Case Information
*1 Before CARNES and BARKETT, Circuit Judges, and POLLAK [*] , District Judge.
CARNES, Circuit Judge:
In this putative class action suit, the plaintiffs assert various state law claims based on an alleged scheme by the defendants, GTE Corporation and GTE South, Inc. (collectively "GTE"), to defraud their customers into leasing telephones and paying exorbitant lease charges. GTE filed a motion to dismiss, contending that the Alabama Public Service Commission ("APSC"), which regulates public utilities operating in that state, has exclusive jurisdiction over the plaintiffs' claims. Alternatively, GTE argued APSC has primary jurisdiction over the claims and that the district court should abstain until the plaintiffs' claims were presented to and reviewed by the APSC. Relying on the primary jurisdiction doctrine, the district court concluded that the plaintiffs should first present their claims to the APSC and for that reason dismissed the suit without prejudice. The plaintiffs appealed.
We vacate the district court's order and remand with directions that the case be dismissed on the grounds that federal courts lack subject matter jurisdiction over this state law case because there is an insufficient amount in controversy for diversity jurisdiction to exist, and no federal law question in the complaint for federal question jurisdiction to exist.
I. BACKGROUND
The origin of this lawsuit lies in the deregulation of "customer premises equipment" ("CPE"). GTE, [1] * Honorable Louis H. Pollak, U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, sitting by designation. GTE Corporation is the holding company parent of GTE South, Inc., a local exchange carrier which
provides telecommunications services to customers in Alabama, among other states.
in addition to providing telecommunications services, leases telephones and related equipment, collectively referred to as CPE, to some of its telecommunications services customers. Before 1988, the leasing activity of GTE and other telecommunications providers, including the amount of the lease rates, was subject to federal and state regulation. In the early 1980s, the Federal Communications Commission ("FCC") decided to deregulate the CPE activity of these providers, thereby allowing them to compete freely with other non-telecommunications providers in the market for CPE while the regulation of their telecommunications services continued.
As part of the deregulation plan, the FCC found it necessary to preempt state regulation of CPE activity, but it allowed states to develop their own deregulation plans provided that those plans were implemented by December 31, 1987. In the Matter of Procedures for Implementing the Detariffing of Customer Premises Equipment and Enhanced Services, 99 F.C.C.2d 354 (1984). Working with the telecommunications providers in Alabama, the APSC followed the directive of the FCC and achieved the deregulation of the providers' CPE activity before 1988.
In January of 1997, Chester Smith and three other Alabama residents filed this putative class action lawsuit against GTE. According to the plaintiffs, after its CPE activity had been deregulated, GTE offered to sell at "artificially high prices" phones that were then being leased by its customers. GTE allegedly treated a customer's lack of response to the offer as "an agreement to continue leasing," which the plaintiffs refer to as "an unlawful negative option." The plaintiffs further allege that during the "Deregulation Period"—which they define as January 2, 1988 until the present—GTE has carried out a "fraudulent scheme," which includes charging its customers exorbitant fees for leased telephones, concealing the existence and amount of those charges, failing to inform customers they would be better off purchasing phones from third parties, and in some instances, charging customers for phones that no longer worked or had been returned to GTE. [2]
In their amended complaint, the plaintiffs assert state law claims for fraud, unjust enrichment, breach of contract, and breach of warranty. In addition, the plaintiffs seek equitable relief in Count VI of their complaint, including an injunction preventing GTE from misrepresenting its lease charges on monthly bills As an example of GTE's alleged deceptive nature of lease charges, the plaintiffs state that the charge for a leased phone was listed as "desk phone" under the heading of "local services" and then listed under the heading of "GTE Basic Service" in the monthly bills sent to customers, thereby implying that the charge was part of the regulated basic service and that non-payment for the charge would result in disconnection of the customer's phone service. They contend that not until October 1996 did GTE first use the word "rental" to refer to the lease charges.
and a declaration that the lease agreements for telephones are "null and void from their inception."
