BRIAN M. COGAN, District Judge.
Before me is plaintiff's motion to remand
Plaintiff filed a verified complaint against defendants on July 21, 2014, alleging serious personal injuries and extensive property damage as a result of defendants' negligence in relation to a collision between plaintiff's car and defendants' tractor trailer. Plaintiff's complaint did not indicate the amount of damages she was seeking, the types of injuries she sustained, or the damage to her vehicle. When defendants answered the complaint on August 27, 2014, they also served on plaintiff's counsel a number of discovery requests, notices, and demands. One such document was a "Notice Pursuant to § 3017(c) of the CPLR" demanding a "statement setting forth the total damages to which plaintiff deems herself entitled" within 14 days.
Defendants followed up with plaintiff's counsel on September 16, 2014, again demanding that plaintiff provide a statement of damages pursuant to CPLR § 3017(c). On January 16, 2015, plaintiff engaged a new law firm to represent her in the action, and the new law firm received the file from plaintiff's previous counsel on or around February 10, 2015.
Defendants moved on February 10, 2015 to dismiss the action in state court on the basis that plaintiff had failed to provide any discovery responses. The Supreme Court of Queens County ordered plaintiff to provide a verified bill of particulars by April 17, 2015.
On April 2, 2015, defendants wrote to plaintiff's new counsel, stating to "[k]indly please provide a response to our demand pursuant to CPLR [§] 3017(c)." The letter requested a response in 20 days to avoid motion practice. On April 20, 2015, defendants wrote for a third time (the second time to plaintiff's new counsel), again requesting the statement of total damages to avoid motion practice, and again requesting a response within 20 days to avoid motion practice.
On September 17, 2015, plaintiff represented at a compliance conference that she would provide a verified bill of particulars on or before October 9, 2015. Plaintiff ultimately provided a bill of particulars on December 23, 2015, which stated an amount in controversy in excess of $75,000, and defendants filed a Notice of Removal in this court on January 4, 2016.
The removing defendant bears the burden of establishing the federal court's removal jurisdiction.
When a case is not initially removable under either 28 U.S.C. § 1331 or § 1332, defendants must file a notice of removal "within thirty 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." 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b)(3). However, a case may not be removed on the basis of diversity jurisdiction "more than [one] year after commencement of the action, unless the district court finds that the plaintiff has acted in bad faith in order to prevent a defendant from removing the action."
Although defendants filed a Notice of Removal within 30 days of receiving plaintiff's bill of particulars in December 2015, it was filed nearly a year and a half after plaintiff had commenced her action in state court. Defendants were required by statute to remove the action by July 21, 2015, one year after the commencement of the case in state court. For this case to have been properly removed, then, defendants must prove both that plaintiff (1) acted in bad faith by delaying to provide the bill of particulars, and (2) did so in order to prevent defendants from removing the action from state court within the one-year window.
Although the Second Circuit has not yet interpreted the scope of the amended § 1446(c)(1), courts have relied on the timing of a plaintiff's actions and the nature of the action itself to determine whether a plaintiff's actions were made in bad faith for the purpose of preventing removal to federal court. Where a plaintiff has taken action in close proximity to a defendant's time to remove and the actions do not appear to be justified, the court has inferred that such steps were taken in order to prevent defendant from removing.
Defendants have not met their burden of showing either bad faith or an intention to prevent removal, both of which are required. The evidence presented shows that defendants sought a bill of particulars multiple times after plaintiff commenced her case in state court, and even moved for dismissal on that basis. But from April to September 2015 — in the crucial time leading up to the expiry of the one-year window, and for months after — it appears that there was no communication between the parties, and certainly no motions by defendants to compel information necessary to properly remove the case to federal court.
Defendants argue that the circumstances here warrant excusal of their delay because plaintiff's counsel is "an experienced personal injury attorney" and that, "based upon other cases" involving plaintiff's counsel, defendants "believe that [plaintiff's counsel] knows the requirements of Federal diversity jurisdiction." Defendants' mere belief that plaintiff knew of the one-year limitation, even if true,
Even if I were to find that plaintiff acted in bad faith by refusing to provide defendants with a statement of total damages sought, that finding alone does not satisfy the requirements for an exception to the time limitation for removal under § 1446(c)(1). The exception to the one-year limitations requires more than just bad faith; it requires bad faith plus the motive to prevent removal. Defendants point to no circumstances in the case or context surrounding plaintiff's behavior from which I could infer that plaintiff was acting with the intent to prevent removal to federal court. Defendants have failed to show that plaintiff acted specifically to prevent removal within the one year window. It took plaintiff until September 2015 to even represent to defendants that they would provide a bill of particulars in October. But by September, the one year window had already passed.
I will not determine that plaintiff's failure to provide a bill of particulars was intended to prevent removal where defendants did not take action for five months and did not move the court to compel that information before the statutory time had passed. The facts as presented do not support a finding that plaintiff has engaged in "the type of obviously strategic behavior" that would justify finding plaintiff acted in bad faith to prevent removal.
Although the language of § 1446(c)(1) is aimed at plaintiff's behavior insofar as whether a court may excuse a delay in removal, it remains defendants' responsibility to remove a case and to do so within one year from the commencement of the state court action. Defendants had the opportunity to take further action to ensure removal before one year had elapsed. The fact that defendants did not take advantage of other available avenues in order to meet the statutory requirements for removal is not grounds for extending the removal period now.
Defendants have presented no evidence that "plaintiff has engaged in strategic gamesmanship to prevent . . . removal from state court."