Lead Opinion
Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Judge RUSSELL wrote the majority opinion, in which Judge HALL concurred. Judge WIDENER wrote a dissenting opinion.
OPINION
This is an appeal of a district court’s order affirming, on appeal, the state law findings of a Virginia state agency. We conclude that the district court was without jurisdiction to review the state agency’s findings and, therefore, we reverse.
I.
The case arose out of a contract dispute between Fairfax County Redevelopment and Housing Authority (Housing Authority) and W.M. Schlosser Company (Schlosser), a contractor who contracted to build a housing project for the Housing Authority. Schlos-ser alleged that the Housing Authority had not paid it in full under the parties’ contract and brought a state administrative claim for the amount owed. The Fairfax County Executive, to whom the claim was brought under Virginia’s administrative scheme, found that the Housing Authority had breached the parties’ contract and ordered it to pay Schlosser the amount Schlosser sought.
The Housing Authority appealed the County Executive’s decision to a Virginia circuit court under Va.Code § 11-71, which allows for judicial review of state administrative decisions involving contract disputes. Schlosser removed the Housing Authority’s appeal to federal district court. The district court reviewed the County Executive’s decision under Va.Code § 11-71 and, finding that the decision was not arbitrary or capricious, entered a judgment for Schlosser in the amount awarded by the County Executive.
II.
Removal of suits from state court to federal court is authorized by 28 U.S.C. § 1441, which states in relevant part: “[A]ny civil action brought in a State court of which the district courts of the United States have original jurisdiction ... may be removed by the defendant_” 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a). The district court here determined that it had original jurisdiction over the Housing Authority’s appeal of the County Executive’s decision under 28 U.S.C. § 1332, the diversity statute. Section 1332 provides that “[t]he district courts shall have original jurisdiction of all civil actions” in which the amount in controversy exceeds $50,000 and the parties are diverse. 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a).
The Supreme Court in Burford v. Sun Oil Co.,
The Court applied this rule that federal district courts are courts of original jurisdiction and, thus, cannot review on appeal findings of state agencies in Chicago, Rock Island & Pac. R.R. v. Stude,
The United States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa does not sit to review on appeal action taken administratively or judicially in a state proceeding. A state “legislature may not make a federal district court, a court of original jurisdiction, into an appellate tribunal....”
Id. at 581,
The issue arose once again in Horton v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
The courts of appeals, with one exception, have consistently followed the Supreme Court and held that federal district courts are without jurisdiction to review on appeal findings of state agencies. The Tenth Circuit addressed the issue most comprehensively in Trapp v. Goetz,
In the case at bar, the federal district court, in its diversity jurisdiction, reviewed the Fairfax County Executive’s finding that the Housing Authority had not fully compensated Sehlosser under the parties’ construction contract. The district court performed this review under Virginia’s “Administrative appeals procedure” set forth in Va.Code § 11-71, which provides for “judicial review” of the County Executive’s decision. In this review:
the findings of fact shall be final and conclusive and shall not be set aside unless the same are fraudulent or arbitrary or capricious, or so grossly erroneous as to imply bad faith. No determination on an issue of law shall be final if appropriate legal action is instituted in a timely manner.
Va.Code Ann. § 11-71. The district court entered judgment in the amount awarded by the County Executive after determining that the County Executive’s finding was not arbitrary and capricious. Because the district court is “a court of original jurisdiction,” not “an appellate tribunal,” Stude,
Before concluding, we will respond to the points raised in the dissenting opinion. Initially, the dissent contends that the review procedure set forth in section 11-71 is a de novo trial, citing Cross v. United States,
Neither Cross nor ALCOA supports the dissent’s contention. We held in Cross that the procedure provided in the federal Food Stamp Act to review food stamp disqualification decisions of a federal agency, under which the party challenging the agency decision was entitled to a “trial de novo” in district court to determine “the validity of the questioned administrative action,” required that the district court review the agency’s decision about the length of the disqualification under the “arbitrary and capricious” standard and review the agency’s decision about the fact of the violation under a “broadfer]” standard. Cross,
Alternatively, the dissent asserts that we should refuse to follow the Supreme Court’s holding in Stude that a federal district court may not review on appeal the state law findings of a state agency. Post at 160-163. To support this assertion, it states that the Supreme Court has never followed Stude, post at 160, that Stude is contrary to the Court’s earlier decisions in Madisonville Traction Co. v. St. Bernard Mining Co.,
III.
