Plaintiff-Appellant Marietta Taylor lost her home in a foreclosure action brought in the Superior Court of Lake County, Indiana by the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and Waterfield Mortgage Company (Waterfield) through the law firm of Burke, Costanza & Cuppy, LLP (BCC) (collectively, the Defendants). Rather than directly appealing this judgment, Taylor filed a suit in state court alleging that the Defendants had committed extrinsic fraud and a fraud upon the court by instituting a wrongful foreclosure action against her in violation of two federal statutes. After the Defendants removed the case to federal court, the district court dismissed Taylor’s suit with prejudice for lack of subject matter jurisdiction because it implicated the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. Taylor now appeals, but for the following reasons, we affirm.
I.
When Taylor’s husband died, her Social Security disability payments were temporarily suspended, though they were guaranteed by the Social Security Administration. Having no other income, she was unable to make timely payments on her mortgage and consequently fell behind on her account. In November 1998, Taylor received an offer of assistance with her monthly mortgage payment from the Calumet Township Trustee (the Trustee). But although the Trustee tendered payments for February 1999 and April-November 1999, these payments were refused because the loan had entered foreclosure, *532 and Taylor needed to pay attorney’s fees of $1,235 in order to cure the foreclosure action before her account (which was approximately $2,000 in arrears as of December 30, 1999) could be brought up to date. Fannie Mae and Waterfield ultimately obtained a judgment of foreclosure from the Lake County Superior Court.
Instead of appealing this judgment, on August 21, 2002, Taylor filed a “Complaint to Vacate Judgment and for Compensatory As Well As Punitive Damages Based On Fraud Upon the Court” (Complaint) in Lake County Superior Court, claiming that the Defendants had committed a fraud upon the court by instituting a wrongful foreclosure action against her, which itself was alleged to have been in violation of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA), 15 U.S.C. § 1691 et seq., and 42 U.S.C. § 1985. The Defendants removed the case to federal court and then moved to dismiss pursuant to Rule 9(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for failure to plead her fraud claim with specificity.
Upon the district court’s review of the Defendants’ motion to dismiss, a jurisdictional question arose: whether the Rooker-Feldman doctrine barred subject matter jurisdiction over the case. After the parties briefed the issue, the district court found that Taylor had requested the federal court to set aside the state court’s judgment of foreclosure and that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine thus barred her suit. Moreover, the district court found that even if Taylor “recast the complaint another way, we would still be constrained to find that the action is inextricably intertwined with the state court judgment.” (Appellant’s Appx. at 27.) The district court found that the injury of which Taylor complained was caused by the state court’s judgment of foreclosure, not by the acts of the Defendants. Since Taylor was found to have had a reasonable opportunity to raise her claims and to challenge the foreclosure in state court, the district court dismissed Taylor’s suit with prejudice for lack of subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to the Rooker-Feldman doctrine and remanded it to the state court from whence it came.
II.
We review de novo a district court’s determination that it lacks subject matter jurisdiction based on the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine.
Brokaw v. Weaver,
In applying the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine, the immediate inquiry is whether the “federal plaintiff seeks to set aside a state court judgment or whether he is, in fact, presenting an independent claim.”
Kamilewicz v. Bank of Boston Corp.,
Once we have determined that a claim is inextricably intertwined, i.e., that it indirectly seeks to set aside a state court judgment, we must then determine whether “the plaintiff did not have a reasonable opportunity to raise the issue in state court proceedings.”
Brokaw,
point[] to some factor independent of the actions of the opposing party that precluded the litigants from raising their federal claims during the state court proceedings. Typically, either some action taken by the state court or state court procedures in place have formed the barriers that the litigants are incapable of overcoming in order to present certain claims to the state court.
Long,
A. Are Taylor’s claims independent?
Taylor’s first claim is that a fraud was perpetrated on the state court that granted the judgment of foreclosure. Although the relief Taylor prays for in her complaint with respect to all three of her claims is “to recover her home, or equal monetary value plus interest of 10% per annum, plus punitive damages,” (Appellant’s Appx. at 12, 13), the relief granted when a claim of fraud on the court succeeds is that the party claiming fraud is relieved from the judgment, i.e., the judgment is set aside.
See
Ind. Trial Rule 60(B)(3) (“On motion and upon such terms as are just the court may relieve a party or his legal representative from an entry of default, final order, or final judgment, including a judgment by default, for ... fraud (whether heretofore denominated intrinsic or extrinsic), misrepresentation, or other misconduct of an adverse party.”). The district court correctly determined that requesting the recovery of her home is tantamount to a request to vacate the state court’s judgment of foreclosure, the form in which Taylor’s complaint in state court was in fact styled, and that the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine barred granting that relief.
See Facio v. Jones,
*534
Both of Taylor’s claimed federal statutory violations, on the other hand, allow for money damages.
