Forty Six Hundred, LLC v. Cadence Education, LLC ( 2021 )


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  •            United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 20-1784
    FORTY SIX HUNDRED LLC,
    Plaintiff, Appellee,
    v.
    CADENCE EDUCATION, LLC, d/b/a NEXT GENERATION CHILDREN'S
    CENTERS,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Timothy S. Hillman, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Thompson, Selya, and Hawkins,*
    Circuit Judges.
    Paul B. Lewis, with whom Bruce E. Falby and DLA Piper LLP
    were on brief, for appellant.
    Douglas T. Radigan, with whom Jared A. Fiore and Bowditch &
    Dewey LLP were on brief, for appellee.
    September 30, 2021
    *   Of the Ninth Circuit, sitting by designation.
    SELYA, Circuit Judge.         This appeal, which rises like the
    mythical phoenix from the ashes of an eviction action removed from
    a Massachusetts state court, poses a series of gnarly questions
    related to the propriety of the district court's abstention-based
    remand order and the premature return of the underlying action to
    the state court.      After sifting through the parties' arguments, we
    conclude that the district court erred in ordering the remand.                     We
    further conclude that the court's premature return of the case to
    the state court does not constrain our ability to remedy this
    error.     Accordingly, we reverse the remand order and direct the
    district    court     to     retrieve    the     removed      action    and     resume
    jurisdiction over it.          We also offer some guidance to district
    courts generally, aimed at avoiding the unnecessary shuttling of
    removed cases back and forth between state and federal courts.
    I
    We start by rehearsing the relevant facts and travel of
    the case.      In 1997, defendant-appellant Cadence Education, LLC
    (Cadence)    and    plaintiff-appellee          Forty   Six   Hundred     LLC    (FSH)
    executed a lease through which Cadence, as lessee, rented a
    property in Westborough, Massachusetts from FSH, as lessor.                        The
    lease arrangement was uneventful for more than two decades.                       The
    relationship       soured,    though,    when    (according     to     FSH)   Cadence
    failed to pay the rent due for the months of April, May, and June
    2020.
    - 2 -
    On June 10, 2020, FSH served Cadence with a pleading
    styled as a "Summary Process (Eviction) Summons and Complaint."
    The original complaint was filed in a Massachusetts state court
    (the Westborough District Court), where it would have been governed
    by the Massachusetts Trial Court Uniform Summary Process Rules
    (the Uniform Rules) and the provisions of chapter 239 of the
    Massachusetts General Laws.       The action sought both to evict
    Cadence for nonpayment of rent and to recover $83,553.90 in damages
    (for rent arrearages).
    On July 9, Cadence seasonably removed the action to the
    federal   district   court,   alleging   the   existence   of   diversity
    jurisdiction.1   See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332, 1441(b).      FSH countered by
    moving to remand the action to the state court.            In its motion
    papers, FSH did not dispute that the action satisfied the statutory
    imperatives for federal diversity jurisdiction but, rather, argued
    (as pertinent here) that the federal district court was entitled
    to abstain from adjudicating the action under Burford abstention
    principles.   See Burford v. Sun Oil Co., 
    319 U.S. 315
    , 334 (1943).
    Cadence opposed this motion.
    1 Cadence is a Delaware limited liability company, and FSH is
    a Massachusetts limited liability company.           Cadence has
    represented that there is no overlap between the state(s) of which
    its members are citizens and the state(s) of which FSH's members
    are citizens, and FSH has not challenged this representation.
    Money damages are sought, and the amount in controversy exceeds
    $75,000.
    - 3 -
    On August 10, 2020, the district court granted FSH's
    motion to remand.       See Forty Six Hundred LLC v. Cadence Educ.,
    LLC, 
    478 F. Supp. 3d 84
    , 87 (D. Mass. 2020).           Although the court
    acknowledged that federal courts may have original jurisdiction
    over removed summary eviction proceedings, it concluded that "this
    is the rare ca[s]e where abstention is appropriate."             
    Id. at 86
    .
    In order "to preserve the state statutory scheme" — a reference to
    the applicable Massachusetts rules of summary process for eviction
    cases — the court declined to exercise jurisdiction over the
    action.    
    Id. at 87
    .
    On the same day that the district court entered its
    remand order, Cadence appealed that order.          See Quackenbush v.
    Allstate Ins. Co., 
    517 U.S. 706
    , 715 (1996) (holding that an
    abstention-based    remand   order   is   appealable    under    28   U.S.C.
    § 1291).    Cadence also asked the district court to stay its remand
    order.    The district court denied Cadence's motion to stay without
    explanation   and   proceeded   immediately   to   execute      the   remand,
    returning the action to the state court.2           The action remains
    pending in the state-court system.
    2 Once the district court denied its stay motion, Cadence
    filed an emergency motion in this court to stay the remand order
    pending appeal.   After it learned that the district court had
    remitted the action to the state court, however, it voluntarily
