Case Information
*1 Before EDMONDSON, CARNES and COX, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
These consolidated appeals arise from two actions, both of which originally asserted various tort claims arising from Ciba-Geigy Corporation's manufacture and sale of a chlorodimeform-based insecticide, Galecron. The principal issue presented is whether the district court had removal jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1441 and the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651, over a later action solely because prosecuting that action violated a settlement stipulation in an earlier action already before the court. We hold that it did not.
Background
The first of the two actions, Price v. Ciba-Geigy Corp., was originally filed in the circuit court of Mobile County, Alabama. The defendants later removed it to the Southern District of Alabama, which certified a nationwide class and approved a complicated, structured settlement. The second, Henson v. Ciba- Geigy Corp., originated in state district court in Iberville Parish, Louisiana. The Louisiana court stayed after its named plaintiff and others successfully intervened in Price (where they were called the Henson interveners) and participated in the Price settlement. The settlement stipulation in the Price action had a clause requiring 's dismissal:
CLASS COUNSEL hereby stipulates that the RELATED CASE, including any and all claims (including, without limitation any CLAIMS defined herein) against CIBA GEIGY CORPORATION and individual defendants ... shall be dismissed, with prejudice, as of the APPROVAL DATE.
(R.7-84-Ex. A at 18.) "Related case" means, according to the stipulation, " Hurley Henson, et al v. Ciba- Geigy Corporation, et al / Docket No. 43,620, 18th Judicial District Court, Parish of Iberville, State of Louisiana." ( Id. at 15.)
Following the approval of the Price settlement, "class counsel" (lawyers for the original Price plaintiffs) complied with the stipulation and prompted the Louisiana state district court to enter an order to show cause why the action should not be dismissed because of the stipulation. A hearing before the Louisiana district court ensued. Hany Zohdy, a Louisiana lawyer who represented the Henson interveners in the Price proceedings, told the Louisiana court that the Price settlement required dismissal only of claims concerning chlorodimeform and not claims about other chemicals handled by Ciba-Geigy. That was incorrect, of course, because the settlement stipulation plainly named the entire Henson action by docket number and said nothing about dismissing only certain claims. [1] Zohdy's representation nonetheless successfully misled the Louisiana court into inviting the Henson plaintiffs to amend their petition to assert tort claims arising from exposure to Atrazine, another toxic Ciba-Geigy product.
This amendment prompted Ciba-Geigy (and three individual defendants, all diversity-defeating Louisiana residents, who were also named in ) to remove the action to the Middle District of Louisiana under 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a), asserting federal jurisdiction based on the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651. [2] The defendants immediately requested a transfer to the Southern District of Alabama under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a), which was granted. Following the transfer, the Southern District dismissed as barred by the Price settlement. Exercising jurisdiction in the Price action itself, moreover, the Southern District ordered Zohdy to pay about $27,000 to Ciba-Geigy for the legal fees it incurred in enforcing the Price settlement despite Zohdy's efforts to thwart it. These are the rulings that the plaintiffs and Zohdy appeal.
Whether the district court had removal jurisdiction is a question we review de novo.
Singleton v.
Apfel,
2 In addition to the lack of complete diversity, Ciba-Geigy could not have removed by asserting jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332 because the notice of removal was filed more than one year after the action's commencement. See 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b).
review for abuse of discretion only.
See Abbott Labs. v. Unlimited Beverages, Inc.,
Discussion
Sanctions on Zohdy
Zohdy challenges the sanctions order on three meritless grounds. First, he says, the district court
lacked jurisdiction to sanction him. Not so, because he was counsel of record in
Price,
the action in which
he signed the settlement stipulation and in which he was sanctioned for violating the settlement.
See Levine
v. Comcoa Ltd.,
Removal Jurisdiction Over Henson
Zohdy's challenge to the district court's subject-matter jurisdiction over has more merit. The
asserted jurisdictional basis is the All Writs Act, whose pertinent part provides district courts the power to
protect their jurisdiction: "The Supreme Court and all courts established by Act of Congress may issue all
writs necessary or appropriate in aid of their respective jurisdictions and agreeable to the usages and
principles of law." 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a). Thus, for example, a district court has the authority under the Act
to enjoin a party to litigation before it from prosecuting an action in contravention of a settlement agreement
over which the district court has retained jurisdiction.
See In re VMS Secs. Litig.,
The circuits have split in addressing similar questions of federal courts' power under the All Writs
Act to protect judgments and control diehard litigants. On one hand, most have read the All Writs Act
generously. Presented with statutory removal questions nearly identical to the one posed here, the Sixth and
Eighth Circuits have held that state-court actions that could produce judgments undermining federal consent
orders—and in one case a state-court action that was merely barred by the preclusive effect of a federal
consent decree—are removable under § 1441, with original subject-matter jurisdiction supplied by the All
Writs Act.
See Xiong v. State of Minn.,
The issue is, by contrast, unavoidably presented here. First, there is no other possible ground of federal subject-matter jurisdiction. Ciba-Geigy's removal notice also alleged supplemental jurisdiction, by virtue of Price, under 28 U.S.C. § 1367. But § 1367 cannot provide the "original jurisdiction" that § 1441 demands for an action to be removable. Ahearn v. Charter Township,100 F.3d 451 , 456 (6th Cir.1996). Ciba-Geigy did not, furthermore, assert ancillary jurisdiction, if such jurisdiction exists independent of § 1367 ( see Peacock v. Thomas, 516 U.S. 349,116 S.Ct. 862 ,133 L.Ed.2d 817 (1996)), and we therefore do not address it as a potential basis. Second, the circumstances here fit the definition of "exceptional" that other circuits' cases imply, since a signatory to a federal settlement stipulation sought to sabotage it. Cf. In re Agent Orange Prod. Liab. Litig.,996 F.2d 1425 , 1430-31 (2d Cir.1993) (absent class members sought to relitigate the settled action, in violation of a release in the settlement).
F.2d 1425, 1431 (2d Cir.1993);
United States v. City of N.Y.,
On the other hand are the minority of courts that have taken a less expansive view. The Tenth Circuit
has held that the All Writs Act does not furnish removal jurisdiction at all because it confers no independent
jurisdiction.
See Hillman v. Webley,
We tend toward the Tenth Circuit camp and conclude that the district court lacked removal
jurisdiction over the case. Two settled principles, one about the prerequisites of § 1441 removal, and
another about the All Writs Act, lead us to this conclusion. First, § 1441(a) authorizes removal only of
actions "of which the district courts of the United States have original jurisdiction." 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a).
That phrase means that actions are not removable unless they "originally could have been filed in federal
court."
Caterpillar Inc. v. Williams,
The most troubling counterargument, and the one that the Second, Sixth, and Eighth Circuits
ultimately rely on, is that the All Writs Act is jurisdictional caulk—it plugs the cracks in federal jurisdiction
through which crafty litigants can escape the effect of a federal order.
See United States v. N.Y. Tel. Co.,
434
U.S. 159, 172-73,
All things considered, we conclude that the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over the action.
Conclusion
We accordingly vacate the district court's order dismissing and remand with instructions for the court to remand to Louisiana state court. We do not, however, imply that the district court may not by injunction force 's dismissal. We affirm the district court's award of sanctions against Zohdy.
N O . 99-6021 (A PPEAL IN H ENSON V . C IBA -G EIGY ): V ACATED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS ; N O . 99-6130 (A PPEAL IN P RICE V . C IBA -G EIGY ): A FFIRMED .
