At issue are the competing concerns of the finality of judgments and the limited subject matter jurisdiction of federal courts. Mrs. Gould asks this court to reconsider its previous determination of subject matter jurisdiction. She contends that removal was improper and the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction. Her contentions fail because of the procedural posture of the case: the district court has entered final judgment against her; and the issues, including subject matter jurisdiction, have been litigated all the way to the Supreme Court. She would continue the controversy by having the case remanded to the state court. Having determined that our prior determination was correct, we hold that the district court was bound by the law of the case.
BACKGROUND
We summarized the facts in our earlier opinion:
*771 In May 1976, Vick Gould was found shot to death in a public park in Bellevue, Washington. He was killed by a bullet that entered through the base of his skull. Vick was insured under a life insurance policy issued by Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York (“MONY”). The policy insured against accidental death, but excluded death by suicide. Plaintiff Harriet Gould, the insured’s widow and beneficiary of the policy, submitted a claim to collect the $25,-000 proceeds of the policy. MONY refused payment, claiming that the death was by suicide.
Plaintiff then brought an action in state court to enforce the policy. MONY raised the policy’s suicide exclusion clause as an affirmative defense. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff and, on appeal, the Washington Supreme Court affirmed. Gould v. Mutual Life Insurance Co.,95 Wash.2d 722 ,629 P.2d 1331 (1981) (en banc).
Gould v. Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York,
Having prevailed on her policy claim, Gould, a Washington resident, sued in state court under the Washington Consumer Protection Act against two Washington attorneys and MONY, a New York corporation. The court dismissed the claims against the two attorneys, and Gould appealed.
While the appeal was pending, MONY removed the action. The district judge denied Gould’s motion for remand and entered summary judgment for MONY.
Gould appealed. After that appeal was submitted, the Washington Court of Appeals reversed the state trial court’s dismissal of the two Washington attorneys.
Gould v. Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York,
In June 1984, we affirmed the summary judgment for MONY.
Gould v. Mutual Life Insurance of New York,
Gould then petitioned for certiorari, again raising the district court’s removal jurisdiction. While the petition was pending, Gould moved in the district court for remand. On April 15, the Supreme Court denied certiorari.
Gould v. Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York,
— U.S. -,
Gould next filed an independent federal action, alleging that the judgment for MONY in the previous action was void for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The district court dismissed the action on MONY’s motion. Gould appealed (Appeal No. 85-4163).
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Removal is a question of federal subject matter jurisdiction, reviewable de novo.
Williams v. Caterpillar Tractor Co.,
Motions to vacate under Rule 60(b) are not a substitute for appeal, however, and are usually reviewed for abuse of discretion.
Pena v. Seguros La Comercial, S.A.,
ANALYSIS
1. District Court Jurisdiction After Appeal of Final Judgment
Initially, MONY contends that once the original notice of appeal was filed, the district court was without jurisdiction to consider Gould’s postjudgment contentions.
The filing of a notice of appeal divests the district court of jurisdiction.
Scott v. Younger,
Indeed, we have held that, where the underlying judgment has been appealed, denial of a motion for relief from that judgment is a nonappealable order.
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Commission v. NFL,
The proper procedure, once an appeal has been taken, is to “ ‘ask the district court whether it wishes to entertain the motion, or to grant it, and then move this court, if appropriate, for remand of the case.’ ”
Scott,
Gould’s motion for remand at issue in No. 85-3833 was not denominated a Rule 60(b) motion. But, since it followed final judgment
2
and was not within the time limits of Rule 59(e), we may consider it a Rule 60(b) motion.
Rodriquez v. Southern Pacific Transportation Co.,
Although language in the cited cases supports the proposition that the district court never regains jurisdiction in the absence of a remand, the better approach is that the district court may consider motions to vacate once the mandate has issued.
The Supreme Court approved this procedure in
Standard Oil Co. of California v. United States,
The Court had denied certiorari by the time the district court ruled pn the motion.
Standard Oil
applies to preclude the necessity of seeking leave of the Supreme Court.
See id.
at 17 n. 1,
II. Removal Jurisdiction and the Voluntary/Involuntary Rule
Gould contends that the district court improperly denied her remand motion made immediately after MONY removed the action. As an initial matter, she is right. Removal jurisdiction is statutory and strictly construed.
