OPINION
Plaintiffs, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c), seek to remand this litigation to the New York State Supreme Court. Four plaintiffs are American oil companies: ARCO Exploration, Inc., Murphy Middle East Oil Co., Iranian Sun Oil Co., (Delaware corporations), and Union Oil Company of Iran (a California corрoration)^ — the “citizen corporations.” The remaining two plaintiffs, Lavan Petroleum Co. and National Iranian Oil Co., are incorporated under the laws of Iran — the “alien corporations.”
The four citizen corporations apparently formed а joint venture with National Iranian, embodied in the creation *1071 of the Lavan corporation (each citizen corporation owning 12y2% of Lavan’s outstanding stock; National Iranian controlling a counter balancing % interest) to undertake the constructiоn and operation of a submarine oil pipeline system in the Persian Gulf area. In furtherance of this enterprise, Lavan entered into a construction and installation contract with Oceanic Contractors Inc. (a Panamanian corporation).
A term of the construction contract required Oceanic to secure an insurance policy underwriting Oceanic’s guarantee that the pipeline would be free of defective materials and workmanship and an “all risks clause” insuring against any physical lоss or damage to the trunkline. In accordance with this provision, an insurance contract was entered into on July 27, 1967 between a group of English insurance underwriters (the “alien underwriters”) and Oceanic, Lavan, and Lavan’s associated companies.
During the oрerative term of the insurance policy, three separate leaks were discovered in the ninety mile trunkline. Plaintiffs, as assureds under the terms of the insurance contract, 1 now seek recovery of expenses incurred in making the necessary repairs tо the trunkline. Their action was originally commenced in State Supreme Court by the filing of a complaint on December 30, 1970. Defendants’ petition for removal to this Court was filed January 19, 1971.
28 U.S.C. § 1332
Subdivision (a) (2) of § 1332 empowers the federal court to entertain original jurisdiction over civil controversies involving a sum in excess of $10,000 between “citizens of a State, and foreign states or citizens or subjects thereof.” To sustain jurisdiction under this section, it is an essential prerequisite that there be complete diversity of citizenship — that each and every party plaintiff be of different citizenship from all parties defendant. Strawbridge v. Curtiss,
Subdivision (a) (3) of this section vests original jurisdiction in controversies between “citizens of different States and in which foreign states or citizens or subjects thereof are additional parties.” Accordingly, if the citizen corporations were involved in litigation with citizens of different states, the presence of the two alien plaintiff corporations would be jurisdictionally immaterial. However, the named defendants are not citizens of different states; they are citizens of a foreign country. Therefore this section is likewise inapplicable.
Defendants’ novel proposition to transform (a) (2) jurisdiction by en-grafting to it section (3)’s clause concerning foreign parties, effectuating thereby a consideration of the alien corporations as merely “additional parties” in an action brought by citizens against aliens, must be rejected. There is no legislative or judicial support for so expanding (a) (2)’s basis of jurisdiction, Cf. 1 Moore’s, Federal Practice, jf 0.60 [3], [8] (2d ed.). Further, such a reading would do violence to the clear wording of that statute. The concept of complete diversity in such litigation would be vitiated, for the presence of a single citizen in an action against defendant aliens would serve as a basis for sustaining jurisdiction.
28 Ü.S.C. § lUl(c)
Although this Court is without original jurisdiction, defendants may successfully remove an action commenced *1072 in state court involving such mixed party alignment, in certain circumstances pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441. Subdivision (c) authorizes the removal of an entire case to thе federal courts if included within the action is a separate and independent claim which if sued upon alone would have been removable.
It is undeniable that that portion of the controversy involving the four citizen corporations and the alien underwritеrs “if sued upon alone” would properly be removable as an adversary matter between citizens of various states and foreign subjects. If defendants are to succeed in sustaining removal, it is incumbent upon them to establish, as well, that this isolated “removable” segment of the litigation comprises separate and independent causes of action, within the meaning of § 1441(e), from those asserted by the two alien plaintiff corporations.
Prior to the enactment in 1948 of § 1441(c) (it superseded 28 U.S.C. § 71), the presence of a “separable controversy” constituted an adequate basis for removal of complex litigation. In American Fire & Casualty Co. v. Finn,
“where there is a single wrong to plaintiff, for which relief is sought, arising from an interlocked series of transactions, there is no separate and independent claim or cause of action undеr § 1441(c).
