The Department of Health and Human Services owed millions of dollars to the now-defunct Land of Lincoln Mutual Health Insurance Company. Likewise, Land of Lincoln owed millions to HHS. As part of its regulatory oversight, HHS has elected to set off its own debt payments by first paying down Land of Lincoln's debt. The Director of the Illinois Department of Insurance, who is Land of Lincoln's appointed liquidator, contends that this setoff violates an order issued by the Illinois court overseeing the liquidation proceedings that prevents any creditors from setting
I
This case centers on debts in the Affordable Care Act's three premium-stabilization programs-the Risk Adjustment, Risk Corridor, and Reinsurance programs-all of which were designed to redistribute money among insurance companies and thereby mitigate each company's exposure to risks in the market.
See
Land of Lincoln participated in these premium-stabilization programs and incurred a debt of roughly $32 million in the Risk Adjustment program. This debt, though large, should not have been a problem for the company, as HHS owed Land of Lincoln over $70 million, the bulk of which it owed under the Risk Corridor program. The government, however, was not able to pay what it owed because it was taking in far less money than it had expected, and it refused to dip into its limited discretionary funds. Like other insurance companies, Land of Lincoln sought the overdue Risk Corridor payments in a suit with the Court of Federal Claims, but it was rebuffed,
Land of Lincoln Mut. Health Ins. Co. v. United States
,
As part of the liquidation, the Chancery Division of the Circuit Court of Cook County-one of two Illinois courts empowered to oversee insurance rehabilitation and liquidation,
see
215 ILCS 5/199 -entered an order naming the Director of the Illinois Department of Insurance as liquidator,
see
215 ILCS 5/191, and prohibited all of Land of Lincoln's creditors, including any "governmental entity," from "setting off or netting monies owed Land of Lincoln without the prior leave of this Court."
See
215 ILCS 5/189. Despite this order and the Director's protestations, HHS began to offset its overdue payments against Land of Lincoln's debt in the Risk Adjustment program, as its own regulations permitted,
see
HHS's refusal to comply led the Director to move the state court for a declaratory judgment finding that HHS was in violation of the court's order. In the motion, the Director asserted that she "is not asking at this point that [HHS] be ordered to release the funds or pay them over to the estate," and instead she hoped that the declaration would lead HHS to follow the order of its own accord. In the event HHS did not choose to comply, the Director expressly asked for "leave to seek an appropriate remedy."
The district court granted the Director's motion to remand. Relying on the legislative history surrounding § 1442(d)(1), the district court concluded that Congress had not aimed that provision toward this sort of motion for declaratory relief, but instead Congress was concerned, principally, with removal of actions "pertaining to pre-suit discovery and specifically those affecting Federal officers." Because the district court thought it necessary to construe the statute strictly against removal, it determined that it lacked removal jurisdiction over this motion, which neither related to discovery nor involved an officer. The district court then certified its remand order.
See
HHS filed a timely motion for reconsideration, which the district court denied mainly because HHS had only rehashed its earlier arguments for removal, which the district court already had thoroughly addressed. At that time, the district court also bolstered its decision to remand explaining that even if it had erred in remanding on statutory grounds, it would have exercised its discretion to remand under the abstention doctrine first set forth in
Burford v. Sun Oil Co.
,
II
We begin, as we must, with our jurisdiction to consider this appeal.
See
III
HHS first argues that the district court erred in concluding that it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over this case under the federal officer and agency removal statute,
Because this case centers on the text of § 1442, we set out the relevant parts of that statute in their entirety:
(a) A civil action or criminal prosecution that is commenced in a State court and that is against or directed to any of the following may be removed by them to the district court of the United States for the district and division embracing the place wherein it is pending:
(1) The United States or any agency thereof or any officer (or any person acting under that officer) of the United States or of any agency thereof, in an official or individual capacity, for or relating to any act under color of such office or on account of any right, title or authority claimed under any Act of Congress for the apprehension or punishment of criminals or the collection of the revenue.
....
(d) In this section, the following definitions apply:
(1) The terms "civil action" and "criminal prosecution" include any proceeding (whether or not ancillary to another proceeding) to the extent that in such proceeding a judicial order, including a subpoena for testimony or documents, is sought or issued. If removal is sought for a proceeding described in the previous sentence, and there is no other basis for removal, only that proceeding may be removed to the district court.
Therefore, § 1442 allows removal of any proceeding that meets the following requirements:
A
We start with the element that the district court found dispositive-whether the motion for declaratory relief is a "civil action." The district court opined that HHS's removal "appears to fall within [ § 1442(d)(1) ], but [that] a closer look at the legislative history reveals the distinct purpose behind Congress's amendment." In the court's view, that purpose was aimed at ancillary civil actions "pertaining to pre-suit discovery and specifically those affecting Federal officers." The court relied on legislative history showing that Congress was particularly concerned with an attempt to seek discovery from a congresswoman without having filed a suit against her.
