OPINION OF THE COURT
This аppeal requires us to determine whether a district court may remand a ease, originally brought in federal court and later consolidated with a removed state court action, after it has correctly concluded that it lacked jurisdiction over either component of the consolidated cases. We hold that it may only remand the removed state court action, and therefore we will reverse the remand order in part. Because we also find that the district court erred in its consideration of whether the federal plaintiff conducted a reasonable inquiry into its jurisdictional allegations, we will remand the case for further proceedings to determine whether sanctions under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11 (“Rule 11”) are appropriate.
I.
In June, 1990, Bradgate Associates, Inc. (“Bradgate Delaware”) brought a diversity action alleging fraud, negligence and breach of contract against Fellows, Read & Associates, Inc. (“Fellows, Read”) in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey. Sometime later, Bradgate Delaware removed a related state court ease between the two parties to the district court. The two cases were consolidated by a consent order for discovery and trial. In August, 1992, however, the district court remanded the entire consolidated case to state court after concluding that it lacked diversity jurisdiction, and denied a motion for sanctions filed by Fellows, Read.
The focus of this appeal is the existence of diversity jurisdiction; thus, a review of the citizenship of the entities involved is necessary.
Bradgate Delaware is a real estate development firm incorporated under the laws of Delaware and having its principal place of business in New Hampshire. According to the affidavit of one of its officers, Bradgate Delaware was formed on September 2, 1986, to act as a successor in interest to a related entity, which we will refer to as Bradgate New Jersey. Bradgate New Jersey is a New Jersey corporation that was formed in 1983. Fellows, Read, a provider of engineering services, is organized under the laws of New Jersey.
On January 9, 1987, either Bradgate Delaware or Bradgate New Jersey contracted with Fellows, Read to provide engineering services in connection with a real estate development project in New Jersey. 1 By April, 1990, however, the relationship between the contracting parties had deteriorated. Fellows, Read sued Bradgate Delaware in the Superior Court of New Jersey to recover payment for engineering services rendered during the course of the project. Bradgate Delaware responded by filing a federal lawsuit and removing Fellows, Read’s case tо federal court.
To establish subject matter jurisdiction in federal court, Bradgate Delaware alleged in its complaint and removal petition that both suits were between diverse litigants. Specifically, Bradgate Delaware alleged that it was the successor in interest to Bradgate New Jersey, the entity which Fellows, Read claimed was the real party in interest to the engineering services contract. It thus did not include Bradgate New Jersey in the federal lawsuit since its presence in the suit would, of course, frustrate diversity.
Following discovery, Fellоws, Read challenged Bradgate Delaware’s allegations in a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Fellows, Read argued that the district court lacked diversity jurisdiction because Bradgate Delaware had not in fact succeeded to Bradgate New Jersey’s interests. Fellows, Read claimed that since Brad-gate New Jersey continued as a viable corporate entity it, not Bradgate Delaware, was the real party in interest to the engineering services contract and consequently a proper party to the lawsuit.
*748 In seeking dismissal, Fellows, Read also moved for sanctions pursuant to Rule 11, claiming that the sole reason counsel for Bradgate Delaware named Bradgate Delaware as plaintiff in the federal suit was to manufacture diversity jurisdiction. Had counsel conducted a reasonable pre-filing investigation, Fellows, Read contended, he would have learned that Bradgate New Jersey was both a viable New Jersey corporation and the real party in interest in the federal lawsuit.
To support its claim, Fellows, Read offered а corporate standing certificate showing that Bradgate New Jersey remained a viable New Jersey corporation at the time it filed its motions. Fellows, Read also pointed to a number of documents bearing the name “Bradgate New Jersey.” These documents included two contracts for the sale of land and a document reflecting an assignment of Bradgate New Jersey’s contractual interests to a third party. Although Bradgate Delaware claimed that it was the entity which had assigned Bradgate New Jersey’s interests, the document provides explicitly that Brad-gate New Jersey made the assignment.
