Ronald and Barbara Blackburn were injured in an automobile accident. Sundstrand Corporation’s welfare benefit plan, which is covered by ERISA, paid $25,831 toward the costs of the Blackburns’ medical care. They filed suit in an Illinois court against the driver of the other car and accepted $105,000 in settlement. Two parties, in addition to the Blackburns, have claims against the $105,000 fund: the Blackburns’ lawyer is entitled by a contingent-fee contract to a third of the money, plus costs, and Sundstrand is entitled by virtue of a subrogation clause in its medical-care plan to reimbursement from any judgment. The Blackburns filed in state court a petition to apportion the fund. They asked, in particular, that a portion of their attorney’s fee and expenses be charged against the amount due to Sundstrand, so that a net payment of $17,048 would be deemed to satisfy its subrogation right. At this point Sundstrand removed the case to federal court, which entered a judgment directing the Blackburns to remit the full $25,831.
The district court did not discuss the source of its subject-matter jurisdiction, and we conclude that it had none. Sundstrand removed the case under 28 U.S.C. § 1441(b), which covers “[a]ny civil action of which the district courts have original jurisdiction founded on a claim of right arising under the Constitution, treaties or laws of the United States”. The “civil action” was the tort suit by the Blackburns against the other driver, which assuredly did not arise under the Constitution, treaties, or laws of the United States. Not even the most expansive reading of ERISA covers motor vehicle collisions, just because part of the recovery may inure to the benefit of a plan. The petition to apportion the fund invoked the ancillary jurisdiction of the state court and was part of that original, non-removable action.
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Even if we were to treat the petition as inaugurating a separate “civil action”, removal would have been improper. The fundamental claim — that the Blackburns should be credited, for purposes of their duty to reimburse Sundstrand, with sums paid to the attorney whose work produced the fund— arises under state law. Sundstrand has at most an argument that ERISA preempts application of the state’s common-fund rule. Yet it has been understood for a very long time that a federal defense to a claim arising under state law does not create federal jurisdiction and therefore does not authorize removal. This is true of defenses under ERISA no less than of defenses under other federal statutes.
Franchise Tax Board of California v. Construction Laborers Vacation Trust,
A separate doctrine, misleadingly called “complete preemption,” does permit removal when the plaintiffs own claim depends on ERISA, and the effort to craft a claim under state law reflects artful pleading. See
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Taylor,
Yet another consideration shows that the district court lacked jurisdiction: the Illinois common-fund doctrine is not preempted, so even if § 514(a) sometimes supported removal, Sundstrand would not be assisted. The status of the state’s common-fund doctrine is a recurring question that should be clarified, and the district court’s decision creates a conflict between state and federal courts in the same jurisdiction.
Scholtens v. Schneider,
Section 514(a) preempts state laws “insofar as they ... relate to any employee benefit plan”. Illinois’s common-fund doctrine, like its parallel in federal law, e.g.,
Sprague v. Ticonic National Bank,
Although crediting plan participants with payments to counsel will reduce the plan’s income from the Blackburns’ suit, a state law is not “related” to a plan just because it affects the net amounts the plan pays for health care.
New York State Conference of Blue Cross & Blue Shield Plans v. Travelers Insurance Co.,
Application of the common-fund doctrine therefore is not at all like application of a state anti-subrogation law, which
FMC Corp. v. Holliday,
The judgment of the district court is vacated, and the case is remanded to the district court with instructions to remand this action to state court.
