By means of this interlocutory appeal, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico attempts to exploit the Supreme Court’s recent redefinition of the calculus of federalism.
See, e.g., Rosie D. v. Swift,
The stumbling block is the time-tested precept that “[n]o matter how tantalizing a problem may be, a federal appellate court cannot scratch intellеctual itches unless it has jurisdiction to reach them.”
Director, OWCP v. Bath Iron Works Corp.,
I.
Setting the Stage
We glean the necessary facts from the plaintiffs complaint.
See LaChapelle v. Berkshire Life Ins. Co.,
The Commonwealth hired plaintiff-ap-pellee Tomás Aquino Espinal-Dominguez, a native of the Dominican Republic, on September 7, 1988. He worked in various capacities for the Department of Natural Resources (the Department) during the next fifteen years. At that point, he was unceremoniously ousted from his employment.
The plaintiff concluded that his firing resulted from national origin discrimination and filed an administrative complaint to that effect with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). The EEOC declined to pursue a full-dress investigation, instead issuing a right to sue letter. Letter in hand, the plaintiff repaired to the federal district court and sued the Commonwealth under Title VII, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e to 2000e-17. His complaint alleged that he had been discharged on the basis of his national origin, see id. § 2000e-2(a)(l), and prayed for reinstatement, back pay, marginal benefits, compensatory damages, and “any other remedy in law or equity” that might be available against the Commonwealth. 1
The Title VII claim brought the plaintiff face to face with the Eleventh Amendment, which provides that “[t]he Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.” U.S. Const, amend. XI. This provision has
Despite its unique commonwealth status, Puerto Rico is treated for many juridical purposes as a State. The Eleventh Amendment is included in this compendium and, thus, Puerto Rico is entitled to a full measure of Eleventh Amendment immunity.
See, e.g., Jusino Mercado v. Comm. of Puerto Rico,
Hoisting this banner, the Commonwealth moved to dismiss the plaintiffs complaint on the ground that the Eleventh Amendment pretermitted it (at least in part). To comprehend the Commonwealth’s position, it is helpful to place Title VII into an historical perspective.
Congress originally enacted Title VII as part of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Pub.L. No. 88-352, 78 Stat. 241, 253 (1964). In 1972, it amended the law to include public employers, thus clearing the way for the prosecution of private rights of action against States that practiced discrimination. See Equal Employment Oрportunity Act of 1972, Pub.L. No. 92-261, 86 Stat. 103, 103 (1972). This new right afforded only a limited set of remedies against a state defendant, mainly equitable in nature. Congress expanded the roster of remedies available against the States in 1991, adding compensatory damages to the mix. See Civil Rights Act of 1991, Pub.L. No. 102-166, 105 Stat. 1071, 1072 (1991) (codified at 42 U.S.C. § 1981a(a)(l)).
In this proceeding, the Commonwealth, with a bow toward the Supreme Court’s decision in
Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer,
This concession perforce means that the plaintiffs complaint has opened the Eleventh Amendment portal at least part-way. The Commonwealth, however, seeks to keep the gates from opening more widely. To that end, it directs its Eleventh Amendment challenge to the availability of the nascent compensatory damages remedy. It grounds this challenge on the premise that the 1991 Civil Rights Act, which made that anodyne available against the States for the first time, fails to pass the congruence and proportionality test delineated by the Supreme Court’s recent Eleventh Amendment jurisprudence.
See, e.g., City of Boerne v. Flores,
Invoking this doctrine and noting that Congress relied upon section five in authorizing private rights of actiоn against state defendants, the Commonwealth asserts that Congress acted outside its constitutional authority in purporting to abrogate state sovereign immunity when it amended Title VII in 1991 (and that, therefore, the Eleventh Amendment continues to protect the Commonwealth from being forced to pay compensatory damages in Title VII actions). Unimpressed by the ingenuity of this assertion, the district court summarily denied the Commonweаlth’s motion to dismiss. This appeal ensued.
II.
Appellate Jurisdiction
Even though the parties have assumed the existence of appellate jurisdiction, we enjoy no comparable luxury. Because federal courts are powerless to act in the absence of subject matter jurisdiction, we have an unflagging obligation to notice jurisdictional defects and to pursue them on our own initiative.
See Ins. Corp. of Ir. v. Compagnie des Bauxites de Guinee,
The difficulty here is that the order appealed from — the order denying the Commonwealth’s motion to dismiss— does not end the case. It is, therefore, not “final.” That matters because federal appellate jurisdiction in most civil actions arises out of the power to review “final decisions of the district сourts of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Although this finality principle admits of certain exceptions, the majority of them are statutory in origin. See, e.g., id. § 1292(a)(l)-(3) (establishing special rules for jurisdiction over interlocutory appeals from orders involving injunctive relief, admiralty cases, and receivership matters). None of these statutory exceptions applies here.
To be sure, the Supreme Court has glossed the finality principle, admоnishing that the general requirement of finality should not be applied mechanically.
See Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
Any effort to decipher the collateral order doctrine must begin with the Supreme Court’s seminal opinion in
Cohen.
