*1 Before WIENER, BENAVIDES, and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.
DENNIS, Circuit Judge:
The named plaintiffs originally brought this civil rights *2 class action in Texas state court under Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101, et. seq., against defendants, the State of Texas, the Texas Department of Transportation, and William Burnett (“defendants” or “Texas”). Texas removed the case to federal district court. The federal district court remanded the case to the Texas district court. Texas filed a motion in the state district court to dismiss on grounds of state sovereign immunity. That motion was denied by the state district court, and Texas appealed the ruling to the state court of appeals. While that appeal was pending, Texas again removed the case to the federal district court and again moved to dismiss on grounds of state sovereign immunity from suit. The district court dismissed plaintiffs’ claims seeking retrospective money damages and prospective injunctive relief for lack of subject matter jurisdiction on grounds that Texas enjoyed immunity from suit under the Eleventh Amendment. The plaintiffs appealed. The predominant issue is whether, in light of Lapides v. Bd. of Regents, 535 U.S. 613 (2002), Texas waived its state sovereign immunity from suit by individuals when it removed this case from state court to federal district court.
I. Background
Congress enacted the ADA in 1990 to establish a “comprehensive national mandate for the elimination of discrimination against individuals with disabilities.” 42 U.S.C. § 12101(b)(1). The *3 ADA’s broad prohibitions of discrimination in public services and accommodations require accessible parking for the sight, mobility and otherwise handicapped. Texas responded to this requirement by providing persons with disabilities two means to obtain the right to use accessible parking spaces: special license plates and parking placards. T EX . T RANSP . C ODE A NN . §§ 502.253, 681.002. The special license plates cost no more than regular license plates. Id. § 502.253(d). The portable placards, which afford parking access to disabled persons without specialized license plates, cost five dollars, however, and must be renewed every four years. Id. §§ 681.003, 681.004. The five dollar fee is used to defray the costs of providing the placards. Id. § 681.005(1).
Plaintiffs filed this class action suit on August 11, 1997, in the state district court for Travis County, Texas alleging that the fee collected to pay for the placard program violates regulations promulgated under Title II of the ADA as well as the ADA. ADA § 12132 states that “no qualified individual with a disability shall, by reason of such disability, be excluded from participation in or be denied the benefits of the services, programs or activities of a public entity, or be subjected to discrimination by any such entity.” 42 U.S.C. § 12132. Pursuant to congressionally granted power to promulgate regulations implementing this section, id. § 12134(a), the Attorney General formulated a “surcharge regulation”:
A public entity may not place a surcharge on a particular individual with a disability or any group of individuals *4 with disabilities to cover the costs of measures, such as the provision of auxiliary aids or program accessibility, that are required to provide that individual or group with nondiscriminatory treatment required by the Act or this part.
28 C.F.R. § 35.130(f). Plaintiffs alleged that by collecting a fee to pay for the placard program, Texas violated both the ADA and the surcharge regulation.
In September 1997, Texas removed the case to the federal
district court for the Western District of Texas, which remanded
the case sua sponte on the grounds that the Tax Injunction Act
barred federal jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ suit. The Texas
state district court granted plaintiffs’ motion for class
certification and denied Texas’s motion to dismiss because of the
state’s sovereign immunity. Texas appealed from that ruling to the
Texas state court of appeals. While that appeal was pending, we
decided in a separate case, Neinast v. State of Texas,
Upon learning of our Neinast ruling, Texas removed this case from the Texas court of appeals to federal district court on July 17, 2000. Two days later, Texas moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) on the grounds of Texas’s Eleventh *5 Amendment immunity. The district court granted the motion to dismiss, holding, inter alia, that because there was “no clear guidance from the [Supreme] Court on whether removal alone constitutes waiver of Eleventh Amendment immunity,” “under [then] current Eleventh Amendment jurisprudence” the state “could avail itself of federal court jurisdiction, and then seek a dismissal on Eleventh Amendment grounds.” Dist. Ct. Op. of April 16, 2001 at 6. Plaintiffs timely appealed.
II. Analysis
We review de novo a district court’s grant of a Rule 12(b)(1)
motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction because
of state sovereign immunity. United States v. Texas Tech
University,
A. Waiver of State Sovereign Immunity From Private Suit
State sovereign immunity is a fundamental aspect of the
sovereignty that the states enjoyed before the ratification of the
Constitution and the Eleventh Amendment, and it was preserved
intact by the Constitution. Alden v. Maine, 527 U.S. 706, 713
(1999). The presupposition or concept of state sovereign immunity
“has two parts: first, that each State is a sovereign entity in our
federal system; and second, that it is inherent in the nature of
sovereignty not to be amenable to the suit of an individual without
its consent.” Florida Prepaid Postsecondary Educ. Expense Bd. v.
*6
College Savings Bank, 527 U.S. 627, 634 (1999)(quoting Hans v.