Libhart v. Santa Monica Dairy Co.,
When an action is removed based on diversity, complete diversity must exist at removal.
Miller v. Grgurich,
In Self v. General Motors, we discussed the rule that only a voluntary act by a plaintiff could create diversity removal jurisdiction where none existed from the complaint. See id. at 657-60. The rule does not allow creation of diversity removal jurisdiction by court order dismissing the non-diverse defendant, id. at 660, even if state appeals of the dismissal were complete, id. at 658.
Under this analysis, the district court erred in denying Gould’s remand motion because dismissal of the two Washington attorneys was not voluntary. If she had pressed an interlocutory appeal, we could have ordered the district court to remand.
III. Removal Jurisdiction after Final Judgment
Because Gould did not take an interlocutory appeal of the denial of her remand motion, however, the issue is subject to a different test. In
American Fire & Casaulty Co. v. Finn,
The Court reaffirmed this rule in
Grubbs v. General Electric Credit Corp.,
In
Lewis v. Time, Inc.,
Essentially, the rule requires an appellant to have a remand issue certified for interlocutory review. Otherwise an appellant will bear the risk that subject matter jurisdiction will exist at final judgment, and she will be deemed to have waived the issue.
See Sheeran v. General Electric Co.,
Under the Grubbs/American Fire rule, the court below had subject matter jurisdiction. The nondiverse defendants had been dismissed by the state trial court and that dismissal had not yet been overturned on appeal. The only parties before the court were diverse. Although application of this rule puts an appellant to a choice, it promotes finality and judicial efficiency as does 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d), which prohibits appellate review of a district court’s grant of a remand motion.
IV. Res Judicata and Law of the Case Doctrines’ Effect on an Attack for Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction of the Court’s Judgment
MONY asserts that, regardless of our analysis of the Grubbs/American Fire rule, Gould should be barred by res judicata or collateral estoppel from relitigating the question of the district court's subject matter jurisdiction. Gould counters with the argument that, since her attack is direct, not collateral, the district court should have examined the issues anew.
The Supreme Court has said that lower federal courts, while of limited jurisdiction, have the authority to determine their own jurisdiction.
Chicot County Drainage District v. Baxter State Bank,
In
Watts v. Pinckney,
Watts, however, differs on its facts and does not control. In Watts, we had held, on the initial appeal, that the judgment against Pinckney was entered without jurisdiction. In Gould’s initial appeal, we considered, albeit on a petition for rehearing and suggestion for rehearing en banc, whether the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction and rejected the contention by denying rehearing.
“Under the law of the case doctrine ‘a decision of a legal issue or issues by an appellate court ... must be followed in all subsequent proceedings in the same case ... unless the evidence on a subsequent trial [is] substantially different....’”
Pubali Bank v. City National Bank, 777
F.2d 1340, 1342 (9th Cir.1985) (quoting
Moore v. Jas. H. Matthews & Co.,
CONCLUSION
Ninth Circuit law requires the conclusion that, unless the case is remanded, a district court does not regain jurisdiction after a notice of appeal is filed. The Supreme Court has approved of a better procedure. Thereunder, a district court may decide postjudgment motions without leave of the appellate court, once the appellate mandate has issued. We follow that procedure, holding that the court had jurisdiction to consider Gould’s motions.
The district court erred initially when it denied Gould’s remand motion. But, the test on appeal of a final judgment is not whether removal was proper but whether the court would have had jurisdiction of the case in the posture it had at the time final judgment was entered. The error does not void its judgment. The court would have had original jurisdiction of the case had it been filed in the posture it had as of final judgment because the only parties before it were diverse.
Moreover, even if the district court found error in our affirming its subject matter jurisdiction when we denied Gould’s rehearing petition, it would have been bound, not by res judicata principles, but by the law of the case.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In August 1984, before this court denied Gould’s rehearing petition and suggestion, the state trial court entered summary judgment for the two Washington attorneys. The judgment is final, and the Washington Supreme Court has denied Gould’s petition for review.
. Gould argues that her motion was proper because, under 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c), the district court may remand any time before final judgment if it finds that removal was improvidently granted. Her argument is frivolous. Her previous appeal was from the district court’s final judgment. Raising a remand motion after the appeal is taken cannot be before final judgment as required in Section 1447(c).
