HPIL Holding Inc. v. Harry Zhang - Sixth Circuit Court Opinion
Summary
The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a district court's dismissal of a lawsuit filed by HPIL Holding, Inc. The court found that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine did not apply, allowing the case to proceed. The lawsuit alleges minority shareholders looted the corporation during a receivership proceeding.
What changed
The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the district court's dismissal of HPIL Holding, Inc.'s lawsuit against Harry Zhang and other defendants. The district court had dismissed the case for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, citing the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, which prevents federal district courts from hearing appeals of state-court judgments. The Sixth Circuit found that HPIL's lawsuit did not directly challenge the state-court order appointing a receiver, thus the Rooker-Feldman doctrine was inapplicable. The court also noted that standard issue and claim preclusion principles would still apply to respect prior state court rulings.
This decision means HPIL's lawsuit alleging that minority shareholders looted the corporation during a receivership proceeding can now proceed in federal court. Companies involved in similar disputes, particularly those stemming from state-court receivership appointments, should be aware that federal courts may not automatically dismiss such claims under the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. The case will now be subject to standard preclusion rules, and parties will need to address the merits of the allegations regarding corporate looting.
What to do next
- Review the Sixth Circuit's opinion in HPIL Holding, Inc. v. Harry Zhang for implications on Rooker-Feldman doctrine application in corporate litigation.
- Assess ongoing or potential litigation involving challenges to state-court orders to determine if they are direct appeals or independent claims.
- Consult with legal counsel regarding the impact of this ruling on existing or future federal court filings related to state-court proceedings.
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March 6, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
HPIL Holding, Inc. v. Harry Zhang
Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
- Citations: None known
- Docket Number: 25-1595
- Panel: Jeffrey S. Sutton, Joan Louise Larsen
Judges: Jeffrey S. Sutton; Joan L. Larsen; Stephanie Dawkins Davis
Combined Opinion
RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
File Name: 26a0069p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
┐
HPIL HOLDING, INC.,
│
Plaintiff-Appellant, │
No. 25-1595│
v. │
│
HARRY ZHANG aka Haining Zhang; STEPHEN BROWN; │
ANGELA COLLETTE; DAVID POSTULA; BROWN FAMILY │
INVESTMENTS, LTD.; CRANK MEDIA, INC., │
Defendants-Appellees. │
┘
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan at Bay City.
Nos. 1:23-cv-12050; 1:24-cv-10479—Thomas L. Ludington, District Judge.
Decided and Filed: March 6, 2026
Before: SUTTON, Chief Judge; LARSEN and DAVIS, Circuit Judges.
COUNSEL
ON BRIEF: Daniel J. Lehman, THE LAW OFFICES OF DANIEL J. LEHMAN, Farmington
Hills, Michigan, for Appellant. Devin W. Bone, PAESANO AKKASHIAN, PC, Bloomfield
Hills, Michigan, for Appellees Zhang and Collette. Dean Elliott, DEAN ELLIOTT, PLC, Royal
Oak, Michigan, for Appellee Brown.
OPINION
SUTTON, Chief Judge. Minority shareholders of HPIL Holding, a Wyoming
corporation, successfully petitioned a state court for the appointment of a receiver. Three years
later, HPIL filed this lawsuit alleging that the minority shareholders looted the corporation
during the receivership proceeding. Pointing to the state-court order that appointed the receiver,
No. 25-1595 HPIL Holding, Inc. v. Zhang et al. Page 2
the district court dismissed the lawsuit for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.
§ 1257 (a), which permits disappointed state-court litigants to seek review of state-court decisions
in the United States Supreme Court but does not permit them to appeal such decisions to a
federal district court. See Rooker v. Fid. Tr. Co., 263 U.S. 413, 416 (1923); Dist. of Columbia
Court of Appeals v. Feldman, 460 U.S. 462, 463 (1983). Because HPIL did not purport to seek a
writ of certiorari or otherwise appeal the state-court appointment of a receiver, because the
implied and vanishingly narrow jurisdictional bar under § 1257(a) does not apply, and because
the bar does not displace the customary way that federal courts respect prior state court rulings
(issue and claim preclusion), we reverse.
