This Opinion is issued in connection with products liability MDL litigation concerning the brand name pharmaceutical Eliquis, a blood thinner used to treat nonvalvular atrial fibrillation and to reduce the risk of stroke and systemic embolism. At *640issue here are four related Eliquis lawsuits filed by the law firm Salim-Beasley in Delaware state court, which were removed by the defendants to federal court and recently transferred to this district pursuant to the MDL process. The plaintiffs have moved to remand their lawsuits to Delaware state court. Before addressing thе motion for remand, some procedural history is in order.
BACKGROUND
The first decision in the Eliquis MDL on a motion to dismiss was issued in Utts v. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. et al., 16cv5668 (DLC) (" Utts"). On March 21, 2017, as that motion to dismiss was being addressed, a scheduling Order provided that "any action presently assigned to this Court ... may file an amended complaint fourteеn (14) days after the Court decides the motion to dismiss" in Utts. The March 21 Order further provided that "any action transferred or reassigned to this Court after the Utts motion to dismiss has been decided shall have fourteen (14) days following arrival on this Court's docket to file an amended comрlaint."
On May 8, this Court issued its opinion in Utts.See Utts v. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. et al.,
In response to the decision dismissing the Utts action, Salim-Beasley voluntarily dismissed thirty-three product liability actions conсerning Eliquis brought on behalf of various plaintiffs that were pending in federal court and refiled them in Delaware state court.
Salim-Beasley has filed additional actions concerning Eliquis for other plaintiffs in Delaware state court, including the four at issue here. One of the four actions was filed in Delaware state court on July 5, 2017; the other three were filed on July 7, 2017. They were removed by the defendants to federal court no later than four days after they were filed and before the plaintiffs could serve the defendants.
*641After the four actions were removed, they were "tagged" for transfer to the MDL on or before July 13.
On August 11, Salim-Beasley notified this Court that it had filed the remand motions before the actions had officially arrived on this Court's docket because of the deadline that governs a remand motion. It asked for an extension of the deadlines set fоrth in the Court's May 9 Order, as well as a conference for scheduling purposes. An August 17 Order acknowledged Judge Stark's June 27 decision denying the remand motions in the thirty-three related cases, denied the request for an extension of the deadlines set forth in the May 9 Order, and requirеd any plaintiff seeking remand to "also address in its show cause memorandum why the motion for remand should not be denied for reasons given in Judge Stark's June 27 Opinion."
Although permitted to file amended complaints in response to the guidance given in Utts, none of the plaintiffs in these four actions opted to do so. In its August 30 omnibus response to the order to show cause, Salim-Beasley addressed Judge Stark's June 27 Opinion and argued for remand. The defendants filed a response on September 13.
DISCUSSION
Federal law permits defendants to remove to federal court an action originally filed in state court if it could have been brought in federal court:
Except as otherwise expressly provided by Act of Congress, any civil action brought in a State court of which the district courts of the United States have original jurisdiction, may be removed by the defendant or the defendants, to the district court of the United States for the district and division embracing the place where such action is pending.
Moreover, when diversity jurisdiction is the sole ground for federal court jurisdiction, the action is removable "only if none of the parties in interest properly joined and served as defendants is a citizen of the State in which such action is *642brought."
Here, it is undisputed that the defendants removed the cаses before they were properly served. A plain reading of the forum defendant rule, then, permitted that removal.
The plaintiffs make principally two arguments in support of their motion for remand. First, they argue that this Court should ignore Judge Stark's decision and take its guidance from decisions by district judges in the Second Circuit. In construing a federal statute, however, the "[f]ederal courts comprise a single system applying a single body of law, and no litigant has a right to have the interpretation of one federal court rather than thаt of another determine his case." Menowitz v. Brown,
The plaintiffs next urge the Court to ignore the plain reading of the statute to discourage what they term as "gamesmanship" by the defendants. They urge that the statute should only be enforcеd when a removal occurs after a plaintiff has had "a meaningful chance" to serve the defendant. The plaintiffs argue that to uphold removal here, which they contend was strategically done in order to evade the forum defendant rule, would be to frustrаte the purpose of both diversity jurisdiction and the forum defendant rule.
As an initial matter, the plain meaning of the statute is controlling absent ambiguity. A court should look to the legislative history of a statute only if the statute is ambiguous or if a literal application would "leаd to an absurd result." Louis Vuitton v. Malletier S.A. v. LY USA, Inc.,
The plaintiffs would hаve the Court ignore statutory language-which was revisited by Congress as recently as 2011
Ignoring the plain terms of the statute to determine in an individual case when a plaintiff had a meaningful opportunity to serve each defendant and to investigate the parties' motives, such as the plaintiff's motives in filing in a particular venue and the defendant's reasons for removing the action to federal court, would add expense, delay, and uncertainty to the litigation. In cases like the ones at issue here, thе investigation is complicated and points in several directions. While the defendants no doubt removed the actions swiftly to combine the four cases with the Eliquis MDL litigation and sweep them under the Utts umbrella, a ruling in favor of the plaintiffs on the issue of removal would reward а different kind of gamesmanship altogether. After this Court issued Utts, Salim-Beasley voluntarily dismissed without prejudice the thirty-three "tagged" cases before the MDL and refiled those cases in Delaware state court. The defendants removed those cases to federal сourt in Delaware. After Judge Stark denied the plaintiffs' remand motion in the thirty-three cases then removed, Young,
*644Because removal to federal court is proper, the only remaining issue is whether to dismiss the complaints. Salim-Beasley does not present any developed argument against dismissal. For the reasons stated in Utts and in Fortner v. Bristol-Meyers Squibb Co., 17cv1562(DLC),
CONCLUSION
The plaintiffs' August 3 and 9, 2017 motions for remand are denied. The plaintiffs' complaints are dismissed with prejudice.
Notes
Salim-Beasley had originally filed the thirty-three cases in California state court. The cases had been removed to federal court and stayed pending a decision by the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation on whether to transfer them to the MDL pending before this Court. The plaintiffs in the thirty-three actions voluntarily dismissed the stayed cases on May 23, 2017, and promptly refiled them in Delaware state court.
One was removed the day after filing; three were removed four days after filing.
One was taggеd for transfer on July 6; three were tagged for transfer on July 13.
Although Salim-Beasley had filed a notice of opposition to the proposed transfer, it did not file the required motion and brief to vacate the conditional transfer order. As a result, the final transfer of thе actions was not further delayed.
The remand motion for the first-filed action was filed on August 3; the remaining remand motions were filed on August 9.
Section 1441(b) was revised in 2011 by the Federal Courts Jurisdiction and Venue Clarification Act of 2011 ("FCJVCA"). While much of the section was rearranged or otherwise edited, the "joined and served" language was untouched.
