In this аppeal, we consider the sole question of whether 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c) requires an award of attorney’s fees in each case remanded to the state court because the removal was improper. We make cleаr that the statute is discretionary. Here, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying attorney’s fees to the plaintiff.
I
Lupe Valdes was abducted at knifepoint from a busy Wal-Mart parking lot at 5:30 p.m. on August 2, 1993. Her assailant forced her to drivе to another location, behind a Petsmart store, where he raped her. Valdes sued Wal-Mart, the Wal-Mart general manager of the store from which she was abducted, Terry Williams, and Petsmart in Texas state court. Wal-Mart removed the case to federal district court. Wal-Mart argued that Valdes fraudulently joined the Wal-Mart general manager. The district court denied Valdes’s motion to remand. The district court later entered summary judgment against Valdes’s claims. On аppeal, in an unpublished opinion issued September 4, 1998, 1 we reversed on the basis of improp *292 er removal, and ordered the case remanded to state court. The summary judgment against Valdes was thus mooted. Following our disposition, Valdes made a motion beforе the district court under 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c) for an award of attorney’s fees, costs, and expenses. 2 On April 26, 1999, without explanation, the district court denied Valdes’s motion in its entirety. Valdes appeals this judgment.
II
The decision of the district court to award or not to award attorney’s fees is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
See Avitts v. Amoco Prod. Co.,
In deciding this matter, we do not consider Wal-Mart’s motive in removing the case to district court. To be sure, the district court may award fees even if removal is made in subjective good faith. In 1988, Congress amended § 1447(c) to delete language that might have been construed to necessitate a showing of bad faith removal.
3
See
Pub.L. 100-702, Tit. X, § 1016(c)(1), 102 Stat. 4670. Other circuits have construed this amendment to require a focus on the legal propriety of removal without regard to motive.
See Excell, Inc. v. Sterling Boiler & Mechanical, Inc.,
We do, however, consider objectively the merits of the defendant’s case at the time of removal. See, e.g., Miranti v. Lee, 3. F.3d 925, 928 (5th Cir.1993). In Miranti, an insurance company defendant removed a tort action to federal court based on diversity. After removal, the plaintiff dismissed his action against the individual policyholder. This dismissal limited the plaintiffs recovery to the policy limit, a sum less than the necessary amount in controvеrsy for federal jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Following a trial and adverse verdict, the plaintiff moved to remand the case. The district court granted this motion on the basis of lack of jurisdiction, and awarded costs and attorney’s fees to the plаintiff. We reversed the award of attorney’s fees. In so doing so, we stated: “[W]e are not persuaded that Congress intended for routine imposition of attorney fees against the removing party when the party properly re *293 moved.” (Emphasis added.) Applying a sort of deductive rationale, Valdes would read this language to suggest implicitly that an award of attorney’s fees must be routine if a party improperly removes an action to federal court. Valdes insists, in other words, that when it is subsequently determined that removal was in legal error, attorney’s fees must be granted to the plaintiff. Without demeaning the efforts of Valdes to turn an argument, we cannot accept this sophistic reading of Miranti.
The application of § 1447(c) rеquires consideration of the propriety of the removing party’s actions based on an objective view of the legal and factual elements in each particular case. We evaluate the objective merits of removal at the time of removal, irrespective of the fact that it might ultimately be determined that removal was improper. “[T]he propriety of the defendant’s removal continues to be central in determining whether to impose fees.”
Id.
at 928.
4
See also Daleske v. Fairfield Communities, Inc.,
Wal-Mart argues thаt it had a reasonable belief that removal was proper on the basis of fraudulent joinder of the store manager. We agree. First, Wal-Mart asserts that it has removed at least one similar case and we upheld its removаl on appeal.
See Anne Lacamu v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. and James Quillman,
No. 95-20313,
[jjoimng local employees tо defeat diversity jurisdiction is a common and wasteful practice by attorneys who rarely, if ever, actually pursue claims against those individuals and know that they tend to be judgment proof. The lack of desire to obtain judgments against individuаl employees is most routinely evidenced by non-suits of those individuals either before or during trial.
