In this appeal we are asked to consider whether the Eleventh Anendment bars this suit. The district court ruled that the Mississippi Department of Economic and Community Development (“MDECD”) had waived its Eleventh Amendment immunity, and therefore denied MDECD’s Motion to Dismiss. For reasons set forth below, we reverse and remand this case to the district court.
I.
In 1994, the Mississippi Legislature enacted the Venture Capital Act of 1994 (“the Act”), codified at Miss.Code Ann. §§ 57-77-1 to 57-77-39. The legislature passed the Act to provide capital to new grovrth-oriented businesses and create new jobs. In accordance with the Act, the Mississippi Department of Economic and Community Development, an agency of the State of Mississippi, incorporated Magnolia Capital Corporation (“MCC”), a non-profit corporation. MDECD also formed a for-profit corporation known as Magnolia Venture Capital Corporation (“MVCC”), with MCC as the sole shareholder. In turn, MVCC created and served as the general partner in the Magnolia Venture Capital Fund Limited Partnership (“the Partnership”), which was to provide venture capital to Mississippi businesses.
In addition to creating these entities, the legislature provided for funding of these cor
In April of 1997, Lisa Looser, purporting to act on behalf of MVCC, executed a Pledge Agreement purporting to grant a first priority security in certain assets of MVCC to MDECD. 1 This agreement secured the obligations, indebtedness, and liabilities under the Loan Agreement between MCC and MDECD. Later that month, MDECD notified MVCC that it was in default under the terms of the Loan Agreement and the Pledge Agreement, and requested that MVCC deliver the pledged assets to MDECD. This requested amount included approximately $11,000,000 that MVCC had invested with Prudential Securities, Inc. (“Prudential”). MVCC refused to deliver the assets and MDECD placed Prudential on notice of its claim to the funds and demanded that Prudential provide the funds to MDECD. Prudential responded by placing a “freeze” on the assets in its possession. As a result of this freeze, MVCC filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code.
After instituting the Chapter 11 proceeding, MVCC filed an adversary action against MDECD seeking a ruling that MDECD had no lien or interest in the funds held by Prudential. After MDECD moved to dismiss the proceeding on Eleventh Amendment grounds, MVCC voluntarily dismissed the action. However, MVCC contemporaneously filed a new adversary proceeding against Prudential seeking a release of the freeze on MVCC’s assets in the Prudential investment account. MVCC also alleged that MDECD held no perfected lien or security interest in MVCC’s assets in the hands of Prudential. MVCC requested a declaratory judgment that the assets in Prudential’s possession were free and clear of any claim or lien by any third party.
In response, MDECD sought leave to intervene in this adversary proceeding, which the bankruptcy court allowed. After MDECD intervened, Prudential filed a counterclaim in the nature of an interpleader against MVCC and named MDECD as a third-party defendant to the adversary proceeding. MVCC then filed a cross-claim •against MDECD, alleging that MDECD had no interest in the assets held by Prudential.
After its intervention, MDECD moved to dismiss the proceeding based on a claim of Eleventh Amendment immunity. MDECD’s motion focused mainly on establishing the unconstitutionality of 8 106 of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 106, in which Congress purported to abrogate the sovereign immunity of states and state agencies which file claims in bankruptcy proceedings. The district court, relying on
In re Estate of Fernandez,
II.
A.
In
Puerto Rico Aqueduct and Reiver Authority v. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc.,
B.
In this appeal, we focus on whether the district court correctly denied MDECD’s Motion to Dismiss based on Eleventh Amendment immunity. The district court concluded that MDECD was entitled to assert Eleventh Amendment immunity, but that MDECD had waived such immunity by virtue of a provision in the Pledge Agreement that provided as follows:
Section 6.03 Applicable Law. This Pledge shall be deemed to have been made and to be performed in Jackson, Hinds County, Mississippi, and shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Mississippi. Courts within the State of Mississippi shall have jurisdiction over any and all disputes between the parties to this Pledge, whether in law or in equity, including but not limited to, all disputes arising out of or relating to this Pledge. Venue in any such dispute, whether in federal or state court, shall be laid in Hinds County, Mississippi.
(Emphasis added).
On appeal, MDECD makes a two-pronged argument. MDECD argues first that the above language of the venue provision does not clearly waive its Eleventh Amendment immunity. Second, MDECD argues that even if the venue provision is construed as waiving Eleventh Amendment immunity, MDECD had no authority to waive this important right.
The district court, in rejecting both of MDECD’s arguments, held that the language of the venue provision was sufficiently clear to amount to a waiver of Eleventh Amendment immunity. The district court also rejected MDECD’s argument that it had no authority to waive Eleventh Amendment immunity. The district court reasoned that Mississippi, by authorizing MDECD to enter into a contract in which MDECD waived its Eleventh Amendment immunity, must be considered as authorizing that waiver.
III.
A.
Assuming without deciding that the language in the venue provision of the Pledge Agreement reflects a clear waiver of Eleventh Amendment immunity, we are satisfied that MVCC has not demonstrated that the state agency, MDECD, was authorized to waive Mississippi’s important right of immunity from suit in federal court.
In concluding that MDECD was authorized to waive Mississippi’s Eleventh Amendment immunity, the district court reasoned as follows: first, the court correctly concluded that under clear Mississippi Supreme Court authority, “sovereign immunity does not bar action against the State or its political subdivisions brought on a breach of contract theory.”
