We must decide whether biological connection, standing alone, gives a grandmother a constitutionally protected liberty interest in the adoption of her grandchildren. We conclude that it does not and affirm the district court’s dismissal of this case.
I.
This case concerns the lives of two Oregon children. Loraine and Charles Mullins, both Washington residents, wish to adopt the two children. Loraine Mullins is the children’s paternal grandmother. Charles Mullins, who only recently married Loraine, has no blood relation to the children. He is, if there be such a thing, the children’s step-grandfather.
The children were abused and neglected by their parents. When the abuse came to light, state authorities stepped in, removed the children from their home, and initiated proceedings to terminate the parental rights. Ultimately, the mother voluntarily relinquished her rights in the children. The father’s rights were terminated involuntarily pursuant to Oregon law.
While the termination proceedings were pending, the Mullinses filed an adoption petition in the Klamath County Juvenile Court. See Oreg.Rev.Stat. § 109.309. The juvenile court did not immediately act upon the petition. Instead, it waited until the termination proceedings had been concluded before taking up the issue of where to place the children. At that time, the juvenile court permanently committed the children to the custody of Oregon’s Children’s Services Division (“CSD”). This put the fate of the Mullinses’ adoption petition squarely in the hands of CSD, because under Oregon law CSD enjoys the exclusive authority to consent m loco parentis to the adoption of children permanently committed to it. See Oreg.Rev.Stat. §§ 109.316(l)(b), 109.390(3).
The administrative rules governing CSD specify that relatives have no “right” to the adoption of children in CSD custody. See Oreg.Admin.Rule 412-27-045. The same rules, however, provide that CSD will give relatives, including grandparents, “first consideration” in the adoption of a child if the relative has established a “parent-child relationship” with the child. Oreg.Admin. Rule 412-30-028(1). A relative is said to enjoy a “parent-child relationship” with a child if the relative has provided for the physical and psychological care of the child for at least six months prior to the filing of the adoption petition. See Oreg.Rev.Stat. § 109.119(4). 1 The Mullinses concede that they did not qualify for this preferential treatment of their adoption petition, because neither of them had established a parent-child relationship with their grandchildren. In fact, by their own admission, the Mullinses never have had more than minimal contact with their grandchildren, seeing them only occasionally and even then only for a few hours at a time.
CSD thus treated the Mullinses’ adoption petition as any other. It considered the Mul-linses’ request but ultimately refused to consent to the adoption. In accordance with Oregon law, CSD did not offer the Mullinses a hearing on its decision to oppose the adoption. See Oreg.Admin.Rule 412-30-036(2). Nor did CSD give the Mullinses a formal, reasoned explanation for its decision. Complaint at ¶ 14. The Mullinses allege that CSD’s objection had nothing to do with their fitness as adoptive parents. They claim that CSD objected because it erroneously thought that it had to obtain the blessing of Washington authorities before it could send the chil *792 dren to live with the Mullinses in Seattle. 2 See Complaint at ¶ 16.
Whatever the reason for the objection, once CSD withheld its consent to the adoption, that was the end of the road for the Mullinses. The juvenile court had no choice but to dismiss their adoption petition for want of jurisdiction.
See
Oreg.Rev.Stat. § 109.316 (providing that CSD must consent to adoption of children in its custody);
see also In re Adoption of Greybull,
Although the Mullinses could not have appealed the juvenile court’s dismissal of their adoption petition, they could have challenged CSD’s withholding of consent under Oregon’s Administrative Procedures Act.
See
Oreg.Rev.Stat. § 183.484;
see also Adams v. Oregon State Children’s Services Div.,
The district court dismissed the Mullinses’ action pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. Our review is de novo.
See Everest and Jennings, Inc. v. American Motorists Ins. Co.,
II.
The State urges us to dismiss this appeal on jurisdictional grounds. It argues that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the underlying dispute because it, in effect, was asked to review the juvenile court’s dismissal of the Mullinses’ adoption petition. This argument has no merit.
We recognize of course that a federal district court, as a court of original jurisdiction, may not review the final determinations of a state court.
See, e.g., District of Columbia Court of Appeals v. Feldman,
The juvenile court never considered the Mullinses’ constitutional claims. Nor could it have.
