Plaintiffs appeal the district court’s order dismissing their claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM.
I. Background
Plaintiffs-appellants in this action are: (1) Kenmen Engineering, a partnership composed of Kenneth Miles and Ken Menz; (2) Miles Specialty Company (d/b/a El Reno Terminal Grain), a corporation in which Mr. Miles is the principal; and (3) Mr. Miles and Mr. Menz in their individual capacities. Defendant-appellee is the City of Union City, Oklahoma, and various Union City officers (“Union City”).
Plaintiffs participated in the United States Department of Defense (“DOD”) “Return to Manufacturer” recycling program. Through the DOD’s program, plaintiffs obtained sixteen tons of magnesium. Plaintiffs stored the magnesium in a grain-storage facility in Union City, Oklahoma.
The appeal before us centers on the effect of a prior state-court judgment. On March 12, 1999, Union City proceeded to Oklahoma state court seeking to enjoin plaintiffs from storing their magnesium within Union City. The Oklahoma state court entered a temporary restraining order and scheduled a hearing for March 22, 1999. During the March 12, 1999 hearing, the Oklahoma state court remarked:
You understand that if, in fact, the order is found to not be necessary and if there are any costs [plaintiffs] may want to come back against the City of Union City for the payment of costs and moving and storage.... I think it would be prudent for the grain, Terminal Grain people that you might want to keep track of all of your expenses and everything else that this order of the Court has because it may be something that at a later date you may make an application for the costs if the Court feels that to be appropriate.
Mr. Miles and Mr. Menz were both present at the March 12,1999 hearing.
On March 22, 1999, the state court entered a subsequent order, granting Union City’s “Motion for a Temporary and Permanent Injunction.” There is no indication that the Oklahoma state court conducted a hearing at this time. The state- *472 court order designated Miles Specialty Company as the sole defendant. Kenmen Engineering, Mr. Menz, 1 and Mr. Miles 2 were not named as parties in the state-court order. 3 The Oklahoma state court scheduled another hearing for May 13, 1999, but cancelled it on May 12, 1999.
According to plaintiffs, as a result of the state court’s order, they were forced 4 to sell the magnesium at a discounted price, resulting in economic loss. Plaintiffs also allege that “the judicial proceedings in the [state court] went to [the] issue of temporary injunctive relief and maintenance of the status quo, and [the state court] made no findings or orders beyond such interim measures, and that no consideration was given in said proceedings to any rights deprivation claim by [plaintiffs].”
Plaintiffs then brought the present action in federal court, seeking damages for losses incurred in connection with the magnesium sale, under two theories: (1) Union City’s actions amounted to an unlawful taking of plaintiffs’ property without due process of law and (2) the Hazardous Materials Transportation Act preempted Union City’s application of its municipal fire code to plaintiffs’ activities. Plaintiffs also sought to recover for allegedly defamatory statements made by Union City officials.
The district court dismissed plaintiffs’ complaint, concluding that the court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction under the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. On appeal, plaintiffs argue that Rooker-Feldman does not prohibit a federal court from exercising jurisdiction over their claims. First, they argue that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine is inapplicable here, because (1) the Oklahoma state court’s injunction was not a judgment of the state’s highest court, and (2) the Oklahoma state court’s judgment was not an “appealable” or “final” order. Second, they argue that even if the Rooker-Feldman doctrine applies, it does not bar their claims, because (1) plaintiffs’ constitutional and preemption claims are not “inextricably intertwined” with the Oklahoma state court’s judgment; (2) the Oklahoma state-court proceeding did not afford plaintiffs a full and fair opportunity to litigate the merits of their constitutional and preemption claims; and (3) Kenmen Engineering, Miles, and Menz were not named parties in the Oklahoma state court’s judgment. We consider each of these contentions below.
*473 II. Discussion
A. The Rooker-Feldman Doctrine
We review the district court’s dismissal for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction de novo.
Johnson v. Rodrigues,
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1257, “federal review of state court judgments can be obtained only in the United States Supreme Court.”
Kiowa Indian Tribe of Okla. v. Hoover,
B. Whether the Rooker-Feldman Doctrine Applies to the Oklahoma State Court’s Judgment.
Initially, plaintiffs argue that the Rook-er-Feldman does not apply to the Oklahoma state-court judgment in this case. We construe plaintiffs’ argument to be twofold. First, plaintiffs contend that Rooker-Feldman does not apply where the state-court judgment under consideration is not that of the state’s highest court. Second, plaintiffs argue that Rooker-Feld-man does not apply where the state-court judgment at issue is not an “appealable” or “final” order. We reject both contentions.
1. Whether Rooker-Feldman Applies Where the State Court Judgment Under Consideration Is Not That of the State’s Highest Court.
