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No. 10047397
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Jeffrey Cogan v. Arnaldo Trabucco
No. 10047397 · Decided August 21, 2024
No. 10047397·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
August 21, 2024
Citation
No. 10047397
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
JEFFREY A. COGAN, No. 22-16948
Plaintiff - Appellant, D.C. No. 2:21-
cv-02087-CDS-
and EJY
JEFFREY A. COGAN, ESQ., LTD.,
Plaintiff, OPINION
v.
ARNALDO TRABUCCO, M.D.,
Defendant - Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Nevada
Cristina D. Silva, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted March 8, 2024
Las Vegas, Nevada
Filed August 21, 2024
Before: Milan D. Smith, Jr., Mark J. Bennett, and Daniel
P. Collins, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Collins;
Concurrence by Judge M. Smith
2 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
SUMMARY *
Rooker-Feldman Doctrine
The panel reversed the district court’s dismissal, as
barred by the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, of attorney Jeffrey
Cogan’s complaint collaterally challenging a civil judgment
entered against him in Arizona state court.
Cogan filed this complaint to collaterally challenge an
Arizona state court malicious prosecution action brought
against him by bankruptcy debtor Arnaldo Trabucco. Cogan
sought a declaration that any claim for malicious prosecution
arising solely from conduct occurring in a federal
bankruptcy proceeding was exclusively within the
jurisdiction of the federal courts and that, as a result, any
judgment in the Arizona malicious prosecution action was
void. Cogan and Trabuco ultimately reached a settlement of
the malicious prosecution action.
The panel held this case is not moot because (1) it fits
within the established line of cases holding that a partial
settlement agreement specifying the ultimate form of redress
that would result from success in litigation does not moot
that litigation, and (2) the settlement agreement has not fully
resolved the parties’ underlying substantive liabilities in a
way that precludes the Court from granting any effectual
relief.
The panel held that the district court erred in dismissing
Cogan’s complaint under the Rooker-Feldman
doctrine. Because Trabucco’s malicious prosecution claim
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 3
is completely preempted by federal law and is within the
federal courts’ exclusive jurisdiction, it is subject to
collateral attack in the federal courts and Rooker-Feldman
therefore does not apply.
Concurring, Judge M. Smith wrote separately to criticize
some of the Court’s Rooker-Feldman precedents, and to
highlight an unresolved circuit split on whether attorneys
who allegedly abuse the federal bankruptcy process may be
held accountable in state court.
COUNSEL
Jeffrey A. Cogan (argued), Pro Se, Henderson, Nevada, for
Plaintiff-Appellant.
Dennis I. Wilenchik (argued), John Wilenchik, and Janis G.
Pelletier, Wilenchik & Bartness PC, Phoenix, Arizona;
Victoria L. Neal, Kemp and Kemp, Las Vegas, Nevada; for
Defendant-Appellee.
4 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
OPINION
COLLINS, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff Jeffrey A. Cogan appeals the district court’s
dismissal of his complaint collaterally challenging, on
federal law grounds, a civil judgment entered against him in
Arizona state court. The district court held that Cogan’s
federal complaint was barred by the Rooker-Feldman
doctrine, “under which a party losing in state court is barred
from seeking what in substance would be appellate review
of the state judgment in a United States district court, based
on the losing party’s claim that the state judgment itself
violates the loser’s federal rights.” Johnson v. De Grandy,
512 U.S. 997, 1005–06 (1994) (citing District of Columbia
Ct. of Appeals v. Feldman, 460 U.S. 462, 482 (1983), and
Rooker v. Fidelity Tr. Co., 263 U.S. 413, 416 (1923)).
Because we conclude that this case is not barred by Rooker-
Feldman, we reverse and remand.
I
As we have noted, this case involves a federal court
collateral challenge to a judgment rendered in an Arizona
state court. In summarizing the factual context, we begin
with an overview of the complex litigation leading up to the
challenged state court proceedings, and we then review the
course of the proceedings in this federal suit.
A
In September 2012, Defendant Arnaldo Trabucco, a
surgeon, performed kidney surgery on Gerald Scharf in Fort
Mohave, Arizona. Scharf, however, died only a few days
later. Around the same time, Trabucco was experiencing a
variety of legal and financial problems, and in November
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 5
2012, he filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition in the United
States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Nevada. Plaintiff
Jeffrey A. Cogan, an attorney, thereafter represented a
number of different creditors asserting claims against
Trabucco in the bankruptcy proceedings. After three of
Scharf’s family members (collectively, “the Scharfs”) filed
a malpractice action against Trabucco in Arizona state court
in March 2013, Cogan took over the representation of the
Scharfs in that case, and he also represented the Scharfs in
Trabucco’s bankruptcy proceedings.
In May 2013, while the Scharfs’ malpractice claim was
still pending in Arizona state court, Cogan filed an adversary
complaint on the Scharfs’ behalf against Trabucco in the
Nevada bankruptcy court, seeking a determination that
Trabucco’s liability to the Scharfs was nondischargeable
under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(2)(A) and (a)(6). 1 Among other
things, those provisions respectively exempt from a
bankruptcy discharge certain debts for money obtained by
“false representation[s],” and debts “for willful and
malicious injury by the debtor” to any person. 11 U.S.C.
§ 523(a)(2)(A), (a)(6). In support of these
nondischargeability claims, Cogan’s operative adversary
complaint on behalf of the Scharfs alleged that Trabucco had
committed willful and malicious injury on Gerald Scharf
during the kidney surgery and that Trabucco had made
fraudulent statements to Gerald and his family members
before and after the surgery. Cogan later explained that he
made these allegations because he thought that otherwise the
1
The adversary complaint initially included, as an additional cause of
action, the Scharfs’ underlying negligence claim against Trabucco, but
that claim was later dropped from the Scharfs’ operative amended
adversary complaint.
6 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
Scharfs’ state court claims against Trabucco would be
dischargeable in the bankruptcy.
Nonetheless, in February 2014, the Scharfs ultimately
stipulated with Trabucco to dismiss the adversary complaint
in bankruptcy court with prejudice. In the stipulation,
Trabucco agreed not to seek attorneys’ fees or costs in
connection with the dismissal of the adversary complaint.
The stipulation stated that the Scharfs could continue to
pursue their previously filed state court malpractice suit (or
a subsequent such suit), but that “any such further litigation
will be limited to claims sounding in negligence and will not
include any allegation of malicious or intentional conduct by
Dr. Trabucco.”
