James Ricketts has appealed pro se from the dismissals of two complaints he filed in the district court after being denied leave to prosecute them in forma pauperis. The district court dismissed the first complaint sua sponte six days after it was filed *1178 for failure to state a claim. A different district court judge dismissed the second complaint for want of subject matter jurisdiction in accordance with the substantiality doctrine. The second dismissal occurred after the judge had reviewed responsive pleadings and ordered the plaintiff to show cause why the case was meritorious. We have consolidated Ricketts’ appeals because they raise a number of questions concerning the proper disposition оf patently frivolous pro se filings.
I. Background
On December 18, 1987, Ricketts applied for leave to proceed in forma pauperis to prosecute two complaints against assorted defendants. In the first complaint (“the banking complaint”), Ricketts sought relief for various claims against defendants Midwest National Bank of Indiana (“Midwest”), the Indiana National Bank, the Am-eritrust Corporation, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the United States Treasury. Ricketts claimed that Midwest did not honor his 1973 request to make a small withdrawal from a savings account he had opened for a holding company of his called the A.L.F.E. Company. He alleged that he was the chairperson and exeсutive director of Alfe Inc., a subsidiary of A.L.F.E., and that he and Charles Corbin Jr. opened a joint corporate checking account for Alfe Inc. at the American Fletcher Bank. Ricketts alleged that Midwest wrongfully paid the $30,267.00 balance of the A.L.F.E. savings account over to the other officers of Alfe, Inc. and then participated in executing “new banking resolutions” which did not name Ricketts as an officer of the corporation. In addition, Ricketts claimed that he was prevented from pursuing his claims because he had been involuntarily detained and drugged over a fifteen year pеriod for suspected mental disorders. Ricketts argued that the foregoing transactions violated the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) and various provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code. As relief, he seeks the return of his alleged assets along with fifteen years of accrued interest and an award of $1,000,000 as “restitution.”
In his second complaint (“the insurance complaint”), Ricketts lumped together a number of disparate claims against defendants Sharp Insurance Co. (“Sharp”) and four of its agents, the Jefferson Insurance Co., Indiana National Bank, two of his former attorneys, the Social Security Administration, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the United States Treasury. Ricketts’ initial allegation is that Jefferson Insurance, the insurer of certain real estate property he had purchased from Sharp, did not honor his policy claims for damage to the property caused by a wind storm and acts of vandalism. He further alleged that in response to a garnishment order entered against him, the Indiana National Bank paid $602.09 to the “defendants” out of an account which was opened on his behalf. Finally, he contended that Sharp stole or converted pеrsonal property of his when it sold the real estate after obtaining a judgment against him. Ricketts argued that these acts violated the Federal Torts Claim Act and the “U.S.Code General Index for Insurance, Contracts, Real Estate Fraud & Fraud, and Torts, and Social Security.” His prayer for relief in the amount of $67,-359 is based upon his calculation of the total damages he incurred because of these acts.
Ricketts’ two applications to proceed
in forma pauperis
and his accompanying complaints were given miscellaneous docket numbers and assigned to a district judge for review in accordance with the procedures suggested in our dеcision in
Wartman v. Branch 7, Civil Division, County Court,
Similarly, the court found that the insurance complaint was frivolous within the meaning of § 1915(d). The court concluded that Ricketts did not allege facts that would give rise to a viable claim under the FTCA. The court also stressed that Rick-etts’ recourse in response to the garnishment action and the adverse state court judgment was to appeal those matters in state court.
Two days after the court denied these applications, Ricketts proceeded to pay the necessary filing fees and filed identiсal copies of both complaints with the district court. 1 Summonses were issued, but on January 20, 1988, before the defendants had filed any pleading in response to the banking complaint, Judge Steckler, acting sua sponte, concluded that the “action was without a reasonable basis in law or fact” and dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim. Ricketts responded to the court’s dismissal order by filing a timely notice of appeal.
