FU JING WU, a.k.a. Leo Wu, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CHUN LIU, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 24-10397
United States Court of Appeals For the Eleventh Circuit
03/19/2025
[PUBLISH]
D.C. Docket No. 1:23-cv-21541-KMW
Before WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge, and GRANT and LUCK, Circuit Judges.
WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge:
Congress generally has barred appellate review of orders that remand actions to state court because of procedural defects or lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. See
I. BACKGROUND
The Immigration and Naturalization Service tower sat like a mausoleum on Biscayne Boulevard in Miami, Florida. Empty since 2008, the building decayed even as the rest of Biscayne Boulevard prospered with new development. Fu Jing “Leo” Wu and his business partner, Wai Kin “Benny” Lam, designed a facelift for the tower. Their proposed Triton Center would replace abandoned offices with a new mixed-use condominium and a hotel.
Wu and Lam pitched their vision to Chinese investors who, like the tower visitors of old, hoped to immigrate to the United States. These Chinese nationals sought to use the EB-5 visa program, administered by the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, to establish permanent residency. Under the program, foreign nationals receive a visa in exchange for a $500,000 or $1,000,000 investment in a commercial enterprise that creates at least 10 full-time, qualifying jobs. Visa eligibility depends on proper use of investor funds.
After the Triton Center project received the approval of Immigration Services sometime between 2009 and 2013, Wu and Lam began their promotion tour. To fund the project, investors like Chun Liu, a Chinese national, paid $500,000 in capital plus $50,000 in administrative and legal fees in exchange for one membership unit and percentage interest in Florida Immigration Building Funding, LLC, an entity founded by Wu in 2013. This initial offering raised approximately $50 million over several years. A purchase agreement with an arbitration clause provided the terms of the offering. All told, Liu says that he and others sank a “collective sum of approximately $72 million” into the Triton Project.
Most of the funds never found their way to the Triton Center project. Instead, Wu and Lam allegedly diverted tens of millions of dollars into a web of offshore entities and personal bank accounts. As funds came into Building Funding, LLC, the two men siphoned them off for their personal gain. This scheme went on for years. From 2013 to 2017, Wu and Lam offered Chinese investors a path to American residency with one hand and looted their investments with the other.
In 2019, Wu‘s scheme unraveled. At that time, the tower still stood as “vacant and unimproved” as it had been in 2013. And the project, despite Wu‘s representations, created “few” jobs.
In 2020, Liu filed a suit in a Florida court against Lam and Building Funding, LLC for breach of fiduciary duty and equitable relief. The state court eventually appointed a receiver for Building Funding, LLC, who commenced an ancillary action against Wu, Lam, and their companies. Wu settled with the receiver in 2022. Under the settlement, Wu agreed to transfer various properties to the receiver. In exchange, Wu would receive up to $5 million from the properties’ sale, with the rest of the proceeds returned to investors.
Angered that Wu would benefit from his fraud and certain that investors would recover less than the value of their investment, Liu filed a class action in a Florida court that alleged fraud, violations of the Florida Securities and Investor Protection Act, and violations of and conspiracy to violate the Florida Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. And he asked the court for a prejudgment writ of attachment on Wu‘s settlement funds lest
At first, Wu contented himself with litigating in the state court. In quick succession, he filed responses to Liu‘s emergency motion, moved for a protective order, filed objections to Liu‘s discovery requests, filed discovery requests of his own, and scheduled depositions. Then, he invoked the purchase agreement between Liu and Building Funding, LLC and the arbitration clause that applied to any “dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or relating to th[e] Agreement, [and] any relationship created herein.” Based on that clause, Wu moved to compel arbitration. But Liu argued that, under Florida law, Wu waived his “contractual right to arbitrate by actively participating in [the] lawsuit [and] taking action[s] inconsistent with that right.”
Stymied by his own litigation decisions in state court, Wu decided to try the same tactic in a different forum. On the same day that Liu responded to Wu‘s motion to compel arbitration in state court, Wu filed a notice of removal that also moved to compel arbitration and sought a stay in the district court. He based removal jurisdiction on section 205 of the Federal Arbitration Act, which empowers district courts to hear suits removed from state court that “relate[] to an arbitration agreement . . . falling under the [Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards].”
