Plаintiff-appellant Digitel, Inc., a provider of telecommunications services, brought suit in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Owen,
Judge)
alleging that defendant-appellee MCI Worldcom, Inc. (“WorldCom”
1
) wrongfully permitted Digi-tel’s toll-free telephone number to be transferred to another customer, thereby destroying Digitel’s business. While WorldCom’s motion to dismiss was pending, the district court, relying on a ground not raised in the motion, dismissed
sua sponte
Digitel’s complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The court held that an enraged letter sent by a Digitel executive to the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) was an “informal complaint” to the FCC, and thereby con
The facts of the underlying disputе, as alleged in Digitel’s complaint, could not be simpler. Beginning in October 1993, Digi-tel established as its toll-free number 1-800-ISDN-TO-U, a number that it disseminated widely through many media. In August 1997, Digitel and WorldCom agreed that WorldCom would beсome the “Responsible Organization” for the number, taking over that role from Sprint. All was well until January 2, 1998, when customers dialing 1-800-ISDN-TO-U suddenly stopped being connected to Digitel and instead found their calls direсted to an unrelated entity. According to the allegations, this occurred because WorldCom failed to take appropriate steps to reserve the number’s use to Digitel, thereby аllowing AT&T to become the Responsible Organization for the number and to assign it to another user. Despite vigorous protests from Digitel, WorldCom failed to take prompt action to reinstatе the number, leaving Digitel in limbo until March 12, 1998, when service was abruptly restored. By then, however, it was too late, and the disruption in service had ruined Digitel’s business. Digitel alleges that WorldCom’s misconduct was “willful” in character.
In December 1999, Digitel brought suit in federal district court. The Amended Complaint alleges that the above-stated acts constituted violations of the Communications Act of 1934, 47 U.S.C. § 151
et seq.,
the tariff under which WorldCоm provided the number to Digitel, and federal common law. WorldCom moved to dismiss, arguing that plaintiff failed to state a claim and that, even if it did, the district court should stay the action and refer Digitel’s claims to the FCC under the primary jurisdiction doctrine,
see generally National Communications Ass’n v. AT&T,
After oral argument оn defendant’s motion, the district court, in a one-paragraph order, ruled that the FCC letter “effects a forum selection” that precluded subject matter jurisdiction in the district court. The court аlso “note[d] that the FCC is proceeding.” As authority for its decision, the court cited 47 U.S.C. § 207, which provides that a person claiming injury by a common carrier “may either make complaint to the Commissiоn as hereinafter provided for, or may bring suit ... in any district court of the United States ... but such person shall not have the right to pursue both such remedies.” It also cited a Fifth Circuit decision,
Stiles v. GTE Southwest, Inc.,
Discussion
WorldCom argues both that Digi-tel’s FCC letter ousted the district court of jurisdiction and that, even if it did not, dismissal was appropriate under the primary jurisdiction doctrine. We agree that, under § 207, Digitel’s filing with the FCC bars it from proceеding in district court. Because we affirm on that ground, we need not address WorldCom’s alternative primary jurisdiction argument.
There can be no doubt that § 207 permits an injured party to seek relief either in fеderal court or before the FCC, but not in both.
See Stiles,
Section 207 requires a choice between litigation and a “complaint to the Commission as hereinafter provided for*’ (emphasis added). And the Commission hаs, pursuant to its authority under 47 U.S.C. § 208 (providing that any person may “apply to [the] Commission by petition” for relief), promulgated regulations establishing (and hence defining) a complaint process. See 47 C.F.R. § 1.701 et seq. These regulations recognize two distinct forms of “complaint”: “informal complaints” and “formal complaints,” and they establish that “an informal complaint shall be in writing and should contain” the name, addrеss, and telephone number of the complainant, the target of the complaint, a statement of the facts underlying the complaint, and the specific relief sought. 47 C.F.R. § 1.716.
We agree with the Fifth Circuit that, under these regulations, the filing of an “informal complaint” constitutes a “complaint to the Commission” for § 207 purposes, and that, therefore, a party that has filed an informal complаint may not also sue in district court. 3 At oral argument both on appeal and in the court below, Digitel conceded that its filing constituted an “informal complaint” and that the FCC had scheduled a hearing on the matter. 4 Accordingly, we need not decide exactly which communications to the FCC will qualify as “informal complaints” sufficient to trigger application of § 207.
We have cоnsidered all of appellant’s arguments, and, finding them to be without merit, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. Through a series of name changes, the entity previously known as MCI Telecommunications Corporation became MCI WorldCom and now simply WorldCom.
. With great respect to the busy district court, we note that such lack of notice — even when the court has authority to act
sua sponte
— is to be avoided.
See Snider v. Melindez,
. Because Digitel has not raised the fact that, originally, WorldCom had not relied on § 207’s forum selection provision, we have no occasion to decide whether to treat the provision as creating a
jurisdictional
bar to bringing suit, or whether it should be treated instead as establishing a waivable non-jurisdictional prerequisite to suit.
Cf. Francis v. City of New York,
. At oral argument before Judge Owen, Digi-tel raised the possibility of staying its complaint before thе FCC in order to allow its lawsuit to proceed. It has not, however, renewed this suggestion on appeal, nor has it made any attempt to stay or withdraw its administrative complaint. As a result, we do not consider here how such a voluntary stay or dismissal would affect the operation of § 207.
. As Digitel points out, the FCC letter does not explicitly demand monetary relief, or, indeed, any specific relief at all. Although this point might have supported an argument that the letter was just what might he called a gripe, and not even an "informal complaint” as that term is defined in the FCC regulations, apрellant disclaimed such a theory at oral argument. In light both of Digitel's concession that it was complaining to the FCC and its failure to identify anything that it was seeking from the FCC that differed from what it sought in the courL below, we see no basis for treating the two complaints as having anything but the same subject matter.