Louisiana 134 U.S. 1, 13 (1890)). The term “state sovereign
immunity” is used imprecisely by the courts to refer to both parts,
i.e., the immunity from suit, and the entity itself, including all
of its powers, rights and privileges. See Alden,
A state’s immunity from suit is not absolute. College
Savings,
Plaintiffs contend that Texas, by removing this case from
state court to federal court, voluntarily invoked federal court
jurisdiction and waived its state sovereign immunity from private
suit. They rely upon the Supreme Court’s recognition in Lapides,
that “removal is a form of voluntary invocation of a federal
*8
court’s jurisdiction” that constitutes “a waiver of Eleventh
Amendment immunity.”
In Lapides, the plaintiff, a professor in the Georgia
university system, brought suit against the university board and
its officials claiming damages for defamation under state law and
for deprivation of his Fourteenth Amendment right to due process
under the federal civil rights act, 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
The Supreme Court granted certiorari and reversed, concluding that the State’s action of voluntarily agreeing to remove the case to federal court constituted a form of voluntary invocation of the federal court’s jurisdiction and a waiver of its Eleventh Amendment immunity. [4] Lapides, 535 U.S. at 620, 624. The Court added, however, that because Lapides had not stated a valid federal claim against the state, [5] its decision did not address whether or how *10 removal would affect federal-law claims or claims in respect to which the state’s underlying sovereign immunity had not been waived or abrogated in state court. Id. at 617. Nonetheless, the Court concluded that the question that prompted it to grant certiorari, “whether a state waives its Eleventh Amendment immunity by its affirmative litigation conduct when it removes a case to federal court,” was not moot, because Lapides’s state-law tort claims remained pending in federal district court. Id. In view of the differences of opinion among the circuit courts on the certiorari issue, the Court decided to answer the question. Id.
1.
Although the Supreme Court in Lapides circumspectly did not
address any issue unnecessary to its decision, we believe that
Lapides’s interpretation of the voluntary invocation principle, as
including the waiver-by-removal rule, applies generally to any
private suit which a state removes to federal court. There is no
evident basis in law or judicial administration for severely
limiting those general principles, or Lapides’s substantial
overruling of Ford Motor Co. v. Dep’t of Treasury of State of
Indiana,
waived immunity therefrom in state court. [6] Moreover, there are many reasons to apply those principles generally.
First, in reaching its conclusion, the Court in Lapides
applied a generally applicable principle of federal law based upon
a comprehensive consideration of problems associated with states’
assertions of sovereign immunity after voluntarily invoking federal
jurisdiction. Id. at 619-24. The Court in Lapides observed
generally that it is anomalous or inconsistent for a state to both
invoke federal jurisdiction and claim immunity from federal suit in
the same case. Id. at 619. Because permitting states to do so can
generate seriously unfair results, the Court noted that over a
century ago it had begun to develop the principle that a state’s
voluntary appearance in federal court amounted to a waiver of its
immunity from suit. Id. Subsequently, the Court noted, it had
recognized that the principle applied to states’ interventions,
*12
bankruptcy claims, and voluntarily becoming a party in federal
court. Id. (citing Clark,
In explaining why the voluntary invocation principle could not be narrowed to exclude even the special situation in Lapides, the Court gave reasons that argue powerfully for general application of the principle and the waiver by removal rule. Cases in which the state’s motive for removal is benign cannot be excepted because “motives are difficult to evaluate, while jurisdictional rules should be clear” and making such an exception “would permit States to achieve unfair tactical advantages, if not in this case, in others.” Id. at 621. Cases involving “suits for money damages against the State——the heart of the Eleventh Amendment’s concern”—— *13 must be included because the principle enunciated in Gunter, Gardner and Clark “did not turn upon the nature of the relief sought...[a]nd that principle remains sound as applied to suits for money damages.” Id. at 620. Finally, the Court’s more recent cases requiring “a ‘clear’ indication of the State’s intent to waive its immunity,” such as College Savings, do not undermine the voluntary invocation principle. To the contrary, College Savings “distinguished the kind of constructive waivers repudiated there from waivers effected by litigation conduct.” Id. Although the state’s intent to waive its immunity must be clearly indicated, “finding waiver in the litigation context” rests upon the “judicial need to avoid inconsistency, anomaly, and unfairness,” and not upon a “State’s actual preference or desire, which might, after all, favor selective use of ‘immunity’ to achieve litigation advantages.” Id. Regarding waivers by removal, “[t]he relevant ‘clarity’ here must focus on the litigation act the State takes that creates the waiver. And that act——removal——is clear.” Id. *14 Emphasizing that point, the Court stated:
“[T]he rule is a clear one,... it says that removal is a form of voluntary invocation of a federal court’s jurisdiction sufficient to waive the State’s otherwise valid objection to litigation of a matter (here of state law) in a federal forum.
