United States Court of
Appeals
FOR
THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
Argued October 16, 2001
Decided April 26, 2002
No. 00-7213
Republic of Venezuela,
Appellee
v.
Philip Morris Incorporated, et
al.,
Appellants
Consolidated with
00-7214, 00-7215, 00-7216, 00-7257,
00-7258
Appeals
from the United States District Court
for the District of Columbia
(No. 99ms00213)
Herbert M. Wachtell argued the cause for
appellants Philip
Morris Companies, Inc., et al. With him on the briefs were
Timothy M.
Broas, Robert F. McDermott, Jr., Paul S. Ryer-
son, Daniel F. Kolb, Kenneth N. Bass, Gene E. Voigts,
Richard L. Gray,
Patrick S. Davies and Steven Klugman.
David Gruenstein and Leigh A. Hyer entered appearances.
Robin S. Conrad, Kenneth S. Geller and
John J. Sullivan
were on the brief of amicus curiae Chamber of Commerce
of
the United States of America in support of appellants.
Joel S. Perwin argued the cause for
appellees. With him
on the brief
were Jonathan S. Massey, George M. Fleming,
Sylvia Davidow and Andres C.
Pereira.
Before: Ginsburg, Chief Judge, Henderson, Circuit
Judge,
and Williams, Senior Circuit Judge.
Opinion for the Court filed by Chief
Judge Ginsburg.
Separate
concurring opinion filed by Senior Circuit Judge
Williams.
Ginsburg, Chief Judge: The district court issued orders
remanding
to a Florida state court four lawsuits filed by
foreign states against
tobacco companies based in the United
States. The companies ask that we reverse the orders of the
district
court and that we issue a writ of mandamus to
prevent the court from
ordering the remand of similar law-
suits still pending before it. We hold that we are without
appellate
jurisdiction to review the orders the district court
already has issued
and that we have no warrant to prohibit
the district court from remanding
to state court those cases
upon which it has not yet acted.
I. Background
Various foreign countries or subdivisions
thereof sued 15
United States tobacco companies in a Florida court to
recover
damages under the laws of Florida. Specifically, the Repub-
lics of Venezuela and of Ecuador,
the Brazilian States of Mato
Grosso Do Sol, Goias, and Espirito Santo,
and the Russian
Federation filed nearly identical complaints in the
Circuit
Court for Florida's Eleventh Judicial District in Miami-Dade
County. They advanced at least
ten distinct theories of
liability, such as fraud, negligence, and unjust
enrichment,
and sought compensation from the companies for the costs of
treating
persons suffering from diseases associated with to-
bacco use. Twenty-nine other foreign states or
subdivisions
have filed similar actions--not now before us--in state and
federal courts around the United States.
The tobacco compa-
nies removed the present cases from the Florida
state court
to the United States District Court for the Southern District
of Florida. The Judicial Panel on
Multidistrict Litigation
then consolidated the cases brought by Venezuela
and three
other foreign states and transferred them to the United
States
District Court for the District of Columbia.
Some months later the district court
dismissed for failure
to state a claim a substantially similar suit
against the tobacco
companies brought in that court by the Republic of
Gua-
temala. See In re Tobacco
(Guatemala), 83 F. Supp.2d 125,
126 (1999), aff'd, Service Employees
Int'l Union Health &
Welfare Fund v. Philip Morris Inc., 249 F.3d 1068
(2001).
The court ruled that
Guatemala's claims were not viable
because Guatemala could not establish
that its alleged inju-
ries, that is, its expenditures for the care and
treatment of its
citizens, were proximately caused by any misconduct on the
part of the tobacco companies.
For the same reason the
district court has since dismissed several
cases that had
originated in other federal courts and been transferred by
the
JPML to this district. The
cases under review are unlike
those the district court dismissed only in
that they were filed
originally in state courts and therefore reached the
district
court after the tobacco companies removed them to a federal
court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. s 1441;
they are substantively
identical in all other respects.