I.
Anju Tandon incorporated HPIL Holding in 2004 to sell scarves and handbags. After
temporarily shifting the company’s focus from selling accessories to providing massages, HPIL
returned to the clothing trade in 2014 by purchasing the right to sell merchandise associated with
the “World Traditional Fudokan Shotokan Karate-Do Federation.” R.55 at 6. In 2018, the
corporation purchased a drilling company from Christopher Philbrick in exchange for HPIL
common stock. After these ventures failed, HPIL stopped filing public reports. A few months
later, the Nevada Secretary of State dissolved the corporation. HPIL relocated to Wyoming and
filed Articles of Continuance there, but it otherwise appeared to become largely defunct.
In 2020, minority HPIL shareholder Haining (“Harry”) Zhang filed a complaint in
Michigan state court, alleging mismanagement by the leadership of HPIL and requesting the
appointment of Angela Collette as a receiver. Zhang served his complaint on HPIL’s old Nevada
address instead of its new Wyoming address. When HPIL failed to respond, a state court issued
a default judgment and appointed Collette as receiver. HPIL alleges that Collette and Zhang
diluted the corporation’s stock. The pair then entered an agreement to sell 92% of the stock to
Stephen Brown. The sale agreement indicated that Brown would serve as the CEO of HPIL.
In 2021, Philbrick and two other minority shareholders filed a motion to intervene in the
receivership proceedings, claiming that they never received service of process. The state court
granted the motion, set aside the default judgment, and dismissed the receivership complaint
No. 25-1595 HPIL Holding, Inc. v. Zhang et al. Page 3
because Zhang had failed to serve HPIL. At the same time, the court declined to vacate any of
the actions Collette took while acting as HPIL’s receiver.
That prompted the three minority shareholders to file derivative counterclaims on behalf
of HPIL against Zhang, Collette, and Brown in Michigan state court. The state court dismissed
the counterclaims, concluding that the shareholders failed to satisfy two requirements of
Wyoming corporate law. They did not continuously hold shares in HPIL for the duration of the
receivership proceedings. And they did not file a written demand with an HPIL director before
filing the lawsuit.
All of this became a preamble to today’s lawsuit. In August 2023, HPIL sued Zhang,
Collette, and Brown, as well as two of Brown’s business associates and three of his companies,
in federal court. Philbrick purported to authorize the corporation to file the lawsuit. In the main,
HPIL alleges violations of fiduciary duty, tort law, and the Racketeering Influenced Corrupt
Organizations Act as well as an overarching civil conspiracy. The complaint alleges that Zhang
and Collette colluded to seize control of HPIL by intentionally failing to provide the corporation
with proper notice of the receivership petition. And it alleges that the defendants stole from the
corporation and executed a “pump and dump” scheme to fraudulently inflate the share price of
its stock. R.4 at 5.
Acting on its own initiative, the district court dismissed the case for lack of subject-
matter jurisdiction. HPIL’s lawsuit in its view “necessarily require[s] the review” under
28 U.S.C. § 1257 (a) of the prior state-court judgments. R.55 at 20. For that reason, it concluded,
“the Rooker-Feldman doctrine deprives this Court of subject matter jurisdiction.” R.55 at 20.
HPIL appealed.
II.
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1257 (a), Congress has vested the United States Supreme Court with
jurisdiction over “[f]inal judgments or decrees rendered by the highest court[s] of a State” with
respect to matters arising under federal law and, by implication, has denied that jurisdiction to
the inferior federal courts. Rooker v. Fidelity Trust Co. first interpreted § 1257 to create this
jurisdictional bar, 263 U.S. at 416, and District of Columbia Court of Appeals v. Feldman echoed
No. 25-1595 HPIL Holding, Inc. v. Zhang et al. Page 4
Rooker. 460 U.S. at 463. The two cases stand for the straightforward proposition that a lower
federal court may not entertain a direct appeal “to reverse or modify” the “judgment” of a state
court. Rooker, 263 U.S. at 416.
