On Monday, June 18, 2012, New York State Supreme Court Justice,
David Demarist ordered the return of 26,160 cartons of unstamped/untaxed
cigarettes and cigars as well as 72 bags of loose tobacco seized by State
Police from Ho-Chunk, Inc. of Nebraska. back in January.
Demarist's
decision read:
"In light
of the lack of any legal authority for the seizure herein, it is the Decision
of this Court, and it is hereby,
ORDERED, that
the Respodents return, immediately, any and all property seized."
The decision is
good and it is good to see an unlawful seizure overturned but there are a few
things not addressed in the decision.
First, there is
no action taken against the St. Lawrence County District Attorney for
unlawfully tying up almost $2 million in product for 6 months.
Nor does the
decision address the cost of the seizure as it relates to the added cost of
transportation, legal costs or the possible expiration of the freshness of the
product.
The Judge
clearly rules that the State has no authority to seize unstamped product being
transported from a Native territory within the State to a location outside the
State. But HCI should not have conceded in their argument
that:
"It is well established, and not
contested by the Petitioner, that the State has the ability to tax
on-reservation sales of cigarettes to non-members of an Indian tribe".
Attea, Moe, Colville and Potawatomi all draw a
distinction on the state's authority to tax products that "Indians"
add value to as opposed to just reselling non-native manufactured products.
"The specific kind of state tax obligation that New York's regulations are designed to enforce--which falls on non Indian purchasers of goods that are merely retailed on a reservation--stands on a markedly different footing from a tax imposed directly on Indian traders, on enrolled tribal members or tribal organizations, or on "value generated on the reservation by activities involving the Tribes," Colville, 447 U. S., at 156-157. Moe, Colville and Potawatomi." (From the Stevens opinion on Attea).
This is basically drawing a distinction from simply retailing a non-native product to non-native purchasers to avoid tax collection and selling a Native made product without tax. Even their courts consistently acknowledges the latter is not taxable.
Native manufactured brands are not "merely retailed on a reservation". They are developed, branded, manufactured, marketed, distributed and available, for the most part, exclusively on Native lands. They are often connected in name or design to our people as well. This distinction also separates taxing an Indian trader directly from the body of law that the states rely on to interfere with Native commerce.
At some point someone has to be bold and brave enough to assert our rights specifically and defend Native to Native trade. That didn't quite happen here. While I acknowledge the risks in providing the courts an opportunity create a precedent in ruling against the rights to trade Native to Native and Territory to Territory, I can't ignore the glaring concession made on the state's right to tax sales on Native lands.
The decision can be found at: http://64.38.12.138/News/2012/06/20/hci061812.pdf