Id. at 623-624. [8]
The Court expressly limited its answer in response to the
certiorari question to the context of “state law claims, in respect
to which the State had waived immunity in its own courts.” Id. at
617. However, in formulating its rationale, the Court did not
restrict itself to facts, rules, or reasons peculiar to the Lapides
case. Rather, throughout its opinion, the Court’s reasoning, rule-
making, and choice of precepts were derived from generally
applicable principles serving “the judicial need to avoid
inconsistency, anomaly, and unfairness” in states’ claims of
immunity in all types of federal litigation. 535 U.S. at 620.
under the waiver by removal rule and voluntary invocation principle
explained in Lapides. Texas’s assertion at the time of removal
that it did not intend to defend and removed for the sole purpose
of asserting sovereign immunity did not prevent waiver of that
immunity by removal. The act of removal without more is sufficient
to waive the state’s immunity. The state’s “actual preference or
desire” and “benign motive” are not relevant to a waiver by
removal. Lapides,
See Gil Seinfeld, Waiver-in-Litigation: Eleventh Amendment Immunity and the Voluntariness Question , 63 O HIO S T . L.J. 871, 875- 890 (2002)(explaining the history and development of the Supreme Court’s cases finding waiver of state sovereign immunity by litigation conduct).
Further, a reading of Lapides within the context of the Court’s previous development and application of the voluntary invocation principle convinces us that, just as the Court concluded about the Lapides case, there is nothing special about the present case or its removal, that would justify our taking it out from under the general legal principle requiring waiver.
Second, the general applicability of the voluntary invocation
principle and the waiver-by-removal rule is demonstrated by their
history. As the Lapides opinion observes, “more than a century ago
this Court indicated that a State’s voluntary appearance in federal
court amounted to a waiver of its Eleventh Amendment immunity.”
Id. at 619, (citing and quoting Clark,
‘waives any immunity ... respecting the adjudication of’ a
[bankruptcy] ‘claim’ that it voluntarily files in federal court.”);
Gunter, 200 U.S. at 284 (“[W]here a State voluntarily becomes a
party to a cause and submits its rights for judicial determination,
it will be bound thereby and cannot escape the result of its own
voluntary act by invoking the prohibitions of the Eleventh
Amendment.”)). “The Court has long accepted this statement of the
law as valid, often citing with approval the cases embodying that
principle.” Lapides,
Until Ford, the Supreme Court fairly consistently applied the
“voluntary invocation” principle, concluding that a state submits
itself to federal court jurisdiction when it voluntarily appears,
intervenes, files a claim, or becomes a party to a cause in federal
court. Gunter, 200 U.S. at 284. In Ford, however, the Court
confused the principle by holding that a state which had
voluntarily participated in litigation could, nevertheless,
successfully assert its sovereign immunity objection even after the
case had reached the Supreme Court.
But the Supreme Court began to clarify and restore the
voluntary invocation principle in Wisconsin Dep’t Of Corrections v.
Schacht,
Justice Kennedy, concurring in Schacht, stated that, because
no party raised it, the court had not reached or considered the
argument that, by giving its express consent to removal of the
case, Wisconsin had waived its Eleventh Amendment immunity. See
In permitting the belated assertion of the Eleventh Amendment bar, we allow States to proceed to judgment without facing any real risk of adverse consequences. Should the State prevail, the plaintiff would be bound by principles of res judicata. If the State were to lose, however, it could void the entire judgment simply by asserting its immunity on appeal.
Id. Noticing that the Ford rule was a departure from the usual rules of waiver, Justice Kennedy maintained that by making the rule more consistent with the practice regarding personal jurisdiction the Court could prevent states from “gaining an unfair advantage.” Id. at 395. Justice Kennedy suggested that the better rule had been expressed in Clark and Gardner, in which the Court adopted and applied the voluntary invocation principle. Id.
One year later, the Court reaffirmed the principle that a
state waives its sovereign immunity by voluntarily invoking the
jurisdiction of the federal courts. Justice Scalia, writing for
the majority in College Savings, recognized that valid waivers of
sovereign immunity may occur pursuant to the “voluntary invocation”
principle.
