Respondent Russell filed a diversity action in the District
Court, alleging,
inter alia, that petitioner college,
located in Rhode Island, had breached an implied agreement to
educate her when it asked her to withdraw from its nursing program
for failing to meet certain weight loss commitments. The court
denied petitioner's motion for a directed verdict, concluding that
the Rhode Island Supreme Court would apply the commercial doctrine
of substantial performance in an academic setting, such that
Russell could prevail even though she had not fully complied with
the contract's terms. The jury returned a verdict for Russell,
which the Court of Appeals affirmed. Applying the appellate
deference that it customarily accords to interpretations of state
law made by federal judges of that State, the Court of Appeals
found that the District Court's state law determination did not
constitute reversible error.
Held: Courts of appeals must review
de novo district
courts' state law determinations. Pp.
499 U. S.
231-240.
(a) The general rule of independent appellate review of legal
issues best serves the dual goals of doctrinal coherence and
economy of judicial administration. Courts of appeals are
structurally suited to the collaborative juridical process that
promotes decisional accuracy. They are able to devote their primary
attention to legal issues. They have the advantage of refined
briefs which bring to bear on the legal issues more information and
more comprehensive analysis than was provided to the district
judge. And they employ multi-judge panels that permit reflective
dialogue and collective judgment. P.
499 U. S.
231-233.
(b) Departure from the rule of independent appellate review is
not warranted by the exercise of diversity jurisdiction. Appellate
deference to the district court's state law determination is
inconsistent with the aims of
Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
304 U. S. 64, to
discourage forum shopping and to avoid inequitable administration
of the laws, since it invites divergent development of state law
among the federal trial courts within a single State and creates a
dual system of enforcement of state-created rights, in which the
substantive rule applied to a dispute may depend on the choice of
forum. Such deference is also contrary to this Court's cases
decided after
Erie. See, e.g., New York Life Ins. Co.
v. Jackson, 304 U. S. 261. Pp.
499 U. S.
233-235.
Page 499 U. S. 226
(c) Russell's argument that appellate courts professing
adherence to the deference rule actually are reviewing
de
novo the district court state law determinations is rejected.
Courts of appeals that profess deference are, in fact, deferring.
When
de novo review is compelled, no form of appellate
deference is acceptable. Russell's argument that district judges
are better arbiters of unsettled state law because they have
exposure to the judicial system of the State in which they sit is
based on overbroad generalizations and is foreclosed by this
Court's decision in
Erie. Pp.
499 U. S.
235-239.
890 F.2d 484 (CA1 1989), reversed and remanded.
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
MARSHALL, O'CONNOR, SCALIA, KENNEDY, and SOUTER, JJ., joined.
REHNQUIST, C.J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which WHITE and
STEVENS, JJ., joined,
post, p.
499 U. S.
240.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The concept of a federal general common law, lurking (to use
Justice Holmes' phrase) as a "brooding onmipresence in the sky,"
was questioned for some time before being firmly rejected in
Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U. S. 64
(1938).
See Southern Pacific Co. v. Jensen, 244 U.
S. 205,
244 U. S. 222
(1917) (Holmes, J., dissenting);
Black & White Taxicab
& Transfer Co. v. Brown & Yellow Taxicab & Transfer
Co., 276 U. S. 518,
276 U. S. 533
(1928) (dissenting opinion).
Erie mandates that a federal
court sitting in diversity apply the substantive law of the forum
State, absent a federal statutory or constitutional directive to
the contrary. 304 U.S. at
304 U. S. 78.
See also 28 U.S.C. § 1652 ("The laws of the several
states, except where the Constitution or treaties of the United
States or Acts of Congress otherwise require or provide, shall be
regarded as rules of decision in civil actions in the courts of
the
Page 499 U. S. 227
United States in cases where they apply"). In decisions after
Erie, this Court made clear that state law is to be
determined in the same manner as a federal court resolves an
evolving issue of federal law:
"with the aid of such light as [is] afforded by the materials
for decision at hand, and in accordance with the applicable
principles for determining state law.
Meredith v. Winter
Haven, 320 U. S. 228,
320 U. S. 238
(1943).
