This case presents a difficult question of the limits on the subject matter jurisdiction of the federal courts. At issue is whether a state, not ever subject to diversity jurisdiction, may be subjected to the ancillary enforcement jurisdiction of the federal courts on a theory that the judgment debtor in an action originally based on diversity is the alter ego of the state. We conclude that the state cannot be so subjected to federal court subject matter jurisdiction unless there is an independent basis for such jurisdiction.
Compañía de Desarrollo Cooperativo (“CDC”), a public corporation created by the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico to foster housing cooperatives, entered into a multiparty agreemеnt in 1978 to build a low income housing project, the Ciudad Cristiána project. Parties to that agreement included CDC, U.S.I. Properties Corp. (“USI”), a Delaware corporation, and MD Construction (“MD”), incorporated under the laws of Puerto Rico and the predecessor in interest to defendant-appellant Futura Development of Puerto Rico, Inc. (“Futura”). Largely due to CDC, that project was never completed and the private companies suffered heavy damages. More than a decade of litigation has ensued.
In October 1983, after CDC filed suit against MD in Puerto Rico Superior Court, USI sued both MD and CDC in federal court under diversity jurisdiction for violating the agreements. MD filed a crossclaim against CDC, which in turn filed a crossclaim against MD and a counterclaim against USI. After a five week jury trial in 1987, a jury found that CDC had violated its contracts with MD (as well as with USI), and rejected CDC’s cross- and counterclaims, finding that CDC’s stated reasons for terminating the project were false. The jury awarded $12.3 million against CDC. This court affirmed. U.S.I.
Properties Corp. v. M.D. Construction Co.,
Futura attempted to collect its judgment against CDC. Futura was unsuccessful because the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico had depleted CDC of its funds and assets so that CDC could not satisfy the judgment against it. Futura then filed a new federal court action to collect the judgment, this time directly against the Commonwealth, arguing that CDC was an alter ego of the Commonwealth and thаt the Commonwealth had waived its Eleventh Amendment immunity. The district court agreed with Futura in this second suit. This court vacated that judgment, holding there was no federal jurisdiction over this second action.
Futura Development of Puerto Rico, Inc. v. Estado Libre Asociado de Puerto Rico,
We hold that there is no federal enforcement jurisdiction over this claim and leave Futura to whatever remedies it may have against the Commonwealth in its own courts. Futura’s effort to establish liability against the Commonwealth exceeds the proper scope of federal enforcement jurisdiction absent some independent ground of federal jurisdiction over the claim. Federal enforcement jurisdiction does not extend so far as to allow enforce *493 ment proceedings to establish direct liability against the Commonwealth on an alter ego theory here, where the limitations on diversity jurisdiction would have prevented the Commonwealth from being named a defendant in the action originally.
I.
A detailed prior history of this litigation is set forth in our
Futura II
opinion.
Having determined that CDC was an alter ego of the Commonwealth, the district court turned to the question of whether the Commonwealth had waived its Eleventh Amendment immunity through the actions of CDC. Given that the Commonwealth controlled CDC’s daily operations before the original litigation over the Ciudad Cristiána project and provided ninety-seven percent of CDC’s income through legislative appropriations, the district court focused its waiver analysis on the critical question of whether at the lime of the original litigation, the Commonwealth “acted as though it were defending an agency and, consequently, its own coffers.” Id. at 255. In addition to CDC’s assertion of its own claim, the district court identified six findings in favor of waiver: (1) the litigation materials and documentation were in the control of the Commonwealth’s Secretary of Justice, not the CDC administrators; (2) in closing arguments CDC argued that any judgment against it would have to be paid with Puerto Rico tax dollars; (3) CDC’s counsel promised Futura that the Commonwealth would include payment of the judgment in its budget in order to deter Futura from attaching assets or requiring the posting of a supersedeas bond during the appellate process; (4) the appeal of the judgment to the First Circuit and consequently the Supreme Court was handled by the Secretary of Justice and paid for by the Commonwealth; (5) the Commonwealth engaged in “a pattern of conveniently allowing CDC to fall into insolvency by refusing to provide- the company with the *494 necessary and customary appropriations, thus letting CDC’s debts mount, wiping out its capital, and in effect, precluding the possibility of satisfying plaintiffs judgment”; and (6) the Commonwealth stripped the agency of its employees and transferred them to a complementary governmental agency. Id. at 255-56. In light of the Commonwealth’s support and control of CDC in maintaining its counterclaim, the district court concluded that the Commonwealth “simply cannot expect to act as CDC’s alter ego throughout the Ciudad Cristiána litigation in an effort to increase its own coffers, and hope that, when its plan boomerangs, this Court tolerates its efforts to distance itself from CDC by pleading and interposing Eleventh Amendment immunity.” Id. at 257.
