Six plaintiffs filed suit in Illinois, seeking to represent a class of auto buyers and lessees whose vehicles had not been painted properly. Two of the named plaintiffs are residents of Illinois, four aré residents of Michigan. They sought damages under both Illinois and Michigan law. Chrysler Corporation, the defendant, removed the action to federal court, asserting that it could have been filed in federal court originally under the diversity jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a). Chrysler stated that it was incorporated in Delaware and had its principal place of business in Michigan. (Chrysler has since merged with Daimler-Benz, but the citizenship of DaimlerChrysler, the resulting entity, does not matter to cases pending when the merger occurred. For simplicity we refer throughout to “Chrysler.”) The presence of four plaintiffs from Michigan, who the notice of removal identified as “citizens” rather than just “residents” of that state, was one obvious obstacle to federal jurisdiction. The small stakes of each claim were another. It is hard to see how any plaintiffs damages could be more than a fraction of the vehicle’s price, see
Gardynski-Leschuck v. Ford Motor Co.,
The district court remanded the proceedings, ruling that Chrysler had not established either complete diversity of citizenship or the jurisdictional stakes.
So what is the dispute doing here again? “An bbdeb bemanding the case may require payment of just coste ahd any actual expensee, including attobney fees, incurred as a beeült Of the removal.” 28
*410
U.S.C. § 1447(c). The district court awarded plaintiffs $7,500 as expenses occasioned by the wrongful removal. That is an independently appealable order, unaffected by § 1447(d). See
LaMotte v. Roundy’s, Inc.,
Chrysler contends that we should exercise
de novo
review; this argument is incompatible with many decisions requiring deferential review of awards under both fee-shifting and sanctions statutes. See, e.g.,
Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp.,
Removal was unjustified under settled law. None of the plaintiffs is apt to recover anything close to $75,000, and Chrysler’s contention that punitive damages should be aggregated for purposes of determining the amount in controversy clashes with established rules. Four of the named plaintiffs hale from Michigan, so the litigants are not completely diverse. Even if the Michiganders were added to prevent removal, that is their privilege; plaintiffs as masters of the complaint may include (or omit) claims or parties in order to determine the forum.
Caterpillar Inc. v. Williams,
After the district court remanded the case, Chrysler filed a frivolous appeal and a frivolous petition for mandamus. On this appeal, which is at least within our jurisdiction, Chrysler argued for
de novo
review in the teeth of contrary decisions by the Supreme Court and this court (including one,
Tenner,
that deals directly with § 1447(c)), contended that a district court local rule concerning the conduct of discovery violates the tenth amendment (we’re not fooling, Chrysler actually advances this argument), and proceeded as if “bad faith” were vital. As we have said, it is not essential — but almost every step of Chrysler’s conduct throughout this litiga
*411
tion
has
been in bad faith (objectively understood to mean frivolous tactics and arguments, see
Lee v. Clinton,
According to Chrysler, an award of $7,500 is too high, because not adequately documented. We would have been inclined to hold the award too low, had the plaintiffs filed a cross-appeal, but they did not. True enough, the plaintiffs did not file the elaborate documentation required for substantial awards calculated under the lodestar method, but $7,500 is not a particularly large sum in commercial litigation (we’re willing to bet that it is
much
less than what Chrysler’s lawyers charged their client for services in connection with removal, which included extensive briefing, interrogatories, and two requests for appellate review). District judges have discretion to tailor the documentation requirement so that it is appropriate in light of the stakes; otherwise the aggrieved parties might spend more detailing them entitlements than they receive under § 1447(c). See
Henry v. Webermeier,
Because § 1447(c) is a fee-shifting statute, the plaintiffs as prevailing parties are presumptively entitled to recover the attorneys’ fees incurred in defending then-award.
Commissioner of INS v. Jean,
The judgment is affirmed, with appellees to recover. costs and other expenses (including attorneys’ fees). Plaintiffs have 14 days to file a statement of the reasonable costs, expenses, and fees incurred on this appeal.
