OPINION
Leslie Warthman filed a complaint in the Court of Common Pleas for Delaware County, Ohio, arguing that the Genoa Township Board of Trustees violated the Ohio Open Meetings Law when it terminated her employment without allowing her to respond to the allegations against her at a public hearing. The Township removed the case to the federal district court on the basis that a reference in the complaint to the Due Process Clause of the *1058 Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution created federal question jurisdiction. Holding that the complaint did not state a federal cause of action, the district court remanded Warth-man’s lawsuit to the state court. The district court declined, however, to award Warthman the costs and attorney fees associated with the removal and subsequent remand. For the reasons set forth below, we VACATE the portion of the district court’s judgment that denied Warthman her request for costs and attorney fees and REMAND the case for reconsideration of that issue.
I. BACKGROUND
Warthman worked as a Zoning Inspector for the Genoa Township Board of Trustees in Westerville, Ohio. The Genoa Township Zoning Commission (a separate entity) held a meeting on March 12, 2007 in which sharp differences of opinion were expressed regarding a thirty-acre parcel of property in the Township. Warthman sent an email to the Board of Trustees the following day. According to her complaint in this case, the email contained “harsh and unflattering” criticism of some Zoning Commission members.
At a Board of Trustees meeting on March 14, 2007, a Zoning Commission member requested an executive session between the Zoning Commission and the Board of Trustees. The Board adopted a motion to hold such an executive session to consider taking action against Warthman, unless she requested a public hearing. Warthman responded to the Board’s action by requesting a public hearing, but no such hearing on the matter was held. The Board of Trustees instead met in four separate executive sessions and subsequently terminated Warthman’s employment on the ground that she had “admitted to having violated Township policies.”
After Warthman was terminated, she filed a complaint in the Court of Common Pleas for Delaware County, Ohio. Her complaint alleged in Count One that the Township had violated the Ohio Open Meetings Law by adopting the resolution to fire her in a meeting not open to the public. In Count Two, the complaint asserted that “Defendant is estopped to deny Plaintiffs right to a public name clearing hearing.” This estoppel claim arose from Warthman’s contention that members of the Board of Trustees and the Zoning Commission “agreed that Plaintiff was entitled to a public hearing but at a later date,” and that they had made that representation to her. Paragraph 25 of Warthman’s complaint contained the sole reference to federal law, stating that, “[pjursuant to the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article I Section 16 of the Ohio Constitution, [she] was entitled to a name clearing hearing.”
The Township removed the ease to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. In its Notice of Removal, the Township cited paragraph 25 of the complaint and Count Two, the estoppel claim, asserting that these portions of the complaint “state[d] a Federal Question pursuant to 28 U.S.C. [§ ] 1331.” Warth-man moved to remand the case back to state court and requested an award of “costs and any actual expenses, including attorney fees, incurred as a result of the removal.”
See
28 U.S.C. § 1447(c). The motion to remand explained that paragraph 25 of the complaint referenced the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment simply to satisfy the Ohio Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Ohio Open Meetings Law.
See Matheny v. Frontier Local Bd. of Educ.,
Ruling on the motion to remand the case to state court, the district court “conclude[d] that the complaint, fairly read, invoke[d] only claims under state law.” The district court noted that the complaint made no reference to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 or any other federal statute, that the first count expressly invoked only Ohio law, and that the second count asserted only a common law estoppel claim. As a result, the district court granted the motion to remand the case to the state court. Regarding Warthman’s request for an award of costs and attorney fees, however, the district court said: “Because removal of the action was based upon plaintiffs reference in the Complaint to federal law, the Court concludes that an award of fees or costs to plaintiff would be unjust and is unwarranted.”
The district court’s decision to grant the motion to remand the case to state court is not subject to review by this court.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1447(d);
Powerex Corp. v. Reliant Energy Servs., Inc.,
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of review
District courts have considerable discretion to award or deny costs and attorney fees under 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c), and we will overrule whatever decision is reached only where such discretion has been abused.
