Randolph S. RAINS, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CRITERION SYSTEMS, INC., a California corporation; Kaiser
Permanente Hospital Inc., a California
corporation; Anthon Freitas, and Paul
Fice, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 93-17168.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted March 13, 1995.
Decided March 26, 1996.
Leo F. Donahue and Christopher H. Whelan, Gold River, California, for plaintiff-appellant.
Fred A Schwartz, Rust, Armenis & Schwartz, Sacramento, California, for defendant-appellee Kaiser Permanente Inc.
Mark S. Spring, Diepenbrock, Wulff, Plant & Hannegan, Sacramento, California, for defendant-appellee Criterion Systems Inc.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California, No. CV-92-013-LKK GGH; Lawrence K. Karlton, District Judge, Presiding.
Before: FLETCHER, REINHARDT, and NOONAN, Jr., Circuit Judges.
REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:
This appeal raises the question whether a plaintiff may allege a violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964's policy against religious discrimination as part of a state law cause of action without converting his claim into a Title VII action or an action that depends on a substantial federal question. We hold that he may, and that in this case he did. We therefore conclude that the district court lacked jurisdiction. Accordingly, we vacate the district court's order granting summary judgment against the plaintiff and direct that court to remand the case to state court.
Since our opinion turns on federal question jurisdiction, not the merits of plaintiff's claims, we will provide an abbreviated version of the facts and allegations underlying this lawsuit. In 1989, Criterion Systems, a California-based medical equipment consulting firm, hired Randolph Rains as a hospital equipment-planner. In the summer of 1990, Anthon Freitas, the owner of Criterion Systems, placed Rains in charge of a number of projects in San Diego for a major client, Kaiser Permanente.
On October 30, 1990, Rains became involved in a discussion concerning religion with Paul Fice, the Kaiser employee responsible for monitoring Criterion's work on the San Diego projects. During the discussion, the district court concluded that "Fice proselytized and preached to plaintiff concerning Jesus Christ and the need to be saved." One week later, Fice called Freitas. The defendants contend that Fice informed Freitas that he had received a phone call from a female Kaiser employee whom he did not name. Fice allegedly stated that the female employee had complained that "Rains had made advances of a personal nature towards her." Criterion states that as a result of Rains' alleged behavior toward the female employee, Fice "indicated that he did not want Randolph Rains on the Kaiser-San Diego project any more. Fice indicated that if Rains was not removed from the Kaiser-San Diego account, CRITERION would lose the Kaiser-San Diego business as well as other Kaiser business in southern California." Freitas states in his declaration that it was Fice's phone call that led him to decide to terminate Rains' employment.1
Rains filed suit in California state court against Criterion Systems Inc., Kaiser Permanente, Freitas, and Fice. He alleged eight separate causes of action, only two of which are relevant here: (1) Freitas and Criterion committed the tort of wrongful termination in violation of public policy by terminating him "for refusing to adopt the said religious opinions of FICE." (2) Kaiser and Fice committed the tort of intentional interference with contractual relations by supplying Freitas with "false allegations." The case was removed to federal district court; the defendants moved for summary judgment on all counts; and the district court granted the motion. Rains appealed and raised several issues that we do not need to reach, because we determine that the district court lacked jurisdiction.
