Darwin Rice appeals from a garnishment order entered by the district court
1
allowing the Government to seize and sell Rice’s stored grain in an effort to satisfy restitution owed to the United States as part of his criminal sentence. Rice argues that the district court sua sponte should have stayed its decision on the garnishment order, pending resolution of other claims the Government has made against his other property. Alternatively, Rice argues that the district court sua sponte should have abstained from exercising jurisdiction over the garnishment proceeding under the rationale of
Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United States,
I. BACKGROUND
In 2005, a jury convicted Rice of making a materially false statement in connection with a loan application filed with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (“USDA”),
see
On August 22, 2008, the United States filed an application for a writ of garnishment, seeking to seize and sell grain belonging to Rice that was being stored at the Farmers Cooperative Company. Rice filed a response, arguing that the grain was exempt from garnishment because (1) D & R Cattle, not Rice, owned the grain; (2) Rice and his wife as joint partners, not Rice individually, owned the grain; (3) the grain was marital property, rather than the property of Rice individually; and (4) the grain was livestock feed and therefore exempt from garnishment under state law. The district court rejected these arguments because Rice provided no evidence to support them.
On appeal, Rice does not challenge the district court’s conclusion that Rice failed to provide evidentiary support for any of these arguments. Instead, Rice claims that the district court should have declined jurisdiction over the garnishment proceedings sua sponte for two reasons. Rice’s first argument stems from a separate administrative action in which the USDA sought to collect on defaulted loans made to Rice. Rice argues that because an administrative appeal of that action is pending, the district court should have stayed the garnishment proceeding on the restitution order under the doctrine of primary jurisdiction. In his second argument, Rice notes that he has appealed a state foreclosure action on his farm in which he is arguing that the junior lienholders, including the USDA, had their interests extinguished and that therefore the proceeds paid to those lienholders should be returned to him. He argues that, under Cobrado River, the district court should have abstained from exercising jurisdiction based on the pending state court foreclosure proceeding.
II. DISCUSSION
We review the issue of primary jurisdiction de novo.
United States v. Henderson,
Rice has not identified any issue relating to the garnishment order that is “within the special competence of an administrative agency.”
See Reiter,
507 U.S.
We review a district court’s decision whether to abstain from exercising jurisdiction under
Cobrado River
for an abuse of discretion.
See Fru-Con Const. Corp. v. Controlled Air, Inc.,
The Government was a junior lienholder in Rice’s farm when it was sold at a sheriffs sale as a result of a state foreclosure proceeding. In state court, Rice is arguing that the USDA was not entitled to a share of the sale proceeds because the junior lienholders’ interests were extinguished. In this appeal, Rice argues that the pending state foreclosure proceeding is “parallel” because, as before, should Rice obtain a favorable resolution on appeal, the Government would possess alternative funds from which Rice’s restitution obligation could be satisfied. While “[t]he prevailing view is that state and federal proceedings are parallel for purposes of
Colorado River
abstention when substantially similar parties are litigating substantially similar issues in
both
state and federal court ... [,][t]his circuit requires more precision.”
Fru-Con Constr. Corp.,
The state foreclosure proceeding involving Rice’s farm is not “parallel” to the garnishment proceeding in his criminal case. Rice’s appeal in the foreclosure action challenges whether certain junior lien-holders’ interests were extinguished, while this garnishment action addresses ownership of stored grain. Thus, the parties are not “litigating substantially similar issues,” and the state foreclosure action cannot “fully dispose of the claims presented in the federal court.”
See id.
As with the
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
Notes
. The Honorable Robert W. Pratt, Chief Judge, United States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa.
. The Government argues that plain error review, or even waiver, is appropriate, because Rice failed to raise this issue before the district court. Because courts of appeals may raise issues of abstention sua sponte,
Cincinnati Indent. Co. v. A & K Constr. Co.,
. We again set aside Rice's failure to raise this issue before the district court, applying our normal standard of review. See supra n. 2.