This court in
Futura II,
however, vacated that judgment, holding that the district court lacked jurisdiction as neither enforcement jurisdiction nor supplementary jurisdiction existed over the claim against the Commonwealth in this separate proceeding. This court first held that under
Peacock v. Thomas,
Having been denied relief against the Commonwealth in a separate proceeding, Futura then filed a motion in the original action for proceedings on and in aid of the execution of the original judgment, seeking to hold the Commonwealth directly accountable for that judgment. Futura advanced two theories. First, Futura asserted the Commonwealth was liable as the judgment debtor of the original MD judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 69(a), which affords federal district courts the enforcement mechanisms available under state law. Under this^heory, Futura relies in the alternative on two Puerto Rico Rules of Civil Procedure, contending that under Rule 51.7, 1 the Commonwealth is a jointly-liable debtor who was not party to the original action, and that under Rule 59, 2 a declaratory judgment should issue that the Commonwealth is the party in interest in the original litigation and required to comply with the judgment. Secondly, Futura moved to substitute or join the Commonwealth in the original proceeding as successor in interest to CDC under Fed. R.Civ.P. 25(c). Importantly, the substantive claim that the Commonwealth was liable as an alter ego of CDC and thus a de facto party to the original litigation underlies both these efforts.
CDC opposed Futura’s motion, asserting that the district court would not have had jurisdiction over the original action had the Commonwealth been a party, both because the Commonwealth (or its alter ego) is not subject to diversity jurisdiction and be *495 cause the Commonwealth enjoys Eleventh Amendment immunity from suit in the federal courts.
Under the mistaken impression that this court in
Futura II
had ruled against Futu-ra’s alter ego claim on the merits, the district court denied Futura’s motion, holding that (1) Futura could not hold the Commonwealth liable as judgment debtor under Fed.R.Civ.P. 69(a) since meeting the requirements of either Puerto Rico rule required what the court took to be a preсluded finding that CDC was the alter ego of the Commonwealth, and (2) the Commonwealth could not be substituted for CDC under Fed.R.Civ.P. 25(c) because that would render the corporate form of CDC a nullity and abrogate the immunity of the Commonwealth from suit in federal court.
U.S.I. Properties Corp. v. M.D. Construction Co.,
II.
CDC urges this court to resolve this case on Eleventh Amendment grounds and dismiss the motion for lack of jurisdiction over the Commonwealth.
3
We need not address Eleventh Amendment issues where the matter may be disposed of in favor of the state (that is, the defendant alleged to be the state) more readily on other grounds.
Parella v. Retirement Bd. of the Rhode Island Employee’s Retirement System,
Futura’s contention that the Commonwealth waived its Eleventh Amendment immunity through the actions of its alter ego, CDC, in pursuing counterclaims against MD in federal court presents a difficult Eleventh Amendment issue: does a state voluntarily waive its Elevehth Amendment protection against suit in federal court when its alter ego invokes the jurisdiction of the federal court through counterclaims and cross-claims? Futura presents a more than colorable claim that in this case, the actions of CDC in the original action (in invoking the jurisdiction of the court by filing its counterclaims against both USI and MD
4
and the like) were sufficient to provide consent to suit in federal court on the part of the Commonwealth.