During the long history of the voluntary invocation principle
prior to Lapides, the Supreme Court gave no indication that the
principle applied only to state-law claims or that it mattered
whether the state had waived its immunity from suit in its own
courts. Indeed, the problems caused by the removal of federal
claims in Schacht prompted Justice Kennedy’s influential concurring
opinion that led to the Court’s decision in Lapides. See Schact,
Third, in order to remove an impediment to its reaffirmation
of the voluntary invocation principle, the Court substantially
overruled its previous decision in Ford. Lapides,
Further, the Court granted certiorari in Lapides to consider the general problem caused by state removals and assertions of *21 immunity in both state and federal-law claim cases. Accordingly, the Court agreed to consider the general question of whether “a state waive[s] its Eleventh Amendment immunity by its affirmative litigation conduct when it removes a case to federal court....” 535 U.S. at 617. The Court described the division of opinions among circuits giving rise to its review by citing cases dealing with both federal and state-law claims:
Compare McLaughlin v. Board of Trustees of State Colleges of Colo.,215 F.3d 1168 , 1171 (10th Cir. 2000) (removal waives immunity regardless of attorney general's state-law waiver authority)[emphasis added]; and Newfield House, Inc. v. Massachusetts Dept. of Public Welfare, 651 F.2d 32, 36, n. 3 (1st Cir. 1981) (similar); with Estate of Porter ex rel. Nelson v. Illinois, 36 F.3d 684, 690-691 (7th Cir. 1994) (removal does not waive immunity)[emphasis added]; Silver v. Baggiano, 804 F.2d 1211, 1214 (11th Cir. 1986) (similar); and Gwinn Area Community Schools v. Michigan, 741 F.2d 840, 846- 847 (6th Cir. 1984) (similar).
Id. at 618. Of those five cases, two involved questions of waiver [11] of immunity only as to federal-law claims, two involved waivers only as to state-law claims, [12] and one involved waivers as to both federal and state-law claims. [13]
Finally, in cases subsequent to Lapides, the preponderant view *22 of the federal courts of appeals appears to be that Lapides’s interpretation of the voluntary invocation principle and its waiver-by-removal rule are fully applicable to suits based on federal-law claims.
Two federal courts of appeals squarely addressed the issue and
decided that a state waives its immunity from suit based on a
federal-law claim by removing the case from state to federal court.
See Embury v. King,
Other federal appellate courts demonstrated the same view in
their discussions of Lapides and the voluntary invocation
principle. See, e.g., Skelton v. Henry,
In two state-law claim cases, a situation identical to
Lapides’s was presented; that is, the removed suits involved state-
law claims in respect to which the state had waived immunity in its
*25
own court. Omosegbon v. Wells,
the states waived immunity from suit when they removed the cases to federal court. Significantly, however, neither court indicated that it would reach a different result if the state had not waived immunity in state courts or if the case had also involved federal- law claims.
One federal court of appeals, Stewart v. North Carolina, 393 F.3d 484 (4th Cir. 2005), considered the removal of a state-law claim in a situation that did not fit the Lapides pattern. North Carolina had not waived immunity from suit on the claim in its own courts. The Fourth Circuit found it improper to rely “exclusively” on Lapides because the Court in Lapides reserved judgment as to whether removal constituted waiver outside its exact situation. Id. at 490. “Nevertheless,” the Fourth Circuit stated, “the principles animating Lapides shed light on the issue we resolve today.” Id.
Accordingly, the court in Stewart recognized the general voluntary invocation principle established in Gardner, Gunter, and *26 Clark, and proceeded to explain why Lapides fell under the principle but Stewart did not. In essence, the court found that Georgia’s conduct in Lapides fell under the general rule requiring waiver because Georgia sought to achieve an unfair tactical advantage by regaining through removal the immunity it had abandoned previously; whereas, North Carolina in Stewart merely sought to “employ removal in the same manner as any other defendant facing federal claims.” Id.
Although Stewart does not bind us or directly bear on removal of federal law claims, we conclude that it is not persuasive because its rationale misconstrues important principles animating Lapides. First, a state is not “like any other defendant” as Stewart maintains. A state possesses sovereign immunity that can be used “to achieve unfair tactical advantages, if not in this case, in others.” Lapides, 535 U.S. at 614. Stewart thus misunderstands that the voluntary invocation principle as explained by Lapides rests on a concern for preventing the potential for unfair tactics, not just upon the need to sanction the actual achievement of an unfair tactical advantage. Permitting states to “follow their litigation interests by freely asserting both claims [i.e., both invoking federal jurisdiction and claiming immunity] in the same case could generate seriously unfair results.” Id. at 619. Second, the Supreme Court in Lapides envisions the voluntary *27 invocation principle and waiver-by-removal rule as applying to all sovereigns regardless of their motives. “A benign motive ... cannot make the critical difference.... Motives are difficult to evaluate, while jurisdictional rules should be clear.” Id. at 621. And finally, the waiver by litigation conduct principles are based on the “judicial need to avoid inconsistency, anomaly, and unfairness, and not upon a State’s actual preference or desire, which might, after all, favor selective use of ‘immunity’ to achieve litigation advantages.” Id. at 620.
