Kissimmee Utility Authority (KUA), a Florida State agency, interlocutorily appeals the district court’s denial of KUA’s motion for partial summary judgment and the partial grant of summary judgment in favor of Plaintiff CSX Transportation on a contract claim for indemnification. KUA claims entitlement to sovereign immunity. Because we lack jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal, the appeal is dismissed.
Background
Defendant KUA entered into a contract with Plaintiff CSX Transportation. CSX owned railroad tracks. The contract gave KUA the right to construct an access road across CSX’s railroad tracks to reach KUA’s Cane Island Power Plant.
The contract included an indemnity provision. This provision said that KUA would “assume all risk of loss and damage to, and waives any right to ask or demand damages for” KUA’s property at the constructed crossing “regardless of the cause.” The contract also provided that KUA “assume[d] all liability for, and releases and agrees to defend, indemnify, protect, and save railroad from and against” all loss or damage to property and all loss or damage due to injury or death of a person at the crossing and all claims and liability for such loss and damage.
After construction of the crossing by KUA, a collision occurred at the crossing. In a separate, but related suit, a jury determined the liability of the various parties involved in the collision. No fault was attributed to KUA. But the contract between KUA and CSX provides for KUA to indemnify CSX (and those otherwise suffering losses) regardless of the fault of KUA.
CSX, along with National Railroad Passenger Corporation (Amtraek),
Discussion
Except in limited circumstances, the courts of appeals have jurisdiction for appeals from final orders only. See 28 U.S.C. § 1291;
But “[i]n Cohen, the Supreme Court recognized a small class of non-final orders involving claims of right that are too important to be denied review and too independent of the cause itself to require that appellate consideration be deferred until the whole case is adjudicated.” Kaufman v. Checkers Drive-In Restaurants, Inc.,
KUÁ argues that both the denial of its motion for partial summary judgment and the partial grant of summary judgment in favor of CSX are interloeutorily appealable. The argument is based on KUA’s alleged entitlement to state sovereign immunity. KUA points us to Mitchell v. Forsyth,
The Supreme Court’s decision in Mitchell was based on the observation that qualified immunity, like Eleventh Amendment immunity, is immunity from suit or trial, not merely immunity from liability or damages. KUA claims that Florida’s state law sovereign immunity is also immunity from suit. Thus, KUA argues that immunity is lost if KUA is forced to litigate in the district court without the protection of an immediate appeal about the denial of that immunity.
We are not bound by a state court’s determination of its own jurisdiction — that is, just because a state court, under its own jurisdictional laws and rules, does not have jurisdiction over a kind of interlocutory appeal, does not dictate a lack of jurisdiction in this court. But we are bound by that state court’s determination of the substantive limits of the state’s sovereign immunity protection.
Because Florida’s state sovereign immunity is only immunity from liability, it is analogous to federal sovereign immunity. See generally Pullman Const. Indus., Inc. v. United States,
Sometimes the word [immunity] connotes a right not to be tried, which must be vindicated promptly. Sometimes the word means only a right to prevail at trial — a right to win, indistinguishable from all the other reasons why a party may not have to pay damages. Confusing the two would undermine the final-decision requirement.
Pullman,
The burden is on KUA to make the showings necessary to establish a right to interlocutory appeal. See Kaufman,
APPEAL DISMISSED.
Notes
. No party disputes the effect of the indemnity provisions, if valid. Instead, the dispute is about the enforceability of the indemnity provisions against KUA.
. An Amtraek train was involved in the collision.
. Additional parties are involved in the litigation before the district court. And, KUA has filed cross-claims against some of these parties.
. In addition to claiming entitlement to sovereign immunity, KUA presents some other issues to support its contention that the indemnity provisions are not enforceable. Among the arguments is one that the inclusion of the indemnity provisions in the contract was beyond KUA's authority. This appeal is, as recognized by KUA, an interlocutory appeal. Litigation is still ongoing in the district court. This case is a multiparty dispute about which no final orders had been entered at the time of KUA's appeal. Thus, appeal of these additional issues does not present a proper interlocutory appeal.
. Section 1292, Title 28, sets out some exceptions to the final order doctrine. None of these statutory exceptions apply to this case.
. CSX points out that an immediate ruling on KUA's sovereign immunity will offer no protection to KUA from participating in' the pertinent litigation: because of the nature of some of the claims, KUA will still be required to participate in the litigation and to litigate the same facts involved in its dispute with CSX. We do not need to decide whether that observation affects an issue's immediate appealability. But we note that in Green v. Brantley,
. KUA malees no claim of immunity under the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution.
. - By the way, KUA's claim of sovereign immunity also may not be independent of the merits of the underlying action, as required under Cohen's collateral order doctrine. Whether KUA will be entitled to sovereign immunity turns on KUA's actual authority to enter into the pertinent contract: an issue still to be resolved in the underlying action.
