FLOYD CURRY, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. U.S. BULK TRANSPORT, INC. et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 05-4218
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
September 5, 2006
RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206. File Name: 06a0341p.06. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio at Cleveland. No. 04-01375—Donald C. Nugent, District Judge. Argued: July 28, 2006. Decided and Filed: September 5, 2006.
Before: MOORE and GIBBONS, Circuit Judges; ACKERMAN, District Judge.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: L. Christopher Coleman, STEUER, ESCOVAR, BERK & BROWN, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellant. John B. Stalzer, REMINGER & REMINGER, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: L. Christopher Coleman, STEUER, ESCOVAR, BERK & BROWN, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellant. John B. Stalzer, Brian D. Sullivan, Frank Leonetti III, REMINGER & REMINGER, Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellees.
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OPINION
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KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff-Appellant Floyd Curry brought this suit to recover damages resulting from injuries he sustained in an accident when a truck carrying potassium sulfate overturned in the warehouse in which Curry worked. Curry alleges that Defendants-Appellees U.S. Bulk Transport, Inc., David Priddy, and Eric Susman negligently operated and covered the truck, thereby causing his injuries. The district court granted summary judgment to defendants, finding that Curry had not provided any evidence that defendants were negligent. Curry appeals, arguing that genuine issues of material fact preclude summary judgment. During review of our jurisdiction to hear this appeal, it became apparent that complete diversity was destroyed when Priddy and Susman were identified and substituted as nondiverse defendants, with
I. BACKGROUND
The following facts are undisputed. On April 3, 2002, Plaintiff-Appellant Curry was on the job as a warehouse manager at American Metal Chemical Corporation in Medina, Ohio. Joint Appendix (“J.A.“) at 36 (Fourth Amd. Compl. at 2); J.A. at 96 (Curry Dep. at 17). Curry was in charge of inventory at the warehouse, and it was his job to direct incoming trucks making deliveries and to show the drivers where in the warehouse incoming truck loads should be dumped. On that morning, Defendant-Appellee Priddy arrived at the warehouse driving a Freightliner truck loaded with potassium sulfate. Defendant-Appellee Susman owned the truck that Priddy was driving, and Defendant-Appellee U.S. Bulk Transport was the lessee of the truck.
When Priddy pulled the truck into the warehouse that day, Curry directed Priddy to dump the potassium sulfate in the area of the warehouse designated for raw materials. While Priddy was in the truck‘s driver‘s seat, Curry stood behind the truck and directed Priddy to raise the truck bed and dump the material. Curry observed that after Priddy raised the truck bed, a significant quantity of the potassium sulfate in the truck adhered to the truck‘s bed instead of falling out of the truck. When gravity failed to dislodge the adhering material, Curry moved to the side of the truck so that he could approach Priddy to tell him that the material was stuck to the truck. Curry incorrectly believed that the truck was equipped with a vibrator that could be used to shake a load loose, and so Curry intended to tell Priddy to vibrate the truck bed so the material would fall out. While Curry was beside the truck, he “heard metal under stress,” and looked up to see that the truck bed was falling over towards him. J.A. at 97 (Curry Dep. at 18). Curry scrambled to get out of the way of the falling bed, and ran towards the back of the truck. Curry escaped from the path of the falling truck bed, but stumbled over some chunks of potassium sulfate that had fallen from the load and fell on his knee and elbows, sustaining injuries that required surgery.
Curry filed suit in the Court of Common Pleas for Cuyahoga County, Ohio, in April 2004, naming U.S. Bulk Transport1 as well as four John Doe defendants (the truck driver, the truck driving company, the truck owner, and the loading company, all of whose names were then unknown to Curry) and alleging three counts of negligence. J.A. at 10-15 (Amd. Compl.). U.S. Bulk Transport filed a notice of removal in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio on July 20, 2004, invoking diversity jurisdiction. Diversity exists between Curry and U.S. Bulk Transport, because Curry is a citizen of Ohio, and U.S. Bulk Transport is a Pennsylvania corporation with its principal place of business in Pennsylvania. J.A. at 7 (Notice of Removal). In January 2005, the district court granted Curry‘s motion to file a third amended complaint, which identified and added Priddy and Susman, both citizens of Ohio, as defendants in place of two previous John Doe defendants. J.A. at 27-28 (Third Amd. Compl. at 2-3). Neither party filed a motion to remand to state court for lack of complete diversity or took any other steps to notify the district court of the potential problem of subject-matter jurisdiction.
Defendants moved for summary judgment on May 20, 2005, but the following month the parties filed a joint motion for an extension of the deadline for filing Curry‘s brief in opposition to summary judgment so that the parties could proceed with discovery. Curry filed his opposition to defendants’ summary-judgment motion on August 1, 2005. Defendants filed a reply to Curry‘s opposition motion on August 5, 2005. On August 18, 2005, Curry filed a motion for leave to file
II. ANALYSIS
After U.S. Bulk Transport filed a notice of removal, the district court assumed diversity jurisdiction over this case under
In January 2005, however, the district court granted Curry‘s motion to file a third amended complaint. This amended complaint added Priddy and Susman as nondiverse defendants, as both men, like Curry, are citizens of Ohio. J.A. at 27-29 (Third Amd. Compl. at 1-3). Curry explained at oral argument that he did not learn the identities of Priddy and Susman until discovery, and defendants agreed and conceded that there was no improper motive on Curry‘s behalf regarding this delay in identifying the parties. Yet upon the substitution of Priddy and Susman for two John Doe defendants in the complaint and the realization that there were then Ohio citizens on both sides of the lawsuit, neither party raised before the district court the issue of whether the district court‘s diversity jurisdiction remained valid, and the court failed to reconsider its subject-matter jurisdiction sua sponte.2 See Owens v. Brock, 860 F.2d 1363, 1367 (6th Cir. 1988) (“[D]efects in subject matter jurisdiction cannot be waived by the parties and may be addressed by a court on its own motion at any stage of the proceedings.“). Upon review, we conclude that the district court should have dismissed the case for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction upon granting Curry‘s motion to amend the complaint to include Priddy and Susman.