In other words, the voluntary invocation principle applies generally in all cases for the sake of consistency, in order to prevent and ward off all actual and potential unfairness, whether egregious or seemingly innocuous. Thus, it is a mistake to read the general principle or the waiver-by-removal rule as focused only on specific or comparative abuses such as attempting to “regain” an “abandoned” immunity. North Carolina in Stewart, and Texas in the present case, acted inconsistently by both invoking federal jurisdiction and claiming immunity in the same case. Whether Texas’s conduct, in removing this case to federal court from the *28 state appellate court to “regain” an immunity that its own courts had found unwarranted, is more or less unfair than Georgia’s removal and reclaiming of its immunity in Lapides is not relevant. The voluntary invocation principle and the waiver-by-removal rule as explained by Lapides evolved not merely to quantify and compare actual unfair advantages but to eliminate the potential of unfairness by the enforcement of clear jurisdictional rules having genuine preventive effect. [18]
For all of these reasons, we are not persuaded by Texas’s argument that Lapides must be read as limiting the ambit of the voluntary invocation principle to cases involving state-law claims with respect to which the state has waived immunity in its own courts. Of course, the Court in Lapides prudently did not address issues beyond this compass. But, as the Fourth Circuit correctly recognized in Stewart, we cannot shut our eyes when “the principles animating Lapides shed light on the issue we resolve today.” 393 F.3d at 489. We conclude that the principles of voluntary invocation and waiver by removal as explained in Lapides and as facilitated by its overruling of Ford apply to the present case. 2.
Texas’s second argument is based on a novel theory of the structure of state sovereign immunity. In essence, Texas’s theory is that a state has two kinds of immunity against private suit that it may assert: (1) its basic or inherent immunity from private suit which it may assert in any court; and (2) its Eleventh Amendment forum immunity from suit in federal court. As the names imply, Texas apparently considers the first immunity to be inherent in the state’s sovereignty, and the second immunity to have been confirmed by the Eleventh Amendment.
Further, Texas contends, after a state waives its Eleventh Amendment forum immunity by removing a case to federal court, the state may still assert its basic or inherent immunity in the same case to have the plaintiffs’ suit dismissed, if the state has not waived its immunity from suit for such a claim in state court. Therefore, under its theory, Texas contends that if a state, which has not waived its immunity as to a claim in state court, removes a suit on such a claim to federal court, even though the state thereby waived its Eleventh Amendment forum immunity by the removal, that state may still assert its inherent or basic immunity *30 from suit and have the plaintiffs’ suit dismissed.
Texas claims that its theory of state immunity structure is
supported by two Supreme Court cases, Alden v. Maine ,
Moreover, there is an irreconcilable conflict between Texas’s theory and the Supreme Court’s rationale in Alden. Texas’s theory is based on the idea that a state has two different immunities from suit, an inherent immunity assertable in any court, and an Eleventh Amendment immunity assertable in federal court. To the contrary, Alden’s rationale is that the states’ sovereign immunity from suit *31 by individuals is the same immunity they enjoyed prior to the Constitution and that the states’ immunity from suit was not changed, limited or added to by the Eleventh Amendment. [20] 527 U.S. at 712-14. The Court in Alden held that the States retain sovereign immunity from private suit in their own courts——an immunity beyond the congressional power to abrogate by Article I legislation——because it was preserved intact by the Constitution since its ratification, and was not created or limited by the Eleventh Amendment. Id. Thus, in Alden, the Supreme Court rejected the notion that a separate form of sovereign immunity from suit was created for the states by the Eleventh Amendment. [21] Id. at 728. Indeed, the Court maintained that the term “Eleventh Amendment *32 immunity” is a misnomer because the states have no other sovereign immunity from suit than that which they brought intact into the union. Id. at 713.
In sum, the Court made clear in Alden that there is no such thing as an Eleventh Amendment immunity separate and apart from state sovereign immunity, that a state’s sovereign immunity from suit is now and always has been inherent within its sovereignty, and that the Eleventh Amendment did not create any new immunity but merely overruled the Supreme Court’s erroneous decision in Chisolm v. Georgia. Id. at 713-727. Consequently, Texas’s argument and theory, which depend totally upon there being an “Eleventh Amendment forum immunity” separate from each state’s sovereign immunity from suit, find no basis in Alden or the current view of the Supreme Court’s majority.
Texas also represents that Pennhurst validates its conception and analysis of sovereign immunity by “requiring [the] State’s express consent to suit in federal forum regarding claims for which underlying sovereign immunity is waived in state court.” Tex. Br. at 11. This description of Pennhurst (in Texas’s words, not the
Court’s) is so incomplete, inaccurate, and ambiguous that it obscures and misconstrues the issue decided in that case and attempts to leave the false impression that Pennhurst’s ruling on a “State’s express consent to suit” should apply by analogy to *33 Lapides and this case.