See also Ruhlin v. New York Life Ins. Co.,
304 U. S. 202,
304 U. S.
208-209 (1938) ("Application of the
state law' to
the present case . . . does not present the disputants with duties
difficult or strange")."
In this case, we must decide specifically whether a federal
court of appeals may review a district court's determination of
state law under a standard less probing than that applied to a
determination of federal law.
I
The issue presented arises out of a contract dispute between a
college and one of its students. Petitioner Salve Regina College is
an institution of higher education located in Newport, R.I.
Respondent Sharon L. Russell was admitted to the college and began
her studies as a freshman in 1982. The following year, respondent
sought admission to the college's nursing department in order to
pursue a bachelor of science degree in nursing. She was accepted by
the department and began her nursing studies in the fall of
1983.
Respondent, who was 5'6" tall, weighed in excess of 300 pounds
when she was accepted in the nursing program. Immediately after the
1983 school year began, respondent's weight became a topic of
commentary and concern by officials of the nursing program.
Respondent's first year in the program was marked by a series of
confrontations and negotiations concerning her obesity and its
effect upon her ability to complete the clinical requirements
safely and satisfactorily. During her junior year, respondent
signed a document that was designated as a "contract," and
conditioned her further
Page 499 U. S. 228
participation in the nursing program upon weekly attendance at a
weight-loss seminar and a realized average loss of two pounds per
week. When respondent failed to meet these commitments, she was
asked to withdraw from the program, and did so. She transferred to
a nursing program at another college, but had to repeat her junior
year in order to satisfy the transferee institution's 2-year
residency requirement. As a consequence, respondent's nursing
education took five years, rather than four. She also underwent
surgery for her obesity. In 1987, respondent successfully completed
her nursing education, and she is now a registered nurse.
Soon after leaving Salve Regina College, respondent filed this
civil action in the United States District Court for the District
of Rhode Island. She asserted, among others, claims based on (1)
intentional infliction of emotional distress, (2) invasion of
privacy, and (3) nonperformance by the college of its implied
agreement to educate respondent. [
Footnote 1] Subject matter jurisdiction in the District
Court was based on diversity of citizenship.
See 28 U.S.C.
§ 1332. The parties agree that the law of Rhode Island applies to
all substantive aspects of the action.
See Erie R. Co. v.
Tompkins, supra.
At the close of plaintiff-respondent's case-in-chief, the
District Court directed a verdict for the individual defendants on
all three of the remaining claims, and for the college on the
claims for intentional infliction of emotional distress and
Page 499 U. S. 229
invasion of privacy. App. 82. The court, however, denied the
college's motion for a directed verdict on the breach of contract
claim, reasoning that "a legitimate factual issue" remained
concerning whether "there was substantial performance by the
plaintiff in her overall contractual relationship at Salve Regina."
Id. at 88.
At the close of all the evidence, the college renewed its motion
for a directed verdict. It argued that, under Rhode Island law, the
strict commercial doctrine of substantial performance did not apply
in the general academic context. Therefore, according to
petitioner, because respondent admitted she had not fulfilled the
terms of the contract, the college was entitled to judgment as a
matter of law.
The District Court denied petitioner's motion.
Id. at
92. Acknowledging that the Supreme Court of Rhode Island, to that
point, had limited the application of the substantial performance
doctrine to construction contracts, the District Court nonetheless
concluded, as a matter of law, that the Supreme Court of Rhode
Island would apply that doctrine to the facts of respondent's case.
Id. at 90-91. The Federal District Judge based this
conclusion, in part, on his observation that "I was a state trial
judge for 18 and 1/2 years, and I have a feel for what the Rhode
Island Supreme Court will or won't do."
Id. at 91.
Accordingly, the District Court submitted the breach of contract
claim to the jury. The court instructed the jury:
"The law provides that substantial and not exact performance
accompanied by good faith is what is required in a case of a
contract of this type. It is not necessary that the plaintiff have
fully and completely performed every item specified in the contract
between the parties. It is sufficient if there has been substantial
performance, not necessarily full performance, so long as the
substantial performance was in good faith and in compliance with
the contract, except for some minor and relatively unimportant
deviation or omission."