Less than three weeks after the stipulated dismissal of the
Scharfs’ adversary complaint in bankruptcy court, Trabucco
filed suit against Cogan and the Scharfs in Arizona state
court, alleging that the filing of the adversary complaint
constituted malicious prosecution, abuse of process, and
intentional infliction of emotional distress.
Meanwhile, the Scharfs’ state court negligence claims
against Trabucco were ultimately unsuccessful. In April
2014, Trabucco filed a motion to dismiss the Scharfs’
malpractice case for failure to prosecute, and the state court
granted that motion on June 11, 2014. On July 16, 2014, the
bankruptcy court entered an order discharging Trabucco
from all pre-petition debts, including those associated with
the claims asserted by the Scharfs. The Scharfs subsequently
pursued a renewed malpractice action in Arizona federal
court against Trabucco, and that suit was allowed to go
forward, despite Trabucco’s discharge, solely for the
purpose of obtaining a recovery from Trabucco’s
malpractice insurer. In October 2017, the jury rendered a
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 7
verdict for Trabucco in the federal malpractice case, and the
Scharfs did not appeal the resulting adverse judgment.
With the bankruptcy proceedings and the Scharfs’
malpractice suits concluded, the only litigation remaining
between the parties was Trabucco’s malicious prosecution
action against Cogan and the Scharfs in Arizona state court.
In January 2018, that court granted Trabucco’s motion for
partial summary judgment as to liability on his malicious
prosecution and abuse of process claims against Cogan and
the Scharfs. At a subsequent state court trial limited to the
issue of damages, the jury awarded Trabucco no damages
against the Scharfs, but a total of $8,000,000 in damages
against Cogan (consisting of $6,232,000 in compensatory
damages and $1,768,000 in punitive damages).
Cogan appealed this judgment to the Arizona Court of
Appeals. In April 2020, that court affirmed the trial court’s
finding of liability for malicious prosecution, reversed its
finding of liability for abuse of process, vacated the damages
award, and remanded for a new trial limited to “the issue of
damages arising out of Cogan’s malicious prosecution of Dr.
Trabucco in the bankruptcy proceedings.” Trabucco filed a
petition for review in the Arizona Supreme Court. In
response, Cogan filed in that court a motion to dismiss the
case, arguing for the first time that the Arizona state courts
lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the matter because it
involved conduct that occurred during a federal bankruptcy
proceeding. On December 16, 2020, the Arizona Supreme
Court issued an order denying, without explanation, both
Cogan’s motion to dismiss and Trabucco’s petition for
review. On remand, the Arizona state trial court set the new
damages trial against Cogan for December 15, 2021.
8 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
B
Less than one month before the scheduled retrial of the
malicious prosecution action in Arizona state court, Cogan
filed this suit in Nevada federal court seeking to collaterally
challenge that action. 2 Specifically, Cogan filed a complaint
against Trabucco seeking a declaration that any judgment in
the Arizona malicious prosecution action “is not valid and
not enforceable against Cogan” and “void ab initio” due to
“lack[]” of “subject matter jurisdiction.” Cogan argued that
any claim for malicious prosecution arising solely from
conduct occurring in a federal bankruptcy proceeding was
exclusively within the jurisdiction of the federal courts and
that, as a result, any judgment in the Arizona malicious
prosecution action was void. In seeking this declaratory
relief, Cogan invoked the district court’s federal question
jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and its diversity
jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332.
On the scheduled retrial date of the Arizona malicious
prosecution action, Cogan and Trabucco reached a
settlement of that action. The settlement’s terms were
memorialized in a one-page written agreement. Section 1 of
that agreement stated that the parties “stipulate to the entry
of a Judgment against [Cogan] in the amount of eight million
dollars.” Section 2(a) provided that Trabucco “covenants
not to execute on the Judgment” and that this covenant
would “remain in effect” regardless of whether Cogan “files
for bankruptcy.” The agreement also contained several
terms that addressed Cogan’s pending Nevada federal
2
Although Cogan’s law firm was listed as a co-plaintiff in this federal
action, that firm was no longer a party to the state malpractice action at
the time of the Arizona Court of Appeals’ decision. Only Cogan
appealed the district court’s judgment in this federal action, and the law
firm is therefore not a party to this appeal.
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 9
lawsuit and its potential impact on the Arizona case.
Specifically, the agreement stated, in section 2(c), that “[i]f
Dr. Trabucco prevails in the Nevada case—meaning, that the
district court denies” Cogan’s requested declaratory relief—
then Cogan “agrees to pay [Trabucco] the sum of eight
million dollars” as an “unsecured, dischargeable debt that
arises solely out of contract.” The parties further stipulated,
in section 2(b), that Trabucco’s Arizona state court claim for
malicious prosecution had arisen “solely out of claim(s) and
allegation(s) made in [the] Adversary Complaint” in
Trabucco’s bankruptcy proceedings. Section 3 of the
agreement contained a “mutual general release” that
specifically excluded any claims asserted in Cogan’s
pending Nevada declaratory relief action and any
“obligations created by or arising from” the settlement
agreement.
The net effect of this settlement agreement was (1) to
formally reinstate an $8,000,000 judgment against Cogan in
the Arizona malicious prosecution action; and (2) to couple
that reinstatement with an agreement by Trabucco that, if
that judgment survived Cogan’s collateral challenge in the
Nevada action, then in lieu of direct enforcement of that
judgment, Trabucco would accept a fully dischargeable
substitute contractual obligation for the same amount. The
stipulated judgment in the Arizona malicious prosecution
action was entered by the Arizona state court on January 18,
2022.
On November 18, 2022, the district court granted
Trabucco’s motion to dismiss the Nevada declaratory relief
action, concluding that Cogan’s collateral challenge of the
Arizona malicious prosecution judgment was barred by the
Rooker-Feldman doctrine. The court therefore denied as
moot Cogan’s motion for summary judgment. Cogan timely
10 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
appealed. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and
we review the district court’s decision de novo. See
Benavidez v. County of San Diego, 993 F.3d 1134, 1141 (9th
Cir. 2021).
II
We first address Trabucco’s contention that the case is
moot and that we therefore lack Article III jurisdiction. See
Chafin v. Chafin, 568 U.S. 165, 172 (2013). To establish
mootness, Trabucco must show that “it is impossible for a
court to grant any effectual relief whatever” to the plaintiff.
