POSNER, Circuit Judge.
Nate Carter lost his home in Crete, Illinois, after the mortgage on it was foreclosed. In this suit against the financial institutions involved in making, servicing, or foreclosing his mortgage, he alleges that the "foreclosing entity" (which he does not identify) did not hold the note or
Our opinion in Sturdivant is an "unpublished" opinion (as nonprecedential opinions are still often called, though they are all published). We have decided to publish (and thus make precedential) our opinion in the present case in order to draw attention to what seems a needless redundancy in judicial opinions dismissing suits for failure to present a justiciable claim.
Conventional legal doctrine deems a suit frivolous if it is apparent from a reading of the complaint that there is no need to await the defendant's answer or motion to dismiss, or discovery or legal research, to determine that the case is going nowhere — that there's no possibility of the court's having authority to provide relief to the plaintiff. Reed v. Columbia St. Mary's Hospital, 782 F.3d 331, 336 (7th Cir.2015); Ricketts v. Midwest National Bank, 874 F.2d 1177, 1180-83 (7th Cir. 1989); Crowley Cutlery Co. v. United States, 849 F.2d 273, 276-77 (7th Cir.1988); Association of American Physicians & Surgeons v. Sebelius, 746 F.3d 468, 473 (D.C.Cir.2014); ACS Recovery Services, Inc. v. Griffin, 723 F.3d 518, 523 (5th Cir.2013); In re Stock Exchanges Options Trading Antitrust Litigation, 317 F.3d 134, 150 (2d Cir.2003). Such a suit does not invoke the jurisdiction of a federal court; "if it is clear beyond any reasonable doubt that a case doesn't belong in federal court, the parties cannot by agreeing to litigate it there authorize the federal courts to decide it." Carr v. Tillery, 591 F.3d 909, 917 (7th Cir.2010).
In contrast, a complaint that makes a claim that if true would provide a basis on which a federal court could grant the plaintiff monetary or other relief, but is later shown (normally by a motion to dismiss or other action taken by the defendant) to have no merit, nevertheless successfully invokes federal jurisdiction and so if it's dismissed the dismissal is on the merits. Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Environment, 523 U.S. 83, 89, 118 S.Ct. 1003, 140 L.Ed.2d 210 (1998); LaSalle National Trust, N.A. v. ECM Motor Co., 76 F.3d 140, 143-44 (7th Cir.1996); Holloway v. Pagan River Dockside Seafood, Inc., 669 F.3d 448, 452 (4th Cir.2012); Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Alabama v. Sanders, 138 F.3d 1347, 1353-54 (11th Cir.1998). In the Carr decision cited above we pointed to a "presumption ... that the dismissal of even a very weak case should be on the merits rather than because it was too weak even to engage federal jurisdiction. Otherwise courts would spend too much time distinguishing degrees of weakness. And there is a certain perversity in a jurisdictional dismissal; it permits the plaintiff to refile his case, albeit (as we noted) not on the ground on which the dismissal was based." 591 F.3d at 917 (citations omitted).
This explosion of redundant verbiage can be traced back to Bell v. Hood, 327 U.S. 678, 682-83, 66 S.Ct. 773, 90 L.Ed. 939 (1946), and perhaps farther (but we haven't tried), and was enlarged and emphatically endorsed in Hagans v. Lavine, supra, 415 U.S. at 537-38, 94 S.Ct. 1372 (long enough ago to invite reconsideration, one might think), as having "cogent legal significance." The Court contributed to the list of synonyms (besides "plainly unsubstantial") "obviously frivolous," "so attenuated and unsubstantial as to be absolutely devoid of merit," "no longer open to discussion," "essentially fictitious," "prior decisions inescapably render the claims frivolous," and "plainly unsubstantial, either because [the federal question] is `obviously without merit' or because `its unsoundness so clearly results from the previous decisions of this court as to foreclose the subject and leave no room for the inference that the question sought to be raised can be the subject of controversy.'" Id. at 536-38, 94 S.Ct. 1372; see also Morrison v. YTB International, Inc., 649 F.3d 533, 536 (7th Cir. 2011); Gammon v. GC Services Ltd. Partnership, 27 F.3d 1254, 1256 (7th Cir. 1994); Davis v. U.S. Sentencing Commission, 716 F.3d 660, 666-67 (D.C.Cir.2013); Harris v. Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Alabama, Inc., 951 F.2d 325, 327 (11th Cir. 1992); Molina-Crespo v. Califano, 583 F.2d 572, 573-74 (1st Cir.1978).
The bare word "frivolous" should be enough to denote a complaint that on its face does not invoke federal jurisdiction. "Utterly frivolous" is redundant. As for "wholly insubstantial," "too insubstantial," "not substantial enough," and all the rest, these are confusing substitutes for "frivolous" that imply misleadingly that a merely "insubstantial" (as opposed to a "too insubstantial" or "wholly insubstantial") claim might suffice to invoke federal jurisdiction — in other words that there is a sliding scale of substantiality, and at some point on the scale a claim is actionable. No one has explained how that point is to be determined. It remains indeterminate, a source of needless uncertainty.
And mightn't it be better to purge "frivolous" too — a word that in modern American
AFFIRMED