This appeal concerns a district court’s authority to act in a case that was initially removed from a state court, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1452, because it was related to a bankruptcy case, and then remanded back to the state court because the district court determined that mandatory abstention applies. The specific issue is whether, after such a remand, the district court may enjoin a party in the remanded case — the debtor in the pending bankruptcy case— from asking the bankruptcy court to stay the remanded state court action. This issue arises on an appeal by Covanta Onondaga Limited Partnership (“Covanta”) from the September 23, 2002, order of the District Court for the Northern District of New York (Howard G. Munson, District Judge), granting a permanent injunction sought by the Onondaga County Resource Recovery Agency (“OCRRA”). We conclude that the injunction must be vacated.
Background
The origin of the pending appeal is a waste disposal agreement entered into by Covanta and OCRRA in 1992. Covanta operates a waste-to-energy municipal waste incinerator in Jamesville, N.Y., on property leased to it by OCRRA. In February 2002, OCRRA notified Covanta that the agreement between the parties was terminated by reason of Covanta’s alleged breach of the agreement’s requirement concerning maintenance of adequate credit. On March 1, Covanta filed a suit in the New York Supreme Court (“the State Court”) seeking a declaratory judgment that OCRRA was not entitled to terminate the parties’ agreement (“the State Court case”). 1 On March 22, OCRRA filed an answer asserting numerous defenses and seeking a judgment declaring, among other things, that OCRRA properly terminated the parties’ agreement.
On April 1, Covanta filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 11 in the Bankruptcy Court of the Southern District of New York (“Bankruptcy Court”). Chapter 11 petitions were simultaneously filed by Covanta’s parent company and 122 related companies. On April 8, Covanta filed in the District Court for the Northern District (“the District Court” or “Northern District”) a notice of removal of the State Court case pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1452 and Rule 9027 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure. On April 12, Covanta filed in the Northern District a motion to transfer the removed case to the Southern District of New York so that it could be referred to the Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District.
Also on April 12, OCRRA filed in the Northern District a motion to remand the State Court case to the State Court, or, in the alternative, to have the District Court retain jurisdiction and adjudicate the action. Remand was sought on the ground that the criteria for mandatory abstention specified in 28 U.S.C. § 1334(c)(2) were met. On August 8, OCRRA filed a proof of claim in the Bankruptcy Court. On August 13, the District Court granted OCRRA’s motion and remanded the State Court case to the State Court.
Covanta Onondaga Limited [Partnership] v. Onondaga County Resource Recovery Agency,
On September 5, Covanta filed an adversary proceeding against OCRRA in the Bankruptcy Court seeking, among other things, a declaration that the automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362 applied to the State Court case, or, in the alternative, an injunction under 11 U.S.C. § 105(a) to prevent OCRRA from further prosecuting the State Court case pending confirmation of a plan of reorganization. Covanta also sought an injunction under section 105(a), apart from the pendency of the adversary proceeding.
On September 11, OCRRA moved in the Northern District for a temporary restraining order (“TRO”), which was issued that same day. The TRO prohibited Covanta and the Bankruptcy Court from proceeding with Covanta’s adversary proceeding and with Covanta’s motion, filed in that proceeding, for section 362 or section 105(a) relief. On September 13, the District Court continued the TRO after a hearing. On September 23, the District Court issued the permanent injunction that is the subject of the pending appeal.
Covanta Onondaga Ltd. [Partnership] v. Onondaga County Resource Recovery Agency,
Discussion
The parties have framed the issue on appeal primarily in terms of whether the District Court exceeded its discretion under the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a), by issuing the permanent injunction. Although that issue inheres in the appeal, we initially consider whether the District Court had jurisdiction to issue the injunction after it had relinquished jurisdiction over the removed State Court case by remanding it to the State Court. In seeking injunctive relief, OCRRA invoked only section 1651(a), which authorizes federal courts to “issue all writs necessary or appropriate in aid of their respective jurisdictions and agreeable to the usages and principles of law.” However, it is well settled that the All Writs Act is not an independent source of a federal court’s jurisdiction.
See United States v. Tablie,
Federal courts frequently use section 1651(a) to protect their jurisdiction over cases that are grounded on some valid jurisdictional basis, typically diversity or federal question jurisdiction.