Bradgate Delaware relied on the affidavit of William S. Barnes, the vice president of both Bradgate Delaware and Bradgate New Jersey, in responding to Fellows, Read’s claims. Barnes stated that in September, 1986, four months before Fellows, Read entered into any contract with a Bradgate entity, Bradgate New Jersey was “liquidated, reorganized and merged” into Bradgate Delaware pursuant to a plan of reorganization. Barnes also claimed that “[a]s of September 7,1986, Bradgate New Jersey ceased to exist and was liquidated.” In his affidavit, Barnes explained that the New Jersey Secretary of State may have issued a certificate of good standing because that office misinterpreted a tax return for a related Bradgate entity filed in 1987; that Bradgate Delaware, rather than Bradgate New Jersey, entered into the engineering contract with Fellows, Read; and that Bradgate Delaware paid for the engineering services with checks drawn from an account shared by all of the Bradgate entities. 2
The district court found that Bradgate New Jersey was a viable entity within New Jersey because a certificate of merger had not been filed with the Secretary of State as required by N.J.S.A. §§ 14A:10-4(2) and 7(l)(a). The district court’s findings left unclear, however, whether Bradgate New Jersey was the real party in interest in the federal lawsuit. For purposes of its jurisdictional inquiry, the district court assumed that Bradgate Delaware was at least one of several proper parties under Rule 17 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and stated that it was quite possible that Bradgate Nеw Jersey should have been joined as a real party in interest under that rule. 3 District court opinion at 9. In considering whether to impose sanctions under Rule 11, however, the court stated that it had made no finding that Bradgate New Jersey was a proper party in the case, characterizing its earlier statement as indicating merely that Bradgate New Jersey might be a proper party. District court opinion at 12.
The district court ultimately concluded that Bradgate Delaware had failed to demonstrate that Bradgate New Jersey was not a proper party and thus had failed to establish that diversity jurisdiction existed. Consistent with this holding, the district court stated that it would grant Fellows, Read’s motion to dismiss. Immediately thereafter, however, apparently recalling that the federal case had been consolidated with a removed state court case, the court stated that “the [dismissal] will not terminate the case ... because the court will remand the action for trial in the [state court].” District court opinion at 11. Indeed, the order issued in conjunction with this ruling did not dismiss the consolidated cases, or even that portion *749 of the case which had originally been filed in federal court, despite the court’s ruling that it lacked diversity jurisdiction. Instead, the order remanded the “matter” to state court. Because the district court did not dismiss any claims, we read the remand order to encompass both portions of the case: that which was initially brought as a federal lawsuit and that which began in state court but was then removed to federal court.
The court next considered Fellows, Read’s motion for Rule 11 sanctions and ruled that sanctions were inappropriate since it had not found that Bradgate Delaware had abused or misused the court’s process by failing to include a proper party in the complaint.
II.
Fellows, Read appeals the district court’s decisions to remand that portion of the case which was originally filed in federal court and to deny its Rule 11 motion. Although the existence of subject matter jurisdiction was disputed before the district court, the basis for the court’s jurisdiction to entertain the federal case was 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1), and the basis for its jurisdiction to hear the removed state court case was 28 U.S.C. § 1441. Our authority to decide the questions presented is found in 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
See Thermtron Prod., Inc. v. Hermansdorfer,
The question we confront concerns a district court’s authority to remand a case originally brought in federal court and later consolidated with a removed state court case. This is a legal questiоn requiring interpretation of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Therefore, our review is plenary.
Int'l. Union, UAW v. Mack Trucks, Inc.,
III.
A.
Fellows, Read does not challenge the district court’s jurisdictional findings or the order remanding to state court that portion of the case which began there. It contends, however, that the district court erred in remanding to state court that portion of the case which was originally filed in federal court and instead should have granted its motion to dismiss after determining that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction. Thus, we analyze the impact of an absence of jurisdiction in two different contexts.
First, of course, when a district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over a case filed in federal court, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure require the court to dismiss the case. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(h)(3). In contrast, when the court lacks jurisdiction to entertain a ease removed from state court, 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c) requires it to remand the case to the court from which it was removed.
Bradgate Delaware’s position is not that Rule 12(h)(3) and sectiоn 1447(c) are inapplicable. In a turnabout from its position before the district court, Bradgate Delaware no longer emphasizes the presence of diversity jurisdiction. Instead, it argues that 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d) precludes appellate review of the district court’s order remanding the entire case, even if one portion began in federal court and one had its inception in state court. Bradgate Delaware seeks to invoke section 1447(d) as a bar to appellate review because the district court remanded two consolidаted cases after concluding that it lacked jurisdiction to hear the claims.
