Asociacion Puertorriquena de Profesores Univ. v. University of Puerto Rico ( 2023 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 21-1690
    IN RE: THE FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO
    RICO, as Representative for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico; THE
    FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO RICO, as
    Representative for the Puerto Rico Sales Tax Financing
    Corporation, a/k/a Cofina; THE FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND
    MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO RICO, as Representative for the
    Employees Retirement System of the Government of the
    Commonwealth of Puerto Rico; THE FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND
    MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO RICO, as Representative for the
    Puerto Rico Highways and Transportation Authority; THE FINANCIAL
    OVERSIGHT AND MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO RICO, as
    Representative for the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority
    (PREPA); THE FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO
    RICO, as Representative of the Puerto Rico Public Buildings
    Authority,
    Debtors,
    ASOCIACION PUERTORRIQUENA DE PROFESORES UNIVERSITARIOS;
    ANGEL RODRIGUEZ-RIVERA; JAVIER CORDOVA-ITURREGUI; HERIBERTO
    MARIN-CENTENO; YOHANA DE-JESUS-BERRIOS; ANNABELL C. SEGARRA;
    NYDIA E. CHEVEREZ-RODRIGUEZ; FRANCES BOTHWELL-DEL TORO;
    IVETTE BONET-RIVERA; LIDA ORTA-ANES,
    Plaintiffs, Appellants,
    MARIA DEL MAR ROSA RODRIGUEZ,
    Movant, Appellant,
    v.
    UNIVERSITY OF PUERTO RICO; GOVERNING BOARD OF THE UNIVERSITY OF
    PUERTO RICO; MAYDA VELASCO-BONILLA, in her official capacity as
    President of the Governing Board of the University of Puerto
    Rico; WALTER ALOMAR-JIMENEZ, in his personal capacity; RICARDO
    DALMAU-SANTANA, in his official capacity as Vice-President of
    the Governing Board of the University of Puerto Rico; ZORAIDA
    BUXO-SANTIAGO, in her personal capacity; MANUEL GONZALEZ-DEL
    TORO, in his official capacity as a member of the Governing
    Board of the University of Puerto Rico; ERIC PEREZ-TORRES, in
    his personal capacity; ALEJANDRO CAMPORREALE-MUNDO, in his
    official capacity as a member of the Governing Board of the
    University of Puerto Rico and in his personal capacity; HERMAN
    CESTERO-AGUILAR, in his official capacity as a member of the
    Governing Board of the University of Puerto Rico; ANTONIO
    MONROIG-MALATRASSI, in his official capacity as a member of the
    Governing Board of the University of Puerto Rico and in his
    personal capacity; MARGARITA VILLAMIL-TORRES, in her official
    capacity as Secretary of the Governing Board of the University
    of Puerto Rico; NEFTALI SOTO-SANTIAGO, in his personal capacity;
    ELIEZER RAMOS-PARES, in his official capacity as a member of the
    Governing Board of the University of Puerto Rico; EMILIO COLON-
    BELTRAN, in his official capacity as a member of the Governing
    Board of the University of Puerto Rico and in his personal
    capacity; JORGE VALENTIN-ASENCIO, in his official capacity as a
    member of the Governing Board of the University of Puerto Rico;
    LEONARDO VALENTIN-GONZALEZ, in his official capacity as a member
    of the Governing Board of the University of Puerto Rico; LOURDES
    SOTO DE LAURIDO, in her official capacity as a member of the
    Governing Board of the University of Puerto Rico; ELIUD RIVAS-
    HERNANDEZ, in his official capacity as a member of the Governing
    Board of the University of Puerto Rico; MAYRA OLAVARRIA-CRUZ, in
    her personal capacity and in her official capacity as Interim
    President of the University of Puerto Rico; JORGE HADDOCK-
    ACEVEDO, in his personal capacity; THE FINANCIAL OVERSIGHT AND
    MANAGEMENT BOARD FOR PUERTO RICO; ALAN RODRIGUEZ-PEREZ, in his
    personal capacity; UNIVERSITY OF PUERTO RICO RETIREMENT SYSTEM;
    NAOMY RIVERA, in her personal capacity; JORGE RIVERA-VELAZQUEZ,
    in his official capacity as a member of the Governing Board of
    the University of Puerto Rico and in his personal capacity,
    Defendants, Appellees,
    MARYSEL PAGAN-SANTANA; EFRAIN RODRIGUEZ-OCASIO,
    Defendants.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
    [Hon. Laura Taylor Swain,* U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Kayatta, Howard, and Thompson,
    Circuit Judges.
