Johnny and Margaret Cobb appeal the denial of their motion to remand to state court for want of subject matter jurisdiction. In the alternative, they appeal the summary judgment in favor of each defendant. We reverse the denial of remand and, accordingly, do not reach the merits of the summary judgment.
I.
Johnny Cobb (“Cobb”) was operating his vehicle on a city street in Lake Charles, Louisiana, when a piece of heavy equipment, a “front end loader,” backed into his vehicle, causing him serious personal injury. The equipment was operated by an employee of J&P Logging, Inc. (“J&P”), to remove broken limbs and residue from an ice storm. J&P was performing limb removal pursuant to an agreement with Delta Exports, Inc. (“Delta”), which had been hired by Waste Management of Louisiana, L.L.C. (“Waste Management”). The City of Lake Charles had entered into an agreement with Waste Management under which Waste Management would be responsible for cleaning up the debris resulting from the storm. Cobb claims that the lack of adequate warning of the work being done proximately caused the accident.
The Cobbs sued Delta and its insurer, Penn-American Insurance Co. (“Penn-American”), both foreign domieiliaries, in state court. Delta and Penn-American removed to federal court on the basis of diversity of citizenship. The federal court granted the Cobbs’ unopposed 1 motion to amend their complaint to add claims against four other defendants, two of which — the city and Waste Management— are Louisiana domieiliaries.
The Cobbs then filed a motion to remand to state court on the ground that there no longer was complete diversity of citizenship. The district court denied remand, reasoning that Waste Management and the city had been fraudulently joined, and their joinder would therefore not destroy federal jurisdiction. The court then granted summary judgment in favor of Delta and Penn-American, reasoning that there was no genuine issue of material fact as to whether Delta Exports was hable for the actions of J&P’s employee, as J&P was an independent contractor. Finally, the court granted summary judgment in favor of Waste Management, concluding that the Cobbs could not establish Waste Management’s liability for the actions of J&P’s employee.
II.
The Cobbs contend that the district court did not have the option of joining the non-diverse defendants and then declining to remand; once the court permitted joinder, they assert, it was bound to remand. The defendants argue that Supreme Court precedent establishes that diversity, for jurisdictional purposes, is established at
A.
The plain language of 28 U.S.C. § 1447(e) requires a remand:
If after removal the plaintiff seeks to join additional defendants whose joinder would destroy subject matter jurisdiction, the court may deny joinder, or permit joinder and remand the action to the State court.
By expressly giving a district court only two options, this section indicates that the court may not permit joinder of non-diverse defendants but then decline to remand, as the court did here. 2
The legislative history supports this reading. In adopting the current version of § 1447(e), Congress rejected a version that would have permitted district courts to join non-diverse defendants and, at their discretion, retain jurisdiction. 3 This history indicates that Congress must not have intended to permit the course of action the district court chose.
Remand is also required by
Hensgens v. Deere & Co.,
B.
The “fraudulent joinder” doctrine is inapplicable here. Under that doctrine, a federal court may assert diversity jurisdiction when a non-diverse defendant has been fraudulently
joined
— ie., when “either ... there is no possibility that the plaintiff would be able to establish a cause of action against the in-state defendant in state court; or ... there has been outright fraud in the plaintiffs pleading of jurisdictional facts.”
5
Jernigan v. Ashland Oil, Inc.,
The fraudulent joinder doctrine does not apply to joinders that occur after an action is removed. This court’s caselaw reflects that the doctrine has permitted courts to ignore (for jurisdictional purposes) only those non-diverse parties on the record in state court at the time of removal. 6
The district court’s confusion likely resulted from the fact that the term fraudulent joinder is a bit of a misnomer; in the typical case, the fraudulently “joined” party is not joined later, but instead is named as a defendant in the original state court complaint to avoid removal. The doctrine simply does not apply to defendants who are joined after an action is removed, for in such cases, the defendants have a chance to argue against joinder before the court grants leave to amend. 7
Accordingly, the district court erred in relying on the fraudulent joinder doctrine to justify its refusal to remand. Indeed, once it permitted joinder of the non-diverse defendants, the court lost subject matter jurisdiction and thus had no power even to consider whether fraudulent join-der applied. 8
C.
Contrary to the defendants’ assertion, this case is not controlled by
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. v. KN Energy, Inc.,
The instant defendants rely on a passage in Freeport-McMoRan explaining that
if jurisdiction exists at the time an action is commenced, such jurisdiction may not be divested by subsequent events.... “Jurisdiction once acquired ... is not divested by a subsequent change in the citizenship of the parties. Much less is such jurisdiction defeated by the intervention, by leave of court, of a party whose presence is not essential to a decision of the controversy between the original parties.”
Freeport-McMoRan,
Defendants also note that
dictum
from
Whalen v. Carter,
Defendants maintain that the lesson of this dictum is that, while joinder of indispensable, non-diverse parties destroys jurisdiction, joining a dispensable, non-diverse party does not. 10 The Cobbs admit that Waste Management and the city are dispensable parties. Accordingly, defendants conclude, the law as established in Free-port-McMoRan and Whalen is that diversity is not destroyed, and the court did not err in joining the non-diverse parties and then retaining jurisdiction.
Defendants also contend that
Freeporb-McMoRan
overruled
Hensgens.