Indeed, section 1447(d) does provide that “[a]n order remanding a case to the [sjtate court from which it was removed is not reviewable on appeal or otherwise.” 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d). In
Gravitt v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.,
Nevertheless, there are situations in which an appellate court may review a remand order. In
Thermtron,
the Supreme Court held that section 1447(d) did not preclude review of remand orders based “on grounds wholly different from those upon which [section] 1447(c) permits remand.”
Thermtron Prod., Inc.,
B.
We now consider whether the consolidation of two different cases precludes the dismissal of one part of the case and the remand of another. We conclude that it does not.
Consоlidated cases typically are heard together; however, they are not necessarily merged forever and for all purposes. As the Supreme Court noted in
Johnson v. Manhattan Ry. Co.,
Johnson
cautions that while consolidated cases may be treated as one lawsuit in order to conserve judicial resources, the procedure should not impose the heavy toll of a diminution of any party’s rights. We discussed this principle in
Bergman v. City of Atlantic City,
This case, however, represents the proverbial horse of a different color. When a court determines that it lacks subject matter jurisdiction, the substantive rights of the litigants differ depending on whether they are parties
*751
to a cаse originally filed in federal court or parties to a case which was removed from state court. Lack of subject matter jurisdiction does not extinguish a removed state court case; section 1447(c) only requires the district court to remand it to state court. In contrast, lack of subject matter jurisdiction terminates a ease originally filed in federal court because Rule 12(h)(3) instructs the district court to dismiss cases which do not meet jurisdictional prerequisites.
See Weaver v. Marine Bank,
In this case, the district court’s treatment of the consolidated cases as a single suit diminished Fellows, Read’s rights by prolonging litigation over claims which should have been dismissed. To avoid this impermissible result, we hold that when a removed state court ¿ase has been consolidated with a ease originally filed in federal court and the district court determines that it lаcks subject matter jurisdiction over both the federal and state components of the ease, the court must apply the rules pertaining to dismissal and remand as if the cases had retained their separate identities and had never been consolidated.
C.
In conclusion, we find that section 1447(d) does not preclude our review of the remand order issued in this ease and that the district court erred by treating the consolidated cases as one once it determined that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over them. Instead, the district court should have remanded the removed case to state court and dismissed the case Bradgate Delaware originally filed in federal court. For these reasons, we will reverse its remand order in part.
IV.
Fellows, Read also appeals from the district court’s denial of its motion for sanctions under Rule 11.
In relevant part, Rule 11 provides:
Every pleading, motion, and other paper of a party represented by an attorney shall be signed by at least one attorney of record in the attorney’s individual name____ The signature of an attorney or party constitutes a certificate by the signer that the signer has read the pleading, motion, or other paper; that to the best of the signer’s knowledge, information and belief formed after a reasonable inquiry it is well grounded in fact ..., and that it is not imposed for any improper purpose, such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of litiga-tion____ If a pleading, motion, or other paper is signed in violation of the rule, the court ... shall impose upon the person who signed it, a represented party, or both, an apрropriate sanction____
Fed.R.Civ.P. 11.
Rule 11 imposes on any party who signs a document submitted to the court an affirmative duty to conduct a reasonable inquiry into the facts and law before filing.
Business Guides, Inc. v. Chromatic Communications Enter.,
*752
The objective standard imposed by Rule 11 is firmly established in this circuit. We have consistently noted that the Rule 11 test is “now an objective one of reasonableness” whiсh seeks to discourage pleadings “without factual foundation, even though the paper was not filed in subjective bad faith.”
Lony,
When a district court examines the sufficiency of the investigation of facts and law, it “is expected to avoid the wisdom of hindsight and should test the signer’s conduct by [asking] what was reasonable to believe at the time the pleading, motion, or other paper was submitted.”
CTC Imports and Exports v. Nigerian Petroleum Corp.,
The district court denied Fellows, Read’s motion for Rule 11 sanctions in eon-clusory fashion. In an effort to explain that Fellows, Read suffеred no prejudice, the court observed that since discovery was almost complete, “[t]he effect of the court’s ruling [was] merely that the action will be tried in state court, rather than in federal court.” Next, the district court stated, without explanation, that it would refuse to impose sanctions because there existed no basis for finding that “an abuse of litigation or misuse of the court’s process” had occurred.
We cannot say that the district court exercised sound discretion in relying upon the extent to which Fellows, Read would or would not bе prejudiced as a basis for denying the motion for sanctions. The focus of a district court’s Rule 11 inquiry is the reasonableness of the investigation and not whether the movant is prejudiced by his or her opponent’s actions. To consider prejudice alone is to overlook the fundamental objective of Rule 11, which is to encourage the filing of documents that are well-grounded in both law and fact.