    Tanaira Padilla Rodríguez, with whom Guillermo Ramos Luiña
    was on brief, for appellants.
    Mark D. Harris, with whom Timothy W. Mungovan, John E.
    Roberts, Martin J. Bienenstock, Dietrich L. Snell, Michael T.
    Mervis, Lucas Kowalczyk, and Proskauer Rose LLP were on brief, for
    appellee Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico.
    Francisco J. González-Magaz, with whom Juan M. Casellas-
    Rodríguez, Ocasio Law Firm, LLC, and Nolla, Palou & Casellas, LLC
    were on brief, for appellees Governing Board of the University of
    Puerto Rico and University of Puerto Rico.
    February 14, 2023
    *  Of the   Southern   District   of   New   York,   sitting   by
    designation.
    KAYATTA, Circuit Judge.      The University of Puerto Rico
    (UPR)    is    a   "covered    territorial      instrumentality"   of   the
    Commonwealth's government within the meaning of section 5 of the
    Puerto Rico Oversight, Management, and Economic Stability Act
    (PROMESA), 
    48 U.S.C. § 2104.1
             As such, it is subject to the
    oversight of the Financial Oversight and Management Board for
    Puerto Rico (the "FOMB" or the "Oversight Board").           See 
    48 U.S.C. § 2121
    (d)(1)(A).       In exercising that oversight, the Oversight
    Board determined that the UPR Retirement System -- the entity that
    administers UPR's pension plan -- was headed towards insolvency.
    The Oversight Board therefore issued fiscal plans for UPR that,
    among other things,       identified the options that UPR had for
    adjusting (or not) its continuing accrual of obligations to the
    Retirement System.
    Understandably   opposed     to    any   reduction   in   the
    Retirement System's benefit payments that would occur should UPR
    not increase (much less reduce) its accrual of obligations to the
    Retirement System, the Asociación Puertorriqueña de Profesores
    Universitarios (APPU) -- an association of active and retired UPR
    professors -- and nine of its individual members filed this
    1  All uses of "section" refer to PROMESA, Pub. L. No. 114-
    187, 
    130 Stat. 549
     (2016), unless otherwise specified.
    - 4 -
    adversary proceeding in the Title III court.2              Plaintiffs seek to
    block any pension changes by, among other things, enjoining the
    Oversight Board from having any "involvement" with the operation
    and benefits of the Retirement System.              Named as defendants are
    the Oversight Board, UPR, the UPR Governing Board, and the UPR
    Retirement      System     (the    latter     three,     together,    the     "UPR
    defendants").         For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment
    of the Title III court dismissing the complaint for lack of
    jurisdiction.
    I.
    A.
    Congress enacted PROMESA in 2016 "to address Puerto
    Rico's 'fiscal emergency.'"          Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R.
    v. Pierluisi (In re Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R.), 
    634 B.R. 187
    , 193      (D.P.R. 2021)       (quoting 
    48 U.S.C. § 2194
    (m)).              "The
    [Oversight]      Board,     established       'as   an    entity     within    the
    territorial government' of Puerto Rico, was empowered by PROMESA
    to, among other things, develop, approve, and certify Fiscal Plans
    and       Territory     Budgets     [for    the     Commonwealth       and    its
    instrumentalities], negotiate with the Commonwealth's creditors,
    and, under Title III, to commence a bankruptcy-type proceeding on
    behalf of the Commonwealth [or its instrumentalities]."                  Méndez-
    2 "Title III court" refers to the district court overseeing
    the bankruptcy proceedings under Title III of PROMESA.
