OPINION
Settlement Capital Corporation (“Settlement Capital”) appeals a district court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of the United States on the basis of federal sovereign immunity. We affirm.
I
Gary Steele was injured by a Virginia National Guard vehicle. He filed a claim against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671, et seq. The United States settled the claim by purchasing an annuity for Steele’s benefit from Trans-America Assurance Corporation (“Trans-America”). According to its contract with *258 TransAmeriea, the United States owns the annuity and retains “the right at any time to designate to whom annuity payments will be made.” Steele has been receiving, and is set to receive, various periodic and lump-sum payments under the annuity.
Facing urgent business expenses and needing to finance his daughter’s wedding, Steele sought to convey $37,453.53 in anticipated annuity payments to Settlement Capital in exchange for a lump-sum payment of $18,250. To this end and to comply with Florida law regulating the transfer of structured-settlement payment rights, Steele presented his agreement with Settlement Capital for review by the Eleventh Judicial Circuit Court of Miami-Dade County (FL). See Fla. Stat. § 626.99296 (hereinafter “Florida Transfer Act”). The Florida Transfer Act requires that notice of the proposed transfer be sent to “interested parties,” so Settlement Capital sent notice to both TransAmeriea (as “annuity issuer”) and the United States (as “structured settlement obligor”). See Fla. Stat. § 626.99296(2)0, (3)(a)(5), (4).
Having received no objection to the proposed transfer from either TransAmeriea or the United States, the Florida court issued an order approving the transaction. The next day, Settlement Capital wrote to inform TransAmeriea of the Florida court’s order and to ask that Settlement Capital be designated the payee of record for future annuity payments. The following day, an attorney from the U.S. Department of Justice wrote to the Florida court explaining that while the United States neither intended to appear in the (already-concluded) transfer proceeding nor consented to the Florida court’s jurisdiction, it believed the Florida court lacked jurisdiction to enter a structured-settlement transfer order “attempting to alter the United States’ contract rights with both Gary Steele and TransAmeriea Assurance Company.” That is, the United States claims it would alter an alleged anti-assignment provision in the Steele — United States settlement contract, as well as the language in the TransAmeriea — United States annuity contract giving the United States the right to designate the annuity payee. The United States also sent a letter directing TransAmeriea not to change the annuity payee.
Settlement Capital paid Steele the agreed-upon lump sum, but TransAmeriea hesitated to forward annuity payments to Settlement Capital because of the United States’ opposition. Settlement Capital urged TransAmeriea to comply with the Florida order, noting that despite similar form-letter opposition from the United States, annuity issuers have often acceded to structured-settlement transfers without incident, even when the United States owned the annuity. TransAmeriea ultimately filed an interpleader action naming the United States, Settlement Capital, and Gary Steele as defendants and asking the district court to adjudicate the competing claims to the annuity payments. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1335, 2361. The parties moved for summary judgment, and the district court ordered, in relevant part, (1) that the United States’ motion for summary judgment was granted and Settlement Capital’s motion for summary judgment was denied; (2) that the Florida court’s order was “void, as having been entered without jurisdiction and without a waiver of the United States of America’s sovereign immunity”; and (3) that TransAmeriea should continue to make annuity payments to Steele unless the United States (as annuity owner) directed otherwise. Settlement Capital appealed the district court’s conclusion that federal sovereign immunity applies.
II
This case turns on whether the doctrine of federal sovereign immunity
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deprives a state court of jurisdiction to approve a transfer of structured-settlement payment rights where the United States nominally owns — but has no beneficial interest in — the annuity funding these payments. If federal sovereign immunity applies, summary judgment should be granted in favor of the government.
