Cable TV operators in Chicago have signed contracts promising to pay the City 5% of their gross revenues from any service, including what the parties call “cable modem service,” furnished over the franchised cable. (We put the phrase in quotations because no modem is involved. A modem converts between analog and digital signals, while the service at issue here is digital throughout. But we follow common usage in applying the phrase “cable modem” to a broadband Internet service provided over a cable that also carries television signals.) In 2002 the Federal
Chicago accepts the FCC’s understanding of the difference between data and telecom services (but see
Brand X Internet Services v. FCC,
Unable to persuade the cable operators to resume payments, Chicago filed this suit seeking a declaratory judgment that the operators must comply in full with the contracts and ordinances. The suit was filed in the Circuit Court of Cook County. Invoking 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1441(b), defendants removed the proceeding to federal court. They asserted that the City’s action arises under federal law either because the demand for payment rests on 47 U.S.C. § 542(a) — which reads: “Subject to the limitation of subsection (b), any cable operator may be required under the terms of any franchise to pay a franchise fee” — or because the meaning and effect of § 542(b) will be the only issue contested in the litigation. The district court denied the City’s motion to remand, concluding that federal adjudication is appropriate because the City’s complaint “implicates ... provisions of the Communications Act” and the FCC’s order.
Chicago v. AT & T Broadband, Inc.,
That the federal defense will be the only contested issue does not matter. Two decisions illustrate this point. A railroad that had settled a tort claim in exchange for a lifetime pass later refused to honor that pass, contending that a federal statute enacted in the interim forbade the provision of free transportation. The pass holder sued in federal court, contending that the only issue requiring resolution was the interpretation of this statute — for, on the plaintiffs view, the pass was not “free” but had the same value as the tort claim that had been surrendered. That view of what issues controlled the case proved to be correct; the railroad did not contest the pass’s validity as a matter of contract. The Supreme Court never reached the merits, however, holding that a contract claim does not arise under federal law even when the only contested issue is the effect on that obligation of a federal statute.
Louisville & Nashville R.R. v. Mottley,
The contracts between Chicago and the cable operators recognize that the payments are subject to any limits imposed by federal law. This does not mean, however, that the claim is itself based on federal law; stating the obvious (given the Supremacy Clause, what other option do the parties have?) does not affect the source of law under which a claim arises. That’s the point of the language in
Taylor
from which we quoted above. Mentioning a federal
Defendants say that this is not so, because (in their view) federal law so completely dominates this field that it is impossible to frame any claim under state law. This appeal to the misleadingly named complete-preemption doctrine is unavailing. (The name is misleading because the doctrine is unrelated to preemption but deals with occupation of the field, as with labor relations and some aspects of pension law. See
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Taylor,
The judgment is vacated, and the district court is instructed to remand this litigation to state court.
