Defendants removed this tort suit from state to federal court under the diversity jurisdiction, but the district judge soon remanded it, ruling that the papers did not establish that the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000. Back in state court, plaintiffs revealed in discovery that they suffered more than $75,000 in damages. Defendants filed a second notice of removal, and again the district judge remanded — not because of any jurisdictional problem, for the requirements of 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a) are satisfied, but because in the judge’s view successive removals are impermissible. Defendants now seek a writ *782 of mandamus to compel the district court to recall its remand.
First in line is the question whether we are authorized to review the district court’s order — and, if so, whether appeal or mandamus is the proper device. Relying on 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d), plaintiffs insist that we dismiss the petition. Section 1447(d) says that “[a]n order remanding a case to the State court from which it was removed is not reviewable on appeal or otherwise”, and literal application of this language would be dispositive. But the Supreme Court has not read it literally. Instead the Court deems § 1447(d) linked to § 1447(c), which authorizes remands for lack of jurisdiction and defects in removal procedure (as § 1446 defines those procedural requirements). “[Ojnly remands based on grounds specified in § 1447(c) are immune from review under § 1447(d).”
Things Remembered, Inc. v. Petrarca,
Appeal rather than mandamus is the right route. Although
Thermtron
stated that mandamus is essential and appeal impermissible,
Quackenbush
reversed that conclusion.
Nothing in § 1446 forecloses multiple petitions for removal. Section 1446(c) expressly authorizes sequential petitions in criminal cases, and the silence on this subject in § 1446(b), which covers civil litigation, can’t reasonably be understood to reflect a prohibition. Silence leaves the matter to judges — though with a broad hint about the answer. The second paragraph of § 1446(b) reads:
If the case stated by the initial pleading is not removable, a notice of removal may be filed within thirty days after receipt by the defendant, through service or otherwise, of a copy of an amended pleading, motion, order or other paper from which it may first be ascertained that the case is one which is or has become removable, except that a case may not be removed on the basis of jurisdiction conferred by section 1332 of this title more than 1 year after commencement of the action.
This tells us that even when a case is not removable at the outset, a notice of removal may be filed within 30 days after it becomes removable. This implies that an unsuccessful earlier attempt to remove is not dispositive. A premature removal may *783 lead to a perfectly justified remand; but when matters change — for example, by dismissal of a party whose presence spoiled complete diversity of citizenship, or by a disclosure that the stakes exceed the jurisdictional amount — the case may be removed, provided only that it is less than one year old. Defendants in our case filed their (second) notice of removal within 30 days after plaintiffs revealed that they seek more than $75,000 in damages, and less than a year after the state action commenced. Section 1446(b) shows that this step was proper.
The district judge attributed the anti-multiple-removal rule to
In re Amoco Petroleum Additives Co.,
Well, then, should we now create a rule forbidding multiple attempts to remove civil cases to federal court? As far as we can see, only one court of appeals has considered that possibility — and it has held that a litigant may try more than once.
O’Bryan v. Chandler,
The only effect of adopting an absolute one-bite rule would be to encourage plaintiffs to be coy. . Complaints need not include an
ad damnum.
This poses difficulties for defendants who believe that the stakes exceed $75,000 and prefer the federal forum. How is the amount in controversy to be established? Courts accept good-faith estimates by defendants as well as by plaintiffs, see
The Barbers, Hairstyling for Men & Women, Inc. v. Bishop,
Reversed and Remanded.
