OPINION
The plaintiffs, businesses located in Wise County, Virginia, seek in this § 1983 action a refund of payments made to the county government under an unconstitutional solid waste disposal fee. The issue before me is whether the principles of comity or the Tax Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C.A. § 1341 (West 1993), divest this court of subject matter jurisdiction. After consideration of the pertinent authority, I find this court should not accept jurisdiction of the case.
I
This case is not the first in the legal contest between the Wise County Board of Supervisors and certain citizens of the county over modifications made in 2001 to a county ordinance levying fees for solid waste disposal. The modifications designed a new fee schedule for the use of solid waste disposal services by households and businesses in the county based on estimates of the volume of garbage deposited in the county’s solid waste landfill. In response to an equal protection challenge to the scheme, the Supreme Court of Virginia held the ordinance unconstitutional on the ground that the classifications utilized to determine the amount of fee to be levied on a given household or business bore no reasonable relation to the county’s objective of having the fees reflect the current costs of solid waste disposal in Wise County.
See Estes Funeral Home v. Adkins,
Following this decision of Virginia’s highest court, the plaintiffs filed the present suit pursuant to 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983 (West 2003) against the members of the county’s governing body seeking recovery of the monies paid to the county for solid waste disposal services from the time of the ordinance’s modification until the declaration of its unconstitutionality. Alleging that there are “hundreds of persons affected by the unconstitutional actions of the Wise County Board of Supervisors” (Compl.¶ 20.), the plaintiffs also seek class action certification. In response, the defendants have filed a Motion to Dismiss the case on the ground, among others, that this court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over the controversy due to the dictates of the federal Tax Injunction Act and principles of comity. The motion has been briefed and argued and is now ripe for decision.
II
A party may challenge a federal court’s jurisdiction over the subject matter of a controversy where there is a question as to whether the complaint factually alleges “a non-frivolous claim arising under federal law” over which the court has jurisdiction to evaluate the merits.
Baker v. Carr,
Ill
Federal district courts are courts of limited jurisdiction and may not decide cases over which they have been divested of jurisdiction by Congress acting within its authority.
Bowman v. White,
Under the Act, a federal court may not exercise jurisdiction over any controversy that seeks to proscribe or constrain the imposition of a state tax if a “plain, speedy and efficient remedy” is available in state court. Thus, the key determinants are whether the remedy sought “enjoin[s], suspend[s] or restraints]” a state tax, whether the assessment challenged is a tax for purposes of the Act, and whether any available state ■ remedy is “plain, speedy and efficient.”
By its very language, the Act clearly precludes actions in federal court for injunctive relief against any state tax, as long as .the taxpayer has an adequate remedy in state court. In determining whether other types of actions fall within the ambit of the Act, the query focuses on whether the remedy sought under the action would be “disruptive” to the state tax system and would contradict Congress’ purpose of minimizing federal interference with state taxation.
Fair Assessment in Real Estate Ass’n, Inc. v. McNary,
Determination of whether a given assessment is a tax for purposes of the Act and thereby falls within its reach is dependent on federal law and is independent of any classifications used by the state to label the assessment, either in the language of the provision or in preceding adjudications.
See Folio v. City of Clarksburg,
The final query addresses whether the available state remedies are plain, speedy, and efficient. This criterion instructs that applicable state remedies must meet certain minimal procedural requirements. A state remedy, in order to be plain, speedy, and efficient, must provide the taxpayer “with a full hearing and judicial determination at which she may raise any and all constitutional objections to the tax.”
Rosewell v. LaSalle Nat’l Bank,
Even where federal courts are not statutorily restrained from exercising jurisdiction, they may be so restricted by reasons of sound policy. The traditional observance of comity and independence between, federal courts and state courts is one such instance. Recognizing the separateness and sovereignty of state governments, comity is rooted in the “belief that the [n]ational [government will fare best if the [s]tates and their institutions are left free to perform their separate functions in their separate ways.”
Younger v. Harris,
Congress has recognized and sanctioned the fundamental principles underlying the comity doctrine and has acted in many arenas to codify their dictates into statutory law. The Tax Injunction Act is one such codification of the comity doctrine and articulates the restraints it imposes upon federal judicial review of state and local taxes where a “plain, speedy and efficient remedy” can be had in a state court. As a forerunner of the Act, the comity doctrine is broader than the Act and may' apply in situations in which the Act’s applicability would normally be preempted, either by a constitutional provision or a conflicting federal law. Accordingly, both the Supreme Court and the Fourth Circuit have clarified that the doctrine of comity is broad enough to apply even . under the wide sweep of § 1983. The Tax Injunction Act and its interpretation may inform the inquiry as to the permissibility of federal jurisdiction in § 1983 actions challenging state taxes but are not a determinative factor.
