This appeal presents questions of justiciability: about ripeness and our review of findings of fact made by a district court. Marta Alfonso appeals from an order that removed her as receiver of the forfeited assets of three convicted criminals. The order removed Alfonso for misfeasance and аppointed the monitor to act as the new receiver to “recover all fees accrued due to the misfeasance of ... Alfonso” and the accounting firm where she is a non-equity partner. Alfonso does not seek reinstatement as receiver; instead, she asks us to reverse the order to recover her fees and the findings of fact that supported her removal. Alfonso contends that the findings of fact damaged her professional reputation. We lack jurisdiction to hear this appeal. The order to recover Alfonso’s fees is not ripe for review because the amount of those fees has nоt yet been determined, and Alfonso’s disagreement with the findings of fact that supported her removal does not present a justiciable controversy because we review judgments, not bare disagreements with findings of fact. We DISMISS this appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
I. BACKGROUND
In March 2006, a jury convicted Martin J. Bradley Jr., Martin J. Bradley III, and Bio-Med Plus of multiple violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-1968, for operating a fraudulent scheme involving prescription drugs. The parties consented to an order of forfeiture of assets in the amount of $39.5 million. The district court approved the consent order and retained jurisdiction to implement the order.
The district court appointed Marta Alfonso as receiver to liquidate all forfeited assets, as well as an additional amount for fines and restitution, and the district court appointed a monitor “to oversee the activities and conduct of the Receiver.” Alfonso successfully marshaled more than $54 million for the receivership by December 31, 2008.
Late in 2008, Alfonso and the monitor began to dispute the amount payable to the accounting firm Rachlin, Cohen & Holtz, LLP, for tax services completed on behalf of the receivership. Alfonso was a non-equity partner at Rachlin and had hired the firm to file tаx returns for the receivership. The monitor refused to pay invoices from Rachlin for tax years 2006 and 2007 because the firm had charged fees in excess of the parties’ contractually agreed upon price and had filed the returns late, incurring significant interest and penalties to be paid by the receivership. The monitor also filed in the district court a monitoring report in which the monitor accused Alfonso of operating the receivership under a conflict of interest.
The district court denied the emergency motion and found that Alfоnso “ha[d] operated under a conflict of interest,” “not acted in the best interest of the Receivership,” and “burdened the receivership not only by enabling an excessive budget overrun and the incurrence of unnecessary expenses, but also by causing additional ... fees.” The district court ordered Alfonso to show cause “why she should not be removed as Receiver, and why the Court should not seek to recover any wasted assets.” The district court later held a hearing and found that Alfonso had operated under a conflict of interest and engaged in “misfeasance.” The district court removed Alfonso as receiver, substituted the monitor as the new receiver, and directed the new receiver to “recover all fees accrued due to the misfeasance of Rachlin and Marta Alfonso.”
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review
de novo
the justiciability of an appeal.
Elend v. Basham,
III. DISCUSSION
Alfonso appeals the order that removed her as receiver, but does “not seek reinstatement as Receiver.” Alfonso instead sеeks “to challenge the findings on which her discharge was based, to reverse the financial surcharge ordered by the District Court, and to excise the District Court’s scathing reprimand.” The United States responds that we lack jurisdiction to decide this appeal.
“Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction.”
Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
“Justiciability is the term of art employed to give expression to this ... limitation placed upon federal courts by the case-and-controversy doctrine.”
Flast,
All of the doctrines that cluster about Article III — not only standing but mootness, ripeness, political question, and the like — relate in part, and in different though оverlapping ways, to an idea, which is more than an intuition but less than a rigorous and explicit theory, about the constitutional and prudential limits to the powers of an unelected, unrepresentative judiciary in our kind of government.
Vander Jagt v. O’Neill,
We divide our discussion of the justiciability of this appeal in two parts. We first explain why Alfonso’s сhallenge of the order about the recovery of her fees is not yet ripe for review. We then explain why the remainder of Alfonso’s appeal does not otherwise present a justiciable controversy.
A. The Order to Recover Fees Is Not Ripe for Review.
“The ripeness doctrine keeps federal courts from deciding cases prematurely,”
Beaulieu v. City of Alabaster,
Alfonso asks us to resolve her dispute prematurely. The amount of fees, if any, to be recovered from her by the new receiver is yet unknown. The receiver could determine that no fees at all are owed due to the misfeasance of Alfonso. At the least, the district court has not ordered a specific amount to be recovered from Alfonso. It is well settled that this kind of uncertain sanction is not ripe for our judicial review.
See Chairs v. Burgess,
B. We Review Judgments, Not Bare Disagreements with Findings of Fact.
In Alfonso’s own words, the remainder of this appeal “is not for financial gain nor reinstatement, but to clear her name.” The government responds that we
District courts resolve justiciable controversies by issuing judgments, and the courts of appeals review those judgments. “A bedroсk principle upon which our appellate review has relied is that the appeal is not from the opinion of the district court but from its judgment.”
United States v. $242,484.00,
Alfonso contends that we have jurisdiction to review the findings of fact made by the district court, even though Alfonso does not appeal her removal as receiver, because those findings amount to an informal sanction. She argues that we have exercised jurisdiction over similar appeals before. We disagree.
We have never held that an appeal of a professional who challenges only a finding of fact that is potentially detrimental to her reputation is justiciable.
See United States v. Sigma Int’l, Inc,
' Alfonso cites decisions about findings of attorney misconduct, but those decisions are distinguishable.
Kleiner v. First National Bank of Atlanta,
involved a certified class action in which counsel for the First National Bank of Atlanta helped the bank develop a plan to encourage potential class members to opt out of the pending class action.
Neither of the concrete injuries that arose in Kleiner and Kirkland is present here. Both Kleiner and Kirkland involved the disqualification of attorneys who were formally sanctioned for misconduct and threatened with potential collateral consequences, such as disciplinary proceedings by the bar, but the district court did not formally sanction Alfonso and the record discloses no threat of disciplinary action against her. Moreоver, in both Kleiner and Kirkland, the attorneys sought reinstatement. Alfonso does not assert a legal right to be reinstated as receiver. Alfonso instead requests that we reverse naked findings of fact that she speculates will harm her professional reputation, but our reversal of those findings of fact would not remedy a tangible injury.
Alfonso arguеs that our sister circuits have exercised jurisdiction absent “a finding of monetary liability or other punishment” in appeals of findings of attorney misconduct.
Walker v. City of Mesquite, Tex.,
Most circuits have declined to exercise jurisdiction ovеr challenges to naked findings of fact about even attorney misconduct because an order to vacate statements or findings in a judicial opinion alone “would not usually affect any tangible interest, thus placing such an order outside of our Article III power to decide cases and controversies.”
Clark Equip. Co. v. Lift Parts Mfg. Co.,
We cannot exercise jurisdiction over this appeal. To do so would be to oрen our doors to “all who might be subject to critical comments by a district judge.”
Bolte,
IV. CONCLUSION
Alfonso’s appeal is not a justiciable controversy. We DISMISS the appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
