|
Vol. 71, No. 8,
August 1998
A New Litigation Strategy
For State And Local Governments:
Removal to Federal Courts
State and local governments increasingly are removing
to federal court actions filed against them in state court that contain
both state law and federal claims. This trend has increased federal court
litigation of what used to be considered "state court" claims.
By Anne Berleman Kearney
With its decisions this past year in International
College of Surgeons and Schacht, the Supreme Court has taken a further step
to expand federal court jurisdiction. These decisions thus require a change
in thought regarding the relationship between federal and state law claims
in an action brought against a state or local government. |
A number of state and local governments are turning to a new and surprising
strategy when actions that contain both state law claims and federal claims
are filed against them in state court: They are removing these cases to
federal court. Although private parties have long removed such cases to
federal court, it is surprising that state and local governments, which
traditionally have looked to state courts to protect their interests, are
now looking to federal courts to provide that protection. It is not entirely
clear what is behind this trend - one could posit a more conservative
federal judiciary or, with the decentralization of political power, state
courts that are more likely to be sympathetic to plaintiffs' interests than
to the government's, or, simply, the efficiency of federal courts. But the
trend can be seen clearly in two recent U.S. Supreme Court cases overturning
decisions of the Seventh Circuit.
This government removal strategy thus far has proved successful despite
several apparent obstacles that would not arise in private litigation. The
best example of this is the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in City of Chicago v. International
College of Surgeons,1 which
held that Chicago could remove to federal court a developer's challenge
to the City Landmark Commission's denial of demolition permits. Even though
this case was by all appearances a garden-variety appeal from a municipal
administrative decision, the Supreme Court concluded that it was sufficient
for purposes of federal court jurisdiction that the developer had included
in its suit a federal constitutional challenge to the Commission's administrative
ruling.
Wisconsin also has adopted this removal strategy, and recently saw the
strategy succeed in the U.S. Supreme Court. In Schacht
v. Wisconsin Dep't of Corrections,2
handed down on June 22, 1998, the Supreme Court unanimously held that Wisconsin
could remove to federal court the suit of a correctional officer against
a state agency (specifically, the Department of Corrections) and certain
state officials in their individual and official capacities.3 The Court determined that the action was properly
removed because the correctional officer's suit included claims alleging
violations of his federal constitutional rights, and even though some of
his other claims - those against the state agency and state officials
in their official capacity - could not be litigated in federal court
since they were barred by the doctrine of sovereign immunity.4
Because
Wisconsin's successful position in Schacht raises some of the same
analytical issues as those considered by the Supreme Court in International
College of Surgeons, it is helpful first to explore the basis for this
earlier decision. In International College of Surgeons, the Court
held that certain actions challenging decisions of state and local governments
may be removed to federal court, even where these challenges predominantly
include state law claims that are brought by in-state citizens and that
therefore do not fall within the original jurisdiction of federal courts.5
In determining whether the local government had properly removed the
case to federal court, the Court in International College of Surgeons
first looked to whether there were any claims "arising under"
federal law. Because such claims were present, the Court directed its attention
to the supplemental jurisdiction statute, 28
U.S.C. §1367.6 That statute,
enacted in 1990 and not previously relied upon by the Court, provides that
"in any civil action of which the district courts have original jurisdiction
[e.g., through the diversity or federal-question statutes], the district
courts shall have supplemental jurisdiction over all other claims that are
so related to claims in the action within such original jurisdiction that
they form part of the same case or controversy."7
The supplemental jurisdiction statute combines the doctrines of pendent
and ancillary jurisdiction, enabling all claims that arise from "a
common nucleus of operative fact" to be brought in federal court.8
The majority in International College of Surgeons found that this
recent jurisdictional statute applied and that its terms were met because
the complaints filed by the developer against the local government contained
well-pleaded issues "arising under" federal law, namely, claims
of federal constitutional due process and equal protection violations.9 Moreover, the developer's state law claims,
which asked for judicial review of the Landmark Commission's determinations
based upon a deferential on-the-record standard, were sufficiently related
to the federal constitutional claims.10
Thus, the Court determined that the entire case fell within the federal
court's jurisdiction - the federal claims within the federal court's
original jurisdiction and the state law claims within the federal court's
jurisdiction by virtue of the supplemental jurisdiction statute.11
In rendering its decision in International College of Surgeons,
the Supreme Court reversed the Seventh Circuit, which had ruled that the
action against Chicago could not be removed because the action - even
though it contained some federal court claims - also contained state
law claims that fell outside the federal court's original jurisdiction.12 Specifically, the majority rejected
the view embraced by the Seventh Circuit that the nature of the state law
claims should be determinative of federal court jurisdiction.13 Instead, the Court shifted the focus away
from the state law claims to the federal claims because "[t]he district
court's original jurisdiction [and thus the basis for federal court jurisdiction]
derives from [the developer's] federal claims, not its state law claims."14 Moreover, the majority stated, "[n]othing
in the jurisdictional statutes suggests that the presence of related state
law claims somehow alters the fact that [the] complaints, by virtue of their
federal claims, were 'civil actions' within the federal court's 'original
jurisdiction.'"15 Indeed,
Justice O'Connor, writing for the Court, concluded that the Seventh Circuit's
interpretation "would effectively read the supplemental jurisdiction
statute out of the books" since the law's very purpose was "to
allow [federal] courts to exercise pendent jurisdiction over claims as to
which original jurisdiction is lacking."16
In dissent,
Justice Ginsburg (joined by Justice Stevens) was taken aback by the apparent
scope of the Court's ruling. Indeed, she termed the majority's ruling in
International College of Surgeons a "watershed decision"
and a "landmark result" because, in her view, it allows a state's
system for handling appeals from administrative agencies to the courts to
be "displaced or dislodged" by any defendant that wants to remove
a case to federal court whenever state law claims are joined with some federal
claims or whenever there is diversity of citizenship.17
The dissent thought that this was not only unwise as a policy matter,
but contrary to two earlier Supreme Court decisions, Chicago,
R.I. & P.R. Co. v. Stude18
and Horton v. Liberty
Mutual Insurance Co.19
These cases suggest that federal district courts do not have original jurisdiction
to sit as appellate courts where a state administrative ruling is being
challenged on the basis of the administrative record.20
The dissent unsuccessfully proposed that, based on these precedents, the
nature of the state law claims should be, at least in some part, determinative
of the federal court's jurisdiction over an action.21
Given this International College of Surgeons backdrop, the Court's
decision in Schacht has a familiar look about it. In Schacht
the Court again focused on the federal claims that were present in the suit.22 In doing so, the Court rejected the
Seventh Circuit's reasoning that since some of the correctional officer's
claims did not fall within the federal court's original jurisdiction because
of the sovereign immunity bar, the action could not be removed to federal
court at all.23
Instead, relying upon International College of Surgeons, the Court
emphasized in Schacht that "the presence of even one claim 'arising
under' federal law is sufficient to satisfy the requirement that the case
be within the original jurisdiction of the district court for removal."24 The Court reasoned that "[the]
federal claims suffice to make the actions 'civil actions' within the 'original
jurisdiction' of the district courts for purposes of removal."25 And, as was the case in International
College of Surgeons, the Court in Schacht concluded that the
presence of related claims over which the district court may not have original
jurisdiction (here, the claims implicating Wisconsin's sovereign immunity)
does not destroy removal jurisdiction.26
Next Page
|