See, e.g., United States v. New York Telephone Co.,
If a district court is acting with respect to a case that remains within its jurisdiction, there is no doubt that its jurisdiction over the case includes authority to act under section 1651 when necessary to “protect,”
Findley v. Laughead (In re Johns-Manville Corp.),
The injunction challenged in the pending appeal does not derive jurisdictional validity from any of these traditional sources of ancillary or continuing jurisdiction. Indeed, we are not aware of any other case in which a district court has purported to have jurisdiction to enter an order (unrelated to fees, costs, or sanctions) after remanding a removed case to a state court. The absence of a precedent, of course, does not demonstrate that jurisdiction is unavailable, but it prompts us to scrutinize with care the claim that jurisdiction exists.
The District Court’s injunction was clearly not issued to prevent any interference with the order it had previously issued. That order returned the removed case from the Northern District to the State Court. No one is trying to bring the State Court case back to the Northern District, and we can safely assume that that is the last thing that Covanta, the party enjoined, would now want to do. The injunction, however, prohibits more than a renewed attempt to remove the State Court case to the Northern District, and we must consider whether the District Court had authority to issue it.
The District Court sought to justify the injunction as necessary to accomplish two related purposes: enforcing the
res judicata
and collateral estoppel effect of the Court’s remand order and preventing “an indirect attempt to appeal a non-appeal-able removal proceeding order.”
Covanta
*397
Injunction,
The “collateral attack” rationale raises at least three problems. The first obstacle to grounding the District Court’s injunction on a preclusion rationale is the substantial uncertainty as to whether the Court’s order has preclusive effect. If the remand order is not appealable, as the District Court stated in justifying its injunction, then it is highly unlikely that the order has preclusive effect.
See, e.g., Health Cost Controls of Illinois, Inc. v. Washington,
The second obstacle to the preclusion rationale is the substantial uncertainty as to whether the issue for which preclusion is claimed was decided in the adjudication of OCRRA’s successful motion to remand the State Court ease. The injunction prohibits Covanta from litigating the application of the automatic stay to the remanded State Court case, but the District Court’s opinion explaining its decision to remand makes no mention of section 362 and does not explicitly decide whether it applies to the State Court case. Nor does the opinion mention section 105 or the discretionary factors that bankruptcy courts consider in exercising their section 105 authority. That opinion purported to decide (a) that the District Court had jurisdiction over the removed State Court case because the State Court case was “related to” a case under Title 11 within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1334(b) and because removal was proper under 28 U.S.C. § 1452(a) (removal proper if district court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1334); (b) that the State Court case was “non-core,”
see
28 U.S.C. § 157; and (c) that the District Court was required to abstain pursuant to the mandatory abstention provision of 28 U.S.C. § 1334(c)(2).
See Covanta Remand,
A third problem with the preclusion rationale is that, as Professor Wright’s treatise explains, “[ojrdinarily
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both issue preclusion and claim preclusion are enforced by awaiting a second action in which they are pleaded and proved by the party asserting them. The first court does not get to dictate to other courts the preclusion consequences of its own judgment .... ” 18 Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper,
Federal Practice and Procedure: Jurisdiction
§ 4405, at 82 (2d ed.2002).
See Midway Motor Lodge v. Innkeepers’ Telemanagement & Equipment Corp.,
The District Court relied on
Wood v. Santa Barbara Chamber of Commerce, Inc.,
Even in the absence of a pattern of vexatious litigation, however, a district court that has adjudicated the merits of a case may have authority to prevent relitigation.
See New York Life Insurance Co. v. Deshotel,
In addition to its preclusion rationale, the District Court supported its injunction on the need to prevent Covanta from making “an indirect attempt to appeal a nonappealable removal proceeding order,”
Covanta Injunction,
Section 1452(b) provides:
(b) The court to which such claim or cause of action is removed may remand such claim or cause of action on any equitable ground. An order entered under this subsection remanding a claim or cause of action, or a decision to not remand, is not reviewable by appeal or otherwise by the court of appeals under section 158(d), 1291, or 1292 of [Title 28] or by the Supreme Court of the United States under section 1254 of [Title 28].
