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Sovereignty Tribal Court
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Sovereignty Nation · Tribal Court

Know Your Court.
Know Your Rights.

A courthouse rooted in ancestral land — where tribal law governs child welfare hearings, water rights disputes, land allotments, and the full reach of sovereign authority.

Family CourtPeacemaking CircleAppellate DivisionCivil Division
Spoke I

Jurisdiction & Authority

Before any procedure, any form, any hearing — this court exists because the Sovereignty Nation exists. Understand the ground on which this courthouse stands.

Why This Court Exists

American Indian tribes are sovereign entities — domestic dependent nations with the authority to determine their own governing structures, their own laws, and their own court systems. The Sovereignty Tribal Court exercises all powers of a sovereign nation except those explicitly ceded by treaty or abrogated by federal law.

This is not a court modeled after state benches. It is a court grown from this land, shaped by the values of the Sovereignty Nation, and accountable first to the people who walk through its doors.

"Sovereignty is not a word we use in legal briefs alone. It is the reason this building was built, the reason these judges were chosen, the reason these proceedings are conducted in the language of our people when we can."

— Chief Judge Margaret Runningwater, Sovereignty Tribal Court

Full Sovereign Authority

Tribes possess all powers of a sovereign nation except those ceded by treaty. Orders issued by this court carry the same legal weight as any state bench — and in matters of tribal membership and reservation land, they carry more.

ICWA Jurisdiction

This court holds exclusive jurisdiction over child welfare proceedings for children residing or domiciled on the reservation. For children living off-reservation, concurrent jurisdiction applies with a presumption favoring tribal court.

Water & Land Rights

Tribal water rights date to reservation establishment — in most prior appropriation systems, these rights are senior to non-Indian users. Land allotment disputes, trust determinations, and heirship matters are resolved here.

Approximately 400 tribal justice systems operate throughout the nation.

The Sovereignty Tribal Court uses a hybrid model — combining western procedural structure with traditional peacemaking practice. Tribal judges are appointed by the Tribal Council and serve fixed terms with full judicial independence in their rulings.

Spoke II

Court Procedures

How proceedings move through this courthouse — from initial filing through hearing, judgment, and appeal. Three divisions, one sovereign authority.

Family Court Division

Custody · ICWA · Child Welfare

ICWA sets minimum federal standards for nearly all Native child custody proceedings, including adoption, voluntary and involuntary termination of parental rights, and foster care placement. Congress established higher standards than other child welfare cases.

Evidence Standard
Clear and convincing for foster placement
Active Efforts
Remedial services must be documented
Expert Witness
Qualified expert required for removal
Tribal Notice
10 days minimum before hearing

Parents have the right to an attorney, to examine all reports, to intervene, and to request transfer to tribal court. The tribe has legal standing to request jurisdictional transfer — and retains authority to veto a transfer back to state court.

Peacemaking Circle Division

Restorative · Healing · Community Resolution

In peacemaking, guilt and sentencing are not the goal — healing is. Participants sit in a circle. A Peacemaker guides open conversation. The case is settled only when all participants can unanimously agree on a resolution. This is not compromise; it is restoration.

"The circle does not have a winner's side and a loser's side. Everyone sits at the same distance from the center. That geometry is itself the teaching."

— Elder Thomas Clearwater, Peacemaker, Sovereignty Nation
90%+
Settlement rate<br/>across tribal courts
36+
Federally recognized tribes<br/>with peacemaking authority
Voluntary
All parties must<br/>consent to participate

Appellate Division

Final Authority · Law Interpretation · Constitutional Review

The Appellate Division is the final authority on all legal matters within the Sovereignty Nation. It reviews appeals from the Family Court and Civil Division and interprets tribal laws and the tribal constitution. Its rulings bind all lower proceedings and establish precedent.

Notice of Appeal
30 days from lower court order
Opening Brief
Due 45 days after designation of record
Oral Argument
Granted by panel order only
Spoke III

Forms & Filing

No registration wall. Resources are free and immediate — because access to justice doesn't require a login.

Find Your Filing— answer three questions, get your forms
1
2
3
What type of case?

What type of case brings you here?

Spoke IV

Legal Resources

Reference materials, federal law summaries, self-help guides, and external resources for tribal members and counsel.

Sovereignty Court Guide

Complete printable guide — all procedures, forms checklist, filing fees, key contacts, and a plain-language explanation of your rights in every division. 42 pages. Updated February 2026.

Download PDF

"The adversarial, win-lose system asks: who is right? The peacemaking circle asks: what does this community need to be whole again? Those are not the same question, and they do not have the same answer."

— Associate Judge Diane Twobears, Sovereignty Tribal Court
Spoke V

Contact & Hours

Every division of the Sovereignty Tribal Court, its hours, and how to reach the right person on the first call.

Court Clerk — General Filing

Walk-in filing accepted until 4:00 PM

Family Court Division

Emergency custody hearings: call main line

Peacemaking Circle Division

Intake sessions by appointment

Appellate Division

Filings accepted by mail or in-person only

Civil Division — Land & Water

BIA coordination: schedule in advance

Pro Hac Vice & Outside Counsel

$150 filing fee · Sponsoring attorney required

Emergency Child Welfare Matters

For emergency custody or ICWA matters outside of court hours, contact the Tribal Police Department at (505) 555-0911. A duty judge is available for emergency orders 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.