    - 5 -
    Núñez v. Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R. (In re Fin. Oversight
    & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R.), 
    916 F.3d 98
    , 104 (1st Cir. 2019) (citations
    omitted).    "The purpose of the Oversight Board is to provide a
    method for [Puerto Rico] to achieve fiscal responsibility and
    access to the capital markets."            
    48 U.S.C. § 2121
    (a).          Under
    section 204, the Oversight Board "may take such actions as it
    considers    necessary   to    ensure      that     [Commonwealth    laws],
    contract[s], rule[s], executive order[s] or regulation[s] will not
    adversely affect the territorial government's compliance with the
    Fiscal Plan, including by preventing the execution or enforcement
    of [such law], contract, rule, executive order or regulation."             
    48 U.S.C. § 2144
    (a)(5), (b)(5); see Pierluisi, 634 B.R. at 200–01.
    B.
    On June 5, 2019, the Oversight Board certified a fiscal
    plan for UPR that addressed, in relevant part, "the challenges
    facing the UPR Retirement System."            The Oversight Board had
    concluded, "if UPR continues its current funding policy its pension
    plan will be insolvent by 2031."      The 2019 plan described "[t]hree
    policy options . . . available to UPR":             (1) "[c]ontinue UPR's
    current   defined   benefit   plan   and   return    to   making   the   full
    actuarially required contribution of roughly $160 million per
    year"; (2) "[f]reeze UPR's current defined benefit plan and move
    to a defined contribution (DC) plan[,] [and] [m]ake no other
    changes to the pension plan (e.g., do not cut accrued benefits)";
    - 6 -
    and (3) "[f]reeze UPR's current defined benefit plan and move to
    a defined contribution (DC) plan[,] [and] [p]rogressively reduce
    accrued benefits."     The Oversight Board stated that it "strongly
    believes that Option 3 is the most responsible course of action
    for UPR."
    On June 12, 2020, the Oversight Board certified a new
    fiscal plan for UPR.    The new Plan reiterated the finding that the
    pension plan would be insolvent by 2031, but presented only the
    second and third policy options from 2019 as viable paths forward,
    eliminating the first option of fully funding the pension plan as
    is.   The Oversight Board echoed its recommendation that Option 3
    from the 2019 plan -- freezing the defined benefit plan, moving to
    a defined contribution plan, and reducing accrued benefits -- was
    the "most responsible" option.
    On March 25, 2021, the UPR Governing Board approved a
    plan to close the defined benefit program to all non-vested
    participants and new employees after December 31, 2021.      In the
    2021 fiscal plan for UPR, certified on May 27, 2021,3 the Oversight
    Board acknowledged that this policy change was "a step in the right
    direction."   Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R., Fiscal Plan for
    3 Plaintiffs discuss the 2021 fiscal plan in their opening
    brief on appeal and in their supplemental complaint tendered in
    the district court, but never submitted the plan itself. We take
    judicial notice of the plan as filed on the Oversight Board's
    public website. See Gent v. CUNA Mut. Ins. Soc'y, 
    611 F.3d 79
    , 84
    n.5 (1st Cir. 2010).
    - 7 -
    the   University         of    Puerto        Rico     51    (May 27,       2021),
    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1vFwFRjmG5rBlUt83vGYUJBF0EPH8odh
    D/view. However, the Oversight Board also stated that "the funding
    of the [pension] plan remains a risk in the long-term" and then
    provided the same options as presented in the 2020 fiscal plan,
    stating that only the option that would reduce accrued benefits
    (Option 3 from the 2019 plan) "meets UPR's risk objectives."                  
    Id.
    at 51–52.
    C.