The plaintiffs contend that diversity jurisdiction exists over their state law claims, and they seek to certify the following two classes: (1) the "Damages Class," which consists of "all persons who presently reside in Alabama who have leased telephone equipment for residential use from [GTE] at any point in time between January 2, 1988 and the date of this suit," and (2) the "Injunctive Class," the composition of which is identical to the "Damages Class" except that it also includes residents of Kentucky, North Carolina, and Virginia. Although the complaint does not allege the number of members in each of the proposed classes, it does allege that "[i]n mid-1993 [GTE] leased telephone equipment to 36,065 residents of the state of Alabama." Consequently, the "Damages Class" alone consists of more than 36,000 members.
On August 14, 1997, GTE moved for judgment on the pleadings. In its motion, GTE argued that the APSC, which supervises and regulates public utilities in Alabama, had either exclusive or primary jurisdiction over the plaintiffs' claims. GTE requested that the district court dismiss the plaintiffs' suit and effectively require them to present their claims to the APSC. The motion was referred to the magistrate court who ultimately recommended that the district court, under the primary jurisdiction doctrine, stay the proceedings in the lawsuit until the plaintiffs' claims could be heard and decided by the APSC. [3]
Agreeing that the APSC should exercise primary jurisdiction over the plaintiffs' claims, the district court adopted the recommendation of the magistrate court except that it did not order a stay. Instead, the court dismissed the case without prejudice to allow the plaintiffs to "assert their claims before the APSC, with leave to any Party to move the court to reinstate the action on the active docket of the court, if and when appropriate and necessary." The plaintiffs appealed.
On appeal, we raised the question of whether this case involved a sufficient amount in controversy
to establish federal diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. The parties submitted supplemental
briefing on that issue and addressed it at oral argument. Both the plaintiffs and GTE contend that there is a
"Primary jurisdiction is a judicially created doctrine whereby a court of competent jurisdiction may
dismiss or stay an action pending a resolution of some portion of the actions by an administrative
agency."
Wagner & Brown v. ANR Pipeline Co.,
sufficient amount in controversy. However, we conclude that there is not, and that federal question jurisdiction also is not present, with the result that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the case.
II. DISCUSSION
"Federal courts have limited subject matter jurisdiction, or in other words, they have the power to
decide only certain types of cases."
Morrison v. Allstate Indem. Co.,
In this case, neither party has challenged federal court jurisdiction. However, because a federal court
is powerless to act beyond its statutory grant of subject matter jurisdiction, a court must zealously insure that
jurisdiction exists over a case, and should itself raise the question of subject matter jurisdiction at any point
in the litigation where a doubt about jurisdiction arises.
See Fitzgerald v. Seaboard Sys. R.R., Inc.,
760 F.2d
1249, 1251 (11th Cir.1985) ("A federal court not only has the power but also the obligation at any time to
inquire into jurisdiction whenever the possibility that jurisdiction does not exist arises.");
see also Morrison,
In their complaint, the plaintiffs allege that diversity jurisdiction exists over this case, and neither
the defendant nor the district court questioned that allegation.
[4]
Moreover, even after we raised the potential
jurisdictional problem on appeal, both parties maintained in their supplemental briefs that federal jurisdiction
exists over the case. But subject matter jurisdiction exists only where granted by statute, and thus, a federal
court is not bound by the jurisdictional contentions of the parties.
See Morrison,
v. Seaboard Coast Line R.R. Co.,
While both parties argue in their supplemental briefs that this case involves a sufficient amount in controversy to sustain diversity jurisdiction, the plaintiffs also raise the possibility that the FCC's preemption of state regulation of CPE establishes federal question jurisdiction over their claims, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331. Because the plaintiffs originally premised jurisdiction on the diversity of citizenship, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332, and because the parties primarily focus on that basis for jurisdiction, we will address the issue of diversity jurisdiction first.
A. DIVERSITY JURISDICTION
The foundation for federal court diversity jurisdiction—the power to decide cases between citizens
of different states—is Article III of the United States Constitution.
See
U.S. Const. art. III, § 2. However,
when Congress created lower federal courts, it limited their diversity jurisdiction to cases in which there was
a minimum monetary amount in controversy between the parties. See
Snyder v. Harris,
Regarding the amount in controversy requirement, the plaintiffs allege in their complaint the
following: "Although the actual damages claimed by the named Plaintiffs are less than $75,000.00, Plaintiffs
also claim punitive damages against [GTE]. Therefore, the matter in controversy exceeds, exclusive of interest
and costs, the sum of $75,000.00."