Id. at 97.
Page 499 U. S. 230
The jury returned a verdict for respondent, and determined that
the damages were $30,513.40.
Id. at 113. Judgment was
entered.
Id. at 115. Both respondent and petitioner
appealed.
The United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
affirmed. 890 F.2d 484 (1989). It first upheld the District Court's
directed verdict dismissing respondent's claims for intentional
infliction of emotional distress and invasion of privacy.
Id. at 487-488. It then turned to petitioner's argument
that the District Court erred in submitting the breach of contract
claim to the jury. Rejecting petitioner's argument that, under
Rhode Island law, the doctrine of substantial performance does not
apply in the college-student context, the court stated:
"In this case of first impression, the district court held that
the Rhode Island Supreme Court would apply the substantial
performance standard to the contract in question. In view of the
customary appellate deference accorded to interpretations of state
law made by federal judges of that state,
Dennis v. Rhode
Island Hospital Trust Nat'l Bank, 744 F.2d 893, 896 (1st
Cir.1984);
O'Rourke v. Eastern Air Lines, Inc., 730 F.2d
842, 847 (2d Cir.1984), we hold that the district court's
determination that the Rhode Island Supreme Court would apply
standard contract principles is not reversible error."
Id. at 489.
Petitioner college sought a writ of certiorari from this Court.
It alleged that the Court of Appeals erred in deferring to the
District Court's determination of state law. [
Footnote 2]
Page 499 U. S. 231
A majority of the Courts of Appeals, although varying in their
phraseology, embrace a rule of deference similar to that
articulated by the Court of Appeals in this case.
See, e.g.,
Norton v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 902 F.2d 1355,
1357 (CA8 1990) ("In general, we accord substantial deference to a
district court's interpretation of the law of the state in which it
sits"), and
Self v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 885 F.2d 336,
339 (CA6 1989) ("[W]e should give
considerable weight' to the
trial court's views on such questions of local law"). Two Courts of
Appeals, however, have broken ranks recently with their sister
Circuits. They have concluded that a district court determination
of state law is subject to plenary review by the appellate court.
See Craig v. Lake Asbestos of Quebec, Ltd., 843 F.2d 145,
148 (CA3 1988), and In re McLinn, 739 F.2d 1395 (CA9 1984)
(en banc, with a divided vote). We granted certiorari to resolve
the conflict. 497 U.S. 1023 (1990).
II
We conclude that a court of appeals should review
de
novo a district court's determination of state law. As a
general matter, of course, the courts of appeals are vested with
plenary appellate authority over final decisions of district
courts.
See 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The obligation of
responsible appellate jurisdiction implies the requisite authority
to review independently a lower court's determinations.
Independent appellate review of legal issues best serves the
dual goals of doctrinal coherence and economy of judicial
administration. District judges preside alone over fast-paced
trials: of necessity, they devote much of their energy and
resources to hearing witnesses and reviewing evidence. Similarly,
the logistical burdens of trial advocacy limit the extent to which
trial counsel is able to supplement the district judge's legal
research with memoranda and briefs. Thus,
Page 499 U. S. 232
trial judges often must resolve complicated legal questions
without benefit of "extended reflection [or] extensive
information." Coenen, To Defer or Not to Defer: A Study of Federal
Circuit Court Deference to District Court Rulings on State Law, 73
Minn.L.Rev. 899, 923 (1989).
Courts of appeals, on the other hand, are structurally suited to
the collaborative juridical process that promotes decisional
accuracy. With the record having been constructed below and settled
for purposes of the appeal, appellate judges are able to devote
their primary attention to legal issues. As questions of law become
the focus of appellate review, it can be expected that the parties'
briefs will be refined to bring to bear on the legal issues more
information and more comprehensive analysis than was provided for
the district judge. Perhaps most important, courts of appeals
employ multi-judge panels,
see 28 U.S.C. §§ 46(b) and (c),
that permit reflective dialogue and collective judgment. Over 40
years ago, Justice Frankfurter accurately observed:
"Without adequate study, there cannot be adequate reflection;
without adequate reflection, there cannot be adequate discussion;
without adequate discussion, there cannot be that fruitful
interchange of minds which is indispensable to thoughtful,
unhurried decision and its formulation in learned and impressive
opinions."