They
Defendants read
Freeport
too broadly. Contrary to the insinuation in
Whalen’s dictum, Freeport-McMoRan
did not hold that diversity jurisdiction is unaffected by post-removal joinder of dispensable, non-diverse parties pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 19. Granted, the
Freeport-McMoRan
Court’s broad statement that “diversity jurisdiction, once established, is not defeated by the addition of a nondiverse party to the action,”
First of all, the Freeport Court was faced with a rule 25 addition, not joinder under rule 19. Second, to read Freeport-McMoRan as holding that a court may permit post-removal joinder of a non-diverse defendant and retain jurisdiction is to understand the Court as having overruled § 1447(e), a provision whose plain language and legislative history indicate that a court can do no such thing.
Courts, of course, may overrule statutes on constitutional grounds, but the limits of diversity jurisdiction are determined purely by statute.
State Farm Fire
& Cas.
Co. v. Tashire,
Finally, two other courts of appeals, while not directly addressing the issue at hand, have suggested that
Freeport-
McMoRan’s holding is limited and does not contravene § 1447(e). In
Casas Office Machines, Inc. v. Mita Copystar of Am., Inc.,
Though the issue before the Casas court was not joinder but substitution, the court still held that § 1447(e), not the rule of Freeport-McMoRan, applied, because “the legislative history to [§ 1447(e) ] indicates that § 1447(e) applies also to the identification of fictitious defendants after removal.” Id. In other words, the Casas court reasoned that Freeport-McMoRan’s rule was extremely narrow, applying only to rule 25 substitutions that do not involve the mere identification of fictitious parties.
If § 1447(e), not
Freeport-McMoRan,
applies to a subset of substitutions that are mentioned only in the provision’s legislative history, then,
a fortiori,
the provision’s
text
must trump
Freeport-McMoRan.
That text expressly addresses post-removal joinder of parties under rule 19, and it is
In
Burka v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
The defendants in Burka had filed a rule 25(c) motion seeking to substitute a non-diverse, dispensable defendant a week before the plaintiff sought to join the same non-diverse defendant pursuant to rule 19. The plaintiffs argued that joinder under rule 19 would destroy diversity and that the case should be remanded pursuant to § 1447(e). They also argued that even if the court did allow defendants’ earlier motion under rule 25(c), that rule triggered the application of the remand provision set forth in § 1447(e).
The Burka court did not accept this latter argument but held, instead, that a rule 25(c) transfer-of-interest-based substitution is not a form of “joinder” within the meaning of § 1447(e). It also concluded that the addition of the non-diverse defendant in that case was under rule 25(c), not rule 19. Accordingly, § 1447(e) did not require remand. The implication is that, had the addition occurred pursuant to rule 19, § 1447(e) would have required a remand. Burka’s reasoning, then, supports the view that Freeport-McMoRan is limited to rule 25 substitutions and that post-removal joinders, whether dispensable or indispensable, are controlled by § 1447(e).
For the foregoing reasons, we decline to read Freeport-McMoRan as broadly as the defendants do. Its holding does not overrule Hensgens or § 1447(e), both of which suggest that the district court erred in permitting joinder of Waste Management and the city and then declining to remand. We therefore REVERSE the court’s order denying remand, and we REMAND with instructions to remand to state court.
Notes
. The Cobbs’ attorney wrote the defendants' attorney, explaining:
I am in the process of filing this week a Motion for Leave of Court to Amend and Supplement the Complaint to add additional parties, including the City of Lake Charles, Waste Management, Inc., Jack Gibson d/b/a J&P Logging and James Wright, who was the driver of the front-end loader at the time of the accident. Pursuant to the local rules, I am requesting your consent to file this motion. I would appreciate it if you could let me know as soon as possible whether you will consent to the motion or whether I should set it for a hearing.
The defendants consented to the amendment.
. We rely on the well-known canon of statutory construction, expressio unius est exclusio alterius — or, "the expression of one thing implies the exclusion of another.” See 73 Am Jur.2d Statutes § 211 (1995).
. See David D. Siegel, Commentary on 1988 Revision of Section 1447, in 28 U.S.C.A. § 1447 (1994) (citing H.R. Rep. No. 100-889, 100th Cong., 2d Sess., 72-73, reprinted in 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5982, 6032-33).
.
See Yniques v. Cabral,
.
See also Burden v. General Dynamics Corp.,
.See Griggs v. State Farm Lloyds,
. The defendants contend it would be unreasonable to require them to raise fraudulent joinder at the time joinder is proposed, for local rules indicate that sanctions may be imposed against attorneys who, without a good faith basis for doing so, withhold consent to amend pleadings to join parties. See Uniform La. Loe. R. 7.6W. We note, however, that a local rule prohibiting parties from erecting bad-faith barriers to proposed join-ders in no way prohibits parties from opposing the joinder of parties against whom recovery is impossible — particularly when the proposed joinder would destroy jurisdiction.
. We leave open the question whether the court properly could have exercised its inherent power to recall its judgment and withdraw its order permitting joinder.
. In pertinent part, rule 25(c) provides: "In case of any transfer of interest, the action may be continued by or against the original party, unless the court upon motion directs the person to whom the interest is transferred to be substituted in the action or joined with the original party.”
. This view, the defendants note, was adopted in
Kerr v. Smith Petroleum Co.,
. That the fictitious defendants might have been non-diverse was properly disregarded when the case was initially removed to federal court on diversity grounds, for 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a) provides that “[flor purposes of removal ..., the citizenship of defendants sued under fictitious names shall be disregarded.”
