Lead Opinion
Appellants (the “tax objectors”) filed tax objections in Illinois state court, claiming that the Rockford Board of Education, School District No. 205 (the “school district”), levied taxes against their property in violation of Illinois law. The taxes were levied as a result of a federal lawsuit against the school district alleging racial discrimination. In that suit, the school district agreed to, and the district court approved, a consent decree that sought to remedy racial imbalance in the Rockford schools. The consent decree authorized the school district to fund remedial programs by levying taxes under the Illinois Local Government and Governmental Employees Tort Immunity Act, 745 ILCS 10/1— 101 et seq. (the “Tort Immunity Act”). The tax objectors contended in state court that the Tort Immunity Act did not provide the school district with authority to levy taxes to finance the remedial measures contained in the consent decree. The school district intervened in the tax objection proceedings and promptly removed the cases to district court. The objectors then moved to remand the tax objections to state court, asserting that the district court lacked jurisdiction over what were essentially state law cases. The district court held that, because the state tax cases could effectively frustrate the school district’s implementation of the consent decree entered in the discrimination lawsuit, the cases were properly removed under the Civil Rights Removal Statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1443, and the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a). On the merits of the tax objections, the district court concluded that the Tort Immunity Act authorized the disputed levies. We conclude that because the district court lacked jurisdiction over the state law tax objections, the tax cases must be remanded to state court, and we therefore reverse the district court’s judgment.
I.
The litigation that spawned the taxes at issue began in 1989, when a class-action complaint was filed in the case of People Who Care v. Rockford Board of Education, No. 89 C 20168 (N.D.Ill.) (the “PWC case”). The complaint alleged that the school district had violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment by intentionally segregating and discriminating against students on the basis of race.
The District is subject to the provisions of the [Tort Immunity Act]. The Tort Immunity Act empowers and directs a local public entity such as the District to pay any liability imposed upon it for a tortious act under Federal or State common or statutory law or to pay any tort judgment or settlement for compensatory damages based on any injury caused by an alleged negligent or alleged wrongful act or omission of the local public entity. The Board of Education of the District may, if it considers the action advisable, issue general obligation bonds without referendum to pay such liability, judgment, or settlement. In addition thereto (or in the alternative), the District may pay for such recurring and continual incremental costs for such programs specified in this Order by additional levies in the District’s Tort Immunity Fund. Pursuant to this Order, the District is mandated to fund the cost of the activities required herein.... This Court has considered the provisions of Artiсle IX — Payment of Claims and Judgment — of the Tort Immunity Act and finds that the funding by the District of the cost of said activities constitutes and is the payment by the District of a liability, tort judgment or settlement that authorizes the issuance of the District’s non-referendum general obligation bonds referred to in Section 9-105 of the Tort Immunity Act or the levying of an annual rate of tax in the District’s annual levy for Tort Immunity purposes, to pay for annual and recurring program costs (other than the institution of capital improvements) as required by this Order.
The funding section of the Second Interim Order further provided that:
[T]he District has the responsibility for funding the activities required by all Sections of this Order. The parties and the Court have already taken possible financial constraints into consideration, and those matters have been allowed for in formulating the particular requirements of this Order. Accordingly, the District has discretion to determine what sources of funds shall be used for that purpose, but this discretion relates solely to the manner of funding the requirements of the Order.
At the time the Second Interim Order was entered, the school district had not admitted engaging in discrimination nor had the district court made a determination of liability.
To finance its obligations under the consent decree, the school district issuеd bonds and levied real estate taxes in 1991,1992, and 1993 under the Tort Immunity Act. The taxes levied to pay for the Second Interim Order’s equitable remedies represented a significant portion of the school district’s annual revenues in those years.
While the tax objections were pending before the district court, extensive evidence was presented in the PWC case regarding the liability of the school district under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. On February 16,1994, after all the taxes disputed in the current case had been levied, the district court found that the school district had unlawfully segregated and discriminated against students on the basis of race and ethnic origin. See People Who Care v. Rockford Bd. of Educ.,
II.