See Fair Assessment in Real Estate Ass’n, Inc. v. McNary,
TV
The defendants, in their Motion to Dismiss, assert that the Tax Injunction Act and principles of comity bar this court from having jurisdiction over the plaintiffs’ suit because their request for a refund is inextricably linked to the fiscal operations of the county. In light of the long-standing principles of federal non-interference and state and local independence in taxation matters, the defendants maintain that state court is the proper forum for this controversy. In response, the plaintiffs argue that the Act is inapplicable to this controversy because their action does not seek to “enjoin, suspend or restrain” any tax and because they do not have a “plain, speedy and efficient” remedy available to them in any Virginia state court. Specifically, the plaintiffs contend that the available state remedy is neither speedy nor efficient since class actions are not available under Virginia law, thereby forcing each independent household and business in Wise County to individually and separately pursue litigation in order to secure a
The plaintiffs’ arguments are not persuasive, and I find that the controversy at hand falls squarely within the bounds of the traditional restraints imposed by comity, informed in particular by the Tax Injunction Act, barring this court from exercising jurisdiction over it. An action to refund previously-paid taxes sufficiently interferes with a state’s system of taxation and revenue collection as to invoke the principles of federal non-interference underlying both comity and the Act. Although the plaintiffs are correct in pointing out that the tax has already been declared unconstitutional and is no longer being collected, ascertaining the amount of refunds that would be due to the plaintiffs would, at a minimum, require the court to delve into the specifics of how the tax was levied, upon whom it was levied, the specific amounts in which it was levied, and whether particular parties had failed to pay it.
In the same vein, as Edward Sealover, the County Administrator of Wise County, has related in his Verification Under Oath, the sanitary landfill built in Wise County in conjunction with the assessment of the solid waste disposal fee was financed by a revenue bond issued by the Virginia Resources Authority (“the VRA”). Any disbursements made under the solid waste disposal fee to the county were used to repay the loan to the VRA and to meet the operational and maintenance expenses of the landfill. (Verif. Under Oath ¶ 2.) Because the landfill has not disappeared and the county’s obligations associated with it have not terminated even though the fee has been deemed unconstitutional, reimbursement of these funds is intimately connected to the county’s present and future fiscal operations. Thus, an action for refunds would be highly disruptive of the state’s use of those funds and does not justify an exception to the applicability of comity or of the Act.
See Tomaiolo v. Mallinoff,
The plaintiffs, in their responses to the defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, attempt to distinguish their case for refunds from other cases in which the primary forms of relief requested were compensatory or punitive damages. This distinction is of no relevance because the crux of the inquiry goes to the possible disruption caused by the requested remedy upon the state or local fiscal system. It is clear in this case that refunds would be equally as disruptive to the county and state as may be any other kind of damages.
See Lehman v. Lycoming County Children’s Services Agency,
It is argued that because Virginia courts have no recognized class action procedure, any state remedy is inadequate, at least as to the putative class members, because each Wise Countian seeking, a refund of fees paid would be required to file an individual action in state court. The plaintiffs contend that because of the relatively small amounts paid to, date by individuals under the unconstitutional ordinance, the state court filing fee alone might exceed the amount of any individual refund sought, and thus practically inhibit many prospective plaintiffs in state court. 3
It is true that Virginia has no statute or court rule generally permitting class actions, such as provided for in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23. However, borrowing from English chancery practice, Virginia has long recognized the ability' of plaintiffs in equity to sue for themselves and others similarly situated.
Moore v. Nat'l Wildlife Fed’n,
Chancery No. 10884,
The degree of possible disruptiveness that this action for refunds would foresee-ably cause and the corresponding availability of a procedurally adequate remedy in state court are sufficient to interpose comity and declare that state courts are the proper forum for this controversy. However, in the interest of being comprehensive, I find that the present action also falls within the parameters of the Tax Injunction Act and thus bars jurisdiction in this court.
The fee at issue in this case is properly classified as a tax for purposes of the Act.
V
For the foregoing reasons, the defendants’ Motion to Dismiss will be granted, and judgment will accordingly be entered.
Notes
. In their Motion to Dismiss, the defendants expressly referenced only Federal Rule of Civ
. Traditionally, under comity, the requisite remedy available in state court must be "plain, adequate, and complete.” However, it is settled that for purposes of the inquiry at hand, there is no significant difference between remedies that are "plain, adequate, and complete” and those that are "plain, speedy and efficient” within the meaning of the Act. See
Fair Assessment in Real Estate Ass'n, Inc.
v.
McNary,
. The defendants represent that there are almost 16,000 individual households in Wise County. (Mot. to Dismiss, Ex. A.) The unconstitutional ordinance amendment adopted January 11, 2001, provided for an annual fee of $30 per household. (Id., Ex. B.)
.Of course, I express no opinion on whether relief should be granted in any such state court suit. For example, the Board of Supervisors contends that the decision of the Virginia Supreme Court should be given only prospective effect, thus relieving the county of any obligation to make refunds. Such an argument must be evaluated by the state courts.