See Adams v. Oregon State Children’s Services Div.,
III.
The Supreme Court has interpreted the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to include a substantive component that protects certain individual liberties from state interference, no matter what process is given, unless the infringement is narrowly tailored to achieve a compelling state interest.
See Reno v. Flores,
— U.S. -, -,
We begin by noting the narrow range of liberty interests that substantive due process protects. Only those aspects of liberty that we as a society traditionally have protected as fundamental are included within the substantive protection of the Due Process Clause.
See Michael H. v. Gerald D.,
That the Court has ample precedent for the creation of new constitutional rights should not lead it to repeat the process at will. The Judiciary, including this Court, is the most vulnerable and comes nearest to illegitimacy when it deals with judge-made constitutional law having little or no cognizable roots in the language or even the design of the Constitution.
Moore v. City of East Cleveland,
Our first task in this case is to describe carefully the asserted liberty interest.
See Collins v. City of Harker Heights,
What this ease is really about is creating a new family unit where none existed before. That is, the asserted interest is one in a potential, still undeveloped familial relationship with prospective adopted children. In every material respect except one, this asserted interest is identical to the interest every prospective adoptive parent has in the child he wishes to adopt, and whatever claim a prospective adoptive parent may have to a child, we are certain that it does not rise to the level of a fundamental liberty interest.
See Ellis v. Hamilton,
Neither the text nor the structure of the Constitution supports the asserted interest. Nor have we found any case that does. The Mullinses’ reliance on
Moore v. City of East Cleveland,
Appellants’ reliance on the Utah Supreme Court’s procedural due process decision in
Wilson v. Family Services Division,
We have found no other authority supporting the proposition that a grandparent, by virtue of genetic link alone, enjoys a fundamental liberty interest in the adoption of her grandchildren. The mere novelty of the claim is reason enough to doubí ;hat substantive due process sustains it
See Reno v. Flores,
— U.S. at -,
IV.
The more familiar office of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment is to provide a guarantee of fair procedure in connection with any deprivation of life, liberty, or property by a state.
See Hewitt v. Helms,
The Mullinses rely on a claim to a protected “liberty” interest in their grandchildren. In support of their asserted interest, the Mullinses repeat many of the arguments they made in connection with their substantive due process claim. Our analysis, however, is very different. Here, unlike in the substantive due process context, we need not search for a “fundamental” liberty interest, because the procedural component of the Due Process Clause protects more than just fundamental rights. It protects all liberty interests that are derived from state law or from the Due Process Clause itself.
See Hewitt v. Helms,
Our first task is again to examine the nature of the asserted interest. The Mullins-es claim a protected liberty interest in the adoption of children with whom they never have enjoyed any significant custodial, emotional, or financial relationship. They offer only one basis for the asserted liberty interest: the biological bond Ms. Mullins shares with her grandchildren. The question we must therefore address is whether this biological bond is sufficient to give rise to a protected liberty interest, either as a matter of state law or as a matter of our own interpretation of the Due Process Clause.
The Mullinses have not pointed to a single Oregon statute that confers upon grandparent a right of adoption on the basis of mere lineage. Our own research has revealed none. In case we were left with any doubt, the administrative rules that govern CSD specifically provide that relatives have no right to the adoption of children in CSD custody unless they have established a “parent-child” relationship. Oreg.Admin.Rule 412-30-028(1); see also Oreg.Rev.Stat. § 109.119(4) (defining parent-child relationship). The Mullinses admit that they have no such relationship. In these circumstances, the rules expressly divest grandparents of even the right to a hearing on the merits of their adoption petition. See Oreg.Admin.Rule 412-30-036(2). It is fair to say, then, that so far as state positive law is concerned, noncustodial grandparents have no more rights than strangers to the adoption of their grandchildren. 5
Nothing in the common law is to the contrary. The Oregon courts have steadfastly refused to create a common law right of adoption on behalf of grandparents or any other blood relatives.
See, e.g. Graham v. Children’s Servs. Div.,
We have, in short, found no statutory, administrative, or common law authority to support the liberty interest the Mullinses assert. As we read them, the relevant authorities are uniform in their refusal to recognize any right whatever to the adoption of one’s grandchildren, at least where the only ties that bind are biological. That spells the end of this appeal unless, as the Mullinses ask us to do, we today create a grandparen-tal right of adoption as a matter of federal constitutional law. This we cannot do.