    withdrew its motion because there was nothing left for this court
    to stay.
    - 4 -
    II
    To begin, Cadence takes aim at the district court's
    decision to refrain from exercising jurisdiction over the action.
    Its challenge rests primarily on the contention that the Burford
    abstention doctrine is inapplicable here.       Thus, Cadence says, the
    district court's allowance of FSH's motion to remand must be
    reversed.
    Before grappling with Cadence's argument, we pause to
    note an oddity. Although both parties have proceeded in this court
    on the understanding that the Burford abstention doctrine lies at
    the heart of the matter, the district court never explicitly
    mentioned Burford.       It falls to us, then, to determine at the
    outset   whether   the   district   court's   decision   to   abstain   was
    actually grounded on Burford principles.
    A close review of the proceedings below, including the
    district court's stated reasoning, reveals that the court did
    indulge in Burford abstention. For one thing, the Burford doctrine
    was the only basis for abstention put forward by FSH.         For another
    thing, the district court — in choosing to abstain — relied on the
    decision in Glen 6 Associates, Inc. v. Dedaj, 
    770 F. Supp. 225
    ,
    229 (S.D.N.Y. 1991). That court, in turn, supported its abstention
    decision by citation to case law applying the Burford abstention
    doctrine.    See 
    id. at 228
    .    This case law included, for example,
    Alabama Public Service Commission v. Southern Railway Co., 341
    - 5 -
    U.S. 341, 345 (1951) (explaining that question sub judice is one
    "framed by the Court in Burford"), and Tonwal Realties, Inc. v.
    Beame, 
    406 F. Supp. 363
    , 364 (S.D.N.Y. 1976) (relying on Burford
    as basis for abstention).           See Glen 6 Assocs., Inc., 
    770 F. Supp. at 228
    .      To cinch the matter, the district court's stated concern
    about     potential      interference       with    a   "comprehensive      [state]
    legislative scheme," Forty Six Hundred, 478 F. Supp. at 87, tracks
    the language we have used to articulate the purpose of the Burford
    abstention doctrine, see Sevigny v. Emps. Ins. of Wausau, 
    411 F.3d 24
    , 28 (1st Cir. 2005) (noting that "Burford['s] central concern
    [is] protecting state-agency schemes").                   Given these telltale
    signs, the only plausible reading of the district court's rescript
    is that it abstained on the basis of the Burford abstention
    doctrine.
    Having dispelled any uncertainty about the doctrinal
    underpinnings of the           district court's         abstention-based     remand
    order, we turn to the supportability of that order.                      A district
    court's decision to abstain has two elements.                     The court first
    must determine whether certain preconditions for abstention are
    met   and,    if   so,    must     then    determine    whether    abstention    is
    appropriate.       See DeMauro v. DeMauro, 
    115 F.3d 94
    , 99 (1st Cir.
    1997).       We    review     de   novo    the     district   court's     threshold
    determination      as    to   "whether      the    requirements    for    [Burford]
    abstention have been met."           Chico Serv. Station, Inc. v. Sol P.R.
    - 6 -
    Ltd., 
    633 F.3d 20
    , 30 (1st Cir. 2011) (quoting Guillemard-Ginorio
    v. Contreras-Gómez, 
    585 F.3d 508
    , 516 (1st Cir. 2009)).                              If the
    decision passes through that screen, we then review the court's
    bottom-line decision to abstain for abuse of discretion.                        See id.;
    Vaquería Tres Monjitas, Inc. v. Irizarry, 
    587 F.3d 464
    , 474 (1st
    Cir. 2009); Sevigny, 
    411 F.3d at 26-27
    .
    Cadence argues that Burford abstention is inapposite
    here.     We tee up its arguments by tracing the legal contours of
    the Burford abstention doctrine.              The baseline rule, of course, is
    that    "federal     courts      have   a     strict      duty   to     exercise        the
    jurisdiction       that     is     conferred     upon       them      by    Congress."
    Quackenbush, 
    517 U.S. at 716
    ; see Colo. River Water Conservation
    Dist. v. United States, 
    424 U.S. 800
    , 817 (1976) (noting the
    "virtually unflagging obligation of the federal courts to exercise
    the jurisdiction given them"); Chico Serv. Station, 
    633 F.3d at 29
    (explaining    that       the    "all   but    unyielding        duty      to   exercise
    jurisdiction rests on 'the undisputed constitutional principle
    that Congress, and not the Judiciary, defines the scope of federal
    jurisdiction    within      the    constitutionally         permissible         bounds'"
    (quoting New Orleans Pub. Serv., Inc. v. Council of New Orleans
    (NOPSI), 
    491 U.S. 350
    , 359 (1989))).
    Though    strict,       this      duty   is    not     absolute.            See
    Quackenbush, 
    517 U.S. at 716
    .               The Supreme Court has carved out
    certain    "exceptional         circumstances"       —   circumstances          in    which
    - 7 -
    "denying    a   federal    forum    would      clearly     serve     an    important
    countervailing interest" — that may warrant a federal court's
    eschewal of jurisdiction.          
    Id.
     (first quoting Colo. River Water
    Conservation     Dist.,    
    424 U.S. at 813
    ).       Even    so,      "[t]he
    circumstances that fit this mold are rare."                Chico Serv. Station,
    
