OPINION
Plaintiff-Appellant Richard Pieper (“Pieper”) was ordered by an Ohio state court to arbitrate the disputes that arose between him and one of the defendants-appellees, Gerald Hambly. Before arbitration began, however, Pieper brought a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, claiming that the dispute was not properly subject to arbitration and seeking injunctive relief that would bar the defendant-appellee American Arbitration Association from proceeding with arbitration hearings.
The district judge granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss, holding that the district court was without jurisdiction to grant the plaintiff relief under the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, which generally prohibits federal courts from reviewing state-court judgments. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM that judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
On December 14, 1999, Pieper brought an action against Gerald Hambly and several other individuals in Ohio state court. Pieper, Hambly, and others had agreed to form a home-construction business. Pieper was supposed to have a one-third interest in the corporation, All Points Investment, Inc. However, according to the state-court complaint, the defendants improperly assumed control of the corporation in violation of Ohio law. The complaint also alleged that the defendants withdrew funds and assets from the corporation without approval of the board of directors and for their personal use, fraudulently purchased real estate, trespassed on the plaintiffs property, and eventually sold the corporation without a vote of the board of directors. The complaint did not raise any federal issue.
Hambly filed a motion to stay the state-court proceedings pending arbitration and to compel arbitration in January of 2000. The state trial court granted Hambly’s motion on February 16, 2000. Pieper objected, and the state court again directed arbitration over Pieper’s protest. At no point did Pieper appeal this determination to an Ohio appellate court, even though such an order is appealable under Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2711.02.
Hambly filed a complaint in arbitration, accusing Pieper of embezzlement, accounting negligence, fraud, and malpractice, among other claims. The arbitration hearing was originally scheduled for March of *460 2001, but was pushed back to April 19, 2001, by request of Pieper’s counsel. The day before the arbitration was to begin, on April 18, 2001, Pieper filed this lawsuit in federal court, which sought a declaration that the disputes between Pieper and Hambly were not properly subject to arbitration. Hambly was not initially a defendant in the federal lawsuit; Pieper sued the American Arbitration Association and the arbitrator, scheduled for the case. Hambly moved to intervene, and the motion was granted. Hambly then filed a motion to dismiss, alleging that the Rook-er-Feldman doctrine prohibited federal-court jurisdiction, and he also moved for sanctions. The district court granted the motion to dismiss but denied the motion for sanctions.
Pieper has appealed to this court. Hambly has filed a motion for sanctions under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 38(a), alleging that Pieper has filed a frivolous appeal.
II. ANALYSIS
A. The Rooker-Feldman Question
The principal issue in this case is whether the district court properly dismissed the case because of a lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. This court reviews de novo a district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss on the basis of subject-matter jurisdiction.
Tropf v. Fidelity Nat’l Title Ins. Co.,
The
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine is derived from two Supreme Court cases which establish that “lower federal courts lack subject matter jurisdiction to engage in appellate review of state court proceedings.”
Peterson Novelties, Inc. v. City of Berkley,
The
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine bars relitigation of claims raised in state-court proceedings as well as claims that are “inextricably intertwined” with the claims asserted there.
See Catz v. Chalker,
At first glance, it seems indisputable that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine applies here. Pieper has several federal claims; he alleges that the state court’s order compelling arbitration violates his due process rights, his right to jury trial, *461 and his right to confront witnesses. All of these claims, however, are attacks on the state court’s order compelling arbitration (though we note that none of them was actually raised in the state-court litigation). Since it would be impossible to grant Pieper relief on any of these claims without calling into question the state court’s arbitration decision, Pieper’s federal claims are inextricably intertwined within the meaning of Rooker-Feldman’s bar. 1 Having reached this conclusion, we would normally dismiss Pieper’s case immediately-
This case, however, has a twist. Pieper implicitly argues that Rooker-Feldman’s bar should not apply here because the state-court order requiring arbitration was not reviewable by the Supreme Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1257, because it was not a final judgment or a decision by the highest court of a State. Such a claim has not been addressed by our circuit before. To understand this argument, one must start by looking at the text of 28 U.S.C. § 1257, which is the root of Rooker-Feldman doctrine and which reads, in part, as follows:
Final judgments or decrees rendered by the highest court of a State in which a decision could be had, may be reviewed by the Supreme Court by writ of eertio-rari [when they raise a federal question] ....
On its face, this statute simply grants to the Supreme Court the ability to consider appeals from the highest court of each state. In the
Rooker
and
Feldman
cases, however, the Supreme Court drew an important negative inference from this statutory language. This negative inference is that because the Supreme Court was specifically given jurisdiction to hear appeals from final judgments of the highest state courts, lower federal courts do not have jurisdiction to review such judgments.
See Feldman,
A close reading of § 1257 reveals that the first sentence gives the Supreme Court power to review only a certain subset of state-court decisions, namely final judgments or decrees that are rendered by the highest court of a State in which a decision could be had. In essence, Pieper argues that Rooker-Feldman does not apply to the state-court order compelling arbitration because it was not a final judgment and also was not rendered by the highest state court. 2 The basic argument *462 under this view is that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine is only necessary to effectuate the negative implication of 28 U.S.C. § 1257 — it is needed only to prevent lower federal courts from considering cases that the Supreme Court is permitted to hear under the statute. When the state-court judgment-is not final or is not rendered by the highest state court, Supreme Court review under § 1257 is impossible. This, according to the argument, makes Rooker-Feldman inapplicable. 3
We reject this argument and join with the majority of. circuits that have concluded that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine does apply to interlocutory orders and to orders of lower state courts.