28 U.S.C. § 1452(b). 3
The District Court’s “indirect appeal” rationale also encounters a substantial problem. Although section 1452(b) applies to all orders remanding cases that were removed under section 1452(a) because they are related to bankruptcy cases,
see Cathedral of the Incarnation v. Garden City Co. (In re Cathedral of the Incarnation),
There is no doubt that Covanta wants to obtain from the Bankruptcy Court some protection from OCRRA’s pursuit of its claims in the State Court case, a result that Judge Munson evidently believed would be inconsistent with his decision to allow the State Court case to proceed. But we see nothing in section 1452(b) that bars a bankruptcy court from making whatever ruling it is otherwise entitled to make (whether on its own or on recommendation to a district court,
see Northern Pipeline Construction Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co.,
We have no doubt that the District Court had subject matter jurisdiction over the State Court case under section 1452(a) upon the filing of the removal petition. And the remand under section 1452(b) did not imply any lack of subject matter jurisdiction to determine whether to remand.
Cf. S.G. Phillips Constructors, Inc. v. City of Burlington (In re S.G. Phillips Constructors, Inc.),
All of the considerations discussed thus far make us doubtful that the District Court, after remanding the State Court case, had continuing jurisdiction to issue the injunction. If jurisdiction was available, the same considerations rendering such jurisdiction doubtful weigh against its exercise as a matter of discretion. Both sides enlist our decision in
Erti v. Paine Webber Jackson & Curtis, Inc. (In re Baldwitir-United Corporation Litigation),
OCRRA contends that the pending case is more appropriate for an injunction be *401 cause Erti involved both a complicated district court proceeding and a complicated bankruptcy court proceeding, whereas the State Court case in the pending litigation involves only a narrow issue as to whether the parties’ agreement has been validly terminated. Covanta responds that an injunction is as inappropriate here as in Erti, if not more so, emphasizing that the Chapter 11 proceeding involving Covanta and its affiliated companies is extremely complicated, the contract at issue in the State Court case is Covanta’s primary asset, the Bankruptcy Court should have the opportunity to consider both whether the automatic stay applies and whether to exercise its section 105(a) authority, and, unlike Erti, the injunction here was issued by a court that no longer had litigation pending before it. We agree with Covanta that, under all the circumstances, issuance of the injunction exceeded the scope of the Northern District’s discretion, even if some remnant of subject matter jurisdiction continued after the State Court case was remanded. We emphasize the limited scope of our decision. We are not purporting to determine whether the District Court’s remand decision has collateral estoppel or res judicata effect, whether the automatic stay applies to the State Court ease, or whether the Bankruptcy Court should act pursuant to section 105(a). We are not endeavoring to instruct either the State Court, in the event that it proceeds with the State Court case, or the Bankruptcy Court, in the event that its authority is properly invoked with respect to any aspect of the controversy between Covanta and OCRRA. We are ruling that the District Court’s injunction must be vacated because the Court probably lacked jurisdiction to issue it, and, if jurisdiction was available, issuance of the injunction, for all of the reasons discussed, exceeded the Court’s discretion.
We vacate the District Court’s injunction, and terminate the interim injunction we issued on December 19. The mandate shall issue forthwith. No costs.
Notes
. Covanta had previously filed the same lawsuit in the District Court for the Northern District, and subsequently voluntarily dismissed the suit for lack of diversity jurisdiction.
. Judge Munson explained in his injunction ruling that he would not have remanded the State Court case if he had thought that the automatic stay applied to it.
Covanta Injunction,
. The same prohibition on appeal is contained in 28 U.S.C. § 1334(d), which applies to cases requiring mandatory abstention under subsection 1334(c)(2).
. We recognize that the Supreme Court has held that the prohibitions on appeal contained in the general removal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d), apply to cases remanded pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1452(b).
See Things Remembered, Inc. v. Petrarca,
. We do not mean to imply that a district court’s decision to abstain from proceeding with a case within its subject matter jurisdiction destroys such jurisdiction; the jurisdictional doubts as to the Northern District’s continuing authority arise in this case because abstention was followed by a remand to the State Court.
