ORDER AND OPINION GRANTING PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO REMAND
Plaintiff filed this case in state court on November 7, 2005, and all Defendants were served by November 23, 2005. Defendants filed their Notice of Removal on January 5, 2006, contending Plaintiffs claims are preempted by (and removable pursuant to) the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act (“SLUSA”). Following removal, Plaintiff filed a Motion to Remand and Defendаnts filed Motions to Dismiss. The Court grants Plaintiffs motion (Doc. # 13) and leaves Defendants’ motions for consideration by the stаte court.
Plaintiff presents two arguments in favor of remand: (1) Plaintiffs claims are not governed by SLUSA and (2) even if they аre, the Notice of Removal was untimely. The Court agrees with the latter argument, making it unnecessary (and inaрpropriate) to reach the first.
SLUSA provides that certain types of cases filed in state court аre removable. 15 U.S.C. § 78bb(f)(2). SLU-SA does not provide a time limit for removal, which leads Defendants to argue there is no time limit. The Court disagrees, concluding 28 U.S.C. § 1446 provides the applicable time limit. Section 1446 establishes proсedures for removal and subsection (b) specifies time limits for properly removing a case to federal court. These provisions apply to all attempts to remove a case, regardless of their statutory basis
E.g., Things Remembered, Inc. v. Petrarca,
Section 1446(b) requires a Notice of Removal to be filed within thirty days after service of the initial pleading, but “[i]f the case stated by the initial pleading is not removable, a notice of removal may be filed within thirty days after receipt by the defendant, through service or otherwise, of a coрy of an ... order or other paper from which it may first be ascertained that the case is one which is or has become removable.” Defendants contend an order issued by the undersigned in
In re American Italian Pasta Company Litigation,
No 05-0725-CV-W-ODS (W.D.Mo. Dec. 19, 2005), constitutes an “order or other paper” within the statute’s meaning. Typically, this reference to an order involves a change in the pending suit; for instance, an order dismissing the sole diversity-destroying defendant would start the time period for seeking removal. In appropriate circumstances, decisions from other, unrelated сases may qualify as an “order or other paper,” but those circumstances require, at a minimum, a deсision that
changes
the legal landscape in some manner. “The statute requires ‘an amended pleading, motion,
order, or other paper’
to act as a trigger to commence the running of a new thirty-day period once the defendant receives actual notice through one of the documents described in Section 1446(b) that
a previously unremovable case has become removable.”
14C Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller, Edward H. Cooper, & Joan E. Steinman, Federаl Practice and Procedure § 3732 (2005 pocket part) (emphasis supplied). For instance, in
Doe v. American Red Cross,
the Red Cross removed a series of suits from state court to federal court on the ground that its charter created a basis for federal jurisdiction. The district court disagreed and remanded the cases; afterwards, in an unrelated case, the Supreme Court decided the Red Cross’ charter
did
provide a basis for federal jurisdiction. The Red Cross then tried again to remove
Doe,
and the Third Circuit upheld the effort.
The undersigned’s December 19, 2005, order does not qualify as an order under sеction 1446(b) for three arguably related reasons. First, it did not change the previously-understood landscape as the Supreme Court’s decision did for the Red Cross in
Doe.
Second, the December 19 Order did not provide the basis by whiсh Defendants could
“first
ascertain!] that the case is one which is or has become removable .... ” (emphasis supplied). The December 19 Order did not add anything to Defendants’ knowledge about the case or chаnge the legal landscape. Defendants could easily have sought removal within thirty days of being served without thе December 19 Order.
See, e.g., Holiday v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
The case must be remanded to state court. Of course, (and the undersigned does not doubt the state court is aware of this observation), the state court is equally obligated to abide by SLUSA’s directive that certain cases appear only in federal court. This means the state court will have to address Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss, and its decision will need to be reviewed by the state’s appellate courts (with ultimate review possible by the Supreme Court via a Writ of Certiorari).
This case is remanded to the Circuit Court for Jackson County, Missouri, because the removal was untimely under 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b).
IT IS SO ORDERED.
