This is an interlocutory appeal from an order of the Superior Court (Mangones, J.) granting the motion to dismiss filed by the defendants, Flint Hills Resources LP (Flint Hills) and Western Refining Yorktown, Inc. (Yorktown). See Sup. Ct. R. 8. We affirm in part, reverse in part and remand.
We accept the statement of the case and facts as presented in the interlocutory appeal statement and rely upon the record for additional facts as necessary.
See In the Matter of Berg & Berg,
The proceedings in the multidistrict litigation included a case management order that established dates by which plaintiffs with pending cases could amend their complaints, as of right, to add additional defendants. The State’s amended complaint was due by late October 2004. After the district court denied its motion to remand, the State sought court approval to amend its complaint to add parties without waiving its objection to the district court’s exercise of subject matter jurisdiction. The motion was granted, and the State timely filed its first amended complaint naming Flint Hills and Yorktown as defendants. In November, the State served Flint Hills and Yorktown with the amended complaint in accordance with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The State served Flint Hills by personally serving its in-house counsel at its corporate headquarters in Kansas. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 4(h)(1)(B). Yorktown was served in a similar manner. See id.
Subsequently, the State sought interlocutory review of the federal district court’s denial of its motion to remand. After granting review, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the district court’s order and
remanded the matter to the superior court in New Hampshire.
See In re Methyl Tertiary Butyl Ether
(“MTBE”),
I
The superior court subsequently transferred the following questions for our consideration:
1. Did the Superior Court err in concluding that service of process upon Flint Hills and Yorktown in accordance with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, pursuant to order and process of a federal court that lacked subject matter jurisdiction, was improper service for purposes of New Hampshire law once the case was remanded to state court and requires their dismissal?
2. Did the Superior Court err in concluding that Flint Hills and Yorktown must be dismissed, notwithstanding their actual notice of the lawsuit?
3. Did the Superior Court err in concluding that the First Amended Complaint filed in federal court “remains viable” because leave to amend and to add additional parties likely would have been granted by the Superior Court had the case not been removed to federal court?
We answer the first question in the affirmative, and hold that the trial court erred when it concluded that Flint Hills and Yorktown were not properly served. To the extent that the second question asks whether the superior court erred by dismissing Flint Hills and Yorktown solely on the ground that service was improper, it is a subsidiary question to the first question, and we answer it in the affirmative. Flint Hills and Yorktown should not have been dismissed on that ground because they were, in fact, properly served. To the extent that the second question asks whether Flint Hills and Yorktown should be dismissed, nonetheless, because they lack sufficient contacts with New Hampshire, it asks us to determine an issue the superior court has not yet addressed, and we decline to answer it. We answer the third question in the negative, and hold that the trial court did not err in concluding that the first amended complaint remains viable. We, thus, affirm the trial court’s decision in part and reverse it in part.
Although Flint Hills and Yorktown assert that the State is judicially estopped from arguing that the first amended complaint remains viable, they concede that the trial court did not certify judicial estoppel as an interlocutory appeal question. Because this issue is outside the scope of the interlocutory questions presented, we decline to address it.
See Everitt v. Gen. Elec. Co.,
II
Flint Hills and Yorktown argue that the superior court lacked personal jurisdiction over them because they were never properly served with a valid writ. We first consider whether the first amended complaint was valid, and then consider whether Flint Hills and Yorktown were properly served with it.
A
Flint Hills and Yorktown contend that the first amended complaint was invalid because the federal district court that originally allowed the State to amend its
Moreover, even if the court order were material, after a case has been remanded for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, the effect to be given federal court orders is a matter of state policy.
See Ayres v. Wiswall,
Flint Hills and Yorktown assert that because federal appellate courts have ruled that orders issued by federal district courts without subject matter jurisdiction are of no effect,
see, e.g., Homestead Ins. Co., Inc. v. Casden Co.,
Because the superior court’s decision to adopt the federal court’s order was discretionary, we review it under our unsustainable exercise of discretion standard.
See State v. Lambert,
B
To the extent that Flint Hills and Yorktown argue that the superior court also erred by accepting the first amended complaint because it was filed in federal court rather than in state court, we disagree. As with federal court orders, the effect to be given pleadings filed in federal court before a case is remanded is for state courts to determine.
Ayres,
The older cases were decided when defendants acted at their peril by removing a case to federal court without protecting and preserving their rights under state rules of procedure.
Laguna Village,
Several policy considerations support giving effect to pleadings filed in federal court before remand to state court. The first is judicial efficiency and economy.
Laguna Village,
Giving effect to the first amended complaint furthers all of these policies. In particular, since being served with the first amended complaint, Flint Hills and Yorktown have been fully apprised of the federal court proceedings and of the remand to superior court.
