OPINION AND ORDER
This case comes before the Court on plaintiffs’ motion to have Mr. Keith Putnam, the Assistant Director of the Oregon Department of Human Resources, held in contempt for his failure to take certain action to bring Oregon into compliance with a previous order of this Court. The issue of law presented by the motion is whether the Court has personal jurisdiction over Mr. Putnam. For the reasons stated below, the Court finds it does not have jurisdiction and, therefore, denies the motion.
I
Certain background information is essential to understanding the problem. This case involves the interpretation of and compliance with the Pickle Amendment to the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1396a (note) (1983), which was “to insure that an increase intended to benefit the aged and disabled would not have inadvertent harmful effects.” S.Rep. No. 94-1265, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 28 (1976),
reprinted in
1976 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 5997, 6022. Plaintiffs herein comprise a nationwide class of social security recipients who argued that the Secretary of Health and Human Services (the “Secretary”) and her state administrative counterparts incorrectly applied the Amendment by invoking it only when it appeared that a recipient lost his or her right to Supplemental Security Income (“SSI”) benefits “solely” because of a social security cost-of-living increase. Plaintiffs further argued that the Pickle Amendment applies a “but for” test, that is, if one would still be entitled to SSI benefits
but for
the social security cost-of-living increase, then one would qualify under the Amendment for continued Medicaid benefits. On March 9, 1984, this Court,
inter alia,
permanently enjoined the Secretary “and all persons acting in concert or participating” with her from “permitting or requiring any state to deny Medicaid benefits to persons otherwise entitled thereto under the Pickle Amendment, on the basis of the ‘solely’ test presently codified at 42 C.F.R. § 435.135.”
Lynch v. Rank,
*71 Plaintiffs allege that Putnam has disobeyed the Court’s orders in a number of ways. First, plaintiffs allege that Oregon did not issue instructions to its local offices implementing the “but for” test until June 26, 1985. If this allegation is true, it would mean that Oregon continued to deny benefits to some eligible recipients on the basis of the forbidden “solely” test even through June 6, 1985, more than fifteen months after this Court’s March 9, 1984, permanent injunction. Second, plaintiffs allege that as of July 29, 1985, Oregon still had not distributed to its Medicaid staffers the worksheets necessary to determine Pickle eligibility. If this second allegation is true, then there is some question as to whether Oregon is applying the “but for” test even now. Finally, plaintiffs allege that Oregon refused on three occasions to send notices to potential Pickle-eligible residents within the State of Oregon, despite the fact that the state was capable of identifying such eligible persons from a computer tape supplied by the federal government, and from the state’s own records.
As mentioned above, plaintiffs no longer seek to have the Secretary adjudged in contempt. However, it is crucial to note that plaintiffs allege concerted disobedience between Putnam and the Secretary. Plaintiffs contend that the Secretary was aware that Oregon would fail to send timely notice to potential Pickle-eligible recipients, yet failed to object. Furthermore, plaintiffs argue, it was not until May 1985, when the Secretary was ordered to produce a status report, that the Secretary performed the investigation necessary to discover that Oregon had decided (wrongly, plaintiffs contend) that it was already in compliance with the Court’s orders. Plaintiffs further allege that on June 25, 1985, Putnam wrote to the regional office of the Health Care Financing Administration, Department of Health and Human Services, and again expressly refused to give potential eligible recipients notice. Finally, plaintiffs allege that although the Secretary has threatened to commence compliance proceedings against Oregon, she has never actually done so.
It is against this factual backdrop that the Court must decide whether to adjudge Putnam in contempt. Before the Court can reach the question of whether Putnam actually disobeyed the order, however, two jurisdictional questions must be resolved. The first question is whether this Court has personal jurisdiction over Putnam. The second question is whether this Court has subject matter jurisdiction to proceed against him. Because the Court finds that it does not have personal jurisdiction, it is unnecessary to reach either the subject matter jurisdiction question or the merits.
II
The starting point in any determination of personal jurisdiction, of course, is the “minimum contacts” analysis first enunciated in
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
III
Plaintiffs contend, however, that Putnam is subject to personal jurisdiction under the language of both Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65(d) and the injunction in this case, which parrots Rule 65(d). Specifical
*72
ly, plaintiffs argue that because Putnam “acted in concert” and “participated” with the Secretary in disobeying this Court’s orders, he submitted himself to the Court’s jurisdiction. This contention must be scrutinized carefully. See
Cubbage v. Merchent,
The seminal pronouncements regarding who may be bound by an injunction can be found in
Alemite Manufacturing Corp. v. Staff,
[N]o court can make a decree which will bind any one but a party; a court of equity is as much so limited as a court of law; it cannot lawfully enjoin the world at large, no matter how broadly it words its decree. If it assumes to do so, the decree is pro tanto brutum fulmen, and the persons enjoined are free to ignore it.
