MILTON I. SHADUR, Senior District Judge.
On October 25 this Court had before it the attempted removal of this action by Fredrikson & Byron P.A. ("Fredrikson & Byron")
But this Court has always been keenly mindful of the regularly repeated teaching from our Court of Appeals that was framed succinctly over a quarter century ago in Wis. Knife Works v. Nat'l Metal Crafters, 781 F.2d 1280, 1282 (7th Cir.1986) and remains good law still:
And as more recently underscored in Wernsing v. Thompson, 423 F.3d 732, 743 (7th Cir.2005)(internal citations and quotation marks omitted):
That last-stated mandate has gained special force in this case when this Court's reading of a portion of the transcript of the October 25 oral presentation by Ritchie's counsel caused it to examine a Seventh Circuit case (In re FedPak Sys., Inc., 80 F.3d 207 (7th Cir.1996)) that it had not previously had occasion to review
This opinion will accordingly begin with a sharp look at the bankruptcy-related predicate that Fredrikson & Byron seeks to rely on as assertedly supporting federal subject matter jurisdiction (and hence as assertedly supporting its removal of the case to this District Court), and the opinion will then turn later to questions bearing on diversity jurisdiction, even though this Court's oral statement at the outset of the October 25 hearing had begun with the latter subject. And as will be seen, the end result of the total analysis here obviates the need for Ritchie's counsel to tender the previously-ordered November 15 submission.
In brief, FedPak, 80 F.3d at 213-14 (most citations omitted) reflects a far narrower scope for the "related to" concept than Fredrikson & Byron would urge:
Zerand-Bernal [Group, Inc. v. Cox], 23 F.3d [159,] 161 [(7th Cir.1994)] (emphasis added, citation omitted).
Indeed, Zerand-Bernal, 23 F.3d at 162 casts added light on the current situation by explaining the limited purpose of possibly "forc[ing] into the bankruptcy court suits to which the debtor need not be a party but which may affect the amount of property in the bankrupt estate":
Any such stay would be bizarre indeed, for if Ritchie were to prove successful in its current litigation and could potentially recover from defendants in this action any amount for which the bankruptcy estate or estates might otherwise be responsible, that could only improve the lot of the creditors of estate or estates.
In short, this Court has reviewed Notice ¶¶ 4-9 (the portion dealing with "related to" jurisdiction) and finds the position set out there to be wholly wanting in analytical terms. Fredrikson & Byron's approach is unduly sweeping in scope, running contrary to the teaching of our Court of Appeals.
That said, this opinion turns to the alternative ground advanced by Fredrikson & Byron for claiming federal subject matter jurisdiction: diversity of citizenship. In that respect the burden of establishing its existence always rests on the party seeking entrance to the federal courthouse door: the plaintiff in any case initiated in the District Court, the defendant (such as Fredrikson & Byron) in any case sought to be removed from its state court of origin. And in this instance we need go no farther than the first name in the case caption — a limited liability company, Ritchie Capital Management, L.L.C. — to see that Fredrikson & Byron has failed in its task, for here is all that Notice ¶ 16 says on that score:
Whenever a newly-filed federal complaint in a case assigned to this Court's calendar has exhibited the same flaw, this Court regularly heeds the Wernsing dictate and sua sponte dismisses both the complaint and the action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. And when as here this Court's analysis of each ground relied on by a removing defendant has shown "that the district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction" (Section 1447(c)
With this action thus having been dispatched back to its place of origin, this opinion might well end at this point. But this Court is constrained to comment on Fredrikson & Byron's ill-considered and ill-grounded effort to charge Ritchie and its counsel with fraudulent joinder by having included Illinois citizens Timothy Takesue and Miguel Martinez, Jr. among the named defendants. Fraud is a serious charge to level against lawyer opponents, and it should not go unchallenged even though resolution of that issue is unnecessary to the already-announced dispositive result.
Some idea of the lack of merit in Fredrikson & Byron's effort to dirty up its adversaries may be gained from its bogus argument that the so-called fraudulence of the two-defendant joinder is supported by Fredrikson & Byron's "information and belief" that "Martinez and Takesue do not have anywhere near the resources to satisfy the judgment sought by plaintiffs in this case" (Notice ¶ 28). But as this Court pointed out in its oral statement during the October 25 hearing, plaintiffs as well as defendants have the right to protect their choice of forum — the example that this Court then gave was of a fatal auto accident caused by the negligent driving of a large semi that collided with a passenger automobile, killing the driver of the automobile — a situation in which the jointly and severally liable driver of the semi, whose state of citizenship coincides with that of the decedent, may properly be joined as a defendant in a state court lawsuit. That joinder would properly defeat any potential for removal of the case on diversity grounds, even though the driver of the semi would clearly be unable to satisfy the hoped-for multimillion dollar judgment.
That is an obvious non sequitur. It clearly requires a quantum leap to connect the dots in a way that would outlaw the claims against the two individual defendants on limitations grounds before the Complaint was filed in the Circuit Court on September 19, 2013. With an acknowledged 85-day tolling agreement having been effective earlier in 2013, a ruling that any Takesue-Martinez claims were barred by limitations would have required that Ritchie know, or reasonably should have known, of the Takesue-Martinez involvement in the wrongdoing by about June 25, 2008 (the applicable statute of limitations is acknowledged to be five years under Illinois law).
That simply does not fly — assuredly not as a matter of law. Takesue and Martinez cannot be erased from the Complaint as having been fraudulently joined.