Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
Faced with disciplinary proceedings in Florida, T. Carlton Richardson petitioned the Supreme Court of Florida for permission to resign, with leave to reapply in three years. The court granted the petition and deemed Richardson to have resigned.
The District of Columbia Court of Appeals thereupon temporarily suspended Richardson from the practice of law in the District, to enable the D.C. Board on Professional Responsibility to conduct reciprocal disciplinary proceedings against him. See In the Matter of T. Carlton Richardson, No. 95-BG-639 (D.C.App.1995). Richardson filed suit in federal district court alleging that his temporary suspension, and the D.C. Bar rule that permits it, see D.C App.Rule XI § 11(d), unconstitutionally deprive him, without due process, of his liberty interest in practicing law.
The district court dismissed Richardson’s claim against his suspension for want of jurisdiction under
District of Columbia v. Feldman,
Richardson’s complaint to the district court about the D.C. Court of Appeals’s order falls squarely within the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine, under which federal district courts lack jurisdiction to review judicial decisions by state and District of Columbia courts. See
Feldman; Rooker v. Fidelity Trust Co.,
Richardson does not deny that the order effecting his suspension was a judicial decision. Rather, he says that the order is merely interlocutory, and that Rooker-Feldman’s bar against district court jurisdiction was meant to apply only coextensively with the set of “final judgments or decrees rendered by the highest court of a State” reviewable by the Supreme Court under § 1257.
The District argues that the order of the D.C. Court of Appeals temporarily suspending Richardson is clearly a “final” decision for purposes of § 1257, much as the Georgia Supreme Court’s reversal of the lower court’s denial of a temporary injunction was final in
Construction Laborers v. Curry,
Even if the suspension were not final for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1257, the district court would have lacked jurisdiction. We cannot imagine how one could reconcile Feld-man ’s reasoning, based as it is on allowing state courts to arrive at decisions free from collateral federal attack, with the idea that the district court would be free to review Richardson’s suspension so long as the decision was interlocutory. Indeed, other circuits have persuasively concluded that the boundaries of § 1257’s grant of Supreme Court jurisdiction do not prevent the application of Rooker-Feldman to the final decisions of lower state courts, or to state courts’ interlocutory decisions. As the Fifth Circuit explained, discussing Feldman,
[w]e hold no warrant to review even final judgments of state courts, let alone those which may never take final effect because they remain subject to revision in the state appellate system.
Hale v. Harney,
Despite
Rooker-Feldman,
a federal district court may sometimes have jurisdiction to hear a challenge to a general bar rule promulgated by a state or District of Columbia court in a nonjudicial capacity.
Feldman,
Upon receipt of a certified copy of an order demonstrating that an attorney ... has been suspended ... by a disciplining court outside the District of Columbia ..., the [D.C.] Court [of Appeals] shall forthwith enter an order suspending the attorney from the practice of law in the District of Columbia pending final disposition of any reciprocal disciplinary proceeding, and directing the attorney to show cause within thirty days from the date of the order why the identical discipline should not be imposed.
The principle allowing federal district court adjudication of attacks on bar
rules
would, of course, thoroughly undermine
Rooker-Feldman
if it encompassed claims that are “inextricably intertwined” with the
judicial actions
immunized under
Rooker-Feldman. Feldman,
Richardson’s attacks on § ll(d)’s constitutionality, however, are not merely intertwined with his attack on the decision to suspend him but are one and the same— namely, that application of § ll(d)’s proce
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dures (or lack of procedures) deprives him of his liberty interest in the practice of law without due process. His attack on the rule cannot be contemplated without his attack on his suspension. Absent any actual or imminent application to Richardson, it is doubtful that he would have standing to secure adjudication of his general due process claim. See
Levin v. Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission of the Supreme Court of Ill.,
The district court therefore lacked jurisdiction over Richardson’s claims. Richardson is entitled to have his claims heard through the course of proceedings in the District of Columbia courts and, if unsatisfied, through petition for certiorari under 28 U.S.C. § 1257. The decision of the district court to dismiss his claims is therefore
Affirmed.
