Group 11: General Provisions · Last amended September 24, 2019 · Last verified July 13, 2026
In one sentenceRule 82.5 tells Washington superior courts when to dismiss or may transfer a case in favor of a federally recognized tribe's court, when to recognize and enforce that tribal court's orders and judgments, and how the two courts may communicate about a shared case.
(a)Indian tribal court; exclusive jurisdiction. Where an action is brought in the superior court of any county of this state, and where, under the Laws of the United States, exclusive jurisdiction over the matter in controversy has been granted or reserved to an Indian tribal court of a federally recognized Indian tribe, the superior court shall, upon motion of a party or upon its own motion, dismiss such action pursuant to CR 12(b)(1), unless transfer is required under federal law.
(b)Indian tribal court; concurrent jurisdiction. Where an action is brought in the superior court of any county of this state, and where, under the Laws of the United States, concurrent jurisdiction over the matter in controversy has been granted or reserved to an Indian tribal court of a federally recognized Indian tribe, the superior court may, if the interests of justice require, cause such action to be transferred to the appropriate Indian tribal court. In making such determination, the superior court shall consider, among other things, the nature of the action, the interests and identities of the parties, the convenience of the parties and witnesses, whether state or tribal law will apply to the matter in controversy, and the remedy available in such Indian tribal court.
(c)Enforcement of Indian tribal court orders, judgments or decrees.
(1)The superior courts of the State of Washington shall recognize, implement and enforce the orders, judgments and decrees of Indian tribal courts in matters in which either the exclusive or concurrent jurisdiction has been granted or reserved to an Indian tribal court of a federally recognized tribe under the Laws of the United States, unless the superior court finds the tribal court that rendered the order, judgment or decree (A) lacked jurisdiction over a party or the subject matter, (B) denied due process as provided by the Indian Civil Rights Act of 1968, or (C) does not reciprocally provide for recognition and implementation of orders, judgments and decrees of the superior courts of the State of Washington.
(2)The superior court may attempt to resolve any issues raised regarding an Indian tribal court money judgment by contacting the Indian tribal court that issued the judgment. The superior court shall follow the procedure for communicating with the Indian tribal court outlined in subsection (d) of this rule.
(d)Communication between Superior Court of Any County of this State and Indian Tribal Court.
(1)A superior court of any county of this state may communicate with any Indian tribal court concerning cooccurring proceedings, whether they are active or have been concluded. The parties shall provide to the respective courts the identity, contact information, and a case or docket number of the other court’s proceedings to facilitate this communication.
(2)The superior court may allow the parties to participate in the communication. If the parties are not able or allowed to participate in the communication, they shall be given an opportunity to present facts and legal arguments in writing before a decision is made regarding the communication, or the subject of communication, by the superior court. The Indian tribal court’s procedures and customs shall determine the parties’ participation in the Indian tribal court proceedings.
(3)The superior court shall make a record of a communication made pursuant to this section. The parties shall be informed promptly of the communication by the superior court and granted access to the record. The Indian tribal court’s procedures shall determine whether and how a record is made in
Indian tribal court proceedings, and whether and how parties may be informed of the communication or granted access to a record of the communication.
(4)Except as otherwise provided in subsection (3) of this section, communication between the superior court and the Indian tribal court regarding scheduling, administrative or emergency purposes, and similar matters may occur without informing the parties. The superior court need not make a record of the communication under this section. The Indian tribal court’s procedures shall determine whether and how a record is made in Indian tribal court proceedings of such communication.
(5)For the purposes of this section, “record” means information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or that is RULES OF COURT 1161 stored in an electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable form.
(6)The superior court shall follow the procedures set forth in subsection (3) of this section when communicating regarding adult criminal matters, except as otherwise authorized by law. The Indian tribal court’s procedures shall determine the requirements for communication regarding adult criminal matters in Indian tribal court proceedings. Superior courts and Indian tribal courts may communicate about the orders prohibiting contact as set forth in subsections (1) - (5) above.
