Herbert Cammon and Carol DiPasalegne married in April 1982. Four days before the wedding, Herbert applied for a $250,-000 life insurance policy on Carol’s life. Sixteen days after the wedding, Herbert called the insurer to confirm that the policy was in force. Carol was brutally murdered later that day. Illinois charged Herbert with the murder. After a jury split 10-2 for conviction, Herbert asked for retrial by the court. A judge acquitted him. In this suit, a variant on the murdering-heir theme, Metropolitan Life asks for a declaratory judgment that Herbert not only slew Carol but also formed his plan before he purchased the policy. Insurance does not cover material risks hidden from the underwriter. Just as an insurer is entitled to know about diseases that affect the life expectancy of the insured, so it is entitled to know about other, more immediate risks, such as impending homicide. Obviously no intending murderer will tell the insurer of his plans; just as certainly, putting the death benefit out of reach will reduce the incidence of murder. Metropolitan Life believes that in a civil case, with a lower burden of proof, it can establish that before buying the policy Herbert formed a plan to kill Carol.
*1222
Metropolitan Life was not put to its proof. Herbert did not satisfy the insurer’s discovery requests, and the district judge entered a default judgment.
Appellate jurisdiction is the first. On November 7, 1989, the district judge entered an order stating that “plaintiffs motion for default judgment is granted.” This was not appealable; it is one thing to grant a motion and another to enter a judgment. Metropolitan Life wanted a declaratory judgment, which the district court had yet to provide. Nonetheless, Cammon (as we call Herbert and his estate, without distinguishing the two) filed a notice of appeal. We dismissed this and gave two reasons: first, the absence of relief made the document non-final, see
Cleaver v. Elias,
IT IS ORDERED AND ADJUDGED pursuant to the Memorandum Opinion dated November 7, 1989, default judgment is entered in favor of the plaintiff, METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY and against defendant HERBERT CAMMON. Final judgment is hereby entered accordingly.
This document, like the order of November 7, neglected to supply the declaratory relief Metropolitan Life requested — for that matter, to provide any relief. It was accordingly not an appealable judgment. Nonetheless, Cammon filed a second notice of appeal. Metropolitan Life took the proper step of asking the district judge to award some relief. On May 7 the court amended its order by adding a declaratory judgment that Metropolitan Life has no liability under the policy but must refund the premium.
Cammon contends that the May 7 judgment is invalid because his appeal from the April 6 judgment transferred jurisdiction to this court. He could not be more wrong. It is the appeal from that April 6 “judgment” that is ineffectual. We had already held that no appeal would lie until the judge entered declaratory relief. Why Cammon filed a notice of appeal from the document entered on April 6 is a mystery to us. It is also mysterious why the district judge omitted any relief. Cammon’s premature notice of appeal did not prevent the judge from correcting his oversight and entering final judgment.
Having filed two appeals from non-final documents, Cammon neglected to file a notice of appeal from the final judgment. It is tempting to apply the three-knockdown rule and stop the contest. Cammon is saved, however — not by the bell, but by Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(2), which treats a premature notice of appeal as if it had been filed after the entry of judgment. This rule “permits a notice of appeal from a nonfinal decision to operate as a notice of appeal from the final judgment ... when a district court announces a decision that
would be
appealable if immediately followed by the entry of judgment.”
FirsTier Mortgage Co. v. Investors Mortgage Insurance Co.,
— U.S. —,
Before the entry of default, Cammon filed a motion arguing that the court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction. The judge brushed aside this motion, refusing to entertain argument, and then, when entering the default, called the question “moot”. It was and is not moot. No court may enter judgment on the merits — which a default judgment is — if it lacks jurisdiction. A federal court must examine its own jurisdic *1223 tion whether or not the parties question it, and it certainly may not disregard jurisdictional questions that have been raised explicitly.
Jurisdiction is based on diversity of citizenship. Cammon was a citizen of Illinois, and Metropolitan Life is a New York corporation with its principal offices in New York. Cammon believes that Metropolitan Life also is a citizen of Illinois because its midwest office, through which Cammon dealt, is in Chicago. This court follows the “nerve center” approach to corporate citizenship: a corporation has a single principal place of business where its executive headquarters are located.
Kanzelberger v. Kanzelberger,
Cammon seizes on the proviso in § 1332(c)(1) that “in any direct action against the insurer of a policy or contract of liability insurance ... such insurer shall be deemed a citizen of the State of which the insured is a citizen, as well as” the states of its incorporation and principal place of business. He asks us to treat Metropolitan Life as sharing the Illinois citizenship of Carol Cammon, the insured. Yet this is not an action “against the insurer”; Metropolitan Life is the plaintiff, which makes all the difference.
Northbrook National Insurance Co. v. Brewer,
Short work can be made of Cammon’s remaining jurisdictional arguments. He invokes the “probate exception” to the diversity jurisdiction. See
Dragan v. Miller,
Short work can be made of the merits, too. District judges are entitled to promote compliance with their orders by threatening dire consequences for disobedience. When disobedience persists, they are entitled to make good the threats. Otherwise the threats are hollow, and disobedience will increase. For some nine months Cammon provided few documents in response to Metropolitan Life’s demands. Cammon’s principal justification — that his criminal lawyer had what Metropolitan Life wanted — is frivolous. Cammon had only to ask his other lawyer for the materials, yet did not. On September 22, 1989, the district judge announced in open court, with Cammon present, that if the documents were not produced in 14 days the court would enter a default judgment. That deadline was October 6, 1989. No documents were produced by October 6, and the judge kept his word. He was entitled to do so.
Tolliver v. Northrop Corp.,
On occasion we have set aside precipitate default judgments. E.g.,
Del Carmen v. Emerson Electric Co.,
For a long time courts were reluctant to enter default judgments, and appellate courts were reluctant to sustain those that were entered. Courts emphasized that litigants are entitled to decisions on the merits, and that default is a harsh sanction. Those times are gone.
National Hockey League
told appellate judges to respect the district judge’s choice of sanction. And district judges have become more aggressive in using their ultimate weapon to promote the efficient conduct of litigation. More power to them.
In re State Exchange Finance Co.,
Affirmed.