Cf. Akers v. Alvey,
Ill
Tort damages have traditionally been paid on a lump-sum basis. The structured settlement, often involving periodic payments over a long term, evolved as a way to foreclose a tort victim from improvidently exhausting his award. 1 The federal tax characterization of a tort award matters both to the victim and to the obligor. Although lump-sum tort-settlement payments have always been excluded from the victim’s income, see 26 U.S.C. § 104, the tax treatment of a structured-settlement award was once uncertain. Tort victims’ periodic annuity payments received from a structured settlement, for example, might formerly have been included in the victim’s income, even though clearly part of a tort settlement. In the late 1970s, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued several rulings suggesting that tort-settlement periodic payments would be excluded from the victim’s income as long as the victim could not control or accelerate the payments. A 1982 amendment to 26 U.S.C. § 104 and enactment of 26 U.S.C. § 130 clarified the tax treatment of structured settlements and revealed their potential advantages. Section 130 allows tort obligors to fund their obligations via an annuity and excludes these payments from the payee’s income as long as (among other things) the payments are “fixed and determinable as to amount and time of payment” and “cannot be accelerated, deferred, increased, or decreased by the recipient.” 26 U.S.C. § 130(c).
In response to victims’ desire to liquidate such periodic-payment rights, a market developed where companies purchase a tort victim’s rights to future payments in exchange for a lump sum. This business of liquidating anticipated structured-settlement payments is known as “factoring,” and the firms engaged in it as “factors.” But the industry faced a problem in the possibility of factored structured-settlement payments being deemed “accelerated,” no longer being deemed “fixed and determinable,” and accordingly being denied the favorable tax treatment otherwise accorded tort settlement proceeds. That is, factoring, it was feared, might disqualify payments from being excluded either from the payee’s income under § 130 or from the factor’s income (since the factor is not a tort claimant under § 104). But new legislation prescribing a method to accomplish a factoring transaction while retaining favorable tax treatment essentially eliminated this possibility. The Victims of Terrorism Tax Relief Act of 2001, Pub.L. No. 107-134, § 115 (2002), added § 5891 to Title 26 to govern the tax treatment of structured-settlement factoring transactions. It imposes a stiff excise tax on anyone acquiring structured-settlement payment rights in a factoring transaction, 26 U.S.C. § 5891(a), but then excepts from *260 this tax any factoring transaction “approved in advance in a qualified order,” id. § 5891(b)(1). Approval essentially turns on a finding that the transaction is in the best interest of the payee and is not contrary to law or court order, see id. § 5891(b)(2)(A), and a “qualified order” may be issued “under the authority of an applicable State statute by an applicable State court,” id. § 5891(b)(2)(B)(i). To support this scheme, states have passed statutes regulating the transfer of structured-settlement payments and empowering state courts to conduct transfer proceedings and issue orders that comply with federal tax law. The Florida Transfer Act is one such statute. The issue posed here concerns the intersection of federal sovereign immunity principles and such implementing state statutes.
IV
Settlement Capital first argues that under the relevant Supreme Court precedent, federal sovereign immunity does not deprive the Florida state court of jurisdiction to issue an order directing the United States to redesignate the payee of the annuity in question. It invokes the Supreme Court’s decision in
Larson v. Domestic & Foreign Commerce Corp.,
Larson
held that a suit brought by the Domestic and Foreign Commerce Corporation against the head of the War Assets Administration to enforce an alleged contractual right to purchase coal was barred by federal sovereign immunity.
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Later Supreme Court cases adhere to the
Larson
formulation in officer suits,
see, e.g., Malone,
Settlement Capital directs us to certain lower-court cases that craft a less demanding formulation while purporting to follow Supreme Court precedent. In
Littell v. Morton,
the plaintiff “sought judicial review by mandamus of a determination of a previous Secretary of the Interior disallowing his claims for compensation for professional services rendered to the [Navajo] Tribe.”
*262
The question, then, is whether the circumstances of this case implicate sovereign immunity under the formulations of
Larson
and
Land v. Dollar.
That is, does a state-court decision ordering the federal government to direct TransAmeriea to change the annuity payee from Steele to Settlement Capital compel or require action from the sovereign,
Larson,
Settlement Capital insists it should prevail by arguing that “ministerial” acts — even if compelled — do not implicate federal sovereign immunity.
See, e.g., Pennhurst State Sch. & Hosp. v. Holderman,
V
Settlement Capital has a second argument why federal sovereign immunity should not apply. Stated syllogistically, Settlement Capital argues that federal sovereign immunity is just a matter of federal common law, and federal common law only applies when there is a federal interest at stake; there is no federal interest here, so state law (i.e., the Florida Transfer Act) should govern. Without suggesting that courts need to undertake such an “interest analysis” in any case where the federal government asserts sovereign immunity, we address Settlement Capital’s argument to demonstrate that it fails on its own premises.
