Apex Digital sued Sears to collect an unpaid debt. Sears filed a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), claiming that Apex lacked standing because it had assigned all of its rights in the debt to the CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. The district court agreed with Sears and granted its motion. We now affirm.
I. Background
On July 24, 2006, Apex Digital brought a diversity suit against Sears in the Northern District of Illinois for breach of contract and other related claims. The complaint alleged that over several years, Sears had purchased products from Apex worth in excess of $100 million. According to Apex, Sears accepted delivery but stopped paying for these products in 2005; the outstanding amount due after all potentially applicable credits is at least $8,185,302.24.
Sears responded on August 14 with a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) or, in the alternative, Rule 12(b)(6). Sears claimed that Apex sold and assigned all of its rights in its accounts receivable to CIT and therefore no longer had standing to sue. In support of its motion, Sears attached a letter from Apex dated June 20, 2003, which stated:
We are pleased to inform you that we have entered into a factoring arrangement with The CIT Group/Commercial Services, Inc. (herein “CIT”). Under our agreement with CIT, all of our existing and future accounts receivable have been sold and assigned to CIT. We feel that this arrangement will provide a higher level of service for all our customers.
In accordance with our arrangement with CIT, commencing immediately, payment on all outstanding invoices and all invoices hereafter rendered by us must be made directly to CIT, strictly in accordance with the terms of sale.... In the event of any merchandise returns or claims, you thereof must give prompt notice to CIT.
Apex offered nothing in response to dispute Sears’s factual allegations. Instead, it pointed to perceived defects in Sears’s argument. Apex claimed that its letter to Sears was insufficient to determine the terms of the assignment between Apex and CIT and that, at most, it suggested that at some point in the last three years CIT and Apex had entered into an assignment of collection. Apex claimed that because an assignment of collection does not transfer beneficial ownership to the assignee under Illinois law,
see Ecker v. Big Wheels, Inc.,
Sears replied that the letter established a sale and assignment of all of Apex’s rights in the debt, not merely the right to collect. The district court apparently agreed and granted Sears’s motion on September 27, 2006, noting that the only relevant evidence presented was the letter from Apex’s president stating, “[ujnder our agreement with CIT, all of our existing and future accounts receivable have been *443 sold and assigned to CIT.” The court concluded that, in the absence of further evidence to the contrary, Apex lacked standing to sue. 1 This appeal followed.
II. Analysis
We review
de novo
a district court’s dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Johnson v. Orr,
Standing is an essential component of Article Ill’s case-or-controversy requirement.
Lujan,
Apex claims that at the pleading stage, the “manner and degree of evidence” it needed to establish standing was no evidence at all. Instead, Apex relies on
Lujan
and
Lac Du Flambeau
for the proposition that general factual allegations of standing may suffice.
See Lujan,
But Apex ignores the critical difference between facial and factual challenges to jurisdiction. Facial challenges require only that the court look to the complaint and see if the plaintiff has sufficiently
alleged
a basis of subject matter jurisdiction.
Lawrence v. Dunbar,
In contrast, a factual challenge lies where “the complaint is formally sufficient but the contention is that there is
in fact
no subject matter jurisdiction.”
United Phosphorus, Ltd. v. Angus Chem. Co.,
This difference between facial and factual attacks on jurisdiction was aptly described by the Third Circuit:
The facial attack does offer similar safeguards to the plaintiff [as Rule 12(b)(6) and Rule 56]: the court must consider the allegations of the complaint as true. The factual attack, however, differs greatly for here the trial court may proceed as it never could under [Rule 12(b)(6) or Rule 56]. Because at issue in a factual 12(b)(1) motion is the trial court’s jurisdiction — its very power to hear the case — -there is substantial authority that the trial court is free to weigh the evidence and satisfy itself as to the existence of its power to hear the case. In short, no presumptive truthfulness attaches to plaintiffs allegations, and the existence of disputed material facts will not preclude the trial court from evaluating for itself the merits of jurisdictional claims.
Mortensen v. First Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n,
Sears produced evidence calling Apex’s standing into question — a letter indicating that Apex had sold and assigned
all rights
in its accounts receivable to CIT. Once such evidence is proffered, “[t]he presumption of correctness that we accord to a complaint’s allegations falls away,”
Commodity Trend Serv., Inc. v. Commodity Futures Trading Comm’n,
Having determined that Apex did not meet its burden of proof to establish jurisdiction, the only remaining question before us is purely procedural. Apex notes that the district court never asked for additional briefing or conducted an evidentiary hearing before holding that it lacked jurisdiction. Thus, Apex claims that it never had the opportunity to present evidence that could have defeated Sears’s claim.
We find Apex’s claim to be without merit. Although the court did not hold an evidentiary hearing, Apex could have attached its agreement with CIT to its response to Sears’s motion. It chose not to do so. 2 Furthermore, this case does not present the same concerns as previous cases where we have held that an evidentiary hearing was required.
For example, in
Hemmings v. Barian,
The instant case is distinguishable from Hemmings. First, the court in that case had no information before it on which to base its jurisdictional ruling. The defendant had not brought forward evidence to question the diversity of the parties, so the court had no factual basis for its decision. In contrast, Sears provided the court with concrete evidence that Apex lacked standing to sue, which formed a sufficient factual basis for the district court’s decision.
Moreover, unlike in Hemmings, where the plaintiff made a “clumsy” attempt to invoke diversity jurisdiction, Apex made no attempt whatsoever to refute Sears’s factual allegations. Sears claimed, based on the letter attached to its motion, that Apex had sold and assigned all of its interests to CIT. Apex argued that Sears’s evidence established only an assignment of collection, but it never offered any factual information of its own to support that claim. It did not describe the contours of its relationship with CIT, nor did it attempt to define the assignment that had occurred. *446 The district court therefore had no conflicting facts before it, and, using the evidence that Sears had presented, it determined that no jurisdiction in fact existed.
Although the district court is duty-bound to demand proof of jurisdiction when resolving factual disputes, see
Kanzelberger,
III. Conclusion
In its motion to dismiss, Sears produced evidence that called into question Apex’s standing to sue. In response, Apex brought forward no competent evidence to establish the court’s jurisdiction. Although the court did not conduct an evidentiary inquiry, none was required under the facts of this case. The dismissal of the suit is Affirmed.
Notes
. Apex also filed a motion to vacate the dismissal under Rule 59(e) or, in the alternative, to permit the filing of an amended complaint under Rule 17(a). The district court denied both motions. The Rule 59(e) motion presented largely the same issues before us on appeal, and the Rule 17(a) motion is not before us, so we need not discuss either motion.
. Apex did, however, attach the factoring agreement to its amended complaint, which the district court refused to accept. A review of that agreement reveals the likely reason that Apex withheld it in response to Sears's motion — the agreement stated: "You [Apex] sell and assign to us [CIT], and we purchase as absolute owner, all accounts arising from your sales of inventory or rendition of services which you in your discretion choose to factor with us____" Thus, this agreement further undermines Apex's argument that Sears's evidence established no more than a collection agreement with CIT.