For the reasons, we reverse the district court’s order and remand with the instructions set forth above.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Stude involved an appeal of two separate actions. A complete analysis of the Court’s holding in Stude requires that we mention the Supreme Court’s treatment of both actions.
As we indicated, a state agency had assessed condemnation damages owed by a railroad to a landowner; to contest this assessment, the railroad pursued two avenues. First, as we discussed, it filed a complaint in the federal district court asking the district court to review the state agency's damages assessment. The Supreme Court found that the district court was without jurisdiction to conduct such a review because the district court "does not sit to review on appeal action taken administratively or judicially in a state proceeding.” Id. at 581,
Second, the railroad appealed the state agency’s assessment of condemnation damages under the procedure established by the state for administrative appeals. Under this procedure, the losing parly before the state agency appeals to state court, and the party’s case is "tried [by the state court] as in an action by ordinary proceedings,” id. at 576,
The Court’s holding on this second issue that the federal district court would have had jurisdiction over this removed case had it been removed by the defendant does not affect our analysis here. The removed case did not seek a review by the district court of the state agency's condemnation assessment, but a de novo proceeding "tried [by the state court] as in an action by ordinary proceedings," id. at 576,
. The Supreme Court in several older cases similarly found that federal district courts had jurisdiction over certain “appeals” from state agencies when these “appeals” were by trial de novo, and, thus, did not involve review of the state agencies’ findings. See, e.g., City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Schnader,
. The dissent also states that this Court and one other court of appeals have not followed Stude's holding, citing Rowland v. Patterson, 882 F.2d 97 (4th Cir.1989), Davison v. Sinai Hosp.,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I respectfully dissent, because I believe that the County Executive’s decision at issue in this case was reviewable de novo by the district court and that even if this was not a de novo review, the federal courts should be permitted to sit in a ease such as this in
I.
The majority recognizes that if the provisions of Virginia law at issue in this case permitted de novo judicial review of the agency’s decision, the district court would have jurisdiction of the action in diversity. But at the same time it fails to recognize that we have defined de novo so as to require the very review it now denies.
In Cross v. United States,
Thus, I am of opinion that the level of review at issue in this case is indistinguishable from that level of review provided in Cross, which was indisputably de novo as required by Section 2022. Accordingly, I believe that this case falls within the Horton exception to the rule of Stude and that the district court had jurisdiction under Horton to review the County Executive’s decision, because the level of review provided by Section 11-71 is essentially the same as we have defined a de novo review of an administrative decision in Cross.
Holding that de novo has a different meaning in this diversity case from the meaning the en banc court has placed on the same words in a federal-question case is hardly even-handed, I suggest.
II.
Even aside from the en bane court’s definition of de novo, I am of opinion that the district court properly exercised its diversity jurisdiction over the dispute, because the district court was exercising its original jurisdiction over a controversy between citizens of different States in which the amount in controversy exceeded $50,000.
The Supreme Court has never followed the holding of Stude, as depended upon by the majority, either before or since.
The Supreme Court in Stude did not even cite, much less overrule, Madisonville Traction Co. v. St. Bernard Mining Co.,
The majority cites Stude for the proposition that under the circumstances of this case, the litigation in the district court was not in the nature of “original jurisdiction,” and thus that Section 1332 does not permit the federal courts to exercise their jurisdiction over such cases. I doubt that Stude justifies such a conclusion.