Dick v. New York Life Ins. Co., 359 U.
S. 437,
359 U. S.
458-459 (1959) (dissenting opinion).
Independent appellate review necessarily entails a careful
consideration of the district court's legal analysis, and an
efficient and sensitive appellate court at least will naturally
consider this analysis in undertaking its review. Petitioner
readily acknowledges the importance of a district court's reasoning
to the appellate court's review.
See Tr. of Oral Arg. 11,
19-22. Any expertise possessed by the district court will inform
the structure and content of its conclusions of law, and thereby
become evident to the reviewing court. If the court of appeals
finds that the district court's analytical sophistication
Page 499 U. S. 233
and research have exhausted the state law inquiry, little more
need be said in the appellate opinion. Independent review, however,
does not admit of unreflective reliance on a lower court's
inarticulable intuitions. Thus, an appropriately respectful
application of
de novo review should encourage a district
court to explicate with care the basis for its legal conclusions.
See Fed.Rule Civ.Proc. 52(a) (requiring the district court
"to state separately its conclusions of law").
Those circumstances in which Congress or this Court has
articulated a standard of deference for appellate review of
district court determinations reflect an accommodation of the
respective institutional advantages of trial and appellate courts.
In deference to the unchallenged superiority of the district
court's factfinding ability, Civil Rule 52(a) commands that a trial
court's findings of fact
"shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous, and due regard
shall be given to the opportunity of the trial court to judge of
the credibility of the witnesses."
In addition, it is "especially common" for issues involving
supervision of litigation to be reviewed for abuse of discretion.
See Pierce v. Underwood, 487 U. S. 552,
487 U. S. 558,
n. 1 (1988). Finally, we have held that deferential review of mixed
questions of law and fact is warranted when it appears that the
district court is "better positioned" than the appellate court to
decide the issue in question or that probing appellate scrutiny
will not contribute to the clarity of legal doctrine.
Miller v.
Fenton, 474 U. S. 104,
474 U. S. 114
(1985);
see also Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp.,
496 U. S. 384,
496 U. S. 402
(1990) ("[T]he district court is better situated than the court of
appeals to marshall the pertinent facts and apply the
fact-dependent legal standard mandated by Rule 11");
Pierce, 487 U.S. at
487 U. S. 562
("[T]he question whether the Government's litigating position has
been
substantially justified' is . . . a multifarious and novel
question, little susceptible, for the time being at least, of
useful generalization").
Nothing about the exercise of diversity jurisdiction alters
these functional components of decisionmaking, or otherwise
Page 499 U. S. 234
warrants departure from a rule of independent appellate review.
Actually, appellate deference to the district court's determination
of state law is inconsistent with the principles underlying this
Court's decision in
Erie. The twin aims of the
Erie doctrine -- "discouragement of forum-shopping and
avoidance of inequitable administration of the laws,"
Hanna v.
Plumer, 380 U. S. 460,
380 U. S. 468
(1965), -- are components of the goal of doctrinal coherence
advanced by independent appellate review. As respondent has
conceded, deferential appellate review invites divergent
development of state law among the federal trial courts even within
a single State. Tr. of Oral Arg. 34-36. Moreover, by denying a
litigant access to meaningful review of state law claims, appellate
courts that defer to the district courts' state law determinations
create a dual system of enforcement of state-created rights, in
which the substantive rule applied to a dispute may depend on the
choice of forum.
Cf. Erie, 304 U.S. at
304 U. S. 74-75
("[The rule of
Swift v. Tyson,
16 Pet. 1 (1842)] made rights enjoyed under the unwritten
general law' vary according to whether enforcement was sought
in the state or in the federal court"). Neither of these results,
unavoidable in the absence of independent appellate review, can be
reconciled with the commands of Erie.
Although some might say that this Court has not spoken with a
uniformly clear voice on the issue of deference to a district
judge's determination of state law, a careful consideration of our
cases makes apparent the duty of appellate courts to provide
meaningful review of such a determination.