The first premise is that federal sovereign immunity is a matter of federal common law. This principle is, at a minimum, debatable.
10
The second premise is that
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federal common law does not apply (i.e., displace state law) when there is no federal interest at stake.
See, e.g., Miree v. DeKalb County,
Settlement Capital argues that there is no federal interest at stake here because in passing the Victims of Terrorism Tax Relief Act of 2001, in particular 26 U.S.C. § 5891, Congress blessed the practice of factoring structured settlements without regard to the identity of the annuity owner (be it the government or a private party). Its argument, however, obscures the true nature of its asserted entitlement. Settlement Capital essentially claims rights as a purported assignee of the annuity contract between Steele and the United States. Contract claims against the government fall within the purview of the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346, 1491, and because the value of the claim in this case exceeds $10,000, the Court of Federal Claims has exclusive jurisdiction. 11 Therefore, the federal interest at stake here is in having claims resolved in the forum contemplated by Congress. 12 To say that the Court of Federal Claims is the appropriate forum for Settlement Capital to assert its entitlement is not to say either that the district court here lacked its usual inter-pleader jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1335, 2361, or that this court lacked its typical appellate jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We simply note that the contractual entitlement Settlement Capital asserted in the interpleader action below is an entitlement cognizable only in the Court of *264 Federal Claims. Put another way, Settlement Capital cannot use the fortuity of being named in an interpleader action to assert in district court an entitlement it would otherwise need to assert in the Court of Federal Claims.
VI
While a state court may find that a proposed structured-settlement factoring transaction would be in the best interests of the payee, it cannot compel or require non-ministerial action on the part of the federal government, absent a waiver of sovereign immunity.
See Larson,
Notes
. For background information on structured settlements, see generally Adam F. Scales, Against Settlement Factoring? The Market in Tort Claims Has Arrived, 2002 Wis. L.Rev. 859.
.
Larson
also articulated two circumstances, not relevant here, where an officer suit requesting specific relief would not implicate sovereign immunity: (1) where the officer’s actions are
ultra vires,
and (2) where the officer's actions, though within his official authority, are claimed to be unconstitutional.
See
. Settlement Capital misreads
Larson’s
statement that the government “cannot be stopped in its tracks by any plaintiff who presents a disputed question of property or contract
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right.”
. In our judgment, the Littell court misread Larson the same way Settlement Capital now does. See supra note 3.
.
Littell’s
terminology is as confusing as its logic. The court said the doctrine of federal sovereign immunity "is applicable,”
.
See Westinghouse Elec. Corp. v. Schlesinger,
. New other federal cases — none from an appellate court and none less than thirty years old — have applied the "substantial bothersome interference” test.
Hsing v. Usery,
. For this reason, Settlement Capital's reliance on
Gao v. Jenifer,
.
See also Houston v. Ornes,
.See generally, e.g., Erwin Chemerinslty, Federal Jurisdiction § 9.2.1, at 610-14 (4th ed.2003); Richard H. Fallon, Jr., Daniel J. Meltzer & David L. Shapiro, Hart and Week- *263 sler's The Federal Courts and the Federal System ch. IX(B), at 944-45 (5th ed.2003).
. Section 1346(a)(2) provides that "[t]he district courts shall have original jurisdiction, concurrent with the United States Court of Federal Claims, of ... claim[s] against the United States,
not exceeding $10,000 in amount,
founded ... upon any express or implied contract with the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(2) (emphasis added). Section 1491(a)(1) provides that "[t]he United States Court of Federal Claims shall have jurisdiction to render judgment upon any claim against the United States founded ... upon any express or implied contract with the United States.” “Because the district court's jurisdiction under section 1346(a)(2) is limited to claims under $10,000, while that of the Claims Court is not, most federal courts have stated that the Claims Court’s jurisdiction over non-tort claims against the government in excess of $10,000 is exclusive.”
Spectrum Leasing Corp. v. United States,
.
See, e.g., West v. Gibson,
