In this appeal, the plaintiffs ask this Court to reverse the district court’s determination that injunctive relief is not available for Fair Credit Reporting Act (“FCRA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1681 et seq., actions brought by private, non-governmental plaintiffs. We do not reach this issue, however, because we lack jurisdiction to hear this interlocutory appeal.
I. History
This is a multidistrict litigation panel case in which nineteen individually named plaintiffs from several different states assert a variety of claims against Chicago-based Trans Union. Trans Union is a “consumer reporting agency” within the meaning of the FCRA. 15 U.S.C. § 1681a(f) (2003). Its primary business is the collection of credit information for the purpose of distributing consumer credit reports to third-party credit grantors for use in assessing the creditworthiness of potential customers.
Another aspect of Trans Union’s business has at various times involved the generation of lists of consumers who meet various credit and financial criteria. Trans Union sells or rents these lists, along with other consumer information, to third parties such as retailers, telemarketers, and others. Plaintiffs allege that Trans Union has violated the FCRA and applicable state privacy laws by unlawfully disclosing private financial information and other confidential information to these *736 third parties for use in prescreening for offers of credit or insurance and in other target marketing schemes.
Many of plaintiffs’ concerns were addressed in a Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) enforcement proceeding instituted in 1992 to determine whether Trans Union’s prescreening and target marketing business violated the FCRA. Two orders came out of the FTC proceeding. The first, the “prescreening order,” requires Trans Union to ensure that its customers who use its services for prescreening have a permissible purpose under FCRA § 1681b. The second, the “final order,” which went into effect April 25, 2001, requires Trans Union to cease the challenged target marketing conduct, specifically enjoining it from “distributing or selling consumer reports, including those in the form of target marketing lists, to any person unless [the company] has reason to believe that such person intends to use the consumer report for purposes authorized under Section [1681b] of the [FCRA].”
In re Trans Union Corp.,
Final Order, No. 9255 (FTC Feb. 10, 2000),
cited in Trans Union Corp. v. FTC,
Despite the FTC’s favorable ruling, plaintiffs continue to seek monetary damages and injunctive relief on a class-wide basis in this action. Before answering the complaint, Trans Union filed several motions with the district court concerning a variety of topics, including motions to dismiss certain counts and challenges to class certification. The district court ruled on all of these motions in a single order dated September 10, 2002.
In re Trans Union Corp. Privacy Litig.,
This is the plaintiffs’ second attempt to appeal the district court’s order. In this appeal, the plaintiffs challenge only the district court’s determination that private plaintiffs are not entitled to injunctive relief under the FCRA. Looking to the text of the FCRA and the only federal appellate decision to address the issue,
see Washington v. CSC Credit Servs.,
The plaintiffs filed a notice of appeal, asserting jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) and seeking immediate review of the dismissal of their request for injunc-tive relief under the FCRA. For the reasons set out below, we find that we lack jurisdiction to hear this appeal.
II. Analysis
Plaintiffs acknowledge that we generally have jurisdiction to review only final judgments of the district court, see 28 U.S.C. § 1291, but they contend that the exception provided in 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) gives this Court jurisdiction to review im *737 mediately the district court’s dismissal of their request for injunctive relief under the FCRA. Section 1292(a) provides in relevant part:
[T]he courts of appeals shall have jurisdiction of appeals from:
(1) Interlocutory orders of the district courts of the United States ... granting, continuing, modifying, refusing or dissolving injunctions, or refusing to dissolve or modify injunctions, except where a direct review may be had in the Supreme Court.
28 U.S.C. § 1292(a) (2003).
We recently reiterated the narrow scope of the § 1292(a)(1) exception to the final-judgment rule, noting the Supreme Court’s directive that “because § 1292(a)(1) was intended to carve out only a limited exception to the final-judgment rule ... the statute is to be construed narrowly.”
Simon Prop. Group, L.P. v. mySIMON, Inc.,
With this in mind, we turn to the requirements for jurisdiction under § 1292(a)(1). Trans Union contends that for jurisdiction to be available under that exception, there must be absolutely no in-junctive relief remaining for the district court to grant or deny. In other words, the district court’s order denying the injunction must have completely foreclosed all injunctive relief in the case or else § 1292 does not apply and we lack jurisdiction.
As support for this position, Trans Union relies heavily on three cases—one Supreme Court case and two eases from this circuit. In the Supreme Court case
Gardner v. Westinghouse Broadcasting Company,
the district court had denied class certification under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(b) on the grounds that the plaintiffs claim was not typical and that the case did not present questions of law or fact common to the class.