Trammell v. State,
The district court reasoned next that because the venue provision waived the state’s Eleventh Amendment immunity, “there would be ‘no mutuality or fairness’ in allowing the Department to assert the Pledge Agreement in support of its claim to the funds in question and yet at the same time permit it to avoid challenges to the validity of the agreement or the correctness of the Department’s claim to an interest predicated on that agreement.” Thus, based on this reasoning, the district court concluded that Mississippi also waived its Eleventh Amendment immunity defense by giving general authority to MDECD to enter into contracts, and the specific contract at issue included an Eleventh Amendment waiver.
B.
The doctrine of sovereign immunity embodies the maxim that “the King can do no wrong,” and can be traced back to ancient times. 3 Sovereign immunity, as it has been interpreted in the federal courts, actually encompasses two separate, but related, concepts — state sovereign immunity, or common law sovereign immunity, and Eleventh Amendment immunity, or constitutional sovereign immunity. 13 Charles Alan WRIGHT, ARThuk R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper, Federal Practioe and Procedure § 3524, at 171 (2d ed.1984). 4 These immunities shield the sovereign, or the state, from suits against it- in its own courts as well as from suits against it in federal courts.
A state’s immunity, however, is not absolute. For example, a state may choose to waive its immunity, thus consenting to suit.
5
However, it is important to keep in mind 'that a state may waive its common law sovereign immunity without waiving its Eleventh Amendment immunity under federal law.
Port Authority Trans-Hudson Corp. v. Feeney,
The Supreme Court has made it clear that we may find a waiver of a state’s Eleventh Amendment immunity in only the most exacting circumstances. . “[T]he State’s consent [to suit in federal court must] be unequivocally expressed.”
Pennhurst State Sch. & Hosp. v. Halderman,
With this background, we now consider the precise issue presented in this case: whether the district court erred in concluding that MDECD had authority to waive Mississippi’s Eleventh Amendment immunity from suit in federal court. 6
C.
In determining whether a state official or entity has authority to waive Eleventh Amendment immunity, the Supreme Court has directed that we look to the “general policy of the state as expressed in its Constitution, statutes and decisions.”
Ford Motor Co.,
The authorities discussed above lead us to conclude that a state, through its constitution, statutes, or court decisions, must expressly authorize a state agency or representative to waive the state’s Eleventh Amendment immunity. Such authority cannot be implied from the circumstances. Although the district court’s conclusion that the state implicitly authorized the waiver of its Eleventh Amendment right has a logical and equitable tug, no Mississippi authority supports this determination. Given the reluctance of courts generally to ñnd a waiver of Eleventh Amendment immunity and the strong general rule that authority to make an effective waiver must be express, we conclude that the district court erred in determining that MDECD had authority to waive Mississippi’s Eleventh Amendment immunity. 8
Although it is unnecessary to our decision, the parties have called our attention to a recent Mississippi statute that confirms our conclusion that Mississippi did not authorize MDECD to waive the state’s Eleventh Amendment immunity. 9
IV.
In summary, because MDECD lacked specific express authorization to waive Mississippi’s Eleventh Amendment immunity, the district court erred in denying MDECD’s Motion to Dismiss on Eleventh Amendment
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. MVCC alleges that Ms. Looser signed the document without any authority to act in a represen-lative capacity for MVCC.
.
See,
e.g..
Port Authority Trans-Hudson Corp., v. Feeney,
. See generally 17 James Wm. Moore et al„ Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 123 App.01 (3d ed.1998).
.
See also Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida, 517
U.S. 44, 54,
. See generally 17 James Wm Moore et al„ Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 123.21 (3d ed.1998).
. As an initial matter, MVCC argues that MDECD is not entitled to raise Eleventh Amendment immunity because MVCC does not seek a money judgment against the state. MVCC therefore contends that Mississippi is not a real party in interest in the suit. As the district court noted in rejecting this argument, "application of the Eleventh Amendment is not limited to those cases in which a money judgment is sought against a state."
See, e.g., Cory v. White,
. Indeed, given the recognition of strong federalism concerns and the concomitant strict solicitude federal courts give to a state's purported waiver of Eleventh Amendment immunity,
see, e.g., Port Authority Trans-Hudson Corp.,
. In addition to arguing that MDECD waived its Eleventh Amendment immunity, MVCC also argues that alternative grounds exist to support the dislricL court's denial of MDECD’s Motion to Dismiss.
See In re Sims,
. On April 17, 1998, Mississippi adopted House Bill No. 1240 regarding the Venture Capital Act of 1994. Specifically, Miss.Code Ann. § 57-77-3, as amended, provides in pertinent part as follows:
Except as provided in Section 57-77-33(7), it is, and has always been, the intent of the Legislature that nothing in this chapter shall he construed to waive the sovereign immunity of the State of Mississippi or the department pursuant to either state law or the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution. It is, and always has been, the intent of the Legislature that.no action by the State of Mississippi or by the department, or by any officer or agent of the State of Mississippi or of the department, shall be considered a waiver of the sovereign immunity of the State of Mississippi or the department pursuant to either state law or the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution. It is, and always has been, the intent of the Legislature that the entering into of any contract, loan agreement, pledge agreement, or other instrument by the State of Mississippi or the department shall not be considered a waiver of the sovereign immunity of the State of Mississippi pursuant to either state law or the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution. It is, and always has been, the intent of the Legislature that the sovereign immunity of the State of Mississippi pursuant to either state law or the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution may only be waived by express authorization set forth in an enactment of the Mississippi Legislature.