The disposition of the insurance complaint followed a different course. After each of the defendants were served and had filed an answer or resрonsive pleading, Judge Noland entered an order outlining the deficiencies in the allegations and directed Ricketts to show cause why his complaint should not be dismissed. After Rick-etts failed to timely respond to the court’s order,
2
Judge Noland dismissed the entire action because it lacked the minimum degree of “plausibility” required to support federal subject matter jurisdiction.
See Dozier v. Loop College, City of Chicago,
On appeal, Ricketts’ arguments are not altogether clear since his briefs in both actions are discursive and admittedly difficult to follow. 3 It is clear, hоwever, that he questions the district court’s authority to dismiss his banking complaint sua sponte since he had paid his filing fees. As to the insurance complaint, Ricketts appears to argue that the court erred in its application of the substantiality doctrine because he provided adequate proof of the *1180 merits of his claims. We begin by addressing the latter argument about the substan-tiality doctrine since it directly involves the subject matter jurisdiction of the federal courts.
II. Analysis
As it relates to the original subject matter jurisdiction of the federal courts, the substantiality doctrine requires that a federal district court entertain a complaint seeking recovery under the Constitution or laws of the United States, unless the alleged federal claim either “clearly appears to be immaterial and solely made for the purpose of obtaining jurisdiction or where such a claim is wholly insubstantial and frivolous.”
Bell v. Hood,
The substantiality doctrine has a long and rich history as a statement of principle affecting the original jurisdiction of the federal courts over constitutional or federal statutory claims.
Neitzke v. Williams,
— U.S. -, n. 6,
The upshot of this doctrine is that it places an obligation on the district court to determine its jurisdiction based on an assessment of the complaint that is confusingly similar to the analysis required by a motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6).
See
*1181
Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. v. Northwestern Public Service Co.,
Justice Rehnquist concluded that the substantiality doctrine and Rule 12 are wholly at odds because the Federal Rules only contemplate a two-tiered review of the sufficiency of a complaint. He pointed out that Rule 12(b)(1) might arguably represent the first tier of a three-tiered system of review to the extent that it allows a party to challenge the subject matter jurisdiction of the court by motion. He concluded, however, that such an interpretation of Rule 12(b)(1) was only possible because of the cryptic statement in
Bell v. Hood
that frivolous complaints invoke no federal court jurisdiction.
Yazoo,
We respectfully disagree with this view based on our understanding of the substantiality doctrine as a principle bearing upon a federal court’s subject matter jurisdiction — that is, the authority to entertain the complaint and ultimately render a decision in the case at all.
Kohler Die and Specialty Co.,
By all accounts, the three-tiered level of review effectively focuses the court’s attention on the question of how far a complaint should be allowed to proceed based on its merits. For that reason, the proper application of the doctrine is likely to aid the district courts in their task of managing their crowded dockets. See generally Administrative Office of the United States Courts, Federal Court Management Statistics, (1988). As this court has recently noted, the substantiality doctrine effectively
spares the federal courts from having to entertain — merely because the defendant did not have the wit to point out the deficiencies in the plaintiff’s case — litigation not reasonably grounded in federal law. A federal court should not be required to decide a dispute over an alleged fraud in the sale of bananas merely because the defendant fails to point out that bananas are not securities within the meaning of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Crowley Cutlery,
A.
At the first tier of review, the district court must assess the substantiality of
*1182
the constitutional or federal statutory allegаtions of the complaint to determine whether they are immaterial to the true thrust of the complaint and thus made solely for the purpose of obtaining jurisdiction, or whether they are “wholly insubstantial and frivolous.”
Bell,
By its own terms, the standard for dismissal is a rigorous one.
Winslow v. Walters,
The district court’s charge then, is to review the face of the complaint in light of the relevant constitutional or statutory provisions and the pertinent case law interpreting those provisions.
Crowley Cutlery,
If the district court determines that the plaintiffs clаims are sufficiently substantial to invoke federal jurisdiction, the complaint, as previously noted, must be initially entertained by the district court.
