On May 28, 2004, the Arkansas State Board of Education ordered the consolidation of the Lake View School District with the Barton-Lexa School District under “Act 60,” a law enacted by the Arkansas General Assembly in its Second Extraordinary Session of 2003. 3 Act 60 required school districts with an “average daily membership” of fewer than 350 students to be consolidated with or annexed by another school district. After the Board’s consolidation order took effect, the plaintiffs in this action (collectively, “Friends of Lake View”) sued the Governor of Arkansas, the Commissioner of the Arkansas Department of Education, the Arkansas State Board of Education, and the State of Arkansas, alleging numerous violations of federal and state law. Friends of Lake View appeal the district court’s 4 grant of the defendants’ motion to dismiss. For the following reasons, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
On June 18, 2004, the Arkansas Supreme Court issued its opinion in
Lake View School District No. 25 v. Huckabee (Lake View 2004),
358 Ark.137,
On October 25, 2004, Friends of Lake View sued in federal court, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as damages, restitution, and attorney’s fees. Although the complaint included eleven separate causes of action, the only claim that Friends of Lake View address on appeal challenges the constitutionality of Act 60 under the Fourteenth Amendment.
On June 9, 2005, the Arkansas Supreme Court recalled its mandate in the
Lake View
litigation and appointed special masters to evaluate whether Governor Huckabee and the other defendants had complied with the court’s previous orders.
Lake View Sch. Dist. No. 25 v. Huckabee (Lake View 2005),
364 Ark.398,
The Arkansas Supreme Court stayed the issuance of its mandate until December 1, 2006.
Lake View 2005,
On October 11, 2007, the district court “reopened” this case for the limited purpose of “determining subject-matter jurisdiction and claim preclusion under the Full Faith and Credit Statute [28 U.S.C. § 1738].”
Friends of Lakeview Sch. Dist. Incorporation No. 25 v. Huckabee,
No. 2:04-cv-00184,
On April 8, 2008, the district court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss. In lieu of issuing a full opinion, the district court adopted a “well-reasoned order” issued by a different judge in a different case.
Friends of Lakeview Sch. Dist. Incorporation No. 25 v. Huckabee,
No. 2:04-cv-00184,
II. DISCUSSION
We review de novo a district court’s decision to grant a motion to dismiss.
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Schaaf v. Residential Funding Corp.,
At the outset, we note that Friends of Lake View object to the manner in which the district court dismissed this action. To be sure,
Friends of Eudora
involved many of the same issues that were raised in the present case, including the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine, issue and claim preclusion, failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, and sovereign immunity. On the other hand,
Friends of Eudora
involved different parties, different facts, a different procedural history, some different claims, and some different arguments. As a result of those differences, some of the court’s reasoning in
Friends of Eudora
was plainly inapplicable here.
8
Nevertheless, we find that a remand is not warranted in this instance because we may affirm the district court’s grant of the defendants’ motion to dismiss “on any basis supported by the record,”
Phipps v. FDIC,
We turn next to the defendants’ argument that the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over this action due to the operation of the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine. The “basic theory” of the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine is “that only the United States Supreme Court has been given jurisdiction to review a state-court decision,” so federal district courts generally lack subject-matter jurisdiction over “attempted appeals from a state-court judgment.” 18B Charles Alan Wright et al.,
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 4469. 1, at 97, 101 (2d ed.2002);
see Dornheim v. Sholes,
Friends of Lake View do not claim to be aggrieved by the outcome of the
Lake View
litigation; hence, this action is not an attempt to appeal from an adverse state-court judgment. Friends of Lake View instead complain of injuries resulting from the consolidation of the Lake View School District under Act 60. That fact alone would seem to foreclose the defendants’ argument that the
Rooker-Feldman
doc
*759
trine applies.
See Exxon Mobil,
Still, the defendants contend that Friends of Lake View’s challenge to the constitutionality of Act 60 was “raised, briefed, and rejected” in
Lake View 2004,
so a federal judgment in favor of Friends of Lake View would effectively overrule the Arkansas Supreme Court’s contrary decision.
9
While the constitutionality of Act 60 does appear to have been raised and briefed in
Lake View 2004
by the Lake View School District, the Arkansas Supreme Court did not decide the issue one way or the other. Instead, after noting that the Lake View School District had asked the court to retain jurisdiction in order to declare Act 60 unconstitutional,
Lake View 2004,
The defendants suggest, however, that the Arkansas Supreme Court implicitly decided that Act 60 comported with the Fourteenth Amendment, since the court could not otherwise have “determined] that the State complied with its obligation to provide Arkansas’s children with an adequate and substantially equal education.” But the state’s obligation to provide an adequate and substantially equal education arises under Article 14 of the Arkansas Constitution, not the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
See Lake View 2002,
The defendants argue in the alternative that Friends of Lake View’s claims are barred by the preclusive effect of the
Lake View
litigation before the Arkansas Supreme Court. To address this argument we consider Arkansas law, for the Full Faith and Credit Act provides that a state-court judgment must be given the “full faith and credit” in federal courts that it would have in the state’s own courts.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1738;
see also Butler v. City of N. Little Rock,
*760
Issue preclusion “bars the relitigation of issues of law or fact actually litigated by the parties in the first suit.”
