This civil rights action represents another chapter in a pitched battle over the pension benefits due to retired municipal employees of the City of Providence. The district court below disposed of several of plaintiffs’ claims at summary judgment and, later, dismissed the remaining claims on jurisdictional grounds. Plaintiffs seek reversal of the district court’s order dismissing their claims under the Contract Clause, Takings Clause, and Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution. We affirm the district court’s judgment in toto.
I.
Although we ultimately resolve this appeal on straightforward grounds, the attendant facts and procedural history are somewhat more involved. We recite only the undisputed facts, unless otherwise noted.
A.
Plaintiffs are all former members of the police and fire departments of the City of Providence who retired after January 1994. Defendants include the City of Providence (City), members of the Providence City Council (City Council), the mayor of the City of Providence, and members of the City of Providence Employee Retirement Board (Retirement Board).
At a meeting held on December 6, 1989, the Retirement Board voted to approve a variety of retirement benefits for both Class A and Class B City employees, 1 including a generous increase in the cost of living adjustment (COLA) for pension benefits. Following the Retirement Board’s vote, however, the City chafed at the prospect of honoring the terms of the newly *141 enacted retirement plan. The City hired outside counsel to challenge the validity of the Retirement Board’s action in state court. In its complaint, the City challenged the Retirement Board’s COLA and pension award action as ultra vires. The case reached a bench trial before the Rhode Island Superior Court. Upon completion of that trial, the trial judge entered a written decision in which he determined that the Retirement Board’s December 6, 1989, vote establishing the pension and COLA modifications was a valid and binding exercise of its authority. Counsel to the case were ordered to prepare and submit an appropriate judgment for entry by the trial court.
Instead of preparing that judgment, counsel informed the trial court that they were attempting to negotiate a final settlement of the case, ostensibly to avoid further proceedings and bring finality to the ongoing pension controversy. By December 17, 1991, an agreed case settlement had been negotiated under which the beneficiaries to the settlement would receive a 6% compounded COLA increase. The terms of the proposed settlement were adopted formally by vote of the Retirement Board at a December 18,1991, meeting, and the settlement was thereafter presented to the trial court for approval and entry as a consent decree.
The City complied with the terms of the consent decree for a period of roughly two years. Then, in 1993, the City again balked at funding COLA benefits for retirees. On January 6, 1994, the City Council passed Ordinance 1994-1, which terminated the 6% compounded COLA increase for retired police and firefighters. On the same day, the City Council also passed Ordinance 1994-2, which established a new scheme of retiree benefits, but did not include the 6% compounded COLA increase. The City’s deviation from the terms of the consent decree triggered a contempt proceeding in state court.
Meanwhile, the City Council and City filed a separate action in state court in pursuit of a declaration that the consent decree was invalid. The City Council and City argued that the decree had not been entered with the permission or ratification of the City Council, thereby rendering the decree unenforceable. The trial judge was asked not only to determine the validity of the consent decree, but also to resolve lingering doubts concerning the actual scope of the consent decree. Numerous City employees who retired after December 18,1991, claimed entitlement to the 6% compounded COLA increase; 2 the City responded by arguing that the consent decree, even if valid, did not apply to later retirees.
After a labyrinthine tour of the state court system, which included an appeal to the Rhode Island Supreme Court and subsequent remand, the various consent decree litigations were ultimately consolidated into a single appeal before the Rhode Island Supreme Court. In
City of Providence v. Employee Retirement Board,
B.
Between 1991 and 1995, during the pen-dency of the ongoing consent decree controversies, the City and plaintiffs (acting through their collective bargaining representatives) negotiated and agreed to a series of collective bargaining agreements (CBAs) that provided for a 5% compounded COLA increase. Although § 17-27 of the Providence Code of Ordinances requires that the City Council ratify all CBAs between the City and a labor organization, it is undisputed that the City Council never ratified the CBAs in question.
Then, beginning in 1995, the City Council passed a handful of municipal ordinances, each of which placed the amount of plaintiffs’ COLA benefits below the levels established under the CBAs: Chapter 1995-17 established a 3% non-compounded COLA increase; Chapter 1996-4 provided a 3% non-compounded increase up to the first $10,000 of the retirement allowance; and Chapter 1998-22 provided a 3% non-compounded increase up to the first $1,000 of the retirement allowance.
C.
In 1998, plaintiffs commenced the present suit in federal court alleging numerous constitutional claims pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The amended complaint asserted that, by adopting an ordinance that terminated the COLA provisions of the consent decree, defendants deprived plaintiffs of property in violation of the Due Process Clause (Count 1). By adopting various city ordinances that are at odds with provisions of the collective bargaining agreements, defendants were also alleged to have violated: the Due Process Clause (Count 2); the due process component of the Rhode Island Constitution (Count 3); the Contract Clause and a cognate provision of the Rhode Island Constitution (Count 6); and the Takings Clause (Count 7). Lastly, the complaint contained a claim for violation of the Equal Protection Clause (Count 4) and a broad-brush due process claim (Count 5).
In November 1998, both parties moved for summary judgment on all counts of the complaint. In September 1999, the district court below entered a written order allowing partial judgment in favor of defendants. At the outset, the district court noted that plaintiffs’ claims essentially comprised an attack on two fronts:
First, they challenge defendants’ efforts to reduce the amount of COLAs to which plaintiffs claim they are entitled under the consent decree. Next, they challenge defendants’ efforts to provide COLAs that are less than those called for under the terms of the collective bargaining agreements (which ... were never formally ratified by the City Council).