We also conclude that in light of Fellows, Read’s claim that Bradgate Delaware concealed the existence of Bradgate New Jersеy in an effort to manufacture diversity jurisdiction, and because the crucial issue is the extent to which Bradgate New Jersey’s status was investigated, the district court should have inquired as to whether Bradgate Delaware or its counsel was in a position to know or acquire the pertinent factual details as to the existence and involvement of Bradgate New Jersey.
See CTC Imports and Exports,
If, indeed, Bradgate Delaware or its counsel failed properly to investigate, then the district court may have been inaccurate in ruling that their actions provided no basis for finding an abuse or misuse of litigation. On remand, we leave it to that court to determine whether it was reasonable, apparently on the basis of the merger agreement, to assert diversity in the complaint. If the court determines that there was a reasonable inquiry initially, it should then consider whether Bradgate was bound to inquire further, and reasonably did so, in light of Fellows, Read’s submission of the certificate of good standing indicating that no merger had taken place. Papers filed by Bradgate after Fellows, Read’s jurisdictional challenge were, of course, subject to Rule 11 just as the pleadings were.
Bradgate Delaware’s failure to disclose Bradgate New Jersey’s existence as a proper party, and its continuing insistence that the New Jersey entity was dissolved and merged into Bradgate Delaware, would constitute an egregious abuse of the court’s process if carried out for the purpose of manufacturing diversity jurisdiction. Even if not carried out for such an inappropriate purpose, a lack of reasonable investigation would nonetheless
*753
serve as a basis for the imрosition of sanctions under Rule 11. The district court should have engaged in further findings regarding the extent of the investigation conducted. Cf
. Lony,
Our prior decisions make clear that the use of the auxiliary verb “shall” in Rule 11 was intended to surmount any hesitancy to issue sanctions against attorneys and parties who run afoul of the duty to conduct a reasonable investigation.
Lony,
At oral argument, Bradgate’s cоunsel offered both a description of his investigation and an explanation for his actions. He conceded that he relied solely on his client’s representations and did not independently investigate the allegations in the complaint. He also conceded that at the time he filed the federal complaint, he sought to avoid state court because he was involved in litigation against the Chief Justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court. On remand, the district court should take heed of these statements and conduct an appropriate inquiry.
We will vacate the district court’s denial of Fellows, Read’s Rule 11 motion and remand for further examination consistent with this opinion. We express no opinion as to the result the district court should reach on remand.
V.
For the foregoing reasons, we will reverse the order remanding the federal case to state court and instruct the district court to dismiss that portion of these consolidated cases after conducting further proceedings on the Rule 11 motion.
See Willy v. Coastal Corp.,
- U.S.-,-,
Notes
. It is unclear from the record which Bradgate entity entered into the contract with Fellows, Read. In light of our decision to remand the Rule 11 issue for further factfinding, we will express no opinion as to which Bradgate entity was a party to the engineering services contract.
. According to the district court’s opinion, there are entities named "Bradgate Associates, Inc.” incorporated in at least eight states. District court opinion at 3.
. Rule 17(a) provides: "[ejvery action shall be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.” The capacity of a corporation to sue or be sued is determined by the state under which it was organized. Fed.R.Civ.P. 17(b). New Jersey permits active corporations, such as Bradgate New Jersey, to sue or be sued. N.J.S.A. § 14A:3-1(1)(b).
. Although we cite the
Foster
decision for the proposition that appellate courts may review remand orders based upon grounds not mentioned in section 1447(c), we hasten to note an important distinction between the situation before us and that which we confronted in
Foster.
Relying upon
Carnegie Mellon Univ. v. Cohill,
. In
Weaver,
the majority, over Judge Sloviter’s dubitante opinion, remanded pendant state claims following a determination that federal securities law jurisdiction was lacking, citing a Pennsylvania statute permitting federal courts within the state to transfer erroneously filed cases to state court.
Weaver,
. We are mindful that a proposed amendment to Rule 11 is pending before Congress. As revised, the rule would provide that a court may, not shall, impose sanctions upon finding a violation. Thus, the emphasis we have previously articulated and reiterate here may yield to a wider discretion among district court judges should the proposed amendment come to fruition.