In a series of cases decided soon after
Erie, the Court
noted that the appellate courts had applied general federal law
instead of the law of the respective States, and remanded to the
Courts of Appeals for consideration of the applicable principles of
state law.
See, e.g., New York Life Ins. Co. v. Jackson,
304 U. S. 261
(1938), and
Rosenthal v. New York Life Ins. Co.,
304 U. S. 263
(1938). It is true that, in
Bernhardt v. Polygraphic Co.,
350 U. S. 198
(1956),
Page 499 U. S. 235
this Court remanded the case to the District Court for
application of state law. The Court noted, however, that the law of
the State was firmly settled, and emphasized:
"Were the question in doubt or deserving of further canvass, we
would, of course, remand the case to the Court of Appeals to pass
on this question of [state] law."
Id. at
350 U. S. 205.
[
Footnote 3]
III
In urging this Court to adopt the deferential standard embraced
by the majority of the Courts of Appeals, respondent offers two
arguments. First, respondent suggests that the appellate courts
professing adherence to the rule of deference actually are
reviewing
de novo the district court determinations of
state law. Second, respondent presses the familiar contention that
district judges are better arbiters of unsettled state law because
they have exposure to the judicial system of the State in which
they sit. We reject each of these arguments.
A
Respondent primarily contends that the Courts of Appeals that
claim to accord special consideration to the District Court's state
law expertise actually undertake plenary review of a determination
of state law. According to respondent, this is simply
de
novo review "cloth[ed] in
deferential' robes." Brief for
Respondent 15. In support of this contention, respondent refers to
several decisions in which the appellate court has announced that
it is bound to review deferentially a district court's
determination of state law, yet nonetheless has found that
determination to constitute reversible
Page 499 U. S.
236
error. Afram Export Corp. v. Metallurgiki Halyps,
S.A., 772 F.2d 1358, 1370 (CA7 1985); Norton v. St. Paul
Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 902 F.2d 1355 (CA8 1990).
Respondent also relies on cases in which the Courts of Appeals,
while articulating a rule of deference, acknowledge their
obligation to scrutinize closely the District Court's legal
conclusions. See Foster v. National Union Fire Ins. Co.,
902 F.2d 1316 (CA8 1990). See also In re McLinn, 739 F.2d
at 1405 (dissenting opinion) ("The majority overreacts to a problem
that is basically one of terminology").
We decline the invitation to assume that courts of appeals craft
their opinions disingenuously. The fact that an appellate court
overturns an erroneous determination of state law in no way
indicates that the appellate court is not applying the rule of
deference articulated in the opinion. The cases cited by respondent
confirm this. In
Foster, for example, the Court of Appeals
articulated a rule of deference, yet cautioned: "We have not,
however, failed to closely examine the matter ourselves."
Id. at 1318. Respondent would have us interpret this
caveat as an acknowledgment of the appellate court's obligation to
review the state law question
de novo. See Brief
for Respondent 17-18, and n. 23. The Court of Appeals, however,
expressly acknowledged that it would not reverse the District
Court's determination "unless its analysis is
fundamentally
deficient. . . . without a reasonable basis, or contrary to a
reported state court opinion.'" 902 F.2d at 1318 (citations
omitted). After reviewing the applicable law in some detail, the
Court of Appeals concluded: "[T]he district court's interpretation
of the applicable Arkansas law is certainly not deficient in
analysis and is reasonable." Id. at 1320. This neither
purports to be, nor is, a conclusion following from de
novo review.
Nor does it suffice to recognize that little substantive
difference may separate the form of deference articulated and
applied by the several courts of appeals and the independent
appellate review urged by petitioner. Respondent argues
Page 499 U. S. 237
that the subtle differences between these standards are
insufficient to warrant intrusion into the manner in which
appellate courts review state law determinations. A variation of
this argument forms the framework upon which the dissent in
McLinn rests.
See 739 F.2d at 1404 ("By giving
substantial deference,' or . . . `great insight,' to the
decisions of the district courts, appellate courts do not suspend
their own thought processes").
As a practical matter, respondent and the dissent in
McLinn frequently may be correct. We do not doubt that, in
many cases, the application of a rule of deference in lieu of
independent review will not affect the outcome of an appeal. In
many diversity cases, the controlling issues of state law will have
been squarely resolved by the state courts, and a district court's
adherence to the settled rule will be indisputably correct.
