*90 MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
The complaints in these two cases, which have been designated by the defendants as related to each other, allege that the defendants (collectively, “CIGNA”) denied them, or doctors belonging to the society, reimbursement for the provision of medically necessary services in violation of the New York unfair and deceptive trade practices and prompt payment statutes and in breach of contract. Plaintiffs in both cases initially filed suit in New York Supreme Court 1 alleging only state law causes of action. Defendants removed the cases to federal court on the grounds that the plaintiffs’ claims arise under federal law because they are completely preempted by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended, 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq (“ERISA”). On September 11, 2001, the day after removal, ’ defendants filed a request with the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation (the “MDL Panel”) to transfer these eases to the Southern District of Florida for consolidation with MDL No. 1334 (the “MDL court”) because they share common questions of fact with the dozens of actions brought by healthcare providers raising similar claims that have already been consolidated with that case.
Two days later, defendants moved to stay all proceedings in both cases pending the MDL Panel’s decision on the requests to transfer. Plaintiffs in both cases partially oppose the stay motion. 2 They object to a stay only insofar as it would prevent the Court from ruling on their motions to remand the cases to state court. 3 Plaintiffs argue that the Court is empowered, indeed obliged, to determine the paramount issue of subject matter jurisdiction before a decision is made by the MDL Panel to transfer the case to another federal court. Defendants counter that the interests of judicial economy and the purpose of the multidistrict statutory scheme 4 would be best served if the remand motion were decided by the same MDL court that has been addressing ERISA preemption in similar motions brought in the healthcare provider cases that have been transferred to it by the MDL Panel.
As a court of limited jurisdiction, this Court cannot proceed to the merits of a case unless it possesses the requisite subject matter jurisdiction.
See Steel Company v. Citizens for a Better Environment,
There is no doubt that despite the request to transfer, I remain empowered to decide pending remand motions.
See
Rules of Procedure of the JPML R. 1.5. Yet, it is equally within this Court’s power to decline to decide a motion which challenges this Court’s subject matter jurisdiction while awaiting the MDL Panel’s decision on transfer.
See, e.g., Meyers v. Bayer AG,
The Second Circuit has not only made it clear that a case may be transferred under the multidistrict litigation statute even after a jurisdictional challenge has been lodged, but has also intimated that allowing the transferee court to resolve the jurisdictional question may be the preferable practice.
See Ivy v. Diamond Shamrock Chemicals Co.,
Agent Orange cases are particularly well-suited for multidistrict transfer, even where their presence in federal court is subject to a pending jurisdictional objection. The jurisdictional issue in question is easily capable of arising in hundreds or even thousands of cases in district courts throughout the nation. That issue, however, involves common questions of law and fact, some or all of which relate to the Agent Orange class action and settlement, and there are real economies of transferring such cases to Judge Weinstein, who has been handling the Agent Orange litigation for several years.
Id. (citations omitted; emphasis added). Underscoring the significance of the multi-district scheme, the court recognized that if such a case is transferred:
[T]he jurisdictional objections can be heard and resolved by a single court and reviewed at the appellate level in due course. Consistency as well as economy is thus served. We hold, therefore, that the MDL Panel has jurisdiction to transfer a ease in which a jurisdictional objec *92 tion is pending, that objection to be resolved by the transferee court.
Id. (citations omitted; emphasis added).
The same considerations drive my decision whether to stay any ruling on plaintiffs’ remand motions. The question is not whether there will be a decision on the jurisdictional issue, but rather which court is in the best position to decide it— this Court or the MDL court. If the underlying jurisdictional issue involved questions of law or fact not bound up with those involved in the multidistrict healthcare litigation, or if it were fairly obvious— such as whether the parties were completely diverse — my preference would be to rule on jurisdiction in the first instance and not wait for the MDL Panel’s transfer decision.
Cf. Vasura v. Acands,
Here, as in Ivy, there are significant economies in having a single court decide a jurisdictional question which has arisen and presumably will continue to arise in cases around the nation. Moreover, plaintiffs have not demonstrated any prejudice in the event of a stay except the slight delay in deciding the remand motion. Accordingly, I will hold the transfer motions in abeyance until the MDL Panel rules on the defendants’ transfer requests. I will, however, allow the parties to complete the briefing of the motions so that either this Court or the transferor court, as the case may be, will be in a position to resolve them promptly once the transfer decision is made.
The above-captioned cases, including the remand motions, are hereby placed on the Court’s suspense docket until the parties notify the Court that the MDL Panel has made its decision on transfer.
The foregoing is SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Boirero was filed as a class action complaint.
. The plaintiffs’ papers in both cases are virtually identical.
.The motions to remand were filed on October 4, 2001. As of the date hereof, they are not yet ripe for decision.
. 28 U.S.C. § 1407(a) provides for the transfer of actions with one or more common questions of fact to a single district for coordinated pretrial proceedings.