    In   April    2019,   plaintiffs        commenced    this   adversary
    proceeding    in   Puerto     Rico's    ongoing      Title III    case.      They
    subsequently amended their complaint to include details from the
    2019 fiscal plan.        As summarized in their appellate brief, "[t]he
    central allegations of the Amended Complaint were that": "the FOMB
    lacked any authority over the Retirement System and was thus
    precluded from including in the [2019 fiscal plan] reforms to the
    Retirement System"; "UPR and its Governing Board had failed to
    comply with their fiduciary duties towards the Retirement System,
    its participants and beneficiaries"; UPR breached its fiduciary
    duty and violated the Contracts Clause; and "the FOMB's continuous
    and illegal pressure to the Governing Board to secure a reform of
    the Retirement System . . . constituted a tortious interference
    with the Governing Board's contractual obligations and fiduciary
    duties."     Plaintiffs sought, among other things, an injunction
    - 8 -
    "staying any involvement of the Oversight Board with the operation
    and benefits of the Retirement System," an injunction "staying
    further compliance of the Governing Board with the instructions of
    the Oversight Board," and compensation for damages.
    Defendants     moved      to   dismiss       under   Fed.    R.     Civ.
    P. (12)(b)(1) and 12(b)(6).           The magistrate judge to which the
    case was referred recommended dismissal of the claims against both
    the Oversight Board and the UPR defendants.                 With respect to the
    claims against the Oversight Board, the judge concluded that
    (i) plaintiffs had failed to identify an injury-in-fact necessary
    for Article III standing because there had "been no reduction in
    pension     benefits,     and   UPR    ha[d]      not    selected,      much    less
    implemented,    any     modifications      to    the    Retirement   System     that
    reduce [benefits owed to plaintiffs]," and (ii) the district court
    lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the challenge pursuant to
    section 106(e), which provides, "[t]here shall be no jurisdiction
    in any United States district court to review challenges to the
    Oversight     Board's     certification          determinations      under      this
    chapter."     
    48 U.S.C. § 2126
    (e).              The magistrate judge further
    recommended that, given the dismissal of the claims against the
    Oversight Board, the district court should decline to exercise
    supplemental    jurisdiction       over     the    claims     against     the    UPR
    defendants, which are all matters of Puerto Rico law.
    - 9 -
    Following the issuance of the magistrate judge's report
    and recommendation, plaintiffs filed with the district court an
    objection to the magistrate report and moved for leave to amend
    their complaint to incorporate the updates in the 2020 fiscal plan.
    The   district     court     adopted      the     magistrate's      report     "in   its
    entirety"    and    denied    plaintiffs'          motion    to   amend   as    futile,
    concluding that the added details still failed to "establish
    standing,    jurisdiction,           or     allow      the    Court    to      exercise
    supplemental jurisdiction."
    Plaintiffs then moved for reconsideration.                       They also
    moved to file a supplemental complaint that discussed the 2021
    fiscal plan and the UPR Governing Board's decision to close the
    defined benefit program to all non-vested participants and new
    employees.     The district court denied both motions, finding that
    the   additional      facts     would       not     affect    the     court's     legal
    conclusions.       Plaintiffs timely appealed.
    II.
    Plaintiffs       argue     that      the   district     court    erred   in
    granting dismissal pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1).                     They contend that
    section 106(e) does not bar their claims, and that they otherwise
    have Article III standing.           Lastly, they contend that the district
    court erred in denying their motions for reconsideration and
    supplementation because the Oversight Board's and UPR Governing
    Board's 2021 actions -- as described in plaintiffs' post-judgment
    - 10 -
    proposed supplemental brief -- "directly affect the conclusion
    that plaintiffs lack constitutional standing."
    A.
