Case Information
*1 Before McMILLIAN, FAGG, and HANSEN, Circuit Judges.
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FAGG, Circuit Judge.
Our earlier opinion in this case contained two independent rulings. First, we held
the district court properly used its power under the All Writs Act to take jurisdiction
over state-law claims filed in Minnesota state court that threatened the integrity of an
earlier federal consent decree. See NAACP, Minneapolis Branch v. Metropolitan
Council,
At issue in Rivet was the power of federal courts to exercise federal-question removal jurisdiction under the artful pleading doctrine articulated in Moitie, 452 U.S. at 397 n.2, based on a removing party’s contention the removed state-law claim is precluded by an earlier federal judgment. In Moitie, seven plaintiffs filed federal antitrust actions in federal district court. The consolidated suits were dismissed for lack of standing. Two of the plaintiffs, Moitie and Brown, refiled in state court, basing their claims exclusively on state law. The defendants removed these lawsuits to federal district court, which denied Moitie’s and Brown’s motion to remand and dismissed their claims as precluded by the earlier judgment. See id. at 395-97. On appeal, the Ninth Circuit upheld the district court’s removal jurisdiction, see id. at 397 n.2, but reversed its res judicata ruling, see id. at 397. The Supreme Court then reversed the *3 Ninth Circuit on the res judicata issue, see id. at 402, but agreed “at least some of [Moitie’s and Brown’s state-law] claims had a sufficient federal character to support removal,” id. at 397 n.2. The Court declined to question the district court’s factual finding that Moitie and Brown “had attempted to avoid removal jurisdiction by ‘artful[ly]’ casting their ‘essentially federal law claims’ as state-law claims.” Id. (alteration and internal quotations in original).
After Moitie the circuit courts attempted to determine what it is that gives a
state-law claim a sufficiently federal character to warrant removal under footnote two
of the Court’s opinion. Some circuits found the necessary federal character in the
federal law of claim preclusion. On this view, Moitie authorizes removal “where a
plaintiff files a state cause of action completely precluded by a prior federal judgment
on a question of federal law.” Carpenter v. Wichita Falls Indep. Sch. Dist., 44 F.3d
362, 370 (5th Cir. 1995); accord In re Brand Name Prescription Drugs Antitrust Litig.,
Recognizing “Moitie’s enigmatic footnote . . . has caused considerable confusion
in the circuit courts,” Rivet, 118 S. Ct. at 926 (internal quotations omitted), the
Supreme Court in Rivet clarified the footnote. Rivet concerned a state-law-based
property dispute filed in state court after a federal Bankruptcy Court had issued orders
concerning the same parcel of property. See id. at 924. Relying on federal claim
preclusion, the Rivet defendants removed the state-court action to federal district court,
which denied the plaintiffs’ motion to remand and granted the defendants’ cross-motion
for summary judgment. See id. The district court based both of its rulings on the
claim-preclusive effect of the Bankruptcy Court’s orders. See id. Unlike in NAACP,
where we upheld under the All Writs Act the district court’s jurisdiction over state-law
claims that threatened the integrity of a federal consent decree the court was
supervising, the Fifth Circuit in Rivet affirmed the district court’s removal jurisdiction
“under the artful pleading exception to the well-pleaded complaint doctrine,” Rivet v.
Regions Bank of Louisiana, F.S.B.,
When the NAACP suit was filed in state court, the Met Council removed the
case to the District Court for the District of Minnesota. On the students’ motion, the
district court remanded to state court the claims against all the defendants except the
Met Council. The district court based its jurisdiction over the students’ claims against
the Met Council on two grounds: the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a) (1994), and
Moitie’s footnote two. See NAACP,
In summary, agreeing with the Second, Sixth, and Seventh Circuits, see id. at
1173-74, we upheld the district court’s exercise of removal jurisdiction under the All
Writs Act “‘to effectuate and prevent the frustration of orders [the district court] ha[d]
previously issued in its exercise of jurisdiction otherwise obtained,’” id. at 1173
(quoting United States v. New York Tel. Co.,
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