The district court ordered that
Venezuela's suit be remand-
ed to the Circuit Court for Florida's Eleventh
Judicial Dis-
trict on the ground that there is no federal jurisdiction
over
the case. The court held
that Venezuela's complaint does
"not present a federal question on
[its] face, and federal
question jurisdiction is not proper under the
federal common
law of foreign relations." In re Tobacco (Venezuela), 100
F. Supp.2d 31, 38
(2000); see also id. at 35 ("The
complaints
... contain only state statutory and common law
claims").
The court later ordered the cases filed by Ecuador, Espirito
Santo, and
Goias remanded to the same Florida state court
"for the reasons
stated" in Venezuela. Since this
case was
argued on appeal, the Florida court in turn has dismissed the
suits of Venezuela and Espirito Santo, citing with approval
the
district court's opinion in Guatemala.
See Venezuela v.
Philip Morris Cos., No. 99-01943 (Nov. 20,
2001); Espirito
Santo v. Brooke
Group Ltd., Inc., No. 00-07472 (Nov. 20,
2001). The suits filed by Ecuador and by Goias remain
pending
before the Florida court.
On October 30, 2000--after the district court had dismissed
Guatemala
and ordered Venezuela remanded--the JPML
transferred to that court the
cases Russia and Mato Grosso
had brought in Florida and the tobacco
companies had re-
moved to the federal court there. The district court here has
not yet
acted upon those cases.
To summarize, the six cases now on review were originally
filed in
the Florida Circuit Court, then removed to a federal
court in Florida,
and finally transferred to the district court
here; the district court ordered four
cases--Venezuela, Ecua-
dor, Espirito Santo, and Goias--remanded to the
Florida
Circuit Court for lack of federal subject matter jurisdiction
and has pending before it the two--Russia and Mato Gros-
so--that
reached the district court after it had ordered the
other cases
remanded. For the sake of simplicity,
we will
refer to the four remanded cases as the Latin America
Cases.
II. Analysis
The
tobacco companies appeal the remand orders in the
Latin America
Cases. They also ask the court to issue
a writ
of mandamus prohibiting the district court from ordering the
remand of Russia and Mato Grosso to the state court where
those
cases originated. Apparently, the
companies would
rather have the district court dismiss all the cases on
the
merits, as it dismissed Guatemala, than remit the cases to
any
less certain fate in the courts of Florida.
A. Appeal of the Latin America
Cases
This court is
without jurisdiction to consider the appeal of
the Latin America
Cases. The orders of the district court
return those cases to the state court from which they were
removed
on the ground that the court did not have federal
subject matter
jurisdiction over them. When it appears
that
a district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over a case
that has been removed from a state court, the district court
must
remand the case, 28 U.S.C. s 1447(c), and the court's
order remanding the
case to the state court whence it came
"is not reviewable on appeal
or otherwise," id. s 1447(d). See
also Quackenbush v. Allstate Ins. Co., 517 U.S. 706, 711-12
(1996)
("remands based on grounds specified in s 1447(c) are
immune from
review under s 1447(d)").
The tobacco companies claim that, notwithstanding the
unambiguous
bar of the statute, some courts have said the
prohibition of s 1447(d)
"is not as broad as it seems."
Poore
v. American-Amicable Life, 218 F.3d 1287, 1291 (11th Cir.
2000). In each case they cite,
however, the court was describ-
ing not the prohibition in s 1447(d) but
the exception thereto
allowing review of a remand order that is not
predicated upon
either a lack of subject matter jurisdiction or a defect
in the
removal process. See
Poore, 218 F.3d at 1289; Liberty Mut.
v. Ward Trucking, 48 F.3d 742, 745-46 (3d Cir. 1995). Be-
cause the district court remanded
the Latin America Cases
for want of federal subject matter jurisdiction,
the exception
does not apply here, and the cases cited by the companies
are
not on point.