[5]
In making this allegation, the plaintiffs appear to have relied on this
Court's holding in
Tapscott v. MS Dealer Serv. Corp.,
class in order to establish diversity jurisdiction over the claims of the entire class.
See id.
at 1358-59.
[6]
However, after the district court in this case dismissed the plaintiffs' suit and they appealed, this Court decided
Cohen v. Office Depot, Inc.,
In light of
Cohen II
and
Lindsey,
which require that any class claim for punitive damages under
Alabama law be divided
pro rata
among all of the class members for amount in controversy purposes, we
put to the parties the question of whether the present case involves a sufficient amount in controversy for
purposes of diversity jurisdiction. They responded that, despite the decisions in
Cohen II
and
Lindsey,
6 Generally, when plaintiffs join in one lawsuit, the value of their claims may not be added together, or
"aggregated," to satisfy the amount in controversy requirement for diversity jurisdiction.
See Zahn v.
International Paper Co.,
7 Decisions of the Fifth Circuit issued prior to October 1, 1981 are binding precedent on this Court.
See Bonner v. City of Prichard,
address an issue is the law of this Circuit, thereby binding all subsequent panels unless and until the first
panel's holding is overruled by the Court sitting en banc or by the Supreme Court.
See Cargill v. Turpin,
In the initial panel decision in Cohen v. Office Depot, Inc.,184 F.3d 1292 (11th Cir.1999) (" Cohen I ") this Court reversed the district court's order of dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. In that case, after the district court had stricken the Florida plaintiffs' punitive damage claim because it had not been properly pled in accordance with Fla. Stat. § 768.72, the court concluded that the plaintiff's class action suit did not satisfy the amount in controversy requirement. See id. at 1294. On appeal, the Court held in Cohen I that Fla. Stat. § 768.72 did not apply to cases filed in federal court, see id. at 1295-99, and relying on Tapscott, concluded that the punitive damages claim could be aggregated to satisfy the amount in controversy requirement for diversity jurisdiction. See id. at 1295.
The defendants in Cohen filed a petition for rehearing in which the Lindsey decision was "belatedly" brought to the Court's attention. See Cohen II,204 F.3d at 1072 . Concluding that Lindsey was controlling on the punitive damages issue under our prior panel precedent rule, we held in Cohen II that the punitive damages claim could not be aggregated, and we affirmed the district court's dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. See Cohen II,204 F.3d at 1073- 77, 83.
punitive damages may still be viewed in the aggregate to satisfy the requisite amount in controversy. In addition, the plaintiffs contend that their claim for attorney's fees and the value of the requested injunctive relief may be viewed in the aggregate, thereby providing additional bases for establishing a sufficient amount in controversy. We address their contentions in that order.
1. Punitive Damages
In arguing that
Tapscott
continues to be controlling authority on the issue of aggregating a class
claim for punitive damages, the parties primarily rehash the same arguments considered and rejected by this
Court in
Cohen II.
They maintain that no conflict exists between
Lindsey
and
Tapscott
because the
Lindsey
Court did not address the same issue as the
Tapscott
Court—whether class members have a "common and
undivided interest" in a claim for punitive damages under Alabama law, thereby permitting a class claim for
punitive damages to be viewed in the aggregate for amount in controversy purposes.
See Snyder,
394 U.S.
at 335,
According to the parties, the
Lindsey
Court simply assumed that punitive damages could not be
viewed in the aggregate under the Supreme Court's decision in
Snyder,
and failed to consider the "common
and undivided interest" exception to the general rule prohibiting aggregation acknowledged by the Supreme
Court in
Snyder,
as well as in its later decision in
Zahn.
Because the
Tapscott
Court subsequently concluded
that Alabama plaintiffs do have a common and undivided interest in a class claim for punitive damages, the
plaintiffs contend that holding from
Tapscott
is the controlling law on the issue of whether such damages can
be viewed in the aggregate. We rejected that very contention in
Cohen II,
Recently, in
H&D Tire and Automotive-Hardware, Inc. v. Pitney Bowes, Inc.,
Like the plaintiff in
Cohen II,
the parties in this case are arguing simply that the decision in
Lindsey
was wrong because, according to them, class members have a "common and undivided interest" in a class
claim for punitive damages.
