Lenetra Jefferson v. Delgado Community College , 602 F. App'x 595 ( 2015 )


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  •      Case: 14-30379      Document: 00512967562         Page: 1    Date Filed: 03/12/2015
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    No. 14-30379                       United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    LENETRA JEFFERSON,                                                        March 12, 2015
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Plaintiff - Appellee                                              Clerk
    v.
    DELGADO COMMUNITY COLLEGE CHARITY SCHOOL OF NURSING,
    Defendant - Appellant
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Louisiana
    USDC No. 2:13-CV-2626
    Before JOLLY, WIENER, and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    The Louisiana Attorney General appeals from two interlocutory rulings
    in the district court, a motion to dismiss and a motion for reconsideration,
    holding that plaintiff Lenetra Jefferson could proceed with her suit against the
    State of Louisiana. At issue in this appeal is the correct procedure for naming
    the State as a defendant under Louisiana law. Because we conclude for the
    * Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH
    CIR. R. 47.5.4.
    Case: 14-30379     Document: 00512967562       Page: 2   Date Filed: 03/12/2015
    No. 14-30379
    reasons that follow that we lack appellate jurisdiction, we DISMISS this
    appeal for want of jurisdiction.
    I.
    Jefferson initiated this action by filing a complaint in Louisiana state
    court, alleging a racial discrimination claim under Title VII, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-
    2(a). Her claim stems from alleged incidents of discrimination that occurred
    while she was employed by the Charity School of Nursing at Delgado
    Community College. In the caption of her complaint, she lists the defendant
    as “Delgado Community College (Charity School of Nursing),” and she
    identifies Delgado in the body of the complaint as “an agency or
    instrumentality of the government of the State of Louisiana.”
    After first attempting to serve Delgado through its chancellor, Jefferson
    subsequently served the Louisiana Attorney General, who appeared in the
    action and removed the case to the district court. Although the Attorney
    General ostensibly has represented Delgado, he purports to appear only to
    protect any state interests implicated by this suit. Once in the district court,
    the Attorney General moved to dismiss the case on procedural grounds,
    arguing that Jefferson had not actually sued the State because she named
    Delgado, which is the common name of the community college, and not the
    specific state agency authorized by Louisiana statute as the entity amenable
    to suit. The Attorney General declined to identify the correct state agency
    before the district court, but he has represented before this Court that
    Jefferson should have named the Board of Supervisors of Community and
    Technical Colleges and served the Board Chairman, who is the Board’s agent
    for receiving service of process.
    The district court denied the Attorney General’s motion, concluding that
    Jefferson’s complaint named the State because it identified Delgado as a state
    agency in the body of the complaint. Similarly, the district court denied the
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    Attorney General’s motion for reconsideration, and the Attorney General filed
    this interlocutory appeal.
    II.
    The Attorney General asserts that we have jurisdiction under the
    collateral order doctrine, which permits immediate appellate review under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
     of a “narrow class of collateral orders.” Quackenbush v. Allstate
    Ins. Co., 
    517 U.S. 706
    , 712 (1996).         Collateral orders are immediately
    appealable only if they “fall in that small class [of orders] which finally
    determine claims of right separate from, and collateral to, rights asserted in
    the action, too important to be denied review and too independent of the cause
    itself to require that appellate consideration be deferred until the whole case
    is adjudicated.” Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp., 
    337 U.S. 541
    , 546
    (1949). We have said that an interlocutory order is reviewable under Cohen if
    it is “sufficiently conclusive, separate, unreviewable, and (perhaps most-
    importantly) important that the benefits of immediate appellate review
    outweigh the loss of efficiency that any movement away from a strict finality
    approach entails.” Henry v. Lake Charles Am. Press, L.L.C., 
    566 F.3d 164
    , 173
    (5th Cir. 2009).     Following review, and with the benefit of supplemental
    briefing on the issue, we hold that the district court’s rulings are not
    immediately appealable under the collateral order doctrine because this Court
    may review them upon entry of final judgment.