Amendment History
Adopted June 13, 1995, effective Sept. 1, 1995; amended September 5, 2019, effective September 24, 2019.
Plain-English Summary
Rule 82.5 addresses jurisdiction shared or divided between Washington superior courts and the courts of federally recognized Indian tribes, and it covers three distinct topics under that heading rather than one.
Subsections (a) and (b) set the jurisdictional starting point. Where federal law grants or reserves exclusive jurisdiction over a matter to a tribal court, the superior court must dismiss the action under CR 12(b)(1), on a party's motion or its own initiative, unless federal law calls for transfer instead of dismissal. Where jurisdiction is concurrent between the state and tribal courts, the superior court has discretion -- not a duty -- to transfer the case if the interests of justice require it, weighing the nature of the action, the parties' interests and identities, convenience to the parties and witnesses, whether state or tribal law applies, and the remedy available in the tribal court.
Subsection (c) addresses enforcement rather than jurisdiction: Washington superior courts must recognize, implement, and enforce the orders, judgments, and decrees of a tribal court that held exclusive or concurrent jurisdiction, unless the superior court finds the tribal court lacked jurisdiction over a party or the subject matter, denied due process under the Indian Civil Rights Act of 1968, or does not reciprocally recognize and enforce Washington superior court orders. For a tribal money judgment specifically, the superior court may try to resolve any issues by contacting the tribal court that issued it, following the communication procedure set out in subsection (d).
Subsection (d) is a detailed communication protocol: a superior court may communicate with a tribal court about related pending or concluded proceedings, with the parties supplying both courts the contact information and case or docket numbers needed to make that possible. The court may let the parties take part in the communication; if they cannot or are not allowed to, they must get a chance to submit facts and arguments in writing beforehand. The superior court must record most communications and inform the parties, with access to that record, though communications limited to scheduling, administrative matters, or emergencies may happen without notifying the parties or keeping a record on the state side. Communications touching adult criminal matters must follow the stricter, record-keeping procedure; the rule separately confirms that superior courts and tribal courts may communicate about orders prohibiting contact under the full range of procedures set out above, not only the strict one. Subsection (d)(5) defines the term record, for these purposes, as information inscribed on a tangible medium or stored electronically and retrievable in perceivable form.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happens if a tribal court has exclusive jurisdiction over a matter filed in Washington superior court?
The superior court must dismiss the action under CR 12(b)(1), on motion of a party or its own motion, unless federal law requires transfer to the tribal court instead of dismissal.
What if state and tribal courts share concurrent jurisdiction over the matter?
The superior court may, not must, transfer the case to the tribal court if the interests of justice require it, after weighing the factors listed in Rule 82.5(b).
Will a Washington superior court enforce a tribal court's judgment?
Generally yes. Rule 82.5(c)(1) requires recognition and enforcement unless the tribal court lacked jurisdiction, denied due process under the Indian Civil Rights Act of 1968, or the tribe does not reciprocally enforce Washington superior court orders.
Can a superior court judge communicate directly with a tribal court about a shared case?
Yes, under Rule 82.5(d), subject to informing the parties and keeping a record for most communications -- though communications about scheduling, administration, or emergencies do not require notice to the parties or a record on the state side.
Do the parties get to take part in court-to-court communications under Rule 82.5?
The superior court may allow it. If the parties cannot or are not permitted to participate, they must be given an opportunity to present facts and legal arguments in writing before the communication or its subject is decided.
What counts as a "record" of a communication under Rule 82.5?
Rule 82.5(d)(5) defines it as information inscribed on a tangible medium, or stored in an electronic or other medium, that is retrievable in perceivable form.
When was Rule 82.5 adopted?
June 13, 1995, effective September 1, 1995, and later amended effective September 24, 2019.
Source & verification. Rule text and amendment history are
reproduced verbatim from the Washington Superior Court Civil Rules, adopted by the
Supreme Court of Washington. Last verified July 13, 2026. ·
Official source
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