MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This case was filed in state court in 2002 and removed to federal court in 2005. Not surprisingly, the plaintiff challenged the removal and moved to remand. (Docket Entry No. 20). This court agrees, for the reasons explained below.
I. Background
Plaintiff Air Starter Components, Inc. (“ASC”) sued David Molina, Filiberto Fuentes, and Specialized Components, Inc. (“SCI”) in state court in October 2002, alleging misappropriation of trade secrets, conversion, and breach of contract. Two defendants, ABCO Products, Inc. and Andrew Bennet Boyd, were added in February 2003 in a First Amended Petition. On October 23, 2003, ASC filed a Second Amended Petition adding two defendants — Richard Kellogg and James Glattly — and adding a claim under the federal *376 Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. § 1961. (Docket Entry No. 25, Ex. A). No defendant removed. The RICO claim was based on allegations that shortly before Molina resigned from ASC, he copied confidential plans, specifications, and other information about ASC’s business and formed an agreement with SCI, ABCO, Boyd, Glattly, and Kellogg to exploit this information.
From October 2003 to November 2004, ASC filed a Third, then a Fourth, Amended Petition, adding defendants — Brian Lee Wilson, Jerry Ward, David Fink, and Bill Joyce — and later nonsuiting two of those defendants — Joyce and Fink. The RICO claim remained in the case as to all defendants. New factual information was added in support of that claim, including allegations that Molina had induced another ASC employee to bring him confidential drawings belonging to ASC and that SCI had hired Wilson and used his knowledge of ASC trade secrets in furtherance of the conspiracy to defraud ASC. The Fourth Amended Petition alleged that Fuentes, while still working for ASC, was paid by SCI and ABCO to develop a customer list for SCI. ASC also added to the Fourth Amended Petition allegations that Fuentes’s actions resulted in eighteen new customers for SCI, seventeen of which were also customers of ASC. In November 2004, the state court judge granted defendants’ motions for partial summary judgment as to the RICO claim. (Docket Entry No. 25, Ex. B). In March 2005, ASC filed a Fifth Amended Petition, adding three defendants — Miguel Matamoros, Gary Mills, and Above & Beyond Compression, Inc. — and reasserting the RICO claim despite the earlier ruling granting defendants’ partial summary judgment motion as to this claim. (Docket Entry No. 25, Ex. C). The Fifth Amended Petition added detail to the RICO claim by identifying three additional members of the alleged conspiracy and by dividing the overarching “scheme to defraud” into four subparts, including: (1) a scheme to deprive ASC of the faithful services of its employer; (2) a scheme to deprive ACS of the right to exclusive enjoyment of its own property; (3) a scheme to deprive ASC of its trade secrets; and (4) a scheme to induce ASC employees to divert sales to SCI and to reveal the names of ASC customers. According to ASC, each of these four related schemes merged into a larger scheme of entering the air starter business and ASC out. The Fifth Amended Petition included allegations that Fuentes and Molina bribed Matamoros to divert sales from ASC and allegations explaining ABC’s role in the conspiracy. These new allegations provided a more detailed factual basis for the previously pleaded (and dismissed) RICO claim.
Although the RICO claim included some factual allegations that appeared for the first time in the Fifth Amended Petition, the RICO claim itself has the same focus as that asserted in the Second, Third, and Fourth Amended Petitions — that the defendants conspired to defraud ASC of confidential information and to exploit that information for competitive advantage. ASC contends that Matamoros was served with the Fifth Amended Petition on August 22, 2005. (Docket Entry No. 20). Matamoros contends that he was not properly served with process. (Docket Entry No. 25). The other two defendants named for the first time in the Fifth Amended Petition were Canadian companies that had not been served when this case was removed in December 2005.
On November 23, 2005, the state court judge granted ASC’s motion to rehear the defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment on the RICO claim and set aside his earlier summary judgment ruling. *377 (Docket Entry No. 25, Ex. H). On December 22, 2005, Matamoros filed an appearance in the state court case and removed it to federal court. (Docket Entry No. 1). Each of the other defendants that had been served filed a notice of consent to removal on that same date. The defendants who had been named and served before Matamoros had also filed counterclaims and third-party claims in the state court.