    The Attorney General contends that the State’s due process rights are
    violated if the State is compelled to participate in this litigation because
    Jefferson did not properly name and serve the State as a defendant. Merely
    asserting a due process right, however, does not mean that the collateral order
    doctrine applies. For example, personal jurisdiction implicates a defendant’s
    due process rights, but a defendant may not appeal the denial of a motion to
    dismiss based on lack of personal jurisdiction under the collateral order rule.
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    See Digital Equip. Corp. v. Desktop Direct, Inc., 
    511 U.S. 863
    , 873 (1994)
    (rejecting a broad assertion of a right under the collateral order doctrine in
    part because it would extend the doctrine to personal jurisdiction); see also Turi
    v. Main St. Adoption Servs., LLP, 
    633 F.3d 496
    , 502 (6th Cir. 2011) (“A claim
    that the trial court lacks personal jurisdiction over the defendant can be
    vindicated on appeal after trial, and thus does not satisfy the third prong of
    the collateral-order doctrine.”). Here, the State’s rights may be vindicated on
    appeal from final judgment. If the State was not properly served and named
    in the action, any judgment against it would be unenforceable. Although the
    Attorney General asserts that he risks waiving the issue by appearing and
    defending this suit, a party waives a challenge to the sufficiency of process by
    failing to raise the argument in accordance with the Federal Rules of Civil
    Procedure. Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(h)(1). The Attorney General has asserted that
    Jefferson did not properly serve the State, and the State has preserved this
    argument for review following entry of a final judgment.
    The Attorney General draws from the Supreme Court’s decision in
    Murphy Bros., Inc. v. Michetti Pipe Stringing, Inc., in which the Court
    acknowledged the “bedrock principle” that “[a]n individual or entity named as
    a defendant is not obliged to engage in litigation unless notified of the action,
    and brought under a court’s authority, by formal process.” 
    526 U.S. 344
    , 347
    (1999). Murphy Brothers involved the time period for removal under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1446
    (b), and not the collateral order doctrine. To the point, the State’s due
    process rights here are no more fundamental than personal jurisdiction, which
    “protects the individual interest that is implicated when a nonresident
    defendant is haled into a distant and possibly inconvenient forum.” United
    States v. Morton, 
    467 U.S. 822
    , 828 (1984).         As with a defendant who
    unsuccessfully moves to dismiss based on lack of personal jurisdiction, the
    Attorney General here faces the same strategic dilemmas. He may take a
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    default judgment and appeal on the issues he has raised here, but he may face
    a binding judgment if this Court does not ultimately agree with the Attorney
    General’s contention that the State was not properly named and served as a
    defendant in this action. Conversely, the Attorney General may defend the
    action on behalf of the State and incur litigation costs that are ultimately
    unnecessary if this Court adopts his position. Any litigant faces these choices
    when a court denies a potentially dispositive motion, but it would eviscerate
    the collateral order doctrine to hold that any such interlocutory order is
    immediately appealable.     See Will v. Hallock, 
    546 U.S. 345
    , 350 (2006)
    (emphasizing that the class of reviewable collateral orders is “narrow and
    selective in its membership”).
    Indeed, the Supreme Court has observed that service of process, which
    initiates a defendant’s obligations in a civil suit, imposes no great burden on
    the defendant. See Van Cauwenberghe v. Biard, 
    486 U.S. 517
    , 526 (1988)
    (“Service of process merely requires that a defendant appear through an
    attorney and file an answer to the complaint to avoid default.”). Even when a
    defendant claimed to be immune to service of process because his presence in
    the United States was due solely to his extradition on criminal charges, the
    Court held that such an immunity would relieve him from the binding force of
    the judgment only, not from the inconvenience of having to stand trial. See 
    id. at 527
    .   Thus, the district court’s denial of a motion to dismiss was not
    immediately appealable. 
    Id.
     As in Van Cauwenberghe, the district court’s
    conclusion in this case means that the State must now defend the litigation or
    face the risk of a default judgment against it. Like the defendant in Van
    Cauwenberghe, however, the Attorney General may raise his arguments
    regarding service of process at issue here on appeal from a final judgment.