But that is all the two cases stand for. Rooker and Feldman do not create a
supplementary doctrine of abstention, see Colorado River Water Conservation Dist. v. United
States, 424 U.S. 800, 819 (1976), a supplementary doctrine of comity, see R.R. Comm’n of
Tex. v. Pullman Co., 312 U.S. 496, 500 (1941), or a supplementary doctrine of federal equity, see
Younger v. Harris, 401 U.S. 37, 43 (1971). Rooker and Feldman do not control the claim or
issue preclusive effect of state-court judgments. See 28 U.S.C. § 1738 (Full Faith and Credit
Act); Target Media Partners v. Specialty Mktg. Corp., 881 F.3d 1279, 1290 (11th Cir. 2018)
(Newsom, J., concurring). Rooker and Feldman do not alter or eliminate the grants of federal-
court jurisdiction concurrent with the jurisdiction of state tribunals. See Exxon Mobil Corp. v.
Saudi Basic Indus. Corp., 544 U.S. 280, 283 (2005); Atl. Coast Line R.R. Co. v. Bd. of
Locomotive Eng’rs, 398 U.S. 281, 295 (1970). And, as judges and commentators from all over
the map have cautioned, the “Rooker-Feldman doctrine” does not create an all-purpose
mechanism for clearing dockets. Hohenberg v. Shelby County, 68 F.4th 336, 340 (6th Cir. 2023)
(quotation omitted); see, e.g., VanderKodde v. Mary Jane M. Elliott, P.C., 951 F.3d 397, 408
(6th Cir. 2020) (Sutton, J., concurring); RLR Invs., LLC v. City of Pigeon Forge, 4 F.4th 380, 399
(6th Cir. 2021) (Clay, J., dissenting); Hunter v. McMahon, 75 F.4th 62, 68 (2d Cir. 2023)
(Menashi, J.); In re Dorand, 95 F.4th 1355, 1362 (11th Cir. 2024) (Pryor, C.J.); GASH Assocs. v.
Village of Rosemont, 995 F.2d 726, 728 (7th Cir. 1993) (Easterbrook, J.); Hadzi-Tanovic v.
Johnson, 62 F.4th 394, 409 (7th Cir. 2023) (Kirsch, J., joined by St. Eve., J., dissenting from the
denial of rehearing en banc); Stephen I. Vladeck, The Increasingly “Unflagging Obligation”:
Federal Jurisdiction After Saudi Basic and Anna Nicole, 42 Tulsa L. Rev. 553, 563 (2007);
Samuel Bray, Rooker Feldman (1923–2006), 9 Green Bag 2d 317, 318 (2006) (celebrating
Rooker-Feldman’s death in a mock obituary); James E. Pfander & Nassim Nazemi, The Anti-
Injunction Act and the Problem of Federal-State Jurisdictional Overlap, 92 Tex. L. Rev. 1, 38,
58–59 (2013); Raphael Graybill, Comment, The Rook That Would Be King: Rooker-Feldman
Abstention Analysis After Saudi Basic, 32 Yale J. on Regul. 591, 592 (2015) (criticizing lower
courts for using Rooker and Feldman as “a convenient way for courts to discharge suits on
No. 25-1595 HPIL Holding, Inc. v. Zhang et al. Page 5
preclusion-like grounds without engaging in actual preclusion analysis (often a messy, fact-
intensive enterprise).”).
Rooker and Feldman somehow continue to grow even after the Court’s aggressive
intervention. See Hayden Davis, Note, Reining in Rooker-Feldman: The Harmful Effects of
Lower Courts’ Overextension of the Rooker-Feldman Doctrine and What Can Be Done About It,
44 Rev. Litig. 107, 117 (2024). In Exxon, Justice Ginsburg’s opinion for a unanimous Supreme
Court rejected all but the narrowest conceptions of Rooker and Feldman. See 544 U.S. at 291–
93. Yet in the last five years, approximately 7,800 federal cases cited Rooker and Feldman while
fewer than half as many cited Exxon. One might have hoped that Exxon would deter the inferior
federal courts from applying Rooker and Feldman. But lower federal courts faced with Rooker-
Feldman arguments dismissed cases at a significantly higher rate in the eight years immediately
after Exxon than the eight years before it. See Graybill, supra, at 600. And the trend appears to
have continued. See VanderKodde, 951 F.3d at 405 (Sutton, J., concurring); Davis, supra, at
117.