Plaintiffs contend that the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine does not apply to this case because the Oklahoma state-court judgment at issue is not that of the state’s highest court. We disagree. Although the Supreme Court has never decided the question, we have previously applied the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine to judgments of intermediate state courts.
See, e.g., Facio v. Jones,
2. Whether Rooker-Feldman Applies Where the State-Court Judgment Under Consideration Is Not an ‘Appeal-able” or “Final” Order.
According to plaintiffs, the Oklahoma state court issued only temporary injunc-tive relief and made no findings or orders beyond such interim measures.' Plaintiffs contend that the absence of a “final” state-court order renders the Rooker-Feldman *474 doctrine inapplicable. We reject plaintiffs’ contention for two reasons.
First, we disagree with plaintiffs’ characterization of the Oklahoma state court’s order. The March 22, 1999 order states that it is granting Union City’s “Motion for a Temporary and Permanent Injunction.” A permanent injunction is a “final” judgment under Oklahoma law.
Morse v. Earnest, Inc.,
Second, the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine — unlike res judicata — does not distinguish between “temporary” and “final” orders. On this question, our prior decisions applying
Rooker-Feldman
to intermediate state-court judgments are instructive.
See Facio,
Moreover, all the factors counseling against lower federal-court review of intermediate state-court judgments apply equally to non-final state-court judgments. On this point, the Second Circuit’s discussion in
Texaco, Inc. v. Pennzoil Co.,
Allowing lower federal courts to review the judgments of state lower courts is as intrusive and as likely to breed antagonism between state and federal systems as allowing federal court review of the judgments of the states’ highest courts. Indeed, if Rooker-Feldman only barred federal review of judgments which had been fully appealed through the state system, it would foster federal/state rivalry by creating incentives for disappointed state court appellants to forum-shop, jumping over to federal courts instead of appealing their cases to the states’ highest tribunals.
Id.
at 1142-43. With these considerations in mind, it is inconceivable that Congress intended any such distinction under 28 U.S.C. § 1257. Under
Rooker-Feldman,
“lower federal courts possess no power
*475
whatever to sit in direct review of state court decisions.”
Feldman,
3. Conclusion
For these reasons, we reject plaintiffs’ contention that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine does not apply to the Oklahoma state-court judgment in this case. Accordingly, we proceed to consider plaintiffs’ federal-court claims under the Rooker-Feldman doctrine.
C. Whether Rooker-Feldman Bars Plaintiffs’ Federal Claims.
1. Whether Plaintiffs’ Federal-Court Claims Are Inextricably Intertwined with the Oklahoma State-Court Judgment.
In its initial formulation of what is now known as the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine, the Supreme Court limited the principle to claims actually decided by a state court.
See Rooker,
The Supreme Court has considered the contours of the “inextricably intertwined” corollary to
Rooker
in two cases,
Feldman
and
Pennzoil Co. v. Texaco, Inc.,
In
Pennzoil,
five justices concluded in concurring opinions that
Rooker-Feldman
did not divest a federal court of jurisdiction over Texaco’s constitutional challenge to Texas’s
post-judgment
collection procedures.
See Pennzoil,
Thus, the Supreme Court has identified two categories of cases that fall outside Feldman’s “inextricably intertwined” umbrella. First, under
Feldman,
a party may bring a general constitutional challenge to a state law, provided that: (1) the party does not request that the federal court upset
6
a prior state-court judgment applying that law against the party,
see Lemonds v. St. Louis County,
These two categories, however, provide little guidance in many cases presenting the “inextricably intertwined” question. Although it is difficult to formulate a foolproof test, in general we must ask “whether the injury alleged by the federal plaintiff resulted from the state court judgment itself or is distinct from that judgment.”
Garry v. Geils,
In conducting this analysis, we must pay close attention to the relief sought by the federal-court plaintiff; we cannot simply compare the issues involved in the state-court proceeding to those raised in the federal-court plaintiffs complaint. Rather than prohibiting the relitigation of issues and claims (the province of the preclusion doctrines), Rooker-Feldman protects state-court judgments from impermissible appellate review by lower federal courts.
*477 In this case, plaintiffs seek monetary damages attributable to losses they sustained as a result of being forced — by state-court order — to remove magnesium from their Union City storage facility. Plaintiffs do not request any form of prospective declaratory or injunctive relief.
Ritter v. Ross,
In his due-process claim, the plaintiff challenged both the county’s failure to provide him with adequate notice and its adoption of the procedures in place for enforcing the property-tax lien.
Id.
The Seventh Circuit first considered the nature of the latter claim.
