ORDER ON MOTION TO REMAND
Now before the Court is the Motion to Remand filed by plaintiffs William Halkett, Jr. and Pamela Halkett, individually and on behalf of their minor children (“the Halketts”). For the reasons set forth below, the Motion to Remand is DENIED.
Discussion
The Halketts initiated this action on August 23, 2000, with the filing of their complaint in the 11th Judicial Circuit in and for Dade County, Florida. The Halketts named as defendants Ford Motor Company (“Ford”), Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc. (“Firestone”), Sunrise Ford Company (“Sunrise”), and City Tire Service of Lees-burg, Inc. (“City Tire”). Defendant Ford filed a Notice of Removal on September 8,
Choice of Law Issue
Although the Halketts’ motion had been fully briefed before transfer to this Court, we afforded the parties an opportunity to provide supplemental briefing on the post-transfer choice of law issue and on the application of the appropriate authority to the issues presented by the motion. Defendants Ford and Firestone took advantage of that opportunity; the other parties did not.
We conclude, consistent with the position advanced by Ford and Firestone, that the law of the Seventh Circuit governs the removal and remand issues presented in this case. The law of the circuit where the transferee court sits governs questions of federal law in MDL proceedings.
In re Korean Air Lines Disaster of September 1, 1983,
Timely Consent to Removal
The Halketts correctly argue that all defendants must join in or consent to a notice of removal within the thirty-day period provided by 28 U.S.C. § 1441.
See, e.g., McMahon v. Bunn-O-Matic Corp.,
The Halketts have attempted to bolster their argument that not all defendants timely consented to removal by pointing
What the Halketts perhaps intend to argue is that Sunrise and Tire City waived their rights to give the necessary consents by filing motions to dismiss in the state court. The Halketts have advanced authority from another circuit that would support such an argument. In
Scholz v. RDV Sports, Inc.,
Elimination of Federal Claims from Amended Complaint
Counts 4 and 8 of the Halketts’ original complaint expressly and unambiguously asserted claims under the National Highway Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966, 49 U.S.C. § 30118. After Ford filed its Notice of Removal, the Halketts filed, as of right, an amended complaint that deleted references to these federal statutory claims. Because the amended complaint provides no basis for federal jurisdiction, say the Halketts, the action should be remanded to state court. See Plaintiffs’ Memorandum at 7-10.
The question, then, is whether an action that was properly removed on the basis of the allegations of the complaint at the time the removal notice was filed should be remanded because the plaintiff amended the complaint after the removal notice to delete the federal claims that had served as the basis for removal. The Seventh Circuit has said that the answer is no. In
Hammond v. Terminal Railroad Ass’n,
The defendant’s right to remove a case from state to federal court depends on the complaint filed by the plaintiff in state court. If that complaint states aclaim that is removable, ... removal is not defeated by the fact that, after the case is removed, the plaintiff files a new complaint, deleting the federal claim or stating a claim that is not removable.
Id. at 97 (citations omitted). 4 Similarly, in Boelens v. Redman Homes, Inc., 759 F.2d 504, 507 (5th Cir.1985), the Seventh Circuit noted that “the majority view is that a plaintiffs voluntary amendment to a complaint after removal to eliminate the federal claim upon which removal was based will not defeat federal jurisdiction,” and went on to explain that the rale “serves the salutary purpose of preventing the plaintiff from being able to destroy the jurisdictional choice that Congress intended to afford a defendant in the removal statute.”
For these reasons, we conclude that the Halketts’ elimination of their federal claims by amendment filed after the notice of removal does not warrant the remand of this action to state court.
Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we hold that all defendants timely joined in or consented to removal, and that the plaintiffs’ amendment of the complaint after notice of removal had been filed to eliminate then-federal claims does not warrant remand. The Halketts’ Motion to Remand is therefore DENIED.
Notes
. The Halketts also suggest that all defendants must have signed Ford’s notice of removal and that it was not sufficient to join in it later. Plaintiffs' Memorandum at 5. That position is untenable.
See, e.g., Martin v. Harshbarger,
. Sunrise, for reasons not apparent to us, filed another notice of consent and joinder on September 29.
. Although an action brought under FELA is not removable (28 U.S.C. § 1445(a)), the defendant had maintained, and both the district court and the Seventh Circuit agreed, that the allegations of the plaintiff's original complaint actually constituted a claim under the federal Railway Labor Act and was thus removable.
. This conclusion arguably resurrects the issue discussed in the preceding section in a manner not addressed by the parties. If the propriety of removal depends on the allegations of the complaint as it existed at the time of removal, when did removal become effective in this case? The Halketts filed their amended complaint on September 20, 2000. As of that date, three of the defendants had not yet joined in or consented to Ford's notice of removal. The Seventh Circuit, construing the prior removal statute that required a defendant to petition for removal, stated that "[a]s a general rule, all defendants must join in a removal petition in order to effect removal.”
Northern Illinois Gas Co. v. Aireo Industrial Gases,
If a state forum is more important to the plaintiff than his federal claims, he should have to make that assessment before the case is jockej'ed from state court to federal court and back to state court. The jockeying is a drain on the resources of the state judiciary, the federal judiciary and the parties involved; [this] tactical manipulation ... cannot be condoned.
Austwick v. Board of Education,