The Supreme Court reads Rooker and Feldman narrowly. It has dismissed a case on the
basis of § 1257(a)’s implied jurisdictional bar just twice—once in Rooker and then again in
Feldman. Skinner v. Switzer, 562 U.S. 521, 531 (2011). Over the four decades since Feldman,
the Court has repeatedly declined to apply Rooker and Feldman. See, e.g., Stop the Beach
Renourishment, Inc. v. Fla. Dep’t of Env’t Prot., 560 U.S. 702, 727 (2010) (plurality opinion);
Verizon Md., Inc. v. Pub. Serv. Comm’n of Md., 535 U.S. 635, 644 & n.3 (2002); Skinner, 562
U.S. at 532; Johnson v. De Grandy, 512 U.S. 997, 1006 (1994); Reed v. Goertz, 598 U.S. 230,
235 (2023). Time and time again, it has emphasized the eye of the needle that a claimant
invoking Rooker and Feldman must go through, and time and time again it has found the
argument wanting. See, e.g., Lance v. Dennis, 546 U.S. 459, 466 (2006) (per curiam) (“limited
doctrine”); Exxon, 544 U.S. at 291 (“limited circumstances”); Skinner, 562 U.S. at 532 (quoting
In re Smith, 349 F. App’x 12, 18 (6th Cir. 2009) (Sutton, J., concurring in part and dissenting in
part)) (“limited grasp”). When a court dismisses a case under Rooker and Feldman, it swims
against a powerful doctrinal current.
No. 25-1595 HPIL Holding, Inc. v. Zhang et al. Page 6
The Court cabined Rooker and Feldman for a reason. If extended beyond the specific
holdings of the titular cases, the concept would create a jurisdictional law of preclusion. Lance,
546 U.S. at 466. That would pervert the ordinary rules of waiver, forfeiture, discovery, and
supplemental jurisdiction. See Arbaugh v. Y&H Corp., 546 U.S. 500, 514 (2006). Still worse, it
would distort the Full Faith and Credit Act while nullifying “Congress’ conferral of federal-court
jurisdiction concurrent with jurisdiction exercised by state courts.” Exxon, 544 U.S. at 283. And
it would cause all that harm for no good reason, because anything Rooker and Feldman can do,
preclusion can do better. See 18B Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and
Procedure § 4469.3 (3d ed. 2025). We therefore interpret § 1257(a) to eliminate jurisdiction only
over “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, 544 U.S. at 284.
III.
HPIL’s suit does not fit within that slender category. One problem is that HPIL does not
“complain[] of injuries caused by [a] state-court judgment[].” Exxon, 544 U.S. at 284. Recall
that Rooker and Feldman apply only to lawsuits alleging injuries created by a state-court
judgment—and for which a writ of certiorari could be sought with respect to the relevant federal
question. See Marks v. Tennessee, 554 F.3d 619, 623 (6th Cir. 2009). “If there is some other
source of injury, such as a third party’s actions, then the plaintiff asserts an independent claim.”
McCormick v. Braverman, 451 F.3d 382, 393 (6th Cir. 2006). Challenges to wrongdoing in the
proceedings leading to a judgment do not challenge the judgment itself. Van Hoven v. Buckles &
Buckles, P.L.C., 947 F.3d 889, 893 (6th Cir. 2020); Powers v. Hamilton Cnty. Pub. Def.
Comm’n, 501 F.3d 592, 606 (6th Cir. 2007).