Id.
at 754. The plaintiff did not seek a declaratory judgment, effective prospectively, relating to the state-court enforcement procedures for property-tax liens. Rather, the plaintiff conceded that “but for the tax lien foreclosure judgment ... [he] would have suffered no injury.”
Id.
at 754. Thus, even if the plaintiff was mounting a “general” challenge to the county’s procedures,
cf. Feldman,
In this case, plaintiffs’ requested relief— monetary damages — would necessarily undo the Oklahoma state court’s judgment. Plaintiffs request that this court place them back in the position they occupied prior to the Oklahoma state-court judgment. This we cannot do. As in
Ritter,
absent the Oklahoma state court’s injunction, no forced sale of the magnesium would have occurred and plaintiffs would not be seeking relief in federal court.
See Ritter,
Considering plaintiffs’ preemption claim, we again focus on the requested relief. Plaintiffs do not seek prospective relief in federal court declaring that the Hazardous Materials Transportation Act preempts Union City’s municipal fire code.
8
In other words, the injury for which plaintiffs seek redress is not the possibility of Union City applying its municipal fire code against them in
the future.
Rather, plaintiffs seek damages for Union City’s
past
application of its municipal fire code — an application sanctioned in a prior state-court judgment.
Compare Centifanti v. Nix,
*478
For the reasons stated above, we hold that plaintiffs’ preemption and constitutional claims are inextricably intertwined with the Oklahoma state court’s injunction. Under the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine, we therefore lack jurisdiction to consider either claim.
Feldman,
2. Whether Rooker-Feldman Applies Where Plaintiffs Had No Opportunity to Litigate Their Claims in the Oklahoma State-Court Proceeding.
Plaintiffs attempt to avoid this result by arguing that they did not have a full and fair opportunity to litigate their claims in the prior state-court proceedings. We find this contention unavailing.
In
Johnson v. Rodrigues,
we considered whether a prior state-court adoption proceeding, to which the federal plaintiff was not a party, barred the federal plaintiffs general constitutional challenge to Utah’s adoption laws under
Rooker-Feldman.
Had we based our decision in
Rodrigues
solely on the lack of a fair opportunity to litigate the claim, this language would support plaintiffs’ contention in the present case. We did not. Indeed, we have previously applied the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine despite the fact that the federal-court plaintiff had no opportunity to litigate her claims in the state-court proceeding.
See Facio,
Injecting the full-and-fair-opportunity-to-litigate inquiry into the
Rooker-
Feldman analysis tends to blur the distine
*479
tion between res judicata and
Rooker-Feldman.
The two are not coextensive.
See GASH,
In contrast, res judicata bars a claim or issue that was actually decided or could have been decided in a previous action.
See Nat’l Diversified Bus. Serv., Inc. v. Corp. Fin. Opportunities, Inc.,
The Rooker-Feldman doctrine asks: is the federal plaintiff seeking to set aside a state judgment, or does he present some independent claim, albeit one that denies a legal conclusion that a state court has reached in a case to which he *480 was a party? If the former, then the district court lacks jurisdiction; if the latter, then there is jurisdiction and state law determines whether the defendant prevails under principles of preclusion.
GASH,
An approach that conflates the two inquiries
12
contradicts
Feldman.
In
Feldman,
the Court held that section 1257 did not bar Feldman’s general constitutional challenge but expressly refused to “reach the question of whether the doctrine of res judicata foreclose[d] litigation on these elements of [the plaintiffs’] complaints.”
Based on the above analysis, we reject plaintiffs’ contention that the absence of a full and fair opportunity to litigate a claim in the prior state-court proceeding bars application of the Rooker-Feldman doctrine.
3. Whether Rooker-Feldman Applies in This Case Despite the Fact That Ken-men Engineering, Mr. Miles, and Mr. Menz Were Not Named Parties in the Oklahoma State-Court Judgment.
We have previously held that the
Rook-er-Feldman
doctrine should not be applied against “non-parties.”
See Johnson v. Riddle,
Kenmen Engineering, Mr. Menz, and Mr. Miles argue that Rooker-Feldman ’s prohibition does not apply to their claims because they were not named parties in the Oklahoma state court’s judgment. We disagree.
*481
As an initial matter, we reject this argument’s factual predicate. It is true that Miles Specialty was the only
named
defendant in the Oklahoma state court’s March 22, 1999 order. At the same time, Ken-men Engineering, Mr. Menz, and Mr. Miles were all clearly within the ambit of the Oklahoma state court’s injunction.
