Prologue
We write today about a suit started in state court and removed to fed
How the Case Got Here
2014 was certainly a whirlwind year for Perfect Puppy. On April 26, Perfect Puppy signed a lease to use an East Providence building for a “Puppy Sales store” (a quote from the lease), which is the only use permitted by the lease. About. a month later, though, on May 20, the East Providence city council introduced and preliminarily passed an ordinance banning dog and cat sales — we say “preliminarily” because the ordinance required a second passage to become effective. The next day, May 21, Perfect Puppy both received a state “PET SHOP” license (a quote from the license) and opened its doors for business. But whatever excitement its owners must have felt quickly vanished after the city council formally passed the ordinance on June 3.
Not willing to take this lying down, Perfect Puppy sued East Providence in state court, claiming (among other things) that the ordinance infracts the equal-protection and due-process clauses of the state and federal Constitutions and the commerce clause of the federal Constitution. East Providence removed the case to federal court on federal-question grounds. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1441(a), 1331. Perfect Puppy then amended its complaint to add a claim that the ordinance so constricted its property rights as to constitute a regulatory taking, requiring just compensation under the takings clauses of the state and federal Constitutions.
The parties eventually cross-moved for summary judgment on stipulated facts. After denying Perfect Puppy’s motion, the district judge granted East Providence summary judgment on all claims except the takings claim. As for any possible facial-takings challenge, the judge concluded that Perfect Puppy had not developed one: Perfect Puppy’s passing comment in a fairly lengthy summary-judgment memo — that it “would ... argue that this taking was categorical in nature, and [Perfect Puppy] should be per se compensated” (a statement which for simplicity’s sake we will • call the single-sentence comment)— was not enough to conclude otherwise. Taking a belt-and-suspenders approach," the judge also wrote that “[i]nsofar as” Perfect Puppy’s single-sentence comment “constitutes a facial taking claim, it ... would fail here because [Perfect Puppy] has not demonstrated that the enactment of the ordinance categorically deprives its
Which brings us to today, with Perfect Puppy contesting only the judge’s handling of the takings claim by attacking his analysis on multiple fronts.
Facial Takings
Perfect Puppy spends a good deal of time (both orally and in writing) trying to convince us that it actually asserted a facial-takings claim below. Color us unconvinced. As the district judge correctly suggested, Perfect Puppy’s single-sentence
comment
— i.e., that it “would ... argue that this taking was categorical in nature, and [Perfect Puppy] should be per se compensated” — hardly suffices, given how Perfect Puppy fleetingly floated the idea below without any analysis or citation. If this is not perfunctory treatment, we do not know what is. And we have long made clear that judges need not entertain such ill-developed arguments.
See United States v. Zannino,
Seeking a way around the problem, Perfect Puppy talks up
cases
— e.g.,
United States v. Williams,
In something of a last gasp, Perfect Puppy argues that it “necessarily raise[d] a facial takings claim” because its amended complaint asked for declaratory relief. This seems like a mischaracterization— after all, Perfect Puppy asked for declaratory relief in the takings count’s heading, but not in that count’s allegations or prayer-for-relief sections. Even putting all that aside, though, we know that a litigant
can
ask for declaratory relief as part of an
as-applied-takings challenge
too.
See, e.g., García-Rubiera v. Calderón,
Enough said on that subject.
Perfect Puppy asks us to review and reverse the judge’s decision characterizing the as-applied-takings claim as unripe (because Perfect Puppy did not exhaust state remedies) and remanding the remainder of the case to state court on this ground. Unfortunately for Perfect Puppy, the insuperable obstacle to doing so is that we lack appellate jurisdiction.
Summarizing the Law
28 U.S.C. § 1447(d) provides (with exceptions not relevant here) that “[a]n order remanding a case to the State court from which it was removed is not reviewable on appeal or otherwise.”
2
Despite the straightforwardness of its language (banning review by appeal or by any other means dreamt up by imaginative counsel), section 1447(d), our judicial superiors tell us, affects only remands under 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c) — a statute that says (among other things) that “[i]f at any time before final judgment it appears that the district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, the case shall be remanded.”
3
See, e.g., Powerex Corp. v. Reliant Energy Servs., Inc.,
As for why section 1447(d) is on the books, we know that Congress passed this proviso to curb the delay caused by interlocutory review of orders shifting cases from federal to state courts — review that does nothing to resolve the cases on the merits, by the way.
See, e.g., Kircher v.
