This case is on remand from the Supreme Court. In
Warmus v. Melahn,
Warmus filed the instant suit against Me-lahn, the former director of the MDI, and two of his subordinates (collectively referred to аs “the officials”), alleging that they conspired to force AFSLIC into rehabilitation and drive Warmus out of the insurance business. We held that abstention was proper because the action “might well have the practical effect of undermining the validity and integrity of the state-court rehabilitation proceedings.”
The Supreme Court, — U.S. at-,
*568 In this case, in light of the Supreme Court’s remand order, we ordered supplemental briefing and hеard oral argument on the effect of Quackenbush on Warmus’s section 1983 damages action. Relying on Amer-son and Fair Assessment, the officials argue that Quackenbush does not preclude the dismissal of Warmus’s action. In Amerson, this court affirmed the district court’s dismissal on abstention principles of a plaintiffs claims for equitable and monetary relief in a section 1983 action arising from termination of her parental rights. We explained:
Although the holding of Quackenbush precludes the dismissal on abstention principles of a damages action, ... a close reading of the case indicates that a plaintiffs incidental insertion of a general claim for damages will not suffice to prevent the dismissal of a § 1983 case where the damages sought cannot be awarded without first declaring unconstitutional a state court judgment on a matter committed to the states.
Id. at 513 (internal quotation omitted). In Amerson, “we reeognize[d] that the abstention holding of Fair Assessment is very limited.” Id. However, we believed that the case was “very analogous to the case at hand[,]” because plaintiffs “claims in effect require[d] a preliminary declaration that the state court judgment terminating her parental rights [wa]s invalid.” Id.
The officials assert that
Amerson
is applicable here because resolution of Warmus’s damages claims would require a dеclaration that the state court rehabilitation order was invalid. Warmus responds that
Amerson
is distinguishable. He first notes that unlike
Amerson,
his damages claims are not incidental to equitablе claims, but are his only claims. He points out that in
Amerson
this court observed “that it appeared] beyond dispute that most all of [plaintiffs] claims for relief [were] equitable in nature.”
Id.
at 512. Moreover, Warmus argues that resolution of his damages claims will not invalidate the order of rehabilitatiоn. Warmus asserts that he is not attacking the rehabilitation order, conceding that as of September 30, 1992 AFSLIC was operating in a hazardous cоndition. Rather, Warmus asserts that his federal action challenges the actions of the officials preceding the rehabilitation order. He acknowledges that he challenged the conduct of MDI officials during the state court rehabilitation proceedings. However, Warmus argues that the conduct was not “so inextricably intertwined with the state court determination [as to rehabilitation] as to necessitate reviеw of that decision.”
Id.
at 513 (citing
District of Columbia Court of Appeals v. Feldman,
We agree with Warmus that his case does not fall within the “very limited”
Amer-son/Fair Assessment
exception to
Quackenbush, Amerson,
The officials assert that a remand would be unnecessary if this court were to hold that the officials are entitlеd to qualified or absolute immunity. The officials note that they raised the immunity defenses in the district court, but that the court did not address them, and that this court may affirm on any basis appearing in the record.
See Sawdon v. Uniroyal Goodrich Tire Co.,
We recently noted that “whether an officer is entitled to qualified immunity [often] requires a ‘fact-intensive’ inquiry.”
Prosser v. Ross,
Accordingly, wе remand this matter to the district court for further proceedings. 1
Notes
. At oral argument, counsel advised the court that Warmus is in bankruptcy. On remand, in addition to considering immunity and abstention issues, the district court may wish to explore the effect, if any, Warmus’s bankruptcy has on this proceeding.