Williams v. Marlar (In re Marlar),
Claim preclusion “bars another action by the plaintiff or his privies against the defendant or his privies on the same claim or cause of action,” provided that the previous case or controversy resulted in “a valid and final judgment rendered on the merits by a court of competent jurisdiction.”
Marlar,
The defendants assert that Friends of Lake View’s Fourteenth Amendment claim “could have and properly should have been raised” (and, presumably, decided) in the
Lake View
litigation. But the defendants’ assertion depends on a false premise — that “almost every aspect of the State’s public education system was comprehensively litigated by the parties [in the
Lake View
litigation] and intensely scrutinized by the Special Masters.” As we noted above, the Arkansas Supreme Court declined to consider the constitutionality of Act 60 under the Fourteenth Amendment and expressly rejected the parties’ invitation to retain jurisdiction and “serve as a watchdog agency” or “a brooding superlegislature.”
Lake View 2004,
The dispositive question therefore becomes whether the complaint in this action stated a claim upon which relief can be granted. The only claim that Friends
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of Lake View address on appeal challenges the constitutionality of Act 60 under the Fourteenth Amendment. Consequently, Friends of Lake View have abandoned the other state and federal claims raised in their complaint.
See Fenney v. Dakota, Minn. & E. R.R.,
First, Friends of Lake View contend that Act 60 is subject to strict scrutiny because education is a fundamental right under Arkansas law. But Arkansas law does not control the level of scrutiny, since Friends of Lake View’s claim arises under the Fourteenth Amendment. As Friends of Lake View acknowledge, the Supreme Court has rejected the proposition that education is a fundamental right under the Fourteenth Amendment,
see San Antonio Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Rodriguez,
Second, Friends of Lake View contend that Act 60 is subject to strict scrutiny because Act 60 is a racial classification. To this end, Friends of Lake View repeatedly invoke the Supreme Court’s decision in
Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School District No. 1,
A facially neutral law such as Act 60 is reviewed under strict scrutiny “only if it can be proved that the law was ‘motivated by a racial purpose or object,’ or if it is ‘unexplainable on grounds other than race.’ ”
Hunt v. Cromartie,
Friends of Lake View also asserted that the selection of 350 students as the cutoff for consolidation was “arbitrary” and that the defendants targeted the Lake View School District for “destruction.” However, those are mere “labels and conclusions.”
See Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
Because Act 60 is a facially neutral law that does not infringe on a fundamental right, we apply the rational basis test.
See Weems v. Little Rock Police Dep’t,
Act 60 survives rational basis review because the State of Arkansas has a legitimate governmental interest in consolidating school districts to achieve economies of scale and other efficiencies and the classification drawn between school districts based on their average daily membership is rationally related to advancing that interest. 13 Accordingly, we affirm the dismissal of Friends of Lake View’s complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. 14
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
Notes
. The student population of the former Lake View School District was composed almost entirely of African-American students (163 African-American students compared to one white student). Meanwhile, the student population of the former Barton-Lexa School District was approximately 25 percent African-American and 75 percent white. After the consolidation, the student population of the new Barton-Lexa School District was approximately 38 percent African-American and 62 percent white.
. The Honorable William R. Wilson, Jr., United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
. We refer to these cases collectively as "the Lake View litigation," and to each of the Arkansas Supreme Court’s opinions by year.
.
See Younger v. Harris,
.
See Rooker v. Fid. Tr. Co.,
. For example, the court in
Friends of Eudora
held that the plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge the constitutionality of Act 60 because the Eudora School District was annexed by another school district under Arkansas’s fiscal distress statutes.
Friends of Eudora,
. We note that the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine does not oust subject-matter jurisdiction when a nonparty to a completed state-court proceeding later brings a federal action.
See Johnson v. De Grandy,
. Even if it were merely "doubtful” whether this case involves the same claim or cause of action as the
Lake View
litigation, Arkansas law instructs that claim preclusion does not apply when "two actions rest upon different set[s] of facts.”
Hamilton v. Ark. Pollution Control & Ecology Comm’n,
. Friends of Lake View seek to preserve their other claims by declaring that they "will rely on pleading [sic] and motions filed below.” We find that this is insufficient to overcome our general rule that "an issue not raised or briefed in this court [is] waived.”
See Berryhill v. Schriro,
. We have found nothing in the record to indicate that this is one of those exceedingly rare cases in which "a clear pattern, unexplainable on grounds other than race, emerges from the effect of the state action even [though] the governing legislation appears neutral on its face,”
Vill. of Arlington Heights v. Metro. Hous. Dev. Corp.,
. Friends of Lake View do not clearly distinguish between the Fourteenth Amendment guarantees of due process and equal protection. Assuming that Friends of Lake View premised their Fourteenth Amendment claim on both substantive due process and equal protection, we need not address those issues separately because "[a] rational basis that survives equal protection scrutiny also satisfies substantive due process analysis.”
Executive Air Taxi Corp. v. City of Bismarck,
. We note that the defendants assert in conclusory fashion that "[a]ll of [Friends of Lake View’s] claims against the Governor are barred by sovereign immunity because they do not fall within the Ex parte Young exception.” Since we affirm the dismissal of Friends of Lake View's complaint, we need not decide whether Governor Beebe (or any of the other defendants) would be entitled to claim sovereign immunity under the Eleventh Amendment in regard to some or all of Friends of Lake View’s claims.