See Cohen II,
Going beyond their argument that no conflict exists between
Lindsey
and
Tapscott,
the parties
contend that even if there is such a conflict, an exception to the prior panel precedent rule exists where the
first panel to address an issue failed to follow and apply controlling Supreme Court precedent. In support of
this contention, GTE points to
Tucker v. Phyfer,
The plaintiffs point out that the
Tapscott
Court, in considering the nature of punitive damages under
Alabama law and concluding that the class members had a common and undivided interest in those
damages, relied on Alabama Supreme Court cases that were decided after
Lindsey.
But there is no
indication in
Lindsey
that the Court based its decision on the particular nature of Alabama punitive
damages.
See Pitney Bowes,
The parties contend that the "exception" to the prior panel precedent rule recognized in
Tucker
applies
here and prevents
Lindsey
from binding subsequent panels on the issue of aggregating punitive damages.
Because the
Lindsey
Court did not discuss the general aggregation standard noted in
Snyder,
which allows
aggregation of the claims of multiple plaintiffs to satisfy the amount in controversy requirement when the
plaintiffs assert a "single title or right in which they have a common and undivided interest,"
Snyder,
394 U.S.
at 335,
If such an "exception" truly existed, it could end up nullifying the well-established prior panel
precedent rule that is an essential part of the governing law of this Circuit.
See
Phillip M. Kannan,
The
Precedential Force of Panel Law,
76 Marq. L.Rev. 755, 763 (1993) (noting a similar exception to the prior
panel precedent rule for "serious or egregious errors" by the prior panel and explaining that such an exception
"is a prescription for rule-swallowing if ever there was one"). To the extent
Tucker
supports such an
exception, it is itself inconsistent with prior precedent. In
United States v. Bascaro,
Moreover, if there ever was an exception to the prior panel precedent rule such as that expressed in
Tucker,
it did not survive the pronouncement of the en banc Court in
United States v. Steele,
The idea of an exception to the prior panel precedent rule where a subsequent panel is convinced the
prior one reached the wrong result—for whatever reason—is also inconsistent with a number of decisions
in which panels of this Court have obediently followed prior panel precedents they were convinced were
wrong.
See, e.g., In re Dickerson,
Permitting an "overlooked reason" exception would undermine the values of stability and
predictability in the law that the prior panel precedent rule promotes.
See Bonner v. City of Prichard,
661
F.2d 1206, 1209-10 (11th Cir.1981) (en banc);
see also Jaffree v. Wallace,
Even if the Tucker exception were engrafted onto the controlling law of this circuit—instead of being rejected by it—that would do these parties no good. In both Snyder and Zahn, the Supreme Court rejected attempts to aggregate claims of class members, and there is no intimation in either of those decisions that members of a class have a common and undivided interest in a class claim for punitive damages that would permit aggregating that claim. Thus, unlike the situation in Tucker, there was no "clearly controlling Supreme Court precedent" on the issue of aggregating punitive damages when Lindsey was decided. See Tucker, 819 F.2d at 1036 n. 7.
10 The erroneous result reached by the prior panel whose decision bound the
Steele
panel was
corrected en banc,
United States v. Steele,
Subsequent panels are not bound by prior decisions where there has been a change in the controlling law
as a result of a subsequent en banc or Supreme Court decision or statutory change.
See United States v.
Hanna,
Moreover, in attempting to justify the exception in
Tucker,
the panel in that case noted that the prior
panel whose decision it questioned had failed to mention either of the two controlling Supreme Court
decisions.
See id.
That was critical to the
Tucker
panel, which said: "We hasten to add that had the [prior]
panel expressly considered [the two controlling Supreme Court decisions], we would be bound by its
interpretation and application of those decisions." By contrast, the
Lindsey
Court cited
Snyder
for the
proposition that the claims of class members may not be aggregated to satisfy the amount in controversy
requirement, and it also cited the Supreme Court's subsequent decision in
Zahn. See Lindsey,
As recently noted by the Fifth Circuit, "
Lindsey
's reasoning did not rely on a characterization of
punitive damages under Alabama law, but was instead based on the principle that 'the claims of several
plaintiffs, suing as members of a class, cannot be aggregated for the purpose of satisfying th[e] jurisdictional
predicate.' "
Pitney Bowes,
In summary, the parties' alternative argument boils down to the position that
Lindsey
incorrectly
interpreted and applied
Snyder
because, as the parties contend, class members have a common and undivided
interest in a claim for punitive damages. The prior panel precedent rule clearly forecloses their position.