It is clear to me that the state court was exercising original jurisdiction in this case. As the court in Madisonville Traction found, the dispute did not become a civil action subject to any jurisdictional analysis until the complaint was filed in the state court, whether styled an appeal from an administrative determination or not. At that point, it is clear that the state court was exercising original jurisdiction, because no other court had yet exercised jurisdiction over the dispute.
I believe that the district court would have had original jurisdiction over this case in the same manner as would the courts of the State, in line with Madisonville Traction and Guaranty Trust, and that the removal was appropriate. Professor Wright essentially recommends that the holding of Stude be limited to condemnation cases, see 12 Wright & Miller § 3055, at 154-56 & n. 64; see also Young, Federal Court Abstention and State Administrative Law from Burford to Ank-enbrandt: Fifty Years of Judicial Federalism Under Burford v. Sun Oil Co. and Kindred Doctrines, 42 DePaul L.Rev. 859, 949 n. 479 (1993) (“From time to time, the Supreme Court has taken th[e] position [that a federal court cannot hear what might be characterized as an appeal from a state administrative
In conclusion, I am of opinion that whether we follow our own en banc decision in Cross as to the meaning of de novo, or whether we follow Madisonville Traction and Guaranty Trust, the district court properly exercised its diversity and removal jurisdiction in reviewing this dispute.
I further suggest that the action of the majority is Rule 12 run riot. With Stude and Madisonville Traction from which to choose, the parties having made no objection, the majority, on its own account, has chosen Stude.
I agree with Professor Wright’s suggestion, that Stude should be limited to condemnation cases, and with Professor Young, that the majority’s construction of Stude is an indefensible rationale only erratically endorsed by the Court. So I would follow Madisonville Traction and Guaranty Trust, and for that reason, I respectfully dissent.
. Stude's prohibition against federal appellate review of state administrative determinations has never been applied by this court, either. In fact, this court has effectively reviewed state administrative determinations on a number of occasions, even where the level of review was less-than-plenary, if required by Horton. See, e.g., Rowland v. Patterson,
. I note that it appears under the majority's reasoning that the case was improperly removed because Schlosser, the claimant before the County Executive, was under the majority's reasoning the plaintiff in this case, since the majority finds that the case originated at the County Executive level. Thus, the majority's reasoning creates the anomalous result that administrative claims against a governmental unit, even where judicial review is de novo under the majority definition here, and thus federal jurisdiction is proper under Horton, will never be subject to removal by a claimant but will always be subject to federal review at the instance of a governmental entity. Again, hardly even-handed.
Under my reasoning, the case did not begin until the complaint was filed originally in the state court, and thus Schlosser was properly the defendant and entitled to remove. Moreover, under my reasoning, any party hailed into state court wdsfd be entitled to the benefit of removal, provided "the other jurisdictional prerequisites are met. This result seems much more consistent with the purposes of removal jurisdiction.
In any event, any invalid removal was waived by the Authority's failure to move for remand within thirty days of removal. See 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c).
. Black's Law Dictionary defines jurisdiction as "embracing] every kind of judicial action. It is the authority by which courts and judicial officers take cognizance of and decide cases .... [or] the legal right by which judges exercise their authority.” (emphasis added). Jurisdiction is, quite literally, the power of a judge to decide. It defies logic to find otherwise than that original jurisdiction rests in the first judicial tribunal to confront a dispute, and I believe that this is precisely what the majority, in its construction of Stude, has done.
. Although the majority cites several court of appeals decisions as following Stude's prohibition on federal review of state agency determinations, none of those decisions is on point. In Trapp v. Goetz,
None of the other cases cited by the majority followed the holding of Stude, and none in any event was on facts similar to those before us in the instant case. See FSK Drug Corp. v. Perales,
. The majority states that the dissent "stat[es]” that Studs “was incorrectly decided” and that Stude is "unwise as a policy matter.” An examination of the dissenting opinion, however, does not disclose the use of the word “incorrectly” or “unwise” referring to Stude. The use of that adverb and adjective when referring to the Supreme Court's opinion is entirely that of the majority.