Accurately presented, however, Pennhurst differs from Lapides and this case so significantly that its interjection here is plainly inappropriate and somewhat questionable. Contrary to Texas’s representation, Pennhurst does not say anything about “claims for which underlying sovereign immunity is waived in state court.” In Pennhurst plaintiffs sued Pennsylvania state and county officials in federal court for Eighth Amendment violations because of conditions of a residence and school for retarded persons. 465 U.S. at 92-93. Pennhurst was not removed to federal court like Lapides and this case, for it was never in state court. Most important, Pennhurst did not present an issue of waiver of immunity by removal as Lapides and this case do. The issue in Pennhurst was whether a state statute amounted to a “clear declaration” that Pennsylvania intended to submit itself to federal court jurisdiction. Id. at 99 n. 9. The Court held that the statute did not submit the state to federal jurisdiction because it did not specifically and expressly say that Pennsylvania consented to suit in federal court. Id. at 99. Lapides and the present case are quite different. They hold that a state’s removal of a case into federal court, without more, clearly demonstrates the state’s consent to invoke and submit to federal jurisdiction so that the general legal principle of voluntary invocation requiring waiver of *34 immunity ought to apply. Pennhurst is devoid of any feature that is analogous to this case or that would lend any support to Texas’s theory of sovereign immunity structure. Hence, it is inapposite, irrelevant and does not support Texas’s arguments in any respect.
For these reasons, neither Alden nor Pennhurst or any of the Supreme Court’s authoritative interpretations of the Constitution provide any basis of support for Texas’s constitutional theory or arguments. Instead, Texas’s arguments are in conflict with the Supreme Court’s decisions. Accordingly, we conclude that Texas has failed to set forth any valid reason that we should not apply the principles explained by Lapides to the present case.
B. The Constitution Does Not Create State Sovereign Immunity or Prescribe its Scope; The Law of Each State Determines the Nature of its Immunities; Thus, it is Possible that a State May Retain a Separate Immunity from Liability after Waiver of its Immunity from Suit.
Although we find no support for Texas’s theory that state sovereign immunity is composed of two separate immunities from suit, further analysis convinces us that the Supreme Court’s cases support a different interpretation and conclusion, viz., that a sovereign enjoys two kinds of immunity that it may choose to waive or retain separately——immunity from suit and immunity from liability. This concept is different from Texas’s theory in several important *35 respects: (1) it is consistent with the Court’s view in Alden that the Constitution protects but does not create the states’ sovereign immunity, and that the Eleventh Amendment did not create, change or add to that immunity; (2) it is consistent with Lapides in that it would not allow a state to assert its immunity from suit twice in the same case; and (3) consistently with the Court’s cases, it would allow a state, if its law authorizes, to waive its immunity from suit without waiving its immunity from liability.
Texas’s theory that the Constitution prescribes a specific
rigid structure for each state’s sovereign immunity conflicts with
the first principles of our federation. Because each state was
considered to have retained the individual sovereignty it enjoyed
before the union, the structure of the Constitution allows for
variation between the nature and structure of each state’s
immunities from suit and liability. This is consistent with the
Supreme Court’s long held view that sovereign immunity is a
privilege that each state may waive at its pleasure. See College
Savings,
Rather than require that the states adhere to a prescribed
plan, the Court’s decisions envision a Constitution that affords the
states discretion to waive or vary the nature and elements of their
sovereign immunity. Id. Consequently, courts must look to the law
of the particular state in determining whether it has established
a separate immunity against liability for purposes of waiver.
[23]
Unlike a state’s waiver of its immunity from suit in federal court,
the state’s waiver or retention of a separate immunity from
liability is not a matter in which there is an overriding federal
interest justifying the application of a federal rule.
[24]
For these
reasons, we conclude that the Constitution permits a state whose law
provides that it possesses an immunity from liability separate from
in such matters). As another example, the Eleventh Circuit has
explained that the Florida sovereign immunity provides immunity
only from liability and not suit. CSX Transp. Inc. v. Kissimme
Utility Authority,
The foregoing principles are reflected in the Supreme Court’s frequent references to sovereign immunity as affording both immunity from liability and immunity from private suits. The Court has often indicated that the purpose of state sovereign immunity is to protect the state from being held liable by its creditors as well as to safeguard it from private suits filed without its consent.
In Lapides the Court stated that “suits for money damages
against the State [are] the heart of the Eleventh Amendment's
concern.” id. 620 More recently, the Court explained: “Sovereign
immunity does not merely constitute a defense to monetary liability
or even to all types of liability. Rather it provides an immunity
from suit.” Fed. Mar. Comm’n v. South Carolina State Ports
Authority,
Corroborating that sovereigns may provide for waiver of
immunity from liability separately from suit immunity, one federal
court of appeals has stated, in dictum, that “[c]ertainly, a state
may waive its immunity from substantive liability without waiving
its immunity from suit in a federal forum.” New Hampshire v.
