MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Denise Tremblay and Karen Lawrence, both residents of New Hampshire, brought this class action complaint in New Hampshire Superior Court against the defendant, Philip Morris, Inc. The plaintiffs allege that Philip Morris markets and sells “Marlboro Light” and “Marlboro Ultralight” cigarettes (light cigarettes) in violation of the New Hampshire Consumer Protection Act See N.H.Rev.Stat. Ann. (RSA) ch. 358-A (1995 & Supp.2001).
According to the complaint, Philip Morris intentionally designs its light cigarettes and manipulates their contents to produce misleading tar and nicotine ratings when measured by the Cambridge Filter Method, a method for measuring tar and nicotine levels in cigarettes that has been endorsed by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). Philip Morris allegedly designed its light cigarettes to ensure that users are exposed to smoke with far higher tar and nicotine levels than detected by the Cambridge Filter Method. In other words, the plaintiffs allege that Philip Morris designed its fight cigarettes to intentionally exploit the limitations of the Cambridge Filter Method, thereby allowing it to falsely claim in its advertising and marketing materials that its fight cigarettes are low in tar and nicotine. 1 This, the plaintiffs allege, amounts to consumer fraud.
*414 Philip Morris removed this case to federal court. It asserts that removal is authorized both by the general removal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1441 (1994), because the court has diversity jurisdiction and Philip Morris is not a resident of New Hampshire, and by the federal officer removal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1442(a)(1) (1994 & Supp.2002), because Philip Morris is “a person acting under” the direction of an officer of the United States. The plaintiffs move to remand the action to the New Hampshire Superior Court. For the reasons set forth below, I reject Philip Morris’s arguments and grant plaintiffs’ motion to remand.
I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A defendant seeking to remove a state court action has the burden of demonstrating that the federal court has subject matter jurisdiction.
See Danca v. Private Health Care Sys., Inc.,
I apply this standard in ruling on plaintiffs’ motion to remand.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Removal Based on Diversity Jurisdiction
Philip Morris asserts that removal is warranted under § 1441 because the court has diversity jurisdiction and it is not a New Hampshire resident. The main issue presented by this jurisdictional claim is whether plaintiffs’ complaint satisfies the $75,000 amount in controversy requirement of the diversity statute. 2
The plaintiffs seek actual damages in the form of either a refund of all sums paid by class members who purchased light cigarettes since 1971, or disgorgement of the profits Philip Morris realized from the sales of such cigarettes to class members. They also seek treble damages and attorneys’ fees, costs, and expenses associated with the suit. Although the named plaintiffs assert that the damages are each less than $75,000, Philip Morris argues that the actual damages claimed by named class member Karen Lawrence will exceed the jurisdictional threshold if they are trebled as may be permitted by RSA 358-A:10.
3
*415
Therefore, Philip Morris concludes that'I have diversity jurisdiction over her claim and may exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the other class,members’ claims.
See 28 U.S.C. §
1367
(1993); see also Kanter v. Warner-Lambert Co.,
Philip Morris alternatively contends that the amount in controversy requirement can be satisfied by taking into account the attorneys’ fees that plaintiffs will recover if they are successful. It makes this claim by first asserting that an award of attorneys’ fees in this case would amount to at least $600,000. Next, it contends that the attorneys’ fees should be distributed among the named plaintiffs rather than among the entire class. Using this methodology, Philip Morris concludes that “the amount- in controversy is easily met.” I address each argument in turn.
1. Lawrence’s Damages
The complaint alleges that “[t]he plaintiffs’ damages are each less than $75,000, as are the economic damages of each individual class member.” Phillip Morris nevertheless argues that Lawrence’s potential damages slightly exceed this amount because she claims to have smoked “one and one-half to two packs a day of Marlboro light cigarettes in New Hampshire for a period of approximately 30 years.” Phillip Morris construes this assertion to mean that Lawrence smoked an average of two packs of Marlboro Light cigarettes for a full 30 years. It then takes the $1.24 average price for a pack of Marlboro Light cigarettes during the 30-year period and asserts that Lawrence’s potential damages when trebled exceed $80,000 (2 [packs per day] x $1.24 [per pack] x 365 [days per year] x 30 [years] x 3 [damages trebled] = $81,468).