Applying the Law
Turning from generalities to specifics, we see that the judge remanded what was left of Perfect Puppy’s case to state court for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. ■ We know this because the judge — citing and quoting section 1447(c) — ruled that he “lack[ed] subject matter jurisdiction” here. This is how he reached that conclusion (we simplify things slightly, repeating some of what we said earlier): The Constitution does not ban takings, but only takings without just compensation. See, e.g.,
Williamson Cnty. Reg’l Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank,
Though convinced that
Downing
gave the judge a colorably jurisdictional basis
But make no mistake: Even assuming— for argument’s sake — that a party’s failure to satisfy the state-exhaustion requirement is not a colorable ground for a subject-matter-jurisdiction remand, we would still affirm the judge’s order here on the merits. In its lower-court filings, Perfect Puppy only argued that the state-exhaustion requirement holds no sway because East Providence removed the case to federal court. True, a government defendant’s removal of a case from state court may waive otherwise valid objections to litigation in a federal forum.
See, e.g., Lapides v. Bd. of Regents of Univ. Sys. of Ga.,
Rejecting Perfect Puppy’s Other Arguments
Shifting gears, Perfect Puppy notes that section 1447(d) says (emphasis Perfect Puppy’s) that “[a]n order remanding a case to the State court
from which it was removed
is not reviewable.” And it insists that this proviso cannot apply here because the takings claim was not removed from state court — again, Perfect Puppy added the claim after East Providence removed the suit. But Perfect Puppy conveniently overlooks that the statute focuses on the “case ... removed,” not on the claims removed. And Perfect Puppy neither cites any case supporting its position (we know of none, frankly) nor offers a persuasive explanation of what the law should be (assuming it unearthed no on-point case). So that argument is waived.
See, e.g., Muñiz v. Rovira,
Ever persistent, Perfect Puppy also suggests that section 1447(c) allows remand only when jurisdiction is lacking at the time of removal. Because the judge had subject-matter jurisdiction when East Providence removed the case — Perfect Puppy added the (unripe) takings claim after removal (we say for the umpteenth time) — the remand was not a subject-matter-jurisdiction remand, meaning section 1447(d)’s appellate-review bar does not apply. Or so Perfect Puppy intimates. But section 1447(c) requires district judges to remand for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction “at any time,” which means section 1447(d) bars appellate review of subject-matter-jurisdiction remands made “at any time.” That is what the Supreme Court said in
Powerex,
Taking yet another tack, Perfect Puppy notes that the high Court in
Quack-enbush v. Allstate Insurance Co.
held that section 1447(d) does not ban appellate review of an abstention-based remand intended to let a state court resolve hotly contested points of state law.
See
With that and at long last, we affirm the judge’s handling of the facial-takings issue, and we dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction as to that part of the judge’s order remanding the as-applied claim to state court. Costs to East Providence.
Notes
. For anyone not in the know: A facial-takings challenge involves a claim that the ordinance’s mere enactment amounts to a taking by " ‘denfying] an owner economically viable use' ” of his property.
Hodel v. Va. Surface Mining & Reclamation Ass’n, Inc.,
. Section 1447(d) reads in full:
An order remanding a case to the State court from which it was removed is not reviewable on appeal or otherwise, except that an order remanding a case to the State court from which it was removed pursuant to section 1442 or 1443 of this title shall be reviewable by appeal or otherwise.
. The complete quote is:
A motion to remand the case on the basis of any defect other than lack of subject matter jurisdiction must be made within 30 days after the filing of the notice of removal under section 1446(a). If at any time before final judgment it appears that the district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, the case shall be remanded. An order remanding the case may require payment of just costs and any actual expenses, including attorney fees, incurred as a result of the removal. A certified copy of the order of remand shall be mailed by the clerk to the clerk of the State court. The State court may thereupon proceed with such case.
. Regarding
Thermtron’s
holding — that circuit courts can review cases remanded on grounds having nothing to do with section 1447(c), despite section 1447(d) — not every Justice has been a fan.
See Carlsbad Tech., Inc. v. HIF Bio, Inc.,
.
See also Thermtron,
. Other circuits, for what it is worth, have read recent Supreme Court cases as holding that the state-exhaustion requirement is not jurisdictional. See, e.g.,
Sherman v. Town of Chester,
. A state-university professor there sued the state, asserting both federal — and state-law claims.
Id.
at 616,
.
Burford
abstention takes its name from
Burford v. Sun Oil Co.,
(1) when there are "difficult questions of state law bearing on policy problems of substantial public import whose importance transcends the result in the case then at bar”; or (2) where the "exercise of federal review of the question in a case and in similar cases would be disruptive of state efforts to establish a coherent policy with respect to a matter of substantial public concern.”
New Orleans Pub. Serv., Inc. v. Council of City of New Orleans,