14
The court directed its March 22, 1999 order to “Defendant Miles Specialty Company, Inc [sic], by and through its officers, agents, servants, employees, attorneys, or representatives.” March 22,1999 Dist. Ct. Order at ¶ 2. The record indicates that Miles was an “officer” of Miles Specialty, and he appeared on behalf of Miles Specialty throughout the Oklahoma state-court proceedings. Further, by virtue of the plaintiffs’ joint venture, we have no doubt that Kenmen Engineering
15
and Menz were “agents” of Miles Specialty.
Accord Rollins v. Rayhill,
Focusing on the
relief
sought by plaintiffs reinforces the necessity of this conclusion.
Cf. Rodrigues,
We therefore hold that Rooker-Feld-man bars plaintiffs’ federal-court claims even though Kenmen Engineering, Miles, and Menz were not named parties in the Oklahoma state court’s judgment.
D. Plaintiffs’ Defamation Claim
We also lack jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ defamation claim. First, there is no federal basis for this claim. Mere injury to reputation cannot support a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
See Paul v. Davis,
III. Conclusion
We hold that the district properly concluded that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine divested it of subject-matter jurisdiction over the plaintiffs’ claims. Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of the case for lack of jurisdiction.
Notes
. Although Mr. Menz was present at the March 12, 1999 state-court proceeding, it is not clear whether he was present at the March 22, 1999 hearing.
. Although Mr. Miles was not named in his individual capacity, he is. the principal of Miles Specialty Company. In fact, Mr. Miles • was the named defendant in the Oklahoma state court’s March 12, 1999 temporary restraining order. The record indicates that Mr. Miles appeared on behalf of Miles Specialty Company throughout the state-court proceedings.
. While Kenmen Engineering, Mr. Menz, and Mr. Miles were not named parties to the Oklahoma state court’s judgment, the March 22, 1999 order did extend to "Defendant Miles Specialty Company, Inc [sic], by and through its officers, agents, servants, employees, attorneys, or representatives.” March 22, 1999 Canadian County Dist. Ct. Order at ¶ 2.
.Neither the state court's March 12, 1999 "Temporary Restraining Order” nor its March 22, 1999 "Order” granting Union City’s "Motion for a Temporary and Permanent Injunction” specifically directed plaintiffs to sell their magnesium or to transport it from Union City. Rather, both orders appear to require merely that plaintiffs store the magnesium in compliance with all applicable local, state, and federal laws. Nevertheless, we accept plaintiffs' characterization of the events for purposes of our decision.
. Justice O’Connor, who joined Justice Sca-lia's concurrence, was the fifth justice. Al
*476
though Justice Marshall joined Justice Brennan’s and Justice Stevens's concurrences, he took a different position on
Rooker-Feldman
in his own concurrence.
See Pennzoil,
. We need not consider the myriad ways a federal court might "upset” a state-court judgment, but two obvious examples are vacating the state-court judgment,
see, e.g., Facio v. Jones, 929
F.2d 541 (10th Cir.1991), and awarding damages for losses incurred as a result of complying with the state-court judgment,
see, e.g., Ritter v. Ross,
. Actual causation alone will not suffice, and thus we may not simply apply a "but-for” test. For example, in
Kiowa Indian Tribe,
we held that the Tribe’s section 1983 challenge to "the use of state court processes to seize tribal assets in satisfaction of state court judgments” was not "inextricably intertwined” with the underlying state-court judgment, despite the fact that the satisfaction-of-judgment procedures would not have been at issue but for the underlying state-court judgment.
See
. We express no opinion on the applicability of Rooker-Feldman to such a suit.
. Thus, while “[a] person would ordinarily lack a reasonable opportunity to litigate claims in an action in which the person was not a party,”
Rodrigues,
. In federal court, 28 U.S.C. § 1738 “governs the preclusive effect to be given the judgments and records of state courts.”
Univ. of Tenn. v. Elliott,
. Focusing on the purposes of the two doctrines also underscores the distinction.
Rook-er-Feldman 's
jurisdictional prohibition fulfills Congress's intent under section 1257: maintenance of our "two ‘essentially separate legal systems.’ "
Texaco,
.
See, e.g., Cruz v. Melecio,
. See Black's Law Dictionary 586 (6th ed.1991) (defining "judgment” as the "final decision of the court resolving the dispute and determining the rights and obligations of the parties ”) (emphasis added).
. Indeed, plaintiffs’ contention contradicts their characterization of the injury for which they seek damages. On the one hand, Ken-men Engineering, Mr. Menz, and Mr. Miles argue that Rooker-Feldman does not bar their claims because they were not named parties to the Oklahoma state-court judgment. On the other hand, Kenmen Engineering, Mr. Menz, and Mr. Miles argue that they were forced, by the Oklahoma state court’s injunction, to sell magnesiunj in which each held an economic interest.
. As previously mentioned, Kenmen Engineering is a partnership composed of two partners: Miles and Menz.
