In an earlier proceeding, the predecessor of plaintiff Futura Development of Puerto Rico, Inc. (“Futura”) obtained a judgment against the Cooperative Development Company (“CDC”), a public corporation and instrumentality of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, in the amount of $12,266,000.
See U.S.I. Properties Corp. v. M.D. Construction Co.,
Background
On October 25, 1988, this court affirmed a district court judgment entered pursuant to a jury verdict against CDC, for $12,266,000.
See U.S.I. Properties Corp. v. M.D. Construction Co., Inc.,
CDC is a public corporation that was created by the Puerto Rico Legislative Assembly in order to develop housing cooperatives across Puerto Rico. See P.R. Laws Ann. Tit. 5, §§ 981 et seq. A majority of the CDC’s budget each year is provided by the Commonwealth. Since- the original litigation, the Commonwealth has engaged in a de facto liquidation of CDC in order to avoid satisfying the sizable judgment pending against it. Specifically, the Commonwealth has failed to provide for satisfaction of the judgment in CDC’s budgets, stripped CDC of its assets, transferred its employees, and replaced CDC in the organizational chart of Commonwealth agencies and public corporations. During its liquidation, CDC settled debts with some creditors, but not with Futura. CDC, insolvent and devoid of official responsibility, now exists in name only.
Futura, frustrated by these tactics, brought this suit against the Commonwealth in federal court under the court’s enforcement jurisdiction. 1 Futura argues that the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico is liable for the original judgment because it was a de facto party to the original litigation. This assertion is supported not only by the generally close relationship between the Commonwealth and the CDC, but specifically by the fact that the Attorney General of Puerto Rico took over the original litigation for CDC. Furthermore, in its closing argument to the jury in that original litigation, CDC argued that any judgment against it would have to be paid with Puerto Rico tax dollars.
The Commonwealth argues that, even if CDC were its “alter ego,” it retains Eleventh Amendment immunity from this suit in federal court. Despite its active participation in the defense of the original suit and use of the “tax dollars” argument with the jury, the Commonwealth asserts that it did not implicitly waive its immunity. The district court disagreed, awarding summary judgment in Futura’s favor on the first count, and dis
*10
missing
sua sponte
Futura’s remaining claims against the individual defendants.
See
Analysis
I. Enforcement Jurisdiction
The first question to be resolved in this case is whether the district court properly exercised jurisdiction over Futura’s claim against the Commonwealth. The parties acknowledge that federal question jurisdiction is inapplicable to Futura’s alter ego claim, and that the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico is not subject to diversity jurisdiction.
Cf. 28
U.S.C. § 1332(d) (Puerto Rico treated as a “state” for purposes of the statute, and therefore not subject to diversity jurisdiction);
Nieves v. University of P.R.,
In
Peacock,
the Supreme Court explained that it had “never authorized the exercise of [enforcement] jurisdiction in a subsequent lawsuit to impose an obligation to pay an existing federal judgment on a person not already liable for that judgment.”
Id.
at 357,
Through
Peacock,
the Court reaffirmed the doctrine that “[i]n a subsequent lawsuit involving claims with no independent basis for jurisdiction, a federal court lacks the threshold jurisdictional power that exists when ancillary claims are asserted in the same proceeding as the claims conferring federal jurisdiction.”
Id.
at 355,
Futura attempts to distinguish Peacock on two grounds. First, Futura argues that, under Peacock, enforcement jurisdiction will only be refused where the new defendant’s liability is premised upon that party’s actions which took place after the original judgment was rendered. According to Futura, the Commonwealth’s liability stems from its actions before and during the original litigation, so Peacock is inapposite. This nuanced interpretation misses the rationale of the case.
Peacock holds that enforcement jurisdiction does not exist in a subsequent lawsuit to impose an obligation to pay an existing federal judgment on a new defendant whenever the new proceeding lacks factual dependence upon the old proceeding. Obviously, subsequent proceedings based upon defendant’s actions occurring after the original proceeding will necessarily be factually independent from the primary proceeding. 2 However, Peacock is broader than that. Extending enforcement jurisdiction to factually independent subsequent proceedings will not serve the purpose of judicial efficiency whether those proceedings premise liability upon pre- or post-judgment actions. Peacock does not limit itself, explicitly or implicitly, as Futura argues. Moreover, Peacock’s discussion of other relevant circuit and.Supreme Court case law confirms that its holding is as broad as dictated by its logic.
