MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Plaintiff Yellow Transportation, Inc. filed this action in state court against defendant Apex Digital, Inc. seeking more than $92,000 in past due freight charges. Defendant filed a notice of removal invoking this court’s diversity jurisdiction. This matter is presently before the court on plaintiffs motion to remand (Doc. 2). By way of this motion, plaintiff argues that the court should remand this case because defendant failed to attach to its notice of removal a copy of the state court summons served on defendant, thus making the removal defective under 28 U.S.C. § 1446(a). For the reasons explained below, the, court will deny plaintiffs motion to remand.
A civil action is removable if a plaintiff originally could have brought the action in federal court. 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a).. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1446(a), a defendant desiring to remove a case to federal court must file
a notice of removal signed pursuant to Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and containing a short and plain statement of the grounds for removal, together with a copy of all process, pleadings, and orders served upon such defendant or defendants in such action.
(Emphasis added.) “[Statutes conferring jurisdiction upon the federal courts, and particularly removal statutes, are to be narrowly construed.”
Pritchett v. Office Depot, Inc.,
In this case, it is" undisputed that defendant failed to follow the required procedure by failing to attach a copy of the summons to the notice of removal. On this basis alone, plaintiff contends that remand is warranted. In response, defendant argues that its failure to attach the summons to the notice of removal does not require remand and, instead, that the court should allow defendant to cure this defect by filing an amended notice of removal. Plaintiff, however, contends that defendant cannot cure the defect because the thirty-day period within which defendant was required to file a proper notice of removal has expired. 1 The pivotal issue, then, is whether the proper remedy for defendant’s failure to attach the summons is to remand the case or allow defendant to cure the defect by filing an amended notice of removal notwithstanding expiration of the thirty-day removal period.
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There are essentially two different viewpoints on this issue. The predominant view is that the removing party’s failure to file the required state court papers is “curable in the federal courts if there is a motion to remand.” 14C Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice & Procedure § 3733, at 350-51 (3d ed.1998). This viewpoint stems from the Fifth Circuit’s holding in
Covington v. Indemnity Insurance Co. of North America,
This viewpoint is also supported by the Seventh Circuit’s holding in
Riehl v. National Mutual Insurance Co.,
The other line of authority on this issue is relied on by plaintiff in support of its motion to remand. Plaintiff predominantly relies on the case of
Kisor v. Collins,
The general rationale of the cases granting remand where the removing party has failed to file the required state court papers within the thirty-day removal period is based on their reading of the interrelationship of the language in the current version of the removal statutes.
Coving-ton, Riehl,
and their progeny, on the other hand, derive their origin from a prior version of § 1447(c), as both
Covington
and
Riehl
predated the 1988 amendments to § 1447. Prior to that time, § 1447(c) required remand “ ‘[i]f at any time before final judgment it appears that the case was removed improvidently and without jurisdiction.’ ”
Sheet Metal Workers’ Int’l Ass’n, AFL-CIO v. Carter,
A motion to remand the case on the basis of any defect other than lack of subject matter jurisdiction must be made within 30 days after the filing of the notice of removal under section 1446(a). If at any time before final judgment it appears that the district *1217 court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, the case shall be remanded.
Under the amended version of the statute, there are essentially “two types of improperly removed cases: those in which the federal court has no subject matter jurisdiction and those with defects in the removal procedure itself.”
Huffman v. Saul Holdings Ltd. P’ship,
The court wishes to clarify that it is not addressing here the extent to which remand might be warranted for other types of procedural defects which also fall within the literal language of the first sentence of § 1447(c). The Tenth Circuit has made it clear that when the plaintiff raises a timely objection to the defendant’s failure to remove the case within the thirty-day removal period, the court should order remand.
See Huffman,
It has been stated that the requirement that a removing party file all of the required state court papers “is obviously intended to provide the district court with the record materials necessary to enable the court and the litigants to delineate the issues to be tried.”