    633 F.3d at 29
    .     And "because abstention runs so firmly against
    the jurisprudential grain," we treat abstention as "the exception,
    not the rule."     
    Id.
     (quoting Fragoso v. Lopez, 
    991 F.2d 878
    , 882
    (1st Cir. 1993)).
    The Burford Court identified one such exception to a
    federal court's duty to exercise jurisdiction.                  See 
    319 U.S. at 334
    .     There, the plaintiff asked a federal court to invalidate,
    under state law, an order issued by the Texas Railroad Commission
    (the Commission), which had granted the defendant a permit to drill
    for oil in a field where hundreds of other producers also had
    wells.    See 
    id. at 316-17, 319
    .         At the time, the power to decide
    who could extract what oil from a commonly drilled field rested
    with the Commission.       See 
    id. at 320
    .        The Commission's judgments
    entailed consideration of a multitude of factors, including the
    oil supply, market demand, protection of the individual operators
    and the public interest, spacing of the wells, as well as highly
    technical    geologic     data.     See     
    id. at 321-22
    .         To   achieve
    consistency in judgments, to avoid "interminable confusion," 
    id. at 326
     (quoting Tex. Steel Co. v. Fort Worth & Denver City Ry.
    - 8 -
    Co., 
    40 S.W.2d 78
    , 82 (Tex. 1931)), and to develop "specialized
    knowledge . . . useful in shaping the policy of regulation of the
    ever-changing demands in this field," a state statute centralized
    direct judicial review in the state district courts of a particular
    Texas county, 
    id. at 326-27
    . Because the intervention of the lower
    federal courts "threatened to frustrate the purpose of the complex
    administrative system that Texas had established," the Supreme
    Court deemed abstention proper.              Quackenbush, 
    517 U.S. at 725
    (discussing Burford).
    The     Court   later   emphasized    that    Burford    permits     a
    federal court to abstain "only in extraordinary circumstances."
    