The consent decree is a unique construct in the legal realm. As a contract wrapped in a judgment, the consent decree has attributes of both. Thus, although a consent decree can casually be labelled a “contract” or a “judgment,” one must closely examine the nature of the dispute to determine the implications of the agreement embodied in a consent decree. The parties in the PWC case agreed in the Second Interim Order that the school district had the capacity to levy taxes under the Tort Immunity Act to pay for the costs of complying with the equitable relief contained in that order. The district court, in approving the consent decree, concurred in the parties’ understanding that the taxes
We begin with the fundamental principle that federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. All federal courts, excluding the Supreme Court, derive their jurisdiction from Congress’ power under the Constitution to “ordain and establish” inferi- or courts. U.S. Const. art. Ill, § 1; Lockerty v. Phillips,
A.
The school district asserts that the district court possessed jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a), which provides for the removal of cases within the original jurisdiction of the district courts.
It is undisputed that the well-pleaded complaint of the tax objectors presents a state law cause of action. Moreover, the school district has failed to demonstrate that the tax objectors’ “right to relief necessarily
Federal question jurisdiction also exists over a state law claim if the claim is “really” one of federal law. Franchise Tax Bd.,
The school district maintains that the tax objections “really” arise under federal law because the actions could potentially interfere with the federal consent decree. Yet the artful pleading doctrine is not a mantra that, through simple invocation, will transform a plaintiffs state law claim into one arising under federal law. Indeed, this case is a far cry from the typical application of the doctrine, where federal law exclusively occupies the entire field in which a plaintiffs purported state law claim is brought. Since, in that scenario, the conduct complained of is necessarily governed by federal law, the claim arises under federal lаw, regardless of the plaintiffs characterization. See, e.g., Avco Corp. v. Aero Lodge No. 735, Int’l Ass’n of Machinists,
B.
We next turn to the “color of authority” clause of the civil rights removal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1443(2), which authorizes a defendant
The school district maintains that, in levying the taxes, it was acting pursuant to the terms of the Second Interim Order and thereby “affirmatively executing duties” under a federal civil rights law. In support of its position, the school district relies on our decision in Burns v. Board of School Commissioners,
Despite the school district’s arguments to the contrary, Bums does not extend so far as to permit removal in this case.
After carefully reviewing the terms of the Second Interim Order, we conclude that the order did not require the school district to levy the taxes at issue in this case. Although the order directed the school district to fund remedial programs, it explicitly left the manner of funding the remedial relief completely in the discretion of the school district. Indeed, the order states that “the [school district] has discretion to determine what sources of funds shall be used for [the re
Even if we were to agree with the school district that the Second Interim Order required it to levy the taxes under the Tort Immunity Act, the tax objections would not be removable under the color of authority clause for an independent reason. The plaintiffs in the PWC case filed their suit under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, which is clearly a federal law providing for equal civil rights. Before any finding of liability in the PWC case, the parties agreed on various matters, and the district court entered their agreement as an injunction — the Second Interim Order. We previously noted that the Second Interim Order, as a consent decree, is both a contract and a judgment. Yet the Supreme Court has clearly stated that “it is the agreement of the parties, rather than the force of the law upon which the complaint was originally based, that creates the obligations embodied in a consent decree.” Firefighters Local No. 93 v. City of Cleveland,
C.
As a final justification for removal, the school district relies on the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a), which provides that federal courts “may issue all writs necessary or appropriate in aid of their respective jurisdictions and agreeable to the usages and principles of law.” The language of this statute, with lineage tracing back to the Judiciary Act of 1789, is both obscure and anachronis
The All Writs Act is a residual source of authority to issue writs that are not otherwise covered by statute. Where a statute specifically addresses the particular issue at hand, it is that authority, and not the All Writs Act, that is controlling. Although that Act empowers federal courts to fashion extraordinary remedies when the need arises, it does not authorize them to issue ad hoc writs whenever compliance with statutory procedures appears inconvenient or less appropriate.
Pennsylvania Bureau of Correction v. United States Marshals Serv.,
The district court asserted removal jurisdiction over the tax objections based on the authority of Yonkers Racing Corp. v. City of Yonkers,
The school district maintains that the current case is controlled by Yonkers, but we cannot agree. Rather, we believe our decision in Dunn v. Carey,
[The tax protestors] were not parties in the federal ease and are otherwise not directly bound by the federal decree. It follows that they may litigate in a forum appropriate to the nature of the claim.... The principles of comity that underlie [the Tax Injunction Act] and [the Anti-Injunction Act] call for allowing a state to decide for itself when and how disputes about the size and distribution of its taxes shall be settled. Indiana has created a forum in which arguments about taxation may be heard. The texts of the statutes to one side, it would take compelling circumstances to justify the displacement of this dispute into federal court
Because a consent decree’s force comes from agreement rather than positive law, the decree depends on the parties’ authority to give assent.... Third parties, not even colorably bound by the decreе, ... should be able to challenge the authority of the person assenting to the decree. Some rules of law are designed to limit the authority of public officeholders, to make them return to other branches of government or to the voters for permission to engage in certain acts. They may chafe at these restraints and seek to evade them; if they do, the people for whose protection the restraints were created are entitled to repair to the forums designed to hear arguments that officeholders have acted without authority.