See
e.g., Bernhardt, 350 U.S. at
350 U. S.
204-205. In a case where the controlling question of
state law remains unsettled, it is not unreasonable to assume that
the considered judgment of the court of appeals frequently will
coincide with the reasoned determination of the district court.
Where the state law determinations of the two courts diverge, the
choice between these standards of review is of no significance if
the appellate court concludes that the district court was clearly
wrong. [
Footnote 4]
Thus, the mandate of independent review will alter the appellate
outcome only in those few cases where the appellate
Page 499 U. S. 238
court would resolve an unsettled issue of state law differently
from the district court's resolution, but cannot conclude that the
district court's determination constitutes clear error.
See
e.g., In re McLinn, 739 F.2d at 1397 ("The panel indicated
that, if the question of law were reviewed under the deferential
standard that we have applied in the past, which permits reversal
only for clear error, then they would affirm; but if they were to
review the determination under an independent
de novo
standard, they would reverse"). These few instances, however, make
firm our conviction that the difference between a rule of deference
and the duty to exercise independent review is "much more than a
mere matter of degree."
Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union
of U.S. Inc., 466 U. S. 485, at
466 U. S. 501
(1984). When
de novo review is compelled, no form of
appellate deference is acceptable.
B
Respondent and her
amicus also argue that
de
novo review is inappropriate because, as a general matter, a
district judge is better positioned to determine an issue of state
law than are the judges on the court of appeals. This superior
capacity derives, it is said, from the regularity with which a
district judge tries a diversity case governed by the law of the
forum State, and from the extensive experience that the district
judge generally has had as practitioner or judge in the forum
State.
See Brief for Respondent 7-10; Brief for Ford Motor
Co. as
Amicus Curiae 9-11.
We are unpersuaded. As an initial matter, this argument seems to
us to be founded fatally on overbroad generalizations. Moreover,
and more important, the proposition that a district judge is better
able to "intuit" the answer to an unsettled question of state law
is foreclosed by our holding in
Erie. The very essence of
the
Erie doctrine is that the bases of state law are
presumed to be communicable by the parties to a federal judge no
less than to a state judge. Almost 25 years ago, Professor Kurland
stated:
"Certainly, if the law
Page 499 U. S. 239
is not a brooding onmipresence in the sky over the United
States, neither is it a brooding onmipresence in the sky of
Vermont, or New York or California."
Kurland, Mr. Justice Frankfurter, the Supreme Court and the
Erie Doctrine in Diversity Cases, 67 Yale L.J. 187, 217
(1957).
See Southern Pacific Co., 244 U.S. at
244 U. S. 222
(Holmes, J., dissenting) ("The common law is not a brooding
onmipresence in the sky, but the articulate voice of some sovereign
or quasi-sovereign that can be identified"). Similarly, the bases
of state law are as equally communicable to the appellate judges as
they are to the district judge. To the extent that the available
state law on a controlling issue is so unsettled as to admit of no
reasoned divination, we can see no sense in which a district
judge's prior exposure or nonexposure to the state judiciary can be
said to facilitate the rule of reason. [
Footnote 5]
IV
The obligation of responsible appellate review and the
principles of a cooperative judicial federalism underlying
Erie require that courts of appeals review the state law
determinations of district courts
de novo. The Court of
Appeals in this
Page 499 U. S. 240
case therefore erred in deferring to the local expertise of the
District Court.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case
is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
The amended complaint named the college and five faculty members
as defendants, and alleged discrimination in violation of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 87 Stat. 355, 29 U.S.C. § 701
et
seq.; denial of due process and unconstitutional interference
with her liberty and property interests; negligent and intentional
infliction of emotional distress; invasion of privacy; wrongful
dismissal; violation of express and implied covenants of good faith
and fair dealing; and breach of contract. The District Court
entered summary judgment for the defendants except as to the three
state law claims for intentional infliction of emotional distress,
invasion of privacy, and breach of contract.
649 F.
Supp. 391, 407 (1986). It determined that it need not consider
"the plausibility of federal question jurisdiction."