See Laguna Village,
Flint Hills and Yorktown urge us to reach a different result because the pleading at issue is an amended complaint that added them as defendants. Whether a state court should give effect to a complaint that was amended in federal court to add parties is a matter that is rarely litigated. Only a handful of cases address this issue, all of which support giving effect to the
first amended complaint in this case.
See El Chico Restaurants v. Transp. Ins. Co.,
In
El Chico Restaurants,
the plaintiff originally filed a class action suit against several defendants in state court.
El Chico Restaurants,
Although Georgia law requires court permission before parties may be added, the appellate court ruled that the federal court’s permission to add parties satisfied Georgia law. Id. at 682-83. The court viewed the federal court order allowing the amendment as valid, and concluded that the trial court could not simply ignore it. Id. at 683. Dismissing the complaint was, therefore, error. Id. As the court explained:
This conclusion is consistent with the notion of fairness to the parties, because the intent of the [federal] court’s ruling is clear, because compliance with the former order serves the purpose of judicial economy, and most importantly, because effectuating the intent of the previous order avoids the inequitable result of dismissal on the hypertechnical basis that a party should have obtained from the superior court some type of “second permission” to amend. Dismissal is fundamentally unfair when permission to add parties was given by the district court and the parties acted consistently with the [federal] court’s ruling in filing an amended complaint.
Id.
The court in
Craig
likewise found to be valid a complaint that the plaintiff had amended to add parties pursuant to a federal court order.
Craig,
After remand, the original defendant answered the amended complaint and moved for judgment on the pleadings. Id. at 459. The state court granted the motion and dismissed the case. Id. On appeal, the Craig court rejected the defendant’s argument that “not only must the federal court remand a case removed from state court if it lacks subject matter jurisdiction, but also that such a pending ruling on jurisdiction divests the court of jurisdiction to allow any party to amend his or her pleadings in any fashion.” Id. The court explained that the federal court had the exclusive authority to determine whether it had the jurisdiction to allow the plaintiff to amend her complaint, and that state courts could not set aside, amend or ignore this determination. Id. at 460. Thus, the court ruled, the state court had received the case on remand in precisely the same posture as it had existed in the federal court. Id. Because the case, when remanded, was governed by the amended complaint, that complaint was deemed to be properly before the state court. Id.
The case later was remanded for lack of diversity jurisdiction. Id. The parties disputed whether the state court should give effect to the pleadings filed in federal court. Id. For policy reasons, the Hansen court decided “the better rule favors giving continued effect to those pleadings.” Id. at 323. Not only would adopting the pleadings avoid unnecessary duplication of effort, but it would also “result in [the state] court’s renewing its jurisdiction with the case in exactly the same posture as when it was remanded from federal court.” Id.
We find the reasoning of these cases persuasive, and, accordingly, hold that the trial court did not err when it concluded that the first amended complaint remained viable after remand.
C
Having concluded that the first amended complaint is viable, we next consider whether it was properly served. Flint Hills and Yorktown argue that service was improper because it did not strictly comply with New Hampshire statutes governing service of process. For the purposes of this interlocutory appeal, we will assume, without deciding, that service did not comply with New Hampshire statutes.
Flint Hills and Yorktown assert that because “[p]roper service of process is a necessary prerequisite to obtaining jurisdiction over an out-of-state
defendant,” and because they were never properly served, the superior court never obtained personal jurisdiction over them.
Estate of Lunt v. Gaylor,
None of the cases to which Flint Hills and Yorktown cite, however, involve a case that was remanded from federal court. The State contends that a different analysis applies in such a situation. It correctly maintains that because the case was in federal court when the first amended complaint was filed, the State had only to comply with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure when serving it. See Fed. R. ClV. P. 81(c)(1). The State argues that requiring it to re-serve Flint Hills and Yorktown now, after remand to superior court, would contravene New Hampshire’s strong policy of deciding cases on their merits.
While we recognize that, generally, we have required strict compliance with New Hampshire’s statutory requirements for service of process to obtain jurisdiction over a defendant,
see Nault,
In
Hansen,
the court ruled that service under the federal rules was sufficient to vest the state court with personal jurisdiction over a defendant.
Hansen,
We find this reasoning convincing. Here, as in
Hansen,
there is nothing to suggest that either Flint Hills or Yorktown would be deprived of its right
to notice and an opportunity to be heard if service under the federal rules is deemed sufficient. Requiring re-service in this case, as in
Hansen,
would conflict with our strong policy of deciding cases on their merits and of favoring substance over procedural form.
See Karch v. BayBank FSB,
Because Flint Hills and Yorktown do not dispute that they were properly served pursuant to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure while the case was pending in federal court, we hold that service was proper for the purposes of New Hampshire law. We, therefore, reverse the trial court’s decision to dismiss Flint Hills and Yorktown on the ground that service was improper. We remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in part; reversed in part; remanded.
