ENTRY ON MOTION TO REMAND
This сase comes before the Court on the motion of plaintiff Harding Hospital to remand the case to the Marion Circuit Court where it was pending when the garnishee defendant removed it. The central issue is whether the garnishment proceeding in state court was sufficiеntly independent of the underlying action so as to be separately removable to federal court. The Court concludes that this garnishment action for health insurance benefits under an employee welfare plan subject to ERISA is sufficiently independent. Because the case was otherwise properly removed, the motion to remand is denied.
Background
This case began in the Marion Circuit Court as Harding Hospital v. Paul Sovchen, Cause No. 49C01-9403-CP-0934. Plaintiff Harding Hospital claimed it provided medical care to Paul Sovchen based on the belief that the care would be paid for by health insurance Sоvchen received through his employment with Amtrak. The insurer declined coverage, so the care was not reimbursed. Harding Hospital sued Sovchen in the Marion Circuit Court. Sovchen never appeared, and the hospital obtained a default judgment against him for $18,928.86.
On
July 22, 1994, Harding Hоspital filed in the Marion Circuit Court proceeding its “verified Motion for Proceedings Supplemental” naming The Travelers Insurance Company (“Travelers”) as a garnishee defendant. The motion alleged that Sovchen had “wages, assets, income, profits, or othеr non-exempt property, due or to become due” from Travelers. The same day, the Marion Circuit Court issued an order to Travelers to appear in court and to “answer as to any wages, assets, profits and other non-exempt property which can be applied toward satisfaction of this judgment.” Travelers filed its Notice of Removal on August 12, 1994, asserting that the garnishment claim is a claim for benefits that necessarily arises under ERISA and is a matter of federal question jurisdiction. See
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Taylor,
Discussion
If Sovchen were suing Travelers for his own health insurance benefits under the employee welfare plan, his own action would plainly arise under federal law and would be removable.
Metropolitan Life,
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1441, only “independent suits” are removable, and “supplementary” proceedings are not.
Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corp. v. Quinn,
419
*1076
F.2d 1014, 1018 (7th Cir.1969). In
Wausau Insurance Co. v. Koal Industries International, Inc.,
In some respects, an Indiana garnishment proceeding appears to be merely ancillary or supplemental to the original lawsuit. Indiana has described garnishment as “a mere incident” of the underlying action,
Tippecanoe Loan & Trust Co. v. Carr,
In addition to Indiana’s treatment of garnishment proceedings, the more general modern trend toward restricting federal removal jurisdiction may weigh against treating garnishments as independently removable proceedings. Some federal courts that have remanded garnishment proceedings have expressed concern about the burdens of dealing with “sometimes minor matters” such as garnishment. See
Richmond v. Allstate Insurance Co.,
The Supreme Court and Seventh Circuit offer relatively little guidance on the treatment of garnishment actions for these purposes. In
Bank v. Turnbull & Co.,
That was a statutory proceeding to try in a summary way the title to personal property seized on execution. It was nothing more than a method prescribed by the law to enable the сourt to direct and control its own process, and, as decided by this court, was merely auxiliary to, and a graft upon, the original action.
The Seventh Circuit has not sрecifically addressed the removability of garnishment proceedings: In
American Auto Insurance Co. v. Freundt,
the Seventh Circuit relied on Illinois courts’ characterizations of garnishment in describing a garnishment proceeding as “supplemental,” “ancillary,” and “auxiliary,” and the court' supported its description by citing
Turnbull & Co.
See
Many other federal courts have considered the removability of garnishments. While the cases are divided, it appears the majority of cases allow such removals. See,
e.g., Stoll v. Hawkeye Casualty Co.,
As noted, the Seventh Circuit has held that whether a particular proceeding is a removable “civil action” is a question of federal law.
Quinn,
*1078
Whether a garnishment proceeding is a removable “civil action” cannot be decided by labels. The determination requires a look at both the procedures available and the nature of the dispute. Where the garnishment procedures allow for adversarial litigation of disputed issues, and where the garnishment action involves a new party and disputed rights and issues not decided by the state court, removal should be permitted. See
Action Auto Stores,
As noted above, Indiana garnishment proceedings hаve been labeled as “mere incidents” of underlying cases, and, in some other respects, are treated as supplemental and ancillary by the state courts. However, under the Indiana garnishment procedures, garnishment requires separate service оf process and formal pleadings to establish disputed issues where the garnishee claims a right to the property. Discovery appears to be available, and a garnishment judgment appears to be separately appealable. See generally Ind.Code §§ 34-1-11-20 to -49; Ind. Trial Rule 69(E). Although the proceedings are most often speedy and not controversial, they clearly provide for litigation of new and independent issues and claims.
In this case, the issues presented in the garnishment proceeding are distinct and independent from those in the underlying suit. In its action against Sovchen, Harding Hospital needed to prove only that it provided medical services to Sovchen, that he implicitly or explicitly agreed to pay for them, and that he had failed to pay for them. In the garnishment removed to this Court, the issue concerns the scope of the coverage provided to Sovchen by the Travelers health insurance policy. While the pleadings thus far do not disclose the precise issue, it is clear that the coverage issue is quite distinct from any issue raised in the state court action. There is no sign here that the garnishee is asking this Court to decide issues that a state court has already decided, or otherwise to interfere with the state court judgment.
Because the garnishment proceedings under statе law allow for adversarial litigation of disputed issues of law and fact, and because this garnishment proceeding involves a new party and presents legal and factual issues new and independent of those in the underlying suit, the Court concludes that this garnishment procеeding is a “civil action” for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1441. The issue of coverage under an employee welfare plan arises under federal law, so the garnishment proceeding was properly removed to this Court. The plaintiffs motion to remand is DENIED. In view of the foregоing split of authority, albeit on an issue plaintiff did not brief, the defendant’s request for sanctions under 28 U.S.C. § 1927 is also DENIED. See also Fed.R.Civ.P. 11(c) (as amended in 1993) (request for sanctions under Rule 11 must be served at least 21 days before it is filed with the Court). The Court will enter a separate order setting a pretrial conference in this matter.
So ordered.
Notes
. If Sovchen had appeared in the state court and filed a third party complaint against Travelers, however, it is at least doubtful in this circuit that the action could have been removed.
See Thomas v. Shelton,
.
Cf. Pinellas County v. Great American Management & Investment, Inc.,