See
Cohen II,
As we have mentioned,
supra
note 5, the individual compensatory damages of each class member
appear to be, at most, approximately $1,400. That means in order to satisfy the $75,000 amount in
*12
controversy requirement, each class member would have to recover over $73,000 in punitive damages. For
that to be possible, the class, which appears to consist of at least 36,000 members, would have to recover over
$2.628 billion in punitive damages. That recovery is not possible as a matter of law,
see generally BMW of
North America, Inc. v. Gore,
517 U.S. 559,
2. Attorney's Fees
In the injunctive relief count of their complaint, the plaintiffs also ask the court to award them
attorney's fees. Alabama follows the "American Rule," which generally requires each party to pay its own
attorney's fees.
See Ex Parte Horn,
There is an exception to the "American Rule," and thus, "direct legal authority" supporting inclusion
of a claim for attorney's fees in determining the amount in controversy, when an award of fees is authorized
either by statute or contract.
See Graham v. Henegar,
The named plaintiffs state that if class certification is denied, they will proceed in an individual
lawsuit, and in such a suit, they may realistically recover an amount of punitive damages, especially when
coupled with a recovery of attorney's fees and the value of the requested injunctive relief, that satisfies the
amount in controversy requirement. Perhaps, but this suit was filed as a class action and until the class
certification is denied, we must treat it as a class action.
See Morrison,
As noted by this Court in
Davis v. Carl Cannon Chevrolet-Olds, Inc.,
In this case, the plaintiffs argue that they will be entitled to an award of attorney's fees under either
the common fund doctrine or the common benefit doctrine. In
Davis,
a diversity suit involving Alabama state
law, this Court held that a requested award of attorney's fees deducted from the recovery of a common fund
could not be viewed in the aggregate to satisfy the amount in controversy requirement for a class action.
See
Davis,
We now turn to the issue of whether the plaintiffs would be entitled to attorney's fees under the
common benefit doctrine of Alabama and, if so, whether the estimated amount of those fees should be viewed
"In an ordinary diversity case where the state law does not run counter to a valid federal statute or
rule of court, and usually it will not, state law denying the right to attorney's fees or giving a right thereto
... should be followed."
Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society,
in the aggregate for amount in controversy purposes. In their complaint, the plaintiffs allude to the common benefit doctrine as the basis for their attorney's fees claim by requesting "a reasonable attorney's fee for the Plaintiffs for securing relief which will benefit the general public and a large group of persons." According to the plaintiffs, their lawsuit against GTE will produce the type of public benefit for which Alabama courts have awarded attorney's fees under the common benefit doctrine because, they say, their lawsuit will: (1) enjoin GTE's alleged practice of targeting minorities, the elderly, the poor, and similar demographic groups for its deceptive leasing scheme; (2) enjoin unlawful practices affecting all of the residents of communities in which GTE exercises a monopoly on telephone service; and (3) determine if, and to what extent, the APSC has retained the authority to supervise or regulate the CPE activity of telecommunications providers. It follows, according to the plaintiffs, that their suit will result in substantial benefits to a large group of persons, thereby justifying an award of common benefit attorney's fees.
In order to determine whether plaintiffs are correct, it is necessary to trace the origins of the common
benefit doctrine and its evolution under Alabama law. The Supreme Court of Alabama first recognized the
common benefit doctrine in
Miles v. Bank of Heflin,
In reaching its conclusion in
Heflin
that the bestowment of a substantial benefit upon the corporation
may entitle the plaintiffs to attorney's fees, the Alabama Supreme Court relied primarily on
Mills v. Electric
*15
Auto-Lite Co.,
The decisions and opinions in
Heflin
and
Mills
teach that the purpose of the common benefit doctrine
is to spread the cost of the litigation, including attorney's fees, among those who have benefitted from the
litigation. It is not so much fee-shifting as fee-spreading. This fee-spreading is accomplished, in the case of
a corporate defendant in a derivative suit, by assessing costs against the defendant corporation directly,
because those costs are, in effect, incurred by the shareholder/beneficiaries.