See Gunter v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co.,
*496 III.
The doctrine of enforcement jurisdiction
5
is a judicial creation, born of the necessity that courts have the power to enforce their judgments. Federal courts have the ancillary enforcement jurisdiction necessary “to enable a court to function successfully, that is, to manage its proceedings, vindicate its authority, and effectuate its decrees.”
Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co., 511
U.S. 375, 380,
Hence, although federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction, they often retain residual federal jurisdiction over postjudgment enforcement proceedings flowing from their original jurisdiction over the action. Ancillary enforcement jurisdiction, given its origins in the courts of equity, traditionally has an equitable and discretionary character.
Cf.
The Judicial Improvements Act of 1990, Pub.L. No. 101-650, § 310, 104 Stat. 5089, 5113-14 (1990), codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1367 (codifying the judicially-crafted common law of pendent and ancillary jurisdiction); 28 U.S.C. § 1367(d) (conferring discretion over exercise of supplementary jurisdiction where claim involves “novel or complex” state law issues or in cases in which the jurisdictionally insufficient claims predominate). The question of whether such jurisdiction should be exercised may well vary with the nature of the underlying basis for federal jurisdiction and the nature of the postjudgment claims made.
See, e.g., Thomas, Head & Greisen Employees Trust v. Buster,
Where the postjudgment claim is simply a mode of execution designed to reach property of the judgment debtor in the hands of a third party, federal courts have often exercised enforcement jurisdiction. The prinсiple that federal courts have jurisdiction over an ancillary action “to secure or preserve the fruits and advantages of a judgment or decree rendered,” whether in law or in equity, is well settled.
See, e.g., Local Loan Co. v. Hunt,
Federal courts have expressly recognized their ability to exercise jurisdiction over new parties in supplemental proceedings where those proceedings concerned property under the control of the federal court due to an existing judgment, even where those new parties are nondiverse.
See Freeman v. Howe,
Insofar as such proceedings are a continuation of the original action, the federal court retains residual jurisdiction flowing from its original authority to render a judgment in the case. This extension of jurisdiction is necessary to ensure the court’s ability to enforce a judgment rendered against the judgment debtor. As the Court remarked in
Peacock,
ancillary enforcement jurisdiction is “at its core, a creature of necessity.”
In many ways this case gives the appearance of fitting within this traditional paradigm of enforcement jurisdiction. After all, the claim is in part that the assets of CDC were in effect transferred from the judgment debtor — CDC—to a third party
7
— the Commonwealth — through mechanisms of depletion and nonpayment in order to evade the judgment. State postjudgment enforcement procedures, incorporated into federal procedure by Rule 69(a), classically encompass such fact patterns. And in colloquial terms, it could be thought that exercise of enforcement jurisdiction here simply protects the MD judgment. Futura draws an analogy to a situation where a judgment is entered against a corporate subsidiary and the judgment is
*498
unenforcable because the corporate parent has looted the subsidiary. In such instance, suits or enforcement proceedings against the corporate parent to enforce the judgment have been permitted.
See, e.g., Explosives Corp. of America v. Garlam Enterprises Corp.,
While it is true that one might envision Futura’s efforts to recover here as analogous to pursuing assets of GDC that were fraudulently transferred to the Commonwealth, Futura has opted not to so characterize its efforts, likely in recognition that there is an analogy but not a perfect fit. Rather, Futura has consistently characterized its efforts to enforce the MD judgment against the Commonwealth as an attempt to
establish liability
directly on the part of the Commonwealth as the alter ego of CDC.
See, e.g., Peacock,
Where a postjudgment proceeding presents an attempt simply to collect a judgment duly rendered by a federal court, even if chasing after the assets of the judgment debtor now in the hands of a third party, the residual jurisdiction stemming from the court’s authority to render that judgment is sufficient to provide for federal jurisdiction over the post-judgment claim.
