MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Thе plaintiff, P. Reginald Fellhauer (“Fellhauer”), filed this action in the Illinois circuit court in Kane County, alleging that the defendants, the City of Geneva (“City”) and Richard Lewis (“Lewis”), the City’s mayor, violated federal and state law by removing him from his position as the City’s Director of Electrical Department. Lewis subsequently petitioned to remove the case to this court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. sec. 1441(b) 1 , but the City did not join in the petition. Before the court are Fellhauer’s motion to remand this action to the Illinois circuit court and Lewis's motion for leave to amend his petition for removal. For the reasons set fоrth below, we grant Fellhauer's motion to remand this action, and we deny Lewis's motion for leave to file an amended petition.
I. FACTS
The essential facts for purposes of the pending motions are as follows. On February 13, 1987, Fellhauer filed a complaint 2 in the Illinois circuit court in Kane County alleging that the City and Lewis illegally had removed him from his position as the City’s Director of Electrical Department. Counts IV and V of Fellhauer’s Complaint allege violations of 42 U.S.C. sec. 1983 against the respective defendants. On March 10, 1987, based on these federal claims, Lewis removed the entirе case to this court. See sec. 1446(b). The City, however, did not join in or otherwise consent to Lewis's petition for removal, and the petition failed to provide any explanation of the City’s failure to do so.
The very next day, on March 11th, Lewis filed a motion, to which Fellhauer agreed without objection, to enlarge the time within which he would answer or otherwise plead to Fellhauer’s complaint. About two weeks later, on March 27th, Lewis filed another motion; this one requesting leave to file a brief in excess of 15 pages. Fell-hauer again agreed without objection.
On March 31st, the City, still not having joined' in or consented to the petition for *1447 removal, filed an answer to Fellhauer’s complaint and a motion for summary judgment and supporting memorandum. Neither the answer nor the summary judgment motion contained any indication that the City joined in or consented to the removal. On April 1st, Lewis moved to dismiss the complaint. Fellhauer requested that the court stay briefing on the defendants’ motions until the court ruled on his motion for remand. The court denied his request for a stay, 3 and all of the motions, including Fellhauer’s motion to remand, which he filed on April 10th, are now fully briefed.
II. DISCUSSION
A federal court’s jurisdiction under the removal statutes constitutes an infringement upon state sovereignty.
Shamrock Oil Corp. v. Sheets,
In order for an action to be properly removed from state court to federal court, all defendants must consent to it “within thirty days after the receipt by the defendant * * * of the copy of the initial pleading” containing the removable claim. Sec. 1446(b).
4
Northern Illinois Gas v. Airco Indus. Gases,
The thirty-day requirement is not a jurisdictional limitation,
(see Clyde,
*1448 In this case, it is undisputed that the City did not communicate its consent to removal to the court within the requisite thirty-day period. In the face of this seemingly fatal flaw, Lewis contends that we should not remand his case for no less than four reasons: first, the City communicated its consent to removal to Lewis prior to the date upon which the action was removed; second, Fellhauer has waived his right to object to the removal as improper; third, Fellhauer is estopped from objecting by his post-removal conduct; and finally, the defect is merely “technical”, and therefore Lewis should be allowed to “cure” it by amending the petition to reflect the City’s consent. We reject each of these arguments.
A. The City’s Consent to Lewis
Lewis first asserts that “although the City ha[d] not separately removed nor previously consentеd in writing to * * * Lewises] petition, the City had [in a] telephone conversation [with Lewis] * * * prior to the filing of [the] petition verbally consented to the removal.” Lewis Resp. at 1. This argument has been flatly rejected by several courts,
(see, e.g., Mason v. IBM,
B. Waiver and Estoppel
Lewis next argues that Fellhauer, by “assenting” to certain “procedural matters” following removal, has waived his right to object to removal. Waiver, of course, involves the intentional relinquishment of a known right, either expressly or by conduct inconsistent with an intent to enforce that right.
J.H. Cohn & Co. v. American Appraisal Assoc., Inc.,
In support of his contention that Fellhauer has waived his right to object, Lewis cites
Harris v. Edward Hyman Co.,
We believe that Harris is easily distinguished from the present case. Unlike Harris, Fellhauer has not initiated any action, other than filing his motion for remand, in this court. 6 It is true that Fellhauer’s counsel extended professional courtesies to Lewis’s counsel following the removal of this action by agreeing to Lewis’s *1449 request for an extension of time within whiсh to file a responsive pleading and his request to file a brief in excess of fifteen pages. But we do not believe that these actions, simple responses to requests of a purely procedural nature 7 , constitute affirmative conduct or unequivocal assent of the “sort which would render it offensive to fundamental principles of fairness to remand.”