    We   begin   with      the    question       whether    section 106(e)
    precludes subject matter jurisdiction over plaintiffs'                            claims
    against the Oversight Board.         "The issue is a critical one, for if
    the   District       Court      correctly          understood           and     applied
    [section 106(e)], we do not reach the question whether the minimum
    requirements of Art. III have been satisfied.                   If [plaintiffs are]
    correct, however, then the constitutional question is squarely
    presented."      Gladstone Realtors v. Village of Bellwood, 
    441 U.S. 91
    , 101 (1979) (addressing statutory standing under section 812 of
    the Fair Housing Act of 1968); see Block v. Cmty. Nutrition Inst.,
    
    467 U.S. 340
    , 353 n.4 (1984) ("Since congressional preclusion of
    judicial review is in effect jurisdictional, we need not address
    the standing issues decided by the Court of Appeals in this
    case.").    Our review is de novo.              See Lyman v. Baker, 
    954 F.3d 351
    , 359 (1st Cir. 2020); Aurelius Cap. Master, Ltd. v. Puerto
    Rico (In re Fin. Oversight & Mgmt. Bd. for P.R.), 
    919 F.3d 638
    ,
    644 (1st Cir. 2019).       "In so doing, we 'construe the [c]omplaint
    liberally   and    treat     all   well-pleaded          facts     as    true,'     with
    [plaintiffs]      receiving        'the        benefit     of      all        reasonable
    inferences.'"     Aurelius, 
    919 F.3d at 644
     (alterations in original)
    - 11 -
    (quoting Town of Barnstable v. O'Connor, 
    786 F.3d 130
    , 138 (1st
    Cir. 2015)).
    Section 106        addresses    court        actions     arising       from
    PROMESA.     With a few exceptions, section 106(a) confers general
    jurisdiction on the District of Puerto Rico over claims brought
    against the Oversight Board.           One of those exceptions is contained
    in   section 106(e),          which    provides,       "[t]here     shall     be     no
    jurisdiction       in   any   United    States     district      court   to    review
    challenges to the Oversight Board's certification determinations
    under this chapter."          
    48 U.S.C. § 2126
    (e).
    Plaintiffs contend that their challenge is not to the
    "Oversight Board's certification determinations," 
    id.,
     but rather
    to "the scope of the FOMB's authority."                Because section 201(b)(1)
    only empowers the Oversight Board to develop and certify fiscal
    plans    "with    respect     to the   territorial       government      or   covered
    territorial        instrumentalit[ies],"          
    48 U.S.C. § 2141
    (b)(1),
    plaintiffs       argue,   "[a]   Fiscal    Plan    not    with     respect    to    the
    territorial government or covered territorial instrumentality, is
    outside the authority of the FOMB."                They assert the Retirement
    System is an "an independent legal trust that is not a covered
    territorial entity"4 and thus cannot be "include[d] in a fiscal
    4  While the Oversight Board argues that the Retirement System
    is a covered entity, we need not resolve this issue to determine
    whether we have jurisdiction. For purposes of this analysis, we
    - 12 -
    plan."     Plaintiffs further argue that because the UPR Governing
    Board's role as trustee of the Retirement System is "separate from
    its role as governing body of" UPR, the FOMB "cannot exercise . . .
    power over the Governing Board as a trustee of the Retirement
    System" even if it "can exercise oversight power over" UPR.
    We need not reach or opine on plaintiffs' premise that
    section 106(e) would not preclude federal court adjudication of a
    challenge to a fiscal plan if the plan were not authorized by
    PROMESA.    PROMESA clearly authorized the Oversight Board to issue
    a fiscal plan for any covered Commonwealth instrumentality.             See
    48 U.S.C §§ 2121(d)(1)(A), (E), 2141(b)(1).           The fiscal plans at
    issue here, which plaintiffs make clear form the basis of their
    claims against the Oversight Board, are for UPR.           And plaintiffs
    concede that UPR is a "covered instrumentality."                Plaintiffs
    nevertheless complain that the plans impermissibly affect the
    Retirement System, and them, through pension policy changes.            But
    that is a complaint about the fiscal plans themselves, not a
    plausible contention that the plans are not authorized. A debtor's
    compliance with a certified plan is almost always going to affect
    others, most notably creditors and counterparties.              Here, for
    example, if UPR reduces payments to the Retirement System, or
    otherwise    adjusts   its   obligations   to   the   system,   that   will
    assume the Retirement System is simply a third-party creditor of
    UPR, as plaintiffs describe.
