Case Information
*1 Before EDMONDSON, Circuit Judge, and CLARK and WELLFORD [*] , Senior Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
Plaintiffs-Appellants appeal from the district court's order of dismissal and from the district court's denial of Plaintiffs' motion to vacate, alter, or amend the order of dismissal. Because the district court erred in abstaining in this case, we are inclined to vacate and remand. But, because uncertainty exists about whether a cause of action exists under state law, we certify a question to the Florida Supreme Court.
I.
Plaintiff Walter Stone, a natural guardian of S.P.S., and Plaintiff S.P.S., a minor, filed this diversity action against Defendants Georgene Wall, Gina Wall Masterson, and Brock Green seeking to recover damages, costs, and attorneys' fees in connection with Stone's recovery of custody of the minor child S.P.S.
Plaintiffs are residents of Mississippi. Stone is the parent and natural guardian of S.P.S., his *2 minor daughter. He was formerly married to the mother of S.P.S., Gwen Lindgren. Defendant Green is a resident of Virginia and is an attorney for Wall and Masterson. Wall is a resident of Florida and is the mother of Lindgren (grandmother of S.P.S.). Masterson is a resident of Colorado and is Wall's daughter (aunt of S.P.S.).
In 1987 Stone and Lindgren were divorced in Virginia. In 1994, Stone exercised his visitation rights with S.P.S. at his home in Mississippi. Stone says that he then was informed by his ex-wife, Lindgren, that she had been diagnosed with brain cancer and was not expected to live more than six months. At Lindgren's request, Stone allowed the child to return to Virginia and to stay with Lindgren, for Lindgren's final days. Plaintiffs further allege that, when Stone returned with S.P.S. to Virginia, Wall asked about Stone's plans for the custody of S.P.S. upon the death of Lindgren. Wall said that she desired that custody of the child be given to Masterson. Stone informed Wall that he would take full custody of S.P.S. and live in Mississippi.
Plaintiffs allege that Defendants Green, Wall, and Masterson acted with intent to interfere with Stone's custody of S.P.S. In addition, Defendants conspired, in Florida, to remove S.P.S. from Virginia to Colorado without the consent of Stone, who was the parent and natural guardian of S.P.S. According to the Complaint, Defendants (1) removed the child from Virginia before the death of her mother; (2) refused to respond to Stone's inquiries about the whereabouts of his child; (3) executed a guardianship/entrustment agreement without the knowledge and consent of Stone; (4) concealed the guardianship agreement from Stone; (5) continued to conceal the child, who Stone located only by his own efforts; and (6) refused to return the child to Stone despite repeated requests and despite Stone's status as the natural guardian legally entitled to custody of the child. [1] *3 The district court concluded that Plaintiffs failed to state a claim (under Fed. R. Civ. Proc.
12[b][6]) and that, even if a claim were stated, other grounds warranted abstention from the exercise of diversity jurisdiction. Plaintiffs filed a motion to vacate, alter, or amend the order of dismissal; the motion was denied.
II.
A. Diversity Jurisdiction and Abstention.
The Supreme Court in
Ankenbrandt v. Richards,
Plaintiffs claim that this lawsuit does not seek a decree within the Ankenbrandt exception, but merely charges Defendants with a tort. Also, Plaintiffs stress that they do not have (and have never had) a marital or parental relationship with Defendants and contend that this case involves no complicated examination of custody law. In addition, Plaintiffs point out that the abstention issue was not raised by the Defendants, but by the district court.
We reverse a district court's decision to abstain when there is an abuse of discretion.
Rindley
v. Gallagher,
In considering this case, the district court acknowledged that Plaintiffs did not fall squarely within the domestic relations exception, but found that—because the resolution of Plaintiffs' claim for damages would require an examination of the facts and circumstances of the domestic relations between the parties—a sufficient basis for abstention existed. Also, the district court stressed that, even if Plaintiffs could state a claim, abstention would be appropriate because of (1) the need to address custody issues; (2) the federal judiciary's lack of experience in this legal area; and (3) the disruption to the balancing of state policy with respect to custody law.
The exception enunciated in Ingram is to be read narrowly and does not—at least, ordinarily—include third parties in its scope. This case does not involve inquiry into the existence of a disputed parent-child relationship; nor is it a dispute between parents over a child. Here a grandmother, aunt, and their lawyer allegedly conspired to abduct, and then abducted, a minor child who had identifiable natural parents. Defendants seemingly had no legal claim of custody *5 whatsoever: they had no court decree giving them custody of the child. [2] And, the record reflects that Defendants have never specifically argued that they had lawful custody. Rather than seeking custody through state courts, they just took the minor child.
We conclude that this case is just a tort suit for money damages. The suit does not fit our domestic-relations-exception precedents. And we are not inclined to extend that exception to include these circumstances. Because abstention was inappropriate, [3] we now address whether, under Florida law, a cause of action exists for the alleged tort.
B. Which State Law to Apply/the Rule 59 Motion.
On appeal, Plaintiffs claim that a cause of action exists under both Virginia and Florida law. The Complaint alleged tortious acts within Florida. After the Complaint had already been dismissed, Plaintiffs contended in their Rule 59 motion that, because the action accrued in Virginia, Virginia law should apply. Plaintiffs also state that, even if Florida law applies, both Virginia and Florida are common law states and recognize the common law claims of the father and minor child.