    Id. at 726
    .       "Burford allows a federal court to dismiss a case
    only if it presents difficult questions of state law bearing on
    policy problems of substantial public import whose importance
    transcends    the    result   in    the   case   then    at   bar,   or   if   its
    adjudication in a federal forum would be disruptive of state
    efforts to establish a coherent policy with respect to a matter of
    substantial public concern."          
    Id. at 726-27
     (internal quotations
    omitted).
    Mindful of these admonitions, we have read Burford and
    its progeny narrowly. We have said that "abstention in the Burford
    line of cases rested upon . . . the threat . . . that the federal
    court might, in the context of the state regulatory scheme, create
    a parallel, additional, federal, 'regulatory review' mechanism,
    - 9 -
    the existence of which would significantly increase the difficulty
    of administering the state regulatory scheme."            Bath Mem'l Hosp.
    v. Maine Health Care Fin. Comm'n, 
    853 F.2d 1007
    , 1013 (1st Cir.
    1988); see Pub. Serv. Co. of N.H. v. Patch, 
    167 F.3d 15
    , 24 (1st
    Cir. 1998) ("The fundamental concern in Burford is to prevent
    federal courts from bypassing a state administrative scheme and
    resolving issues of state law and policy that are committed in the
    first instance to expert administrative resolution.").               That a
    case implicates "important state regulatory policies," Chico Serv.
    Station, 
    633 F.3d at 30
     (quoting Vaquería Tres Monjitas, 587 F.3d
    at 473), or that "federal action may impair operation of a state
    administrative scheme or overturn state policy" does not alone
    justify Burford abstention,       id.;    see   NOPSI, 
    491 U.S. at 362
    (explaining that "[w]hile Burford is concerned with protecting
    complex   state   administrative     processes     from     undue    federal
    interference, it does not require abstention whenever there exists
    such a process, or even in all cases where there is a 'potential
    for conflict' with state regulatory law or policy" (quoting Colo.
    River Water Conservation Dist., 
    424 U.S. at 816
    )).                  Instead,
    Burford abstention applies only in "unusual circumstances," where
    the   federal   court   risks   usurping    the   state's    role   as   the
    "regulatory decision-making center."        Vaquería Tres Monjitas, 587
    F.3d at 474 (quoting Bath Mem'l Hosp., 
    853 F.2d at 1012-13
    ); see
    Fragoso, 
    991 F.2d at 882
     (noting that Burford abstention is limited
    - 10 -
    to "narrowly circumscribed situations where deference to a state's
    administrative processes for the determination of complex, policy-
    laden, state-law issues would serve a significant local interest
    and would render federal-court review inappropriate").
    It is against this backdrop that we measure the fit
    between Burford and the case at hand.      Cadence asserts that the
    Uniform Rules and Massachusetts General Laws chapter 239 do not
    constitute the kind of complex state administrative scheme that
    engenders protection under Burford.      See NOPSI, 
    491 U.S. at 362
    (explaining Burford's concern with protection of "complex state
    administrative processes"); Patch, 
    167 F.3d at 24
     (expressing
    similar view with respect to "state administrative scheme[s]");
    Cnty. of Suffolk v. Long Island Lighting Co., 
    907 F.2d 1295
    , 1309
    (2d Cir. 1990) (explaining that "intricate state administrative
    scheme" is the "sine qua non" of Burford abstention).      In arguing
    against this assertion, FSH unwittingly makes Cadence's case.        We
    explain briefly.
    The rules and statutes that FSH identifies are merely
    rules of procedure designed to expedite summary process eviction
    proceedings.    See Uniform Rule 1 ("These rules govern procedure in
    all   summary   process   actions   in   the   Trial   Court   of   the
    Commonwealth."); see also FDIC v. Sweeney, 
    136 F.3d 216
    , 219 (1st
    Cir. 1998) (describing Massachusetts summary process rules as
    "abbreviated procedures").    As FSH points out, the Uniform Rules
    - 11 -
    specify such things as the physical form that must be used to
    initiate a summary process action, see Uniform Rule 2(a); the
    timing of service of process, see Uniform Rule 2(b) (mandating
    service of summons and complaint "no later than the seventh day
    nor earlier than the thirtieth day before the entry day," subject
    to   certain   conditions);   entry   dates,    see    Uniform   Rule   2(c)
    (requiring entry dates to be "each Monday"); and the format and
    content of a defendant's answer, see Uniform Rule 3 (requiring
    that defendant "prepare a written answer containing . . . the
    caption 'Summary Process Answer' with the trial date set forth
    below   the    caption[,] . . . deny[ing]      every   statement   in    the
    complaint which is in dispute[,] . . . [and] stating . . . any
    affirmative defense").    These rules also confirm the applicability
    of some state procedural imperatives, which apply both to the
    Massachusetts summary process scheme and outside that scheme. See,
    e.g., Uniform Rule 8 (applying Mass. R. Civ. P. 38); Uniform Rule
    13 (applying relevant parts of Mass. R. Civ. P. 60, 62).           Even the
    court below acknowledged that these summary process rules were,
    for the most part, comparable to those applicable in plenary civil
    litigation.    See Forty Six Hundred, 478 F. Supp. 3d at 86.        Simply
    put, the Uniform Rules, with their statutory gloss, are no more
    than stereotypical rules of procedure, including directives about
    when to file and what to title a filing.          They do not amount to
    "the sort of complex administrative scheme at issue in Burford."
    - 12 -
    Sweeney, 
    136 F.3d at 219
    .         It follows that, in this instance, there
    is no plausible threat of "disrupt[ing] state efforts to establish
    coherent policy with respect to a matter of substantial public
    concern."       NOPSI, 
    491 U.S. at 361
     (quoting Colo. River Water
    Conservation Dist., 
    424 U.S. at 814
    ).            Substitution of procedural
    rules, which do not themselves amount to a complex administrative
    scheme, prevents neither the development of substantive state
    policies nor application of those policies by a federal court.
    FSH's argument to the contrary rests heavily on the
    notion that the summary process rules are "complex."             But for that
    proposition, FSH relies on the decision in Adjartey v. Central
    Division of Housing Court Department, 
    120 N.E.3d 297
     (Mass. 2019).
    This reliance is misplaced.           Although the Massachusetts Supreme
    Judicial Court (the SJC) did use the adjective "complex"                      in
    describing the summary process scheme, 
    id. at 304,
     Adjartey hardly
    can   be   said    to   support   federal   abstention.       There,   the   SJC
    described summary process cases as "complex," particularly for pro
    se    tenants     confronted   by   "landlords    who   are   represented     by
    attorneys."       
    Id. at 304, 306
    .     The SJC did not deem the procedure
    "complex" as compared to the wide universe of state administrative
    schemes.    Moreover, it is apparent to us that the summary process
    rules and the scheme that they elaborate are straightforward, and
    Adjartey does not undercut this assessment.
    - 13 -
    In a variation on the same theme, FSH contends that the
    summary process rules constitute a "specialized procedure," which
    would be "unavailable in the federal court."                   This contention
    proves too much:       all removed actions are subject to the Federal
    Rules of Civil Procedure.       See Fed. R. Civ. P. 81(c)(1); Rinsky v.
    Cushman & Wakefield, Inc., 
    918 F.3d 8
    , 17 (1st Cir.), cert. denied,
    
