ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR REMAND
FACTS
This is а procedurally and factually complicated case involving a dispute between condominium owners, the condominium association, the board of directors, and others associated with the property. Plaintiffs Thomas and Lorinna Schmidt filed a Complaint in U.S. District Court for the District of Hawaii in 1988. That case was assigned to Judge Ezra. When it became apparent that the federal case would be dismissed for lack of diversity, the Schmidts, on January 3, 1989, filed their case in state court. Judge Ezra subsequently dismissed the federal action.
A fourth-party complaint in the state action was served on fourth-party defendant Paul Jacobi, alleging, inter alia, violations of 18 U.S.C. § 1961(3) (Rico) and 18 U.S.C. § 1962(b) (racketeering). On October 9, 1990, Jacobi filed a removal petition in the First Circuit Court of the State of Hawaii, based on his status as a fourth-party defendant and also filed a fifth-party complaint in the action. The removed action is now before this Court.
Numerous defendants move this Court to remand the case to state court and for an award of fees, costs, and sanctions. Fourth-party defendant Paul Jacobi moves this Court to disqualify the law firm of Dinman, Nakamura, Elisha & Nakatani *701 from representing anyone besides themselves in this case.
DISCUSSION
A. The Removal Petition Was Based on Diversity Jurisdiction
Title 28 U.S.C. § 1441 allows removal to federal district court in certain circumstances when the district court has original jurisdiction of the matter. The district court analyzes the complaint to determine if federal jurisdiction could be invoked, either by diversity or federal question.
Schroeder v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
Jacobi does not now contest the lack of diversity. Instеad, he claims that the petition for removal incorrectly stated the diversity statute as the basis for the petition. He claims that he meant to cite 28 U.S.C. § 1331, not § 1332. Section 1331 is the federal question jurisdictional statute, and Jacobi points out that he cited the correct jurisdictional basis in his fifth-party complaint which he filed. Count IV of the fourth pаrty complaint alleges violations of federal statutes. It seems clear that the error was more than a mere typographical error, however, because there would be no need for Jacobi to mention the $50,000 amount in controversy requirement if he was intending to base his removal on federal question jurisdiction.
The remоval petition must set forth “a short and plain statement of the grounds for removal.” 28 U.S.C. § 1446(a). Jacobi’s petition fails to provide a valid statement for the grounds of removal. Removal petitions may be amended freely within the thirty-day period set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b).
Northern Illinois Gas Co. v. Aireo Industrial Gases,
After the thirty-day period has elapsed, the Ninth Circuit rule is that the “removal petition cannot be thereafter amended to add allegations of substance but solely to clarify ‘defective’ allegations of jurisdiction previously made.
Barrow Dev. Co. v. Fulton Insur. Co.,
This Cоurt, however, must look to both the fourth-party complaint that is the basis for the removal petition, as well as the petition itself, in order to determine the sufficiency of the removal procedure.
See Schroeder v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
Finally, two competing policies are involved. First, the policy that the removal statutes are to be strictly construеd against removal militates for not allowing the petition to be removed.
Boggs v. Lew
*702
is,
The thirty-day period for amending the removal petition has lapsed. The petition, as it now stands, is insufficient. However, even if this Court were to grant Jacobi leave to amend his removal petition in order to state the correct ground for federal jurisdiction, the removal must fail because this Court finds that fourth-party defendant Jacobi may not remove this action to federal court.
B. Third-Party Complaints and Removal Jurisdiction
Even if this Court looks beyond the facе of his incorrect removal petition, determines that the petition is truly meant to be based on federal question jurisdiction, and allows the removal petition to be amended, the removal must still fail.
The removal in this case is based on the fourth-party complaint in which Jacobi is named as a fourth-party defendant. The question of whether removal of state actions to federal court may be based on third or fourth-party complaints has not been definitively answered. Section § 1441(a) provides that only defendants may remove cases. The courts are split on whether “defendants” in this context means only defendants joined in the original complaint. The majority view is that the determination of who is a defendant is determined by the original complaint, not subsequent third or fourth-party complaints. A leading treatise states:
We believe that the reference in the general removal statute, § 1441, is only [sic] to plaintiff’s defendants and does not include such defendants as third-party defendants, cross-claim defendants, and othеr parties that are not defending a claim asserted against them by the plain-tiff_ If the plaintiff and the plaintiffs defendants must, or have chosen to, adjudicate their suit in a state forum, we fail to find any statutory right clearly given to other type defendants, by the general removal § 1441, to choose a federal forum....
1A
Moore’s Federal Practice
¶¶ 0.157[7], (1989).
Accord Share v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
In a case that, like the instant one, the third-party removal was based on the assertion of a federal question in the third-party complaint, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals stated that, in the broad run of cases third-party defendants may not remove cases under § 1441(c).
Thomas v. Shelton,
The only other court of appeals to consider the issue has held that third-рarty defendants may remove actions, but only if the removal is based on a cause of action in the third-party complaint that is “separate and independent” from the other claims in the case pursuant to § 1441(c).