Bell,
When the plaintiffs complaint is meritorious enough to proceed to this second tier, the district court’s authority to dismiss the complaint
sua sponte
is, to a certain degree, limited by the requirements of the Federal Rules. For example, this court has consistently interpreted Rule 4(a) to require that summons be issued and served before the complaint may be dismissed.
Nicholes v. Schubert,
A district court may dismiss an action on its own motion for failure to state a claim, but only after the court takes the proper procedural steps. The court must permit issuance and service of process as required by Fed.R.Civ.P. 4(a) and the court must notify the plaintiff of the proposed action and afford him [or her] an opportunity to submit a written argument in opposition.
Id.
(quoting
Franklin,
*1184
A number of other circuits have also exercised thеir supervisory authority and established a notice and opportunity to respond requirement before a complaint may be dismissed
sua sponte. Tingler v. Marshall,
From these cases, as well others, it is possible to disсern at least three overriding policy considerations which inform the notice and response requirement for a proper
sua sponte
dismissal. In discussing the effect of
sua sponte
dismissals in general, for example, this court has noted that they may often conflict with the traditional adversarial precepts of our system of justice, and tend to make the district court seem like “a proponent rather than an independent entity.”
Doe v. St. Joseph’s Hospital,
Untimely dismissal may prove wasteful of the court’s limited resourсes rather than expeditious, for it often leads to a shuttling of the lawsuit between the district and appellate courts. The undesirable consequences of premature dismissal are amply illustrated by the awkward posture this case presents on appeal. [Appellant], having had his action dismissed for failure to state a claim, asks us to rule on the sufficiency of his complaint. The state of New York and the other defendants, however, refuse to defend the propriety of [the judge’s] order. They have never been made parties to the action, and decline to waivе their right to service. Accordingly, they have not briefed the question of the sufficiency of the [appellant’s] complaint. We are *1185 confronted, therefore, with a controversy where the defendants refuse to participate because they are not parties, and to resolve it at this stage and under these circumstances would be unnecessary and wasteful.
Bayron,
In conclusion, we believe that a wasteful shuttling of cases involving complaints which are substantial enough to invoke federal jurisdiction, but which may ultimately fail to state a claim, is best avoided by following our decision in
Bryan v. Johnson,
B.
With the foregoing principles under the first two tiers of review in mind, we turn to the propriety of the respective dismissal orders of the district court in these cases. In reference to the dismissal of the insurance complaint, we believe that the district court properly dismissed the complaint for want of subjеct matter jurisdiction. The linchpin for federal jurisdiction in this complaint was the charge that the insurance claims gave rise to a cause of action under the Federal Tort Claims Act. Yet even when read liberally, Ricketts’ allegations did not provide any facts, inferentially or otherwise, that would suggest that he had a colorable claim against the United States or any of its employees. Section 1346 of the FTCA provides that the district courts shall have exclusive jurisdiction over “claims against the United States for money damages ... for injury or loss of property ... caused by the negligent or wrоngful act or omission of any employee of the Government while acting within the scope of his office or employment ...” 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). The thrust of Ricketts’ claims are directed against Sharp Insurance rather than a federal employee of any of the agencies named in his complaint heading. For this reason, it would appear that the allegation of a cause of action under the FTCA was made solely for the purpose of obtaining federal jurisdiction over what are clearly state law claims.
Bell,
The same analysis is applicable to Rick-etts’ banking complaint. 9 The district court proceeded to address the merits of the banking complaint sua sponte when it held that Ricketts’ “action was without a reasonable basis in law or fact.” The court’s dismissal of the action, presumably under the authority of Rule 12(b)(6), was improper because Ricketts’ complaint was not substantial enough to proceed beyond the first tier of jurisdictional review. In short, the district court proceeded to address the merits of Ricketts’ claims when it lacked subject matter jurisdiction to do so. The allegations in the banking complaint, like those in the insurance complaint, fail to make a colorable claim against the United States or any of its employees for the purposes of the FTCA.