The
Peacock
Court specifically declared that it had granted certiorari to resolve a split among the various federal courts of appeals.
See id.
at 352,
Futura’s other attempt to distinguish Peacock is futile as well. Futura claims that since the Commonwealth is the alter ego of CDC, the Commonwealth is not really a “new” defendant. According to this argument, whereas Peacock was not liable for the primary judgment until after the subsequent hearing, the Commonwealth was hable to Futura from the moment that the jury returned its verdict in the original proceeding. Thus, the viability of Futura’s argument depends entirely upon our ruling that, unlike a generic veil-piercing claim, which represents a substantive rule, of liability, an alter ego claim is a mere factual determination that identifies an original judgment debtor.
Although we do not discount the possibility that some other alter ego claims can be so characterized, in this case, the Commonwealth and CDC are undeniably separate *12 jural entities, and CDC (but not the Commonwealth) was the original judgment debtor. See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 5, § 981(d) (stating that the Commonwealth is not liable for the debts of CDC). It is clear, then, that this alter ego claim seeks to do more than simply identify the original judgment debtor.
It cannot be denied that this case is separate from the original proceeding. Like the veil-piercing claim in Peacock, an alter ego claim involves an independent theory of liability under equity, complete with new evidence. See Note, Piercing the Corporate Law Veil: The Alter Ego Doctrine Under Federal Common Law, 95 Harv. L.Rev. 853, 853 n. 1 (1982) (veil-piercing and alter ego claims are part of the same doctrine). 3 Although a judgment entered pursuant to such a finding can affect previously existing judgments and other debts, the claim requires a subsequent and distinct inquiry from the court.
To adopt Futura’s argument, we would be forced to treat the corporate form of CDC as a complete nullity—to look through its legal identity to the party standing behind it—and to do so under the guise of making a factual determination necessary to determine our subject matter jurisdiction over this case.
Cf. United States v. United Mine Workers,
Thus, the Commonwealth is in the same position as the defendants in
Beecher
and
Sandlin,
who had also been sued under alter ego rationales.
See Sandlin,
II. Supplemental Jurisdiction
In the alternative, Futura argues that its alter ego claim is within the district court’s supplemental jurisdiction because that claim is so related to its civil rights claims against the individual defendants, claims over which the court undeniably has original jurisdiction, that it forms part of the same ease or controversy. See 28 U.S.C. § 1367. We do not find this argument persuasive. 4
Although its alter ego claim has pre- and post-judgment components, Futura carefully crafted the allegations in its alter ego claim to emphasize the pre-judgment relationship between the Commonwealth and CDC. It stressed the close ties between CDC and the government that existed before and during the original case. It did so because its only chance to penetrate Puerto Rico’s Eleventh Amendment immunity was to argue that the Commonwealth, through its behavior in the case, waived its immunity. Futura recognized that, were it to rely upon the Commonwealth’s post-judgment liquidation of CDC in its alter ego claim, Puerto Rico would have Eleventh Amendment immunity from the claim that would be virtually unassailable, as no waiver of such immunity can be inferred *13 from the Commonwealth’s post-judgment conduct. Futura’s alter ego claim simply cannot be saved by the argument that it forms part of the same case or controversy as the civil rights claims, all of which are premised upon post-judgment conduct. And even if we were to agree that there existed sufficient relatedness between Futura’s claims against the individual defendants and the post-judgment components of Futura’s alter ego claim to bring these components within our supplemental jurisdiction, the Eleventh Amendment would, for reasons already explained, render us powerless to grant Futura any relief against the Commonwealth.
In any event, we do not find sufficient relatedness between these claims because there is no common nucleus of operative facts shared by both the civil rights claims and the alter ego claim.