Lewis makes the closely related argument that Fellhauer is estopped from objecting to the removal because both Lewis and the City have prepared and filed extensive motions in this court “in reаsonable reliance that [Fellhauer], by agreeing to the two procedural motions * * * waived any technical objections to removal.” Lewis Resp. at 6. We disagree. Estoppel, unlike waiver, which centers on whether a party possessing a right intended to relinquish it, “focuses on the effects of the [actor’s] conduct * * *. It arises when a party’s conduct leads another into believing that a right will not be enforced and causes the other party to act to his detriment in reliance upon this belief.”
J.H. Cohn,
C. Leave to File an Amended Petition
Lewis repeatedly characterizes his failure to include the fact of the City’s consent in his petition for removal as a “technical” (аs opposed to a substantive) defect. He does so for good reason: if the defect is merely technical, then we can grant leave to amend the petition even though the thirty-day limit has long since passed. If it is a substantive defect, on the other hand, we cannot. Unfortunately for Lewis, it is well settled that the failure to join or gain the consent of all defendants in timely fashion is a substantive defect.
8
See, e.g., Adams v. Aero Services Inter., Inc.,
Having disposed of each of Lewis’s arguments, we pause to reemphasize the underlying concept which leads us to conclude that this case must be remanded to the Illinois state courts: federalism. We do so because we believe that Lewis’s characterization of the defect in his petition as a mere “technical” flaw that can be swept away like so much dust seriously misunderstands the conditions under which the formidable power of the federal judiciary can
*1450
—and should — be invoked. As we have tried to make clear, the principle оf federalism is not, as some now see it, a quixotic anachronism that can be ignored whenever it poses an obstacle to achieving a result that a disgruntled litigant or even a federal judge deems desirable. As Justice Frankfurter understood, federalism serves “not as a matter of doсtrinaire localism, but as a promoter of democracy”,
(San Diego Bldg. Trades Council v. Garmon,
We deal here with a question of federal jurisdiction, and “[questions of jurisdiction are questions of power * *
Barnes v. Kline,
Though the foregoing remarks may appear to sacrifice the substance of justice to what some view as its inferior relation —form, this view is flawed: form is “the essence of the theory and practice of constitutionalism.” Bickel, The Morality of Consent 30 (1975).
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, it is hereby ordered that:
(1) Fellhauer’s motion for remand is GRANTED;
(2) Lewis's motion for leave to file an amended petition for removal is DENIED;
(3) pursuant to 28 U.S.C. sec. 1447(c), this action is REMANDED to the Illinois Circuit Court for the Sixteenth Judicial Circuit Court, Kane County, Illinois;
(4) pursuant to 28 U.S.C. sec. 1447(c) and Northern District Civil Rule 3(c), Fellhauer shall dеposit with the Clerk of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois a copy of this Memorandum Opinion and Order to be certified and mailed to the Clerk of the Circuit Court for the Sixteenth Judicial Circuit, Kane County, Illinois, and
(5)pursuant to 28 U.S.C. sec. 1446(d) and 1447(c) and Northern District Civil Rule 3(a), Lewis shall pay all cоsts and disbursements incurred by Fellhauer by reason of the removal proceedings, excluding attorney’s fees. Fellhauer is directed to submit appropriate documentation of such costs and disbursements to the court within 14 days hereof.
Notes
. All references to Title 28 of the United States Code shall be designated as sec.__
. Actually, the complaint that Fellhauer filed on February 13th was an amended complaint. Since it was the first pleading to contain a removable claim (Count IV alleged a cause of action under 42 U.S.C. sec. 1983), it constitutes the relevant starting point for our analysis.
. At this time, the case was assigned to Judge Hart’s calendar, but was subsequently reassigned to this court in June of 1987.
. The unanimous consent or joinder of all defendants is not required where the non-joining defendant is either an unknown or nominal party, or where a defendant has been fraudulently joined.
See e.g., Romashko v. Avco Corp.,
. Requiring the consent of all defendants serves three principal functions: (1) it eliminates the risk of inconsistent adjudications in federal and state courts; (2) it prevents one defendant frоm choosing the forum for all of the defendants; and (3) it preserves the ability of state courts to entertain federal claims that Congress has not committed exclusively to federal jurisdiction.
Hess v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., Inc.,
. Thus, this case is also distinguishable from
In re Moore,
. Lewis has not argued, as he might have, that Fellhauer has waived his right to object because he has responded to
substantive
motions filed by the defendants, and therefore we decline to address it.
See National Metalcrafters
v.
McNeil, 784
F.2d 817, 825 (7th Cir.1986). Nevertheless, we note that this position bears little weight where, as here, a litigant has requested to stay proceedings pending a decision on a motion to remand, but the request is denied, thereby compelling the litigant to respond or risk other, perhaps more drastic consequences.
See Clyde
. Lewis’s reliance on
Northern Illinois Gas Co.
v.
Airco Indus. Gases,