Id. (emphasis added) (citation omitted). That burden is a
“heavy” one, see Forest Guardians v. Johanns, 450 F.3d
455, 461 (9th Cir. 2006), and Trabucco has not carried it.
Trabucco argues that, because the parties’ settlement
agreement in the malicious prosecution case includes an
express covenant “not to execute on the Judgment” in that
case, Cogan has already obtained through that settlement any
relief he might have obtained in this federal lawsuit. See FBI
v. Fikre, 601 U.S. 234, 240 (2024) (stating that, when “a
complaining party manages to secure outside of litigation all
the relief he might have won in it,” then “a federal court must
dismiss the case as moot”); see also Allard v. DeLorean, 884
F.2d 464, 466 (9th Cir. 1989) (holding that, in light of the
parties’ settlement of a separate matter, the plaintiff no
longer had the ability to obtain any relief in the case on
appeal). This argument fails, because it overlooks the full
scope of the relief sought by Cogan in his complaint in this
case. That complaint seeks a declaration, not only that any
judgment in the malicious prosecution action is “not
enforceable,” but also that any such judgment is “not valid”
and is instead “void ab initio” due to the state court’s lack of
“subject matter jurisdiction.” We conclude that the
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 11
requested further declaration of invalidity could grant a
measure of “effectual relief” to Cogan that goes beyond what
he has already obtained from the unenforceability covenant.
If Cogan wins this federal lawsuit, and the malicious
prosecution judgment is declared to be void and to have been
entered without jurisdiction, then the $8,000,000 liability
reflected in that judgment would be entirely wiped out and
Cogan would owe nothing. But if Trabucco wins this federal
suit, then that state court judgment would remain in place.
In that scenario, the settlement agreement says that two
things occur: (1) Trabucco will not “execute on” that
judgment 3; and (2) Cogan will instead incur an equivalent,
but dischargeable, contractual liability to pay Trabucco
$8,000,000. Given these significant real-world differences
associated with the grant or denial of the full declaration
requested here—i.e., a declaration that the Arizona judgment
is entirely void and not merely that it cannot be enforced—
an award of that broader requested declaration would
produce some “effectual relief.” Chafin, 568 U.S. at 172
(citation omitted). This case, therefore, is not moot.
Viewed this way, this case fits comfortably within the
established line of cases holding that a partial settlement
agreement specifying the ultimate form of redress that would
result from success in litigation does not moot that litigation.
For example, in Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman, 455 U.S.
363 (1982), the parties agreed that, if the Supreme Court
3
Because a void judgment cannot be enforced, Trabucco’s covenant not
to execute becomes meaningfully operative only if the state court
malicious prosecution judgment remains in place, i.e., only if Cogan
loses this federal suit. The covenant also effectively operates as a stay
while the parties litigate the judgment’s validity, but that purely
temporary feature of the covenant, by its nature, cannot have the sort of
permanent effect that might conceivably moot this case.
12 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
upheld the viability of the individual plaintiffs’ complaint
asserting Fair Housing Act violations, then each such
plaintiff would “be entitled to $400 in damages and no
further relief.” Id. at 371. But if the Supreme Court rejected
those claims, then these plaintiffs “would be entitled to no
relief whatsoever.” Id. The Court held that this agreement
did not moot the parties’ dispute, because the plaintiffs were
seeking monetary relief and the agreement “merely
liquidate[d] those damages,” depending upon whether the
Court held those claims to be viable. Id. Similarly, in Nixon
v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 731 (1982), the former President was
sued by a former Air Force employee who alleged retaliatory
discharge, and while the Supreme Court was considering
Nixon’s claim of absolute immunity, the parties reached an
agreement under which “Fitzgerald agreed to accept
liquidated damages of $28,000 in the event of a ruling by
th[e] Court that [Nixon] was not entitled to absolute
immunity” and Fitzgerald would receive nothing further if
the Court agreed with Nixon. Id. at 744. Citing Havens
Realty, the Court held that an agreement to liquidate the
value of claims while the parties litigated those claims’
viability did not moot that litigation. Id.
The settlement agreement in this case is not materially
distinguishable from those at issue in Havens Realty and
Nixon v. Fitzgerald, and, as in those cases, it does not moot
this litigation. The instant federal suit is a declaratory relief
action by Cogan against Trabucco that collaterally
challenges the validity of state court proceedings in which
Trabucco seeks monetary relief from Cogan. As in Havens
Realty and Nixon v. Fitzgerald, the issues on appeal concern
the threshold viability of the plaintiff’s underlying claims: if
Cogan prevails in this federal action, Trabucco’s monetary
claims in state court will be wiped out (including Trabucco’s
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 13
successful litigation of Cogan’s liability for malicious
prosecution), but if Trabucco prevails in this federal suit,
then Cogan will be liable to Trabucco, with the exact form
of that liability being fixed, as in Havens Realty and Nixon
v. Fitzgerald, by the settlement agreement. Under those
controlling decisions, this case is not moot. And, as in those
cases, it is irrelevant that the liquidated redress specified in
the settlement agreement does not take the form of an
enforceable and collectable formal judgment. So long as the
parties continue to have a live dispute over their underlying
substantive rights, it does not matter what form of redress
they chose to accept in the event that the still-litigated
liability is not defeated.
We distinguished Havens Realty and Nixon v. Fitzgerald
in Gator.com Corp. v. L.L. Bean, Inc., 398 F.3d 1125 (9th
Cir. 2005) (en banc), and our analysis there confirms that the
claims in this case are not moot. In Gator.com, L.L. Bean
sent a “cease-and-desist letter” to Gator.com, asserting that
Gator.com’s use of “pop-up” advertisements
“misappropriated the good will associated with [L.L.
Bean’s] trademark.” Id. at 1127. Gator.com preemptively
filed a declaratory relief action in the Northern District of
California, seeking a declaration that the challenged
practices did not violate any rights of L.L. Bean. Id. The
district court dismissed the action for lack of personal
jurisdiction over L.L. Bean, and Gator.com appealed. Id. at
1127–28. While that appeal was pending before the en banc
court, Gator.com and L.L. Bean “reached a confidential
settlement of other litigation in which they were involved.”
Id. at 1128. As part of the settlement, Gator.com agreed that,
after three months, it would “permanently discontinue” the
challenged practices, and L.L. Bean agreed to “renounce[]
all claims arising from Gator’s use of pop-up advertisements
14 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
prior to—or in accordance with—the agreement.” Id. The
settlement stated, however, that if Gator.com lost the appeal
on the personal jurisdiction issue, then Gator.com would pay
L.L. Bean $10,000. Id.