Id.
at 393, n. 1.
[
Footnote 2]
See Coenen, To Defer or Not to Defer: A Study of
Federal Court Deference to District Court Rulings on State Law, 73
Minn.L.Rev. 899 (1989), and the many cases cited therein.
See
also Note, What is the Proper Standard for Reviewing a
District Court's Interpretation of State Substantive Law?, 54
U.Cin.L.Rev. 215 (1985), and Note, A Nondeferential Standard for
Appellate Review of State Law Decisions by Federal District Courts,
42 Wash. & Lee L.Rev. 1311 (1985).
See, however, Note,
The
Erie Enigma: Appellate Review of Conclusions of Law,
26 Ariz.L.Rev. 755 (1984), and Note, The Law/Fact Distinction and
Unsettled State Law in the Federal Courts, 64 Tex.L.Rev. 157
(1985).
[
Footnote 3]
The dissent inexplicably relies on several cases in which this
Court declined to review
de novo questions of state law to
support the dissent's contention that it is "quite natural" for
appellate judges to rely on the "experience" of district judges.
See post at
499 U. S.
241-242. We are not persuaded that the manner in which
this Court chooses to expend its limited resources in the exercise
of its discretionary jurisdiction has any relevance to the
obligation of courts of appeals to review
de novo those
legal issues properly before them.
[
Footnote 4]
Of course, a question of state law usually can be resolved
definitively if the litigation is instituted in state court and is
not finally removed to federal court, or if a certification
procedure is available and is successfully utilized. Rhode Island
provides a certification procedure.
See Rhode Island
Supreme Court Rule 6 (1989).
See, however, Lehman Brothers v.
Schein, 416 U. S. 386,
416 U. S.
390-391 (1974) ("We do not suggest that, where there is
doubt as to local law, and where the certification procedure is
available, resort to it is obligatory. It does, of course, in the
long run, save time, energy, and resources, and helps build a
cooperative judicial federalism. Its use in a given case rests in
the sound discretion of the federal court.") (footnote
omitted).
[
Footnote 5]
"As a general proposition, a federal court judge who sits in a
particular state, especially one who has practiced before its
courts, may be better able to resolve complex questions as to the
law of that state than is a federal judge who has no such personal
acquaintance with the law of the state. For this reason, federal
appellate courts frequently have voiced reluctance to substitute
their own view of the state law for that of the district judge. As
a matter of judicial administration, this seems defensible. But
there is some tendency to go beyond that proposition and to say
that, if the trial court has reached a permissible conclusion under
state law, the appellate court cannot reverse even if it thinks the
state law to be otherwise, thereby treating the question of state
law much as if it were a question of fact. The determination of
state law, however, is a legal question, and although the
considered decision of a district judge experienced in the law of a
state naturally commands the respect of an appellate court, a party
is entitled to meaningful review of that decision just as he is of
any other legal question in the case, and just as he would have
been if the case had been tried in a state court."
19 C. Wright, A. Miller, and E. Cooper, Federal Practice and
Procedure, § 4507, pp. 106-110 (1982).
CHIEF JUSTICE REHNQUIST, with whom JUSTICE WHITE and JUSTICE
STEVENS join, dissenting.
I do not believe we need to delve into such abstractions as
"deferential" review, on the one hand, as opposed to what the
Court's opinion calls, at various places, "plenary," "independent,"
and "
de novo " review, on the other, in order to decide
this case. The critical language used by the Court of Appeals, and
quoted in this Court's opinion, is this:
"In view of the customary appellate deference accorded to
interpretations of state law made by federal judges of that state,
Dennis v. Rhode Island Hospital Trust Nat'l Bank, 744 F.2d
893, 896 (1st Cir.1984);
O'Rourke v. Eastern Air Lines,
Inc., 730 F.2d 842, 847 (2d Cir.1984), we hold that the
district court's determination that the Rhode Island Supreme Court
would apply standard contract principles is not reversible
error."