The tobacco companies argue also that their appeals raise
the
"substantial question whether Congress intended by
s 1447(d) to make
a district court the final arbiter of ... an
important issue of
constitutional dimension," namely, "wheth-
er, under our
constitutional scheme, claims by foreign govern-
ments of this nature fall
within the adjudicatory authority of
the federal courts based upon
federal common law." We are
tempted
to say, as Wolfgang Pauli once said of a colleague's
idea, the contention
is "not even wrong." James
Gleick,
Genius: The Life and
Science of Richard Feynman 115 (1992).
For starters, the appeal does not raise an issue of "constitu-
tional
dimension." The district court
decided a pleading
point: whether
a complaint alleging various torts under the
law of Florida "raises
issues of federal law." Chicago v.
International Coll. of Surgeons, 522 U.S. 156, 163 (1997).
There is no provision in the
Constitution, and the companies
do not cite to any, that suggests this
mundane inquiry takes
on a "constitutional dimension" when the
plaintiff is a foreign
sovereign.
Furthermore, the companies err in suggesting there is an
exception to the prohibition of appellate review in s 1447(d)
when
the remand order does raise a constitutional question.
As long as the district court orders a
case remanded for want
of subject matter jurisdiction, the Congress has
insulated the
decision to remand from review "whether or not that
order
might be deemed erroneous by an appellate court." Therm-
tron Prods., Inc. v.
Hermansdorfer, 423 U.S. 336, 351 (1976).
The decision of the Third Circuit In re TMI Litig. Cases
Cons.
II, 940 F.2d 832 (1991), which the companies offer for
the proposition
that "in extraordinary circumstances
[s 1447(d) does not prohibit]
appellate consideration of cer-
tain categories of remand orders," is
not to the contrary.
TMI holds
that "1447(d) was not intended to preclude appel-
late consideration
of a section 1292(b) certified question con-
cerning the constitutionality
of an Act of Congress"--in that
case the very statute upon the basis
of which the plaintiff had
invoked federal jurisdiction. Id. at 836.
The decision recog-
nizes that s 1447(d) precludes appellate review
of an order
remanding a case to a state court when, as here, the order is
"based upon a finding that removal was not authorized by
Congress." Id. at 845;
accord Rio de Janeiro v. Philip
Morris Inc., 239 F.3d 714, 716 n.6
(5th Cir. 2001).
The
plaintiffs argue that the court may not hear the
appeals for the
additional reason that the records of the cases
have been transferred
back to the state court. See Starnes v.
McGuire, 512 F.2d 918, 935 (1974) (en banc), a habeas corpus
case
in which we said that "once a record is transferred to a
permissible
forum in another district, this court loses jurisdic-
tion over the
matter." The companies respond
that Starnes
governs only those cases that have been transferred to anoth-
er federal
court, see Kimbro v. Velton, 30 F.3d 1501, 1504 n.2
(D.C. Cir. 1994), and
that we should not extend its holding to
cases that have been remanded to
state court. Having
already held
that s 1447(d) precludes review, however, we
need not resolve this side
dispute in order to decide the
present cases.
B. Mandamus in Russia and Mato Grosso
The tobacco companies also petition this
court for a writ of
mandamus prohibiting the district court from issuing
any
orders remanding Russia and Mato Grosso to the Florida
Circuit
Court where they were filed. The
companies contend
the lawsuits arise under federal common law because they
implicate the vital interests--economic and sovereign--of a
foreign
nation and, hence, the foreign relations of the United
States. (We will assume without deciding that the
companies
are correct about the significance of these cases to American
foreign policy.) The foreign
states respond that "federal
jurisdiction exists only when a federal
question is presented
on the face of the plaintiff's properly pleaded
complaint," and
that a federal court may not assert jurisdiction
over a case
that raises no question of federal law simply because the
plaintiff is a foreign sovereign.
We need not resolve this
dispute unless we determine first that a
writ of mandamus is
at least potentially available in the circumstances
of this case.