ASC timely moved to remand. (Docket Entry No. 20). ASC argues that removal was improper because it was filed long after the RICO claim was first asserted and the resulting removal opportunity waived. ASC argues that neither the addition of Matamoros as a party nor the state judge’s reversal of his order granting summary judgment as to the RICO claim allowed removal two years later. ASC also asks for attorney’s fees for improvident removal under U.S.C. § 1447(c). (Docket Entry No. 29). Defendants respond that Matamoros was not effectively served with the Fifth Amended Petition, making his removal timely; that the earlier-named and served defendants had not waived their ability to consent to his notice of removal to meet the unanimity requirement; and that the state judge’s November 2005 ruling reinstating the RICO claim revived the time for removal under 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b). (Docket Entry No. 25).
Each argument is addressed below.
II. The Motion To Remand
A. The Applicable Legal Standards
A defendant has the right to remove a case to federal court when federal jurisdiction exists and the removal procedure is properly followed. 28 U.S.C § 1441. The removing party bears the burden of establishing that a state court suit is properly removable to federal court.
Carpenter v. Wichita Falls Indep. Sch. Dist.,
28 U.S.C. § 1446 governs the procedure for removal. Section 1446(b) provides that “[t]he notice of removal ... shall be filed within thirty days after the receipt by the defendant ... of a copy of the initial pleading.” 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b). The first paragraph of section 1446(b) applies to cases that are removable as initially filed; the second paragraph applies to cases that although not initially removable, later become removable.
See Johnson v. Heublein,
if the case stated by the initial pleading is not removable, a notice of removal may be filed within thirty days after receipt by the defendant ... of a copy of an amended pleading, motion, order or other paper from which it may first be ascertained that the case is one which is or has become removable, except that a case may not be removed on the basis of jurisdiction conferred by section 1332 of this title more than 1 year after commencement of the action.
28 U.S.C. § 1446(b). Under the second paragraph of section 1446(b), the thirty-day removal clock begins to run when a defendant receives a pleading, motion, or other paper that reveals on its face a basis for federal jurisdiction.
Chapman,
Under the unanimity rule, all properly served defendants must timely join in or consent to the removal.
Doe v. Kerwood,
B. The Unanimity Requirement and the Newly Added Defendant
When ASC filed its Second Amended Petition, which included a federal RICO claim, on October 24, 2003, the case became removable. The case became removable when the RICO claims were added. The then-named-and-served defendants did not timely remove. Instead, those defendants elected to remain in state court, filing dispositive motions, counterclaims, and third-party claims.
The filing of the Fifth Amended Petition in March 2005 “opened a new window of removal” for the three defendants added in that petition. 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b). As to the new defendants, re-movability is determined as of the date of receipt of service of the amended complaint.
Brand v. Transp. Serv. Co. of III.,
In
Brown v. Demco,
a defendant was added to a state court action that had been pending in state court for four years.
A defendant who is added to a case in which a co-defendant has failed to seek removal is in no worse position than it would have been if the co-defendant had opposed removal or were domiciled in the same state as the plaintiff. To per *379 mit the defendants in this case to obtain removal after they have tested state-court waters for four years would give them a second opportunity to forum-shop and further delay the progress of the suit. The unfairness of this to the plaintiff outweighs the unfairness, if any, to the last-joined defendant. The forum for a suit ought to be settled at some time early in the litigation.
Id.
In
Getty Oil,
a defendant removed the case within thirty days of having been served. Two later-served defendants consented to the removal within thirty days of removal and within thirty days of service; however, one of those defendants did not consent until fifty-one days after the first defendant was served.
See
In the present case, the defendants named in ASC’s October 2003 Second Amended Petition, which included RICO allegations, had the right to remove within the thirty day window, but none did. Instead, they litigated in state court, including by a challenge to the RICO allegations through motions for partial summary judgment. A defendant can waive the right to remove to federal court if it “proceed[s] to defend the action in state court or otherwise invoke[s] the processes of that court.”
Brown,
Defendants contend that in
Murphy Bros., Inc. v. Michetti Pipe Stringing, Inc.,
The Sixth Circuit rejected the first-served rule before
Murphy Bros,
was decided, concluding that a better view is to restart the thirty-day clock each time a defendant is served, the so called last-served interpretation.
Brierly v. Alusuisse Flexible Packaging Inc.,
The Fifth Circuit’s opinions setting out the first-served rule are binding on this court. Some of the criticisms defendants make in this case were recognized and rejected by the Fifth Circuit in the
Brown
and
Getty Oil
opinions that adopted the first-served rule. Although the Eighth Circuit has held that the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Murphy Bros,
is inconsistent with the first-served rule, no Fifth Circuit case has so held.