The courts * * * may not grant an enforcement order or injunction so broad as to make punishable the conduct of persons who act independently and whose rights have not been adjudged according to law.
It is clear from both Alemite and Regal Knitwear that for Putnam to be subject to the Court’s contempt powers, there must at the very least exist a strong identity of interests between the enjoined defendant and the would-be contemnor. Applied to this case, that means there must exist a commonality of incentives and motivations between the Secretary and Putnam. Absent such an identity of interests, it cannot be said that the Secretary and Putnam were acting “in concert” or “participating” with one another in disobedience of the Court’s orders.
Plaintiffs have made no real showing that the interests and motivations of the Secretary on the one hand and Respondent Putnam on the other hand are identical, or even overlapping. At most, plaintiffs have made the conclusory statement that “[t]he Medicaid program, by its very nature, is a cooperative state-federal venture.” Plaintiff’s Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Application for Order to Show Cause Re Contempt at 10. In an ideal state of affairs, perhaps it would be true that programs such as Medicaid would be purely cooperative ventures between governmental entities. In reality, however, the entities have divergent and sometimes conflicting interests. Here, for instance, the Secretary had a strong interest in seeing that the “but for” test was carried out, and that all appropriate notices to potential Pickle-eligibles were served. The Secretary stood to suffer the severe penalty of contempt if those tasks were not executed. The Secretary obviously had no concern whether the implementation of the “but for” test and the service of appropriate notice to Pickle-eligibles would create additional administrative expenses for the State of Oregon. The Secretary’s interest was simply not to run afoul of this Court’s commands. By contrast, Putnam was not under court order and reasonably had no expectation of being held in contempt should the “but for” test not be properly *73 implemented in Oregon. Putnam’s duty, as an official of the State of Oregon, was to watch out for the state’s best interests. Under these circumstances he may have concluded that for fiscal reasons it would be in Oregon’s interests not to alter its existing practices. In his June 25, 1985, letter to Norman Meyer, the Associate Regional Administrator of the Health Care Financing Administration of the Department of Health and Human Services, Putnam stated that Oregon had decided not to send individual notice because “we can better use available staff and computer time for needed program improvements.” Declaration of Evelyn Frank in Support of Application For Order to Show Cause Re Contempt, Exhibit 10 at 2. This is not to say that the Court condones or approves of Putnam’s decision not to serve individual notice. The point is that Putnam obviously concluded that Oregon’s best interests diverged from and in fact conflicted with the Secretary’s interests on the matter of individual notice. Thus, it cannot fairly be said that the requisite identity of interests between the Secretary and Putnam existed for the purposes of Rule 65(d) and personal jurisdiction.
In the absence of such an identity of interests, the case authority mandates a finding that the Secretary and Putnam did not act in concert or participate with each other within the meaning of Rule 65(d) or for the purpose of establishing personal jurisdiction. The court in
Heyman v. Kline,
The precedent that most strongly requires a finding of no active concert or participation here is
Thompson v. Freeman,
Although we recognize HHS’s past ineffectiveness in securing Missouri’s compliance with AFDC regulations, this ineffectiveness does not alone amount to “active concert or participation with” the *74 state agency within the meaning of Rule 65(d).
The similarity between Thompson and the case at bar is striking. As in Thompson, the state agency here is alleged to have been the primary wrongdoer or contemnor, with the federal agency being guilty of contempt only in that it failed to secure compliance from the individual state. Thompson holds that, at least in the absence of an explicit agreement to disobey, the collective failure by federal and state agencies to implement federal law properly does not constitute “active concert or participation.” Thompson’s limiting restatement of the permissible scope of injunctions, of course, is rooted in the concerns expressed by the courts in Alemite and Regal Knitwear. The scope of injunctions cannot be boundless. Especially where the concerted activity alleged is mere failure to act, as in this case and in Thompson, courts must be careful not to resort to fictional conspiracies to find personal jurisdiction.
Plaintiffs’ able counsel, has marshalled an impressive array of case authority designed to persuade that the Secretary and Putnam acted in active concert or participation. Unfortunately for plaintiffs, each of the cases misses the mark. In
Waffenschmidt v. MacKay,
When [respondents] knowingly participated in [defendant’s] scheme to dissipate the funds they equally knowingly subjected themselves to the jurisdiction of that court.
