ORDER
This action is before the court on the plaintiff’s motion to remand the case to the Superior Court of Fulton County, Georgia. The case originally was brought in the Superior Court of Fulton County on May 1, 1986 against National Union Fire Insurance Company, McKenzie Tank Lines, and Elbert LeSueur Grier. The defendants are the insurer, owner, and driver, respectively, of a tractor-trailer truck involved in a collision in Mitchell County, Georgia that resulted in the death of the plaintiff’s young child. By an order dated July 28, 1986, the Superior Court of Fulton County concluded that it lacked personal jurisdiction over defendants McKenzie Tank Lines and Elbert LeSueur Grier, that venue as to them wаs improper, and that they were not properly sued in the Superior Court of Fulton County. The state court therefore granted the motions of McKenzie Tank Lines and Mr. Grier to transfer the action to the Superior Court of Mitchell County, thereby leaving
The literal language of 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b) would not appear to support the plaintiff’s motion to remand. The statute reads:
If the case stated by the initial pleading is not removable, a pеtition for removal may be filed within thirty days after receipt by the defendant, through service or otherwise, of a copy of an amended pleading, motion, order or other paper from which it may first be ascertained that the case is one which is or has become removable.
Here, the defendant filed its рetition for removal promptly upon receiving the order from which it could be ascertained that the case had become removable, i.e., the state court’s order transferring venue as to the two resident defendants to Mitchell County. The statute itself gives no indication that removal in such a case is improper.
However, the plaintiff’s motion to remand is not based on the terms of the statute but on a straightforward application of the long-standing, judicially-created “voluntary-involuntary rule.” In a diversity case, the voluntary-involuntary rule states: “if the resident defendant was dismissed from the ease by the voluntary act of the plaintiff, the case became removable, but if the dismissal was the result of either the defendant’s or the court’s acting against the wish of the plaintiff, the case could not be removed.”
Weems v. Louis Dreyfus Corp.,
Section 1446(b) has been interpreted to preserve the voluntary-involuntаry rule.
See Weems,
The defendant argues that the voluntary-involuntary rule does not apply in this case because the transfer of venue that resulted in complete diversity in Fulton County was a voluntary action by the plaintiff. The argument is unpersuasive. That the transfer order gave the plaintiff the “option” of paying the transfer fees doеs not render the transfer voluntary; failure to pay the fees would not have resulted in continued proceedings against all three defendants in Fulton County. Instead, the plaintiff’s failure to pay the transfer fees would have resulted in dismissal. Order on Motion to Dismiss at 2, 3. The transfer of venue was not due to any voluntary act of the plаintiff but was instead “the result of either the defendant’s or the court’s acting against the wish of the plaintiff.”
Weems,
The defendant also argues that the voluntary-involuntary rule does not apply in this case because the underlying rationale or justification for the rule is not present here. The rule’s justification, argues the defendant, is a desire to avoid removal to federal court where the removal is premised on developments in the state court that could later be reversed by the state appellate court. In the case that is perhaps the most often cited on this issue, the former Fifth Circuit offered the finality/appealability ratiоnale as one of the rule’s virtues:
Although the rule has often been criticized for failing to explicate an underlying rationale, it nevertheless has merit in that it prevents removal of those cases in which the issue of the resident defendant’s dismissal has not been finally determined in the state courts. This avoidsthe duplication and еxpense which would result if a resident defendant was dismissed on an appealable ground, the nonresident was permitted to remove, and the plaintiff then obtained a reversal of the dismissal in the state appellate courts. On the other hand, that danger does not arise where a plaintiff voluntarily drops a resident defendant since appeal then is not available, and the elimination of the resident defendant from the case is final.
Weems,
A number of recent cases go further than
Weems,
holding that the finality/appealability rationale is synonymous with the voluntary-involuntary rule.
See Burke v. General Motors Corp.,
As a result of this equating of finality with voluntariness, courts have permitted removal where, as here, the order of the state court that results in complete diversity is nоt due to the plaintiff’s voluntary action but is nevertheless final.
See Quinn v. Aetna Life and Casualty Company,
If the
Quinn
case and others like it are correctly dеcided, removal would be proper here. There is no possibility of a duplication of proceedings in this case. Because the order transferring venue entered judgment as to fewer than all of the claims or parties in the Fulton County action it was not a final judgment under O.C.G.A. § 5-6-34(a)(1).
See Wise v. Georgia State Board fоr Examination, Qualification and Registration of Architects,
Removal is not proper here, however, because the above discussed cases are simply incorrect. Study of the Supreme Court cases that developed the rule discloses that the voluntary-involuntary rule is not based upon an appealability/finality rationale. The early history of the voluntary-involuntary rule was summarized in Weems:
The rule that a case non-removable on the initial pleadings could become removable only pursuant to a voluntary act of the plaintiff originated in two early Supreme Court cases. The first was Powers v. Chesapeake and O. Ry.,169 U.S. 92 ,18 S.Ct. 264 ,42 L.Ed. 673 (1898), where ... [t]he Court held that a nonresident defendant can rеmove as soon “as the action assumes the shape of a removable case in the court in which it was brought,”169 U.S. at 101 ,18 S.Ct. at 267 , and concluded that the case had become removable for the first time when the plaintiff discontinued his action against the individual resident defendants.