We held that the substantive issues raised by
Gator.com’s declaratory relief action were fully moot,
because, under the settlement, Gator.com “has agreed to
terminate its pop-up advertisements and has been released
from liability for its past conduct.” Gator.com, 398 F.3d at
1131. With the underlying substantive issues fully resolved,
any decision concerning the discrete issue presented on
appeal—viz., whether the Northern District of California
could assert personal jurisdiction over L.L. Bean—would
amount to an “advisory opinion[].” Id. at 1132 (citation
omitted). We held that, unlike in Havens Realty and Nixon
v. Fitzgerald, the parties had not preserved any ability for
Gator.com to obtain any of the substantive relief that it had
sought in its complaint. Id. at 1131–32. Because the
remaining “personal jurisdiction issue [was] wholly
divorced from any live case or controversy,” the parties’
agreement that L.L. Bean would be paid $10,000 if it
prevailed on that abstract issue amounted to a “side bet” that
could not save the case from mootness. Id. at 1132; see also
id. at 1133 (Tashima, J., joined by Rymer and McKeown,
JJ., concurring) (agreeing that, because no live dispute
remained concerning the parties’ underlying substantive
“primary rights,” the “outcome of the side bet would
determine only whether the district court hypothetically
could adjudicate a no-longer-existent dispute”).
In this case, by contrast, the settlement agreement does
not moot the dispute over the parties’ underlying substantive
rights. If Cogan prevails in this federal case, then the state
court’s substantive determinations will all be rendered void
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 15
and Cogan’s underlying liability to Trabucco will be
unresolved or even eliminated. But if Trabucco prevails,
then the state court’s liability findings against Cogan will be
preserved and his ensuing liability will be fixed and payable
in accordance with the settlement’s terms. Thus, the very
feature that was present in Havens Realty and Nixon v.
Fitzgerald and missing in Gator.com—namely, a continuing
dispute over the parties’ underlying substantive rights—is
present in this case.
Trabucco argues, in the alternative, that the settlement
agreement here actually has fully resolved the parties’
underlying substantive liabilities and that the dispute is
therefore moot on that basis. As noted earlier, the settlement
agreement provides that if “Trabucco prevails in th[is]
Nevada case—meaning, that the district court denies
[Cogan’s] request” for declaratory relief—then Cogan
“agrees to pay [Trabucco] the sum of eight million dollars.”
Trabucco essentially argues that, under this language,
Cogan’s payment obligation became effective and
indefeasible once “the district court denie[d]” Cogan’s
request and that a reversal of that district court ruling on
appeal cannot undo that irrevocably fixed obligation. By
contrast, Cogan argues that a “reversal of the district court”
would mean that the condition for his $8,000,000 payment
obligation under the settlement agreement would no longer
be met and he would then have no “obligation under the
settlement agreement.” We agree with Cogan on this point.
Trabucco’s proffered reading of the agreement’s
language—namely, that the parties’ rights become
irrevocably fixed once the district court initially enters an
order denying Cogan’s requested declaratory relief—is
unreasonable and would lead to absurd results. See Roe v.
Austin, 433 P.3d 569, 575 (Ariz. Ct. App. 2018) (“[C]ourts
16 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
must avoid an interpretation of a contract that leads to an
absurd result.”); see also Chandler Med. Bldg. Partners v.
Chandler Dental Grp., 855 P.2d 787, 791 (Ariz. Ct. App.
1993) (“The court must apply a standard of reasonableness
in contract interpretation.”). 4 Under Trabucco’s reading, the
mere initial entry of an order denying Cogan’s request
suffices to trigger Cogan’s payment obligation, and it is
irrelevant whether (due to a successful appeal or otherwise)
that order is subsequently revoked and is replaced by a
contrary order granting Cogan’s requested declaration. This
reading makes no sense. The more natural reading of the
settlement’s language addressing whether Trabucco
“prevail[ed]” and Cogan was “denie[d]” relief by the district
court would take into account the background availability of
the various mechanisms (such as reconsideration and appeal)
that might lead to an alteration of the relevant district court
order. See 28 U.S.C. § 1291; FED. R. CIV. P. 59(e). If we
were to direct the district court to withdraw its order denying
Cogan’s requested relief and to instead enter an order
granting it, then the settlement’s condition will not be
fulfilled, and Cogan will have no obligation to pay anything.
We therefore reject Trabucco’s argument that the settlement
agreement has fully resolved the parties’ underlying
substantive liabilities in a way that precludes us from
granting any effectual relief.
4
Trabucco’s brief relies on general contract interpretation principles and
does not address what jurisdiction’s law governs the construction of the
settlement agreement here. Cogan’s reply brief affirmatively takes the
position that Arizona law applies. We therefore assume that Arizona law
applies, although we also perceive no basis for concluding that applying
Nevada law or federal law would make a difference to the outcome.
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 17
III
Having concluded that the appeal is not moot, we turn to
considering whether the district court correctly dismissed
this case under the Rooker-Feldman doctrine.
A
“The Rooker-Feldman doctrine” limiting district court
review of state court civil judgments “derives its name from
two Supreme Court cases: Rooker v. Fidelity Trust
Company, 263 U.S. 413 (1923), and District of Columbia
Court of Appeals v. Feldman, 460 U.S. 462 (1983).”
Benavidez, 993 F.3d at 1142 (simplified). In its current
form, the doctrine is narrowly “confined to cases of the kind
from which the doctrine acquired its name: cases brought by
state-court losers complaining of injuries caused by state-
court judgments rendered before the district court
proceedings commenced and inviting district court review
and rejection of those judgments.” Exxon Mobil Corp. v.
Saudi Basic Indus. Corp., 544 U.S. 280, 284 (2005).
The doctrine’s rationale, as explained in Rooker, is that
only the Supreme Court, and not a district court, may
exercise what is effectively appellate review over a state
court civil judgment. In Rooker, a federal court plaintiff
sought “to have a judgment” of an Indiana state court
“declared null and void” on the ground that it violated the
federal Constitution. 263 U.S. at 414–15; see also Rooker v.
Fidelity Trust Co., 261 U.S. 114, 115–16 (1923) (dismissing
writ of error on direct review of the Indiana Supreme Court’s
decision and detailing the facts of the state court litigation).
