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Once More into the Breach The Supreme Courts Sovereign Immunity Decision in Katz

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ABI Journal, Vol. XXV, No. 3, p. 32, April 2006
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In its recently-issued opinion <i>Central Virginia Comm. College v. Katz</i>,
126 S.Ct. 990 (2006), the U.S. Supreme Court revisited the issue of sovereign
immunity and the Bankruptcy Code, and held that an action to avoid and recover
preferential transfers from a state agency pursuant to Code §§547
and 550 was not barred by the doctrine of sovereign immunity. If read broadly,
<i>Katz</i> suggests that the sovereign-immunity defense may be significantly
curtailed in bankruptcy proceedings. However, the dissent in <i>Katz</i> calls
into question the historical underpinnings and justification of the majority's
opinion. Left unclear is whether the Court will expand its ruling in <i>Katz</i>
and the extent to which the Court's holding will apply to other issues arising
in bankruptcy proceedings involving governmental units. This article will (1)
briefly describe the state of Supreme Court jurisprudence on the sovereign immunity
defense in bankruptcy cases prior to the <i>Katz</i> decision, (2) discuss the
Court's opinion in <i>Katz</i> and (3) address certain issues that are likely
to arise in the wake of the Court's ruling in <i>Katz</i>.

</p><p><b>Background</b>
</p><p> Article I §8 of the U.S. Constitution provides that Congress shall have
the power to establish "uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies throughout
the United States." U.S. Const. Art. I, §8, cl. 4 (the "Bankruptcy
Clause"). The Constitutional basis for this assertion of the sovereign-immunity
defense is found in the Eleventh Amendment to the Constitution, which provides
that "[t]he judicial power of the United States shall not be construed
to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one
of the United States by citizens of another state, or by citizens or subjects
of any foreign state." U.S. Const. Amend XI. Pursuant to its authority
to establish federal bankruptcy laws, Congress has attempted to abrogate the
sovereign-immunity defense in §106(a) of the Code, which provides that
"sovereign immunity is abrogated as to a governmental unit to the extent
set forth in this section...." 11 U.S.C. §106(a).<sup>2</sup>
</p><p>Prior to the <i>Katz </i>ruling, the Supreme Court had offered limited guidance
concerning the scope of the sovereign-immunity defense in bankruptcy proceedings.
In the context of another Article I power conferred on Congress, the Court addressed
sovereign immunity in <i>Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida</i>, 517 U.S.
44 (1996), in which the Court held that the Constitution's Indian Commerce Clause,
U.S. Const. Art. I, §8, cl. 3, did not empower Congress to abrogate the
state's sovereign immunity from a suit involving Indian casino gambling despite
the clear congressional intent to do so in the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act,
25 U.S.C. §2710, <i>et seq</i>. <i>Seminole Tribe</i>, 517 U.S. at 47.
The <i>Seminole Tribe</i> opinion sets forth the standards by which the courts
will adjudicate a sovereign-immunity defense and any attempted congressional
abrogation thereof. In <i>Seminole Tribe</i>, the Court started with the proposition
that under the Eleventh Amendment to the Constitution, a state is sovereign
and is not susceptible to private suit absent the state's consent. <i>Id</i>.
at 54. However, without a state's consent to private suit, Congress may abrogate
the sovereign-immunity defense in certain limited circumstances (<i>Id</i>.
at 59), provided that two tests are satisfied. First, Congress must express
"in a clear legislative statement" a specific intention to abrogate
sovereign immunity. <i>Id</i>. at 55. Second, provided the clear statement of
intent by Congress is present, the abrogation of sovereign immunity must be
"passed pursuant to a constitutional provision granting Congress the power
to abrogate" sovereign immunity. <i>Id</i>. at 59. As noted in <i>Seminole
Tribe</i>, the Court has held that the Constitution does not bestow such authority
often or broadly. Only in the context of the Fourteenth Amendment has the Court
found the requisite constitutional authority for Congress to abrogate states'
sovereign immunity. <i>Id</i>.