Id. at 717.
The Waffenschmidt scenario, however, is plainly different from the case at bar. There, the party defendant and the two nonparty respondents clearly worked within a common scheme to launder illegally obtained proceeds. Indeed, both the trial court and the court of appeals found by clear and convincing evidence that respondents were aiders and abettors of defendant within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Id. at 723-26. Here, there has been no proof of anything resembling aider and abettor liability. Moreover, the whole discussion in Waffenschmidt about personal jurisdiction predicated on “active concert or participation” was dicta because the court held that respondents were subject to jurisdiction under the traditional “minimum contacts” analysis. Id. at 722-23.
G. & C. Merriam Co. v. Webster Dictionary Co.,
Nor does
Shakman v. Democratic Organization of Cook County,
IV
Plaintiffs’ final argument for finding personal jurisdiction over Putnam is that the Court has the inherent power to protect its ability to render a binding judgment, citing
United States v. Hall,
Plaintiffs would have this Court stretch Hall far beyond its actual holding. In Hall, the district court’s injunction prohibited willful interference with the school’s operation. Any person who engaged in such willful interference (including Hall, the eventual contemnor) would necessarily have subjected himself to personal jurisdiction in the state in which the school was located (Florida), whether through the creation of “minimum contacts” or through actual presence. The trial court in Hall fashioned its decree so as to make certain that there could be no objection to lack of personal jurisdiction at any contempt hearing. Put simply, Hall does not stand for the proposition that a court automatically acquires personal jurisdiction over any person necessary to preserve judgment. Instead, Hall legitimates the adjudication of contempt over a nonparty, even one who does not act in active concert or participation with a party, provided that personal jurisdiction over the would-be contemnor already exists. As the Hall court stated, “[t]he integrity of a court’s power to render a binding judgment in a case over which it has jurisdiction is at stake in the present case.” Id. at 265 (emphasis added). If Putnam had subjected himself to jurisdiction in some other way, Hall suggests that he could be held in contempt even though he was not a party and even though he did not act in concert or participate with a party. In fact, however, the Court had not already acquired jurisdiction over Putnam in some other way, and the mere fact that contempt over him may be necessary or desirable to help effectuate the judgment does not create jurisdiction where it did not previously exist.
There is another reason why Hall is inapplicable to the present case. Hall arose in the special context of school desegregation. The Fifth Circuit succinctly explained the peculiarities of school desegregation litigation:
As this Court is well aware, school desegregation orders often strongly excite community passions. School orders are, like in rem orders, particularly vulnerable to disruption by an undefinable class of persons who are neither parties nor acting at the instigation of parties. * * * The peculiar problems posed by *76 school cases have required courts to exercise broad and flexible remedial powers.
Id. at 266 (citations omitted). This Court declines plaintiffs’ invitation to extend Hall beyond its narrow holding.
The foregoing analysis of cases shows clearly why this Court lacks jurisdiction to proceed against Putnam. In the end, plaintiffs must recur to and reexamine the structural limitations of the injunction they secured in this case. The strategy underlying the March 9, 1984, injunction was to obtain compliance from the states through the efforts of the Secretary. Pressure on the Secretary, in turn, was to be made available through the threat of contempt. The injunction did not envision direct contempt against the states and their officials. As this Court stated in response to the Secretary’s argument that granting the injunction would force the Court to decide how each state would implement the “but for” test:
Although the Court would indeed be reluctant to face such an Augean task, it is not required by this case. * * * if a class member in a state outside California objects to his or her state’s implementation of new and correct federal regulations, that matter is for adjudication in the courts of that person’s state, not here.
Lynch,
Accordingly, the motion to have respondents Putnam and Reilly held in contempt is denied with prejudice. The motion to have the Secretary held in contempt is denied without prejudice.
Notes
. Plaintiffs seek to have the Secretary held in contempt only insofar as that is necessary to having Putnam held in contempt. Because the Court finds that there is no jurisdiction to proceed against Putnam, regardless of whether the Secretary is held in contempt, it is unnecessary to determine whether the Secretary disobeyed any of the subject orders.
. The Heyman court pointed out that plaintiffs there had an adequate alternative remedy; they could simply sue Jeanne Kline in Florida, where she was amenable to jurisdiction. Here, the members of the nationwide class who live in Oregon apparently have their interests represented by a parallel lawsuit now pending in Oregon federal court. Surely contempt against Putnam can be had in that action.