    140 S. Ct. 455
     (2019).           Those rules invariably displace the
    procedural rules that would have governed the removed action had
    that action remained in the state-court system.                We do not think
    that      this   rule-displacement        mechanism       is      capable     of
    transmogrifying previously applicable state procedural rules into
    state administrative schemes worthy of Burford protection.                  Any
    other conclusion would make the act of removal alone sufficient to
    trigger abstention — a result wholly inconsistent with the Supreme
    Court's     cabining    of   Burford      abstention     to     "extraordinary
    circumstances."       Quackenbush, 
    517 U.S. at 726
    .
    What is more, the substance of summary process cases
    independently shows that there is no threat of interference with
    state policymaking sufficient to warrant Burford abstention.                The
    Burford    doctrine    guards   against    federal     interference    with   a
    state's resolution of "difficult and consequential questions of
    state law or policy."        Chico Serv. Station, 
    633 F.3d at 26 n.9
    (citing NOPSI, 
    491 U.S. at 361
    ); see Sweeney, 
    136 F.3d at 219
    (requiring "difficult, complex questions of state law"); Fragoso,
    - 14 -
    
    991 F.2d at 883
     (declining to abstain when appeal "frame[d] no
    difficult question of state law bearing on significant public
    policy issues" (quotations omitted)).         The adjudication of an
    eviction action does not involve the          kinds of difficult   and
    unsettled questions of state substantive law that can suffice to
    trigger abstention.
    As we explained nearly two decades ago, "there [is]
    nothing    unusual    about   the   federal    court . . . appl[ying]
    Massachusetts law regulating the possession of real property."
    Sweeney, 
    136 F.3d at 219
    .      Unlike in Burford — where the state
    specifically sought to develop and apply a state agency's technical
    expertise in evaluating complex issues of geology and economics,
    see 
    319 U.S. at 326-27
     — real property rights, though derived
    mainly from state law, are routinely enforced in federal as well
    as state courts.     Especially in light of this historical pattern,
    we discern no principled reason for concluding that the state's
    interests would be jeopardized by allowing a federal court to
    resolve a garden-variety eviction action.3       Sweeney, 
    136 F.3d at 219
    .
    The incidence of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic does not
    3
    alter this conclusion.    "In a variety of ways, federal courts
    enforce rights created by state law," Sweeney, 
    136 F.3d at 219,
    and there is no reason to believe that federal courts cannot apply
    whatever eviction-related policies may have evolved in response to
    the COVID-19 pandemic. We add, moreover, that the district court's
    concern over the difficulty of "anticipat[ing]" state-court
    exceptions to eviction proceedings is wide of the mark. Forty Six
    - 15 -
    We add a coda.         A centerpiece of FSH's argument in
    support of abstention is the decision in Federal Home Loan Mortgage
    Corporation v. Briggs, 
    556 F. App'x 557
     (8th Cir. 2014) (per
    curiam).   Briggs, however, is too flimsy to support the weight
    that FSH loads upon it.
    In Briggs, a panel of        the Eighth Circuit upheld        a
    district court's decision to abstain — on Burford grounds — from
    adjudicating an eviction action controlled by state procedures
    similar to those at issue here.      See 
    id. at 558
    .   The Briggs court,
    though, did not have the benefit of briefing on the complexity or
    lack of complexity of the state procedural scheme and relied only
    on the lower court's analysis, see 
    id. at 557-58,
     and we have found
    the lack of such complexity to be dispositive.           In all events,
    Briggs is not controlling precedent even in the circuit of its
    birth, see 8th Cir. R. 32.1A, and we decline to follow it.
    To say more about the abstention question would be to
    paint the lily.    We conclude, without serious question, that the
    Massachusetts summary process scheme is not the kind of state
    administrative    scheme   that   demands   the   protective   shield   of
    Hundred, 478 F. Supp. at 87. Presumably, eviction cases heard in
    state court will outnumber those removed to federal court, and
    state law will develop with only negligible interruption. Besides,
    the very nature of those few eviction cases that may satisfy the
    statutory prerequisites for removal — such as this commercial
    eviction dispute — makes them less likely to implicate those
    questions.
    - 16 -
    Burford abstention.   As we have said, it is not an intricate or
    complex state administrative scheme, nor does it pose difficult
    and unsettled questions of state law.     Given these conclusions and
    given the undisputed fact that FSH's suit against Cadence satisfied
    all the prerequisites for federal diversity jurisdiction, the
    district court was not entitled to shirk its duty to exercise
    jurisdiction over that suit.      See Quackenbush, 
    517 U.S. at 726
    -
    27; Chico Serv. Station, 
    633 F.3d at 29-30
    .
    III
    Our   reversal   of   the   remand   order   ordinarily   would
    require nothing more than a simple instruction to the district
    court to exercise its jurisdiction and adjudicate the action that
    FSH has brought against Cadence.          Here, however, there is a
    possible wrench in the works:     because the district court already
    has returned the action to the state court and the case has
    progressed (albeit modestly) in that forum, a question arises as
    to whether the ordinary remedy is still available. Some background
    helps to put this question in perspective.
    In In re La Providencia Development Corp., 
    406 F.2d 251
    (1st Cir. 1969), we said that, in removal proceedings, "the state
    court proceedings are to be interfered with once" and only once.
    