See, e.g., Thomas, Head,
Thus in
Peacock,
the Court rejected an argument by the amicus United States to the effect that Thomas’ veil-piercing claim fell under classic cases seeking to “force payment by mandamus” or to “void post-judgment transfers,” noting that “neither Thomas nor the courts below characterized this suit this way,” and that indeed “Thomas expressly rejects that characterization of his lawsuit.”
In the present proceeding, Futura seeks to hold the Commonwealth accountable for the existing MD judgment as an alter ego of CDC. Like piercing the corporate veil, an alter ego claim presents a substantive theory seeking to establish liability on the part of a new party not otherwise liable.
See Futura II,
Here an independent basis in federal jurisdiction is lacking: the sole basis for federal jurisdiction over the original action was diversity, and diversity jurisdiction does not exist where a state is a party. As federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction, they can act only where the Constitution and Congress endow them with some affirmative ground to do so.
See Kokkonen,
This conclusion accords with the general congressional policy against reaching states in diversity actions. An extension of federal enforcement jurisdiction to such cases would potentially provide a means to evade, in effect, such limitations on federal court jurisdiction. To permit the exercise of federal enforcement jurisdiction against the Commonwealth on a theory that the original defendant was a mere alter ego of the Commonwealth, and thereby to hold the Commonwealth the real party in interest, would violate these limitations on diversity jurisdiction. This is not a case where the Cоmmonwealth is plainly a third party holding by happenstance the assets of the judgment debtor. Rather, Futura maintains that CDC was the alter ego of the Commonwealth all along. On that theory and in light of the congressional policy against making the states (or the Commonwealth) party to diversity actions, Fu-tura should not be able to reach the Commonwealth here.
The analysis would be different if there were an independent jurisdictional base to bring in the Commonwealth.
See Blackburn Truck Lines, Inc. v. Francis,
It is no answer to say, as Futura does, that diversity is to be assessed at the time the action is filed.
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. v. K N Energy, Inc.,
It is undisputed that there was diversity jurisdiction over the original action against CDC. The Commonwealth has denied that CDC is its alter ego, and Futura did not then make the claim. It would be an anomalous result if Futura could do through ancillary enforcement jurisdiction what it could not do through original jurisdiction: force Puerto Rico (or a state) to be a defendant in federal court based on diversity jurisdiction when Congress has determined states are simply not subject to diversity jurisdiction.
To sum up, since Peacock, courts have allowed postjudgment actions to proceed against third parties where they seek to establish the control of the court over the assets of the judgment debtor in the hands of that third party, and involve the third party only incidentally. Those proceedings are different in kind from the alter ego theory advanced by Futura in this case, which by contrast seeks to hold the third party itself, the Commonwеalth, directly accountable as the judgment debtor under a new substantive theory of liability. Absent some independent ground in federal jurisdiction, there is no federal enforcement jurisdiction over such a claim.
IV.
Because it is inappropriate for the federal courts to exercise ancillary enforcement jurisdiction over this matter, we vacate the district court’s findings that CDC was not an alter ego of the Commonwealth and that Puerto Rico Rules of Civil Procedure 51-7 and 59 do not allow for enforcement against the Commonwealth, and we order dismissal of Futura’s motion for supplemental proceedings in aid of execution of judgment for lack of federal jurisdiction. While the findings of the district court in this proceeding wеre at odds with the finding of the district court in
Futura I
that CDC was an alter ego of the Commonwealth, both opinions have been vacated, and hence neither have any preclusive weight. This leaves Futura free to pursue whatever remedies may be available in the courts of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. Under Puerto Rico’s saving clause, the statute of limitations has been tolled during the resolution of the questions of jurisdiction in the suits in federal court, as CDC conceded at oral argument. 31 L.P.R.A. § 5303.
See Soto v. Chardon,
In
Futura II,
this court said the Commonwealth’s treatment of Futura “has been despicable,” and the Commonwealth has “cleverly used its sovereignty to shield itself from the fan* consequences of its action,”
So ordered.
