Case Information
*1 Before McMILLIAN, FAGG, and HANSEN, Circuit Judges.
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FAGG, Circuit Judge.
The Minneapolis Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and six Minneapolis schoolchildren, on behalf of all Minneapolis public school students (the student class), filed this class action in Hennepin County District Court against the Metropolitan Council (Met Council) and twenty-one state officials and entities (the state defendants), asserting claims under the Minnesota Constitution. The Met Council, an administrative agency that coordinates planning and development in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area, removed the case to federal district court. The NAACP and the student class moved to remand the case to state court. The district court remanded all claims against the state defendants, but denied the motion to remand claims against the Met Council. The district court based its removal jurisdiction on the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651 (1994), and the artful pleading doctrine recognized in Federated Dep’t Stores, Inc. v. Moitie, 452 U.S. 394, 397 n.2 (1981). The district court then granted the Met Council’s motion under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) to dismiss all claims against it as precluded by an earlier federal judgment. The NAACP and the student class appeal, contending their claims against the Met Council were not removable, and even if they were, the district court improperly applied federal res judicata law because this case and the earlier lawsuit involve different causes of action against the Met Council as well as different parties.
The issues in this appeal spring from the relation of this action to an earlier class action, Hollman v. Cisneros, brought in federal court by the NAACP and a class consisting of minority persons and their families living in, or applying for, low-income housing in Minneapolis (the Hollman class). Filed in 1992, the Hollman lawsuit claimed public housing in Minneapolis was concentrated in racially segregated neighborhoods. The NAACP and the Hollman class contended the Met Council had
violated the federal Fair Housing Act by failing to encourage development of low- income housing in Twin Cities’ suburbs, as well as by approving funding for suburban sewer and road projects and thus “accelerat[ing] the polarization of the metro area by income and race.” The lawsuit was settled by consent decree in Hollman v. Cisneros, Civ. No. 4-92-712 (D. Minn. filed Apr. 21, 1995). In the Hollman decree, the Met Council agreed to undertake numerous complex responsibilities to help “achieve a metropolitan distribution of affordable housing.” Among these, the Met Council agreed to consider low-income housing distribution in its “decisions and recommendations regarding the . . . funding, construction, or approval of regional wastewater and transportation facilities.” The parties agreed to submit periodic progress reports to the district court, and the district court retained jurisdiction to issue “such further orders as may be necessary or appropriate for the enforcement of this Decree.”
Six months after the district court entered judgment in Hollman, the NAACP
filed this lawsuit in state court “on behalf of a plaintiff class consisting of all students
enrolled . . . in the Minneapolis public schools,” which necessarily includes students
who live in low-income housing and belong to the Hollman class. The plaintiffs
(appellants before this court) claimed that because the Minneapolis public schools have
disproportionate enrollments of poor and minority students, generating “negative
effects” that “depress[] . . . educational achievement,” Minneapolis public school
students as a whole are being denied their right to receive an adequate education in
violation of the Education and Equal Protection Clauses of the Minnesota Constitution.
See Skeen v. State,
Having decided the district court properly exercised removal jurisdiction over
claims asserted against the Met Council, we now turn to the district court’s res judicata
dismissal of those claims as precluded by Hollman. Our review is de novo, on both
procedural and substantive grounds. See Coleman v. Watt,
Finally, we must determine whether this suit and Hollman involve the same
parties or their privies. The NAACP was a party to Hollman, and it brought this suit on
behalf of the student class. As defined in the plaintiffs’ complaint, the student class
necessarily includes students who live in low-income housing and belong to the Hollman
class. We cannot determine the extent of class overlap, but it may be extensive because
the plaintiffs’ complaint states “the Minneapolis public schools have an extraordinary
proportion of children living in poverty among their student populations,” an assertion
we must accept as true. See Coleman,
Because the student class in this suit neither controlled the Hollman action nor
are successors-in-interest to the Hollman class, the resolution of the privity issue
depends on whether the student class was adequately represented in the earlier action
by the Hollman class. See Tyus v. Schoemehl,
Although not enough by itself, identity of interests between the parties is essential. See id. at 455. This requirement is satisfied here. As against the Met Council, the interests of the Hollman class and the student class are virtually the same. The only difference is the Hollman class sued the Met Council to secure broader geographical distribution of low-income housing as an end in itself, while the student class seeks the same relief against the Met Council as a means to the end of improving education. Furthermore, the Hollman class adequately represented the interests it shares with the student class because the Hollman class had a powerful incentive to establish the segregative effects of the Met Council’s housing policies and practices. See id. at 455-56. After all, the Hollman class could not prevail in its lawsuit against the Met Council without successfully litigating the same kind of claims raised against the Met Council by the student class in this case. Although incentive to litigate, not results, is the key, see id. at 458, the Hollman plaintiffs secured commitments of more than $100 million to promote the spread of low-income housing in the Twin Cities’ metropolitan area--which in turn, according to the plaintiffs’ complaint in this suit, will improve educational achievement in the Minneapolis schools.
Because the memberships of the student and Hollman classes overlap, it is clear to us the parties in the two suits are not strangers to one another. Indeed, the student members of the Hollman class actually participated in that litigation. See id. at 455. Adding these considerations to the two classes’ closely aligned interests, and the Hollman class’s incentive to protect those interests in the earlier suit, we are satisfied that the members of the student class were adequately represented by, and thus are in *9 privity with, the Hollman class. Accordingly, the district court properly dismissed the claims against the Met Council as precluded by Hollman.
We affirm the judgment of the district court.
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
