MEMORANDUM & ORDER
Plaintiffs Cardell and Dahlia Payne (hereinafter, the “plaintiffs”) move to amend their complaint to strike all federal claims and then to remand the case back to state court. For the reasons stated below, we deny both motions.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs are husband and wife and residents of an apartment located in the Parkchester North Condominiums in the Bronx. According to plaintiffs, Cardell was beaten, pepper-sprayed, handcuffed and arrested by the building’s security guards, some of whom have “Special Patrol Officer” status granted by the New York City Police Department. Dahlia also claims that one or more of these guards struck her. The defendants include Parkchester North Condominiums Associates, The Parkchester South Condominium, Inc., Parkchester Preservation Management, LLC, and several security officers (hereinafter, collectively, the “defendants”).
In August 1999, plaintiffs sued in the Supreme Court of New York, Bronx County. In their original complaint, and in three places in their October 1999 amended complaint, plaintiffs expressly claim violations of specific federal constitutional rights. (See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 1, 22, 30 (Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments)). They also allege assault and battery, false arrest and imprisonment, malicious prosecution, negligence, and other state torts. In July 2000, defendants served interrogatories. Plaintiffs did not answer the discovery requests until late February 2001, but the parties have taken and/or scheduled depositions.
At about the same time that plaintiffs filed their amended complaint in Supreme Court, defendants attempted unsuccessfully to remove the case to this Court, and at least some of the parties’ lawyers labored under confusion about the lawsuit’s status. In April 2000, counsel for defendants ascertained that the Clerk of this Court had not assigned a docket number. Accordingly, in June, defendants again tried to file for removal, this time successfully.
Over seven months after such removal, on January 24, 2001, we held a pre-motion conference (requested by defendants) during which we and they learned for the first time that plaintiffs challenged our jurisdiction. Plaintiffs now move (as urged in their reply brief) again to amend their complaint, deleting all references to the United States Constitution. Further, they ask us to remand the case.
Plaintiffs’ opening motion papers fashion a very weak argument for remand, namely, that their federal claims represent “nothing more than state court claim[s] recloaked in constitutional garb.” (Pis. Mem. at 3). In two pages of opposition, defendants vanquish plaintiffs’ effort. But then, in their reply papers, plaintiffs take a new stance, asking for leave to drop their explicitly federal causes of action and to substitute state and local analogues.
DISCUSSION
Ordinarily, we should “freely” grant leave to amend the complaint and
Crucially, we must also take into account whether the plaintiffs have tried to manipulate the forum
(Id.
at 357,
A district court can consider whether the plaintiff has engaged in any manipulative tactics when it decides whether to remand a ease. If the plaintiff has attempted to manipulate the forum, the court should take this behavior into account in determining whether the balance of factors to be considered under the pendent jurisdiction doctrine support a remand in the case.
Over the years, several courts have confronted the question now before us, namely, whether to permit a plaintiff voluntarily to strike his federal claims after removal and, if so permitted, whether thereafter to remand. Several of these cases adopt one of two opposing rules or directions. Curiously, most of the opinions acknowledge only whichever rule is adopted therein and do not address the counterarguments. On the one hand, courts disposed to reject remand when a plaintiff clearly and intentionally attempts to engage in forum manipulation typically cite three rationales for their rejection - time and resource conservation, Congressional intent, and a sense of fair play.
See, e.g., Boelens v. Redman Homes, Inc.
(5th Cir.1985)
We transcribe here an oft-quoted articulation of these reasons
(Boelens,
“When a plaintiff chooses a state forum, yet also elects to press federal claims, he runs the risk of removal. A federal forum for federal claims is certainly a defendant’s right. If a state forum is more important to the plaintiff than his federal claims, he should have to make that assessment before the case is jockeyed from state court to federal court and back to state court. The jockeying is a drain on the resources of the state judiciary, the federal judiciary and the parties involved; tactical manipulation [by the] plaintiff ... cannot be condoned.” Aus twick v. Board of Ed. (N.D.Ill.1983)555 F.Supp. 840 , 842. The rule that a plaintiff cannot oust removal jurisdiction by voluntarily amending the complaint to drop all federal questions [also] serves the salutarypurpose of preventing the plaintiff from being able to destroy the jurisdictional choice that Congress intended to afford a defendant in the removal statute.
