After Micrometl Corp. filed suit in state court against Tranzact Technologies, Inc., alleging overbillings in excess of $100,000, Tranzact removed to federal court. The parties are of diverse citizenship, and so jurisdiction appeared secure. Over a year and a half after the lawsuit commenced, however, Micrometl produced a document showing that its damages were really, so it seemed, less than $40,000. Tranzact believed that the document conclusively established that the amount in controversy had never exceeded $75,000, and if that was true, then the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Inexplicably, Tranzact waited ten months, until after a settlement conference failed to resolve the underlying dispute, to alert the court about this problem. Only then did it file a motion to remand the case to state court, along with a request for
I
Micrometl sued Tranzact in the Circuit Court of Marion County, Indiana, alleging that Tranzact overbilled for services rendered in connection with a shipping services agreement. The facts of the dispute are not relevant to this litigation, except that Micrometl claimed that Tranzact refused to correct overbillings in excess of $100,000. Tranzact removed to federal court for the Southern District of Indiana without objection on March 11, 2008, and then transferred the case to the Northern District of Illinois based on a forum selection clause in the contract. On July 14, 2008, the parties filed a joint status report in which Micrometl reiterated its claim for more than $100,000. Shortly thereafter, Micrometl and Tranzact consented to the jurisdiction of the United States Magistrate Judge pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(c).
Discovery took place over the next year and a half. Micrometl produced a spreadsheet in August 2009 showing that it had incurred almost $140,000.00 in overbillings, but that it also received refunds from third-party sources that reduced Tranzact’s liability to $38,846.98. Tranzact then deposed two Micrometl executives who testified that the amount of potential damages was only $38,846.98 and, importantly, that Micrometl had received the refunds that reduced the overbillings by November 14, 2007 — well before Micrometl filed suit in early 2008. Micrometl does not dispute this. It does, however, point out that the spreadsheet in question is in fact a document based on information available to both parties that Tranzact prepared and Micrometl revised after discovery began. In Micrometl’s view, Tranzact easily could have crunched the numbers to arrive at the conclusion apparent in the August 2009 document: that Tranzact owed only $38,846.98. Micrometl makes this point with some hesitation, however, since the company also maintains that it is possible for it to recover more. Notably, Tranzact does not dispute that it could have figured out that the amount in controversy was lower than Micrometl claimed by doing some simple math. Even so, Tranzact exercised its right to remove to federal court based on the numbers stated in Micrometl’s complaint.
This much is clear: once Tranzact had the August 2009 spreadsheet in hand, it had every reason to believe that diversity jurisdiction was lacking because the amount in controversy could not be satisfied. Discovery closed five months later on January 7, 2010, and the parties participated in a settlement conference at the direction of the court on June 9, 2010. When the conference failed to resolve the dispute, Tranzact filed a motion to remand the case to state court on June 17, 2010. The district court immediately ordered the parties to brief the issue and ultimately remanded the case based on the finding that it was legally impossible for the plaintiffs to recover more than $40,000. See
Rising-Moore v. Red Roof Inns, Inc.,
II
We review a district court’s decision to award fees and costs for an abuse of discretion.
Lott v. Pfizer, Inc.,
Most actions seeking fees under § 1447(c) are brought by a plaintiff who wanted all along to be in state court against a defendant who improperly removed. The parties here have spilled much ink debating whether a defendant can
ever
recover fees pursuant to § 1447(c). This is puzzling, since the statute says nothing about limiting the right to fees to plaintiffs, nor did the district court imply that it lacked the competence to award fees to the defendant. We can assume that it is unusual for a defendant to seek fees and costs associated with removal when it is the party that chose the federal forum after the plaintiff filed in state court. But such cases are not unheard of. See,
e.g., Vaughan v. McArthur Bros. Co.,
Tranzact argues that the district court should have awarded fees and costs under
We suspect that if that was all there was to this case, the district court would have sided with Tranzact. This is not because Micrometl likely inflated its allegation of damages in state court; in that forum the amount in controversy has no jurisdictional effect. See
Rising-Moore,
To excuse its foot-dragging, Tranzact points to a verbal order from the court at the close of discovery telling the parties to participate in mediation before filing for summary judgment. This command, according to Tranzact, prevented it from informing the court that it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction and compelled both parties to attend a settlement conference-even though ultimately the court had no authority to resolve the case. This argument makes no sense. Every federal judicial officer knows that subject-matter jurisdiction is a
sine qua non
for a federal proceeding. Nothing about an order regulating discovery or dispositive motions says a thing about this essential feature of the court’s power. And no litigant should believe that a judge’s order telling the parties to seek mediation before filing for summary judgment would prohibit it from informing the court that the entire matter is not properly before it. What is the point of having a federal judge preside over a settlement conference when the court lacks the authority to hear the case at all? We do not see anything in the district court’s statement to the parties on January 7, 2010, that relieved Tranzact (or Micrometl) from its duty to inform the court if jurisdiction was absent. See generally Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(h)(3). As lawyers who practice in federal courts certainly know, they “have an obligation to assist the judges to keep within the boundaries fixed by the Constitution and Congress; it is precisely to impose a duty of assistance on the bar that lawyers are called ‘officers of the court.’ ” See
BEM I, LLC,
Next, Tranzact contends that the district court decided not to award fees and costs
If at any time before final judgment it appears that the district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, the case 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.
28 U.S.C. § 1447(c). The first sentence explains when a case must be remanded for a lack of jurisdiction, which as a practical matter — wholly unrelated to the fee-shifting provision — is almost always. The reason for this, of course, is that federal courts are forums of limited jurisdiction that may not hear cases over which they have no legal authority. The second sentence gives district court discretion to decide when the remand order should include an award of “just costs and actual expenses” to a party based on the other’s conduct relating to removal.
Tranzact contends that the statute should be interpreted as follows: a party’s delay in revealing facts showing that the court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction is irrelevant to an award of fees and costs “incurred as a result of removal” because remand is appropriate “at any time” before final judgment. That reading turns the purpose of the fee-shifting on its head. It is precisely because a case must be remanded at any time when a court lacks jurisdiction that Congress sought to deter improper removals and delays in seeking remand by enacting the fee-shifting provision. See
Martin,
Naturally Tranzact prefers that we focus oh Micrometl’s failure properly to calculate and disclose the amount in controversy, rather than its own delay. It emphasizes this point in support of its argument that the district court erred in refusing to award fees pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1927. Section 1927 is a sanctions statute intended “to deter frivolous litigation and abusive practices by attorneys and ensure that those who create unnecessary costs also bear them.”
Riddle & Assocs. v. Kelly,
The judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