    Id. at 252
    .   We subsequently reiterated this admonition in FDIC v.
    Santiago Plaza, 
    598 F.2d 634
     (1st Cir. 1979) (per curiam), stating
    that "once a district court has decided to remand a case and has
    - 17 -
    so notified the state court, the district judge is without power
    to take any further action."                 
    Id. at 636
    .      These prescriptive
    statements — which also give us pause to consider our authority to
    review the remand order — are context-specific.                      As we explain
    below, they do not apply in this case.
    The quoted statements were made in, and applied only to,
    cases that fall within the compass of 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d) — a
    provision that forbids appellate review of certain remand orders.4
    Once the state court has resumed jurisdiction in such a case, a
    defendant         is   barred       even     from   bringing     a     motion   for
    reconsideration.          See id.
    That one-shot rule, see In re La Providencia Dev., 
    406 F.2d at 253,
     does not inform our inquiry in this case.                  After all,
    where section 1447(d) is not in play, following the one-shot rule
    would make little sense.             So it is here:       while section 1447(d)
    generally bars appellate review of remand orders "premised on a
    lack       of   subject   matter    jurisdiction     or   a   defect   in   removal
    procedure," BP P.L.C. v. Mayor of Balt., 
    141 S. Ct. 1532
    , 1541
    (2021) (explaining Court's holdings in Carlsbad Technology, Inc.
    v. HIF Bio, Inc., 
    556 U.S. 635
    , 638 (2009), and Thermtron Products,
    Section 1447(d) provides, with limited exceptions, that
    4
    "[a]n order remanding a case to the State court from which it was
    removed is not reviewable on appeal or otherwise . . . ."        28
    U.S.C. § 1447(d); see BP P.L.C. v. Mayor of Balt., 
    141 S. Ct. 1532
    ,
    1536-37 (2021).
    - 18 -
    Inc. v. Hermansdorfer, 
    423 U.S. 336
    , 345-46 (1976)), the Supreme
    Court (in reviewing the history of section 1447) has determined
    that "[t]here is no indication whatsoever that Congress intended
    to extend the prohibition against review to reach remand orders
    entered on grounds not provided by the statute,"     Thermtron, 
    423 U.S. at 350
    ; see BP P.L.C., 141 S. Ct. at 1541 (noting that Court
    precedent "permitted rather than foreclosed appellate review of
    certain remand orders").      The Court's "strong statement" that
    remand orders beyond the reach of section 1447 are reviewable
    "suggests that it would not countenance a district court evading
    review by immediately transmitting its remand order to the state
    court."   Acad. of Country Music v. Cont'l Cas. Co., 
    991 F.3d 1059
    ,
    1063 (9th Cir. 2021).
    The Quackenbush Court determined that abstention-based
    remand orders were not only beyond the reach of section 1447(d)
    but also immediately appealable under section 1291.    See 
    517 U.S. at 712-15
    .    In such cases, allowing a district court to render the
    permitted appeal nugatory by prematurely returning the case to the
    state court would defeat the very purpose of permitting an appeal
    and leave a defendant who prevails on appeal holding an empty bag.
    Neither Supreme Court precedent nor our own case law demands so
    illogical a result.
    We are mindful that some modest proceedings have taken
    place in state court.     Given the inapplicability of the one-shot
    - 19 -
    rule, however, we do not think that this fact alone should either
    defenestrate Cadence's entitlement to be heard in federal court or
    alter the outcome of this appeal.      And although FSH argues that
    Cadence has "taken advantage" of the state court's jurisdiction,
    that argument comprises more cry than wool.
    Importantly, there is no question of waiver or estoppel
    here.   Cadence has at all times acted expeditiously to preserve
    its right to a federal forum. For instance, Cadence promptly asked
    the district court to stay its remand order and — when that stay
    was denied — promptly asked this court for a stay.     That no stay
    was ordered by this court was not a function of any lack of
    diligence on Cadence's part but, rather, was a function of the
    district court's premature return of the action to the state court.
    Nor do general considerations of comity seem adequate to override
    Cadence's entitlement to a federal forum, especially since the
    state-court proceedings are still in their early stages and no
    judgment has yet been entered.
    Even though we are confident that this case's uneventful
    time in state court neither affects the merits of Cadence's appeal
    nor the remedy we invoke, we have been unable to identify any
    formal procedural mechanism for the retrieval of a removed case
    erroneously returned to a state court.    We see no reason, though,
    why general principles of comity, cooperation, and communication
    - 20 -
    between state and federal courts are inadequate to bridge this
    procedural gap.
    The case law abounds with examples of federal courts
    using informal processes to retrieve improvidently remanded cases
    from state courts.           An example can be gleaned from our decision in
    Connolly v. H.D. Goodall Hospital, Inc., 
    427 F.3d 127
     (1st Cir.
    2005). There, the district court ordered a remand, which the clerk
    of court then executed.               See 
    id. at 128
    .      But when the removing
    defendant filed a notice of appeal, the district court "issued a
    procedural      order       vacating     its   already-effectuated         remand       as
    'premature.'"         
    Id.
        In addition, the court "direct[ed] its clerk
    to recall the case from the state court."                    
    Id.
        Acting on that
    directive, "[t]he clerk complied and the state court cooperated,"
    and the case was re-docketed in the district court.                       
    Id.
    So, too, in a case in which a district court had already
    transmitted its sua sponte remand order to a state court, the Ninth
    Circuit     determined         both    that    federal    jurisdiction          was    not
    forfeited and that review of the order was not pretermitted by
    section 1447(d).            See Acad. of Country Music, 991 F.3d at 1070.