See Carl Heck Engineers v. Lafourche Paris Police,
There is, however, a second, stronger reason for not allowing third-party removal. Allowing such removal nullifies the original plaintiff’s choice of forum, even if the original plaintiff carefully structured his lawsuit to ensure that it could not be removed. As one court put it, to allow a third-party defendant to remove is akin to permitting the “tail to wag the dog.”
Luebbe v. Presbyterian Hosp.,
As discussed above, the minority of courts that havе allowed third-party removal have done so only when removal is based upon a separate and independent cause of action. Most of that minority of courts attempt to further balance the policies underlying this issue by remanding the main action and retaining only the separate, removed action.
See Carl Heck Engineers, supra,
Judge King of this district recently declined to squarely decide the issue.
See Queen Victoria Corp. v. Ins. Specialists of Hawaii,
Fourth-party defendant Jacobi urges this Court to adopt the minority position and allow removal of his claim. Jacobi argues that the federal claims in the fourth-party complaint are separate and independent from those in the main case. Further, Jacobi argues that allowing removal in this case will not prejudice the main plaintiffs in this case, the Schmidts, because the Schmidts testified at the hearing on this motion that they are amenable to the case being removed to federal court.
This Court, however, is not inclined to follow the minority position. First, by allowing third-party removal, the original plaintiff’s choice of forum is subjugated to the third-party defendant’s choice of forum. There is no indication that Congress intended such a result when it drafted the removal statutes. The only way to respect the plaintiff’s choice of forum and also allow third-party removal is to allow removal only of separate and independent third-party claims, and remanding all other claims to the state court. That “solution” defeats the judicial economy which the re *704 moval statutes seek to promote by allowing removal of an entire case.
This case is a good example of how allowing removal of the third-party action would defeat judicial economy. Jacobi argues that the claim is separate and independent for purposes оf removal under § 1441(c), but also urges this Court to keep the entire case — not just the fourth-party federal claims — because the fourth-party claims are also substantially intertwined with the main case. 2 However, the minority of courts that allow third-party removal almost invariably premise their decision on remanding all but the separate and independent claims to state court in order to respect the original plaintiffs’ choice of forum. Further, even in a case such as this one where the original plaintiffs are amenable to the fourth-party removal, allowing such removal would cause judicial inefficiencies. The main case has been proceeding in stаte court for over a year. There have been dispositive motions in state court. Removal of the federal claims now would result in two courts expending resources on the case, even though by Jacobi’s own admission the federal claims are intertwined and related to the claims in the state action.
This Court finds the majority position of not allowing removal by third-party defendants to be the better approach. There appears to be no reason why third-party defendants should be able to defeat a plaintiff’s choice of forum if the original defendants cannot do so. Even if that problem could be resolved in some cases by removing the third-pаrty claims and remanding the rest of the case, such an approach nullifies the judicial economy that the removal statute seeks to promote. Those concerns, coupled with the Ninth Circuit rule construing the removal statute strictly against removal, militate in favor of remanding this case to state court.
C. Award of Costs, Fees, and Sanctions
Title 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c) provides in pаrt that “[a]n order remanding the case may require payment of just costs and any actual expenses, including attorney fees, incurred as a result of the removal.” The defendants bringing this motion move this court for such an order.
The award of such costs and expenses is discretionary. The movants argue that such an award should be issued in this casе because the removal was based on diversity, even though it was obvious that there was a lack of diversity in light of the case being dismissed for lack of diversity earlier by Judge Ezra.
See Ralphs Grocery Co., Div. of Federated Dept. Stores, Inc. v. Meat Cutters Union,
It cannot be said with any degree of certainty that Jаcobi’s reliance on diversity as a basis for jurisdiction was more than an oversight on his part. Because it appears that the reliance was inadvertent, this Court denies the motion for costs, fees, and sanctions. The minority position regarding third-party removal is a plausible legal and factual basis for asserting removal jurisdiction in the case based on federal questions. Further, if the minority position were adopted, only the fourth-party defendants in this case would need to join in the removal because the action would have to be shown to be “separate and independent.”
See Lemke v. St. Margaret Hosp.,
*705 D. The Motion to Disqualify Law Firm
Because removal was ineffective in this case, this Court has no jurisdiction to address Jacobi’s motion to disqualify the Din-man law firm.
CONCLUSION
The motion to remand is granted. The removal petition relied upon diversity jurisdiction when no such jurisdiction existed in this case. Even if this Court were to look beyond the face of the rеmoval petition and allow the removal petition to be amended to assert federal question jurisdiction as the basis for removal, the fourth-party defendants may not remove actions to federal court.
This Court finds that the reliance on diversity jurisdiction for removal was inadvertent, and that there was a reasonable basis in fact and law to assert removal based on the federal questions in the fourth-party complaint. Accordingly, this Court denies the motion for fees, costs, and sanctions.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Another possible reason for permitting removal is to protect citizens of foreign states from possible prejudice in state court.
See Ford Motor Credit Co. v. Aaron-Lincoln Mercury,
. Jacobi obviously is walking a fine line with this argument. While it may be possible for a claim to be “separate and independent” while also being substantially intertwined with the main case, Jacobi has neglected to set forth a coherent or detailed argument as to why that is the case in this instance.