There, the Court held that an order may be appealed immediately if it “finally determinefs] claims of right separable from, and collateral to, rights asserted in the action, 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.”
Id.
at 546,
The order must involve: (1) an issue essentially unrelated to the merits of the main dispute, capable of review without disrupting the main trial; (2) a complete resolution of the issue, not one that is “unfinished” or “inconclusive”; (3) a right incapable of vindication on appeal from final judgment; and (4) an important and unsettled question of controlling law, not merely a question of the proper exercise of the trial court’s discretion.
United States v. Sorren,
A decade ago, the Supreme Court ruled that an interlocutory order denying a State’s claim of Eleventh Amendment immunity from suit may be appealed immediately by way of the collateral order doctrine.
P.R. Aqueduct & Sewer Auth. v. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc.,
Here, the parties’ assumption that we enjoy appellate jurisdiction apparently rests on the belief that
Puerto Rico Aqueduct
is controlling. We are less sanguine. The precise question before the
Puerto Rico Aqueduct
Court was “whether a district court order denying a claim by a State or a state entity to Eleventh Amendment immunity
from suit
in federal court may be appealed under the collateral order doctrine.”
Id.
at 141,
We turn, then, to the task of testing the viability of such an extension. This requires us to assess the Commonwealth’s actual asseveration (that subjecting it to a claim for compensatory damages in a Title VII suit properly brоught against it in a federal court is barred by the Eleventh Amendment) and to decide, applying the Cohen criteria, whether a pretrial rejection of that asseveration is subject to immediate appeal.
Of the four requirements underpinning the collateral order doctrine, urgency is perhaps the most elemental.
See Recticel Foam,
There is a critical difference between avoiding trial, on the one hand, and limiting exposure to liability, on the other hand. The denial of a colorable claim of immunity from suit cannot effectively be reviewed after trial as the very object and purpose of the immunity is to protect the hоlder from the indignity of being subjected to the coercive processes of a judicial tribunal at the instance of a private party.
See In re Ayers,
This concern is not implicated when the State interposes the Eleventh Amendment not as the basis for an immunity from suit, but, rather, as a defense to one of several remedies sought by a particular plaintiff.
See Thomas v. Nakatani,
Divorced from the question of whether a State can be sued at all in a federal court, the much narrower question of whether it can be held liable for a certain type of pecuniary damages is a question that adequately can be reviewed following trial.
See Cherry,
That tenet is fully operative here. If the plaintiffs case goes forward and the Commonwealth is found liable for compensatory damages, it will have an ample opportunity to test the propriety of that award before it is forced to pay. Thus, the only harm that the Commonwealth stands to suffer from the unavailability of interlocutory review is an inchoate harm stemming from an erroneous but non-final ruling. That is always a risk in litigation— and not the sort of harm that warrants special solicitude. After all, “almost every pretrial or trial order might be called ‘effectively unreviewable’ in the sense that relief from error can never extend to rewriting history.”
Digital Equip.,
Indeed, if the harm asserted here were deemed sufficient to warrant interlocutory review, the
Cohen
exception would swallow the finality principle in a single gulp. That is a consummation that ought to be avoided. The Supreme Court repeatedly has cautioned that the collateral order doctrine constitutes only a “narrow exception” to the final judgment rule and that it “should stay that way.”
Id.
at 868,
The Supreme Court’s decision in
Behrens v. Pelletier,
If an action is dismissed on qualified immunity grounds, that dismissal disposes of the entire case against the defendant in his or her personal capacity.
See Scott v. Lacy,
III.
Conclusion
We need go no further. We conclude that where, as here, a State asserts only that a singular remedy, compensatory damages, is precluded by the Eleventh Amendment, yet acknowledges that it is subject to the plaintiffs federal court suit with respect to other remedies arising as part of the same cause of action, that acknowledgment defeats any claim of entitlement to an interlocutory appeal. In such circumstances, the State must await final judgment before testing on appeal the question of what remedies may be available.
Mercer,
We dismiss the appeal, without prejudice, for want of appellate jurisdiction.
Notes
. Two features of the plaintiff’s complaint deserve special mention. First, only the Commonwealth is prosecuting this appeal; thus, we omit any further reference to the Department and the several departmental officials who are named as additional defendants. Second, the complaint at one point cites 42 U.S.C. § 2000e(j), a definitional provision that deals with discrimination on the basis of religiоn. Since the body of the complaint contains no facts alluding either to the plaintiff’s religion or to any failure to accommodate the plaintiff’s religious practices, we assume that the citation is in error.
. We recognize that it may be possible to wrench certain language in the
Puerto Rico Aqueduct
opinion from its contextual moorings to promote the proposition that any denial of any species of immunity is subjеct to immediate review.
See, e.g.,
. Although not necessary for our conclusion, we note that this interlocutory appeal might well fail the finality prong of thе Cohen test.
. In all events, the purposes served by the doctrine of qualified immunity are distinct from those served by the Eleventh Amendment. State sovereign immunity is intended primarily to “prevent the indignity of subjecting a State to the coercive process of judicial tribunals at the instance of private parties.”
In re Ayers,