Id. at 558-59 (emphasis added and internal citations omitted). Dunn stands for the proposition a state court suit challenging the authority of parties to a consent decree cannot interfere with a consent decree, for the validity of the decree is entirely dependent on the parties’ authority to give assent. If a state court determines that a party lacked authority to agree to particular terms of a consent decree, those terms of the decree are without legal effect. Consequently, an injunction against the state court suit would not be necessary to protect or effectuate the consent decree. Our eases following Dunn have reiterated that parties generally “cannot consent to do something together that they lack the power to do individually.” Perkins v. City of Chicago Heights,
Dunn and our other precedent discussing the legal effects of consent decrees strongly indicate that, in a case such as this where a consent decree was entered without findings of liability
Dunn held that the Anti-Injunction Act does not permit the enjoining of a third-party state court action challenging a party’s authority to assent to a federal consent decree. It would therefore be highly inconsistent for us to decide that removing the same type of action is permissible under the All Writs Act.
III.
While we can appreciate the district court’s diligent efforts to remedy the vestiges of discrimination in the Rockford school system, we cannot turn a blind eye to the jurisdictional requirements of the federal courts. The Second Interim Order, as a consent de-eree providing for equitable remedies, simply does not currently supply the district court
For the foregoing reasons, we Reverse the district court’s judgment with instructions to remand the tax objections to state court.
Notes
. The evidence supporting the constitutional claims is extensively detailed in the district court’s ultimate adjudication of liability in the PWC case. See People Who Care v. Rockford Bd. of Educ.,
. The tax objectors profess, and the school district does not dispute, that the taxes amounted to $7,827,786 in 1991 (11.49 percent of the school district’s total levy), $9,807,911 in 1992 (13.34 percent of the school district’s total levy), and $11,786,068 in 1993 (14.72 percent of the school district’s total levy).
. The appellants filed their tax objections in 1992, 1993, and 1994 for the taxes that were levied and collected in 1991, 1992, and 1993, respectively.
. Section 9-107 of the Tort Immunily Act states in relevant part:
A local public entity may levy or have levied on its behalf taxes annually upon all taxable property within its territory at a rate that will produce a sum which will be sufficient to pay*894 the cost of settlements or judgments under Section 9-102_
745 ILCS 109. -107. Section 9-102 in turn provides that "[a] local public entity is empowered and directed to pay any tort judgment or settlement for compensatory damages for which it ... is liable...." 745 ILCS 10/9-102 (emphasis added).
. The Comprehensive Remedial Order contains a section titled “Finance,” which discusses the economic condition of the school district, sources of funding the remedial relief, and the financial impact of the relief on the local community. In this order the district court set a cap on Tort Immunity Fund use in the amount of $25 million per year, with a maximum increase of 4 percent per year for four years. In 1995, the school district’s regular revenues from the education fund were $140 million. Thus the $25 million in revenue from the Tort Immunity fund increased the total revenue of the school district by approximately 18 percent.
. This removal statute states in relevant part:
Except as otherwise expressly provided by Act of Congress, any civil action brought in a State court of which the district courts of thе United States have original jurisdiction, may be removed by the defendant or the defendants, to the district court of the United States for the district and division embracing the place where such action is pending.
28 U.S.C. § 1441(a). We assume without deciding that the school district is a "defendant” in the tax objections proceedings within the meaning of the removal statute. See generally Chicago, R.I. & P.R. Co. v. Stude,346 U.S. 574 , 580,74 S.Ct. 290 , 294,98 L.Ed. 317 (1954) (holding that federal court may disregard state law labels and re-align parties for purposes of removal statute).