As a threshold
matter, we agree with the tobacco compa-
nies that s 1447(d) is not a
jurisdictional bar to the relief they
request. The statute "prohibits review of all remand orders
issued
pursuant to s 1447(c) whether erroneous or not and
whether review is sought
by appeal or by extraordinary writ,"
Thermtron Prods., 423 U.S. at
343, but the district court has
not issued an order of remand in Russia
or Mato Grosso. By
its terms,
therefore, s 1447(d) does not prevent the court
from entertaining the
present petitions. But see Black &
Decker v. Brown, 817 F.2d 13, 14 (3d Cir. 1987). We will not
infer a jurisdictional
limitation upon "our normal and tradi-
tional function when no
statute requires that we do so."
Id.
at 15 (Garth, J., dissenting).
As we often have noted, "the
writ of mandamus is an
extraordinary remedy, to be reserved for
extraordinary situa-
tions."
National Ass'n of Crim. Def. Lawyers, Inc. v. United
States DOJ,
182 F.3d 981, 986 (1999) (NACDL). We
are
particularly disinclined to issue the writ before the district
court
has acted, as the petitioners here request.
See In re
Bituminous Coal Operators' Ass'n, Inc., 949 F.2d 1165,
1167
(D.C. Cir. 1991) ("indiscriminate use of the remedy [would]
avoid the stricture of the final judgment rule"). In resolving
such a preemptive
petition, we consider instructive the follow-
ing factors:
(1)
whether the party seeking the writ has any other
adequate means, such as a direct
appeal, to attain the
desired relief;
(2) whether that party will be harmed in a way
not
correctable on
appeal;
(3)
whether the district court clearly erred or abused its
discretion;
(4) whether the
district court committed an oft-repeated
error; and
(5) whether the
decision of the district court raises im-
portant and novel problems or issues of law.
See NACDL, 182 F.3d
986-87. As the tobacco companies
correctly
observe, a petitioner need not be favored by all five
factors in order to
demonstrate its entitlement to the writ of
mandamus; indeed, "it is difficult to envision a
case that
involves both an oft-repeated error as well as an issue of law
of first impression." Valley
Broad. Co. v. United States Dist.
Ct. for the Dist. of Nev., 798 F.2d
1289, 1292 n.3 (9th Cir.
1986).
Our cases also make clear, however, that two of the
factors are
actually prerequisites, for no writ of mandamus--
whether denominated
"advisory," "supervisory," or other-
wise--will issue
unless the petitioner shows (1, above) that it
has no other adequate
means of redress, see NACDL, 182
F.3d at 987, and (3, above) that the
writ is necessary to
emend a clear error or abuse of discretion. See Byrd v.
Reno, 180 F.3d 298, 303
(D.C. Cir. 1999).
We doubt the tobacco companies
satisfy the first condition.
It
is true, as the companies assert, that they could not seek
review of an
order remanding Russia or Mato Grosso to the
state court in Florida, but
that is not because some practical
exigency prevents the companies from
availing themselves of
their remedy at law. Compare, e.g., In re Sealed Case, 141
F.3d 337, 340 (D.C.
Cir. 1998) (issuing writ to prevent trans-
fer of motion to quash
third-party subpoena). On the
con-
trary, the companies have no legal right to appellate review.
Rather, the court of appeals is
prohibited by statute from
reviewing remand orders--by appeal or
otherwise--of the
sort the district court might issue in Russia and Mato
Grosso. Although, as we have
said, s 1447(d) does not
deprive this court of jurisdiction to issue a
writ of mandamus,
the determination of the Congress that we should not
review
a remand order certainly militates against our opining in
advance
upon the propriety of a remand order the district
court might otherwise
issue. See Ex parte Pennsylvania, 137
U.S. 451, 454 (1890) ("it is unquestionably a general rule that
the abrogation of one remedy does not affect another. But in
this case, we think, it was the
intention of [C]ongress to make
the judgment of the circuit court
remanding a cause to the
state court final and conclusive").
In any event, the tobacco companies do
not come close to
demonstrating that it would be a clear error or an
abuse of
discretion for the district court to order the cases
remanded.
The companies identify
no precedent of this court or of the
Supreme Court even suggesting there
is federal subject
matter jurisdiction over a case merely because the
plaintiff is
a foreign government with a sovereign or an economic
inter-
est in the outcome of the lawsuit.
