We are asked, in effect, to referee a turf war between the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and the United States. This is the latest in a series of cases in which those two sovereigns have asserted conflicting claims against a limited fund that is to be disbursed by interpleader. In those cases, each has endeavored to have the relative priority of its claims determined in its own courts, and each has mustered a plausible argument that it should not be forced to litigate this question in the other’s forum. A number of district courts have attempted to untangle this Gordian knot, but the divergence in their decisions illustrates the implacability of the constitutional quandary that has arisen.
Compare, e.g., Horizon Bank & Trust Co. v. Flaherty,
Before us, both sovereigns invite the announcement of a categorical rule spelling out a protocol for litigating such cases in the future. We decline the invitation to speak categorically. Rather, while leaving unresolved the most difficult aspect of the underlying constitutional question, we chart a course that suffices to dispose of the case at bar. Although we envision that this roadmap will be appropriate for other similarly configured cases, we do not address what changes in the contours of the dispute might render this solution inutile.
With that preface, we turn to specifics. Despite the enigmatic nature of the constitutional question, the relevant facts are remarkably straightforward.
At the times material hereto, Hudson Savings Bank (the Bank) held a first mortgage on a condominium (the Property) owned by George C. Austin, Jr. Austin owed money, arising out of tax delinquencies, to both the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and the federal government. The Commonwealth recorded two tax liens against the Property in the amounts of
In due course, Austin defaulted on the mortgage note. The Bank foreclosed and sold the Property. After satisfying its mortgage debt and defraying expenses associated with the foreclosure, it retained a surplus of nearly $100,000. The surplus was manifestly insufficient to satisfy all the tax liens and, unsure of the priorities, the Bank filed an interpleader action in a Massachusetts state court. Because Austin had died, the Bank named as defendants Austin’s executor, the Massachusetts Department of Revenue, and the United States. The Bank made no claim as of right to any portion of the surplus, asking only that the court (i) resolve the relative payment priorities as among the named defendants, (ii) discharge it from any liability with respect to the avails of the foreclosure, and (iii) award it, out of the surplus funds, the costs of bringing the action (including its attorneys’ fees).
Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1444, which confers upon the federal government an absolute right to remove to federal court interpleader actions in which it is named as a defendant, the United States removed the case to the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. The executor of Austin’s estate neither contested the removal nor filed a claim to the surplus. The Commonwealth, however, invoked the Eleventh Amendment and asserted that it was immune from the Bank’s action if that action was to be prosecuted in a federal court. The Commonwealth further argued that it was both a necessary and an indispensable party to the interpleader action, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 19(b), and that, therefore, its Eleventh Amendment immunity required dismissal of the entire action.
The United States rejoined on several fronts. To begin, it offered two alternate theories as to why the Eleventh Amendment did not apply. For one thing, it characterized interpleader as an in rem or quasi in rem proceeding and, thus, outside the ambit of the Eleventh Amendment under the reasoning of
Tennessee Student Assistance Corp. v. Hood,
The district court rejected the arguments advanced by the United States.
See Hudson Sav. Bank v. Austin,
No. 05-11604, slip op.,
The right of a state to litigate a private party’s claims against it in its own courts is constitutionally assured. In the absence of special circumstances — consent, waiver, and congressional override are paradigmatic examples — the Eleventh Amendment prohibits the exercise of federal judicial power over “any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of
The United States, however, is not a private party. Thus, the prohibition contained in the Eleventh Amendment does not extend to suits brought against a state by the federal government.
See Employees of Dep’t of Pub. Health & Welfare v. Dep’t of Pub. Health & Welfare,
In light of this background, it is readily evident that tensions may arise between the sovereign interests of the state and federal governments. Those tensions make cases such as this one problematic.
See, e.g., Horizon Bank & Trust Co. v. Massachusetts,
This is such a case. The question of whether the Commonwealth invariably is entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity from interpleader suits brought by private parties is highly ramified, the arguments advanced by the United States concerning both the nature of interpleader and its role in bringing the case to federal court are sophisticated, and the ultimate answer to the Eleventh Amendment question is freighted with uncertainty. Equally as important, the facts of this case permit us to accept and act upon Justice Brandeis’s sage counsel, resolving the main controversy while reserving the most difficult aspect of the constitutional question.
The logical starting point for further analysis is a recognition of the idiosyncratic nature of Eleventh Amendment immunity. The Supreme Court has cautioned that, when Eleventh Amendment concerns are at stake, form should not be exalted over substance.
See Idaho v. Coeur d’Alene Tribe,
This focus is particularly valuable here. In interpleader, the plaintiff ordinarily is a mere stakeholder who solicits the assistance of a court in order to avoid potentially inconsistent liabilities. See 4 James Wm. Moore et al., Moore’s Federal Practice § 22.02[1] (3d ed.2006). The stakeholder-plaintiff names as defendants those who are potential claimants to the stake. See id. Typically, the defendants are not antagonistic to the plaintiff but, rather, are pitted against one another. That circumstance follows ineluctably from the principle that interpleader is not available unless the defendants’ claims are “adverse” to each other. 7 Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Mary Kay Kane, Federal Practice & Procedure § 1705 (3d ed.2001).
It follows that, in an interpleader action in which the stakeholder does not assert a claim to the stake, the stakeholder should be dismissed immediately following its deposit of the stake into the registry of the court.