    It subsequently held that the district court's decision to remand
    based on section 1447(c) exceeded the scope of such statutory
    authority and vacated the remand order.                  See id. at 1069-70.           The
    court     did   not     deem     the    retrieval   of     the     case    to     be    an
    insurmountable obstacle but, rather, concluded its opinion by
    - 21 -
    directing that "[t]he district court shall enter an order recalling
    the remand and shall notify the [state court] that the district
    court has resumed jurisdiction over the action."            Id. at 1070; see
    Reddam v. KPMG LLP, 
    457 F.3d 1054
    , 1062 (9th Cir. 2006) (entering
    similar direction upon reversal of remand order in case prematurely
    returned to state court).
    Our decision in Alstom Caribe, Inc. v. Geo. P. Reintjes
    Co., 
    484 F.3d 106
     (1st Cir. 2007), involved the possible need for
    retrieval of funds improvidently transferred from one federal
    district court to another.         Although not involving the retrieval
    of a case from a state court, this decision furnishes a compelling
    analogy. There, the district court ordered the deposit of disputed
    funds into its registry and then transferred the funds — but not
    the case — to a district court in a different circuit.             See 
    id. at 110-11
    .    By the time we heard the appeal, the funds had been
    "physically transferred to the Western District of Missouri" and
    "that court ha[d] assumed control over them."               
    Id. at 116
    .      We
    acknowledged that "we [had] no authority to order a district court
    in another circuit" to return previously transferred funds but —
    because a party's rights were at stake — "we fe[lt] confident that
    we   c[ould]   rely   on   the   district    courts   in   the   two   affected
    districts to act cooperatively so that the ends of justice w[ould]
    be served."    
    Id.
        We left it up to the district court — should a
    retransfer of the funds prove necessary — "to advise the transferee
    - 22 -
    court that the deposited funds were transferred improvidently and
    request their return."    
    Id.
    These examples point the way toward the appropriate
    remedy in this case.     As we already have determined, the district
    court's remand order was in error.       See supra Part II.   Thus,
    Cadence is entitled to defend against FSH's action in the federal
    district court.   There is a long and storied history of comity and
    cooperation between state and federal courts in this circuit.
    Given that history, we are confident that the district court can
    enlist the state court's cooperation and restore the action to its
    own docket (where the case belongs).        In the exercise of our
    supervisory authority, we direct the district court to undertake
    this retrieval forthwith.
    IV
    We offer some guidance to district courts to help prevent
    a removed case from becoming a shuttlecock, batted back and forth
    between a state court and a federal court.
    If a motion to remand is granted by the district court
    in a removed case and the remand order is appealable, the district
    court may wish to avoid immediately certifying the remand order
    and returning the case file to the state court until it believes
    the specter of shuttling has abated.      A district court would be
    well-advised, for example, to hold the matter in abeyance for a
    brief period or to direct the clerk of court to delay transmittal
    - 23 -
    of the certified remand order.     Either course of action would give
    the removing party an opportunity to move for a stay, to seek
    reconsideration, and/or to appeal the order and request a stay
    from the court of appeals.
    The variety of approaches in the federal court system
    dealing with similar issues illustrates that, although there may
    not be a single best method, an important common denominator is
    that counsel be made aware of these temporal constraints.              The
    court may do so either formally (say, by adoption of a local rule
    or   publicly   available   operating   procedure)   or   informally   (by
    acquainting counsel, on an ad hoc case-by-case basis, with its
    timeline).      The United States District Court for the Eastern
    District of Texas, for instance, requires that its clerk of court
    wait at least twenty days following entry of a remand order before
    returning the case file. See Eastern District of Texas Local Civil
    Rule 83(b); see also Gunter v. Jay Ayers, Inc., No. 10-354, 
    2011 WL 13217086
    , at *1 n.1 (E.D. Tex. Mar. 8, 2011) (acknowledging
    that rule helps avoid a snafu where parties may like to object to
    a magistrate judge's ruling on a motion to remand within the time
    period allotted for filing objections).        Another district court
    has promulgated a local rule requiring that its clerk of court
    wait fourteen days before transmitting a certified copy of a remand
    order pursuant to section 1447(c).          See Northern District of
    Illinois Local Rule 81.2.     Other district courts have devised more
    - 24 -
    informal approaches tailored to the circumstances of particular
    cases.   See, e.g., Reiber v. Cnty. of Gage, No. 15-3023, 
    2016 WL 2596025
    , at *2 n.2 (D. Neb. May 5, 2016) (noting "for the parties'
    convenience, that [the] remand order is appealable" and advising
    that the court "will, unless notified by all remaining parties
    that   they    wish   to   expedite   remand     to   state   court,   stay   its
    transmittal of the case for 30 business days to permit sufficient
    time for an appeal").         In the end, it is the district court's
    province to manage its dockets.             See United States v. Ottens, 
    74 F.3d 357
    , 359 (1st Cir. 1996).           And it is that court's charge to
    do so fairly and efficiently.
    V
    We need go no further. For the reasons elucidated above,
    we reverse the district court's remand order and remand the matter
    to the district court with directions to resume jurisdiction,
    retrieve the action forthwith from the state court, and thereafter
    to proceed in the ordinary course.             Costs shall be taxed in favor
    of Cadence.
    So Ordered.
    - 25 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 20-1784P