The Supreme Court held that the federal district court’s
entertaining of such an action would amount to “an exercise
of appellate jurisdiction” over the state courts. Rooker, 263
U.S. at 416. However, only the Supreme Court had been
18 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
granted such appellate jurisdiction, and “[t]he jurisdiction
possessed by the District Courts is strictly original.” Id.; see
also 28 U.S.C. § 1257 (current provision granting the
Supreme Court jurisdiction to review final state court
judgments raising certain federal issues).
Likewise, in Feldman, the Court held that, because “a
United States District Court has no authority to review final
judgments of a state court in judicial proceedings,” the
district court lacked jurisdiction to review the plaintiffs’
direct collateral challenge to the D.C. Court of Appeals’
denial of certain waiver petitions the plaintiffs had pursued
in connection with their efforts to be admitted to the D.C.
bar. 460 U.S. at 482. The plaintiffs instead “should have
sought review” of those judgments in the Supreme Court. Id.
Feldman, however, also placed an important limitation on
the doctrine by drawing a distinction between challenging a
particular as-applied state court decision and bringing a
broader challenge to an underlying state statute governing
such a decision. See id. at 483–87; see also Skinner v.
Switzer, 562 U.S. 521, 532 (2011) (explaining that, under
Feldman, “a state-court decision is not reviewable by lower
federal courts, but a statute or rule governing the decision
may be challenged in a federal action”). Our caselaw has
further narrowed the doctrine as applying only to suits
alleging errors by the state courts in rendering judgment, as
opposed to misconduct by litigants in obtaining such a
judgment. See, e.g., Kougasian v. TMSL, Inc., 359 F.3d
1136, 1140–43 (9th Cir. 2004) (holding that Rooker-
Feldman did not bar suit alleging extrinsic fraud by litigant
in obtaining state court judgment).
Although the Rooker-Feldman doctrine’s prohibition of
district court review of state court civil judgments has been
criticized as being “nearly redundant” to what would be
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 19
accomplished by application of preclusion principles, see
18B C. WRIGHT, A. MILLER & E. COOPER, FEDERAL
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 4469.1, at p.79 (3d ed. 2019)
(hereafter “WRIGHT & MILLER”), the two are analytically
distinct. “Unlike res judicata, which requires courts to look
to the preclusive effect of prior judgments under state law,
Rooker-Feldman looks to federal law to determine ‘whether
the injury alleged by the federal plaintiff resulted from the
state court judgment itself or is distinct from that
judgment.’” Bianchi v. Rylaarsdam, 334 F.3d 895, 900 (9th
Cir. 2003) (emphasis added) (citation omitted). And,
“unlike res judicata, the Rooker-Feldman doctrine is not
limited to claims that were actually decided by the state
courts, but rather it precludes review of all ‘state court
decisions in particular cases arising out of judicial
proceedings even if those challenges allege that the state
court’s action was unconstitutional.’” Id. at 901 (citation
omitted).
B
As an initial matter, Cogan argues that Rooker-Feldman
cannot apply here for the simple reason that, at the time he
filed this federal action, no “judgment” had yet been entered
in the Arizona malicious prosecution action. As noted
earlier, that state court action had been remanded for a new
trial on damages, and Cogan filed this federal suit a month
before that retrial was scheduled to begin. Cogan points to
the Supreme Court’s statement in Exxon Mobil that Rooker-
Feldman only applies to federal “cases brought by state-
court losers complaining of injuries caused by state-court
judgments rendered before the district court proceedings
commenced and inviting district court review and rejection
of those judgments.” See Exxon Mobil, 544 U.S. at 284
(emphasis added). Exxon Mobil stated that, when state
20 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
proceedings are still ongoing, any parallel federal action
might trigger “[c]omity or abstention doctrines,” but
Rooker–Feldman would not be “triggered simply by the
entry of judgment in state court” while the federal action was
still pending. Id. at 292. Instead, “[d]isposition of the
federal action, once the state-court adjudication is complete,
would be governed by preclusion law.” Id. at 293.
The district court concluded that Rooker-Feldman
nonetheless applied because, during the state appellate
proceedings that led to the remand, Cogan had argued to the
Arizona Supreme Court that the state courts lacked
jurisdiction over a matter involving federal bankruptcy
proceedings, and after that court denied Cogan’s motion
raising that issue, he assertedly could have filed a petition
for certiorari seeking review of that federal issue in the U.S.
Supreme Court. Whether that state court “judgment”
actually resolved that federal issue and whether it was
sufficiently “final” to permit Supreme Court review at that
point under 28 U.S.C. § 1257 raise abstruse issues that we
need not resolve here. See 18B WRIGHT & MILLER, supra,
§ 4469.2, at pp. 102–03 (noting the “complication [that]
arises in identifying the level of finality that must be reached
to qualify a state-court judgment as one ‘rendered before the
district court proceedings commenced’” for purposes of
Rooker-Feldman and noting that at least one circuit court has
suggested that this may require drawing on “all of the
pragmatic tests of finality that support Supreme Court
review [under § 1257] before state-court proceedings have
concluded”). Even assuming that Cogan’s federal suit
challenges a sufficiently final judgment that was entered
before that suit was filed, we conclude that, for alternative
reasons raised by Cogan, Rooker-Feldman still would not
apply.
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 21
We have held that a “state court judgment entered in a
case that falls within the federal courts’ exclusive
jurisdiction is subject to collateral attack in the federal
courts,” Gonzales v. Parks, 830 F.2d 1033, 1036 (9th Cir.
1987) (emphasis added), and that the Rooker-Feldman
doctrine therefore does not bar such suits, see Henrichs v.
Valley View Dev., 474 F.3d 609, 614 (9th Cir. 2007); Gruntz
v. County of Los Angeles (In re Gruntz), 202 F.3d 1074, 1079
(9th Cir. 2000) (en banc). Invoking this line of cases, Cogan
contends that Trabucco’s malicious prosecution action is
within the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal courts; that
any judgment in that case is therefore subject to collateral
attack in federal court; and that Rooker-Feldman thus does
not bar this suit. We agree.