Accordingly, the district court’s order dismissing the banking complaint in the case designated by the docket number 88- *1186 1203 for failure to state a claim is hereby Reversed and remanded with directions to dismiss for lack of subject mattеr jurisdiction. The district court’s order dismissing the insurance complaint in the case designated by the docket number 88-2302 for lack of subject matter jurisdiction is hereby Affirmed.
Notes
. In
Smith-Bey v. Hospital Administrator,
[W]hen the complaint submitted along with a petition for leave to proceed in forma pauper-is fails to present an arguable claim for relief, the district court must deny leave to proceed in forma pauperis under § 1915(a). At the same time, the district court should also determine whether the deficiencies in the complaint could be cured by amendment. If the allegations show that an arguable claim is “indisputably absent,” then the district court should dismiss the case with prejudice under § 1915(d). In doing so, the district court should clearly state that the dismissal is under § 1915(d) and with prejudice. The district court should also enter judgment on a separate document as required by Rule 58.
Id. at 758. This procedure should help alleviate the problem of a plaintiff refiling an identical complaint.
. Ricketts did file a document which he labeled as a "complaint.” In it, he made further allegations against the City of Indianapolis and other defendants for towing away his car in 1984 and later destroying it and its contents after he failed to pay the towing and storage fees. The district court interpreted this filing as an attempt to amend the complaint, and took the new allegations into consideration when it dismissed the action for want of federal jurisdiction.
.The appeal from the dismissal of the banking complaint was further complicated because none of the named defendants were able to properly appear, file an answer or otherwise respond beforе the complaint was dismissed sua sponte. Accordingly, there is no personal jurisdiction over the named defendants, and as Midwest points out, they are not actual parties to this litigation and have no duty to file an appellate brief. Nonetheless, on May 4, 1988, this court ordered the “defendants-appellees” to show cause why the case should not be decided without the benefit of briefs on their behalf. Thereafter, Midwest and the Indiana National Bank filed briefs which helped clarify the particularly sparse appellate record in that case. As we stress later, developments such аs these are likely to arise when a complaint is dismissed sua sponte for failure to state a claim at such a nascent stage of the proceeding.
. Because a dismissal for want of subject matter jurisdiction is not a decision on the merits of the complaint, it "will deprive the judgment of res judicata or collateral estoppel effect so far as any related state-law claims may be concerned."
Crowley Cutlery,
. The Hagans Court went on to emphasize that: The limiting words ‘wholly’ and ‘obviously’ have cogent legal significance. In the context of the effect of prior decisions upon the sub-stantiality of constitutional claims, those words import that claims are constitutionally insubstantial only if the prior decisions inescapably render the claims frivolous; previous decisiоns that merely render claims of doubtful or questionable merit do not render them insubstantial for the purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 2281. A claim is insubstantial only if ‘ “its unsoundness so clearly results from the previous decisions of this court as to foreclose the subject and leave no room for the inference that the question can be the subject of controversy.” ’
. In
Crowley Cutlery,
this court explored the distinctions between a frivolous filing within the meaning of Fed.R.Civ.P. 11 and a "wholly" frivolous claim for the purposes of the substan-tiality doctrine.
. The district court’s precaution in this case of ordering Ricketts to show cause why his insurance complaint was meritorious was a particularly judicious step to take before dismissing the action for want of jurisdiction. The effect of the order was to emphasize to the plaintiff that his complaint suffered from significant deficiencies, and that the action could not proceed absent substantial amendments to the complaint.
. As Justice Rehnquist stated in Yazoo:
In other words, at the second-tier level, the federal court might find simply on the basis of the allegations of the complaint that no triable constitutional issue was raised, and accordingly, dismiss it on that ground. The third tier of review would be where the federal court finds the allegations of the complaint sufficient to statе a constitutional claim, and accordingly requires further pleadings, discovery, and perhaps eventually a trial on the merits to determine whether the plaintiff can prove the allegations of his complaint.
Yazoo,
. Although a district court’s order dismissing a complaint rather than a "suit” or “action" is generally not a final order for the purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1291,
Conisten Corp. v. Village of Hoffman Estates,