Although the Court in Powers did not emphasize that the resident defendant’s dismissal resulted from an act voluntary to the plaintiff, that aspect was seized upon in Whitcomb v. Smithson,175 U.S. 635 ,20 S.Ct. 248 ,44 L.Ed. 303 (1900), and applied to firmly establish the voluntary-involuntary rule. In Whitcomb, the elimination from the case of the resident defendant was accomplished not by the plaintiff’s voluntary act but rather by a directed verdict. The Court held that since the resident defendant was eliminated from the case without the plaintiff’s consent, the case did not become removable. Accord, Kansas City Suburban Belt Ry. Co. v. Herman,187 U.S. 63 ,23 S.Ct. 24 ,47 L.Ed. 76 (1902). Later cases agreed that the crucial point on which Powers had turned was the voluntariness of the plaintiff’s act, and the rule that an action non-removable when commenced may become removable thereafter only by the voluntary act of the plaintiff was solidified. See Great No. Ry. Co. v. Alexander,246 U.S. 276 , 281,38 S.Ct. 237 [239],62 L.Ed. 713 (1918); American Car & Foundry Co. v. Kettelhake,236 U.S. 311 , 316,35 S.Ct. 355 [356],59 L.Ed. 594 (1915).
The above passage from
Weems
cites four Supreme Court decisions in which removal was held improper:
Whitcomb, Herman, Kettelhake,
and
Alexander.
Lack of finality could not have been the rationale for the voluntary-involuntary distinction developed and applied in those cases because the state court action that arguably made the cases removable had been affirmed by or had originated in the state’s highest court in three of the four cases cited. No appeal was possible within the state courts and, therefore, no possibility of a duplication of proceedings existed, yet the United Statеs Supreme Court denied removal. In
Whitcomb,
the directed verdict on which the defendant relied to justify removal had been appealed to and affirmed by the Supreme Court of Minnesota.
Kettelhake is the only case in which the order relied upon by the non-resident defendant to justify removal was not yet final in the state courts. Kettelhake is аlso the only Supreme Court case in which appealability and finality are discussed in connection with the voluntary-involuntary rule, and the Court made it clear that lack of finality in the state courts was not synonymous with involuntariness but was instead a separate ground for denying removal.
[W]here there is a joint cause of aсtion against defendants resident of the same State with the plaintiff and a non-resident defendant, it must appear to make the case a removable one as to a non-resident defendant because of dismissal as to resident defendants that the discontinuance as to such defendants was voluntary on the part of the plaintiff, and that such action has taken the resident defendants out of the case, so as to leave a controversy wholly between the plaintiff and the non-resident defendant. We do not think that situation is shown by this record.
Though most of the Supreme Court cases discussing the voluntary-involuntary rule contain no discussion of the rule’s rationale, the few cases that do contain such a discussion point to a policy much different from the аppealability/finality rationale. After summarizing the voluntary-involuntary rule cases, including Powers, Herman, Lathrop, Shea and Henwood Company, and Kettelhake, the Supreme Court in Alexander stated:
The obvious principle of these decisions is that, in the absence of a fraudulent purpose to defeat removal, the plaintiff may by the allegations of his complaint determine the status with respect to removability of a case, arising under a law of the United States, when it is commenced, and that this power to determine the removability of his case continues with the plaintiff throughout the litigation, so that whether such a case non-removable when commenced shall afterwards become removable depends not upon what the defendant may allege or prove or what the court may, after hearing upon the merits, in invitum, order, but solely upon the form which the plaintiff by his voluntary action shall give to the pleadings in the case as it progresses towards a conclusion.
What emerges from an examination of the Supreme Court eases on the voluntary-involuntary rule is the conclusion that the rule is not based upon аn appealability/finality rationale but upon a policy favoring the plaintiff’s “power to determine the removability of his case.” It could perhaps be argued that the policy is antiquated or arbitrary, but the Supreme Court has never expressed dissatisfaction with the only justification it ever offered for the vоluntary-involuntary rule. More importantly, whatever the actual justification for the volun
As discussed above, the transfer of venue in this case that resulted in complete diversity was not due to any voluntary act of the plaintiff. The plaintiffs motion to remand the case to the Superior Court of Fulton County, Georgia is therefore GRANTED. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c) the Clerk of Court is DIRECTED to mail to the Clerk of the Superior Court of Fulton County a copy of this order of remand so that the state court may thereupon proceed with thе case. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1446(d) the defendant will pay all costs and disbursements incurred by reason of the removal proceedings.
Notes
. Contrary to the defendant’s argument, the traditional voluntary-involuntary rule does not permit a plaintiff purposely to plead jurisdiction improperly in order to avoid removal. The rule has always been subject to an exception for fraudulent joinder for the purpose of defeating removal.
See Alexander,