See Mills,
Thus, under the common benefit doctrine, the focus is on the nature of the relationship between the
defendant and the class members, or, in the absence of a certified class, those individuals who can be said to
benefit from the litigation. If the relationship is such that the costs can be spread indirectly to the
beneficiaries by imposing them on the defendant, then the relationship permits application of the doctrine.
As explained in
Campbell v. General Motors Corp.,
Since its decision in
Heflin,
the Alabama Supreme Court has awarded attorney's fees under the
common benefit doctrine in the context of only one particular sort of relationship—that of citizens and their
governmental entity.
See generally Brown v. State,
Although the Alabama Supreme Court has never explicitly based its common benefit analysis on the
nature of the relationship between a defendant and the beneficiaries of the lawsuit, that rationale has clearly
animated the court's decisions. For example, in
Ex Parte Horn,
to governmental defendants. The relationship between a defendant who is a governmental entity and the citizens who stand to benefit from the lawsuit brought against that defendant is probably not the only type of relationship where application of the common benefit doctrine is appropriate.
thus, ... a benefit was not conferred on all the residents of Birmingham in the same manner as it was conferred on [the plaintiffs]." Id. at 704-05. The underlying premise of the city's argument was that the costs of the litigation would be shouldered by all of the Birmingham residents if the city was forced to pay, and that it would be inequitable to impose those costs on the entire city of Birmingham because all of its residents did not benefit equally from the litigation. The Alabama Supreme Court ultimately rejected the city's argument, reasoning that "the plaintiffs' efforts clearly resulted in an increased level of due process protection to all residents of Birmingham ... and all of its residents have received a common benefit...." at 706. What matters for purposes of our analysis, though, is that in Horn the Alabama Supreme Court accepted the underlying legal premise of the city's argument—application of the common benefit doctrine turns on whether requiring the defendant to pay the plaintiffs' litigation costs would spread those costs equitably among the beneficiaries of the lawsuit.
Returning to the facts of our case, the relationship between GTE and the proposed beneficiaries of this lawsuit does not warrant application of the common benefit doctrine. Imposing on GTE litigation costs, including attorney's fees, would not operate to spread those costs among the purported beneficiaries of the litigation, the class members. Those beneficiaries do not have any apparent economic or other connection with GTE—like shareholders to a corporation, union members to a union or citizens to a governmental entity—that would result in those costs being shared by the class members. Even assuming that this lawsuit will confer a benefit on the general public, requiring GTE to pay attorney's fees under the common benefit doctrine would not serve the doctrine's purpose of spreading the costs of this litigation among those beneficiaries. Instead, it would merely saddle GTE as the unsuccessful defendant with those costs, in clear contravention of the American Rule.
Therefore, we conclude that any award of attorney's fees in this case would be paid out of the
common fund created by the litigation and not by GTE on the basis of a common benefit theory. An award
of common fund attorney's fees may not be viewed in the aggregate,
see Davis,
The plaintiffs in this case have also asserted claims of fraud against GTE. The Alabama Supreme Court has, on one occasion, recognized an exception to the American Rule where "fraud, willful negligence or malice has been practiced." See Reynolds v. First Alabama Bank of Montgomery, N.A., 471 So.2d 1238, 1242-43 (Ala.1985). However, the Alabama courts have apparently not extended the application of Reynolds beyond the facts of that case. Notably, the Reynolds court emphasized that case
3. Injunctive Relief
For amount in controversy purposes, "the value of the requested injunctive relief is the monetary
value of the benefit that would flow to the plaintiff if the injunction were granted."
Cohen II,
As to any individual class member, that monetary benefit would be well below $75,000. For
example, a class member who paid the highest current monthly lease rate for a telephone (about $10) for even
as long as sixty years would end up paying only $7,200, and the present value of that amount would be far
less. Of course, if the value of the injunction could be aggregated, given the size of the class the injunctive
relief sought in this case would satisfy the amount in controversy requirement. But as explained recently in
the
Morrison
decision, aggregation depends on the rights asserted by the plaintiffs and not the particular type
of relief sought.
See Morrison,
Aggregation is permissible only when multiple plaintiffs seek to "enforce a single title or right, in
which they have a common and undivided interest,"
Zahn,
Alexander,
The allegations that the lease agreements were induced and maintained by a common scheme of fraud
does not change the separate and distinct nature of the rights asserted in this case.