</p><p>The Supreme Court also dealt with the sovereign-immunity issue in the bankruptcy
context in <i>Tennessee Student Assistance Corp. v. Hood</i>, 541 U.S. 440 (2004).
In <i>Hood</i>, the Court held that a discharge proceeding was not a "private
civil suit" against a state for Eleventh Amendment purposes, and therefore,
the state's sovereign-immunity defense was not implicated. Although the Court
declined to address the question of whether Congress' attempted abrogation of
sovereign immunity in §106 was authorized, the <i>Hood</i> case stands
for the proposition that the Eleventh Amendment does not bar courts from exercising
<i>in rem</i> jurisdiction against a state or an agency of a state. <i>Id.</i>
at 445. Said another way, a court's jurisdiction is focused and premised on
the debtor and the debtor's estate, or a particular <i>res</i>, rather than
on an estate's creditors. <i>Id</i>. at 447. As such, with respect to most issues,
a court exercises <i>in rem</i>, as opposed to in personam, jurisdiction. In
<i>Hood</i>, the Court held that a ruling in a discharge proceeding will bind
a state agency and does not infringe upon a state's sovereignty because a debtor
does not seek monetary damages or affirmative relief from the state. <i>Id</i>.
Because a discharge proceeding does not constitute a "private civil suit,"
a state's Eleventh Amendment rights are not implicated, and the state cannot
claim sovereign immunity from the effect of a discharge order. <i>Id</i>. Prior
to the Supreme Court's <i>Katz</i> decision, the circuit courts were in conflict
with respect to whether or not the Eleventh Amendment barred preference actions
from being prosecuted against states or their instrumentalities.<sup>3</sup>

</p><p>In <i>Katz</i>, a chapter 11 trustee brought an adversary proceeding to avoid
and recover preferential transfers under Code §§547 and 550 against
a Virginia community college that is considered an arm of the state entitled
to sovereign immunity.<sup>4</sup> <i>Katz</i>, 126 S.Ct. at 994. The college
moved to dismiss the preference action on sovereign-immunity grounds, but the
court denied its motion. <i>Id</i>. at 995. The district court and Sixth Circuit
affirmed the bankruptcy court's decision on the grounds that Congress had abrogated
the state's sovereign immunity in bankruptcy proceedings pursuant to Code §106.
<i>Id</i>. The Supreme Court, in a five-to-four decision, held that states do
not enjoy immunity from preference proceedings, but not for the same reason
as the lower courts; the Supreme Court did not address the issue of whether
Congress had validly abrogated immunity from suit by enacting §106. <i>Id</i>.
Rather, the Court held that it need not reach the issue of Congressional abrogation
because the states had effectively waived their sovereign-immunity defense by
ratifying the Constitution containing the Bankruptcy Clause. <i>Id</i>. Building
on the <i>in rem</i> theme it relied upon in <i>Hood</i>, the Court held that
the intent of the Framers of the Constitution in including the Bankruptcy Clause,
together with the history behind such clause, evidenced that the Bankruptcy
Clause provision was intended to constitute a waiver by the states of the sovereign-immunity
defense in connection with bankruptcy proceedings that are ancillary to the
Court's <i>in rem</i> bankruptcy jurisdiction. <i>Id</i>. at 1005.

</p><p> In reaching its holding, the five-justice majority in <i>Katz</i> relied heavily
on the historical context in which the Bankruptcy Clause was included in the
Constitution. To the majority in <i>Katz</i>, the inclusion of the Bankruptcy
Clause "reflects the states' acquiescence in a grant of congressional power
to subordinate to the pressing goal of harmonizing bankruptcy law sovereign-immunity
defenses that might have been asserted in bankruptcy proceedings." <i>Id</i>.
at 997. After engaging in a discussion of the primary purpose for early bankruptcy
laws, the <i>Katz</i> Court found that compelling the states to honor another
state court's discharge orders was the primary motivation behind the Bankruptcy
Clause and the Bankruptcy Act of 1800. To the majority, "the Framers, in
adopting the Bankruptcy Clause, plainly intended to give Congress the power
to redress the rampant injustice resulting from states' refusal to respect one
another's discharge orders." <i>Id</i>. at 1004.
</p><p> From this historic artifact, the Court fashioned a limited waiver by the states
of sovereign immunity in bankruptcy proceedings. <i>Id</i>. The Court held that
the "history of the Bankruptcy Clause, the reasons it was inserted in the
Constitution, and the legislation both proposed and enacted under its auspices
immediately following ratification of the Constitution demonstrate that it was
intended not just as a grant of legislative authority to Congress, but also
to authorize limited subordination of state sovereign immunity in the bankruptcy
arena." <i>Id</i>. The Court in <i>Katz</i>, therefore, concluded that
since the Bankruptcy Clause was intended to make the bankruptcy laws uniform,
the Bankruptcy Clause subordinated the states' sovereign immunity rights in
bankruptcy, and the states acquiesced in that result by ratifying the Constitution.
<i>Id</i>.