Trans Union similarly relies on statements in our opinion in
Holmes v. Fisher,
Finally, Trans Union points to our decision in
Samayoa v. Chicago Bd. of Educ.,
Trans Union asserts that
Samayoa, Gardner,
and
Holmes
together illustrate that an appeal under § 1292(a)(1) is not available unless the district court has completely disposed of all injunctive relief in the case. We are not convinced, however, that these cases stand for such a strong proposition. For instance, the
Gardner
Court, though making a statement supporting Trans Union’s position in dicta, actually dealt with whether the denial of class certification amounts to the denial of an injunction, and not directly with whether an appeal could be had under § 1292 when injunctive relief is still pending below.
Gardner,
Rather, we think that these cases and others interpreting § 1292(a)(1) represent a continuum. At one end are cases like
Holmes
where our jurisdiction under § 1292(a)(1) is secure because the district court’s order entirely negated the equitable component in the case. At the other end are cases where the district court’s order did not involve the denial of any injunctive relief. At this end, § 1292(a)(1) clearly would not provide jurisdiction. Between these poles are the more difficult cases where plaintiffs have sought multiple injunctions and the district court denied some of them while leaving others pending.
Samayoa
falls in this middle area, but we ultimately determined in that case that we lacked jurisdiction because the counts that remained in the district court and the counts that were dismissed and appealed, essentially sought the same in-junctive relief, only under different legal theories.
See Holmes,
Our task in deciding whether we have jurisdiction therefore involves determining where on that continuum this case lies. We find that this case falls very close to Samayoa: while the district court denied injunctive relief under the FCRA, substantial and similar injunctive relief is still available in the district court.
To determine what injunctive relief is still remaining in the district court, we look to the plaintiffs’ most recently amended complaint, the Second Amended Consolidated Complaint, which was filed after the district court’s order denying plaintiffs injunctive relief under the FCRA. In that complaint, we find that still pending in the district court is the plaintiffs’ “Seventh Cause of Action,” which seeks an order enjoining the defendants from further violations of California Business & Professions Code §§ 17203 and 17204, which regulates unfair business practices. At the very least under this count, injunctive relief against defendant’s complained-of actions is still available for the California plaintiffs.
In addition to the relief under the California statute, however, there remains in-junctive relief under laws in other states as well. For instance, in Count III of the complaint, all the plaintiffs seek equitable and other remedies for invasion of privacy and misappropriation “under the laws of the states in which Plaintiffs reside.” Similarly, in Count IV, all plaintiffs seek all appropriate relief for unjust enrichment “under the laws of the states in which Plaintiffs reside.”
Most importantly, in the second amended consolidated complaint’s prayer for relief, the plaintiffs seek the same injunctions under state- and common-law theories as they sought in the first complaint under the FCRA.
2
Such relief, now sought under state law, would provide for the same injunctions that the district court ruled were unavailable to the plaintiffs under the FCRA. Thus, not unlike
Samayoa,
*740
there is little difference between the in-junctive relief denied by the district court and the injunctive relief that still remains below. Since essentially the same injunc-tive relief is still available, the district court’s order ruling that injunctive relief is not available under the FCRA did not truly deny an injunction but rather “narrowed the grounds of dispute.”
Holmes,
We have recognized that in certain rare instances where the district court’s order, while not technically refusing an injunction, has the same “practical effect,” a plaintiff may still obtain appellate review if there is a possibility of irreparable harm to the plaintiffs if the appeal is delayed.
See Simon Prop. Group,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we lack jurisdiction to hear this appeal. This appeal is therefore Dismissed.
Notes
. The Final Order was stayed pending Trans Union’s appeal to the D.C. Circuit, which upheld the FTC's decision.
See Trans Union Corp.,
. Specifically, in the second complaint they request:
2. As permitted by state law and the Court’s equitable powers, an order enjoining defendants from disclosing consumer reports in the form of target marketing lists to any person unless defendants have reason to believe that such person intends to *740 use such lists for a permissible purpose as required by law;
3. As permitted by state law and the Court's equitable powers, an order enjoining defendants from the misappropriation and/or invasion of the privacy rights of Plaintiffs and of the members of the appropriate Plaintiff Classes through the disclosure of their private financial, credit and other confidential information without their informed written consent;
4. As permitted by state law and the Court’s equitable powers, an order requiring defendants to notify all members of the appropriate Plaintiffs Class of their right to be excluded from defendants’ target marketing lists and of the manner in which such exclusion may be sought.