See Eagle Star Ins. Co.
v. Maltes,
It is also worth mentioning that since GTE raised the specter of the primary jurisdiction of the APSC, the plaintiffs have insisted that the CPE activity challenged in this case is not part of GTE's public utility service but instead is a free market, non-regulated business. If true, that is a further indication that the rights which would be protected or vindicated by the requested injunction are the separate and distinct rights of the class members in their lease agreements with GTE, and as a result, the value of the injunctive relief may not be aggregated to satisfy the amount in controversy requirement for diversity jurisdiction.
B. FEDERAL QUESTION JURISDICTION
We turn now to plaintiffs' fallback argument, which is that the district court had federal question jurisdiction over this case, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331, because this lawsuit seeks injunctive relief based on the FCC's preemption of state regulation of the CPE activity of telecommunications providers. Recall that the plaintiffs seek an injunction to prevent GTE from misrepresenting its telephone lease charges as part of its regulated, telecommunications service and thereby wrongfully implying that it may disconnect a customer's telephone service for failure to pay the lease charges. The plaintiffs also seek a declaration that the lease agreements "are null and void from their inception."
Under the federal question jurisdiction statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1331, a district court has subject matter
jurisdiction over "all civil actions arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States."
Whether a claim arises under federal law for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1331 is generally determined by the
well-pleaded complaint rule, "which provides that federal jurisdiction exists only when a federal question is
presented on the face of the plaintiff's properly pleaded complaint."
Caterpillar, Inc. v. Williams,
482 U.S.
386, 392, 107 S.Ct. 2425, 2429, 96 L.Ed.2d 318 (1987). A well-pleaded complaint presents a federal
question where it "establishes either that federal law creates the cause of action or that the plaintiff's right to
relief necessarily depends on resolution of a substantial question of federal law."
Franchise Tax Bd. v.
Construction Laborers Vacation Trust for S. Cal.,
The complaint in this case establishes neither basis for federal question jurisdiction, because it
contains only state law causes of action and does not show that any "substantial question of federal law" is
necessary for the plaintiffs to obtain their requested relief.
See id.
The question of whether the Alabama
Public Service Commission retains some regulatory power over the CPE activity of GTE, or whether such
power was preempted, arose not from the complaint but rather from GTE's invocation of the primary
jurisdiction doctrine in defense. As the Supreme Court stated in
Franchise Tax Bd.,
federal question
jurisdiction exists only when "the
plaintiff
's complaint establishes that the case 'arises under' federal law."
at 10,
A federal question is presented when a suit "seeks injunctive relief from state regulation[ ] on the
ground that such regulation is pre-empted by a federal statute which, by virtue of the Supremacy Clause of
the Constitution, must prevail...."
Shaw v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.,
The plaintiffs argue that their claim for injunctive relief is essentially a federal claim because federal
law has completely preempted states' regulation of the CPE market and the claim for injunctive relief is based
*21
on that preemption. "One corollary of the well-pleaded complaint rule ... is that Congress may so completely
pre-empt a particular area that any civil complaint raising this select group of claims is necessarily federal
in character."
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Taylor,
The Supreme Court has recognized that complete preemption occurs when "the pre-emptive force
of a statute is so 'extraordinary' that it 'converts an ordinary state common-law complaint into one stating a
federal claim for purposes of the well-pleaded complaint rule.' "
Caterpillar,
We have noted that "the [Supreme] Court has revisited the complete preemption doctrine only
sparingly" and has found complete preemption only in the context of two federal statutes—the Labor
Management Relations Act (LMRA), 29 U.S.C. § 141,
et seq.,
and the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. § 1001,
et seq. BLAB T.V. of Mobile, Inc. v. Comcast Cable Communications, Inc.,
In BLAB, which is the only Eleventh Circuit case to address directly the application of the complete preemption doctrine outside of the context of the LMRA and ERISA, we discussed the various tests employed by other courts to determine whether complete preemption exists. See id. at 856-57 (concluding that the Cable Communications Policy Act did not completely preempt state law). Although we refused to adopt any particular approach, we summarized the various factors considered by other courts as follows:
These cases reveal a varying emphasis on such questions as whether the state claim is displaced by federal law under an ordinary preemption analysis, whether the federal statute provides a cause of action, what kind of jurisdictional language exists in the federal statute, and what kind of language is present in the legislative history to evince Congress's intentions. at 857. Furthermore, we concluded that the focus of each of the tests was "to determine whether Congress
not only intended a given federal statute to provide a federal defense to a state cause of action that could be asserted either in a state or federal court, but also intended to grant a defendant the ability to remove the *22 adjudication of the cause of action to a federal court by transforming the state cause of action into a federal [one]." (citation and quotation omitted). [17] In other words, the "touchstone" of federal jurisdiction under the complete preemption doctrine is "Congress's intent." Id.