Because this case is brought into federal court based on diversity of the citizenship of the
parties, the substantive law of the forum must be applied (including its rules applicable to
choice-of-law problems).
LaFarge Corp. v. Travelers Indem. Co.,
118 F.3d 1511, 1515 (11th
Cir.1997). Under Florida law, courts are required to take judicial notice of the common law and
*6
statutes of all sister states, however, "such judicial notice can only be taken after one party has raised
the issue of foreign law through pleadings, thereby providing the other party with reasonable notice."
Schubot v. Schubot,
The First Amended Complaint (the complaint which was the subject of the district court's dismissal) alleges the following:
At times material ... [Defendant Masterson] ... committed tortious acts or engaged in activity within the State of Florida ... which is the basis of the cause of action herein.
....
At all times material ... [Defendant Green] committed tortious acts ... within the State of Florida ... [with Defendants Wall and/or Masterson], who were present in Dade County, Florida ... which is the basis of the cause of action herein.
Although the Complaint specifically alleged tortious acts in Florida, Plaintiffs mentioned Virginia in the following statements: (1) Plaintiff Stone and Lindgren were divorced in Virginia; (2) Plaintiff Stone had custody rights to S.P.S. under Virginia law; (3) Lindgren lived in Virginia; and (4) S.P.S. was taken from Virginia to Colorado. At no point, however, did the Complaint allege that Virginia law is the applicable law, or set out what Virginia law is, or hint that Virginia law is different from Florida law in some material respect.
When deciding whether to dismiss the Complaint, the district court—given the pleadings then before it—did not err in concluding that it would judge the Complaint under Florida law. And it was no abuse of discretion for the district court later to deny the Rule 59(e) motion after the case's dismissal. The Rule 59 motion claimed, among other things, that the choice of law to be applied to this cause of action was Virginia law. But, as far as the record shows, possible application of Virginia law was not specifically raised until the Rule 59 motion was filed. At all pertinent times *7 before the order of dismissal, the district court was asked to look at Florida law. Therefore, when it was time to raise a dispute about choice of laws, there seems to have been no controversy about what state's law applied: Florida law. The purpose of a Rule 59(e) motion is not to raise an argument that was previously available, but not pressed. So, the question properly presented to the district court, and now to us, is whether a cause of action exists under Florida law.
C. Existence of a Claim Under Florida Law.
The test for sufficiency of the complaint was set out by the Supreme Court in Conley v. Gibson:
In appraising the sufficiency of the complaint we follow ... the accepted rule that a complaint should not be dismissed for failure to state a claim unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.
Plaintiffs claim that this case presents an issue of first impression and that their cause of
action is based on the common law action for interference with a parent/child relationship or
abduction. They rely on two cases and the Restatement of Torts, Second, § 700 to establish this
claim; see
Pickle v. Page,
252 N.Y. 474, 169 N.E. 650 (1930);
Armstrong v. McDonald,
39
Ala.App. 485,
No Supreme Court of Florida decision squarely addresses whether a cause of action exists in the circumstances presented by this case. So, we certify the following question to the Supreme *8 Court of Florida for resolution: [4]
WHETHER A CAUSE OF ACTION EXISTS FOR INTERFERENCE WITH THE PARENT/CHILD RELATIONSHIP WHERE A THIRD PARTY (THAT IS, A NONPARENT WHO HAS NO CUSTODY RIGHTS OVER THAT CHILD) INTENTIONALLY ABDUCTS A MINOR CHILD FROM A PARENT LEGALLY ENTITLED TO THE CHILD'S CUSTODY.
Our phrasing of this question is intended in no way to limit the Supreme Court of Florida in its inquiry and consideration of the various problems and issues posed by the entire case as the Supreme Court perceives them to be. To assist its determination, the entire record and the briefs of the parties shall be transmitted to the Supreme Court of Florida.
QUESTION CERTIFIED.
Notes
[*] Honorable Harry W. Wellford, Senior U.S. Circuit Judge for the Sixth Circuit, sitting by designation.
[1] Stone hired a private detective to determine S.P.S.'s location; and then he took physical custody of his child with the knowledge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Commonwealth Attorney in Virginia, and the Cherry Hills, Colorado Police Department.
[2] During oral argument, Defendants' lawyer stated that a guardianship/entrustment agreement had been signed by Lindgren before her death (transferring guardianship of S.P.S. to her sister). The lawyer said that he was not addressing the "legal efficacy" of this agreement on appeal.
[3] Abstention was also incorrect because the court abstained and then decided the case on its
merits. If a court states that abstention is appropriate in a case, it should not then adjudicate the
case on its merits by granting a Rule 12(b)(6) motion. The order of dismissal here defeats the
purpose of the abstention doctrine, which is to abstain from reaching the merits of certain claims.
See O'Hair v. White,
[4] We are aware that Defendants objected to personal jurisdiction and venue. And, these
defenses were not addressed by the district court. But, we have looked at the record and are
comfortable that for at least one Defendant, Georgene Wall—a Florida resident—personal
jurisdiction and venue are appropriate. So, the question of whether the Complaint states a claim
should be outcome-determinative, at least for this Defendant. Jurisdiction may also be proper for
the other Defendants.
See Wilcox v. Stout,