In a single order, the district court denied Wu‘s motion to compel arbitration and remanded the action. It ruled that Wu failed to meet the “jurisdictional prerequisites for the arbitration agreement to fall under the Convention” because Wu “[was] not a signatory to the Purchase Agreement and, therefore, to the arbitration clause.” And it ruled that Wu failed to “provide[] any additional basis for . . . jurisdiction” aside from section 205 of the Arbitration Act. So it granted Liu‘s “motion to remand and order[ed] the case to proceed in state court.”
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review our jurisdiction de novo. Overlook Gardens Props., LLC v. ORIX USA, L.P., 927 F.3d 1194, 1198 (11th Cir. 2019).
III. DISCUSSION
Wu and Lam frame their appeal as a challenge to the denial of their motion to compel arbitration, not to the remand order. From their perspective, jurisdiction is a nonissue. Liu responds that the issue of arbitration cannot be divorced from the assessment of subject-matter jurisdiction and that section 1447(d) bars our review. Because we agree that section 1447(d) applies, we dismiss Wu and Lam‘s appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
Federal courts, we often explain, “are courts of limited jurisdiction.” Wood v. Raffensperger, 981 F.3d 1307, 1310 (11th Cir. 2020). Some limitations come from Article III of the Constitution, which describes the “Cases” and “Controversies” we may decide.
Congress has provided a general rule that remand orders are unreviewable on appeal. See
Nevertheless, we may review remand orders “that determine[] the substantive issues of the case in a way that is conclusive because it is unreviewable by the state court.” Vachon v. Travelers Home & Marine Ins., 20 F.4th 1343, 1347 (11th Cir. 2021) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). But we may not do so when “the substantive issue is intrinsic to the district court‘s decision to remand for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.” Calderon v. Aerovias Nacionales de Colom., 929 F.2d 599, 602 (11th Cir. 1991). And relatedly we may review orders that “lead to, but are separate from, orders of remand and have a conclusive effect upon the ensuing state court action.” Aquamar S.A. v. Del Monte Fresh Produce N.A., Inc., 179 F.3d 1279, 1286 (11th Cir. 1999). This exception to the bar of appellate review finds its origin in Waco v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 293 U.S. 140, 142-43 (1934), where the Supreme Court held that appellate jurisdiction extended to an order that, “in a single decree, . . . entered one order dismissing a cross-complaint against one party, and another order remanding because there was no diversity of citizenship in light of the dismissal.” Powerex Corp. v. Reliant Energy Servs., 551 U.S. 224, 236 (2007).
Under the Federal Arbitration Act, federal courts possess “original federal subject-matter jurisdiction over any action” that arises under the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. Indus. Risk Insurers v. M.A.N. Gutehoffnungshutte GmbH, 141 F.3d 1434, 1440 (11th Cir. 1998), overruled in part by Corporación AIC, S.A. v. Hidroeléctrica Santa Rita S.A., 66 F.4th 876, 880 (11th Cir. 2023) (en banc);
We must consider whether the text of the Arbitration Act gives us jurisdiction to review the order entered by the district court, notwithstanding the bar of review under section 1447(d). The Act provides that a litigant may appeal “an order . . . denying an application under section 206 of this title to compel arbitration.”
When Congress intends to make section 1447(d) inapplicable to new grounds for removal, it says so expressly. See, e.g.,
We acknowledge that the Arbitration Act expressly excepts removal petitions filed under section 205 from one of the “[t]he procedure[s] . . . otherwise provided by law.”
Section 16(a)(1)(C) of the Arbitration Act—which gives us jurisdiction to hear appeals of orders that deny motions to compel arbitration—does not except orders that both deny a motion to compel arbitration and remand the suit for lack of jurisdiction from section 1447(d)‘s jurisdictional bar. This reading does not reduce section 16(a)(1)(C) to a nullity, as Wu suggests. Instead, it interprets the statutory provisions “in a way that renders them compatible, not contradictory.” ANTONIN SCALIA & BRYAN A. GARNER, READING LAW: THE INTERPRETATION OF LEGAL TEXTS § 27, at 180 (2012). It pays heed to section 205‘s direction that the “procedure[s] . . . otherwise provided by law shall apply.”
A contrary conclusion would render section 1447(d) a nullity, not the other way around. “[A]ppellate review of . . . remand orders under [section] 16 would circumvent [section] 1447(d) by affording review of remand orders issued in nearly every case removed under [section] 205.” Dahiya v. Talmidge Int‘l, Ltd., 371 F.3d 207, 210 (5th Cir. 2004). But section 205, “by expressly invoking the procedure for removal of causes otherwise provided by law, forecloses such a result.” Id. (alteration adopted) (internal quotation marks omitted). Wu cannot use section 16 as a workaround to the bar of our appellate jurisdiction under section 1447(d).
