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Vol. 71, No. 8,
August 1998
A New Litigation Strategy
For State And Local Governments:
Removal to Federal Courts
With its decisions this past year in International College of Surgeons
and Schacht, the Supreme Court has taken a further step to expand
federal court jurisdiction. These decisions thus require a change in thought
regarding the relationship between federal and state law claims in an action
brought against a state or local government.
In particular, because of the success of state and local governments
in these cases, both plaintiffs and state and local governments alike effectively
have been granted greater access to federal courts. Plaintiffs now can initially
file in federal court when their lawsuits raise federal claims and their
state law claims - almost whatever their nature and even if they are
as mundane as the land-use challenge in International College of Surgeons
- arise from the same set of facts. That is because in International
College of Surgeons the premise of the decision that Chicago could remove
was that the College could have brought its land-use challenge in federal
court in the first place (so long as it was joined with the federal claims).
Likewise, the premise in Schacht was that the federal court would
have had original jurisdiction over the suit if it originally had been filed
there. As for state and local governments named as defendants, these decisions
establish that they may remove such actions to federal court if plaintiffs
have opted for state court instead. Simply put, the Seventh Circuit's more
restrictive view of federal jurisdiction no longer holds.
Moreover, because parties no longer are so boxed into either federal
or state court where a state or local government is involved, they must
adapt their litigation strategies. Now when such cases are filed, plaintiffs
must carefully determine which claims they want to plead. For example, if
violations of federal law are pleaded along with violations of state law
against a governmental entity, the plaintiff must decide whether it wants
to file in federal court or state court. And if the plaintiff wishes to
file in state court, it may want to forgo pleading federal claims to preserve
its state court forum. The same is true for litigants seeking to bring suit
against state officers in their individual and official capacities. If such
a plaintiff wants to retain a state court forum, it must think twice about
including a federal claim in its suit.
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Anne Berleman Kearney, Harvard 1990, practices at Foley &
Lardner, Milwaukee. The opinions expressed are solely her own. |
Correlatively, state governments must pay particular attention to their
removal strategy and the effect of that strategy on any affirmative defenses
they may want to raise. As Justice Kennedy's concurrence in Schacht
stresses, the Court has not yet determined whether a state's request for
removal is a waiver of its Eleventh Amendment sovereign immunity defense.27
These initial strategy decisions will influence the parties' later decisions
in litigating the suit. The parties' decisions on discovery, motions, and
even settlement will be affected because they, too, will vary according
to the forum where the case is being heard.
The Supreme Court's decisions also carry broader implications for all
litigants in federal court. In International College of Surgeons,
for example, the Court made clear that the supplemental jurisdiction statute
is to be given effect - strong effect - as set forth in the plain
terms of the statute. In Schacht as well, the Court adopted a more
expansive view of federal court jurisdiction based upon the applicable jurisdictional
statute.
These decisions reflect a general trend in the Court's jurisprudence
towards interpreting jurisdictional statutes as written without inference
of exceptions.28 The message to be gleaned
from this trend is that, if federal court jurisdiction is to be restricted,
the restrictions must come from Congress and not from the courts. For litigants,
that trend - with the addition of the decisions in International
College of Surgeons and Schacht - translates into the immediate
result of increased federal court litigation of what used to be considered
"state court" claims.
Endnotes
1City
of Chicago v. International College of Surgeons, 118 S. Ct. 523
(1997).
2Schacht
v. Wisconsin Dep't of Corrections, No. 97-461, 1998 U.S. LEXIS 4177
(U.S. June 22, 1998).
3See id. at *5-*6.
4See id. at *5-*6, *16.
5International
College of Surgeons, 118 S. Ct. at 530.
6See id.
728
U.S.C. § 1367(a).
8United Mine Workers v. Gibbs, 383
U.S. 715, 725 (1966).
9International
College of Surgeons, 118 S. Ct. at 527, 529-30.
10See id. at 529-30.
11See id. at 530, 534.
12See id. at 528, 530-31.
13See id. at 530-31.
14Id. at 530.
15Id.
16Id. at 531.
17Id. at 534, 537, 539-40 (Ginsburg,
J., dissenting).
18Chicago,
R.I. & P.R. Co. v. Stude, 346 U.S. 574 (1954).
19Horton
v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 367 U.S. 348 (1961).
20International
College of Surgeons, 118 S. Ct. at 537-38 (Ginsburg, J., dissenting).
21See id. at 538 (Ginsburg, J., dissenting).
22See Schacht,
1998 U.S. LEXIS 4177, at *6, *9-*11, *16.
23See id. at *18-*19.
24Id. at *10-*11.
25Id. at *11 (quoting Int'l College
of Surgeons, 118 S. Ct. at 530).
26See id. at *9.
27See id. at *22 (Kennedy, J., concurring).
28See, e.g., Quackenbush
v. Allstate Ins. Co., 116 S. Ct. 1712 (1996); New
Orleans Pub. Serv. Inc. v. Council of City of New Orleans, 491 U.S.
350 (1989).
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