I reject Philip Morris’s argument because it does not give a fair reading to the complaint as a whole. First, as the above-quoted language reveals, Lawrence claims that she smoked not two packs per day, but an 'average of one and one-half to two packs per day. The fairest way to read this assertion is to construe it to be a claim that she smoked an average of 1.75 packs per day during the period in question. Second, while Lawrence at one point alleges that' she smoked Marlboro Light cigarettes for approximately 30 years, she makes another more precise assertion elsewhere in the complaint that she began smoking Marlboro Light cigarettes in 1973 or 1974 and stopped smoking them in February 2001. This assertion limits her claim to costs she incurred during a period of no more than 28 years and two months. If these more specific assertions are used in Phillip Morris’s equation, Lawrence’s damages are below the jurisdictional amount (1.75 [packs per day] x $1.24 [per pack] x 365 [days per year] x 28 [years] x 3 [damages trebled] = $66,532 + 1.75 x $1.24 x 59 [days in 2001] = $66,660). Given Lawrence’s express assertion in the complaint that her damages are less than $75,000 and the fact that Philip Morris has failed to come forward with any contrary evidence, I am unpersuaded by its argument that Lawrence’s damages could exceed the jurisdictional amount. 4
2. Attorneys’Fees
Philip Morris also claims that, in addition to her actual damages, Lawrence, if successful, will recover her attorneys’ fees and costs.
See
RSA 358-A:10 (autho
*416
rizing award of attorney’s fees to prevailing plaintiff). According to Philip Morris, “the potential attorneys’ fees in this case would amount to at least $600,000.” Philip Morris, citing
In re Abbott Labs.,
Unlike the statute at issue in
In Re Abbott Labs.,
RSA 358-A:10-a does not require that an award of attorneys fees be made to the named plaintiffs rather than the class as a whole.
See id.
at 526-27. Accordingly, the statute does not require deviation from the general rule announced by the Supreme Court in
Snyder,
Because I reject Philip Morris’s aggregation argument, I must also determine whether Lawrence’s pro rata share of potential attorneys’ fees pushes her damages beyond $75,000. Even if one were to double Philip Morris’s estimate regarding attorneys’ fees, a class size of merely one thousand members would result in an award of $1,200 for each member. The probable size of the class in this case— people who smoked light cigarettes during the last three decades — will more than likely be far larger than one thousand members. Adding Lawrence’s potential attorneys’ fees — the generous amount of $1,200 — to her actual damages, Philip Morris has still failed to demonstrate that Lawrence’s damages will exceed $75,000. Therefore, I reject Philip Morris’s argument that the removal is authorized by § 1441.
B. Federal Officer Removal
Philip Morris also argues that removal is proper under § 1442(a)(1), which provides, in pertinent part, that an action may be removed to federal court by “any officer (or any person acting under that officer) of the United States or of any agency thereof, sued in an official or indi
*417
vidual capacity for any act under color of such office_” This provision protects federal officers, federal agencies, and those acting under their direction “against interference in the course of their duties by hostile state courts.”
Fleet Bank-NH v. Engeleiter,
Ordinarily, when removal is sought based on the existence of federal question jurisdiction, the “well pleaded complaint” rule requires the court to determine whether removal is warranted by looking only to the face of the plaintiffs well pleaded complaint rather than to the potential existence of a defense based on federal law.
See Jefferson County v. Acker,
The primary beneficiaries of § 1442(a)(2) are federal officers and agencies. A private party defendant may also invoke § 1442(a)(2) but to do so it must: (1) assert a colorable defense based on federal law in the notice of removal; (2) establish that it was acting under the direction of a federal officer when it engaged in the actions on which the plaintiffs claims are based; and (3) demonstrate that a causal nexus exists between its actions and the federal officer’s use of his governmental office.
See Jefferson County,
Philip Morris argues that it was merely attempting to comply with the FTC’s policies regarding the testing and labeling of light cigarettes when it engaged in the conduct for which it has been sued. Thus, it argues that it has satisfied § 1442(a)(l)’s second requirement. Because this argument is based on both a misunderstanding of FTC’s activities in this area and a mis-characterization of the plaintiffs’ complaint, I find its assertion unpersuasive.
The FTC began its efforts to regulate the marketing of light cigarettes in 1955 by issuing cigarette advertising guides that banned tobacco companies from representing “that any brand of cigarette or the smoke therefrom is low in nicotine or tars ... when it has not been established by competent scientific proof ... that the claim is true.” Cigarette Advertising Guides, 6 Trade Reg. Rptr. (CCH) 39,012 (1995). The advertising guides responded *418 to complaints from tobacco companies that their rivals were misrepresenting tar and nicotine levels in advertisements. See National Institutes of Health, U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human Servs., Pub. No. 02-5074, Risks Associated with Smoking Cigarettes with Low Machine-Measured Yields of Tar and Nicotine 202 (2001); Cigarette Testing, Request for Public Comment, 62 Fed.Reg. 48,158, 48,158 (Sept. 12, 1997). Apparently, however, the advertising guides were unsuccessful in curbing the advertising war or “tar derby” among tobacco companies. Thus, in 1960, “the tobacco industry through the aegis of the [FTC] decided to halt the ‘tar derby’,” and agreed to eliminate the tar and nicotine claims in cigarette advertisements. Tobacco Products and Accessories, 5 Trade Reg. Rptr. (CCH) 11,730 (1988).