Murphy Bros,
may support, but does not require, allowing each defendant thirty days after service to remove. In that case, the Court held that a defendant’s time to remove “is triggered by simultaneous service of summons and complaint, or receipt of the complaint ‘through service or otherwise,’ after and apart from service of the summons, but not by mere receipt of the complaint unattended by any formal service.”
Courts in the Fifth Circuit urged to abandon the first-served rule have refused to do so.
See, e.g., Casley v. Barnette,
No. 04-3349,
C. The Revival Exception
Defendants rely on the “revival” exception recognized and applied by the Fifth Circuit in
Johnson v. Heublein,
In
Heublein,
the Fifth Circuit recognized that a lapsed right to remove may be restored if a complaint is amended so substantially as to alter the character of the proceedings and constitute essentially a new lawsuit.
Defendants do not contend that the Fifth Amended Petition by itself revived the removal right. The Fifth Amended Petition was filed in March 17, 2006; any right to remove based on the amended RICO allegations expired well before December 2005. Instead, defendants argue that the state court’s November 23, 2005 order setting aside the partial summary judgment dismissing the RICO claim and allowing the plaintiffs to proceed on the RICO claim as pleaded in the Fifth Amended Petition, restarted the time for removal. 2
*382 This argument fails because the RICO allegations in the Fifth Amended Petition, which the state judge allowed the plaintiffs to pursue in 2005 were not so different from the RICO allegations first asserted in 2003 so as to alter the character of the action and constitute essentially a new lawsuit. The RICO claim first appeared in this case in the Second Amended Petition, which was filed on October 24, 2003. The thrust of the RICO claim was that the defendants formed a conspiracy to defraud ASC and to deprive ASC of the honest, loyal, and faithful service of its employees. Between October 24, 2003, and November 19, 2004, when the state court judge granted defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment and dismissed RICO allegations from the case, ASC amended its petition two additional times. The Third Amended Petition added three defendants and new allegations of bribery of ASC’s employees-. The Fourth Amended Petition added allegations that Fuentes aided in the alleged conspiracy. The case stayed in state court after the initial RICO allegations appeared in the Second Amended Petition and remained there after the Third and Fourth Amended Petitions were filed. Four months after the RICO claim was initially dismissed by the interlocutory order granting partial summary judgment, ASC filed its Fifth Amended Petition, on March 17, 2005, reasserting the RICO claim and adding allegations that three additional defendants had aided in the alleged conspiracy.
Unlike
Heublein,
in which the amended petition realigned the parties, added new causes of action, and substantially enlarged the scope of the defendants’ liability, the claims asserted in the Fifth Amended Petition asserted the same RICO cause of action as the Second, Third and Fourth Amended Petitions, relating to the alleged theft of ASC’s trade secrets and the alleged conspiracy to defraud ASC. Since
Heublein,
district courts have held that an amendment does not revive a right to remove as long as the lawsuit remains essentially the same as earlier pleaded and the amendment does not alter the essential character of the action.
See La. Farm, Bureau Cas. Ins. Co. v. Michelin Tire Corp.,
In addition to the lack of fundamental change worked by the RICO claim asserted in the Fifth Amended Petition, the state court’s ruling allowing the plaintiffs to proceed on the RICO claim cannot start the removal clock anew. This is not a case in which the state court’s decision granting a motion
first
made the case removable.
See, e.g., Sullivan v. Conway,
III. The Motion for Attorney’s Fees
28 U.S.C. § 1447(c) authorizes the court to “require payment of just costs and any actual expenses, including attorney fees incurred as a result of removal.” The Supreme Court has recently clarified that “[a]bsent unusual circumstances, courts may award attorney’s fees under § 1447(c) only where the removing party lacked an objectively reasonable basis for seeking removal.”
Martin v. Franklin Capital Corp.,
— U.S. -,
IV. Conclusion
The motion to remand is granted. This case is remanded to the 268th Judicial District Court of Fort Bend County, Texas.
Notes
. Defendants do not argue that the claim against Matamoros was separate and independent from the claims against the earlier-named defendants under 28 U.S.C. § 1441(c), so as to make their inability to join in the removal irrelevant to federal jurisdiction.
. An additional problem with defendants’ argument is that federal district courts have repeatedly rejected the argument that the revival exception applies not only to cases that were removable as initially filed, but also to cases that, while not removable as initially filed, become removable at a later date. See
*382
Cosse v. Apcoa Standard Parking, Inc.,
No. 02-1208,
