CHRISTOPHER R. COOPER, District Judge.
It seems simple enough: for federal diversity jurisdiction to exist in a case, the plaintiff and defendant must be citizens of different states. 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Flesh-and-blood people are citizens of the state where they are domiciled; corporations are citizens where they are incorporated and where they are headquartered.
Though neither party has raised this issue, "no action [or inaction] of the parties can confer subject-matter jurisdiction upon a federal court."
This is a medical malpractice action involving a long-term care facility operated by the defendant. The suit does not present any federal law claims, so the Court has jurisdiction over it only if the parties are diverse. Plaintiff, a citizen of Maryland, pled that defendant "Bridgepoint Healthcare LLC, was a corporation licensed to do business in the District of Columbia." Second Amended Complaint ¶ 3. But Bridgepoint must be either an LLC or a corporation; it cannot be both. And the distinction matters a great deal in federal court, since different rules for determining citizenship apply to each. Bridgepoint identifies itself as an LLC,
But nowhere in Plaintiff's pleadings or in Bridgepoint's submissions could the Court find any clue as to the composition of Bridgepoint LLC's membership. Wanting to assure itself of jurisdiction, the Court directed Bridgepoint to file a certification attesting to the citizenship of its members and to verify that no members are citizens of Maryland—since if any of them were, diversity would be destroyed.
Bridgepoint's first response was a nonstarter. It informed the Court that Bridgepoint LLC's "sole member is a private institution investment LLC [named SPCP] that is incorporated in the state of Delaware, and has a principal place of business in the state of Connecticut." Def's Certification of Citizenship at 1. But that was no help. An LLC's state of "incorporation" (which is a non-sequitur) and principal place of business are irrelevant to its citizenship.
So the Court asked Bridgepoint to try again,
The Court tried to clarify this problem with Bridgepoint at a hearing. Analogizing to Russian nesting dolls, it told Bridgepoint that it needed to ascertain the citizenship of the partners in the Delaware limited partnership, and specifically whether any of them are citizens of Maryland. 10/02/2018 Hr'g Tr. at 2-3. Bridgepoint's counsel acknowledged the problem,
Questions abound. For starters, when Bridgepoint asserted that the "trust entity" was "incorporated," did it mean that the trust entity is actually a corporation? The Court could not assume that is what Bridgepoint intended to say, since in the same certification it said that SPCP (Bridgepoint's sole LLC member) was "incorporated" in the state of Delaware—and LLCs by definition are unincorporated associations. But if in fact this trust entity is a legal corporation, it would be a citizen in the state of its incorporation (Maryland), and the certification would have verified that diversity is destroyed.
Alternatively, if Bridgepoint meant to say that the trust entity was merely established in Maryland, but never technically incorporated, that wouldn't help. Knowing where a trust is established is about as relevant to determining citizenship for diversity jurisdiction purposes as where a partnership or LLC is established—which is to say not at all. Rather, if this is what Bridgepoint intended to convey in its certification, it raised more questions than it answered. The Court would then need to know if this Maryland trust is a business trust or a "traditional" trust. The former is a "distinct legal entity" that "can be haled into court" or do the haling itself.
So the Court put these questions to Bridgepoint.
It may seem an odd exercise to dig this deeply to determine diversity jurisdiction, but that is what is required when an LLC or partnership or trust is party to a suit. The problem only deepens where, as here, an LLC's "members" are still more LLCs, partnerships, and trusts. But the difficulty must be confronted, and better sooner than later. Failing to check jurisdiction could have allowed this suit to progress well beyond a final judgment and into the court of appeals before recognizing the fatal flaw, wasting the clients' money and everyone's time. And though here the Court raised the jurisdictional concern itself, it feels constrained to remind the lawyers here—and everywhere—that they have a duty to do so themselves. Especially confounding in this instance is that the Court not only flagged the jurisdictional issue, but had to explain three times over why the defendant's citizenship certifications were incomplete. "Lawyers for defendants, as well as plaintiffs, must investigate rather than assume jurisdiction; to do this, they first must learn the legal rules that determine whose citizenship matters (as defendant's lawyers failed to do)."
Lacking subject-matter jurisdiction, the Court will dismiss the case. A separate Order shall accompany this Memorandum Opinion.