See
H.R. Rep. 112-17, at 3-4,
reprinted in
2011 U.S.C.C.A.N. 420, 422-23 (describing
Price v. Johnson
,
On appeal, HHS argues that the district court erred in narrowly construing § 1442(d)(1). Even assuming that a narrow construction was necessary, HHS asserts that the plain text of the statute applies to the motion in this case, making it removable. We agree with both points.
We have yet to interpret the definition of "civil action" provided in
The district court relied on our decision in
Morris v. Nuzzo
,
Turning to the text of § 1442, it does not support the district court's conclusion that it lacked jurisdiction because the Director's motion was neither directed at an individual officer nor related to discovery. The definition of "civil action" is independent of the nature of the party removing. Section 1442(a) uses the term "civil action" only once to refer to all the different entities and persons that may remove a case under the section, including individual officers, persons acting under those officers, federal agencies, and the United States itself. Due to this drafting choice, the text of the statute gives no reason to believe that the phrase "civil action" should have different meanings depending on whether the defendant is an officer or an agency.
The text of the statute also gives no reason to limit removal only to discovery disputes. The statute applies to any proceeding seeking a "judicial order,
including
a subpoena for testimony or documents."
Because the Director seeks an order declaring her right to money withheld by HHS, her motion requesting that order is an "ancillary proceeding" and, therefore, a "civil action" within the plain text of § 1442. There is no need then to delve into the legislative history.
See
Singh v. Sessions
,
B
Next, the motion for declaratory relief is also "against or directed" to HHS within the meaning of § 1442. The district court correctly recognized that the liquidation of Land of Lincoln (as a whole) was not a civil action "against or directed to" HHS, or any other part of the federal government. The government merely has an interest in the proceeding that does not, inherently, make it a party.
See
United States v. Rural Elec. Convenience Co-op Co.
,
The Director's position has two faults. First, it wrenches the district court's reasoning from its context. As the court correctly explained, "removal could only be proper if contemplated as arising from an ancillary proceeding [and] Section 1442(a) does not otherwise provide that DHHS can remove the action as a non-ancillary proceeding." This part of the district court's analysis is correct because this case is removable only if it is an ancillary proceeding. The district court erred solely in its determination that this case was not an ancillary proceeding.
Having concluded that the statute allows removal of only part of a proceeding, we turn to whether the Director's motion is "against or directed to" HHS. That much is plain from the fact that the Director served HHS with a notice of the Director's motion, and HHS must respond to the motion. That the Director may eventually ask the court to order HHS to produce the withheld money only bolsters this conclusion.
C
We also agree with HHS that it has alleged a colorable federal defense. HHS specifically argues that the Director's motion cannot proceed because it has not waived its sovereign immunity. It asked the district court to dismiss the case for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction and now asks this court to do so in the district court's stead. To conclude that removal was proper, we need find only a "colorable" or "plausible" federal defense, because removal is "concerned with who makes the ultimate determination, not what that determination will be."
Ruppel v. CBS Corp.
,
The Director contends that HHS's claim to sovereign immunity is baseless. In doing so, the Director does not rely on any waiver of sovereign immunity, express or implied, but instead argues that the liquidation proceeding does not implicate sovereign immunity at all, because it is a proceeding in rem .
The Director overstates her case. "[T]here is no general
in rem
exception to principles of sovereign immunity."
Zych v. Wrecked Vessel Believed to be the Lady Elgin
,
Next, the Director argues that the Supreme Court abrogated the reasoning of
Nordic Village
, and therefore
Zych
, in the later case of
Central Virginia Cmty. College v. Katz
,
Even to the extent that the Director seeks a "mere declaration," HHS's claim to sovereign immunity remains colorable. A contrary conclusion would imply that both statutes that create and court decisions that find waiver of the federal government's sovereign immunity were wholly unnecessary, including the version of
Because HHS met the final element necessary for removal under § 1442, we conclude that the district court erred in remanding this case for lack of removal jurisdiction.
IV
That removal was proper does not end this appeal because the district court decided that, even if it had erred in construing § 1442, it would nevertheless abstain from hearing the case. We review the district court's decision to abstain from exercising its jurisdiction for an abuse of discretion.
Adkins v. VIM Recycling, Inc.
,
It is well established that federal courts have a "virtually unflagging obligation ... to exercise the jurisdiction given them."
Colo. River Water Conservation Dist. v. United States
,
Here, the district court relied upon the abstention principle set out in
Burford v. Sun Oil Co.
,
The Supreme Court has generalized this standard in the intervening decades and clarified that
Burford
abstention is proper in only two circumstances. The first is "when there are 'difficult questions of state law bearing on policy problems of substantial public import whose importance transcends the result in the case then at bar.' "
NOPSI
,
Relying on our decision in
Hartford Casualty Insurance Co. v. Borg-Warner Corp
,
Finally, the district court considered the effect of the McCarran-Ferguson Act,
Though we, like the Tenth Circuit,
see
Oklahoma ex rel. Doak v. Acrisure Bus. Outsourcing Servs., LLC
,
A
Regarding the first factor, namely, the nature of the cause of action, the federal issues in this case eclipse any state issues that might arise. Therefore, under the ordinary rules of the Supremacy Clause, principles of federalism do not "warrant deference to the state's regulatory regime."