</p><p>The scope of the Court's ruling is best set out in footnote nine of the opinion,
which in pertinent part reads as follows:
</p><blockquote>
<p>That does not mean, however, that the state sovereign-immunity implications
of the Bankruptcy Clause necessarily mirror those of the Commerce Clause.
Indeed, the Bankruptcy Clause's unique history, combined with the singular
nature of bankruptcy courts' jurisdiction, discussed <i>infra</i>, have persuaded
us that the ratification of the Bankruptcy Clause does represent a surrender
by the states of their sovereign immunity in certain federal proceedings.
That conclusion is implicit in our holding in <i>Tennessee Student Assistance
Corporation v. Hood</i>, 541 U.S. 440, 124 S.Ct. 1905, 158 L.Ed.2d 764 (2004).
</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Building on this "singular jurisdiction" theme, the Court recognized
that its previous holding in <i>Hood</i> had turned on the distinction between
<i>in rem</i> and <i>in personam</i> jurisdiction. In <i>Hood</i>, the Court
had held that the bankruptcy court's jurisdiction focused on the <i>res</i>
of the debtor's estate, and therefore, a debtor's action in bankruptcy seeking
to discharge debts owed to a state did not constitute a "private civil
suit" that would impact states' sovereign immunity. <i>Hood</i>, 541 U.S.
at 447.

</p><p> In <i>Katz</i>, however, the Court was faced with an action against a state
agency seeking to avoid and recover monies transferred to the agency. <i>Katz</i>,
126 S.Ct. at 990. Without saying so, the Court places a tremendous amount of
emphasis on the fact that the plaintiff in <i>Katz</i> had not asked for a money
judgment. This is an important distinction because a preference action could
easily be characterized as a "private civil suit" against the state,
rather than a purely in rem proceeding. <i>Katz</i>, 126 S.Ct. at 1001. The
Court recognized this distinction and stated that "the trustee, in order
to marshal the entirety of the debtor's estate, will need to recover the subject
of the transfer... A court order mandating turnover of the property, although
ancillary to and in furtherance of the court's <i>in rem</i> jurisdiction, might
itself involve in personam process." <i>Id</i>. at 1001 (emphasis added).
</p><p>In so doing, the majority in <i>Katz</i> retreated somewhat from the in rem/in
personam distinction and held that in ratifying the Bankruptcy Clause, the states
waived their sovereign immunity with respect to matters ancillary to the bankruptcy
court's <i>in rem</i> jurisdiction (<i>i.e.</i>, preference actions). <i>Id</i>.
"Whatever the appropriate appellation, those who crafted the Bankruptcy
Clause would have understood it to give Congress the power to authorize courts
to avoid preferential transfers and to recover the transferred property... Insofar
as orders ancillary to the bankruptcy courts' <i>in rem</i> jurisdiction, like
orders directing turnover of preferential transfers, implicate states' sovereign
immunity from suit, the states agreed in the plan of the Convention not to assert
that immunity." <i>Id</i>. at 1001-1002. Here, the Court seems to be using
the word ancillary in the sense of "in aid of" or "in furtherance
of."

</p><p>It is perhaps no coincidence that <i>Katz</i> was decided by a bare majority
of the court. It is particularly interesting to note that the decision was announced
on the day Justice O'Connor retired from the Court. The dissent in <i>Katz</i>
was joined by four of the Justices and called into question the majority's interpretation
of the historical underpinnings of the Bankruptcy Clause. Specifically, the
dissenting opinion states that the history of the ratification of the Bankruptcy
Clause "merely established federal power to legislate in the area of bankruptcy
law and did not manifest an additional intention to waive the states' sovereign
immunity against suit." <i>Id</i>. at 1006. Seeing no meaningful distinction
between the different powers granted in Article I of the Constitution, the dissenting
opinion states that nothing in the text of the Bankruptcy Clause indicates a
desire by the states to have waived their sovereign immunity to suits in the
bankruptcy context. <i>Id</i>. at 1007. The dissenting Justices referenced <i>Seminole
Tribe</i> in support of their conclusion that "the Eleventh Amendment restricts
the judicial power under Article III, and Article I cannot be used to circumvent
the constitutional limitations placed on federal jurisdiction." <i>Katz</i>,
126 S.Ct. at 1007 (<i>quoting Seminole Tribe</i>, 517 U.S. at 72-73). In addition,
the dissenting opinion relied on the fact that none of the other clauses in
Article I had been found to express an intention to subrogate sovereign immunity,
and that there was nothing special about the Bankruptcy Clause that supports
a finding of waiver of immunity. <i>Katz</i>, 126 S.Ct. at 1007. The dissent
went on to critique the majority's reasoning with respect to the historical
context of the Bankruptcy Clause.

