UNION PLANTERS BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff - Intervenor Defendant - Appellee, versus TARIQ MAURICE SALIH, individually and as administrator of the succession of Canty, Intervenor Plaintiff - Appellant, versus JOHN A. GAVEL, JR., Defendant - Intervenor Defendant - Appellee
No. 03-30409
United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
April 29, 2004
Charles R. Fulbruge III, Clerk
Before JONES, WIENER, and PRADO, Circuit Judges.
WIENER, Circuit Judge:
In this appeal, we are asked to determine whether a federal district court can enjoin the production of information ordered produced by a Louisiana state court‘s subpoena duces tecum. Because the Rooker-Feldman doctrine forecloses federal subject matter jurisdiction in this case, we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand with instructions to dismiss this action
I. FACTS & PROCEEDINGS
In January 2001, the Intervenor Plaintiff-Appellant Tariq Salih sued the Plaintiff-Intervenor Defendant-Appellee Union Planters Bank National Association (“UPB” or “Union Planters“) in Louisiana state court. Salih‘s putative class-action complaint alleged that UPB violated Louisiana law by engaging in “forced-placement” of flood insurance, causing UPB‘s borrowers to pay excessive insurance premiums. Specifically, Salih alleged that UPB regularly required its borrowers to carry flood insurance in an amount greater than that required by law and as specified in the mortgage agreements securing UPB‘s underlying loans. Salih asserted that instead of arranging for low-cost flood insurance through the pool of insurers approved by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, UPB force-placed insurance coverage through WNC Insurance Services, Inc. (“WNC“), a California-based third-party “surplus line” insurance broker. At all relevant times, the Defendant-Intervenor Defendant-Appellee John A. Gavel, Jr. was WNC‘s agent in Louisiana.
In early 2002, at Salih‘s request, the clerk of the subject state court issued third-party deposition and document subpoenas to WNC and Gavel. The subpoenas sought, inter alia, the names and addresses of UPB‘s Louisiana borrowers whose flood insurance had been issued through WNC. As respondents to the subpoena, WNC and Gavel filed a joint motion for a protective order and to quash the
The Louisiana trial court denied the Motion to Quash, but limited the scope of the document subpoena. WNC and Gavel jointly filed an emergency application for supervisory writs to the cognizant Louisiana Court of Appeal. In their writ application, WNC and Gavel relied on Louisiana law and the GLBA as support for their argument that Salih‘s subpoena “call[ed] for disclosure of information about loan defaults that borrowers would likely not want Union Planters or anyone else to disclose.”2 The Louisiana appellate court quashed the subpoena directed to WNC, but denied
After a hearing, the district court issued a preliminary injunction prohibiting Gavel “only from disclosing documents, and/or information, as set forth in the modified subpoena, and subsequent court clarifications, which would violate the GLBA,” and prohibiting Salih “from taking any action in the state court which would render this [federal district] court‘s order ineffective or jeopardize the parties who were directed to comply with it.”3 After further argument and another hearing, the district court made the preliminary injunction permanent.4 Salih timely filed a notice of appeal.
II. ANALYSIS
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“We exercise plenary, de novo review of a district court‘s assumption of subject matter jurisdiction.”5
B. SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION AND THE ROOKER-FELDMAN DOCTRINE
Salih did not specifically raise Rooker-Feldman on appeal until his reply brief, but federal courts are duty-bound to examine the basis of subject matter jurisdiction sua sponte, even on appeal.6 As an initial matter, we must analyze the nature of the Louisiana state court discovery order through the lens of the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. “[T]he Rooker-Feldman doctrine only applies insofar as a state court judgment merits full faith and credit.”7 We must therefore consider how the Louisiana courts would treat the discovery order at issue. When we do so, we encounter two sequential questions: (1) Would Louisiana courts give preclusive effect to the order requiring Gavel to produce the requested information; (2) if so, is UPB — which is not the named
1. The Discovery Order Was a “Final” State Court Judgment.
Under Article 2083 of the Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure (“LCCP“), “[a]n appeal may be taken from a final judgment rendered in causes in which appeals are given by law whether rendered after hearing or by default, [or] from an interlocutory judgment which may cause irreparable injury....” 8 LCCP Article 1841 distinguishes between interlocutory and final orders by declaring that “[a] judgment that does not determine the merits but only preliminary matters in the course of the action is an interlocutory judgment“; but “[a] judgment that determines the merits in whole or in part is a final judgment.”9 Louisiana courts have interpreted these code provisions to mean that a “ruling denying a motion to quash a subpoena duces tecum brought by a non-party to the action determines in whole the merits of this single issue between the parties.... It is, therefore, a final appealable judgment.”10
2. UPB Is Barred From Seeking Inferior Federal Court Review of the State Discovery Order on Federal Grounds.
The second issue that we must address is presented by UPB‘s contention that it was technically not a party to the Louisiana state court order and therefore cannot be subject to its preclusive effect.13 This argument is likewise without merit. UPB was the named defendant in the state court proceedings and certainly had standing to challenge the production of information requested in the subpoena duces tecum.14 Indeed, the gravamen of UPB‘s complaint in federal court is its asserted interest under the GLBA in protecting the privacy of its customers’ non-public information — an interest that UPB contends will be violated if Gavel is allowed or required to disclose the contested information to Salih. In contrast to cases in which the Rooker-Feldman doctrine was held not to bar federal jurisdiction because the federal plaintiff was not a party to the state court proceedings,15 UPB was clearly in a position to seek review of a state court ruling that UPB contends
A rejected applicant‘s deliberate bypass of those procedures that envisioned (ultimately) a reviewable final state-court judgment, itself under Feldman not subject to federal district-court review, should not, it would seem, entitle the applicant to a review of his constitutional claims by a federal district court that would have been unavailable to him if he had pursued his claim to final state court judgment.17
At bottom, UPB‘s contention that it was not a party to the Louisiana discovery order stands for naught in the Rooker-Feldman calculus.
C. THE STATE AND FEDERAL PROCEEDINGS WOULD BE “INEXTRICABLY INTERTWINED”
The Supreme Court has definitively established, in what has become known as the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, that “federal district courts, as courts of original jurisdiction, lack appellate jurisdiction to review, modify, or nullify final orders of state courts.” “If a state trial court errs the judgment is not void, it is to be reviewed and corrected by the appropriate state appellate court. Thereafter, recourse at the federal level is limited solely to an application for a writ of certiorari to the United States Supreme Court.”19
In this case, UPB filed the instant suit in federal court to nullify the enforcement of a state discovery order that had become final and appealable. Rather than seek relief from the Louisiana Supreme Court (and if necessary from the Supreme Court of the United States by applying for a writ of certiorari), UPB asked the federal district court to act as a de facto appellate court and reverse the state courts. This is precisely what the Rooker-Feldman doctrine does not tolerate.
In Weekly v. Morrow, the federal plaintiff filed a claim in the Louisiana Office of Worker‘s Compensation, and his employer sought discovery of his Social Security records.20 The plaintiff asserted a federal privacy interest in his Social Security records
Consistent with our earlier decision in Weekly,24 we reiterate that inferior federal courts are without subject matter jurisdiction under the Rooker-Feldman doctrine to enjoin the
III. CONCLUSION
The relief sought by UPB in the instant action is an outright reversal of a final, appealable discovery order of the Louisiana courts. As the Rooker-Feldman doctrine eschews subject matter jurisdiction in this case, we vacate the district court‘s order26 and remand with instructions to the district court to dismiss this action for lack of jurisdiction.