In MSR Exploration, Ltd. v. Meridian Oil, Inc., 74 F.3d
910 (9th Cir. 1996), we held that “state malicious
prosecution actions for events taking place within . . .
bankruptcy court proceedings are completely preempted by
federal law.” Id. at 912. We reasoned that “the unique,
historical, and even constitutional need for uniformity in the
administration of the bankruptcy laws” confirms that
“Congress wished to leave the regulation of parties before
the bankruptcy court in the hands of the federal courts
alone.” Id. at 915. We stated that “the highly complex laws
needed to constitute the bankruptcy courts and regulate the
rights of debtors and creditors” further “underscore[d] the
need to jealously guard the bankruptcy process from even
slight incursions and disruptions brought about by state
malicious prosecution actions.” Id. at 914. We noted that,
in Gonzales, we had held that, in light of the federal courts’
exclusive jurisdiction over bankruptcy petitions, the state
courts lack “subject matter jurisdiction to hear a claim that
the filing of a bankruptcy petition constitutes an abuse of
22 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
process,” id. at 915 (quoting Gonzales, 830 F.2d at 1035),
and we held that this same reasoning extends to malicious
prosecution actions against creditors, id. at 916. As we
explained, “[t]he threat of later state litigation may well
interfere with the filings of claims by creditors and with
other necessary actions that they, and others, must or might
take within the confines of the bankruptcy process.” Id. We
stated that “[w]hether creditors should be deterred, and
when, is a matter unique to the flow of the bankruptcy
process itself—a matter solely within the hands of the
federal courts.” Id. Relying on this reasoning, we held that
malicious prosecution actions based on conduct during
bankruptcy proceedings fell within the narrow class of cases
in which the preemptive force of federal law is so strong that
“any claim purportedly based on that pre-empted state law is
considered, from its inception, a federal claim, and therefore
arises under federal law.” Id. at 912 (citation omitted).
Although any such “purported action must, in fact, be a
federal claim,” that federal claim may only be “brought in
the bankruptcy court itself” and cannot even be brought as a
later “separate action in the district court.” Id. at 916.
It follows inexorably from MSR’s reasoning and holding
that Trabucco’s malicious prosecution claim is completely
preempted by federal law and may only be asserted in federal
court as part of Trabucco’s bankruptcy proceedings. We
noted in MSR that Congress had provided a panoply of
remedies to address misconduct occurring during
bankruptcy proceedings, 74 F.3d at 915, but Trabucco did
not invoke any of those. Instead, less than a month after
Cogan’s adversary complaint was dismissed, and while
Trabucco’s bankruptcy proceedings were still ongoing,
Trabucco filed in Arizona state court a malicious prosecution
action based on Cogan’s adversary complaint in bankruptcy
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 23
court, which had challenged the dischargeability of
Trabucco’s asserted liability to the Scharfs. Trabucco’s
malicious prosecution action was thus squarely focused on
contentions that Cogan had made in seeking a determination
of nondischargeability from the bankruptcy court under
§ 523 of the Bankruptcy Code. Indeed, Trabucco expressly
conceded, in his settlement agreement with Cogan, that
Trabucco’s malicious prosecution claim “arose solely out of
the claim(s) and allegation(s) made” in Cogan’s adversary
complaint on behalf of the Scharfs. Trabucco’s malicious
prosecution claim against both the Scharfs and their lawyer
thus directly implicates MSR’s concern that “[t]he threat of
later state litigation may well interfere with the filings of
claims by creditors and with other necessary actions that
they, and others, must or might take within the confines of
the bankruptcy process.” Id. at 916 (emphasis added).
Trabucco’s claim therefore “must, in fact, be a federal
claim” that “should have been brought in the bankruptcy
court itself” and may not be brought in state court. Id.
Because Trabucco’s malicious prosecution claim is
completely preempted by federal law and is “within the
federal courts’ exclusive jurisdiction,” it is “subject to
collateral attack in the federal courts,” Gonzales, 830 F.2d at
1036, and Rooker-Feldman therefore does not apply, see
Henrichs, 474 F.3d at 614; Gruntz, 202 F.3d at 1079.
Accordingly, the district court erred in dismissing Cogan’s
complaint as barred by Rooker-Feldman.
IV
Trabucco argues that we may nonetheless affirm on the
alternative ground that, regardless of whether it was correct
under MSR, the Arizona Supreme Court’s denial of
Trabucco’s motion to dismiss on similar jurisdictional
24 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
grounds has preclusive effect with respect to whether the
Arizona proceedings encroached on the exclusive
jurisdiction of the federal courts. Even assuming that the
Arizona Supreme Court’s summary denial order actually
reached the merits of the exclusive-jurisdiction issue, we
conclude that Trabucco’s argument is foreclosed by our
decision in Contractors’ State License Board of California
v. Dunbar (In re Dunbar), 245 F.3d 1058 (9th Cir. 2001).
We held there that Gruntz’s “rationale” for concluding that
Rooker-Feldman does not bar collateral challenges to state
court judgments that intrude on the exclusive bankruptcy
jurisdiction of the federal courts “clearly applies,” not just to
Rooker-Feldman, but also to “collateral estoppel” and “res
judicata.” Id. at 1063; see also Gruntz, 202 F.3d at 1082 n.6
(noting that, under Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Epstein,
516 U.S. 367, 386 (1996), full faith and credit is not given to
a state court judgment where the rendering court lacked
subject matter jurisdiction to render the judgment).
To the extent that Trabucco rests his preclusion
arguments on the principle that the Arizona courts had
jurisdiction to determine their jurisdiction, his contention
still fails. That principle does not completely insulate any
such jurisdictional determination from being collaterally
attacked on the ground that the state court suit intrudes upon
the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal courts. The “general
rule of finality of jurisdictional determinations is not without
exceptions,” and “in some contexts” must yield to
countervailing “[d]octrines of federal pre-emption or
sovereign immunity.” Durfee v. Duke, 375 U.S. 106, 114
(1963) (citing, inter alia, Kalb v. Feuerstein, 308 U.S. 433
(1940), which held that state court proceedings that intruded
on the “bankruptcy courts[’] exclusive jurisdiction over
farmer-debtors and their property” were “nullities subject to
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 25
collateral attack”). Where, as here, the relevant state law
claims are completely preempted by federal law and are
within the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal courts, that
overriding preemption doctrine permits a collateral attack of
even an express finding of jurisdiction by a state court. See
20 C. WRIGHT & M. KANE, FEDERAL PRACTICE AND
PROCEDURE, FEDERAL PRACTICE DESKBOOK § 17, at p.122
(2d ed. 2011) (“[W]hen a federal statute has vested exclusive
jurisdiction of a particular type of case in the federal courts,
the finding by a state court that it has jurisdiction over such
a case will not preclude collateral attack upon the judgment
rendered in the state court.”).