. Even if it were possible for the school district to enlarge its authority through the consent decree, federal law could only be relevant by way of a defense of federal authorization, and then only if the tax objectors had stated a valid claim for relief under state law. Thus the question of federal law would merely be “lurking in the background” and could not provide a sufficient basis for federal jurisdiction. Gully v. First Nat’l Bank in Meridian,
. In Ultramar, the plaintiff originally filed a diversity suit in district court. After receiving an unfavorable judgment, the plaintiff filed similar state law claims in state court, and the defendant removed the case to district court. The Supreme Court in Federated Dep’t Stores v. Moitie,
When the prior federal judgment sounded in federal law, new purported state claims can be recharacterized as the old federal claims in disguise. But when the prior federal judgment was based on state law, new purported state claims can be "recharacterized” only as the old state claims from the first suit. In such a situation, there is not a federal claim in sight, and removal is impermissible even though res judicata probably bars the suit. The situation is directly analogous to that where federal law preempts state law yet fails to provide its own cause of action. In such a situation, although federal law is a perfectly valid defense to a state claim, that claim cannot be said to actually be a federal claim, for no federal right of action exists on point.
Ultramar,
. The school district relies on Striff v. Mason,
. Again, we assume without deciding that the school district is a "defendant" within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1443.
. Given this conclusion, we do not reach the question of whether Bums was correctly decided in light of Greenwood. We do note, however, that Greenwood clearly limited the application of the color of authority clause to federal officers charged with enforcing civil rights laws (and those acting trader them). We therefore find questionable Bum’s conclusion that a federal court can be considered a federal officer in this context. Courts interpret the law and determine what the law requires; they do not enforce the law. Enforcement of the law is the province of the executive branсh of government. Revealingly, the Greenwood Court heavily based its conclusion on specific “language of enforcement” in the original Act, which allowed the removal of suits for “arrest or imprisonment, trespasses, or wrongs.”
. As an example of an ancillary duty, suppose the court had ordered the school district to desegregate by busing students. If the school district needed to hire additional bus drivers to transport the students, the school district would have an obligation under the court’s order to hire the drivers.
. Although the dissent correctly observes that Firefighters was decided in a different factual context than the current case, both People Who Care and Dunn involved third-party challenges to the terms of a consent decree. In fact, this lawsuit first came before us in People Who Care, where we examined other provisions of the Second Interim Order. Thus, in the same context as the current appeal, we have found that the obligations contained in a consent decree derive from the agreement of the parties and not the law on which the complaint is based. See People Who Care,
. The Anti-Injunction Act provides:
A court of the United States may not grant an injunction to stay proceedings in a State court except as еxpressly authorized by Act of Congress, or where necessary in aid of its jurisdiction, or to protect or effectuate its judgments.
28 U.S.C. § 2283.
. We first examined the provisions of the Second Interim Order in this People Who Care case. We found that the consent decree could not alter the contractual or state law rights of third parties without a finding that such a change was necessary to rectify a legal wrong.
. The district court found the defendant hable for violating the Constitution after the entry of the Second Interim Order. The school district does not argue that the subsequent liability finding should impact our jurisdictional analysis, but instead relies on the Second Interim Order as the sole predicate for the removal of the three tax objections.
We note that generally "if federal subject-mattеr jurisdiction is absent at the time of the original removal petition, the case must be remanded to state court.” NPSA Serv. Corp. v. Independent Am. Sav. Ass’n,
. We use this term to refer to a finding by the district court that specific terms of a consent decree are necessary to remedy the violation of a legal wrong. In People Who Care, we left open the possibility that such a finding could be made before a formal liability finding.
. Because of the close parallels between the Anti-Injunction Act and the All Writs Act, allowing removal of the tax objections in this case would, as a practical matter, completely eviscerate the holding of Dunn. The parties in the federal action in Dunn asked the district court both to enjoin the state tax protests and to join the protestors in thе federal litigation, thereby allowing the district court to hear the tax disputes. It would be strange indeed to allow the school district to accomplish trader the All Writs Act exactly what Dunn held was not permissible under the Anti-Injunction Act.
. We note that the consent decree in Yonkers was entered after a finding of liability; and given the city's unwillingness to comply with the court’s original remedial desegregation order,
. Given our disposition of this case, we need not resolve the difficult issue of whether the All Writs Act can ever create removal jurisdiction over a case. It is well-settled that the All Writs Act "does not provide federal courts with an independent grant of jurisdiction." New York Tel. Co.,
. The school district claims that the delay caused by our decision will, in itself, frustrate the implementation of the remedial programs ordered by the district court. The school district, however, cannot benefit from the delay caused by its improper removal of the tax objections.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
In my view, removal of this action was permissible under the civil rights removal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1443(2).