HPIL alleges that Zhang and Collette intentionally filed the receivership petition without
proper service of process, hijacking the corporation to steal from it. That injury emerged not
from the state court’s receivership decision but from “the conduct of the individuals who
happened to participate in that decision.” Alexander v. Rosen, 804 F.3d 1203, 1207 (6th
Cir. 2015). The judgment served only as the means through which the defendants harmed the
plaintiff, not as an independent source of harm. See Todd v. Weltman, Weinberg & Reis Co., 434
No. 25-1595 HPIL Holding, Inc. v. Zhang et al. Page 7
F.3d 432, 437 (6th Cir. 2006); Holloway v. Brush, 220 F.3d 767, 778–79 (6th Cir. 2000) (en
banc); VanderKodde, 951 F.3d at 403; cf. Skinner, 562 U.S. at 532 (Rooker and Feldman do not
bar a lawsuit targeting a statute broadly rather than a prior adverse state judgment grounded in
the statute).
When locating the source of an injury, our cases underscore the distinction between
judgments and antecedent misconduct in the legal process. The plaintiff in McCormick v.
Braverman alleged that the administrator of an estate deliberately failed to make her a party to a
receivership proceeding, denying her notice and preventing her from asserting certain property
rights. 451 F.3d at 392. We observed that the plaintiff “d[id] not claim that the state court
judgments themselves are unconstitutional or in violation of federal law.” Id. Instead, she
asserted “that those state court judgments were procured by certain Defendants through fraud.”
Id. HPIL’s first set of claims, like the claims discussed in McCormick, allege injuries from
misconduct during the receivership proceeding, not from the receivership order itself. See
Truong v. Bank of Am., N.A., 717 F.3d 377, 383 (5th Cir. 2013). For the same reason, they are
not jurisdictionally barred by Rooker and Feldman.
HPIL’s next set of claims do not complain of injuries caused by a state-court judgment
either. HPIL alleges that Zhang, Collette, and Brown engaged in an unlawful “pump and dump”
scheme that looted the corporation and damaged its creditworthiness. R.4 at 31–40. The state
court’s order authorized Collette to act as receiver. It did not direct or authorize corporate fraud.
See New Alaska Dev. Corp. v. Guetschow, 869 F.2d 1298, 1305 n.9 (9th Cir. 1989)
(“Certainly no court is empowered to permit a receiver to steal corporate assets.”); Morley v.
Snow, 75 N.W. 466, 467–68 (Mich. 1898) (holding that the “considerable discretion” granted to
a receiver “will not be interfered with, except where some abuse and wrong is manifest”). The
independent tortious conduct of a third-party breaks the chain of causation. See Powers, 501
F.3d at 606–10; United States v. Speakman, 594 F.3d 1165, 1174 (10th Cir. 2010);
VanderKodde, 951 F.3d at 408 (Sutton, J., concurring). Because any injury to HPIL flows not
from the state-court judgment but from the independent misconduct of the defendants, § 1257(a)
does not deny the district court jurisdiction over these claims.
No. 25-1595 HPIL Holding, Inc. v. Zhang et al. Page 8
Rooker and Feldman do not apply to this case for an additional reason. HPIL’s lawsuit
does not “invit[e] district court review and rejection” of state-court judgments. Exxon, 544 U.S.
at 284. To repeat, Rooker and Feldman recognize that inferior federal courts lack jurisdiction
over appellate challenges to specific state-court orders. Johnson, 512 U.S. at 1005–06. That a
plaintiff’s lawsuit “would undermine a judgment’s legal underpinnings” implicates preclusion,
not jurisdiction. Hohenberg, 68 F.4th at 341. HPIL’s lawsuit does not attempt to reverse the
state court’s receivership order. And resolving HPIL’s allegations of a pump-and-dump scheme
would not require rejection or even review of the state court’s order dismissing Philbrick’s case
under Wyoming’s demand requirement.
All told, Rooker and Feldman do not affect the district court’s jurisdiction because
HPIL’s lawsuit does not appeal anything or for that matter seek a writ of certiorari over anything.