* * *
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s
determination that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine deprived it
of subject matter jurisdiction over Cogan’s declaratory relief
complaint is reversed. The matter is remanded to the district
court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
26 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
M. SMITH, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I join the court’s opinion in full. I write separately (1) to
criticize some of our Rooker-Feldman precedents and (2) to
highlight an unresolved circuit split on the question of
whether attorneys who allegedly abuse the federal
bankruptcy process, like Cogan, may be held accountable in
state court.
I
The Rooker-Feldman doctrine generally precludes a
federal district court from exercising subject-matter
jurisdiction over an action that seeks “to ‘overturn an
injurious state-court judgment.’” Brown v. Duringer L. Grp.
PLC, 86 F.4th 1251, 1253 (9th Cir. 2023) (quoting Exxon
Mobil Corp. v. Saudi Basic Indus. Corp., 544 U.S. 280, 291–
92 (2005)), cert. denied, 144 S. Ct. 1351 (2024).
Nevertheless, if Congress expressly authorizes the federal
district courts to review state-court judgments by statute,
then the Rooker-Feldman doctrine does not apply. See, e.g.,
28 U.S.C. § 2254 (explicitly authorizing federal collateral
review of final state-court criminal convictions).
We have expressly affirmed that principle on at least
three separate occasions. See In re Gruntz, 202 F.3d 1074,
1079, 1081–83 (9th Cir. 2000) (en banc) (Congress, in
enacting 11 U.S.C. §§ 544, 547–49, 727, 1129, 1135, 1141,
1325, and 1328, expressly empowered lower federal courts
exercising original bankruptcy jurisdiction to avoid, modify,
and discharge certain state-court judgments, and Congress,
in enacting 11 U.S.C. § 362(a), necessarily authorized those
courts to review state-court judgments that violate the
automatic stay); Mozes v. Mozes, 239 F.3d 1067, 1085 n.55
(9th Cir. 2001) (Congress, in enacting 42 U.S.C. § 11603(a),
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 27
expressly authorized federal district courts to vacate state-
court orders that contravene the Hague Convention),
abrogated on other grounds by Monasky v. Taglieri, 589
U.S. 68, 76 (2020); Doe v. Mann, 415 F.3d 1038, 1047 (9th
Cir. 2005) (Congress, in enacting 25 U.S.C. § 1914,
explicitly authorized federal district courts to invalidate
state-court custody orders that violate specific provisions of
the Indian Child Welfare Act). We have further observed in
dicta that such “statutory authorizations to review state court
judgments” are “rare,” and that “[c]ourts have been loath to
recognize [them].” Doe, 415 F.3d at 1043 & n.7. Moreover,
we have positively cited decisions from other circuits
suggesting that such statutory authorizations are the only
way for state-court losers to circumvent the general rule that
the lower federal courts cannot sit in appellate review of
injurious state-court judgments. See id. at 1043 n.7 (citing
Ritter v. Ross, 992 F.2d 750, 753 (7th Cir. 1993); Johnson v.
State of Kansas, 888 F. Supp. 1073, 1080 (D. Kan. 1995),
aff’d, 81 F.3d 172 (10th Cir. 1996)) (other citations omitted).
Nevertheless, it turns out there is another way in our
circuit to circumvent the Rooker-Feldman bar. The bar does
not apply when state-court losers seek lower-federal-court
review of injurious state-court judgments rendered pursuant
to state-law causes of action that are completely preempted
by federal law. See Henrichs v. Valley View Dev., 474 F.3d
609, 614 (9th Cir. 2007) (acknowledging that one way “to
circumvent the jurisdictional bar” imposed by the Rooker-
Feldman doctrine is to show that the injurious state-court
judgment was “entered in a case that falls within the federal
courts’ exclusive jurisdiction” (citing Gruntz, 202 F.3d at
1079)). That rule controls the result here. Our decision in
MSR Exploration, Ltd. v. Meridian Oil, Inc., 74 F.3d 910
(9th Cir. 1996), establishes that Trabucco’s malicious
28 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
prosecution claim for events taking place within federal
bankruptcy proceedings is, in reality, an exclusively federal
claim for bankruptcy sanctions arising under Title 11 of the
bankruptcy code and is completely preempted by federal
law. See id. at 912. Accordingly, despite Cogan’s failure to
identify where exactly in the federal bankruptcy code
Congress explicitly authorized the federal district courts to
review the state-court judgments at issue in this litigation, 1
we can still conclude that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine does
not apply. See Maj. 23.
However, I am not sure that the Rooker-Feldman rule we
acknowledged in Henrichs is consistent with the U.S.
Supreme Court’s discussion of the doctrine in Exxon Mobil.
In Exxon Mobil, the Supreme Court explained that, under the
Rooker-Feldman doctrine, the lower federal courts do not
have the statutory power to sit in appellate review of state-
court judgments because Congress “vest[ed] authority to
review a state court’s judgment solely in [the Supreme]
Court.” 544 U.S. at 292. The Supreme Court then
acknowledged only one circumstance under which the
Rooker-Feldman doctrine, where it would normally apply,
may fall away: “Congress, if so minded, may explicitly
empower district courts to oversee certain state-court
1
The various statutory provisions we identified in Gruntz as explicitly
authorizing federal bankruptcy review of certain state-court judgments
affecting the bankruptcy estate, see 11 U.S.C. §§ 362(a), 544, 547–49,
727, 1129, 1135, 1141, 1325, 1328, do not squarely apply to the state-
court judgments rendered in Trabucco’s state-court malicious
prosecution case. All those bankruptcy provisions concern the assets of
the bankruptcy estate during the pendency of bankruptcy. The state-
court judgments that Cogan seeks to challenge, however, were issued
several years after Trabucco’s Chapter 7 estate terminated, and only
impose damages against Cogan, a third-party attorney who never had
any personal creditor claims to assert against the estate.
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 29
judgments and has done so, most notably, in authorizing
federal habeas review of state prisoners’ petitions.” Id. at
292 n.8 (citing 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a)). Reading this
discussion, I am left with the strong impression that the
question of whether Rooker-Feldman prevents a lower
federal court from directly reviewing an injurious state-court
judgment should turn on whether Congress, by statute,
expressly authorized a lower federal court to engage in such
review.
