30 U.S. (5 Pet.) 1 (1831)
Cherokee Nation v. Georgia was a landmark case decided by the United States Supreme Court in 1831, which clarified the ambiguous political status of Native American tribes within the United States legal framework.
Does the Cherokee Nation qualify as a foreign nation under Article III of the U.S. Constitution, thereby allowing it to bring suit in the U.S. Supreme Court?
Native American tribes are considered 'domestic dependent nations', as defined by the relationship between the tribes and the federal government. This unique status implies neither full foreign sovereignty nor complete subjugation to state law.
The Supreme Court held that the Cherokee Nation did not constitute a foreign nation but rather a domestic dependent nation, thus lacking the standing to sue as a foreign state under Article III of the Constitution.
Cherokee Nation v. Georgia is of paramount significance for law students and legal scholars due to its lasting impact on the legal concept of tribal sovereignty and the federal-tribal relationship. It carved out a distinct legal category for Native American tribes, one that has influenced federal Indian law for nearly two centuries. The decision confronted legal assumptions about sovereignty and set the stage for subsequent landmark decisions such as Worcester v. Georgia, further delineating the scope of state versus federal power in Indian affairs. Today, the domestic dependent nation status continues to shape governmental interactions with tribes, informing debates on jurisdiction, land rights, and tribal governance.