ORDER
AND NOW, this 5th dаy of July, 2011, upon consideration of Claimants Joan, Roy, and David Langbord’s Memorandum of Law with respect to the Declaratory Judgment Claim: In Response to the Government’s Argument Concerning Jury Trial Right and in Support of Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings or Summary Judgment (Doc. No 169), and the United States’s Response in opposition thereto (Doc. No. 173), the Court hereby DENIES the Langbords’ Motion for Judgment and concludes that a jury trial right does not attaсh to the Government’s declaratory judgment claim.
I. Availability of Declaratory Judgment
In an exercise of its discretion, district court may grant declaratory relief in accordance with the following statutory provision:
In a case of actuаl controversy within its jurisdiction ... any court of the United States, upon the filing of an appropriate pleading, may declare the rights and other legal relations of any interested party seeking such declarаtion, whether or not further relief is or could be sought.
28 U.S.C. § 2201(a). The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure further provide that “[t]he existence of another adequate remedy does not preclude a judgment for declaratory relief in eases where it is appropriate.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 57. Despite the broad nature of these provisions, declaratory relief
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“should not be granted where a special statutory proceеding has been provided.”
Katzenbach v. McClung,
The Langbords challenge the United States’s ability to bring a claim under the Declaratory Judgment Act on the ground that the Civil Asset Forfeiture Reform Act (CAFRA) is a special statutory proceeding that рrecludes concurrent declaratory relief. According to the Langbords, although no court has held that CAFRA provides a special statutory remedy, its “very specific steps, time-frames, burdens, remedies and limitations governing the government’s ability to forfeit” property, and 18 U.S.C. § 981’s “careful listing of what property is subject to forfeiture, as well as a number of procedural and substantive provisions related to civil forfeiture” mean that a CAFRA proceeding qualifies. (Doc. No. 169-1, at 13.)
The 1937 Notes of the Advisory Committee on Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 57 provides the basis for the restriction upon which the Langbords rely. It states that “[a] declaration may not be rendered if a special statutory proceeding has been provided for the adjudication of some special type of case.” The Third Circuit has cited E. Borchard,
Declaratory Judgments
342-46 (2d ed.1941) as the relevant treatise discussing special state and federal statutory proceedings within the ambit of the Committee Note.
See Lac D’Amiante du Quebec, Ltee v. American Home Assur. Co.,
It has already been noted that the declaratory action was not designed to interfere with the jurisdiction of special courts, but that on the contrary courts within thеir respective jurisdictions over persons and subject-matter were authorized by the Declaratory Judgment Acts to render declaratory judgments. Thus, when a probate court has jurisdiction over the construction of wills and matters of guardianship, it was not intended that courts of general jurisdiction should oust the jurisdiction of such special tribunals. In analogy thereto, where a special statutory procedure has been рrovided as an exclusive remedy for the particular type of case in hand, such as income tax assessment, tax abatement, workmen’s compensation, unemployment compensation, annulment оf a bigamous marriage, that specific recourse must be followed. Thus, a court should not by declaratory judgment ordinarily interfere with the jurisdiction of an administrative commission, especially where the statute is nоt ambiguous and where the jurisdiction of the committee depends on a jurisdictional fact ... which the commission must in first instance determine.
Borchard, Declaratory Judgments 342-43.
Consistent with Borchard’s understanding, since the enactment of the Declaratory Judgmеnt Act, courts have recognized only a few of categories of cases as “special statutory proceedings” for purposes of the Advisory Committee’s Note, including (1) petitions for habeas cоrpus and motions to vacate criminal sentences,
e.g., Clausell v. Turner,
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By contrast, although CAFRA supplies the necessary statutory authority for the United States to seek to forfeit property that qualifies as an instrumentality or the proceeds of a crime, the statutory remedy does not apply to a subset of criminal matters and CAFRA cases are not adjudicated by administrative tribunals or courts of special jurisdiction.
See New York Times Co. v. Gonzales,
Moreover, even if CAFRA did typically provide a special statutory remedy, it does not do so in this case.
See McClung,
The Langbords also argue that the United States’s declaratory judgment claim adjudicates only past conduct, and should accordingly be dismissed.
See, e.g., Corliss v. O’Brien,
The Court accordingly denies the Langbords’ motion for judgment on the pleadings or summary judgment and concludes that, despite the CAFRA claim that the United States pursues and the Court’s previous determination that triggered this forfeiture proceeding, the Government may seek declaratory relief.
II. Jury Trial Right
Should the Court cоnclude that the declaratory judgment claim should remain
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part of this litigation, as it has, the Langbords ask to try the claim to a jury. Because declaratory judgments were created as a remedy in the federal сourts before the merger of law and equity, see 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201-2202, the Declaratory Judgment Act has a “neutral position on the jury trial,” and “postmerger courts have found it necessary to preserve the distinction between lаw and equity.”
Owens-Illinois, Inc. v. Lake Shore Land Co.,
If the declaratory judgment action does not fit into one of the existing equitable patterns but is essentially an inverted law suit an action brought by one who would have been a defendant at common law[,] then the parties have a right to a jury. But if the action is the counterpart of a suit in equity, there is no such right.
Id.
In other words, the Court must assess the basic nature of the issues involved in the case and determine if they would have arisеn in law or equity had Congress not enacted the declaratory judgment act.
See, e.g., Wallace v. Norman Industries, Inc.,
The United States’s declaratory judgment claim fits into an equitable pattern: that of a quiet title action. In a quiet title action, a cloud upon title prevents the party who possesses property from possessing it free and clear of another’s claim to it. Here, the Government possesses the coins and claims rightful ownership, but the Langbоrds’ assertion that the Double Eagles legally belonged to Israel Switt and were legally inherited by the Langbord Claimants clouds the Government’s title. 1 As quiet title actions are equitable in nature, no jury trial right attaches to them, аnd no jury trial right therefore attaches to the Government’s declaratory judgment claim.
The test articulated Owens-Illinois mandates that Courts first determine whether a case “fit[s] into one of the existing equitable patterns,” and, if not, requires an examination as to whether the case mirrors a legal action. Here, because the Government’s claim fits into the quiet title pattern, the Court need not take the second step.
III. Conclusion
The Court accordingly DENIES the Langbords’ Motion for Judgment and concludes that a jury trial right does not attach to the Government’s declaratory judgment claim.
Notes
. The Court concludes that federal common law would apply to the Government’s hypothetical quiet title action, meaning that whether Pennsylvania law limits quiet title actions to real property is of no import.
See Clearfield Trust Co. v. United States,
