This is аn action involving the claims of two women, each of whom claim to be the surviving spouse of Antal Csibi, who died intestate in California in 1975. Plaintiff-appellant Marcella Csibi, who claims to be Antal’s first wife, and her three children brought the instant diversity action to establish their rights in Antal’s estate. The district court, prior to any discovery, ordered appellants to submit an offer of proof establishing their claims. On the basis of material submitted, the district court concluded that the appellants could not prevail and dismissed the action. Marcella and her children appealed. We hold that appellants’ action is within the historic domestic relations exception to diversity jurisdiction, and therefore, that the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over this dispute. The district court’s order of dismissal is vacated, and the action dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.
Marcella Csibi and her three children, citizens of Rumania, filed this diversity action 1 in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California to establish their status as heirs of Antal Csibi. Marcella alleges that she married Antal Csi-bi in Rumania in 1946 and that her marriage was never dissolved. Antal left Rumania in 1969 and emigrated to the Unitеd States, making his home in San Francisco. Antal married Gizela Fustos in 1970 and lived with her until his death. Gizela contends that even if Antal was already married to Marcella, she is entitled to inherit his estate under California law as a good faith putative spouse. 2 Marcella argues that Gizela knew that Antаl was married to another; thus, Gizela’s relationship was meretricious and Gizela is not entitled to inherit Antal’s property.
Approximately ten months after the suit was filed, after defendant had answered, but before any discovery was taken, the district court ordered plaintiffs to submit an offer of proof setting forth facts “from which a trier of fact could determine that plaintiffs are entitled to prevail.” (R 8-9). *136 Applying a complex series of presumptions found in California community property law, the district court held that the factual material submitted by appellants in responsе to the court’s order did not sustain plaintiff’s burden of disproving Gizela’s putative status. The court found that Gizela was a good faith putative spouse entitled to inherit all Antal’s community property. The court also found that the Csibi children had not shown that the estate contained any separate property which would descend to them under Section 221 of the California Probate Code. Therefore, the district court reasoned, Gizela was entitled to the entire estate. Appellants’ action was dismissed.
Marcella and her children appealed, objecting tо the summary disposition of their claims on the court’s own motion. Neither the parties nor the district court raised the issue of whether the court lacked jurisdiction over this action due to the domestic relations exception, an historical exclusion of domestic matters formerly sеttled in ecclesiastical courts from federal court subject-matter jurisdiction. This court raised the issue of whether or not the domestic relations exception should be applied in this case on its own motion. 3 The parties were asked to submit further briefing on the issue.
The domestic rеlations exception arose from early judicial construction of the diversity statute now codified in 28 U.S.C. § 1332.
4
The statute, as originally enacted in 1789, conferred jurisdiction over “ ‘suits of a civil nature in law or in equity.’ ” 13 C. Wright, A. Miller, E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure, § 3609 at 663 (1975). That statutory desсription was construed to exclude domestic relations and probate matters which were heard in ecclesiastical courts at the time the diversity statute was drafted.
Cf. Ohio ex rel. Popovici v. Agler,
The Revised Judicial Code of 1948, Act of June 25,1948, § 1331, 62 Stat. 869 at 930, substituted the broader term “civil actions” in its description of diversity jurisdiction.
5
The domestic relations exception has persisted, however, because the courts have found it to be supported by sound policy. States have an interest in family relations
*137
superior to that of the federal government, and state courts have more expertise in the fiеld of domestic relations. “Domestic relations is a field particularly suited to state regulation and control and particularly unsuited to control by federal courts.”
Buechold v. Ortiz,
As a jurisdictional limitation, the domestic relations exception has been narrowly confined.
Sutter v. Pitts,
There is another class of cases also involving domestic relatiоns which federal courts have jurisdiction over, but often refrain from adjudicating. This second class of cases consists of those where domestic relations problems are involved tangentially to other issues determinative of the case. Federal courts may exercise their disсretion to abstain from deciding such cases.
