Exactly 30 days after being served with process in a suit filed in state court, James Florio filed a notice of removal, asserting that complete-diversity of citizenship among the parties brought the case within federal jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332, 1441(a). All defendants joined Florio’s notice, an essential step. See
Hanrick v. Hanrick,
Florio has filed this appeal to argue that the “first-served defendant rule” is incompatible with § 1446(b). Florio reads “receipt by the defendant” to mean “receipt by the
removing
defendant” rather
*354
than “receipt by
any
defendant”, for the latter dispenses with the definite article. On Florio’s reading only the removing defendant need meet the time requirement, though all defendants still must agree to the federal forum. He also relies on the holding of
Murphy Brothers, Inc. v. Michetti Pipe Stringing, Inc.,
After
Quackenbush v. Allstate Insurance Co.,
§ 1447(d) must be read in pari materia with § 1447(c), so that only remands based on grounds specified in § 1447(c) are immune from review under § 1447(d). As long as a district court’s remand is based on a timely raised defect in removal procedure or on lack of subject-matter jurisdiction—the grounds for remand recognized by § 1447(c)—a court of appeals lacks jurisdiction to entertain an appeal of the remand order under § 1447(d).
Section 1447(d), as construed in Things Remembered, requires us to dismiss Flo-rio’s appeal. Here, just as in Things Remembered, the district judge remanded a proceeding on the statutory ground that removal had been untimely. Florio insists, however, that this case is different because the district judge used extra-statutory criteria to determine timeliness. Instead of sticking with the language of § 1446(b), the district judge relied on two additional rules: the principle that removal is proper only if all defendants join the notice, and the supposed corollary (essential to the first-served defendant rule) that one defendant may join another’s notice only if the joining defendant is eligible to remove on its own. Neither the all-defendants rule nor the first-served-defendant corollary can be found in § 1446(b), which means, Florio concludes, that the case has not been remanded on a statutory ground, making appellate review available.
This is a nice try—close enough to require denial of appellees’ request for sanctions under Fed.R.App.P. 38—but no cigar. Section 1446(b) is not self-contained. No part of the judicial code is.
*355
All statutes depend for their meaning on external norms. Section 1446(b) uses words such as “filed” and “days” and “service” that can be understood only by reference to other sources of law. What it means to “file” a document recently required decision by the Supreme Court. See
Artuz v. Bennett,
— U.S. -,
Gravitt v. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.,
For reasons mentioned in this opinion’s second paragraph, the soundness of the district judge’s decision is questionable. But that was no less true in Gravitt. In the end, this remand was based on a conclusion that the notice of removal was untimely, and such a decision is not reviewable by a court of appeals. Florio’s appeal is dismissed under § 1447(d).
