This appeal concerns the propriety of abstention in the context of a diversity tort suit implicating state domestic relations law. This issue arises on the appeal of defendant-appellant Astrid Eckardt-Minot from the April 19, 1993, judgment of the District Court for the Southern District of New York (Michael B. Mukasey, Judge) remanding the removed action of plaintiff-appellee Jeffrey Minot to New York State Supreme Court. Though we are somewhat troubled by an abstention-based remand in this context, we conclude that the District Court exercised its discretion properly and therefore affirm.
Background
This ease vividly demonstrates the unfortunate consequences that often result from a contentious custody battle. In this instance, the sad human drama has spilled into federal court, raising close questions of federal jurisdiction and federal appellate practice along the way.
Eckardt-Minot and Minot were married in 1986, in Heidelberg, West Germany, though they apparently moved to New York soon after. The parties’ only child, Stephen Rafael Minot (“Stephen”), was born in New York in 1987. Eckardt-Minot later decided to separate from her husband and return to Germany. After arranging to have her belongings moved from the marital residence, Eckardt-Minot relocated to Germany with Stephen; the parties apparently agreed initially that she would have custody of Stephen. Eckardt-Minot returned to New York with Stephen for visits in November of 1988 and again in February of 1989.
While in New York on the second visit, Eckardt-Minot was .served with a New York *592 Supreme Court summons and complaint in an action for divorce, along with a temporary restraining order prohibiting her from leaving New York with Stephen pending a hearing scheduled four days later. Eckardt-Mi-not immediately returned to Germany with Stephen, and promptly instituted an action for custody of Stephen in the Family Court of Heidelberg. Meanwhile, after conducting hearings without Eckardt-Minot, New York Supreme Court Justice Kristin Booth Glen awarded temporary custody of Stephen to Minot and ordered Eckardt-Minot to discontinue the German custody action and return with the child from Germany. Thereafter, Justice Glen entered a judgment that (1) granted Minot a divorce, (2) concluded that New York had jurisdiction over this custody dispute, (3) awarded permanent custody of Stephen to Minot, and (4) ordered Eckardt-Minot to facilitate Stephen’s return to New York.
On the same day that judgment was entered in the New York action, the Family Court of Heidelberg awarded temporary custody of Stephen to Eckardt-Minot, though this decision was later reversed by a German appellate court. The issue of custody was remanded to the Heidelberg Family Court, and according to Eckardt-Minot’s counsel, the Family Court has recently again awarded custody to Eckardt-Minot. Meanwhile, Justice Glen had written to Judge Fried of the Heidelberg Family Court requesting that he dismiss Eckardt-Minot’s custody action so that a “complete and impartial hearing” could be held in New York Supreme Court.
In April of 1992, Minot commenced the instant action in New York state court seeking damages for Eekardt-Minot’s violations of his rights under the New York custody orders. This action, brought personally and on Stephen’s behalf, alleges torts of intentional infliction of emotional distress, damage to family relationship, violation of civil rights, and other similar claims. Later in April, Eckardt-Minot’s German attorney wrote a letter to-Justice Glen, giving his account of the entire case and suggesting that Minot obtained the New York orders through fraud. In this letter, Eckardt-Minot’s counsel requested that Justice Glen “review” her judgment, and “take appropriate steps in order to avoid injustice by annulling judgments which were obtained by fraud.” Then, in May of 1992, Eckardt-Minot removed this case to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York based on diversity of citizenship, and Minot later moved to remand the case back to state court.
In April of 1993, the District Court granted Minot’s remand motion. Relying on
Ankenbrandt v. Richards,
— U.S. -,
Discussion
1. Proper Mode for Review — Direct Appeal or Mandamus?
We first consider whether we have appellate jurisdiction, notwithstanding Minot’s explicit decision not to contest our jurisdiction.
The statute'that provides for remands after removals states that, with one exception that is not relevant here, a remand “is not reviewable on appeal or otherwise.” 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d) (1988). The Supreme Court has held, however, that the prohibition of appellate review in section 1447(d) applies only to remand orders issued pursuant to section 1447(c), which provides for remand when a case has been removed “improvident[ly] and without jurisdiction.”
See Thermtron Products, Inc. v. Hermansdorfer,
*593
Nevertheless, though some form of appellate review of the District Court’s remand decision is permitted, the proper means for doing so is still in question. Eckardt-Minot has appealed from the District Court’s remand order. However, this Court’s decision in
Corcoran
might be read to suggest that a petition for mandamus is the only proper means for challenging a remand order in this context.
See Corcoran,
We recently applied the
Corcoran
decision in
Travelers Insurance Co. v. Keeling,
2. Use of Abstention to Remand
Turning to the merits, we first note our general concern with employing abstention doctrines to remand a case properly removed to federal court on the basis of diversity jurisdiction. Though abstention may sometimes justify a remand of a removed case,
see, e.g., Corcoran,
Yet, the facts of this case reveal that the District Court’s reasons for abstaining were in fact quite strong. The underlying action is perhaps a paradigmatic example of a case presenting “difficult questions of state law bearing on policy problems of substantial public import whose importance transcends the result in the case ... at bar.”
See Colorado River,
Even though this area of the law is ill-suited to- federal court determinations, the family-law nature of the. subject matter would .not alone justify abstention in this case.
See McIntyre v. McIntyre,
The Supreme Court in
Ankenbrandt
suggested that
Burford
abstention in family-law disputes might be particularly appropriate when “the suit depended on a determination of the status of the parties.”
Ankenbrandt,
— U.S. at -,
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. Conversely, when a district court’s remand order does not determine the forum in which the dispute will ultimately be
decided
— i.e. when the remand simply returns to the state court the
threshold
question of where the underlying dispute is to be decided — a petition for mandamus is.the only way to obtain appellate review.
See Travelers Insurance,
. The only significant recent New York state case even considering these sorts of claims is
Harley v. Harley,
In Kajtazi v. Kajtazi,
. Notably, this case would not involve a "simple” application of the tort of custodial interference. Eckardt-Minot is not a kidnapper who clearly and knowingly violated undisputed custody orders. Rather, Eckardt-Minot resists the New York court orders based on a good-faith belief that these orders were obtained through fraud and are therefore invalid. Because the equities in this case are tangled, defining and developing the exact contours of a tort of custodial interference would be especially complicated here.
Cf. Fay v. South Colonie Central School District,