</p><p> First, the dissenting Justices held that the Framers' desire for national
uniformity does not, by itself, evidence an intention by the states to waive
sovereign immunity from suit. <i>Id</i>. at 1008. The dissent noted that although
uniformity was also a motivation behind other provisions in Article I pertaining
to interstate commerce and patent protection, the Court had not found a similar
waiver of states' sovereign immunity.<i> Id</i>. Second, the dissent criticized
the majority's holding that the Framers urgently desired a national bankruptcy
scheme, noting that "states were free to act in bankruptcy matters for
all but 16 years of the first 109 years after the Constitution was ratified...[a]nd
when Congress did act, it did so only in response to a major financial disaster,
and it repealed the legislation in each instance shortly thereafter." <i>Id</i>.
at 1009. Third, the dissent held that the majority placed far too much emphasis
on Congress' early provision for <i>habeas corpus</i> relief in bankruptcy and
the pre-ratification practice whereby state courts often failed to honor other
courts' discharge orders. <i>Id</i>. at 1010. The dissent held that "none
of these observations comes close to demonstrating that under the Bankruptcy
Clause, the states may be sued by private parties for monetary relief."<i>
Id</i>. As for the fact that <i>habeas corpus</i> relief was made available
under the first Bankruptcy Act of 1800, the dissent noted, "[t]he availability
of <i>habeas</i> relief in bankruptcy...does not support the respondent's effort
to obtain monetary relief in bankruptcy against state agencies today. The <i>habeas</i>
writ was well established by the time of the Framing, and consistent with then-prevailing
notions of sovereignty." <i>Id</i>. at 1011. As for the historical argument
based on the states' prior refusal to recognize other states' discharge orders,
the dissent held that this historical concern was adequately addressed by the
Full Faith and Credit Clause of the Constitution, without the need to infringe
upon the states' sovereign immunity. <i>Id</i>. at 1012.

</p><p> The <i>Katz</i> decision is clearly correct. Bankruptcy is different from
interstate commerce or patents. A bankruptcy law that cannot affect the rights
and claims of states and their instrumentalities would be neither uniform, effective
or fair. However, the dissent's opinion in <i>Katz</i> raises significant doubts
that the Bankruptcy Clause was intended by the Framers to constitute a waiver
by the states of their sovereign immunity in connection with bankruptcy proceedings.
Furthermore, the majority opinion leaves much room for debate regarding whether,
under <i>Katz</i>, the states will be deemed to have waived the sovereign-immunity
defense in other bankruptcy-related proceedings not involving a preference or
some similar matter "ancillary" to the Court's <i>in rem</i> jurisdiction.
<i>Katz</i>, 126 S.Ct. at 1005, n. 15 ("[w]e do not mean to suggest that
every law labeled a 'bankruptcy' law could, consistent with the Bankruptcy Clause,
properly impinge upon state sovereign immunity"). With this caveat, the
precise holding of Katz—that states have waived sovereign immunity with
respect to their involvement "in proceedings necessary to effectuate the
<i>in rem</i> jurisdiction of the bankruptcy courts" (<i>Id</i>. at 1005)—leaves
unresolved the issue of which types of bankruptcy proceedings the sovereign-immunity
defense will be unavailable.<sup>5</sup>