See BIW Deceived v. Local S6, Indus. Union of Marine and Shipbuilding Workers,
As the district court observed, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico “stood behind CDC in filing an action of questionable merit in this Court, and when that backfired and resulted in an adverse judgment of $12.3 million, it sought to preclude collection of the same.”
III. Sua Sponte Dismissal of Futura’s Other Claims
After awarding summary judgment for Futura on the first cause of action, the district court dismissed the six remaining causes of action Futura had brought against individual defendants. Although the district court’s desire to dispose of these claims is understandable in light of its having provided for the full satisfaction of the original judgment through its award of summary judgment on the first cause of action, the sua sponte dismissal of these remaining claims was premature. Because we herein vacate the district court’s award of partial summary judgment, these remaining claims become even more potentially significant.
This court has held that, in limited circumstances,
sua sponte
dismissals of corn-
*14
plaints under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are appropriate.
See Wyatt v. City of Boston,
In this case, Futura’s initial complaint contained four causes of action against individual defendants, each a government employee. The individuals were sued under the Equal Protection Clause, Due Process Clause, and for federal civil rights violations and tortious interference with contractual relationships under Puerto Rico law. These causes of action were improperly pled in the initial complaint because they contained insufficient factual allegations to establish a causal nexus between the named defendants’ conduct and the alleged violations of law.
See
The district court erred in dismissing these claims
sua sponte
without providing the parties with notice and an opportunity to respond.
See Wyatt,
Conclusion
For the reasons stated herein, we
vacate
the district court opinion as to count one of the verified amended complaint and
dismiss
that count. We
reverse
the district court’s
sua sponte
dismissal of counts two through seven and
remand
those claims for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Finally, we wish to note again the manifest injustice of the conduct of the
government
of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico throughout this affair. It has cleverly used its sovereignty to shield itself from the fair consequences of its actions, and has been aided by recent Supreme Court doctrine.
Peacock,
however, is a relatively new case, and circuit courts are applying it differently.
Cf. Matos v. Richard A. Nellis, Inc.,
No costs.
Notes
. Plaintiffs argue that the district court has jurisdiction over this claim under the doctrine of ''ancillary jurisdiction” recognized in
Dugas v. American Surety Co.,
.
Enforcement jurisdiction can extend to post-judgment conduct in cases where mandamus is sought to force compliance with an existing judgment. However, it cannot extend to most cases that seek to assign liability for the judgment to a new party.
See Peacock,
. Futura’s argument that an alter ego determination fundamentally differs from a generic veil-piercing is somewhat undermined by Futura’s own complaint, which declares that ”[t]he corporate entity [sic] of CDC must be disregarded and its veil pierced, and [the Commonwealth] be declared the alter ego of CDC.”
. We note that Futura did not plead supplemental jurisdiction as an alternative basis for jurisdiction over its alter ego claim. Nor has plaintiff moved to amend the jurisdictional allegations in its complaint pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1653. There is a legitimate question as to whether Futura may preserve its judgment simply by suggesting an alternative jurisdictional theory in its brief.
See Limerick v. Greenwald,
. Recognizing the possibility that
Peacock
might govern this appeal, Futura argues that an appropriate remedy is not a dismissal of this case, but rather a remand to the district court with instructions to deem the first cause of action in this case a motion under P.R. R. Civ. P. 59 for a declaratory judgment that the Commonwealth is the party in interest in the original litigation and required to comply with the judgment. However, we cannot do so. Having determined that federal courts have no enforcement or supplemental jurisdiction over this proceeding, we similarly have no authority for a declaration along the lines suggested by Futura.
See Hercules, Inc. v. United States,
. Thus, we do not reach many of the substantive issues in this case, including whether CDC actually was an alter ego of the Commonwealth, whether the issue is precluded by a post-trial order in the earlier litigation, and whether Puerto Rico’s Eleventh Amendment immunity applies to this claim.
. We note that, upon review, we are unable to determine how the amended verified complaint fails to draw a sufficient nexus between the defendants and the alleged wrongdoing. Without opining as to the ultimate survivability of these claims under Rule 12(b)(6), we expect that, on remand, the district court will provide Futura with more guidance as to the perceived failings in the amended complaint.