    Finally, we reject the Attorney General’s assertion that the State is
    entitled to immediate appellate review because it is a sovereign state. We note
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    that “[c]onsistent with Supreme Court precedent and the general purposes of
    the final judgment rule, we determine whether an order is appealable as a
    general or categorical matter.”         Henry, 
    566 F.3d at 173
    .          At bottom, the
    Attorney General has raised a procedural argument: the complaint should be
    dismissed because Jefferson listed “Delgado Community College (Charity
    School of Nursing)” in the caption of her complaint instead of the Board of
    Supervisors of Community and Technical Colleges, and consequently, the
    State has not been properly named and served with process in this action. The
    Attorney General’s argument is no different from the argument that any
    private litigant could make concerning the insufficiency of service of process. 1
    Thus, we hold that the Attorney General is not entitled to appellate
    review of the district court’s orders under the collateral order doctrine.
    III.
    Alternatively, the Attorney General requests that we effectively treat his
    appeal as a petition for a writ of mandamus raising this issue. A writ of
    mandamus is appropriate only if: “(1) the petitioner has no other adequate
    means to attain the desired relief; (2) the petitioner has demonstrated a right
    to the issuance of a writ that is clear and indisputable; and (3) the issuing
    court, in the exercise of its discretion, is satisfied that the writ is appropriate
    under the circumstances.” In re Allen, 
    701 F.3d 734
    , 735 (5th Cir. 2012) (per
    1The Attorney General points the Court to a case holding that a denial of a motion to
    dismiss based on sovereign immunity is immediately appealable under the collateral order
    doctrine. P.R. Aqueduct & Sewer Auth. v. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., 
    506 U.S. 139
    , 147 (1993).
    The Attorney General has not cited to any authority, however, suggesting that his specific
    argument here implicates sovereign immunity. For example, he does not argue that Jefferson
    is barred from bringing a Title VII claim against the State based on the allegedly
    discriminatory incidents that occurred at Delgado Community College. Instead, he merely
    argues that Jefferson has failed to name and serve the State as a defendant, a procedural
    contention.
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    curiam) (internal quotation marks omitted). The Attorney General has not
    satisfied any of the three elements of mandamus review.
    As we have discussed above, the State has an effective right to relief on
    appeal from final judgment. See In re Occidental Petroleum Corp., 
    217 F.3d 293
    , 295 (5th Cir. 2000) (stating that a petitioner for mandamus relief must
    show that “error is irremediable on ordinary appeal”). Additionally, the district
    court denied the Attorney General’s motions based on a Louisiana appellate
    decision that applies a flexible inquiry into whether a plaintiff has sued the
    State. See Dejoie v. Medley, 
    945 So. 2d 968
    , 973 (La. Ct. App. 2006). In Dejoie,
    the plaintiff attempted to sue the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans,
    which argued that it was not a juridical person. The court reasoned that the
    plaintiff had named the State as a defendant in the suit, however, and it
    reversed the trial court’s ruling that the Civil District Court lacked procedural
    capacity to be sued. 
    Id.
     The district court here did not clearly abuse its power
    by concluding that Jefferson’s description of Delgado as a state agency in the
    body of her complaint was sufficient to name the State in the suit and that her
    service on the Attorney General was service on the State. Additionally, a writ
    is inappropriate because the Attorney General has identified the proper state
    board that he asserts should be named on the face of the complaint and
    formally served with process. Thus, the parties may now reevaluate their
    positions in the district court in the light of the Attorney General’s
    acknowledgment.
    Accordingly, we decline to consider the Attorney General’s arguments on
    a petition for mandamus review because mandamus review is not warranted
    on these facts. 2
    2 We note that the Attorney General cites to our decision in In re Equal Employment
    Opportunity Commission, 
    709 F.2d 392
     (5th Cir. 1983). In that case, we recognized that we
    may also grant mandamus review in certain cases to resolve important and unsettled issues
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    IV.
    In sum, we hold that we lack jurisdiction to consider the Attorney
    General’s interlocutory appeal.
    DISMISSED.
    of law. 
    Id. at 394
    . We are unpersuaded that the service-related issues here are of such great
    importance that immediate review is warranted. Instead, we believe that any error by the
    district court can be remedied on appeal from a final judgment.
    8