Adkins
,
To clarify, this case involves two debts owed to and by a federal agency under a federal regulatory regime, and the court must decide whether that agency can, consistent with a federal regulation, offset the two debts. On the other hand, the only application of state law to this case is whether HHS violated the state-court order by offsetting its debt, which may or may not be "mutual" (and therefore permissible to offset) under state law. The determination of that question would necessarily require a court to answer antecedent federal questions, including, most importantly, whether the federal agency enjoys sovereign immunity preventing the state court from deciding the state-law question in the first place. Moreover, to the extent state law overcomes contrary general federal law under the McCarran-Ferguson Act, that determination is itself a question of federal law, namely, the interpretation of the Act,
see
SEC v. Variable Annuity Life Ins. Co. of Am.
,
Beyond whether questions of state or federal law predominate, Congress has already decided, as a policy matter under
B
The district court also gave too much weight to Illinois's interests in a uniform liquidation proceeding and concentrated review of claims, while diminishing the complex federal policies and interests at play in this case. Removal of this one case is not "disruptive of state efforts to establish a coherent policy."
NOPSI
,
Critically, the budget-neutral nature of the premium-stabilization programs-in particular the Risk Adjustment program in which Land of Lincoln owed money-means that HHS has already distributed the money it offset to other insurance companies which, like Land of Lincoln, needed that money to maintain solvency. HHS informs this court that there are more than twenty insurance companies throughout the country that are in rehabilitation or liquidation proceedings and whose debts HHS has been offsetting to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars. Exposing HHS's actions-whether lawful or not-to the inconsistent decisions of so many different state fora could have dire consequences for the complex regulatory framework of the Affordable Care Act, if not the insurance market as a whole. The federal government's interest in the relative uniformity of the federal courts is substantial.
In contrast, we do not see how removal of this case will disrupt the liquidation in Illinois court. The court can continue to freely distribute Land of Lincoln's assets to creditors according to the state's priority scheme, albeit with $27 million less to distribute for now. The Director is justifiably worried that this money may not be distributed to Illinois policyholders if this case were removed. This is a lofty concern, and we do not disparage the Director's
The McCarran-Ferguson Act does not change our analysis. In
Hartford
, we relied on the Act to abstain from deciding "the amount and existence of liability that an insolvent Illinois insurer owes to Hartford."
C
Finally, we can dismiss the third and fourth
Hartford
factors out of hand. The existence of a special forum "is a prerequisite of, not a factor in, the second type of
Burford
abstention."
Prop. & Cas.
,
V
The parties finally dispute the appropriate remedy, now that we have found that the district court should not have remanded this case to state court for lack of removal jurisdiction or on abstention grounds. As we previously noted, HHS argues we should direct the district court to dismiss the case forthwith rather than remand for further proceedings. We decline to do so because the merits of HHS's defense have not been resolved. The district court, in the first instance, must evaluate HHS's sovereign immunity to the Director's motion, as well as the propriety of dismissal under the doctrine of derivative jurisdiction, which despite its name is "a procedural bar to the exercise of federal judicial power" and does not go to the court's subject-matter jurisdiction.
Rodas
,
On the other extreme from HHS's request that we dismiss the case outright, the Director argues that under any circumstance this case belongs in state court, even if it is removable, the district court erred in abstaining, and the doctrine of derivative jurisdiction bars the case. She relies principally on
Section 1447(c) does not apply to this case by its own terms. Although HHS made the error of filing its motion to dismiss for lack of derivative jurisdiction under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), we have already explained that derivative jurisdiction is not an issue of subject-matter jurisdiction.
See
Rodas
,
Because we base our holding on the conclusion that HHS's claim of sovereign immunity is only "plausible," we leave to the district court the final evaluation of the defense. The parties framed this question as primarily concerned with whether this motion is
in rem
or
in personam
, but failed to fully explore the consequences of this antecedent issue, and in particular the limits of "the prior exclusive jurisdiction doctrine."
Goncalves
,
Finally, we recognize that, just as HHS has a plausible argument for sovereign immunity, the Director has a non-frivolous argument that HHS is improperly jumping in line in Land of Lincoln's liquidation to the detriment of policyholders.
Cf.
U.S. Dep't of Treasury v. Fabe
,
VI
Because the district court construed its removal jurisdiction too narrowly and erred in abstaining, this case should have remained in federal court. Accordingly, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
HHS moved this court to stay the remand, but we denied the motion because the district court had already certified its remand orders and the case had returned to state court; therefore, there was nothing for this court to stay.
See
Hudson United Bank v. LiTenda Mortg. Corp.
,
HHS contends that abstention cannot be allowed here because, under
Quackenbush
, a federal court can abstain only if it is being asked to order discretionary-i.e., equitable or declaratory-relief.