Ramsey,
Concurrently, there is a growing body of impressive scholarly thought favoring the view that the Supreme Court has implicitly recognized that state sovereign immunity consists of two separate and different kinds of immunity, immunity from suit and immunity from liability. We come to substantially the same conclusion. The commentators’ reading of the cases is reasonable and tends to be persuasive. We conclude, however, that it is more appropriate to say that the Court’s cases accommodate the view that the Constitution guarantees a state’s prerogative, by its own law, to treat its immunity from liability as separate from its immunity from J. at 1234 (“[S]tate sovereign immunity has two independent See Siegel, , 52 D Waivers of State Sovereign Immunity UKE L. aspects: it is partly an immunity from suit in a particular forum (federal court) and partly a substantive immunity from liability.... [A state] may waive its forum immunity without waiving its underlying immunity from liability. Moreover, removal should be understood to waive only forum immunity.”); cf., Carlos Manuel Vazquez, Sovereign Immunity, Due Process, and The Alden Trilogy , 109 Y ALE L.J. 1927, 1930 (2000)(Arguing that in Alden and College Savings the Supreme Court “rejected the ‘forum-allocation’ interpretation of the Eleventh Amendment, and implicitly adopted what I have called the ‘immunity-from-liability’ interpretation, under which the states are immune from being subjected to damage liability to individuals.”)(citing Carlos Manuel Vazquez, What is Eleventh Amendment Immunity? , 106 Y ALE L.J. 1683, 1700-08 (1997)(“describing the ‘forum-allocation’ and ‘immunity-from- liability’ interpretations.”).
suit for purposes of waiver or relinquishment. For these reasons, we conclude that the Constitution permits and protects a state’s right to relinquish its immunity from suit while retaining its immunity from liability, or vice versa, but that it does not require a state to do so.
In sum, under the principles of federal law we have discussed,
when Texas removed this case to federal court it voluntarily invoked
the jurisdiction of the federal courts and waived its immunity from
suit in federal court. See Lapides,
C. Remaining Arguments
The only matter before us is plaintiffs’ appeal from the district court’s ruling granting Texas’s 12(b)(1) motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction based on Texas’s sovereign immunity from suit. In the district court’s rulings complained of on appeal, the court held that plaintiffs failed to establish subject matter jurisdiction by showing that Texas’s sovereign immunity from suit had been either waived or abrogated. Specifically, the court ruled that (1) Texas had not waived its *41 immunity from suit by removing the case to federal court and (2) Congress had not validly abrogated Texas’s immunity from suit by its enactment of ADA Title II. We conclude, in the light of Lapides, that Texas waived its immunity from suit in federal court when it removed the case to federal court. Consequently, the district court’s judgment, which was rendered prior to Lapides, is in error in its conclusion that plaintiffs had not established subject matter jurisdiction based on waiver by removal. Because Texas waived its immunity from suit by removal of this case to federal court, we will reverse and remand on this ground. Thus, we need not reach or decide whether the district court erred in finding that Congress did not validly abrogate Texas’s immunity from suit by ADA Title II.
Furthermore, it is not necessary to address Texas’s arguments
in opposition to plaintiffs’ Ex parte Young suit. The purpose of
the doctrine of Ex parte Young is to allow plaintiffs asserting
*42
federal law claims to circumvent the state’s sovereign immunity from
suit by suing state officers instead. Home Telephone & Telegraph
Co. v. City of Los Angeles,
Thus, having decided the determinative issue of this appeal——that the federal district court has subject matter jurisdiction because Texas waived its immunity from suit by removal of this case to federal court——we will not address Texas’s remaining arguments, which pertain to its defenses on the merits of the case, not raised below and prematurely presented here, viz., that the five dollar fee does not violate the statute or the regulation; that the regulation is invalid under Chevron; and that ADA Title II and the regulation are not authorized by the Commerce Clause, as limited by the Tenth Amendment. These matters may or may not contribute *43 relevantly to Texas’s defenses on the merits of the case, but they can have no bearing or effect on our determination that the federal district court has subject matter jurisdiction over this case.
For these reasons, the judgment of the district court is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not determine and the state is not precluded from pursuing a claim that it is immune from liability under principles of Texas sovereign immunity law, separate and apart from its waiver of its immunity from suit in federal court in this case.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
[1] Marjorie Meyers, Helen Elkin, Ruth Davis, and Phillip Greenberg (“plaintiffs”).
[2] The Eleventh Amendment provides: The Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend in any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State. U.S. C ONST . A MDT . XI.
[3] In the appellate court’s view, as it was unclear that the
state attorney general had the legal authority to waive state
sovereign immunity, the board retained the legal right to assert
its sovereign immunity from suit by individuals even after removal.
Lapides,
[4] 535 U.S. at 620. The Court pointed out that removal
requires the unanimous consent of all defendants. Id. (citing 28
U.S.C. § 1446(a); Chicago, R.I. & P.R. Co. v. Martin,
[5] As the Court explained, Lapides did not state a valid
federal claim “because Lapides’s only federal claim against the
State arises under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, that claim seeks only monetary
damages, and we have held that a State is not a ‘person’ against
whom a § 1983 claim for money damages might be asserted.” 535 U.S.
at 617 (citing Will v. Michigan Dep’t of State Police,
[6] This classification excludes “[t]he core of modern federal
court jurisdiction[,]cases arising under the Constitution and laws
of the United States[,]compris[ing] the largest component of the
federal courts’ docket and...widely viewed as the most important
component of the federal courts’ workload.” Erwin Chemerinsky,
F EDERAL J URISDICTION , § 5.2.1, p. 265 (4th ed. 2003); see Jonathan R.