</p><p>It is likely that much future litigation will revolve around the meaning of
the ambiguous phrase "proceedings necessary to effectuate the <i>in rem</i>
jurisdiction of the bankruptcy courts." Furthermore, the Court reached
its decision with only a bare majority, which majority included Justice O'Connor,
who has since retired and has been replaced by Justice Alito. Pundits and scholarly
observers predict that Justice Alito will favor states' rights more rigorously
than his predecessor. Thus, it is possible, perhaps even likely, that the <i>Katz</i>
case may be limited in its application when this issue is next considered by
the Court.
</p><p>In the modern bankruptcy arena, governmental units including states almost
always have at least some interest in bankruptcy proceedings. They are not only
recipients of transfers avoidable under chapter 5 of the Code, they may be taxing
authorities or have regulatory interests in the bankruptcy estate, among other
interests. Thus, as a practical matter, the waiver of sovereign immunity of
the type provided in <i>Katz</i> may go a long way in facilitating the public
policy of a nationally uniform system of bankruptcy laws. <i>See Katz</i>, 126
S.Ct. at 1002. Absent a waiver or abrogation of states' sovereign immunity in
the bankruptcy context, the discharge and fresh-start aspirations of the Code,
as well as the turnover of property to the estate, could go unfulfilled. However,
bankruptcy proceedings often involve issues other than discharge and turnover
of estate property. For instance, courts have exercised 'related to' jurisdiction
over non-bankruptcy causes of action and issues. <i>See</i> 28 U.S.C. §1334(b).
As such, it is easy to envision a situation where the bankruptcy process could
be misused to divest a state of its sovereign immunity from proceedings having
little to do with bankruptcy law. These competing considerations, as well as
other issues, remain unresolved by the holding in <i>Katz</i>. Thus, although
the <i>Katz</i> decision squarely addresses the issue of sovereign immunity
in preference proceedings, that opinion by no means disposes of the question
of the availability of a sovereign immunity defense in other types of bankruptcy
proceedings.

</p><blockquote>
<blockquote>&nbsp; </blockquote>
</blockquote>

<hr>
<h3>Footnotes</h3>

<p>1 Mr. Stratton gratefully acknowledges the assistance of James C. Carignan
in the preparation of this article. Mr. Carignan is an associate in the bankruptcy
and restructuring group in the Wilmington, Del., office of Pepper Hamilton.
</p>
<p>2 Bankruptcy Code §106(a) purports to abrogate sovereign immunity with
respect to, among others, proceedings involving "§§105, 106,
107, 108, 303, 346, 362, 363, 364, 365, 366, 502, 503, 505, 506, 510, 522, 523,
524, 525, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 722, 724,
726, 728, 744, 749, 764, 901, 922, 926, 928, 929, 944, 1107, 1141, 1142, 1143,
1146, 1201, 1203, 1205, 1206, 1227, 1231, 1301, 1303, 1305 and 1327...."
11 U.S.C. §106(a)(1). </p>
<p>3 <i>See</i>, <i>e.g.</i>, <i>Richardson v. Mt. Adams Furniture</i> (<i>In
re Greene</i>), 980 F.2d 590, 598 (9th Cir. 1992) (holding that the bankruptcy
court's jurisdiction over property of the estate and to hear adversary proceedings
did not defeat Indian tribe's immunity from suit by chapter 7 trustee to recover
preferential transfers); <i>Schlossberg v. Maryland Comptroller of the Treasury</i>
(<i>In re Create Goldsmiths of Washington, D.C. Inc.</i>), 119 F.3d 1140, 1146
(4th Cir. 1997) (holding that Code provision purporting to abrogate states'
sovereign immunity was unconstitutional, and as such, the state of Maryland
had sovereign immunity from preference action); <i>Hoffman v. Connecticut Dept.
of Income Maintenance</i> (<i>In re Willington Convalescent Home Inc.</i>),
850 F.2d 50, 54 (2d Cir. 1988) (holding that turnover actions and preference
actions were outside the scope of Code's waiver of sovereign immunity and therefore
were barred by the Eleventh Amendment); but, <i>see Lee v. Schweiker</i>, 739
F.2d 870, 873 (3d Cir. 1984) (holding that bankruptcy court's rejection of Social
Security Administration's sovereign-immunity defense to suit for recovery of
overpayments was "undoubtedly correct"). </p>

<p>4 Apparently, the plaintiff did not seek a money judgment against defendant,
a fact that assumes surprising significance in the <i>Katz</i> decision. </p>
<p>5 Given the extensive and explicit waiver found in §106(a), a broad construction
of "ancillary" could lead to the conclusion that the defense has little
or no life left in bankruptcy proceedings. As discussed, <i>infra</i>, this
result is far from certain.</p>

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