In light of the factors that we considered in BLAB, we are persuaded that the complete preemption doctrine does not provide a basis for federal jurisdiction in this case. The plaintiffs have not shown, and our review has not found, any indication that either Congress or the FCC intended completely to preempt state law in deregulating the CPE activity of telecommunications providers. Therefore, federal question jurisdiction is not present as to the plaintiffs' claim for injunctive relief.
In arguing that we should find complete preemption, the plaintiffs point to FCC orders which
expressly preempt some state regulation of CPE activities. However, a review of those orders reveals that
complete preemption was not intended. Although the FCC's orders concerning deregulation recognized that
preemption of many state regulations would occur, the FCC stated that "we preempt the states here only to
the extent that their ... regulation is at odds with the regulatory scheme set forth." In re Amendment of
Section 64.702 of the Commission's Rules and Regulations,
Likewise, a review of the Federal Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. § 151,
et seq.,
pursuant to which
The fact that, in
BLAB,
we refer to federal defenses rather than causes of actions, and to "removal"
jurisdiction rather than "subject matter" jurisdiction, reflects that the doctrine of complete preemption has
generally been considered in the context of a defendant seeking to remove an action that, on its face, only
asserts state law claims. In light of our conclusion that the plaintiffs incorrectly relied on diversity
jurisdiction as a basis for the district court's subject matter jurisdiction over this action, it is the plaintiffs
rather than the defendant who argue that the complete preemption doctrine provides an alternative basis
for federal jurisdiction over this action. Nonetheless, the same principles apply in this case as would
apply if we were determining the propriety of removal jurisdiction.
See BLAB,
the FCC was acting in deregulating CPE activity, reveals that Congress also did not intend to preempt completely state causes of action or remedies concerning the subject matter of the Act. In the Communications Act, Congress provided that:
Any person claiming to be damaged by any common carrier subject to the provisions of [the Communications Act] may either make complaint to the Commission as hereinafter provided for, or may bring suit for the recovery of the damages for which such common carrier may be liable under the provisions of [the Communications Act], in any district court of the United States of competent jurisdiction....
47 U.S.C. § 207. Despite this provision permitting federal jurisdiction over well-pleaded actions under the
Communications Act, Congress further provided that "[n]othing in this chapter contained shall in any way
abridge or alter the remedies now existing at common law or by statute, but the provisions of this chapter are
in addition to such remedies." 47 U.S.C. § 414. As we stated in
BLAB,
the existence of this type of "savings"
clause which "contemplate[s] the application of state-law and the exercise of state-court jurisdiction to some
degree ... counsels against a conclusion that the purpose behind the ... Act was to replicate the 'unique
preemptive force' of the LMRA and ERISA."
Furthermore, the plaintiffs have not pointed to any provision in the Communications Act itself or in
its legislative history which would indicate "that Congress intended state law causes of action within the
scope of [the Communications Act] to be federalized."
Sanderson, Thompson, Ratledge & Zimny v. AWACS,
Inc.,
Although the complete preemption doctrine does not apply in this case, we recognize that use of the term "preemption" in this context has caused "a substantial amount of confusion between the complete preemption doctrine and the broader and more familiar doctrine of ordinary preemption." BLAB, 182 F.3d at 854. For that reason, it is worth pointing out that:
complete preemption functions as a narrowly drawn means of assessing federal removal jurisdiction, while ordinary preemption operates to dismiss state claims on the merits and may be invoked in either federal or state court. at 854-55. In other words, our conclusion that the complete preemption doctrine does not provide a basis
for federal jurisdiction in this action does not preclude the parties from litigating about the preemptive effect, if any, of the FCC's orders or the Communications Act in any subsequent state court action.
III. CONCLUSION
Because the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over this case, we VACATE its order dismissing the case on abstention grounds and REMAND with directions that the case be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