We would dismiss this argument as speculative and without support in the record but for a subsequent advisement provided us under 5th Cir.R. 28.5 stating that “Valdes non-suited the individuаl, non-diverse Defendant, Terry Williams, with prejudice, prior to opening statements.”
Ill
In sum, we find that Wal-Mart had objectively reasonable grounds upon which to remove this case to district court. Thus, although we earlier concluded that rеmoval was improper, that conclusion does not require the district court to award attorney’s fees on Valdes’s behalf., The district court simply did not abuse its discretion in declining such an award in this case, and its judgment is therefore
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
Valdes v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
et al., Nos. 97-20179 & 97-20610,
. 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c) provides: "... An order remanding the case may require payment of just costs and any actual expenses, including attorney's fees, incurred as a result of the removal.” (Emphasis added.)
. Prior to the 1988 amendment, subsection (c) read in pertinent part: "If at any time before final judgment it appears that the case was removed improvidently and without jurisdiction, the district court shall remand the case, and may order the payment of just costs.”
. In Miranti, we staled:
“The matter is left to the [district] court’s discretion, to be exercised based on the nature of the removal and nature of the remand." Commentary on 1988 Revision by David D. Siegel following 28 U.S.C.A. § 1447 (West.Supp.1993).... Courts considering fees awards under § 1447(c) invariably take into consideration the defendant’s decision to remove. See Vatican Shrimp [Co. v. Solis], 820 F.2d [674] at 681 [(5th Cir. 1987)] (considering complexity and uncertainty of the law on the removal issue in evaluating sanctions); see also Moore [v. Permanente Medical Group], 981 F.2d [443] at 447 [(9th Cir.1992)] (finding some evaluation of merits of remand necessary to review attorney’s fee award, regardless of the standard of review); but see Bucary [v. Rothrock], 883 F.2d [447] at 449 [(6th Cir.1989)] (refusing to review defendant's arguments because to do so would amount to review of the remand)- Although the Bucary court seemingly eschewed consideration of the merits of the defendant's аrgument for removal, it nevertheless considered the “weakness” of "the removal question” in evaluating the district court’s exercise of discretion. Bucary,883 F.2d at 449 .
. Wal-Mart presented this same line of cases in the previous appeal in this сase. Under a deferential standard of review, we held that these cases did not clearly bar Valdes’s claim. That conclusion is not inconsistent with our finding in the instant appeal despite Valdes's *294 conlention that "had [these cаses] truly evidenced a 'trend' as Wal-Mart asserts, presumably the [Fifth Circuit] would not have acted as it did.” The basis of our previous review should be clearly understood. In our disposition with respect to improper removal, we stated: " '[H]aving assumed all of the facts set forth by [Valdes] to be true and having resolved all uncertainties as to state substantive law against the defendant,’ B., Inc. [v. Miller Brewing Co.], 663 F.2d [545] at 550 [(5th Cir. (Unit A) 1981)], we find that there is a reasonable possibility that Valdes has stated a valid Texas law cause of action against Williams.” Such deference to the plaintiff's legal argument, and construction of case law against the removing party, logically explains why a case improperly removed may not merit an award of attorney's fees under § 1447(c). Indeed, in our unpublished opinion, we stated: "If read broadly, the principles of Leitch might well undermine Selph .... But Leitch was not a premises case and we cannot say with full confidence that it will be applied outside of the employer-employee context. Nothing in it expressly reflects that it would be so extended. As explained below, a Texas court of appeals [Deggs ] has recently held that neither Centeq nor Natividad undermines the holding of Selph. We cannot say that that conclusion is so clearly wrong as to be unreаsonable.” If only with respect to Leitch, this language suggests, but for the standard of review, the panel would have concluded that Wal-Mart had a reasonable basis on which to argue that Valdes had no case against its store manager.