The other circuits to have
considered the companies' theory--in
cases where the foreign
sovereigns were not the plaintiffs but had a
material interest
in the outcomes--are divided over the issue of federal
juris-
diction. Compare Pacheco de
Perez v. AT&T Co., 139 F.3d
1368, 1377 (11th Cir. 1998) ("Where
a state law action has as a
substantial element an issue involving
foreign relations or
foreign policy matters, federal jurisdiction is
present"), and
Torres v. Southern Peru Copper Corp., 113 F.3d 540,
542-43
(5th Cir. 1997) (same), with Patrickson v. Dole Food Co., 251
F.3d 795,
803 (9th Cir. 2001) (rejecting reasoning of Pacheco
and Torres and citing
with approval decision of district court
to remand in Venezuela). Considering that the Ninth Circuit
has
adopted as its own the district court's reason for remand-
ing in the
Latin America Cases, we cannot agree with the
companies that the district
court is now poised to commit a
clear error that would justify our
issuing a writ of manda-
mus.* See
Byrd v. Reno, 180 F.3d 298, 303 (D.C. Cir. 1999)
(denying petition for
writ of mandamus "because it [was] far
from clear that the district
court erred"); In re Thornburgh,
869 F.2d 1503, 1507 (D.C. Cir. 1989) ("the petitioner must
demonstrate
that [its] right to relief is 'clear and indisputa-
ble' ") (quoting
Kerr v. United States Dist. Ct. for the N. Dist.
of Ca., 426 U.S. 394,
403 (1976)).
In sum, the
companies have failed to make out one if not
both prerequisites for a
writ of mandamus. Therefore, we
deny
the companies' petitions without considering the other
factors mentioned
in NACDL.
__________
* The companies argue in a footnote that "even if the entire
claims
[sic] of these foreign governments are not deemed to be
governed by
federal common law ... the question of the availability
of the parens
patriae doctrine in these suits is in and of itself
clearly a substantial
question governed by federal law sufficient to
confer federal-question
jurisdiction." We respond in
kind. Cf.
Hutchins v. District of
Columbia, 188 F.3d 531, 539 n.3 (D.C. Cir.
1999) ("We need not
consider cursory arguments made only in a
footnote").
"[T]he doctrine of parens patriae is
merely a species of pruden-
tial standing," Service Employees, 249
F.3d at 1073; it is not a
substantive
element of the plaintiffs' state common law claims.
Whether a litigant has standing to sue may present a
threshold
issue for a federal court, but our doctrines of prudential
standing
are of no moment in a state court, the jurisdiction of which is
not
similarly limited to what is granted by an act of the
legislature.
The companies may
not bootstrap their way into a federal court
with a claim that the
plaintiffs' standing would be an issue had the
plaintiffs originally
filed their lawsuits in a federal court, and the
district court therefore
did not err in rejecting this argument.
Finally, we decline, as we must,
the companies' invitation to
issue an advisory opinion to the effect that
the district court
should not remand Russia or Mato Grosso. See Br. of
Appellants at 31
("[I]t may be entirely possible for this Court
to grant petitioners
effective relief in this proceeding while
stopping short of actually
issuing a writ of mandamus at this
time"). Article III does not authorize a federal court "to
declare,
for the government of future cases, principles or
rules of law which
cannot affect the result as to the thing in
issue in the case before
it." California v. San Pablo &
T.R.
Co., 149 U.S. 308, 314 (1893).
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the appeals in
the Latin Amer-
ica Cases are dismissed for want of appellate
jurisdiction, and
the petitions for a writ of mandamus in Russia and Mato
Grosso are denied.
So
ordered.
Williams, Senior Circuit Judge, concurring: Although I
agree that the defendants'
arguments do not prevail, they
seem to me a good deal subtler than the
majority opinion lets
on.
First, the argument for federal jurisdiction is not for all
claims
in which a plaintiff foreign government has "a sover-
eign or an
economic interest in the outcome," Maj. Op. at 9,
but for a
considerably narrower set, ones "where the actions
of a foreign
government are a direct focus of the litigation."