“Diversity of citizenship, the basis for jurisdiction in the present case, exists only when no plaintiff and no defendant are citizens of the same state.” Jerome-Duncan, Inc., 176 F.3d at 907. The general rule is that diversity is determined at the time of the filing of a lawsuit. See Smith v. Sperling, 354 U.S. 91, 93 & n.1 (1957). Notwithstanding this general rule, persuasive authority counsels that in a situation such as this where an amended complaint is filed to include the identity of a previous unidentified defendant, diversity must be determined at the time of the filing of the amended complaint. As the leading civil procedure treatise explains:
Although jurisdiction will not be ousted by a subsequent change in parties who are ancillary to the suit and whose presence . . . is not essential to an adjudication on the
merits, a change in parties that goes to the very essence of the district court‘s ability to adjudicate the merits of the dispute effectively — most notably the addition of indispensable parties — may destroy it. The cases indicate that the court will take account of whether the plaintiff has been dilatory or is trying to destroy diversity, whether the plaintiff will be significantly disadvantaged if the amendment is not allowed, and whether remanding the action to the state court will prejudice the defendant.
14B
In Casas Office Machines, the First Circuit faced a nearly identical scenario to the instant case, and concluded that the identification of nondiverse “John Doe” defendants after removal destroyed subject-matter jurisdiction. Casas, the plaintiff in that suit, had originally filed suit in the Superior Court of Puerto Rico against Mita and two “John Doe” defendants. Casas Office Mach., 42 F.3d at 670. After Mita removed the case to the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico, Casas filed an amended complaint identifying the two fictitious defendants which, like Casas, were Puerto Rico corporations. Despite the destruction of complete diversity, the parties did not move to remand to state court and the district court failed to dismiss sua sponte, but rather proceeded to adjudicate the dispute on the merits. When appealing the district court‘s unfavorable judgment, Mita raised the lack of diversity jurisdiction for the first time before the First Circuit.
Relying upon
Neither the parties nor the district court followed this proper course of action, however, and instead the district court simply proceeded to adjudicate the summary-judgment motion on the merits. We are now faced with Curry‘s appeal from that summary-judgment motion, and we must decide whether we may reach the merits of this appeal despite the fact that the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction below. Acknowledging the lack of complete diversity at oral argument after our prodding, U.S. Bulk Transport concedes the lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. In response, U.S. Bulk Transport encourages us to dismiss Curry‘s claims against Priddy and Susman pursuant to Newman-Green, Inc. v. Alfonzo-Larrain, 490 U.S. 826 (1989), so that we may retain jurisdiction over this appeal and reach the merits of the district court‘s grant of summary judgment to U.S. Bulk Transport.
In Newman-Green, plaintiff Newman-Green, Inc. initially filed suit in federal district court alleging state-law contract claims against multiple defendants and invoking diversity jurisdiction because all of the defendants were believed to be diverse from Newman-Green. When Newman-Green appealed the district court‘s partial grant of summary judgment to the Seventh Circuit, the Court of Appeals drew the parties’ attention to the fact that one of the defendants in the suit, who was domiciled in Venezuela but a U.S. citizen, had no domicile in the United States, rendering him “stateless” for the purposes of
In these circumstances, we conclude that curing the lack of subject-matter jurisdiction against Curry‘s wishes by dismissing Priddy and Susman would harm Curry, as it would force him to be bound by a judgment that the district court lacked jurisdiction to issue. Dismissing Priddy and Susman while retaining in federal court Curry‘s action against U.S. Bulk Transport may also force Curry to initiate a second lawsuit in state court in order to pursue his claims against Priddy and Susman, requiring him to expend further resources than if he had been able to pursue his claims against all defendants in his single state-court suit as he originally desired. In addition, a two-suit resolution of Curry‘s grievances would be an utter waste of judicial resources. We recognize the seeming waste of judicial resources in our inability to reach the merits of this appeal, but this is due to the failure of the parties and the district court to take the proper action — to remand the suit to state court — when the nondiverse defendants were named. For these reasons, we conclude that this case is not the proper instance in which to exercise our limited authority under Newman-Green. We remand the action to the district court so that the district court can remand the action in its entirety to the state court for lack of federal-court subject-matter jurisdiction, thereby permitting the plaintiff to pursue resolution of this dispute in one lawsuit in state court.
III. CONCLUSION
Because complete diversity was destroyed when Priddy and Susman were identified as nondiverse defendants, the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction. We REMAND the action to the district court with instructions to remand the action to the state court from which this action was removed.