1.
The court, although acknowledging that this court
Although the panel’s holding is clear, it is not clear why the court reads such a requirement into the civil rights removal statute. The еases cited by the panel in support of its holding hardly exhibit the same rigidity as today’s holding. Indeed, many of the cases, including Bums, make no mention of such a requirement. The case law, meager as it is, demonstrates, at most, that the relationship between the district court’s order and the action taken by the defendant can become so attenuated that it cannot be said that the defendant’s activity is motivated primarily by its obligation to comply with the consent decree.
The case law, therefore, reflects a far more realistic understanding of the role of an equitable decree in a civil rights matter. Fashioning such a decree is one of the most difficult tasks that a district court must perform. It requires the court to shape a remedy that will correct the federal injury and, in all other respects, leave the local community alone to handle its own affairs without the interference of federal authority. See Milliken v. Bradley,
Such flexibility as to means is often the most effective way by which a federal judicial officer can achieve the necessary federal objective, while assuring that those subject to or affected by the decree live otherwise undisturbed. Today, however, the court holds that, when a federal officer acts with restraint and concern for the local community, the order cannot be protected when others commence state litigation to thwart the exercise of the federal decree. The federal court is powerless when a third party attempts to deprive the federal defendant of the options the federal court intended it to have. Paradoxically, then, the federal order that is most effective and, at the same time, most restrained and most respectful of the limits of federal authority loses the protection of the federal court.
The hardship placed on district courts by this incongruous reading of the civil rights removal statute is illustrated graphically upon examination of the Second Interim order at issue in this case. A detailed document that no doubt embodies a great deal of effort by not only the judge but also the parties to the litigation, the order covers in detail the issue of the funding of the remedy. As the panel majority suggests, the district court no doubt wanted to assure itself that the school district had the legal authority to raise the necessary funding for the contemplated remedial programs. A reading of the order also makes clear that another motivation was no doubt operative in the decision to detail the permissible financial arrangements for implementation of the consent decree: assurance that the necessary funding to implement the agreed remedy was available. Indeed, a detailed delineation of the permissible and possible funding options is a key component in the formulation of a consent decree. Plaintiffs need to know that the substantive terms of the decree can be performed; defendants need sufficient flexibility to ensure that they can fulfill all of their responsibilities of governance. There are few аreas in which the preservation of local options is more important to the accomplishment of the federal purpose. The panel majority never explains why the preservation of such local options ought to cause the loss of the federal protection afforded by the removal statute.
2.
The majority’s alternate ground for holding that the civil rights removal statute cannot be invoked is more far-reaching. The panel holds that, because the judgment of the district court is also a consent decree, its terms cannot be protected by the federal removal statute. Its sole authority for this extraordinary proposition is the statement in Firefighters Local No. 93, Int’l Ass’n of Firefighters v. City of Cleveland,
As the majority correctly notes, consent decrees have been recognized as having a dual character. They possess some of the attributes of a judicial decree and some of the attributes of a contract. As the Court noted in Firefighters, this dual nature has required that the courts treat such decrees differently for different purposes. Id. at 519,
This suit was brought under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1983 and the Fourteenth Amend
3.
In my view, today’s decision could have very far-reaching implications on the capacity of the district courts of this circuit to manage effectively institutional civil rights litigation. The consent decree, often forged with the cooperation of both parties, has proven to be an effective tool in the resolution of such cases. Party cooperation and assent is crucial. After today’s decision, litigants will understandably be far less inclined to rely on such a device, despite its advantages in circumscribing disruption to the local community. Likewise, in formulating an equitable decree in such cases, district courts will be less inclined to afford defendant state officials, no matter how cooperative they may be, options in the manner of compliance. Consequently, federal judges will find themselves called upon more and more to micromanage the administration of equitable decrees and to intrude more significantly into matters of local concern. If this state of affairs were the unhappy consequence of a congressional mandate, however unintended, we would have to live with the consequences. But there is no evidence that Congress intended such a situation. The statute in question permits the removal of the action and its adjudication by the court. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
. See Burns v. Board of School Comm’rs,
. See, e.g., Bohlander v. Independent Sch. Dist. No. One,
. In Firefighters, the Court was asked to determine whether a consent decree entered in a Title VII action could go beyond the specific terms of the statute. The Court answered that question affirmatively and made the statement upon which the majority relies in that context.
