Fоrd Motor Company appeals from the United States District Court’s determination that it improperly terminated its dealer franchise agreement with Shamrock Motors, Inc. The case had been removed to the district court from the State of Montana District Court for thе Second Judicial District, Silver Bow County. However, because the state court proceeding was an appellate review of an administrative proceeding, the district court did not have jurisdiction. Therefore, we vacate and remand.
BACKGROUND
Ford sought to terminаte the automobile dealer franchise agreement which it had with Shamrock because the owners of Shamrock had purported to transfer control of its business to another person, without obtaining Ford’s consent. The franchise agreement provided that Shamrock’s shareholders were to be Patrick E. Lyons and Charles R. Canty and that Lyons was to have full managerial control over the business. It also provided that:
The Dealer [Shamrock] shall give the Company [Ford] required notice of any proposed change in said ownership or management authority____ No such change ... and no assignment of this agreement or of any right or interest herein, shall be effective against the company unless and until embodied in an agreement. ... The Company shall not unreasonably withhold its consent to any such change.
The agreement went on to provide that:
The following represent events which are substantially within the control of the Dealer and over which the Company has no control and which are so contrary to the intent and purpose of this Agreement as to warrant its termination or nonrenewal:
(1) Any transfеr or attempt to transfer by the Dealer of any interest in, or right, privilege, or obligation under this Agreement ... without the Company’s prior written consent.
Despite these provisions, the corporation’s owners did transfer eighty percent of their interest in Shamrock to another person without even informing Ford, much less obtaining its consent. Ford then sought to terminate the agreement and gave the notice of intent to do so which is required by Montana law. See Mont.Code Ann. § 61-4-205(3).
Shamrock objected to the termination, and an administrative proceeding was commenced by the State of Montana Department of Justice Motor Vehicle Division. See Mont. Code § 61-4-206. The department held in favor of Ford, and, pursuant to the Montana Administrative Procedure Act, Shamrock sought review in the State of Montana District Court for the Montana Sеcond Judicial District, Silver Bow County. See Mont.Code Ann. §§ 2-4-701 — 2—4—711, 61-4-206(8).
Ford then removed the review action to the United States District Court on the basis of diversity of citizenship. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1441(a), 1332. That court reversed the decision of the Montana Department of Justice and rendered judgment in favor of Shamrock. This apрeal ensued.
DISCUSSION
At the threshold, we observed a jurisdictional difficulty, that is, did the district court have subject matter jurisdiction to review the decision of the Montana Department of Justice? We, therefore, raised the issue sua sponte as we were required to do.
See WMX Technologies, Inc. v. Miller,
Review of state administrative decisions by the Montana state courts is in the
*198
nature of appellate review rather than trial or de novo review. That review is “without a jury” and is “confined to the record.”
See
Mont-Code Ann. § 2-4-704(1). Moreover, the reviewing court is not to substitute its judgment regarding the “weight of the evidence” for that of the administrative agency and, essentially, may only reverse if the agency’s determination was clearly errоneous, an error of law, or “arbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of discretion or clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion.” Mont.Code Ann. § 2-4-704(2);
see Thornton v. Commissioner,
While we have not had occasion to confront the precise issue subtended by the Montana statutory review scheme, we have alluded to that issue.
See Shell Oil Co. v. Train,
In doing so, we need not penetrate some trackless forest because the Supreme Court, and other circuits, have blazed the trail for us. In
Chicago, R.I. & P.R. Co. v. Stude,
The petitioner, after giving notice of appeal ... could not perfect that appeal to any court but the court which the statute of Iowa directed, which was the District Court of that State for the County of Pot-tawattamie. The United States District Court for the Sоuthern District of Iowa does not sit to review on appeal action taken administratively or judicially in a state proceeding. A state “legislature may not make a federal district court, a court of original jurisdiction, into an appellate tribunal or otherwise expand its jurisdiction. ...”
Id.
at 581,
However, the removed action was one in which the state court was authorized to conduct de novo review, and, the Court suggested, removal would have been proper had the removing party truly been the defendant.
See id.
at 578-80,
The Court returned to that theme in
Horton v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
The courts of appeals that have considered the point have applied that framework, and when review of an administrative decision was sought, they have analyzed the type of review provided for by the state in question. The Seventh Circuit has trenchantly summed up the law in this area:
[I]n determining whether a state action seeking judicial review of a state administrative agency’s decision is removable, the focus must be upon the character of the state рroceeding and upon the nature of the review conducted by the state court. If the state administrative review process provides for a trial de novo, removal of the action to federal court does not require the district court to perform аn appellate function that is inconsistent with the character of a court of original jurisdiction. Under those circumstances, the state proceeding can be termed a “civil action.” If, however, the state administrative review process requires the stаte court to proceed on the basis of a more deferential review of the state agency’s findings and determinations, removal of the action to federal court would require the district court to perform an appellate role with respect to the decision of the state administrative agency. The district court would not be performing a function that could be described as a “civil action” within its original jurisdiction and, accordingly, the requirements of 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a) would not be fulfilled.
International College of Surgeons v. City of Chicago,
Other circuits have reached the same conclusion. Thus, when faced with “a review procedure under which factual findings are conclusive unless found to be fraudulent, arbitrary or capricious or so grossly erroneous as to imply bad faith,” the Fourth Circuit said that could not “be fairly characterized as a
de novo
trial.”
Fairfax County Redev. & Housing Auth. v. W.M. Schlosser Co., Inc.,
We agree with the other circuits. Appellate administrative review is vеry little like a civil action in the usual sense. Furthermore, the prospect of a federal court sitting as an appellate court over state administrative proceedings is rather jarring and should not be quickly embraced as a matter of policy. That is not to say that Congress could not place federal district courts in the position of reviewing state administrative or court decisions in certain instances. But even when Congress has done so for important reasons of federalism, the unique problems thereby creatеd and the unique procedures we have had to devise to deal with those problems militate against considering those to be civil actions in the usual sense.
See, e.g., RTC v. Bayside Developers,
When these principles are applied to this case, it becomes abundantly clear that the district court erred when it reversed the decision of the Montana Department of Justice. The Montana administrative review procedure is clearly of an appellate nature; it is about as far from de novo trial review as one could imagine. In a sense, thе district court implicitly recognized that when it issued its decision. It did not simply issue a judgment in favor of Shamrock. What it did, instead, was order that “the final decision of the Department of Justice is, accordingly, REVERSED.” In so doing, the district court acted as an appellate tribunal and exсeeded its jurisdiction.
CONCLUSION
When a state provides for administrative agency review of an appellate nature, rather than administrative review of a de novo nature, federal district courts have neither original jurisdiction nor removal jurisdiction over the review proceedings.
Under Montana law, administrative review of Montana Department of Justice Motor Vehicle Division decisions is appellate in nature. Therefore, the district court should not have assumed jurisdiction, but should have, instead, remanded the removed action to the state court. We, therefore, vacate the judgment and remand to the district court for further remand by it to the state court.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. It appears that certiorari was granted because the administrative review claim was mixed with federal law claims. See -U.S. -,