Picard v. City of Providence,
Nos. 98-40-L & 98-95-M, slip op. at 7,
The district court did not, however, feel similarly constrained in ruling on plaintiffs’ second means of attack. The court entered summary judgment against plaintiffs on their claims based on the CBAs. The district court reasoned that the failure of the City Council to ratify the CBAs pursuant to § 17-27 of the Providence Code of Ordinances rendered those agreements void and thereby foreclosed the possibility of finding any enforceable contract rights protected by the Constitution.
Id.
at 11-12 (citing
Providence City Council v. Cianci,
Later, defendants filed a motion to dismiss the remaining consent decree claims based on lack of standing, lack of subject matter jurisdiction, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. Plaintiffs filed no opposition to the motion; nor did plaintiffs’ counsel attend a status conference held in the case. On September 19, 2000, the district court granted the motion to dismiss for the reasons presented in defendants’ memorandum and for plaintiffs’ failure to prosecute the claim. Subsequently, plaintiffs filed a motion for reconsideration explaining counsel’s absence from the status conference, but offering no legal argument on the merits of the motion to dismiss. In response to plaintiffs’ motion, the district court withdrew its statement that plaintiffs had failed to prosecute the claim and stated that its dismissal rested solely on the substantive grounds set forth in defendants’ motion to dismiss. Thereafter, plaintiffs filed their notice of appeal.
II.
A.
The district court’s September 19, 2000, order disposed of the plaintiffs’ claims on the basis of defendants’ motion to dismiss for want of subject-matter jurisdiction.
Cf. Valentin v. Hosp. Bella Vista,
B.
The nub of plaintiffs’ first argument on appeal is that the district court erred in dismissing Counts 2, 3, 6, and 7 of the complaint by overlooking plaintiffs’ contention that the City entered an implied-in-fact contract to provide the 5% compounded COLA increase in conformity with the unratified CBAs. Plaintiffs assert that this implied-in-fact contract was consummated when the City accepted the benefits of plaintiffs’ work and allowed them to continue contributing a portion of their salaries toward the pension fund.
Cf. Marshall Contractors, Inc. v. Brown Univ.,
In evaluating whether a purported contract or property right is entitled to constitutional protection under the Takings Clause, Contract Clause, or Due Process Clause, this Court generally looks to state law as interpreted by the state’s highest court.
See Phillips v. Wash. Legal Found.,
C.
With respect to the claims based solely on the consent decree, Counts 1, 4, and 5, plaintiffs have offered no argument or authority — either in their brief or at oral argument — that supports reversal. That fact alone would justify affirmance under our long-standing precedent.
See Acevedo Lopez v. Police Dep’t of P.R.,
Moreover, even if the plaintiffs had mounted an adequate challenge to the district court’s order of dismissal, their arguments would be doomed in any event. Their claim is foreclosed by a textbook application of the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine.
See Rooker v. Fidelity Trust Co.,
The Rooker-Feldman doctrine prohibits federal district and circuit courts from reviewing state court judgments. Where a party did not actually present its federal claims in state court, Rooker-Feldman forecloses lower federal court jurisdiction over claims that are “inextricably intertwined” with the claims adjudicated in a state court. See Feldman,460 U.S. at 483 n. 16,103 S.Ct. 1303 . A federal claim is inextricably intertwined with the state-court claims “if the federal claim succeeds only to the extent that the state court wrongly decided the issues before it.” See Hill v. Town of Conway,193 F.3d 33 , 39 (1st Cir.1999).
Sheehan v. Marr,
In the present case, the gravamen of plaintiffs’ claim based on the consent decree is that the terms of the decree extended to police and firefighters retiring after January 1995 and entitled them to the 6% compounded COLA increase provided therein. This issue was squarely addressed when these parties were before the Rhode Island Supreme Court in
City of Providence v. Employee Retirement Board,
[T]he group of city employees who retired prior to December 18, 1991, and the nineteen city employees who retired effective December 18, 1991, were the only city retirees that could benefit from [the consent decree’s] pension grant provisions, and all members of that group continue to remain entitled to those benefits.
Id. at 1100 (emphasis added).
Any attempt to make out a constitutional violation under the Due Process Clause, Contract Clause, or Takings Clause would require plaintiffs to establish — at a minimum — some property or contract right stemming from the consent decree. Thus, it is plain that plaintiffs’ claims could only succeed to the extent the Rhode Island Supreme Court wrongly decided the question of the consent decree’s coverage. We therefore must decline jurisdiction, as plaintiffs’ claims represent an improper attempt to seek federal review of a final state court judgment.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed. Costs are assessed against plaintiffs. Fed. R.App. P. 39(a)(2).
Affirmed.
Notes
. As defined by City Ordinance § 17-181, Class B employees include "members of the fire department and police department of the City of Providence.”
. This group included a class of former police and firefighters which, in turn, included plaintiffs. They were represented in the state-court litigation and on appeal by their counsel in the present case.
. As explained more fully below, the Rooker-Feldman doctrine provides that federal courts, other than the Supreme Court, lack jurisdiction to directly review the decisions of state courts.
. The state court’s holding in
Mansolillo
was later affirmed by the Rhode Island Supreme Court in
City of Providence v. Employee Retirement Board,
. Defendants also rejoin with the argument that plaintiffs have forfeited any claim based on the CBAs by failing to designate in their notice of appeal the district court's September 1999 order granting summary judgment on those claims. We find, however, that the notice of appeal sufficiently apprised this Court and the defendants that plaintiffs were appealing the final judgment of the district court. "[I]t has been uniformly held that a notice of appeal that designates the final judgment encompasses not only that judgment, but also all earlier interlocutory orders that merge in the judgment.”
John's Insulation, Inc. v. L. Addison & Assocs., Inc.,