First, like other federal courts of appeals, we find it difficult to believe that lower federal courts are prohibited from reviewing final state-court judgments, but yet are somehow permitted to review im terlocutory decisions. The D.C. Circuit put this point forcefully:
We cannot imagine how one could reconcile Feldman’s reasoning, based as it is on allowing state courts to arrive at decisions free from collateral federal af-tack, with the idea that the district court would be free to review Richardson’s suspension so long as the decision was interlocutory.
Richardson v. District of Columbia Court of Appeals,
For similar reasons, we do not believe that lower federal courts should be prohibited from reviewing judgments of a state’s highest court but should somehow have free rein to review the judgments of lower state courts. The Supreme Court has repeatedly used language suggesting that Rooker-Feldman's bar applies to judgments of lower state courts as well as to those of a state’s highest court.
See Feldman,
Ultimately, we conclude that this argument depends upon a faulty premise. It presumes that the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine exists only to prevent lower federal courts from considering cases that the Supreme Court could hear under § 1257 and that the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine does not apply when the underlying state-court judgment is not amenable to review in the Supreme Court. Under this view, the Supreme Court’s lack of jurisdiction essentially “creates” jurisdiction for the lower federal courts. The Supreme Court’s lack of jurisdiction, however, seems to us actually to be a stronger argument
against
lower federal-court jurisdiction than in favor of it.
See
Charles AlaN Wright, Arthur R. Miller, Edward H. Cooper, 18B Federal Practice and Prooedure § 4469.1,
*464
at 146-47 (2d ed. 2002 & Supp.2003) (“Of course the prospect that there may never be Supreme Court jurisdiction may support the further conclusion that district court subject-matter jurisdiction is even less appropriate.”);
cf. Doe & Assocs. Law Offices v. Napolitano,
Necessity also seems to compel the conclusion that the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine applies here. The only federal circuit to have considered specifically the applicability of the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine to an interlocutory order to stay litigation pending arbitration concluded that the doctrine applies to such orders.
See Brown & Root,
Our conclusion that we lack jurisdiction in this case does disturb us, however, in one respect. Under Ohio law, interlocutory orders cannot form the basis for claims of res judicata or collateral estop-pel.
See State ex rel. Comm. for the Referendum of City of Lorain Ordinance No. 77-01 v. Lorain Cty. Bd. of Elections,
B. Sanctions on Appeal
Appellee Hambly has filed against Pieper a motion for sanctions for filing a frivolous appeal under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 38. “Rule 38 allows a court of appeals to award appellees ‘just damages and single or double costs’ in a frivolous appeal.”
Barney v. Holzer Clinic, Ltd.,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED, The defendant’s motion for sanctions under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 38 is DENIED.
Notes
. We note that Pieper's claim is that the state court’s judgment actively caused him injury (not that the judgment merely failed to redress a preexisting injury). This suggests that, of the related doctrines of res judicata and
Rooker-Feldman,
it is the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine that applies here.
See Hutcherson v. Lauderdale County, Tenn.,
. It is clear that the state trial court’s order granting a motion to stay state-court litigation and compel arbitration was not rendered by the highest court of the state in which a decision could be had. In fact, the state trial court’s order was immediately appealable under Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2711.02. The fact that Pieper chose not to appeal the order does not change that analysis.
It also appears that the order staying litigation and compelling arbitration was not a final judgment or decree within the meaning of § 1257. The Supreme Court has explained that "[t]o be reviewable by this Court, a state-court judgment must be final 'in two senses: it must be subject to no further review or correction in any other state tribunal; it must also be final as an effective determination of the litigation and not of merely interlocutory or intermediate steps therein. It must be the final word of a final court.’ ”
Jefferson v. City of Tarrant, Ala.,
. Of course, § 1257 also only permits review of final state-court decisions that involve a federal question. Since Pieper's state-court complaint did not raise a federal question— the constitutional issues were raised only in the federal lawsuit — Pieper could argue that the lack of federal questions in the state-court lawsuit is another reason why Rooker-Feld-man is inapplicable here, because the lack of a federal issue provides another reason why the Supreme Court could never have reviewed the state-court case under § 1257.
The Supreme Court, however, has already rejected this argument, and so must we as well.
See Feldman,
. Commentators have noted the split. See Jean R. Stemlight, Forum Shopping for Arbitration Decisions: Federal Courts’ Use of Anti-suit Injunctions Against State Courts, 147 U. PA. L. REV. 91, 142 (1998) (noting that "it is not entirely clear whether the Rooker-Feld-man doctrine applies only to final judgments, or also to interlocutory rulings”); 18 Moore’s Federal Practice § 133.30[3][b], at 133-24 (3d ed.2000) (noting that "[s]ome circuits have held that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, unlike preclusion, does not depend on the existence of a final state court judgment on the merits, but also applies to interlocutory decisions”).
Moore’s Federal Practice suggests that this circuit has implied that the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine applies only to final judgments.
See
18 Moore’s Federal Practice § 133.30[3][b], at 133-24 n. 20 (3d ed.2000) (citing
United States v. Owens,
. In fact, a natural reading of 28 U.S.C. § 1257 suggests that no federal court (neither inferior nor Supreme) has jurisdiction over appeals from non-final state-court orders or from orders and decisions of lower state courts. Such a reading supports our conclusion that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine is appropriately applied to interlocutory orders and judgments of lower state courts.