Filed Date: 9/30/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/30/2021

Authorities (19)

county-of-suffolk-a-municipal-corporation-robert-alcorn-christopher-s , 907 F.2d 1295 ( 1990 )

federal-deposit-insurance-corporation-in-its-capacity-as-receiver-of , 136 F.3d 216 ( 1998 )

Sevigny v. Employers Insurance , 411 F.3d 24 ( 2005 )

federal-deposit-insurance-corporation-v-juan-j-santiago-plaza-v-banco , 598 F.2d 634 ( 1979 )

New Orleans Public Service, Inc. v. Council of City of New ... , 109 S. Ct. 2506 ( 1989 )

22-socsecrepser-567-medicaremedicaid-gu-37243-medicaremedicaid-gu , 853 F.2d 1007 ( 1988 )

In Re La Providencia Development Corporation , 406 F.2d 251 ( 1969 )

Connolly v. H.D. Goodall Hospital, Inc. , 427 F.3d 127 ( 2005 )

Annette B. Demauro v. Joseph M. Demauro, Edward Martin, ... , 115 F.3d 94 ( 1997 )

Alstom Caribe, Inc. v. Geo. P. Reintjes Co. , 484 F.3d 106 ( 2007 )

Chico Service Station, Inc. v. Sol Puerto Rico Ltd. , 633 F.3d 20 ( 2011 )

United States v. Ottens , 74 F.3d 357 ( 1996 )

Public Service Co. of New Hampshire v. Patch , 167 F.3d 15 ( 1998 )

Tonwal Realties, Inc. v. Beame , 406 F. Supp. 363 ( 1976 )

Glen 6 Associates, Inc. v. Dedaj , 770 F. Supp. 225 ( 1991 )

Guillemard-Ginorio v. Contreras-Gomez , 585 F.3d 508 ( 2009 )

Carlsbad Technology, Inc. v. HIF Bio, Inc. , 129 S. Ct. 1862 ( 2009 )

Carmen Fragoso, A/K/A Carmen Fragoso De Conway v. Dr. Maria ... , 991 F.2d 878 ( 1993 )

Burford v. Sun Oil Co. , 63 S. Ct. 1098 ( 1943 )

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