Bartholomew v. Town of Collierville,
B. Costs and attorney-fee awards upon remand
A civil case that is filed in state court may be removed by the defendant to federal district court if the plaintiff could have chosen to file there originally. 28 U.S.C. § 1441. If the district court later determines that it lacks subject matter jurisdiction, however, the case must be remanded. 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c). The remand statute provides that “[a]n order remanding the case may require payment of just costs and any actual expenses, including attorney fees, incurred as a result of the removal.”
Id.
This language places an award of costs and attorney fees (hereinafter sometimes collectively referred to simply as “fees” or “fee awards”) squarely within the discretion of the district court, but subject to the guidance set forth by the Supreme Court in
Martin v. Franklin Capital Corp.,
“Absent unusual circumstances,” the Supreme Court instructs that fee awards are appropriate “only where the removing party lacked an objectively reasonable basis for seeking removal.”
Id.
at 141,
Warthman asserts in her brief that “[w]hen a district court denies attorney-fees it abuses its discretion where the Defendant’s argument for removal was devoid of even fair support.” She takes this statement of the rule from
Bartholomew,
Bartholomew
quoted the rule as it was stated in
Aheam,
but did not apply it in the same way because the defendant’s removal in
Bartholomew
was fairly supportable.
Bartholomew,
The Supreme Court in
Martin
noted that Congress designed the costs- and-fees provision in § 1447(c) to permit removal in appropriate cases, while simultaneously “reducing] the attractiveness of removal as a method for delaying litigation and imposing costs on the plaintiff.”
Martin,
In sum, Martin makes clear that a district court’s discretion to award or deny fees under § 1447(c) involves more than an on-off switch that is solely dependent on the objective reasonableness of the removal decision. See id. The rule that this court articulated in Aheam and Bartholomew therefore no longer applies.
C. Denial of Warthman’s request for costs and attorney fees
The district court denied Warthman’s request for costs and attorney fees upon the remand of her case in a single sentence: “Because removal of the action was based upon plaintiffs reference in the Complaint to federal law, the Court concludes that an award of fees or costs to plaintiff would be unjust and would be unwarranted.” As explained above, however, a district court deciding whether to award fees in this situation may not simply look to whether the complaint in the case referenced federal law. It must instead decide whether the removal was objectively reasonable.
Id.
The district court should deny fees “when an objectively reasonable basis exists.”
Id.
On the other
*1061
hand, in cases where the removal was not objectively reasonable or, in the words of this court, where the removal attempt was not “fairly supportable,” the district court may exercise its discretion to award fees or not, keeping in mind the underlying purposes of § 1447(c) awards and the general presumption that fees should be awarded under such circumstances.
Id; Bartholomew,
In the present case, the district court did not apply the correct legal standard. We therefore conclude that the court abused its discretion when it denied costs and attorney fees to Warthman.
See United States v. 2903 Bent Oak Highway,
A defendant who seeks to remove a case pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441(b) bears the burden of demonstrating that the case as pled falls within the federal question jurisdiction of the district court.
Eastman v. Marine Mech. Corp.,
As an initial matter, the Township could not have based removal jurisdiction on Count One of Warthman’s complaint. That count rested exclusively upon the Ohio Open Meetings Law, and the district court correctly noted that Count One “expressly invoke[d] only Ohio Law.” See Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 121.22. The Township made no attempt in its Removal Notice to find a federal claim buried within the first count of the complaint, and it makes no such attempt on appeal.
We nevertheless note that Count One incorporated paragraph 25, with its reference to the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. But as the district court recognized, this reference was made in order to satisfy the judicially created limitation on the Ohio Open Meetings Law, which holds that the law provides a right to a public hearing only if the hearing is “elsewhere provided by law.”