Section 1257 eliminates only a disguised form of appellate jurisdiction in the inferior federal
courts. In addition to failing to use the word “appeal” or “certiorari” or any equivalent word,
HPIL’s current lawsuit does not even look like an appeal. It challenges different wrongs from
the previous state-court lawsuits. Johnson v. Ford Motor Co., 13 F.4th 493, 503 (6th Cir. 2021).
It requests different forms of relief. See Williams v. United States, 1995 WL 21431, at *5 (6th
Cir. Jan. 19, 1995) (per curiam) (“This court cannot afford relief where it was not sought in the
district court.”). And it seeks that relief from different parties. See, e.g., Payne v. Niles, 61 U.S.
(20 How.) 219, 221 (1857) (“[I]t is very well settled in all common-law courts, that no one . . .
[can] be made a defendant in [a] writ of error, who was not a party to the judgment in the inferior
court.”). All of that means that neither Rooker nor Feldman nor § 1257 has anything to do with
this case.
The district court thought that, because HPIL’s lawsuit requests a form of relief that the
state court denied to Philbrick, Rooker and Feldman eliminate federal jurisdiction over this case.
That is wrong. See Todd, 434 F.3d at 437. That a state-court order “ratified, acquiesced in, or
left unpunished” some source of injury does not mean that the state court caused the injury.
Buckles & Buckles, 947 F.3d at 892 (quotation omitted). State courts do not cause injuries by
failing to anticipate the misdeeds of third parties. Lawrence v. Welch, 531 F.3d 364, 369 (6th
Cir. 2008).
No. 25-1595 HPIL Holding, Inc. v. Zhang et al. Page 9
The district court also thought this federal lawsuit amounted to a request for “review and
rejection” of the state-court decision, Exxon, 544 U.S. at 284, due to the tension between the
allegations in this case and the prior state-court judgments. A Wyoming corporation, as the
district court saw it, may sue only in its own name if its directors authorize the lawsuit, meaning
that hearing a lawsuit by HPIL to sue in this instance would necessarily mean recognizing
Philbrick as HPIL’s sole director. But when the state court dismissed Philbrick’s derivative
lawsuit because he had not made a demand to the board of directors, the district court added, the
state court implicitly held that Philbrick was not HPIL’s sole director. Because this federal
lawsuit would cast doubt on an implicit holding of the state court, the district court thought that
Rooker and Feldman applied.
Not so. So long as it presents an “independent claim,” HPIL is free to try to “den[y] a
legal conclusion that a state court has reached” without facing a § 1257(a) barrier. Exxon, 544
U.S. at 293 (quoting GASH Assocs., 995 F.2d at 728 (Easterbrook, J.)). Rooker and Feldman
apply only to attempts to directly reverse a state court’s judgment. Rooker, 263 U.S. at 414
(“This is a bill in equity to have a judgment . . . declared null and void.”); Feldman, 460 U.S.
at 463; see RLR, 4 F.4th at 388. Though HPIL’s complaint sought “a ‘declaration’ that ‘void[s]’
‘any document granting’” authority to Brown, R.55 at 26–27, HPIL did not seek to void the
judgment, which—as the district court acknowledged—had already been vacated when the state
court dismissed the complaint. Neither Rooker nor Feldman nor § 1257(a) applies “simply
because a party attempts to litigate in federal court a matter previously litigated in state court.”
Exxon, 544 U.S. at 284. Nor does § 1257(a) eliminate jurisdiction over federal lawsuits that
brush up against the legal foundations or implicit assumptions of a state-court judgment.
Hohenberg, 68 F.4th at 341. When the state court dismissed the derivative action, the identity of
HPIL’s sole director may well have featured in its reasoning. But Rooker and Feldman eliminate
only jurisdiction to “review and reverse” judgments, not to implicitly undermine them. Exxon,
544 U.S. at 283. And they speak of judgments, not reasoning. See, e.g., 28 U.S.C. § 1257 (a)
(“[F]inal judgments or decrees.”); Hohenberg, 68 F.4th at 341. Anything less is a job for the
non-jurisdictional and truly doctrinal requirements of issue and claim preclusion.
We reverse and remand.
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