We are to decide in this case whether a United States District Court sitting in the Beaumont Division of the Eastern District of Texas has jurisdiction over the subject matter of a lawsuit disputing the title to real property located in the State of Colorado. The district court in Texas held that it had subject matter jurisdiction over this Colorado dispute. The defendant Gulf Oil
I. The Underlying Dispute
The underlying dispute in this case concerns the title to an oil and gas lease which was issued by the Bureau of Land Management оf the United States Department of the Interior to the plaintiff Hayes for a ten-year term, effective August 1, 1975. This lease covered lands located in Montezuma County, Colorado. Hayes agreed to assign Gulf his interest in the lease in October 1977 for a five-year primary term, with an automatic extension if “actual drilling operations have been commenced on lands of another lease with which this lease is committed to an approved co-operative or unit plan.”
Hayes and Gulf disagree as to whether this has occurred. Hayes approved the inclusion of the lease in the Yellow Jacket Unit Agreement in 1977, but the Yellow Jacket Unit was terminated as of April 2, 1983. However, all the acreage in the Yellow Jacket Unit, including this lease, was combined with the acreage in six other units to form the McElmo Dome Unit. The McElmo Dome Unit was compulsorily unitized pursuant to a Colorado statute. Hayes never ratified the McElmo Dome Unit or consented to the inclusion of his lease therein. He thus claims that all interests in the federal lease reverted to him when the Yellow Jacket Unit was terminated. Gulf responds that Hayes’ refusal to ratify the McElmo Dome Unit is irrelevant, since the unit was compulsorily unitized under state law.
Hayes filed suit against Gulf and Shell Oil Company (Shell) in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, claiming title and seeking a declaration that all interests under the lease belonged to him. After an amended complaint was filed, Gulf and Shell filed a joint motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction for two reasons: 1) Shell, with its principal place of business in Houston, Texas, was a non-diverse party; and 2) a federal district court sitting in Texas had no subject matter jurisdiction over a dispute about title to a Colorado leasehold. Hayes voluntarily dismissed Shell and again amended his complaint. Gulf then renewed its motion to transfer this action due to a want of jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1631.
The district court held that it had subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate the question of leasehold title in lands located wholly in Colorado and denied Gulf’s motion. The district court certified this issue for interlocutory appeal, 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), and this сourt granted Gulf permission to appeal.
II. The Local Action Doctrine
The questions presented are: whether Hayes’ action is indeed local, whether the local action doctrine remains good law, and whether the rule affects only the venue of the court and may be waived.
Following
Livingston,
the Supreme Court has consistently recognized that a local action must be brought within the state where the land is located.
See, e.g., Louisville & N.R.R. v. Western Union Telegraph Co.,
A. Local or Transitory?
The local action doctrine is so ingrained in our jurisprudence that a claimant does not normally challenge the rule’s existence, but is more likely to argue that a particular cause of action is transitory in nature and not local. Chief Justice Marshall discussed this distinction between local and transitory actiоns in
Livingston
and concluded that the common law restrained the court to hold that an action for trespass to land, although an
in personam
action seeking monetary relief, was nevertheless local in nature because it could only take place in Louisiana.
Chief Justice Marshall stated that the question whether an action was local or transitory should be controlled by federal law.
Id.
at 665.
See also
Wright, Miller & Cooper § 3822, at 207-08. However, the Supreme Court near the end of the century stated in dictum that the question whether an action is local depends on the law of the
Plaintiff Hayes does not make a serious effort to contest the characterization of this lawsuit as local. Counsel at oral argument did suggest that what is really involved here is a contract dispute between Hayes and Gulf which just happens to involve the title to real property. We need not belabor this issue. Under Texas law it is clear that an interest in land under an oil and gas lease constitutes real estate, and that Hayes’ action to terminate Gulf’s interest is an action to try title to real property located in Colorado.
See Howell v. Union Producing Co.,
B. The Effect of Shaffer v. Heitner
Despite the overwhelming authority supporting the doctrine that local actions may only be brought within the territorial boundaries of the state where the land is situated, Hayes maintains that the local action rule is no longer a viаble concept. We read Hayes’ argument as making two interrelated propositions. First, that
Shaffer v. Heitner,
Hayes asserts that the district court’s diversity jurisdiction depends on whether a Texas state court could exerсise jurisdiction. Hayes submits that Texas law provides that state court jurisdiction is now co-extensive with that allowed by the United States Constitution.
See, e.g., Hall v. Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia, S.A.
More fundamentally, Hayes suggests that the local action doctrine is inconsistent with the underlying rationale of Shaffer which indicates that the sovereignty and the territoriality of the states are no longer the significant, controlling factors in determining the constitutionality of a state court’s exercise of jurisdiction. Hayes concludes that, as long as a court has jurisdiction over the parties to a dispute, it has jurisdiction to adjudicate the parties’ rights regardless of whether the dispute involves land located in another state.
Hayes has apparently abandoned the federal question basis as a jurisdictional ground on appeal, and indeed does not dispute Gulfs position that this case should be decided exclusively on the basis of state law. Since Hayes dismissed Shell as a party defendant, Gulf concedes that complete diversity exists.
In
International Shoe Co.,
In Shaffer, the plaintiff shareholder of Greyhound Corporation stock filed a shareholder derivative suit in a Delaware court against Greyhound, a Greyhound subsidiary, and present and former officers and directors of both' corporations. Their assertion of jurisdiction in the courts of Delaware over all defendants was based on a sequestration of shares of the corporation’s stock which were statutorily located in Delaware. The shareholder suit concerned corporate management decisions and did not involve Greyhound stock in the State of Delaware. The Supreme Court held this quasi in rem assertion of jurisdiction was no longer sufficient in light of the International Shoe “minimum contacts” test. The statutory presence of the defendant’s stock in Delaware, unrelated to the underlying cause of action, could not create minimum contacts which would confer jurisdiction.
