KELLI SMALLWOOD, Plаintiff-Appellant, versus ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD COMPANY; MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 02-60782
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit
December 1, 2003
FILED December 1, 2003 Charles R. Fulbruge III Clerk
ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
Before KING, Chief Judge, HIGGINBOTHAM and STEWART, Circuit Judges.
PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:
Appellees Illinois Central and Mississippi Department of Transportation have moved for rehearing following our decision ordering remand of this case to state court.1 Appellees contend that our decision conflated the removal rules applicable to federal question jurisdiction with those governing diversity removal.
In this case, we rejected Illinois Central‘s attempts to remove to federal court based on a preemption defense that barred suit against all defendants. In so doing, we insisted that the joinder of the local defendant be shown to be improper. We applied the common defense rule first enunciated by the Supreme Court in Chesapeake & O. R. Co. v. Cockrell.2 In Cockrell, the Supreme Court reviewed an effort by a diverse railroad to remove a case to federal court on fraudulent joinder grounds. To justify the finding of fraudulent joinder, the railway claimed that the plaintiff‘s negligence charges against the defendants were “each and all ‘false and untrue‘” and that the local defendants were added simply to defeat diversity.3 The Supreme Court rejected the railway‘s argument, noting:
So, when in such a case a resident defendant is joined with the nonresident, the joinder, even although fair upon its face, may be shown by a petition for removal to be only a fraudulent device to prevent a removal; but the showing must consist of a statement of facts rightly engendering that conclusion. Merely to traverse the allegations upon which the liability of the resident defendant is rested, or to apply the epithet ‘fraudulent’ to the joinder, will not suffice: the showing must be such as compels the conclusion that
the joinder is without right and made in bad faith . . . . . . . And while the plaintiff‘s statement was not conclusive upon the railway company, it did operate to lay upon the latter, as a cоndition to a removal, the duty of showing that the joinder of the engineer and fireman was merely a fraudulent device to prevent a removal. Of course, it was not such unless it was without any reasonable basis.
Putting out of view, as must be done, the epithets and mere legal conclusions in thе petition for removal, it may have disclosed an absence of good faith on the part of the plaintiff in bringing the action at all, but it did not show a fraudulent joinder of the engineer and fireman. . . . As no negligent act or omission personal to the railway company was charged, and its liability, like that of the two employees, was, in effect, predicated upon the alleged negligence of the latter, the showing manifestly went to the merits of the action as an entirety, and not to the joinder; that is to say, it indicated that the plaintiff‘s case was ill founded as to all the defendants. Plainly, this was not such a showing as to engender or compel the conclusion that the two employees were wrongfully brought into a controversy which did not concern them.4
The Supreme Court thus made clear that the burden on the removing party is to prove that the joinder of the local parties was fraudulent; a showing that the plaintiff‘s case is barred as to all defendants is not sufficient. When the only proffered justification for fraudulent joinder is that there is no reasonable basis for predicting recovery against the local dеfendant and that showing is
The common defense rule reminds us that the proper focus of a fraudulent joinder claim is whether the joinder of the local parties was fraudulent, a simple concept that is too easily obscured. The fraudulent joinder doctrine is a narrow exception to the rule that diversity jurisdiction requires complete diversity. As such, “the burden of demonstrating fraudulent joinder is a heavy one.”5 To estаblish fraudulent joinder, the party seeking removal to the federal forum must either show “(1) actual fraud in the pleading of jurisdictional facts, or (2) inability of the plaintiff to establish a cause of action against the non-diverse party in state court.”6 Under this second prong, we examine “[i]f there is ‘arguably a reasonable basis for predicting that the state law might impose liability on the facts involved.‘”7 If not, then we conclude that the plaintiff‘s decision to join the local defendant was fraudulent unless that showing a fortiori compels dismissal of all defendants.8 Stated another way, when on a motion to remand a
defendant‘s shоwing that there is no possibility of recovery against the local defendant equally discharges the non-resident defendant, there is no fraudulent joinder, only a lawsuit lacking in merit. In such cases, it makes little sense to single out the local defendants as “sham” defendants and call their joinder fraudulent. In such circumstances, the allegation of fraudulent joinder is more properly an attack on the plaintiff‘s case as such – an allegation that “the plaintiff‘s case [is] ill founded as to all the defendants.”9
Despite Appellees’ contention to the contrary, the common defense rule does not impair a foreign defendant‘s right to remove. In every case where a diverse defendant proves that the plaintiff‘s decision to join a local party is fraudulent, the diverse defendant gains access to the federal courts. If thе foreign defendant fails to prove the joinder fraudulent, then diversity is incomplete and the diverse defendant is not entitled to remove.
Appellees further contend that our decision to apply the common defense rule contradicts prior holdings of this circuit which have allowed a finding of fraudulent joinder based on a common defense. This circuit, however, has never before addressed the common defense rule. The mere fact that prior cases failed to discuss the issue does not grant us license to continue to ignore Supreme Court precedent. Since Cockrell is applicable to this case, we cannot fail to apply the common defense rule simply because it has not been urged in the past.
Appellees’ final contention is that our decision somehow confuses the application of federal question and diversity removal, pointing to the reference in our opinion to the well-pleaded complaint rule. This misconstrues our statements. In the opinion, we noted that Appellees could not remove on the basis of federal question jurisdiction because the only federal question appeared as a defense. Nonetheless, Appellees did just that: they removed on the basis of their federal conflict preemption defense, but attemрted to portray it as an issue of fraudulent joinder. This use of fraudulent joinder would only undermine the well-pleaded complaint rule. We emphasize, however, that the common defense rule is not limited to cases that seek to avoid the well-pleaded complaint rule.
Amici‘s immediate concern is understandably not to protect the abstract rationale underlying diversity jurisdiction. Rather, it is to allow defendants to flee the state courts. Amici argue that on remand, a state court reviewing a case like this one might somehow “improрerly breathe life” into claims that are barred by federal law or some other legal defense. Given this “state court
It is no accident that the first Congress conferred removal jurisdiction, accommodating competing political interests. Removal remains a centerpiece of our federalism. The cry of out-of-state interests seeking to escape local courts is in fact an old and recurring song. To the point, our insistence that diversity
Amici‘s final claim is that the common defense rule undermines judicial economy by forcing a federal district court to remand a meritless case to state court rather than dismiss it outright. This argument, however, fundamentally misconstrues the inquiry on remоval. When a defendant removes a case to federal court on a claim of fraudulent joinder, the district court‘s only inquiry is whether the joinder was fraudulent. Indeed, until the removing party proves that the local defendant has been fraudulently joined, the court does not have thе authority to do more; there is no jurisdiction to evaluate the merits of the suit or dismiss the case. Viewed properly, then, it is not the remand to state court that wastes judicial resources; it is the misguided effort by the diverse party to gain access to the federal forum.
Appellеes understandably seek broader license to escape from state court, but we are not authorized to grant such a request, as compelling as it may be. It is the province of Congress to modify the complete diversity rule by allowing properly joined local defеndants to be disregarded.
The petitions for panel rehearing are DENIED.