Rains did not contest the removal and did not challenge the district court's jurisdiction to hear his complaint until we ordered supplemental briefing on that issue. This court, however, must consider whether federal jurisdiction exists, even if no objection is made to removal, Harris v. Provident Life and Acc. Ins. Co.,
Once judgment has been entered in a case that was removed to federal court, the question a court of appeals must ask in determining whether jurisdiction was proper changes slightly. The issue becomes not whether the removal was proper, but whether the district court had jurisdiction at the time it issued its judgment. Id. at 705,
There are three possible grounds for federal question jurisdiction in this case. The first is that Rains asserted a federal (Title VII) claim in his complaint, i.e., that federal law creates the cause of action he asserted. The second is that under the artful pleading doctrine, one or more of Rains' state law claims should have been recharacterized as a federal claim. The third is that one or more of Rains' state law claims necessarily turned on the construction of a substantial, disputed federal question. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc. v. Thompson,
A. Stating a Title VII Claim
Rains' complaint states at the outset that it arises under "the laws of the United States (42 U.S.C. 2000(e)-2) [Title VII], the laws of the State of California, (Gov.Code § 12940 et seq.), the rules, regulations, and directives implementing said statutes and common law." While the reference to the laws of the United States and specifically to Title VII suggests that Rains might be asserting at least one federal cause of action, the actual causes of actions stated in the complaint all sound in state law.2 Moreover, during the course of the litigation, both the parties and the court consistently treated Rains' claims as state law claims. For example, the district court rejected defendants' assertion that plaintiff must actually prove a violation of Title VII or the FEHA to prevail on his claim for wrongful discharge in violation of public policy, noting that the state tort was a separate cause of action. There was also no inquiry as to whether Rains had exhausted his administrative remedies as is required before filing a Title VII claim.3
One of Rains' claims cites Title VII directly, the other refers to it indirectly. Rains' first claim is for wrongful termination in violation of public policy. In order to prevail on such a claim under California law, a plaintiff must prove as one element that a fundamental public policy exists that is "delineated in constitutional or statutory provisions...." Gantt v. Sentry Ins.,
If federal jurisdiction does not attach to Rains' wrongful termination action, it certainly does not attach to his tortious interference claim.4 Thus we focus on Rains' wrongful termination claim in our analysis. That the same facts could have been the basis for a Title VII claim does not make Rains' wrongful termination claim into a federal cause of action. Rains chose to bring a state claim rather than a Title VII claim, and was entitled to do so. See Pan American Petro. Corp. v. Superior Court,
While Rains named Title VII as one of several similar bases for determining the applicable public policy in his state law cause of action, he did not file a Title VII claim. Thus the defendants' first argument that Rains filed a federal claim, cannot succeed.
B. Artful Pleading
Under the artful pleading doctrine, a plaintiff may not avoid federal jurisdiction by "omitting from the complaint federal law essential to his claim, or by casting in state law terms a claim that can be made only under federal law." Olguin v. Inspiration Consol. Copper Co.,
Concluding that Rains' complaint was not artfully pleaded to avoid federal jurisdiction, however, does not end our analysis. As the Court noted in Caterpillar:
There does exist, however, an "independent corollary" to the well-pleaded complaint rule ..., known as the "complete pre-emption" doctrine. On occasion, the Court has concluded that the pre-emptive force of a statute is so "extraordinary" that it "converts an ordinary state common-law complaint into one stating a federal claim for purposes of the well-pleaded complaint rule." Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. [v. Taylor,
That independent corollary is not applicable here because Title VII does not completely preempt state law. Rather Title VII only preempts state law inconsistent with it. California Federal Sav. and Loan Ass'n v. Guerra,
In Utley v. Varian Associates, Inc.,
C. Substantial Federal Question
Even where, as here, state law creates the cause of action, and no federal law completely preempts it, federal jurisdiction may still lie if "it appears that some substantial, disputed question of federal law is a necessary element of one of the well-pleaded state claims[.]" Franchise Tax Bd. of State of Cal. v. Construction Laborers Vacation Trust for Southern California,
Here, Title VII is not a "necessary element" of the state law claim because state law independently espouses the same public policy established by Title VII. Although the complaint refers to Title VII as one basis for demonstrating that there is a public policy against employment discrimination on the basis of religious belief, the complaint also refers to the California Constitution and to the CFEHA, both of which prohibit employment discrimination on the basis of religion. Specifically, Art. I, § 8 of the California Constitution, on its face, explicitly prohibits such discrimination.8 As to the California anti-discrimination statute, we have previously held that "[t]here is no doubt that [the CFEHA] establishes a California public policy against religious discrimination in the workplace." See Cook v. Lindsay Olive Growers,
When a claim can be supported by alternative and independent theories--one of which is a state law theory and one of which is a federal law theory--federal question jurisdiction does not attach because federal law is not a necessary element of the claim. The Court decided that very issue in Christianson v. Colt Industries Operating Corp.,
Circuit courts applying Christianson have concluded that claims like Rains' do not give rise to federal question jurisdiction. In Mulcahey v. Columbia Organic Chemicals Co.,
Christianson teaches us that, if a claim is supported not only by a theory establishing federal subject matter jurisdiction but also by an alternative theory which would not establish such jurisdiction, then federal subject matter jurisdiction does not exist. Examination of the complaint in the instant case reveals that the negligence per se claim citing the federal environmental statute was only an alternative theory of liability under Plaintiffs' negligence claim contained in Count I. Even if Columbia Organic was found not to have violated any federal statute, the Plaintiffs might still be entitled to recover under an alternative theory of negligence. For example, paragraph twenty-seven of the complaint also alleges negligence in the violation of state and local environmental laws.