See Matheny v. Frontier Local Bd. of Educ.,
The Township instead purported to find a federal question in Count Two of Warth-man’s complaint. That Count, like the first, incorporated paragraph 25’s reference to the U.S. Constitution. The complaint then stated that “[defendant is es-topped to deny Plaintiffs right to a public name clearing hearing.” In her prayer for relief pursuant to Count Two, Warthman asked that the court “find, declare and determine that Defendant is estopped from denying that Plaintiff had a right to a name clearing hearing which is the predicate for her hearing under R.C. 121.22(G)(1)[,]” a provision of the Ohio Open Meetings Law. The Township’s Notice of Removal asserted that paragraph 25 and Count Two together stated a federal cause of action.
On appeal, the Board expands on this theory. It argues that “Plaintiffs Complaint appeared to attempt a ... due process claim pursuant to the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.” The Fourteenth Amendment has in fact been held to provide a procedural due process right to a name-clearing hearing in cases that resemble Warthman’s.
See, e.g., Quinn v. Shirey,
A plaintiff employed by a public entity must plead a laundry list of elements in order to effectively state a claim that stigmatizing statements “deprived [him or her] of a liberty interest and entitled [him or her] to a name-clearing hearing.” Id. The statements must have been made publicly and voluntarily by a public employer “in conjunction with the plaintiffs termination from employment.” Id. In addition, “the plaintiff must claim that the charges made against him were false.” Id. The charges must go beyond allegations of “merely improper or inadequate performance, incompetence, neglect of duty[,] or malfeasance.” Id. Finally, the plaintiff must request a name-clearing hearing from the employer before filing his or her complaint. Id. at 322.
The Township lists these elements, and correctly notes that the facts pled by Warthman in this case might have supported a Due Process claim. But Warth-man points out in response that, had she sought relief pursuant to the Due Process Clause, she would have been required to do so through the vehicle of a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim.
See Thomas v. Shipka,
Some complaints, however, particularly those filed by pro se plaintiffs, have asserted claims for relief under the U.S. Constitution directly. District courts have on occasion interpreted such claims as § 1983 actions.
See, e.g., Jordan v. Moore,
No. 99-3489,
Warthman took great care to assert only state-law claims in her complaint, a choice that she was fully entitled to make even if it meant foregoing an available federal cause of action.
See Alexander v. Elec. Data Sys. Corp.,
Warthman’s complaint was not sloppily drafted. It neatly laid out two state-law causes of action and did not invite the Township — as a less careful complaint might have done — to latch onto the constitutional reference and imply a federal claim where none was stated. Warthman’s freedom to choose state law in this manner would be significantly undermined by a rule that granted defendants the freedom to safely second guess a plaintiffs decision and remove to federal court on the basis of claims that could have been pled, but were not.
See Alexander,
Other plaintiffs in Warthman’s situation — those who choose to forego federal claims and secure a state forum — sometimes expressly disclaim any arguable federal cause of action in the text of their complaints.
See, e.g., Brown v. Vickers Employees Credit Union,
Defendants in similar cases need not worry about losing opportunities to remove where the plaintiff invokes only state law but later changes her mind. The defendant’s right to remove is preserved if the plaintiff later reveals that she wishes to make a federal claim after all. See 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b) (“If the case stated by the initial pleading is not removable, a notice of removal may be filed within thir *1064 ty 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 .... ”).
A reference to the U.S. Constitution in a complaint should be read in the context of the entire complaint to fairly ascertain whether the reference states a federal cause of action or, as in Warth-man’s case, simply supports an element of a state claim.
See, e.g., Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc. v. Thompson,
The Township instead rested removal on an isolated mention of the Fourteenth Amendment in a carefully drafted complaint that pled only state-law claims. Its basis for removal was not “objectively reasonable” under these circumstances. We therefore remand the case to the district court so that it may consider whether, in light of the
Martin
standard discussed above, an award of costs and attorney fees to Warthman is appropriate and, if so, the amount of the award.
See Martin,
546 U. S at 141,
III. CONCLUSION
For all of the reasons set forth above, we VACATE the portion of the district court’s judgment that denied Warthman her request for costs and attorney fees and REMAND the case for reconsideration of that issue.