890 F.2d 484, 489 (CA1 1989).
In order to determine the Court of Appeals' views as to
"customary appellate deference," it seems only fair to refer to the
page in
Dennis to which the court cites. There we find
this language:
"[I]n a diversity case such as this one, involving a technical
subject matter primarily of state concern, we are reluctant to
interfere with a reasonable construction of state law made by a
district judge, sitting in the state, who is familiar with that
state's law and practices."
Id. at 896 (citation omitted).
Page 499 U. S. 241
The court does not say that it always defers to a district
court's conclusions of law. Rather, it states that it is reluctant
to substitute its own view of state law for that of a judge "who is
familiar with that state's law and practices." In this case, the
court concluded that the opinion of a district judge with 18 1/2
years of experience as a trial judge was entitled to some appellate
deference.
This seems to me a rather sensible observation. A district
court's insights are particularly valuable to an appellate court in
a case such as this where the state law is unsettled. In such
cases, the courts' task is to try to predict how the highest court
of that State would decide the question. A judge attempting to
predict how a state court would rule must use not only his legal
reasoning skills, but also his experiences and perceptions of
judicial behavior in that state. It therefore makes perfect sense
for an appellate court judge with no local experience to accord
special weight to a local judge's assessment of state court
trends.
If we must choose among Justice Holmes' aphorisms to help decide
this case, I would opt for his observation that "[t]he life of the
law has not been logic: it has been experience." O. Holmes, The
Common Law 1 (1881). And it does no harm to recall that the members
of this Court have no monopoly on experience; judges of the courts
of appeals and of the district courts surely possess it just as we
do. That the experience of appellate judges should lead them to
rely, in appropriate situations, on the experience of district
judges who have practiced law in the State in which they sit before
taking the bench seems quite natural.
For this very reason, this Court has traditionally given special
consideration or "weight" to the district judge's perspective on
local law.
See Bernhardt v. Polygraphic Co. of America,
Inc., 350 U. S. 198,
350 U. S. 204
(1956) ("Since the federal judge making those findings is from the
Vermont bar, we give special weight to his statement of what the
Vermont law is");
United States v. Hohri, 482 U. S.
64,
482 U. S. 74, n.
6 (1987) ("[L]ocal
Page 499 U. S. 242
federal district judges . . . are likely to be familiar with the
applicable state law. . . . Indeed, a district judge's
determination of a state law question usually is reviewed with
great deference.");
Bishop v. Wood, 426 U.
S. 341,
426 U. S. 346,
and n. 10 (1976) ("this Court has accepted the interpretations of
state law in which the District Court and the Court of Appeals have
concurred even if an examination of the state law issue without
such guidance might have justified a different conclusion").
But the Court today decides that this intuitively sensible
deference is available only to this Court, and not to the Courts of
Appeals. It then proceeds to instruct the courts of appeals and the
district courts on their respective functions in the federal
judicial system, and how they should go about exercising them.
Questions of law are questions of law, they are told, whether they
be of state law or federal law, and must all be processed through
an identical decisional mold.
I believe this analysis unduly compartmentalizes things which
have, up to now, been left to common sense and good judgment.
Federal courts of appeals perform a different role when they decide
questions of state law than they do when they decide questions of
federal law. In the former case, these courts are not sources of
law, but only reflections of the jurisprudence of the courts of a
state. While, in deciding novel federal questions, courts of
appeals are likely to ponder the policy implications as well as the
decisional law, only the latter need be considered in deciding
questions of state law. To my mind, therefore, it not only violates
no positive law, but also is a sensible allocation of resources, to
recognize these differences by deferring to the views of the
district court where such deference is felt warranted.
I think we run a serious risk that our reach will exceed our
grasp when we attempt to impose a rigid logical framework on the
courts of appeals in place of a less precise but tolerably
well-functioning approach adopted by those courts. I agree with the
Court that a court of appeals should not "abdicate"
Page 499 U. S. 243
its obligation to decide questions of state law presented in a
diversity case. But, according weight to the conclusion of a
particular district judge on the basis of his experience and
special knowledge of state law, an appellate court does not
"suspend [its] own thought processes."
In re McLinn, 739
F.2d 1395, 1404 (1984) (Schroeder, J., dissenting). I think the
Court of Appeals did no more than that here, and I therefore
dissent from the reversal of its judgment.