterprise Corp. officials called one meeting and told workers that racial epithets and harassment wouldn't be tolerated. Wright said the harassment continued.
In February 2003, after eight months on the job, he quit.
In Olympia on Tuesday, several justices seemed leery of trying to find a dividing line between the Colville tribes and their businesses.
"The tribe owns the corporation, controls the corporation, gets the proceeds from the corporation," Justice Richard Sanders told Beggs. "What more do you need?"
Tribal sovereign immunity from lawsuits is well established in federal law. In general, Indian tribes can be sued in local or state courts only when the tribe agrees to the suit or when Congress allows it.
The goal of this longstanding immunity, according to Supreme Court rulings and legal experts, was to protect the tribes from being stripped of their land and other assets.
It's one thing to protect the tribe, Beggs told the high court Tuesday, but it's quite another to protect for-profit corporations they create.
That's a distinction without a difference, the tribal attorneys say.
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"A careful study of anti-semitism prejudice and accusations might be of great value to many jews,
who do not adequately realize the irritations they inflict." - H.G. Wells (November 11, 1933)
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