Siegel, Waivers of State Sovereign Immunity and the Ideology of the
Eleventh Amendment , 52 D UKE L.J. 1167, (2003) (“Although the
particular circumstances of the case may be limited, the reasoning
of the case endorses the crucial values underpinning the
traditional rule that sovereign immunity is waived if not timely
asserted.”)(citing Lapides,
[7] Texas argues that the present case is controlled by Neinast
v. Texas,
[9] See Siegel, Waivers of State Sovereign Immunity , 52 D UKE L.J. at 1167-1168 (“[P]rior to 1945, the Supreme Court—even as it enforced a broad, substantive rule of state sovereign immunity–applied a sensible doctrine of waiver that balanced the interests of states with those of private parties and the federal judicial system.... Beginning in 1945 ... new rules of waiver permitted states to abuse their immunity and waste federal judicial resources by litigating the merits of a case while holding an immunity defense in reserve.”); Seinfeld, Waiver-in-Litigation , 63 O HIO S T . L.J. at 875-890.
[10] Justice Kennedy also recommended overruling Ford’s requirement that the state attorney who consented to the removal be authorized under state law to waive the Eleventh Amendment on behalf of the state. “[T]he state’s consent [to removal] amounted to a direct invocation of the jurisdiction of the federal courts.” Id. at 397.
[11] See McLaughlin, 215 F.3d 1168; Estate of Porter, 36 F.3d 684.
[12] See Gwinn Area Community Schools, 741 F.2d 840; Newfield
House,
[13] See Silver,
[14] Contrary to Texas’ argument, Watters v. Washington
Metropolitan Area Transit Authority,
[15] Contrary to Texas’s argument, Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (“RIDEM”), 304 F.3d 31, supports the conclusion that the First Circuit will apply waiver by removal to federal-law claims when it is appropriate. RIDEM, a state’s arm, did not remove or voluntarily invoke federal court jurisdiction. RIDEM was forced to seek injunctive relief from federal administrative ALJ’s denial of its sovereign immunity claim. Id. at 50. Second, a state or other alternate forum was not available to RIDEM. Id. Finally, RIDEM’s opponent forfeited its waiver argument by failing to raise it in district court. Id.
[16] Initially, the plaintiffs asserted a federal claim. On
appeal, however, appellants challenged the district court decision
only with respect to state-law tort claims. Stewart,
[17] Lapides, 535 U.S. at 619 (“It would seem anomalous or inconsistent for a State both (1) to invoke federal jurisdiction, thereby contending that the ‘Judicial power of the United States’ extends to the case at hand, and (2) to claim Eleventh Amendment immunity, thereby denying that the ‘Judicial power of the United States’ extends to the case at hand.”).
[18]
[19] Texas uses the term “confirm” instead of “create.” No matter how Texas contends the Eleventh Amendment is responsible for bringing about the second separate “Eleventh Amendment forum immunity,” however, the effect is the same: Texas’s argument is based on a state having two separate immunities from suit, one inherent, and one attributable to the Eleventh Amendment.
[20] The Court maintained that: [T]he States’ immunity from suit is a fundamental aspect of the sovereignty which the States enjoyed before the ratification of the Constitution, and which they retain today (either literally or by virtue of their admission into the Union upon an equal footing with the other States) except as altered by the plan of the Convention or certain constitutional Amendments. Id. at 713.
[21] The Court explained that “sovereign immunity derives not
from the Eleventh Amendment but from the structure of the original
Constitution itself.” Id. at 728 (citing Idaho v. Coeur d’Alene
Tribe of Idaho,
[22] See, e.g., Matthew J. Whitten, Fiction Becomes Reality: When will Texas Abrogate the “Catch-22" of Sovereign Immunity When it Comes to Contracts? 37 T EX . T ECH L. R. 243, 247, 260 (2004) (explaining that Arizona has waived its sovereign immunity from both suit and liability for contracts disputes, but Texas has waived its immunity from liability but not its immunity from suit
[23] In general, “the substantive law to be applied by the federal courts in any case is state law, except when the matter before the court is governed by the United States Constitution, an act of congress, a treaty, international law, the domestic law of another country, or, in special circumstances, federal common law.” 19 Charles Alan Wright et al., F EDERAL P RACTICE AND P ROCEDURE : J URISDICTION § 4501, at 2 (2d ed. 1996)(discussing the Federal Rules of Decision Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1652 and constitutional considerations)); see Siegel, Waivers of State Sovereign Immunity , 52 D UKE L.J. at 1224- 1225.
[24] See Lapides,
[26] See supra note 22.
[27] Moreover, our holding in Neinast v. Texas,
[28] See Pederson v. Louisiana State University,