See, e.g., Comm’l Union Ins. Co. v. United States,
The case at bar is a classic interpleader action. For our purposes, three features are especially important: (i) the Bank, a pure stakeholder, has not asserted any entitlement to the stake and is seeking nothing beyond a discharge from further liability; (ii) no private party has asserted any claim of entitlement to the stake (the only non-governmental defendant — the executor of Austin’s estate — has manifested total indifference to the outcome of the interpleader action); and (iii) the sum of the sovereigns’ claims exceeds the dollar value of the stake. 1 A straightforward dispute between two sovereigns unquestionably would fall outside the purview of the Eleventh Amendment, and given these three features this case appears much the same, in practical effect, as a straightforward dispute between the Commonwealth and the United States.
Of course, there is a rub: the Bank’s continuing presence in the inter-pleader action. Stripped of rhetorical flourishes, the Bank’s presence furnishes the sole basis for the Commonwealth’s invocation of the Eleventh Amendment. Yet, the fact that the Bank remains in the litigation is serendipitous; the thirty-day window for removal,
see
28 U.S.C. § 1446, did not permit the action to mature in state court to the point at which the stakeholder normally would have been dismissed. That being so, it is hard to see the continuing involvement of the Bank as anything more than a fiction of “the elementary mechanics of captions and pleadings” — a fiction of the type that the Supreme Court has suggested we ignore for Eleventh Amendment purposes.
Coeur d’Alene Tribe,
To cinch matters, giving weight to a pragmatic appraisal of the case is consistent with our existing interpleader jurisprudence. We previously have treated an interpleader action as a de facto suit be
Turning a blind eye to the practical effect, the Commonwealth resists any characterization of this case as a contest between sovereigns. Its argument is built around the Bank’s role in bringing the interpleader action and its effort to obtain substantive relief — relief that, if ordered by a federal court, would impinge on state sovereignty. In this regard, the Commonwealth points to the Bank’s prayer that the defendants (including the Commonwealth) be “restrained from instituting any action against [it] for recovery of the net proceeds of the foreclosure sale.” 2 The Commonwealth’s reliance on this boilerplate language seems overblown: at most, this relief is tangential to the goal of the action, which is to settle the validity and relative priority of the various tax liens. 3
We need not resolve the difficult constitutional question that attends the Commonwealth’s attempt to hinge a claim of Eleventh Amendment immunity on this prayer for relief. The district court had the authority to avoid this question by the simple expedient of staying the Bank’s request for relief vis-á-vis the Commonwealth and, following its adjudication of the main dispute between the two sovereigns, remanding what was left of the in-terpleader action to the state court for resolution. That court, unencumbered by the Eleventh Amendment, could then determine whether to grant the Bank’s prayer for exculpation from any further claims that might be pressed against it by the Commonwealth with respect to the foreclosure proceeds. 4 In our view, the district court’s failure to follow that course and its choice, instead, to dismiss the interpleader action constituted reversible error.
We add, moreover, that the decision to dismiss was not only unnecessary (given the available alternative) but also beyond the district court’s lawful authority. After all, the pertinent provision of the remand statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c), instructs that “[i]f at any time before final judgment it appears that the district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, the case shall be remanded” to the state court. This command is obligatory and does not afford district courts leeway to dismiss
The command embodied in section 1447(c) applies in circumstances in which a federal court, by virtue of the Eleventh Amendment, finds itself unable to adjudicate all or part of a removed case. While the Supreme Court has declined to state definitively whether the Eleventh Amendment is a doctrine of subject matter jurisdiction,
see Wis. Dep’t of Corr. v. Schacht,
This conclusion is not at odds with our holding in
Parella v. R.I. Employees’ Ret. Sys.,
Let us be perfectly clear. In concluding that remand, rather than dismissal, is the appropriate way to assuage the lingering Eleventh Amendment concerns raised by this case, we do not pretend to have crafted a perfect solution. Conducting a single lawsuit in two complementary court systems is inefficient and burdensome. Yet, given the uncertain constitutional terrain, the half-measure of interpleader in a federal court followed by possible remand to a state court seems preferable to any of the alternatives. Here, as elsewhere in the real world, half a loaf often is better than none.
At this juncture, a succinct summary seems sensible. We hold that, on the facts of this case, the Eleventh Amendment will not be offended by allowing a federal court to determine the relative priority of the federal and state tax liens. Only the particular claim giving rise to potential Eleventh Amendment concerns — the Bank’s claim for relief that would bind the Commonwealth — need be reserved.
This disposition renders moot the Rule 19(b) issue raised by the Commonwealth and resolved by the district court. Because we give “practical effect” to the Eleventh Amendment claim,
Hood,
We need go no further. For the reasons elucidated above, we reverse the judgment of dismissal and return the matter to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Thereafter, if any issue remains to be resolved between the Commonwealth and the Bank, see supra note 4, the remainder of the case should be remanded to the state court.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. We emphasize that if any of these three features were not present (if, say, the stakeholder or some other private party was asserting a claim to the stake), that would present a different set of considerations. Our opinion is limited accordingly.
.The Commonwealth at no point contends that the Bank's standard request for reimbursement of the costs of bringing the inter-pleader action (including attorneys’ fees), out of the funds deposited, gives rise to a claim of Eleventh Amendment immunity. Any such claim is, therefore, deemed to be abandoned.
See United States v. Zannino,
. Indeed, the Bank’s complaint in interpleader specifically prayed that the defendants "be required to interplead and settle between themselves their right to the net proceeds of the foreclosure sale."
. It is entirely possible, of course, that such a remand would prove unnecessary, for the Commonwealth might at that point be willing to release the Bank from any further claims.
. We note that the probable exercise by the United States of its own sovereign immunity following a remand does not alter this calculus. In the final analysis, remand is mandatory unless the federal court can "say with absolute certainty that remand would prove futile.”
Me. Ass’n of Interdep. Neighborhoods v. Comm’r, Me. Dep’t of Human Servs.,
