May a district court remand a case on its own motion for a defect in removal procedure? Are we even entitled to ask this question? A petition for mandamus presents these subjects for decision.
Leonard E. Sturzl filed suit in a Wisconsin court on September 22, 1993. Defendant Continental Casualty Company is not a Wisconsin insurer and is required by state law to designate the state’s Commissioner of Insurance as its agent for service of process. On October 1, 1993, Sturzl served the Commissioner with the summons and complaint. On October 4 the Commissioner mailed these documents to Continental, which on November 3 removed the action to federal court, asserting federal-question jurisdiction. (The parties also appear to be of diverse citizenship, but the notice of removal did not invoke this fount of jurisdiction.) On November 12 the district judge remanded the case to state court. The judge’s explanation for this ac *293 tion, which took both parties by surprise, was that the removal was untimely under 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b), which affords a defendant 30 days after “receipt” of the complaint to remove. The district judge believed that the 30 days began when the Commissioner of Insurance received the complaint. The judge did not cite any authority for this conclusion.
Continental immediately filed a motion for reconsideration, pointing out that numerous cases have held that the time begins from receipt by an employee of the defendant rather than receipt by a state official serving as a compulsory “agent.” E.g.,
Skidaway Associates, Ltd. v. Glens Falls Insurance Co.,
The first question is whether we are entitled to consider the petition in light of 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d), which provides:
An order remanding a case to the State court from which it was removed is not reviewable on appeal or otherwise, except that an order remanding a ease to the State court from which it was removed pursuant to section 1443 of this title shall be reviewable by appeal or otherwise.
Continental did not remove under § 1443, so a literal reading of § 1447(d) leads to the conclusion that we lack power to act.
As we have explained in several recent eases, however,
Thermtron Products, Inc. v. Hermansdorfer,
(1) remands on grounds listed in § 1447(e) and beyond the power of appellate review; (2) remands on grounds not listed in § 1447(c) but nonetheless sometimes proper, and reviewable to decide whether this is one of those times; (3) remands not authorized by § 1447(c) or anything else, and subject to automatic mandamus.
Amoco Petroleum Additives,
Section 1447(c) reads:
A motion to remand the case on the basis of any defect in the removal procedure must be made within 30 days after the filing of the notice of removal under section 1446(a). If at any time before final judgment it appears that the district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, the ease shall be remanded. An order remanding the case may require payment of just costs and any actual expenses, including attorney fees, incurred as a result of the removal. A certified copy of the order of remand shall be mailed by the clerk of the court to the clerk of the State court. The State court shall thereupon proceed with the case.
Section 1447(c) thus sets up two categories of reasons for remand: a “defect in the removal procedure” and the absence of subject matter jurisdiction. An order of remand based on either of these grounds is beyond all power of appellate review, whether or not the order is erroneous.
Gravitt v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.,
The potential difficulty with this understanding of matters is that the first sentence of § 1447(c) speaks of a “motion to remand”. Does this imply that a motion within 30 days is essential for a remand on account of a defect in removal procedure? If the answer is yes, then the district court’s remand falls outside the authority of § 1447(c), and appellate review is possible. If lack of a motion not only kicks the remand outside of § 1447(c) but also makes the remand unauthorized, then the case falls into category (3), and the litigant who removed the case is entitled to a writ of mandamus. Yet the question whether a remand under the first sentence of § 1447(c) requires a motion looks exactly like “the merits” — which we know from § 1447(d) we are not supposed to review! To determine whether we have the power to review the remand, we have to inquire into the very issue we are forbidden to address unless we have the power to review the remand. Reasonable people might wonder whether this conundrum does not expose some difficulty in Thermtron and Camegie-Mellon, but our part is to apply these eases as best we can.
One way out of the box is to say that if a motion for remand is essential to action under the first sentence of § 1447(c), then the lack of a motion deprives a district judge of
power
to return a case to state court.
Thermtron
permits us to decide whether a district court has the power to do what it did, although we cannot examine whether a particular exercise of power was proper. Although this distinction seems metaphysical, it has persuaded one court of appeals.
In re Allstate Insurance Co.,
Is a motion essential? Allstate answered “yes” on the ground that the statutory provision of one method excluded others. Expressio unius est exclusio alterius. We are skeptical of this maxim, for the omission of other items from a list may reflect no more than a belief that other options are provided for elsewhere. Judges do many things on their own motion, and Congress may have left the extent of these powers alone. One can turn the question around and ask: What in § 1447(c) prevents a remand sua sponte? Camegie-Mellon holds that the list in § 1447(c) is not exclusive. If district judges may remand cases for reasons that do not appear in § 1447(e) at all, it is hard to treat the omission of a particular method from that subsection as dispositive.
Nonetheless, we agree with the result in
Allstate
even though we do not embrace all of that opinion’s reasoning. Ever since
Ayers v. Watson,
One may arrive at the same conclusion by a slightly different route. Three courts of appeals have held, correctly we believe, that after the 30 days have expired a district judge may not remand on its own motion for non-jurisdietional problems.
Maniar v. FDIC,
District judges who look carefully at newly filed or removed cases, and identify potential defects in their institution or removal, do both the parties and the legal system a great service. We commend the district judge for his care and alertness in spotting the potential problem. But because not all potential problems are fatal, the court should alert the parties before dismissing or remanding the cases. Litigants may have sufficient answers to the court’s concerns, as Continental believes that it has a legal reply to the district court’s understanding of § 1446(b). Or litigants may elect to surrender their entitlement to insist on procedural perfection, as Sturzl was willing to do here. Quick notice is a boon; quick action without inviting the parties’ submissions may illustrate the adage that haste makes waste. The remand in this ease has stopped this litigation dead in its tracks. It should now get back under way, and in federal court. The petition is granted, and a writ of mandamus will issue directing the district court to recall its remand and reinstate the case on its docket.