Riehl,
This court has, however, located helpful guidance on this issue from the Supreme Court. Long ago, the Supreme Court addressed the propriety of a trial court’s order remanding a case to state court based on a defendant’s failure to file the state court record within the time period required under an earlier version of the removal statute. In
St. Paul & Chicago Rwy. Co. v. McLean,
abundantly sustain the proposition that the failure of the defendant to file the copy [within the required time period] does not deprive that court of jurisdiction to proceed in the action, and that whether it should do so or not upon the filing of the copy, is for it to determine. In this case it was undoubtedly within the sound legal discretion of the [trial] court to proceed as if the copy had been filed within the time prescribed by statute.
Id.
at 216,
Nothing in the language of § 1447(c) itself suggests a view contrary to the one stated by the Supreme Court in McLean. Where this court departs from the logic of cases such as Kisor and Employers-Shop-mens Local 516 Pension Trust, which seek to give meaning to the first sentence of § 1447(c) by requiring remand for such procedural defects when those defects are the subject of a timely objection, is that those cases have not distinguished between the statutory directives for the two different types of grounds for remand. Significantly, the second sentence of § 1447(c) states that the district court “shall” remand the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The district court has no discretion in this respect. Notably absent from the first sentence of the statute, however, is any indication of the extent to which the court must or should remand the case based on non-jurisdictional defects. Simply stated, the statute is silent on the issue. Thus, while the court is certainly mindful that removal statutes are to be strictly construed and all doubts resolved in favor of remand, the court finds nothing *1219 in the statute that requires remand for the particular procedural defect at issue here.
Additionally, nothing in the legislative history of the 1988 amendments to § 1447(c) suggests a congressional intent that is contrary to the Supreme Court’s holding in McLean. The legislative history does not suggest that Congress amended the statute in an attempt to give more “teeth” to the removal statute’s procedural requirements. Rather, the sole objective sought to be accomplished by the first sentence of § 1447(c) appears to have been to force the parties to raise any such objections promptly so that procedural defects cannot be used to later inconvenience the parties and the court:
So long as the defect in removal procedure does not involve a lack of federal subject matter jurisdiction, there is no reason why either State or Federal courts, or the parties, should be subject to the burdens of shuttling a case between two courts that each have subject matter jurisdiction. There is also some risk that a party who is aware of a defect in removal procedure may hold the defect in reserve as a means of forum shopping if the litigation should take an unfavorable turn.
H.R.Rep. No. 100-889, at 72 (1988), as reprinted in 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5982, 6033. Thus, the court finds nothing in the statute or its legislative history that tends to suggest that the court does not have discretion to determine whether remand is warranted under the circumstances.
Accordingly, in keeping with the Supreme Court’s comments in McLean, this court will exercise its discretion in resolving this issue. Utilizing that discretion, this court can see no valid reason for remanding this case solely because the defendant failed to attach the summons to the notice of removal. The failure was inadvertent and trivial. In and of itself, the failure did not unduly burden the court or reflect the complete failure to follow the removal procedure that typically leads to remand orders where the motion is made outside the thirty-day window or where all defendants do not join. Important, also, is the fact that plaintiff has suffered absolutely no prejudice whatsoever from the defect and this defect can be promptly and easily remedied by allowing defendant to file its proposed amended notice of removal.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED BY THE COURT that plaintiffs motion to remand (Doc. 2) is denied.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that defendant shall immediately file its proposed amended notice of removal.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Defendant was served on September 29, 2005, and was required to file the notice of removal within thirty days thereafter. See 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b). The thirtieth day was October 29, 2005. Because this was a Saturday, the thirty-day removal period expired on the next business day, which was Monday, October 31, 2005. Defendant filed its notice of removal on that day. Plaintiff filed its motion to remand on November 4, 2005, and defendant asked the court for leave to file an amended notice of removal on November 18, 2005, which was indisputably well after the thirty-day removal period expired on October 31, 2005.
