Mаrk FILLA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. NORFOLK SOUTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY, a Virginia corporation; Defendant-Appellant, Skyline Motors, Inc., a Missouri corporation; Richard L. March; Darlene March; Patrick Connaughton, Defendants. Mark Filla, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Norfolk Southern Railway Company, a Virginia corporation, Defendant, Skyline Motors, Inc., a Missouri corporation, Defendant-Appellant, Richard L. March, Defendant, Darlene March, Defendant-Appellant, Patrick Connaughton, Defendant.
Nos. 02-2358, 02-2359
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit
Submitted: Dec. 12, 2002. Filed: July 22, 2003.
336 F.3d 806
Peter Boone Hoffman, argued, St. Louis, MO (Matthew J. Eddy, on the brief), for appellants Skyline Motors, Inc. and Darlene Marsh.
Grant L. Davis, argued, Kansas City, MO (Thomas C. Jones and Shawn G. Foster, on the brief), for apрellee.
Before BOWMAN, RILEY, and SMITH, Circuit Judges.
Norfolk Railroad, Darlene March, and Skyline Motors, Inc. (“Skyline“) appeal the district court‘s1 order remanding this case to state court.2 Petitioners seek a writ of
I.
Procedural Background
Filla filed an action against the petitioners in Missouri state court seeking damagеs for injuries received in a collision with a train at a private railroad-track crossing.3 He later amended his petition adding three individual defendants-Richard March, Darlene March, and Patrick Connaughton-all Missouri citizens.4 Petitioners removed the action5 to district court based on thе parties’ diversity of citizenship.6 Petitioners noted that Filla is a citizen of Missouri, and that Norfolk is a corporation with Virginia citizenship. Alleging fraudulent joinder, petitioners claimed that Filla joined the additional Missouri defendants merely to defeat federal diversity jurisdiction.
On November 9, 2002, Filla filed a motion to remand to state court. He contended that viable actions existed under Missouri law against Skyline and Darlene March as alleged owners of property adjacent to the private railroad crossing. He also asserted that he had a legitimate complaint against Connaughton, the owner of a nearby “paintball” business.7 According to Filla‘s theory, Connaughton was partially liable for the injuries Filla sustained because Connaughton failed to warn approaching business invitees of the alleged dangerous conditions near the railroad crossing. On March 19, 2002, the district court remanded the case to state court. In its evaluation of the petitioners’ fraudulent joinder allegation, the court agreed that Filla‘s claim against Connaughton had no reasonable basis under Missouri law. However, with respect to Darlene March and Skyline, the district court concluded:
This Court, and apparently the parties, have been unable to lоcate any case determining whether there is a cause of action against an owner of property for failure to maintain that property when the road in question was private and the setting was rural. It is not for this Court to speculate how the Missouri courts would decide such an issue. The burden is upon the removing party to demonstrate that the facts pled by Plaintiff cannot possibly create liability to March or Skyline. Norfolk has not met this burden. The Court finds that Skyline and March were not fraudulently joinеd to defeat diversity.
This appeal asserts that the existence of diversity jurisdiction should have prevented the district court from remanding the remaining state-court claims. Specifically, petitioners argue that the district court failed to reach the question of its own
II.
Discussion
As an initial matter, we must determine whether we have jurisdiction to review the district court‘s remand order. Congress has limited our power to review district-court remand orders.
Here, the district court did not explicitly cite
While fraudulent joinder-the filing of a frivolous or otherwise illegitimate claim against a non-diverse defendant solely to prevent removal-is rather easily defined, it is much more diffiсulty applied. As the Fifth Circuit recently noted, “Neither our circuit nor other circuits have been clear in describing the fraudulent joinder standard.”9 Within our own circuit the fraudulent-joinder standard has been stated in
The district court‘s remand order in this case contains similarly confusing language. At one point the district court concludes that Filla‘s claim against Connaughton has “no reasonable basis” under Missouri law. Later in the order the court states that the “burden is upon the removing party to demonstrate that the facts pled by Plaintiff” “cannot possibly create liability.” (Emphasis added.)
We believe that, despite the semantical differencеs, there is a common thread in the legal fabric guiding fraudulent-joinder review. It is reason. Thus, a proper review should give paramount consideration to the reasonableness of the basis underlying the state claim. Where applicable state precedent precludes the existence of a cause of action against a defendant, joinder is fraudulent. “[I]t is well established that if it is clear under governing state law that the complaint does not state a cause of action against the non-diverse defendant, the joinder is fraudulent and federal jurisdiction of the case should be retained.” Iowa Public Service Co. v. Medicine Bow Coal Co., 556 F.2d 400, 406 (8th Cir.1977) (emphasis added). However, if there is a “colorable”10 cause of action-that is, if the state law might impose liability on the resident defendant under the facts alleged-then there is no fraudulent joindеr. See Foslip Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Metabolife Intern., Inc., 92 F.Supp.2d 891, 903 (N.D.Iowa 2000). As we recently stated in Wiles, “... joinder is fraudulent when there exists no reasonable basis in fact and law supporting a claim against the resident defendants.” 280 F.3d at 871. Conversely, if there is a reasonable basis in fact and law supporting the claim, the joinder is not fraudulent.
Petitioners аrgue that the district court never actually reached the question of its own jurisdiction because it declined to rule on the key underlying issue supporting the claim of fraudulent joinder-whether Missouri law would impose a duty upon rural-land owners adjacent to a private road and private-railroad crossing to modify the contours of their land or remove vegetation from their land or the railroad‘s right-of-way. A determination of the current status of the state law, according to petitioners, is an еssential court function, and a court cannot simply decide that it will refrain from deciding or interpreting the state‘s law. See Mallard v. U.S. Dist. Court for the Southern Dist. of Iowa, 490 U.S. 296, 109 S.Ct. 1814, 104 L.Ed.2d 318 (1989).
Petitioners’ argument is supported by an Erie foundation. However,
Instead, the court must simply determine whether there is a reasonable basis for predicting that the state‘s law might impose liability against the defendant. This determinatiоn is the essential function required of the district court in a fraudulent-joinder setting. As we discussed in Iowa Public Service Co., in situations where the sufficiency of the complaint against the non-diverse defendant is questionable, “the better practice is for the federal court not to dеcide the doubtful question in connection with a motion to remand but simply to remand the case and leave the question for the state courts to decide.” 556 F.2d at 406. Here, the district court-by remanding the case to the state court-did all that was required of it.
Wе agree that under Missouri law a reasonable basis exists for predicting that liability might be imposed upon petitioners, and the ultimate success-or failure-of Filla‘s claims is best left to the Missouri courts. By ordering remand of the case to Missouri state court, the district court inevitably did reach the question of its own jurisdiction. The fact that
As it stands, the state defendants’ presence destroys complete diversity. Consеquently, the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction to consider the claim, and remand to the state court was proper. Like the district court, we have no power to decide the merits of a case over which we have no jurisdiction. For the foregoing reasons, the appeal is dismissed.
SMITH
CIRCUIT JUDGE