The Mullinses argue that the “freedom of personal choice in matters of ... family life is one of the liberties protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment,” citing
Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. LaFleur,
It is true that the Seventh Circuit, in a case not cited by the parties, has suggested that a relationship between grandparent and grandchild merits the same constitutional protection as that traditionally reserved for the nuclear family.
See Drollinger v. Milligan,
Nor are we persuaded by the Utah Supreme Court’s decision in
Wilson v. Family Services Division,
When a child is abandoned by his parents and placed with a state agency, the state’s paramount concern must be the swift and suitable placement of the child. Oregon, and many other states, have concluded that the creation of new, enforceable rights in grandparents would burden rather than assist this process. 7 A contrary rule, for example, would inevitably delay adoptions as child placement decisions were transferred from *797 the state welfare agencies to the courts. Also, we note that grandparents sometimes may be unsuitable adoptive parents precisely because of their blood relationship, especially in cases of abuse such as this in which there may be a well founded fear that the grandparents will be unable to protect the children from future parental contact and abuse. Decisions of this nature are best left to the state authorities who daily deal with such questions in conjunction with the procedures, neither challenged nor invoked here, that provide for administrative and judicial review of their decisions.
We therefore conclude that grandparents
qua
grandparents have no constitutionally protected liberty interest in the adoption of their children's offspring. In reaching this conclusion, we take notice of Oregon’s Administrative Procedures Act, under which a grandparent — or anybody else who has filed an adoption petition — may challenge CSD’s refusal to consent on legal or factual grounds. Oreg.Rev.Stat. 184.484(4);
see Adams v. Oregon State Children’s Services Div.,
Y.
In their final assignment of error, the Mul-linses argue that the district court should have allowed them to amend their complaint before dismissing their case. However, they have not identified any factual allegation they could make that would allow them to prevail on a motion to dismiss. The district court did not err.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Oreg.Rev.Stat. § 109.119(4) provides, in pertinent part, that a "parent-child relationship” is:
[A] relationship that exists or did exist, in whole or in part, within the six months preceding the filing [of an adoption petition], and in which relationship a person having physical custody of a child or residing in the same household as the child supplied, or otherwise made available to the child, food, clothing, shelter and incidental necessaries and provided the child with necessary care, education and discipline, and which relationship continued on a day-to-day basis, through interaction, companionship, interplay and mutuality, that fulfilled the child’s psychological needs for a parent as well as the child's physical needs.
Id.
. Oregon's Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children governs the interstate adoption of Oregon children. See Oreg.Rev.Stat. § 417.200. Under Article III of the Compact, Oregon authorities may not place a child in another state unless that state certifies that the placement is in the interest of the child. Art. 111(d), codified at Oreg. Rev.Stat. § 417.200.
Washington officials refused to certify the placement in this case because the Mullinses refused to turn over to Washington authorities the results of a psychological examination of Loraine Mullins. The examination, which was somewhat negative in tone and recommendation, was performed by a Washington doctor selected by the Mullinses.
. The Mullinses concede that CSD’s refusal to consent deprived the juvenile court of jurisdiction over their adoption petition. They do not ask us to review that dismissal.
. The State contends that the district court should have abstained from considering the Mul-linses' constitutional claims pursuant to
Younger v. Harris,
. Noncustodial relatives at most have a "right to provide information about the child’s background and to make recommendations for the child’s future.” Oreg.Admin.Rule 412-27-035. Although children in CSD’s custody appear to have some sort of right to be placed with family members over nonfamily members, this is a right that is personal to the child and may not be enforced in a proceeding brought by a relative. Oreg.Admin.Rule 412-27-045.
. In
Drollinger,
Rosanna Drollinger and her father-in-law Nathan Drollinger brought a § 1983 challenge to the terms and conditions of Rosanna's state court probation. One of the probation conditions restricted Nathan's ability to associate with Stephanie Drollinger (Rosanna’s daughter and his granddaughter). The
Drollinger
court held that this condition implicated Nathan’s protected liberty interest in the society of his granddaughter.
.
See Reed v. Glover,
