LARRY ALAN BURNS, District Judge.
Plaintiff Catherine Bryan submitted an ex parte motion for a temporary restraining order (TRO), with attached exhibits. By discrepancy order, the Court accepted the motion.
The motion makes clear Bryan is
In an earlier case, Kokopelli Community Workshop Corp. v. Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc., 10cv1605-CAB (KSC), Bryan litigated ownership of the property and lost. She then took an appeal, which the Ninth Circuit has yet to resolve.
The complaint in this case alleges that the City of Carlsbad and its code officer Scot Rudinger have been using municipal property codes as a pretext to harass and oppress her. It alleges that Defendant's agents have illegally intruded on her property and singled her out for arbitrary enforcement of property regulations. The buyer(s) and purported new owner(s) of the property are not named as Defendants in this case.
As a result of litigation in state court, the house is scheduled to be demolished this month. (Memorandum at 15:17-16:4.) Bryan asks the Court to "enjoin [Defendants] from condemning and demolishing her home . . ." after her failure to make mandated repairs. (Memorandum at 20:17-19.) She believes that if her house is demolished, she will lose theequity she says she still has in her home. (Id. at 3:10-15.) Bryan believes the state court proceeding was carried out in a manner that violates her federal due process rights. (Id. at 16:1-17:11.)
The motion is really raising two groups of claims. First, Bryan argues that the state court violated her constitutional rights when it authorized an inspection warrant and later adjudicated the city's claim for condemnation and demolition of the house. Those arguments are based on matters at issue in this case. Second, she claims that she will be harmed because of her ownership in the house. She contends the demolition will extinguish her Truth in Lending Act (TILA) based rights to the $2 million in equity she has in the property. Those arguments are based on matters at issue in the case on appeal.
The Anti-injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2283, generally prevents this Court from enjoining state court proceedings. The only exception to that prohibition that might apply here is that a court can grant injunctions in support of its jurisdiction.
The motion is defective in a number of other ways, but because the Court lacks jurisdiction to grant the relief Bryan is asking for, this order does not address those issues. The motion is