Notes
: Puerto Rico Rule 51.7 provides in relevant pai't,
When a judgment is recovered against one or more of several debtors, jointly liable for an obligation, those debtors who are not parties to the action may be summoned to show cause why they should not be bound by the judgment in the same manner as if they had been originally sued.... It shall not be necessary to file a new complaint. ... [T]he judgment debtor ... may assert any defense of fact and of law that may release him from liability.
. Puerto Rico Rule 59 provides that when appropriate, "[t]he Court of First Instance shall have the power to declare rights, status and other legal relationship, even though another remedy is or may be instigated.... The declaration ... shall have the force and effect of final judgments or resolutions.”
. While the Supreme Court has reserved ruling on the immunity of the Commonwealth under the Eleventh Amendment,
see Puerto Rico Aqueduct and Sewer Authority v. Metcalf
&
Eddy, Inc.,
. CDC filed counter- and crossclaims against USI and MD respectively alleging that the properties were contaminated by mercury and seeking several million dollars in damages. These claims were expressly rejected by the jury in the original litigation.
. Like
Futura II,
we use the phrase "enforcement jurisdiction” to refer to that portion of ancillary jurisdiction based in the inherеnt power of federal courts to exercise jurisdiction in order to enforce their judgments in certain situations where jurisdiction would otherwise be lacking. We do so both to maintain consistency and to avoid confusion arising from the relationship of ancillary and pendent jurisdiction.
See Futura II,
. Federal courts have also at times awarded monetary judgments against impecunious police officers and then allowed enforcement proceedings against municipalities which had contractual obligations to pay such judgments.
Argento v. Village of Melrose Park,
. We use the language of "third parties” without in any way implying an outcome to the alter ego quеstion. The very theory of alter ego liability depends on there being two entities to start with.
See, e.g., Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers v. Springfield Terminal Ry. Co.,
. Nor is it sufficient to rely on the incorporation of state procedures in Rule 69(a) to establish federal enforcement jurisdiction. State courts, as courts of general jurisdiction, are free to employ any enforcement mechanisms warranted by state law, even where those mechanisms allow liability to be established directly against a third party to the original action. However, the limited nature of federal jurisdiction in general confines the scope of enforcement jurisdiction as well. The incorporation of state enforcement procedures through Rule 69 is not alone sufficient to create
federal
jurisdiction over such enforcement proceedings. The fact that Rule 69(a) may (by way of slate law) afford procedural mechanisms for enforcing an existing federal judgment against a third party not otherwise liable does not obviate the need to establish the jurisdiction of the federal court over the supplemental proceeding. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure can neither expand nor limit the jurisdiction of the federal courts, Fed.R.Civ.P. 82, and the issue of jurisdiction remains distinct from the question of procedure.
See Sandlin,
. We do not answer the question of whether there is federal enforcement jurisdiction for any possible scenario involving an alter ego claim. We do not rule out the possibility that some alter ego claims will presеnt sufficiently intertwined factual issues to warrant federal courts to assume pendent jurisdiction over the claims. However, this is not such a case. In this case, the factual bases of Futura’s alter ego claim are independent and substantially distinct from the facts relevant to establishing liability against CDC in the original action. In any event, any possible judicial economy from the simultaneous adjudication of interdependent facts vanished when the initial proceedings closed.
. We are not persuaded by Futura’s efforts to distinguish this case from
Peacock
and
Fu-tura II
on the ground that this claim is brought in the context of a supplemental proceeding rather than a subsequent post-judgment action. Because it brings its motion for proceeding on and in aid of thе execution of an existing judgment, Futura 'maintains that the court possesses “the threshold jurisdictional power that exists where ancillary claims are asserted in the same proceeding as the claims conferring federal jurisdiction” that was lacking in those cases.
See Peacock,
. Nor does Futura’s reliance on
Laird v. Chrysler,