See
15 U.S.C. § 1691e(a)-(b) (allowing civil actions under the ECOA for actual and punitive damages); 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3) (a party claiming a conspiracy to deprive her of civil rights “may have an action for the recovery of damages, occasioned by such injury or deprivation”). While recovery of her home is not available through these claims for the same reason her fraud claim is barred, the monetary damages Taylor claims are compensatory damages in the amount of the value of her home plus 10% interest per annum and punitive damages. The fact that Taylor is claiming compensatory damages in the amount of the value of her home (plus interest) demonstrates that her asserted injury is the loss of her home due to the Defendants’ conspiracy to deprive her of her home, not an independent injury arising from acts of the Defendants.
2
This bars her § 1985 claim.
See Brokaw,
As for Taylor’s ECOA claim, it is distinguishable from the situation in which we have allowed plaintiffs to proceed with federal claims because the asserted violations were “independent of and complete prior to the entry” of the challenged state order.
Long v. Shorebank Dev. Corp.,
B. Reasonable opportunity
We have held that “[w]hile the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine bars federal subject matter jurisdiction over issues raised in state court, and those inextricably intertwined with such issues, ‘an issue cannot be inextricably intertwined with a state court judgment if the plaintiff did not have a reasonable opportunity to raise the issue in state court proceedings.’ ”
Brokaw,
Frankly, both the parties and the district court seem a bit confused about what the “reasonable opportunity” was, or is, in this case. This is not surprising, since we are faced with somewhat unusual circumstances with respect to this portion of our analysis. Usually, Rooker-Feldman is raised by defendants when a disappointed state court litigant brings suit in federal court to overturn the state court decision, or by plaintiffs when a defendant seeks removal of a state suit to federal court. Here, Taylor did sue in state court, but her suit was removed by the Defendants to federal court (apparently without any objection from Taylor) under asserted federal question jurisdiction. Once the district court raised the Rooker-Feldman doctrine as a potential bar to its subject matter jurisdiction, the Defendants admitted that Rooker-Feldman applied to bar federal jurisdiction, while Taylor had latched onto the federal venue and argued that her suit should remain in federal court. Taylor appealed the district court’s dismissal of her suit because she is concerned that her claims might be issue-precluded on remand, leaving her case “unduly postured for a state-court dismissal.” (Appellant’s Br. at 12.) Taylor’s concern is apparently the product of the district court’s determination that she had had a reasonable opportunity to bring her claims in the state court foreclosure proceedings and to challenge the foreclosure.
Although we agree with the district court that Taylor has shown no barriers preventing her from bringing her claims in state court, and we therefore find that the district court’s decision to remand for lack of subject matter jurisdiction was correct, we must attempt to allay Taylor’s concern that her suit will be precluded on remand. Taylor’s fear (and her desire to remain in federal court) seems to stem from confusion about the relationship of the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine to the doctrine of res judicata, which, as we have previously noted, “are not coextensive.”
GASH Assoc. v. Rosemont,
*536 Conclusion
Because Taylor’s claims are all either de facto appeals of, or are inextricably intertwined with, the state court’s judgment of foreclosure, and because she has failed to demonstrate any barriers preventing the consideration of her claims by the state court, the district court was correct that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine deprived it of subject matter jurisdiction over her suit. The dismissal with prejudice of Taylor’s suit was thus appropriate, and the district court’s order remanding her case to state court, where she will have the opportunity to bring her claims, is Affirmed.
Notes
. Even though the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine does not apply to claims that are neither de facto appeals nor are inextricably intertwined with a state court judgment, these claims may still be barred as claim-precluded under res judicata if the plaintiff litigated them (or could have litigated them) in state court proceedings.
See Rizzo v. Sheahan,
. If, as a hypothetical example, attorney's fees were wrongfully added to the balance Taylor owed on her mortgage in violation of the ECOA, and if, when her home was sold at foreclosure, the attorney's fees were withheld from any balance owed to her, then she might have an independent claim for money damages in the amount of the wrongfully imposed attorney’s fees. But she does not claim any such wrongful action or other independent injury.
. See, e.g., Taylor's Br. at 4-5 (ECOA and § 1985 violations constituted the “fraud, accident or mistake which prevented the defendant in the judgment from obtaining the benefit of his defense”; Taylor’s Reply Br. at 6 ("Taylor contends that the operative 'fraud' constitutes a violation of [ECOA] and 42 U.S.C. § 1985.”); Taylor's Short Appx. at 12 *535 ("[DJefendant's (sic) ... knew they were intentionally, as part of a conspiracy, combination and agreement!,] acting to deprive the plaintiff of her property, violating the Equal Credit Opportunity act.”).
. Although we may not consider the issue of res judicata because we lack the subject mat
*536
ter jurisdiction to do so, we note that Indiana allows independent actions for fraud on the court to be brought at any time after judgment has been entered.
See Stonger v. Sorrell,