Our additional rule that Rooker-Feldman also falls away
whenever a state-court judgment is “entered in a case that
falls within the federal courts’ exclusive jurisdiction,”
Henrichs, 474 F.3d at 614, regardless of whether Congress
explicitly granted the lower federal courts review power,
does not fit neatly into the Supreme Court’s statutory
rationale for the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. While it is
possible that Congress wanted the lower federal courts to be
able to review all state-court judgments that were rendered
pursuant to completely preempted state-law causes of action,
that possibility is a mere inference about congressional intent
and a far cry from the “explicit[]” congressional
authorization for such review as contemplated by the
Supreme Court in Exxon Mobil. 2 544 U.S. at 292 n.8.
2
If the rule we recognized in Henrichs is wrong, defendants to
completely preempted state-court actions that exclusively belong in
specific federal fora would not be without recourse. Congress has
famously crafted two procedural tools to ensure that state-law causes of
action that are, in reality, exclusively federal claims get into the federal
forum where they belong: removal and transfer. See, e.g., 28 U.S.C.
§§ 1412(a), 1441(c), 1452(a), 1631; Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7087. Had Cogan
availed himself of these tools shortly after Trabucco filed suit in Arizona
state court, more than five years of precious state judicial resources may
not have been wasted.
30 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
Because of the rule we acknowledged in Henrichs, 474
F.3d at 614, we reverse the district court’s holding that
Cogan is jurisdictionally barred from asking the federal
district court of Nevada to review and void judgments and
orders issued by the state courts of Arizona, including the
Arizona Supreme Court. 3 Cogan may proceed with his
endeavor despite his failure to identify any statutory
provision in his complaint showing that Congress explicitly
authorized such a maneuver. 4
II
Of course, the Rooker-Feldman rule we acknowledged
in Henrichs is only relevant here because of our subsidiary
conclusion that Trabucco’s state-law cause of action for
malicious prosecution is completely preempted by federal
law. See Maj. 22–23. Trabucco’s malicious prosecution
action seeks to recover against Cogan for his conduct in
Trabucco’s Chapter 7 case, and we previously held in MSR
that “state malicious prosecution actions for events taking
place within . . . bankruptcy court proceedings are
completely preempted by federal law.” 74 F.3d at 912.
Trabucco devotes some of his answering brief to
attacking the correctness of our holding in MSR. Notably, at
least two other federal courts of appeals have issued
3
I, like the majority, assume that Cogan’s federal suit challenges a
sufficiently final state-court judgment that was entered before that suit
was filed. See Maj. 20.
4
Cogan specifically relies on the Declaratory Judgment Act, codified at
28 U.S.C. §§ 2201–02; Rule 9011 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy
Procedure; and 11 U.S.C. § 105, in his complaint for declaratory relief.
None of those provisions expressly contemplates the possibility of the
federal district courts reviewing state-court judgments issued against
third-party attorneys who have no personal stake in the bankruptcy
estate.
COGAN V. TRABUCCO 31
decisions that directly conflict with MSR’s broad holding.
For instance, the Third Circuit declined to hold that 11
U.S.C. § 303(i) completely preempts state-law tort claims,
including malicious prosecution claims, regarding the bad-
faith filing of involuntary bankruptcy petitions—i.e., events
taking place within bankruptcy court proceedings. See
Paradise Hotel Corp. v. Bank of Nova Scotia, 842 F.2d 47,
52 (3d Cir. 1988). More recently, in Rosenberg v. DVI
Receivables XVII, LLC, 835 F.3d 414, 421 (3d Cir. 2016),
the Third Circuit expressly disagreed with our holding in In
re Miles, 430 F.3d 1083 (9th Cir. 2005), that state-law tort
claims brought against petitioning creditors in state court are
completely preempted by 11 U.S.C. § 303(i)—a holding
which we stated was “compelled by the logic of our decision
in MSR,” id. at 1089.
Similarly, the Seventh Circuit held in In re Repository
Technologies, Inc., 601 F.3d 710 (7th Cir. 2010), that certain
state-law tort claims based on a debtor’s abusive filing of a
voluntary bankruptcy petition are not completely preempted
by the federal bankruptcy code because the code “does not
provide . . . comprehensive, express remedies for” creditors
harmed by abusive petitions. Id. at 724. That latter
observation is fundamentally at odds with our own
observation in MSR that Congress “provided a panoply of
remedies to address misconduct occurring during
bankruptcy proceedings,” Maj. 22 (citing MSR, 74 F.3d at
915), such that Congress wished “to leave the regulation of
parties before the bankruptcy court in the hands of the
federal courts alone,” MSR, 74 F.3d at 915.
In addition, the Supreme Court has sharpened the test for
determining whether a state-law cause of action is
completely preempted by federal law in the intervening
years since we issued our 1996 decision in MSR. See
32 COGAN V. TRABUCCO
Beneficial Nat. Bank v. Anderson, 539 U.S. 1, 8 (2003);
Aetna Health Inc. v. Davila, 542 U.S. 200, 207–10 (2004);
see also Saldana v. Glenhaven Healthcare LLC, 27 F.4th
679, 687–88 (9th Cir. 2022) (the modern test for complete
preemption asks: “(1) did Congress intend to displace a
state-law cause of action and (2) did Congress provide a
substitute cause of action?”), cert. denied, 143 S. Ct. 444
(2022). I am skeptical that 11 U.S.C. § 105 and Rule 9011
of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure would satisfy
the modern test for completely preempting state-law
malicious prosecution claims for events taking place within
bankruptcy proceedings (especially when those claims are
brought against third-party attorneys, like Cogan, who never
had any personal claims to assert against the estate).
Nevertheless, I do not think that those intervening authorities
from the Supreme Court are “clearly irreconcilable” with our
holding in MSR to allow us to conclude that it has been
effectively overruled. Miller v. Gammie, 335 F.3d 889, 900
(9th Cir. 2003) (en banc). Absent en banc reconsideration of
MSR’s broad holding, we are bound by it.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT JEFFREY A.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT JEFFREY A.
02Silva, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted March 8, 2024 Las Vegas, Nevada Filed August 21, 2024 Before: Milan D.
03TRABUCCO SUMMARY * Rooker-Feldman Doctrine The panel reversed the district court’s dismissal, as barred by the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, of attorney Jeffrey Cogan’s complaint collaterally challenging a civil judgment entered against him in A
04Cogan filed this complaint to collaterally challenge an Arizona state court malicious prosecution action brought against him by bankruptcy debtor Arnaldo Trabucco.
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FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT JEFFREY A.
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