In contrast, other courts justify forum manipulation as “a legitimate tactical decision”:
The defendant is not obligated to remove; rather, he has the choice either to submit to state court resolution of his claims, or to assert his right to a federal forum. If the defendant rejects the plaintiffs offer to litigate in state court and removes the action, the plaintiff must then choose between federal claims and a state forum. Plaintiffs in this case chose the state forum. They dismissed their federal claims and moved for remand with all due speed after removal. There was nothing manipulative about that straightforward tactical decision, and there would be little to be gained in judicial economy by forcing plaintiffs to abandon their federal causes of action before filing in state court.
Baddie v. Berkeley Farms, Inc.
(9th Cir.1995)
We are not obligated by any Second Circuit precedent to observe either of the two competing general policies. We may use our discretion. The Fifth Circuit announced in 1985 that the “no remand” position represents the “majority view,” and that Court included in its list of adherents a 1963 Second Circuit case.
Boelens,
One case in this District has embraced the general policy to remand.
Certilman v. Becker
(S.D.N.Y.1992)
Intentional Manipulation
It makes more sense to remand if the particular plaintiffs did not intentionally maneuver the forum.
See Cohill,
The most innocent request to strike federal claims materializes when a plaintiff did not initially realize that his complaint would be construed as containing federal subject matter.
See, e.g., Moscovitch,
Less innocently but still relatively acceptably, a particular plaintiff may seek to avoid a federal venue but
also
have
other, substantive
reasons to alter his pleadings.
See, e.g., Olmstead,
In the case at bar, this factor tends to persuade us to deny plaintiffs’ motion to remand, for plaintiffs have manifestly resolved to manipulate their forum without any reasonable or fair justification. First, plaintiffs must have known that they were advancing federal claims, for they invoked the United States Constitution in three logical places in their complaint. In so doing, they risked removal. Moreover, they waited months and then surprised their opponents and us with their motion when threatened with potential motions to compel and for summary judgment. This timing suggests unreasonable delay 2 and perhaps even a kind of retaliatory intent.
Prejudice, Resource-Wasting, & Untimeliness
We must also contemplate other variables, and we now turn to the three interrelated factors of prejudice, resources, and time. When plaintiffs promptly request amendment and remand, less chance exists that the federal court or the defendants have expended significant time or assets on motions, conferences, or other aspects of federal procedure. In fact, in many of the cases condoning remand, the plaintiff had moved within
days
after removal, before discovery and before any attempt at resolution on the merits.
See, e.g., Certilman,
In contrast, in the current case, plaintiffs waited over seven
months
to file for remand, some discovery has already occurred under the Federal'Rules, and this Court has become quite familiar with the case through pre-motion conferences.
Cf. Carbonara v. Olmos,
No. CV 93-7548 SVW,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we DENY plaintiffs’ motion for leave to amend their complaint and DENY their motion to remand.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. For example, with regard to one of the three underlying rationales for the “no remand” rule, the legislative intent argument, Congress has crafted a statutory scheme whereby plaintiffs (and not just defendants) have a choice: Plaintiffs may opt to replead and return to state court at the discretion of the federal district courts.
. Granted, plaintiffs’ counsel understandably became confused in early 2000 about where this suit was then pending, given that defendants thought that they had filed for removal by that time. Still, plaintiffs’ lawyer received service of a notice of removal in June 2000, and he could easily have verified the effectiveness of the removal filing at any time thereafter.
. Plaintiffs could have secured a state tribunal by alleging, at their first opportunity, only non-federal causes of'action. The instant defendants raise the specter of the "artful pleading doctrine,” which precludes a plaintiff . from frustrating a defendant’s right to removal by carefully "framing in terms of state law a complaint the real nature of [which] is federal, ... or by omitting to plead necessary federal questions.”
Fax Telecommunicaciones Inc. v. AT & T,
. Also, plaintiffs have forced defendants to dispute contentions advanced for the first time in the reply brief, and plaintiffs now want to complicate the case by substituting different causes of action.
Cf. Pierotti,