    - 13 -
    undoubtedly affect the Retirement System.       But that fact does not
    make the plan an "unauthorized" plan for the Retirement System,
    any more than a plan of reorganization for a debtor would be a
    plan of reorganization for the debtor's affected creditors or
    counterparties.
    Nor does it add anything to plaintiffs' case to argue
    that UPR's Governing Board acts on some matters as a fiduciary for
    the Retirement System.      Plaintiffs develop no argument that the
    fiscal plans dictate actions by the Governing Board as trustee (as
    opposed to, for example, actions by UPR as settlor). In any event,
    Commonwealth instrumentalities may well have many roles and types
    of obligations and duties.    Nothing in PROMESA limits the scope of
    fiscal plans so as to exclude attention to any and all of those
    obligations as they bear on the entities' fiscal health.
    In sum, PROMESA authorized the issuance of the fiscal
    plans that plaintiffs seek to challenge, so the question whether
    plaintiffs could challenge an unauthorized plan is irrelevant to
    the disposition of this appeal.          And plaintiffs here "have the
    burden of demonstrating the existence of federal jurisdiction,"
    Acosta-Ramirez v. Banco Popular de P.R., 
    712 F.3d 14
    , 20 (1st Cir.
    2013).   Because they make no other arguments for jurisdiction over
    their claims against the Oversight Board -- all of which, in one
    way or the other, rest on challenges to the Oversight Board's
    certifications    and   reasoning   --   section 106(e)   precludes   the
    - 14 -
    district court from exercising jurisdiction over those claims.
    Cf.    Méndez-Núñez,         
    916 F.3d at
        112–13   ("[Section] 106(e)            bars
    district      courts     from      reviewing       the   reasons     for    certification
    determinations          as   much     as     the     certification         determinations
    themselves.").
    B.
    Plaintiffs finally argue that the district court erred
    in dismissing, sua sponte, the sixth, seventh, and eighth claims
    for relief, all of which are against only the UPR defendants.
    Those claims requested the court to: (6th) order UPR to pay damages
    for "any loss or depreciation of trust property and any profit
    made by trustee resulting from the breach of fiduciary duties of
    the Governing Board"; (7th) "remove the Governing Board as trustee
    of    the    Retirement      System";       and     (8th) "appoint         the    Retirement
    System Board as successor trustee of the Retirement System."                              But
    plaintiffs concede that supplemental jurisdiction is the only
    basis       for    jurisdiction      over    all     the    claims    against       the   UPR
    defendants (including these claims) and make no argument that
    maintaining          supplemental      jurisdiction          would     be        appropriate
    following the dismissal of the claims against the Oversight Board.
    See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1367
    (c)(3); Wilber v. Curtis, 
    872 F.3d 15
    , 23 (1st
    Cir. 2017) ("[W]e have held that, when all federal claims have
    been dismissed, it is an abuse of discretion for a district court
    to retain jurisdiction over the remaining pendent state law claims
    - 15 -
    unless doing so would serve 'the interests of fairness, judicial
    economy,    convenience,       and    comity.'"    (quoting     Desjardins     v.
    Willard, 
    777 F.3d 43
    , 45 (1st Cir. 2015))).
    C.
    Having concluded that section 106(e) precludes review of
    plaintiffs' claims against the Oversight Board, and having agreed
    that all claims under Commonwealth law against the UPR defendants
    must also be dismissed under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1367
    (c)(3), we need not
    consider the question of constitutional standing.                See Gladstone
    Realtors, 
    441 U.S. at 101
    ; Block, 
    467 U.S. at
    353 n.4.              Because we
    do not address standing, we need not address whether the events of
    2021, as described in plaintiffs' proposed supplemental complaint,
    would have any effect on the district court's constitutional
    analysis.      Instead,       since   plaintiffs    make   no   argument     that
    supplementation       would    affect   the    section 106(e)    analysis,     we
    easily     conclude     that    the     district   court    properly    denied
    plaintiffs' motion for reconsideration and supplementation.
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district
    court is affirmed.
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