Melvyn Kaufman appeals from Judge Trager’s dismissal of his complaint, which brought an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Kaufman alleges that the procedure for assigning appeals among panels of judges in New York’s Second Department of the Appellate Division violates the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment because it permits court staff to assign cases to panels of judges on a non-transparent, discretionary basis.
Based on O’Shea v. Littleton,
BACKGROUND
Because this is an appeal from a dismissal for failure to state a claim, we view the allegations of the complaint in the light most favorable to appellant. Desiderio v. Nat’l Ass’n of Securities Dealers,
Kaufman alleges the following. He lives in Mamaroneck, New York, in a gated community called Edgewater Point. The Edgewater Point Property Owners’ Association (the “EPPOA”) imposes various covenants that run with the property, and Kaufman complies with them, as do most of his neighbors. However, he alleges that “there are newer property owners who have chosen to disregard the restrictive covenants.” Compl. at 24. These new property owners “became wealthy during the recent period of corporate excess and illegal financial schemes of the 1990’s and purchased property in existing prestigious communities such as Edgewater Point as a validation of their heightened social status.” Id. Nevertheless, they refuse to abide by the restrictive covenants, and the EPPOA “is unwilling to enforce the restrictive covenants against the non-complying property owners.” Id. at 27.
Before bringing the present action, Kaufman had lost five cases in New York state court against various neighbors and entities in Mamaroneck. In these, he claimed that neighbors violated a covenant not to use homes in Edgewater Point for business purposes by renting out their house to tenants. Kaufman v. Fass,
After each case was dismissed in the trial court, Kaufman appealed to the Second Department of the New York Appellate Division. In the Second Department, Justice Gabriel M. Krausman and Justice Thomas A. Adams sat on four of the five panels hearing his appeals. Justice Stephen G. Crane sat on three of the five panels. Based on a statistical analysis, Kaufman claims that the assignment of judges to his cases was not random but “was intentional and not a mere accident, or coincidental.” Compl. at 49. He also claims that Justices Krausman, Adams, and Crane “exhibited extreme bias against” him, Compl. at 50, and that all of the panels that heard his appeals decided against him “[djespite the strong factual and legal basis for overturning the orders of the court below.” Compl. at 51. Kaufman sought review of Kehler and Fass in the Court of Appeals. Those requests were denied. He petitioned the Supreme Court of the United States for certiorari for review of Fass. That request was also denied.
Three further Kaufman-initiated cases were pending when the present complaint was filed. On appeal to the Second Department, all three were scheduled for argument on the same day, although they involved different defendants and different issues. Each ended unsuccessfully for Kaufman. In those appeals, Justice Adams was on each panel.
Kaufman also notes that a $10,000 sanction was imposed on him by the Second Department for pursuing a frivolous appeal. This fine was imposed, according to Kaufman, “because the panel was not neutral and was biased against [him].” Compl. at 65.
Kaufman’s complaint sought: (i) a declaration that the system for assigning cases among panels of judges in the Second Department of the Appellate Division violates the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment; (ii) an injunction requiring the New York state legislature to establish a new system of assigning appeals in the Second Department; (iii) vacatur of a number of Second Department decisions adverse to Kaufman; and (iv) vacatur of sanctions the Second Department has imposed on him.
Judge Trager granted appellees’ motion to dismiss the complaint. He held that Kaufman’s request for reversal of previously rendered decisions of the Second Department was barred by the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, see District of Columbia Court of Appeals v. Feldman,
DISCUSSION
Even the relief now sought by Kaufman would be so intrusive in the administration of the New York court system that we must, based on applicable precedent, abstain. Under a controlling decision of the Supreme Court, federal courts may not entertain actions, like the present one, that seek to impose “an ongoing federal audit of state ... proceedings.” O’Shea v. Littleton,
In Younger, the Supreme Court had explained that, in our federal system, a federal court, “anxious though it may be to vindicate and protect federal rights and federal interests, always endeavors to do so in ways that will not unduly interfere with the legitimate activities of the States.”
We have previously examined the role of federal courts in civil litigation challenging the internal workings of state courts. See Wallace v. Kern,
We see little difference between the relief sought here and that sought in O’Shea and the decisions cited in the preceding paragraph. To be sure, as appellant argues, the relief he now seeks in the federal courts would, if granted, leave “the state judiciary ... free to craft a remedy in the first instance.” Appellant’s Reply Br. At 27. However, any remedy fashioned by the state would then be subject to further challenges in the district court. Appellant — or any state court litigant dissatisfied with the panel of judges assigned to his or her appeal — could raise compliance issues under the putative federal injunction claiming that the state court’s chosen remedy violated the Constitution or the terms of that injunction. Such challenges would inevitably lead to precisely the kind of “piecemeal interruptions of ... state proceedings” condemned in O’Shea. In short, we cannot resolve the issues raised here as to present assignment procedures without committing to resolving the same issues as to the remedy chosen by the state and as to the subsequent case-by-case implementation of the assignment procedures in the Second Department. This is exactly what O’Shea forbids.
Of course, as in O’Shea, Kaufman can raise his federal claims in the state proceedings and has in fact raised them in his prior cases. “[A]bstention is appropriate where the plaintiff has an ‘opportunity to raise and have timely decided by a competent state tribunal’ the constitutional claims at issue in the federal suit.” Spar-go v. New York State Comm’n on Judicial Conduct,
Moreover, if he is dissatisfied with the decisions of the Appellate Division, he may
CONCLUSION
We conclude that federal courts must abstain from consideration of the claims Kaufman raises here, and we therefore affirm the dismissal of his complaint.
Notes
. "Younger is not a jurisdictional bar based on Article III requirements, but instead a prudential limitation on the court’s exercise of jurisdiction grounded in equitable considerations of comity.” Spargo v. New York State Comm’n on Judicial Conduct,
