In this case Frances J. and Willa B. represent a class of mentally impaired adults over the age of 60 who have been or will be adjudicated disabled in the probate court of Cook County. On the plaintiffs’ behalf, the Cook County Public Guardian filed suit, in state court, against two state officers in their official capacity (“Defendants”), alleging that they violated the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights and misapplied state law. Defendants removed the case to federal court and subsequently moved to dismiss the plaintiffs’ complaint. The district court granted Defendant’s motion. Plaintiffs here appeal. Because the federal courts lack subject matter jurisdiction over this case, we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand this ease with the instructions that the district court remand it back to the state courts.
I. Background
The named plaintiffs, Frances J. and Willa B., represent a class of elderly persons, most of whom suffer from Alzheimer, dementia or organic brain syndrome dysfunctions. At the time this suit was filed, Frances, at 75 years old, suffered from an organic brain syndrome dysfunction, while Willa, at 100, suffered from dementia of the Alzheimer type. Both are so severely disabled that the probate court appointed Patrick T. Murphy, the Cook County Public Guardian (“Guardian”), to direct their legal affairs. Defendants, Phil Bradley as the director of Illinois Department of Public Aid (“IDPA”), and Nancy Nelson as the acting director of the Illinois Department of Aging (“IDOA”), were sued in their official capacities only. Since the filing of this suit both Mr. Bradley and Ms. Nelson have been succeeded in their official duties by Robert Wright and Maralee Lindley respectively, and thus, pursuant to F.R.A.P. 43(c), Mr. Wright and Ms. Lindley have been substituted in the caption.
On the plaintiffs’ behalf, the Guardian is attempting to obtain certain home healthcare benefits for the plaintiffs that are provided by the state though IDOA. 1 In Illinois, the IDOA administers these health-care benefits through its Community Care Program (“Program”). As part of the Program, the IDOA has established the “Determination of Needs Analysis” (“DONA”) test to assess the requisite level of home health-care services needed by an applicant. Depending on an applicant’s DONA score, the state will reimburse the Guardian for the allowed level of home health-care services. In this case, after the IDOA found the plaintiffs eligible for less than the maximum number of Program benefit dollars, 2 the Guardian filed suit in state court for damages, a declaratory judgment, and injunctive relief. In their state-court complaint, the plaintiffs alleged violations of substantive due process, procedural due process and equal protection rights, along with violations of the Rehabili *340 tation Act of 1973. Defendants removed the case to federal court, where the district court dismissed the suit for failure to state a claim. Here, the plaintiffs have appealed. We do not reach the merits of the plaintiffs’ contentions because this ease is beyond the removal jurisdiction of the federal courts. Accordingly, we must vacate the district court’s judgment and remand this suit with instructions to remand it to state court.
II. Analysis
The procedural path of this case highlights a peculiar sequence of decisions by Defendants. Initially this case was filed by the plaintiffs in the state courts of general jurisdiction. But Defendants, after removing this case to federal court on their own motion, now argue that this same federal forum lacks any subject matter jurisdiction, by the Hans doctrine, 3 to hear all but the prospective claims of this case. We are curious why Defendants would engage in such a paradoxical jurisdictional maneuver, unless they merely had hoped to split the prospective relief claims from those that are retrospective in nature. Whatever their reason, stratagem, or lack thereof, for our part we can only send this whole matter back from whence it came. Under the federal removal statute, this case should not have been removed without Defendants first producing an authoritative waiver of the state’s sovereign immunity.
A. Removal
The linchpin of this court’s jurisdiction is the ease’s removal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a). 4 The text of § 1441(a) specifies when a federal court may hear a case removed from state court. Notably, the language of this statute only authorizes the removal of actions that are within the original jurisdiction of the federal courts:
Except as otherwise expressly provided by Act of Congress, any 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 or defendants, to the district court of the United States for the district and division embracing the place where such action is pending.
28 U.S.C. § 1441(a) (1948) (our emphasis). Thus, federal courts are straightaway restricted from removing actions where the action could not have been originally filed in federal court.
See Metcalf v. Watertown,
We are not alone in our reading of § 1441(a).
See McKay v. Boyd,
In reaching our decision, we disagree, as some have asserted, that
McKay
and similar decisions must erroneously read
Hans
to bar federal jurisdiction over actions rather than single claims.
See Henry v. Metropolitan Sewer District,
We note that while our holding today is compelled by the text of § 1441(a), it is not without policy support. As the Supreme Court has taught from early in this Nation’s history — state courts are competent and capable to decide those federal questions that, as under § 1441(a), would not be removable to a federal forum.
See Martin v. Hunter’s Lessee,
B. Sovereign Immunity
Having concluded that § 1441(a) bars the removal of an action if it contains claims that would infringe a state’s sovereign immunity, we must examine the claims here. Plaintiffs brought this suit against the Director of the IDPA and the IDOA in their official capacities requesting the district court to order the IDOA to immediately reimburse the Office of the Public Guardian for all public funds the Guardian has expended on Frances and Willa for which the IDOA should have paid. To the extent the plaintiffs’ claims sought retrospective relief to be paid from the state’s treasury, they are barred under the Hans doctrine, unless the state has explicitly consented to suit in federal court.
This constitutional bar to federal jurisdiction applies to suits against any state,
Hans,
An exception to the general rule of
Hans
has been recognized where an official-capacity suit challenges the legality of an official’s conduct under the Constitution or federal law.
Ex Parte Young,
As a general matter Illinois has consented to such suits in its own state courts, in a manner prescribed by the General Assembly. Ill. Const, art. 13, § 4 (1971);
*343
see also Osteen v. Henley,
III. Conclusion
Having determined that the plaintiffs’ action contained claims that are outside the original jurisdiction of the federal courts, under § 1441(a), their action should not have been removed from state to federal court. Without proper removal the district court lacked jurisdiction. Therefore, we must vacate its judgment and remand this case with the instruction that it be remanded to state court.
Vacated and Remanded.
Notes
. These benefits would permit Plaintiffs to receive their health care in their homes instead of in an institutional nursing facility.
. Frances, with a DONA score of 71/100, qualified for seven hours of home health-care services per day, for a monthly total of $919.00 out of a possible $1,445.00. Similarly, Willa, with a DONA score of 71/100, qualified for five and a half hours of home care per day, or $838.00 out of the $1,445.00 possible per month. We are uncertain why Frances and Willa, both with a DONA score of 71/100, received unequal monthly benefits. However, since our resolution of this case does not depend on such treatment, we note this oddity without further comment.
.
Hans v. Louisiana,
. We have considered whether § 1441(c) could have alternatively stated authority for the removal of this case to federal court. We believe that the language of § 1441(c), by providing that "the entire case may be removed and the district court may determine all issues therein," 28 U.S.C. § 1441(c) (emphasis supplied), renders this statue inapplicable to the case at bar. Because the Hans doctrine bars a federal court from hearing claims against a citizen's home state in federal court, and, short of that sovereign's consent, the district court may not thus determine "all issues therein,” this section seems incompatible with a case of this sort.
. For an analysis of this case law, which we found unpersuasive, see Mitchell N. Berman, Note, Removal and the Eleventh Amendment: the Case for District Court Remand Discretion to Avoid a Bifurcated Suit, 92 Mich.L.Rev. 3 (1993).