* * * -X- * *
The allegations in which Reiss [the non-diversity defendant] is a defendant involve substantially the same facts and transactions as do the allegations * * * against the foreign insurance companies. It cannot be said that there are separate and indepеndent claims for relief as § 1441(c) requires.”
In seeking to escape Finn’s stringent
2
definition of a separate and independent cause of action, defendants rely heavily upon this court’s determination in Herrmann v. Braniff Airways, Inc.,
Although the court in Herrmann declined to remand the action and found that the application of
“Finn’s language * * * is not appropriate because Finn and almost all reported diversity cases involve a single plaintiff who has made related claims against multiple defendants in a single case, whereas here we are concerned with multiple plaintiffs who have joined their individual claims in a single suit against a single defendant” (308 F.Supp. at 1098 ),
it did not imply that the mere presence of multiple plaintiffs would necessarily involve separate and independent claims. The accompanying essential element underlying
Herrmann’s
holding was that the right asserted by each plaintiff was of “separate wrongful acts, namely the wrongful invasion of each decedent’s right of bodily safety.”
Unlike the fortuity linking
Herrmann’s
ill fated passengers or the reviled objects in
Scheideler’s
remarks, the plaintiffs through Lavan, a corporation in the control of which each participated, entered into a single insurance policy to protect their joint interest in the trunk-line. The three causes of action alleged in the complaint arise out of a single series of “interlocking transactions” Charles Dowd Box Co. v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co.,
Additionally,
Finn
instructs that when determining this issue the court must “look to the plaintiff’s pleading, which controls.”
Waiver
Independent of the propriety of removal of this action pursuant to § 1441 (c), plaintiffs contend that defendants relinquished any right to removal when they entered into an agreement according the assureds the right to select the court of competent jurisdiction in which all disputes growing out of the insurance policy were to be litigated. The pertinent provision of the insurance agreement provided:
“It is agreed that in the event of the failure of Underwritеrs herein to pay any amount claimed to be due hereunder, Underwriters herein, at the request of the Assured, will submit to the jurisdiction of any court of com- ' petent jurisdiction within the United States and will comply with all requirements necessary to give such Court jurisdiction, and all matters аrising hereunder shall be determined in accordance with the law and practice of such Court.”
In General Phoenix Corp. v. Malyon,
“Unquestionably, the privilege of removal may be waived. A waiver may occur in numerous ways such as a failure to make a timely application, answering in the State Court, or any other fashion indicating submission to jurisdiction. Of cоurse, the waiver is always spelled out from occurrences after commencement of suit. Whether parties may stipulate in advance to restrict removal is highly doübtful, for such an understanding would run counter to the settled idea that bargains limiting parties to partiсular tribunals are illegal. However, the clause in suit is not such a bargain. It merely restricts the defendant to the Court in which suit is first begun against it, be it Federal or State.”
Defendants reliance on Davila v. Hilton Hotels International, Inc.,
Although defendants’ contention of the unenforcibility of this “bargain” is not without some support, see e. g. Roberts v. Lexington Insurance Co.,
Disposition
For the reasons set forth above, plaintiffs motion to remand this litigation to the Supreme Court of the State of New York, County of New York is granted. This controversy is not a proper subject of removal jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441(c). Defendants surrendered their right to seek removal by their acceptance of the contract clause affording plaintiffs the option of selecting the forum to litigate this' dispute. Plaintiffs’ application for the payment of just costs expended in prosecuting its motion to remand is denied.
Settle order on notice.
Notes
. Also named as a defendant in the complaint was Oceanic. The petitioning defendаnts (the alien underwriters) question Oceanic’s status as a co-defendant. For purposes of determining the motion now before us, Oceanic’s alignment is immaterial,
. Wright, in his authoritative treatise on Federal Courts, at 117-118, describes the breadth of the Finn holding: “Few, if any, diversity casеs can properly be removed under this statute in light of the construction placed upon it in the Finn ease.” Accord, 1 Barron & Holtzoff Federal Practice and Procedure § 105, p. 494 (1960). Despite Wright’s ominous forecasts, a number of courts have sustained removal of diversity suits. See 1 A Moore’s, supra, ¶ 0.163 [4-5] and cases cited therein.
. The court reached this conclusion although feeted every plaintiff. each of the alleged defamatory statements af-