Hayes’ basic reading of Shaffer is that assertions of jurisdiction must now satisfy the International Shoe “minimum contacts” standard. The Shaffer opinion, however, is relevant to today’s case only in determining whether the Texas federal district court can assert personal jurisdiction over the defendant Gulf. In view of Gulf’s more than minimum contacts with Texas, it clearly has the power to do so. Indeed, Gulf does not contest the power of the court to assert personal jurisdiction ovеr it.
Whether that same district court may exercise jurisdiction over the subject matter of this lawsuit is an entirely different question. The Supreme Court in
Shaffer
did not purport to address that question. It is true the Court stated that cases which relied on the
Pennoyer
principles of state court power were overruled to the extent they were inconsistent with the “minimum contacts” standard.
See Shaffer,
Hayes’ position that 28 U.S.C. § 1332 provides subject matter jurisdiction if a dispute over land outside the state is between citizens of different states and the requisite jurisdictional amount is satisfied must also fail. The Congressional grant of diversity jurisdiction pursuant to express Constitutional authority has been vested in inferior courts of the United States since the Judiciary Act of 1789. And since 1811 such courts have insisted that a local action must be brought where the land is located. Moreover, the positive grants of diversity and federal question jurisdiction cannot be viewed as absolutes. Other fundamental, judicially created limitations to a federal district court’s exercise of its subject matter jurisdiction exist. In the areas of domestic relations and probate, federal courts have refused to adjudicate disputes even though diversity requirements have been met.
See Jagiella v. Jagiella,
The analogy of local actions to the probate and domestic relations exceptions is not exact. A federal court must abstain in the latter cases regardless of where it sits when it is asked to modify a divorce decree or probate a will. But these analogies do illustrate that subject matter jurisdiction is not required to be exercised in every situation it literally embraces. In the areas of domestic relations and probаte, states have a strong interest in the proper implementation of state policy, and local courts have a well-developed competence.
See Crouch v. Crouch,
Equally cogent reasons also underlie application of the local action doctrine. Contrary to Hayes’ assertions, the rule is not out-dated and аrchaic. The rationale for the rule is as forceful today as it was in Chief Justice Marshall’s time, and remains as, if not more, compelling than the domestic relations or probate exceptions. If litigants were free to file claims to the same Colorado real property in different federal and state courts throughout the country, the State of Colorado could not give conflicting judgments full faith and credit. More significantly, title to real estate would never be certain again since it could be involved in unknown claims in unknown fora with no practical method for control of liens, lis pendens or priority of title claims. State land title records would become unmanageable. The local action rule prevents courts unfamiliar with local property rights and laws from interfering with title to real property which must be recorded under a unitary set of rules to keep it free of conflicting encumbrances. These local rules ensure that real property actions will be tried in a convenient forum and that orderly notice to all interested parties— through Colorado land title records — will be facilitated.
In short, overwhelming precedent, including cases from this Circuit, which hold that a court sitting in one state cannot adjudicate title to land situated in a different state, and numerous salutory reasons for continuing the local action rule to determine subject matter jurisdiction compel reversal of the district court’s judgment.
C. Venue or Jurisdiction?
Hayes contends in the alternative that the local action doctrine relates only to venue and not to a court’s subject matter jurisdiction. This distinction is significant in the case at bar because a defect in venue must be raised by timely motion or by pleading by the objecting party.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(h)(1). A defect in the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction, on the other hand, may be raised at ary time by
We need not belabor this issue of procedural waiver since we are bound by Circuit precedent to hold that a federal district court sitting in Texas does not have subject mattеr jurisdiction over Hayes’ claim of title to the federal oil and gas lease.
See Iselin,
Hayes argues that Shaffer’s rejection of territoriality as the controlling concept of state court jurisdiction should persuade us that state boundaries relate only to venue. Our rejection of Hayes’ argument that Shaffer abrogates the local action doctrine also answers this assertion.
Hayes cites cases from other courts as precedent for treating the local action issue as a question of venue.
5
None of the cases have confronted the issue we confront herе. For example, in
X-Rail Systems, Inc. v. Norfolk and W. Ry.,
III. Conclusion
By invoking the jurisdiction of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, Hayes seeks to have himself declared the owner of an oil and gas lease covering land located in Colorado. The local action doctrine, however, is alive and well in post-Shaffer jurisprudence. Accordingly, that suit must be litigated, if anywhere, in a court in Colorado of competent jurisdiction. Accordingly, we remand this case and dirеct the district court to dismiss Hayes’ action or to transfer the action to the proper United States District Court in Colorado pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1631.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Transfer to cure want of jurisdiction
Whenever a civil action is filed in a court ... and that court finds that there is a want of jurisdiction, the court shall, if it is in the interest of justice, transfer such action or appeal to any other such court in which the action or appeal could have been brought at the time it was filed оr noticed, and the action or appeal shall proceed as if it had been filed in or noticed for the court to which it is transferred on the date upon which it was actually filed in or noticed for the court from which it is transferred.
.
The result would not be different if Colorado law governed the determination of whether this is a local action.
See Hagood v. Heckers,
. Plaintiff Hayes alleged in his second amended complaint both federal quеstion and diversity as bases of federal subject matter jurisdiction.
. We note that Gulf and Shell in their answer to Hayes' first amended complaint did move pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1631 for a transfer to cure a want of jurisdiction. Because we decide that the local action rule determines a court’s subject matter jurisdiction, we express no view as to whether the invocation of § 1631 was sufficient to raise the venue issue under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(h).
.
See e.g., Still,
. Transfer pursuant to § 1631 was not available at the time of this decision.
