A partnership called GASH Associates owned an office building in Rosemont, Illinois. The building was encumbered by three mortgages. GASH created a fourth when it sold the building, taking the buyer’s non-recourse note. The buyer did not pay, and GASH decided to foreclose on its interest. This led to a sale at auction, which realized $4,005,000, not enough to pay off the senior lenders, to which GASH owed almost $6 million. GASH was stuck with a hefty deficiency judgment. The senior lenders asked the court to confirm the sale. It did, over GASH’s vigorous objection.
Lyons Savings & Loan Ass’n v. GASH Associates,
Dissatisfied with the outcome in state court, GASH commenced this action in federal court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the Village of Rosemont, the winning bidder. GASH believes that Rosemont winkled it out of full value for the property by commencing a condemnation action in state court while the foreclosure action was pending, thus “taking” its property. It styled this as an inverse condemnation action. By tendering only $3.8 million in the condemnation action, Rosemont scared away rival bidders, GASH believes. Anyone outbidding Rosemont faced a risk that it would have to surrender the building to the Village for less than it paid; that prospect depressed the price below what GASH says is the fair market price of the building, some $5.8 million. Rosemont replied that any condemnation action may discourage other potential buyers, and the process cannot itself be a “taking”; nothing is special about condemnation while the owner prefers to sell at auction. The Village contended that it cannot be liable for “taking” what it bought in the market, and cannot be required to pay more than the high bid in a competitive auction. Rosemont insists that its bid did nothing but-drive up the price at the auction. Had it remained on the sidelines, someone else would have bought for less than $4 million, and GASH’s deficiency judgment would have been greater. GASH or a third party could have topped the $4 million bid had it believed that the condemnation action would lead to a higher award. The district court accepted Rose-mont’s arguments and dismissed the action under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6).
Dominating this case is a simple fact: GASH objects to the outcome of a judicial proceeding and filed a separate suit to get around it. This runs headlong into
Rooker v. Fidelity Trust Co.,
Rosemont invoked the Rooker-Feldman doctrine in the district court. Judge Nord-berg, presiding in the case before its transfer to Judge Andersen, concluded that this doc *728 trine is coterminous with principles of claim preclusion (res judicata). Because Illinois would allow litigation in its own courts raising the possibility that a judicially-approved sale is a taking, Judge Nordberg concluded, the litigation may proceed in federal court. Both sides appear to accept this disposition, for neither mentioned it in the appellate briefs.
Equating the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine with preclusion is natural; both sets of principles define the respect one court owes to an earlier judgment. But the two are not coextensive. Preclusion in federal litigation following a judgment in state court depends on the Full Faith and Credit Statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1738, which requires the federal court to give the judgment the same effect as the rendering state would.
Marre se v. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons,
Three of our recent cases illustrate the dividing line. Plaintiff in
Leaf v. Supreme Court of Wisconsin,
As we see things, GASH is attacking the judgment itself. It believes that the sale should not have been confirmed at such a low price and wants the buyer to pay more. Just *729 as in Ritter, it has no claim independent of the state court’s adverse decision. To put this differently, the injury of which GASH complains was caused by the judgment, just as in Rooker, Feldman, and Ritter. GASH did not suffer an injury out of court and then fail to get relief from state court; its injury came from the judgment confirming the sale, rather than requiring the Village to condemn the building independently of the foreclosure, as GASH had demanded. Both trial and appellate courts in Illinois considered and rejected this position on the merits. The appellate court expressly rebuffed GASH’s contention that the pending condemnation action unduly depressed the price realized in the auction. Only the Supreme Court of the United States was authorized to review that decision. Because GASH complains about the judgment entered by a state court, the district court lacked jurisdiction. The judgment is vacated, and the case is remanded with instructions to dismiss for want of jurisdiction.