See Bossom v. Bossom,
This Circuit’s test for subject-matter jurisdiction in domestic relations cases was articulated in
Buechold v. Ortiz,
An application of the Buechold test to the facts of the case at bar compels the conclusion that the federal courts lack subject-matter jurisdiction over this domestic relations dispute. This casé turns on a determination of the marital status of Antal Csibi, Marcella Csibi and Gizela Fustos. Marcella Csibi must establish her own status as Antal’s legal spouse, and disprove Gisela’s status as good faith putative spouse in order to recover. Accordingly, part of Marcella’s prayer for relief is a request fоr an annulment of Antal’s marriage to Gizela. 8 Thus, the primary issue in the instant case concerns the status of husband and wife, and federal courts lack subject-matter jurisdiction under the test announced in Buechold.
This case is factually similar to
Welker v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
We are not persuaded by plaintiffs’ assertion that there is diversity jurisdiction over this dispute because the complaint alleges a tort claim for wrongful interfеrence with inheritance. Even if such a tort cause of action exists under the applicable law, the primary issue is still the marital status of Antal, Marcella and Gizela. If Gizela’s marriage to Antal was either valid or invalid but in good faith, there could be no recovery for Marcella Csibi оn either the tort claim or under the intestacy laws. Only if appellants proved that Gizela’s status was meretricious would there be further inquiry as to whether the invalid marriage was part of a scheme to deprive Marcella and her children of their inheritance.
Moreover, if litigants were allowed to invoke diversity jurisdiction over domestic relations cases by pleading an independent tort, the longstanding domestic relations exception to federal subject-matter jurisdiction would be completely swallowed up. For example, child and spousal suppоrt matters could come into federal court if a clever pleader alleged a claim for wrongful interference with economic advantage. An area of law formerly the “virtually exclusive province of the states” would be federalized.
See Sosna v. Iowa,
In holding that the district court lacked jurisdiction over the instant dispute, we are reaffirming a time-honored boundary between the domains of federal and state governments. As Justice Holmes said in
Ohio ex rel. Popovici v. Agler,
Because we hold that the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over this action, we do not reaсh any question concerning the propriety of the district court’s sua sponte summary dismissal of plaintiff’s claims on the merits. Our dismissal of this case on jurisdictional grounds does not preclude trial on the merits in an appropriate forum.
Notes
. Jurisdiction was predicated on 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(2), which provides for diversity jurisdiction in actions between citizens of a State and citizens or subjects of a foreign state.
. The district court applied California law without any discussion of the choice of law question in this action between Rumanian plaintiffs and a California defendant. Under California Civ.Code § 4452, a person with a good-faith belief in the validity of a void or voidable marriage is considered to be a putative spouse. Putative spouses are treated the same as legal spouses when property acquired during the relationship is divided upon annulment. By analogy, California case lаw holds that a putative spouse inherits all community property from a partner dying intestate just as a legal spouse would.
See Estate of Krone,
. Lack of subject matter jurisdiction can be raised by a court’s own motion at any time, and can be raised for the first time on appeal.
See, e.g., City of Kenosha v. Bruno,
. Other jurisdictional statutes, containing grants of power over a broader range of actions, have been interpreted as including jurisdiction over domestic relations cases. The Supreme Court has twicе taken jurisdiction over appeals from territorial divorce decrees under broadly worded jurisdictional statutes.
See De La Rama v. De La Rama,
. The diversity statute as enacted in 1789 read:
“[T]hе circuit courts shall have original cognizance, concurrent with the courts of several states, of all suits of a civil nature at common law or in equity. ...”
Act of Sept. 24, 1789, Sec. 11, 1 Stat. 73, 78. The statute now reads;
“(a) The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of all civil actions where the mattеr in controversy exceeds the sum or value of $10,000, exclusive of interest and costs, and is between .... (2) citizens of a State and citizens or subjects of a foreign state....”
28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(2).
.
See, e.g., Sutton v. Leib,
. The use of the word “decline” arguably conveys a sense of the court having jurisdiction but choosing not to exercise it. Immediately preceding the “must decline” language, however, is a statement that the federal courts
“have no jurisdiction
of suits to establish paternity and child support.”
. Annulment and divorce proceedings are one of the historically ecclesiastical actions always considered to be outside the scope of the diversity statute.
See, e.g., Barber v. Barber,
62 U.S. (21 How.), 582, 584,