Defendants' Br. at 36, quoting Pacheco
de Perez v. AT&T, 139
F.3d 1368, 1377 (11th Cir. 1998). This is manifested here,
defendants
argue, by the plaintiff governments' claim that
"their very
policymaking--their core governmental decision-
making as such--was
subverted by an American industry
over a period of some 40
years." Appellants' Br. at
34.
From this the defendants
reason that adjudication of the
claims will necessarily take the court
deep into the evaluation
of plaintiff states' governmental
decisionmaking, thereby im-
plicating United States foreign relations and
rendering the
dispute "inappropriate for state law to
control." Texas In-
dus. v.
Radcliff Materials, Inc., 451 U.S. 630, 641 (1981).
But it is not clear that these allegedly
federal issues satisfy
the well-pleaded complaint rule--i.e., the
proposition that
federal court jurisdiction under s 1331 exists only if
the
federal issue appears on the face of a properly pleaded
complaint. See Caterpillar Inc. v. Williams, 482 U.S.
386,
392 (1987); see also
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Mottley,
211 U.S. 149, 152
(1908). Federal issues raised by way of
defense do not qualify, see Franchise Tax Bd. of Cal. v.
Construction
Laborers Vacation Trust for Southern Cal., 463
U.S. 1, 14 (1983); Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Taylor, 481
U.S. 58, 63 (1987); Gully v.
First Nat. Bank in Meridian, 299
U.S. 109, 112 (1936), yet that appears
to be the character of
the issues sketched out by defendants. The plaintiffs pre-
sumably will
portray themselves as completely innocent gulls
of the tobacco companies,
akin for example to garden-variety
medical insurers, and the companies
will then respond with
evidence impugning the supposed innocence.
The defendants hint at an argument
that the present case
might fall under the rubric of "complete
preemption," an
exception to the well-pleaded complaint
doctrine. See Rivet
v. Regions
Bank of Louisiana, 522 U.S. 470, 475-76 (1998).
But they do not offer us an analytical basis for extending
the
complete preemption doctrine beyond the two statutes that
the
Supreme Court has held effected such a preemption:
s 502(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act
and s 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act. See,
e.g., Metropolitan Life Insurance
Co. v. Taylor, 481 U.S. 58,
64-67 (1987) (ERISA); Avco Corp. v. Aero Lodge Number
735,
International Ass'n of Machinists and Aerospace Work-
ers, 390 U.S. 557,
560-62 (1968) (LMRA); see also Anderson
v. H&R Block, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 5978, at *5-*12 (11th
Cir.,
Apr. 3, 2002) (discussing well-pleaded complaint and
complete preemption
doctrines).
Second,
defendants argue a still narrower position:
that
some of plaintiffs' common law claims, those brought by the
foreign governments as parens patriae, even though they are
purportedly
only under state law, in fact depend on an
anterior federal law issue,
namely a finding of federal pruden-
tial standing. See Defendants' Br. at 38 & n.**. Although
normally of course federal
standing doctrines are no part of
state common law actions, see Maj. Op.
at 10 n.*, defendants
point to our decision in Service Employees Int'l
Union Health
& Welfare Fund v. Philip Morris, Inc., 249 F.3d 1068
(D.C.
Cir. 2001), in which we treated the parens patriae standing
issue
as an element of the plaintiffs' state common law claims,
and, in
reliance entirely on federal law concepts, found the
absence of such
standing fatal to the claims. See id.
at 1073;
see also id. at 1069
(noting complaints' inclusion of common
law claims). But in that case the plaintiffs themselves
explic-
itly invoked parens patriae standing as to all claims, see
Appellants'
Opening Br. at 37-38 and Reply Br. at 6-7,
Service Employees (No.
00-7093), drawing no distinction be-
tween the statutory and common law
claims. Thus, the court
in
Service Employees had no occasion to hold that state
common law parens
patriae claims by a foreign government
inherently include a federal
element.