Without an express statutory exception, we turn to the matter-of-substantive-law exception and the Waco exception. In Aquamar, we distinguished between them. 179 F.3d at 1286. The matter-of-substantive-law exception, we explained, “applies to the review of a remand order itself.” Id. It “allows the courts of appeals to review those remands to state court” that determine
The matter-of-substantive-law exception does not apply. Although “it is unclear what aspect of the judicial Power of the United States authorizes us to carve out exceptions to Congress‘s lawful restriction of our jurisdiction,” that judge-made “exception is inapplicable” here in any event. Vachon, 20 F.4th at 1347 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). The district court entered a single order that both denied the motion to compel arbitration and granted the motion to remand. But it conducted its arbitration analysis as an assessment of “jurisdictional prerequisites.” In other words, its ruling that Wu could not enforce the arbitration clause was a federal “jurisdictional finding[]” that has no effect on the state action. Id. This exception cannot supply jurisdiction.
Even if we were to slice the order in two, as Wu asks, the Waco exception would not supply jurisdiction. Recall that the Waco exception allows us to review orders that “lead to, but are separate from, orders of remand and have a conclusive effect upon the ensuing state court action.” Id. (discussing Waco, 293 U.S. at 143). Even if we were to cast the denial of Wu‘s motion to compel arbitration as a separate order, it would not be a conclusive one. See Hernandez v. Seminole County, 334 F.3d 1233, 1241 (11th Cir. 2003) (explaining that an order is conclusive under Waco only if it will be “functionally unreviewable in the state court, and it changes the contours of the state court action after remand“). Collateral estoppel would not bar the state court from revisiting the arbitration question both because state courts can reconsider jurisdictional findings and because section 1447(d) “prevents [Wu] from appealing the [d]istrict [c]ourt‘s decision.” Kircher, 547 U.S. at 647; see also City of Oldsmar v. State, 790 So. 2d 1042, 1046 n.4 (Fla. 2001) (noting that, under Florida law, collateral estoppel applies only when a matter has been “fully litigated and determined in a contest that results in a final decision of a court of competent jurisdiction“). At most, the remand order “is final and has preclusive potential only for the issue” of removal jurisdiction. In re Loudermilch, 158 F.3d 1143, 1146 (11th Cir. 1998).
The decision of the Supreme Court in Kircher confirms our conclusion. In Kircher, the district court based its remand order on a finding that the cause of action was not a “covered” class-action suit as defined by the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act of 1998, so it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction. 547 U.S. at 636-38. The Supreme Court held that section 1447(d) barred review of the remand itself and the ruling on the application of the Uniform Standards Act. Id. at 642-44. Because the remand order could not “be disaggregated [like] the Waco orders,” the Court reasoned that the “work done” by the district court “[was] jurisdictional, as [was] the conclusion reached and the order implementing it.” Id. at 644, 646 n.13. On remand, the “state court . . . [was] perfectly free to reject the remanding court‘s reasoning” even though “the remand‘s basis coincide[d] entirely
In a final effort to avoid the bar of section 1447(d), Wu contends that the order was “based on a forum selection clause,” not a lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, and his best precedent is Snapper, Inc. v. Redan, 171 F.3d 1249, 1260 (11th Cir. 1999). But Snapper is inapposite. The Snapper defendants removed their case based on diversity jurisdiction, which was never contested, and the district court remanded to state court after it determined that the forum-selection clause in the parties’ contract waived their right to removal. Id. at 1251-52. The district court in Snapper had diversity jurisdiction to hear the case, but ruled only that removal was improper based on the contract. Id. And we, in turn, ruled that section 1447(d) did “not bar our review of the . . . remand order” because it was “based upon [the interpretation of] a forum selection clause” and not a ground covered by section 1447(d). Id. at 1260.
Unlike in Snapper, removal jurisdiction here turns on the enforceability of the arbitration clause. Although we have jurisdiction to review some remand orders that turn on forum-selection clauses, we lack jurisdiction to review those orders where the enforceability of the clause serves as a predicate for our subject-matter jurisdiction. This appeal falls into the latter category.
IV. CONCLUSION
We DISMISS Wu and Lam‘s appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