In 1966, “to provide a uniform basis for advertising claims,” the FTC sought public comment on the adoption of the Cambridge Filter Method as the standard for measuring tar and nicotine levels.
Shortly after adopting the Cambridge Filter Method, the FTC initiated formal rulemaking procedures, proposing a trade rule mandating the disclosure of tar and nicotine levels in cigarette advertisements. See Federal Trade Commission, Report to Congress (Dec. 21, 1970). In response, Philip Morris and other tobacco companies voluntarily agreed to disclose tar and nicotine levels as determined by the Cambridge Filter Method. Because the tobacco companies voluntarily agreed to such disclosure, the FTC indefinitely suspended its rulemaking proceeding. See id. at app. c.
This discussion of the FTC’s regulatory treatment of light cigarettes demonstrates that the FTC endorsed the use of the Cambridge Filter Method in order to “provide smokers seeking to switch to lower tar cigarettes with a single, standardized measurement with which to choose among the existing brands,” not to direct and control the design or production of low tar cigarettes.
Cf. Ryan,
Nowhere in the complaint do the plaintiffs challenge the enforcement or wisdom of any FTC policy, procedure or regulation. Further, the complaint does not allege that Philip Morris is liable simply for complying with the Cambridge Filter Method and FTC advertising policies. Rather, it clearly and concisely alleges that Philip Morris engages in a course of conduct aimed at manipulating the FTC’s policies by exploiting loopholes in the Cambridge Filter Method. Because the plaintiffs are the masters of their complaint,
see Webster v. Reproductive Health Servs.,
In short, this is not a case where plaintiffs seek to challenge federal policy or official action in a state court forum. Rather, the plaintiffs challenge the conduct of a .private corporation, acting without direction from a federal officer or agency. Allowing this action to be litigated in state court will not interfere with the course of the FTC’s duties nor its policies regarding the regulation of the cigarette industry.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, I determine that Philip Morris fails to demonstrate that removal is warranted under either the general removal statute or the federal officer removal statute. Accordingly, I grant the plaintiffs’ motion to remand (Doc. No. 9) pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1447(a). Because Philip Morris had a good faith basis for seeking removal, given the complexity of the law in this area, I deny plaintiffs’ request (Doc. No. 10) that I exercise my discretion under 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c) to require Philip Morris to bear the costs and attorneys’ fees incurred by plaintiffs as a result of removal.
See Am. Inmate Phone Sys. v. U.S. Sprint,
My findings and conclusions herein apply with equal force to the consolidated case of Shelby Peters v. Philip Morris, Inc., No. 02-245-M. Therefore, Peters is remanded to the Superior Court of New Hampshire, for the County of Rockingham, where it was originally filed.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. For instance, Philip Morris allegedly manipulates the smoke pH in light cigarettes in order to create more ''free” nicotine in the smoke, thereby enhancing the actual nicotine delivery to smokers beyond that measured by mechanized testing. As for alleged design manipulations, the plaintiffs claim that Philip Morris uses microscopic vents that allow air to mix with the smoke, thus diluting the tar and nicotine. These vents are typically covered up by the consumer’s fingers and lips when smoked but remain uncovered when tested by machine.
Cf. F.T.C. v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.,
. The First Circuit has not described the standard of proof that a court should use to determine whether a defendant removing a case based on diversity jurisdiction has met the amount in controversy requirement. In the majority of circuits that have addressed this question, “courts generally require that a defendant establish the jurisdictional amount by a preponderance of the evidence.”
Martin v. Franklin Cap. Corp.,
. Presumably because it deems the issue to have been foreclosed by the Supreme Court's opinions in
Snyder v. Harris,
. Because plaintiffs have asked me to accept as true their assertions that none of the named plaintiffs have incurred damages in . excess of $75,000, they are estopped from arguing otherwise at any later point in this . litigation.
. "Normally, attorney’s fees are excluded from the amount-in-controversy determination .... There are two exceptions to this rule: when the fees are provided for by contract, and when a statute mandates or allows payment of the fees.”
Spielman v. Genzyme
corp.,
. Plaintiffs do not challenge Philip Morris’s claim that it has a colorable preemption defense. Further, because I determine that Philip Morris was not acting under the direction of federal officers when it engaged in the conduct for which it has been sued, I need not address § 1442(a)(l)'s third requirement.
. I am aware of the fact that Philip Morris has unsuccessfully removed under diversity jurisdiction in many other cases. However, the issue here involves an analysis of factual allegations specific to this case. Further, it appears that this is the first time that Philip Morris has advanced an argument for removal based upon the federal officer removal statute.
