OPINION
Appellant Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Company (“MGIC”) appeals the district court’s decision to remand this suit back to state court pursuant to its discretion under the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201-2202 (“DJA”). MGIC argues that the district court was required to consider its motion under the Federal Arbitration
I.
Appellant MGIC and Appellees Countrywide Home Loans Insurance Company and BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP (collectively “Countrywide”) are parties to an insurance agreement referred to as the “Flow Policy.” Under the terms of the Flow Policy, MGIC insures Countrywide against borrower defaults on Countrywide mortgage loans. The Flow Policy allows MGIC to cancel or to rescind coverage for loans involving material misrepresentations. The Flow Policy also provides for a reduction in the claimed loss amount in certain cases of “fraud, misrepresentation, or negligence” on the part of Countrywide. On the purported basis of these fraud provisions, MGIC rescinded or denied coverage on several Countrywide claims submitted between 2006 and 2008.
In addition, the Flow Policy contains an arbitration clause, which states that
all controversies, disputes, or other assertions of liability or rights arising out of or relating to this Policy, including the breach, interpretation or construction thereof, shall be settled by arbitration. Notwithstanding the foregoing, [MGIC] or [Countrywide] both retain the right to seek a declaratory judgment from a court of competent jurisdiction on matters of interpretation of the [Flow] Policy.
On December 17, 2009, Countrywide filed a declaratory judgment action in California Superior Court contesting MGIC’s denial of its claims. In its Complaint, Countrywide states that it seeks “declaratory relief ... so that the [Flow Policy] language can be properly interpreted.” On January 19, 2010, MGIC timely removed the action under 28 U.S.C. § 1441(b) to the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. The parties do not dispute that, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1382, the district court had diversity jurisdiction over the suit. MGIC is a Wisconsin corporation with its principal place of business in Wisconsin; Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. is a New York corporation with its principal place of business in California; and BAC Home Loans Servicing is a Texas limited partnership with its principal place of business in Texas. The amount in controversy among the parties is greater than $75,000. Accordingly, this case was properly removed. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332; id. § 1441(b).
Countrywide then moved to remand, arguing that the court should “exercise its broad discretion under the[DJA]” and “decline jurisdiction and remand the case to state court.” MGIC opposed the remand and filed a Motion to Stay the Action Pending Resolution through Arbitration under § 3 of the FAA. MGIC also filed an arbitration demand against Countrywide before the American Arbitration Association, seeking “resolution of the over 1400 loans in dispute between the parties.”
On March 30, 2010, the district court granted Countrywide’s motion to remand and denied without prejudice to refiling in state court MGIC’s motion to stay pending arbitration. The District Court reasoned that the DJA “grants courts discretionary jurisdiction to declare the rights of litigants,” and that “several factors weigh in favor of abstention.” The court noted that the FAA provides no independent basis for federal jurisdiction, and that the power to enforce an arbitration clause only exists “when federal jurisdiction is otherwise established.” The court further reasoned
On April 27, 2010, MGIC timely filed a notice of appeal of the district court’s decision to remand without reaching the merits of its FAA motion. Because the district court’s discretionary remand pursuant to the DJA constitutes an immediately appealable “final decision” under the collateral order doctrine,
see Quackenbush v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
II.
The question presented by MGIC’s appeal is whether a district court’s discretion under the DJA allows the court to decline to consider and to award relief under the FAA. This question is one of first impression in this circuit. MGIC argues that the discretion afforded under the DJA does not allow the district court to abstain from deciding a request for relief under the FAA. Countrywide’s position is that the issue of arbitrability should not be excepted from a federal court’s well-established DJA discretion to decline to hear an action seeking declaratory relief.
A.
We first examine the discretion granted to federal courts under the DJA. Generally, district courts have a “virtually unflagging obligation ... to hear jurisdictionally sufficient claims.”
Snodgrass,
Both the Supreme Court and this court have, at times, characterized the discretion provided under the DJA as the ability to “accept” or “decline” “discretionary” jurisdiction, or to decide whether to “exercise jurisdiction,” in an action seeking declaratory relief.
See Brillhart v. Excess Ins. Co. of America,
As MGIC correctly points out, however, it is imprecise to describe the discretion provided by the DJA in terms of jurisdiction. A court’s jurisdiction is distinct from its remedial powers.
Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t,
The Seventh Circuit recently made clear this distinction. In
Brandt v. Village of Winnetha,
We agree with the Seventh Circuit’s analysis. Federal courts’ regular use of “discretionary jurisdiction” language implicitly and inaccurately suggests that the DJA confers jurisdiction that the federal courts have the discretion to decline. The DJA, however, does not confer jurisdiction, and therefore also does not afford the opportunity to decline it. The DJA gives district courts the discretion to decline to exercise the conferred remedial power,
Wilton,
Here, as we previously noted, the parties do not dispute that the district court had proper diversity jurisdiction over this case. The district court’s exercise of its remedial discretion under the DJA did nothing to alter its subject matter jurisdiction over the underlying controversy between the parties.
B.
In light of our conclusion that the district court’s proper subject matter jurisdiction remained unaffected by the DJA, we now turn to the court’s obligation under the FAA. MGIC’s motion, filed before the district court had ruled on Countrywide’s motion to remand, sought under § 3 of the FAA a stay of the declaratory judgment action pending arbitration.
Second, unlike the DJA, the FAA gives the adjudicating court no discretion as to whether to award relief. The statute provides that when a party seeks relief under § 3 of the FAA, “the court ..., upon being satisfied that the issue involved in such suit or proceeding is referable to arbitration under such an agreement,
shall
on application of one of the parties stay the trial of the action until such arbitration has been had in accordance with the terms of the agreement.” 9 U.S.C. § 3 (emphasis added). As the Supreme Court has recognized, the language of the FAA leaves no room for discretion: “By its terms, the Act leaves no place for the exercise of discretion by a district court, but instead mandates that district courts
shall
direct the parties to proceed to arbitration on issues as to which an arbitration agreement has been signed.”
Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc. v. Byrd,
We therefore hold that the FAA’s mandatory terms, combined with the court’s proper diversity jurisdiction, required' the district court to reach the merits of MGIC’s motion before it remanded the suit back to state court.
Countrywide’s primary argument in opposing this conclusion is that, although “the district court had the power to adjudicate [this] case,” the DJA provided it with “the discretion to decline to exercise that power.” DJA discretion, argues Countrywide, “necessarily encompasses” the issue of arbitrability, which is “embraced within and dependent on the declaratory relief claim.” Notably, Countrywide’s argument fails to address the mandatory “shall” language of the FAA, which the Supreme Court has interpreted to require district courts to consider the propriety of arbitration in cases where jurisdiction is proper.
1
In addition, we are not persuaded that the
Countrywide also points out that, in refusing to allow the FAA to independently confer federal jurisdiction, Congress clearly considered state and federal courts equally capable of adjudicating FAA claims and deliberately declined to guarantee litigants a federal forum. While this contention may be true, a federal court nonetheless maintains a basic obligation to consider the merits and to award relief in cases where its jurisdiction is proper.
See
III.
Because the federal court’s jurisdiction was proper, it was required under the mandatory terms of the FAA to consider MGIC’s motion before it remanded the suit pursuant to its discretion under the DJA. We therefore REVERSE the district court’s order of remand and REMAND for its consideration of MGIC’s FAA motion.
Notes
. Countrywide argues in its brief that § 3 of the FAA "refers only to actions initiated in federal court and does not specify the district court's obligations in a removed action.” There is simply no basis, however, for the conclusion that the statute lacks its usual controlling effect when a motion is brought in a removed federal suit as opposed to one originally filed in federal court. In either situation, proper federal subject matter jurisdiction is required.
See, e.g., Bernhardt v. Polygraphic Co. of America,
. Indeed, the question of whether a request for arbitration is independent from a request for declaratory relief raises an alternative analysis under which we reach the same conclusion. In
Snodgrass v. Provident Life and Accident Insurance Company,
Although MGIC moved for a stay of the declaratory judgment action pending arbitration under § 3 of the FAA, it could have sought to compel arbitration independent of Countrywide’s suit. A federal district court can entertain a direct petition to compel arbitration under 9 U.S.C. § 4, if, after "looking through” the petition, it determines that the underlying substantive controversy between the parties triggers federal subject matter jurisdiction.
Vaden v. Discover Bank,
Thus, MGIC’s FAA motion probably qualifies as an independent, non-declaratory claim under
Snodgrass
and
R & D Latex;
as we have shown, it need not be joined with a claim for declaratory relief and provides a wholly separate basis on which the court could "exercise” its diversity jurisdiction.
See R & D Latex,