In Willy v. Coastal Corp.,
Rains' wrongful termination action, like that of the plaintiff in Willy, can be supported by an independent state theory as well as by a federal theory. In fact, Rains' claim that he was wrongfully terminated in violation of public policy is supported by three alternative theories--one for each of the three sources of law he cites to establish that his termination was in violation of public policy. Only one theory, that which invokes Title VII to establish the public policy, clearly rests on a federal theory. We need not consider the second theory, the one which relies on the CFEHA, an act that is interpreted in accordance with federal law,9 because the California Constitution also expressly prohibits discrimination in employment on the ground of religious beliefs. That provision, which is unquestionably wholly independent of federal law, makes that prohibition an explicit part of the public policy of the state. Since the provisions of the California Constitution that Rains cites in his complaint do not depend in any way on Title VII, it is obvious that Title VII is not necessary to Rains' wrongful termination claim. Thus, under Christianson, federal jurisdiction does not lie.10
To conclude otherwise, would make it difficult, if not impossible, to bring an action for wrongful termination in violation of public policy in California state courts without being subject to removal to federal court whenever a state policy is similar to a federal policy. Under defendants' theory of federal jurisdiction, if the plaintiff named the federal policy in his state cause of action as Rains did, the defendant would automatically be able to remove the suit to federal court. Even if the plaintiff did not name the federal policy, the defendant could invoke the artful pleading doctrine, which provides that courts may recharacterize an artfully pleaded complaint as though it had been well pleaded. See Gully v. First Nat. Bank,
We conclude that Rains did not assert a federal cause of action and that neither of his two state causes of action should be recharacterized as a federal claim under the well pleaded complaint rule. We further hold that even though Rains' action is supported by a federal theory, there is no substantial federal question because his claim is also supported by an independent state theory. Accordingly, we vacate for lack of jurisdiction the district court's order granting summary judgment to the defendants and remand Rains' complaint to that court with instructions that it be remanded to state court.
Vacated and Remanded
Notes
Fice disputes that he actually requested Rains' removal
Rains labeled one cause of action, Wrongful Termination Against Public Policy, a cause of action that exists under California law but not under federal law. He labeled his other cause of action, Intentional Interference with Contractual Relations, which is also a state cause of action and not a cause of action that may be brought under Title VII. The label that a plaintiff places on his pleadings, however, does not determine the nature of his cause of action. See Johnson v. United States,
In its prayer for relief, the complaint seeks attorneys' fees and pre-judgment interest under both federal and state law. At oral argument, the attorney for Rains said the reference to federal law in the prayer for relief was standard boiler plate that he inadvertently forgot to remove in preparing the complaint. While this may be true, we do not rely on counsel's representation. However, we do not find the attorneys' fee and pre-judgment interest requests determinative. It is the nature of the cause of action that is controlling
The wrongful termination claim cites Title VII directly, while the tortious interference claim does not. Moreover, wrongful termination may provide a basis for recovery under Title VII, if the termination is unlawful under the statute, while tortious interference with contractual relations does not. Federal law is not part of the state tort of interference with contractual relations
See also Franchise Tax Bd. of State of Cal. v. Construction Laborers Vacation Trust for Southern California,
Conclusions by courts to which a claim is removed that state claims are actually federal in character have generally been confined to instances in which the state law claim was preempted by the federal one. See Caterpillar Inc. v. Williams,
For reasons we explain, see infra pages 346-47, we need not consider whether or under what circumstances reliance on a state statute that incorporates or is interpreted in accordance with federal law is sufficient to avoid federal jurisdiction. However, we note that in Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc. v. Thompson,
Rains' complaint cites Art. I, § 8, and Art. I, § 2. Art. 1, § 8 says in pertinent part:
A person may not be disqualified from entering or pursuing a business, profession, vocation, or employment because of sex, race, creed, color, or national or ethnic origin (emphasis added).
Art. I, § 2 says in pertinent part:
Every person may freely speak, write and publish his or her sentiments on all subjects, being responsible for abuse of this right.
See Clark v. Claremont University Center and Graduate School,
The fact that Title VII creates a private right of action does not alter the analysis. In Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc. v. Thompson,
