GEORGE L. RUSSELL, III, District Judge.
THIS MATTER is before the Court on Plaintiff Mayor & City Council of Baltimore's ("Baltimore City" or the "City") Motion to Remand (ECF No. 7). The Motion is ripe for disposition, and no hearing is necessary.
Baltimore City is "a municipal corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Maryland." (Compl. ¶ 22, ECF No. 2). According to the City, opioid use "has disrupted the lives of its citizens, damaged its communities, and imposed overwhelming financial and logistical costs on its government." (
Defendants Purdue Pharma L.P., Purdue Pharma, Inc., The Purdue Frederick Company, Inc. (collectively, "Purdue Pharma"), Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc., Cephalon, Inc., Johnson & Johnson, Janssen Pharmaceutica, Inc., Ortho-McNeil-Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Allergan, Plc, Actavis, Inc., Watson Laboratories, Inc., Actavis, LLC, Actavis Pharma, Inc., Endo Health Solutions, Inc., and Endo Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (collectively, the "Manufacturer Defendants") manufacture, market, and sell prescription opioid pain medications. (
Defendants Cardinal Health, Inc., McKesson Corporation, and AmerisourceBergen Drug Corporation (collectively, the "Distributor Defendants") distribute opioid medications to pharmacies, pain clinics, and other dispensaries across the country, including in Baltimore City. (
Defendants Rosen-Hoffberg Rehabilitation and Pain Management Associates, P.A., Norman B. Rosen, and Howard J. Hoffberg (collectively, the "Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants") are healthcare providers in Baltimore City and the medical practice at which the alleged over-prescribing of opiates occurred. (
The City filed the present action in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, Maryland on January 31, 2018. (ECF No. 2). In its four-count Complaint, the City alleges: (1) public nuisance against all Defendants (Count I); (2) negligence against all Defendants (Count II); (3) violation of the Maryland Consumer Protection Act, Md. Code Ann., Com. Law §§ 13-101
The thrust of the City's Complaint is that the Manufacturer Defendants fraudulently marketed and promoted opioids, the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants fraudulently over-prescribed opioids, and the Distributor Defendants failed to limit fraudulent or suspicious distribution of opioids, causing widespread opioid use and exacting a high monetary cost to the City. (
On December 5, 2017, prior to the City initiating this lawsuit, the United States Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation ("JPML") created a Multidistrict Litigation ("MDL") in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio (the "MDL Court") to manage all federal cases in which "cities, counties, and states . . . allege that: (1) manufacturers of prescription opioid medications overstated the benefits and downplayed the risks of the use of their opioids and aggressively marketed . . . these drugs to physicians, and/or (2) distributors failed to monitor . . . and report suspicious orders of prescription opiates." Dec. 5, 2017 Trans. Order,
On March 27, 2018, the JPML conditionally transferred this action to the MDL Court. CTO-18,
Defendants Endo Health Solutions Inc. and Endo Pharmaceuticals Inc. (collectively, "Endo") filed a Notice of Removal from the Circuit Court to the United States District Court for the District of Maryland on March 16, 2018. (ECF No. 1). On March 19, 2018, the City filed a Motion to Remand. (ECF No. 7). Endo filed an Opposition on March 26, 2018. (ECF No. 27). The City filed a Reply on March 29, 2018. (ECF No. 32).
The party seeking removal carries the burden of establishing federal jurisdiction.
A defendant may remove a state court action to federal court if the federal court would have original jurisdiction over the action. 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a) (2018). Federal district courts have original jurisdiction over civil actions that arise under federal law, 28 U.S.C. § 1331 (2018), or have an amount in controversy exceeding $75,000, exclusive of interests and costs, and complete diversity of citizenship, 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a) (2018). If a civil action is not based on a question of federal law, then a federal court may only exercise original jurisdiction based on diversity of citizenship.
The purpose of the diversity requirement "is to provide a federal forum for important disputes where state courts might favor, or be perceived as favoring, home- state litigants."
Endo urges the Court to deny the City's Motion to Remand as to the Manufacturer and Distributor Defendants. As a preliminary matter, Endo maintains that the Court should defer its ruling on the Motion to permit the MDL Court to resolve all pending motions to remand collectively. Alternatively, Endo contends that the Court has diversity jurisdiction over this action because the Court can sever the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 21 or apply the fraudulent misjoinder doctrine. The Court begins by discussing whether it must defer to the MDL Court.
Endo argues that the Court should stay its ruling on the City's Motion to Remand to permit the MDL Court to resolve all pending remand motions in
This Court has the authority to rule on pending motions any time before the JPML issues a transfer order.
Consistent with this principle, several federal district courts have granted motions to remand before the JPML could transfer the cases to the MDL Court.
Here, the JPML has yet to issue an order transferring this case to the MDL Court. Additionally, the existing conditional transfer order does not limit this Court's jurisdiction to rule on pending motions.
Accordingly, the Court next considers the merits of the City's Motion to Remand.
Where, as here, the removing party invokes diversity jurisdiction, it is that party's burden to demonstrate that diversity is "complete"—in other words, that no defendant in the case is a citizen of the same state as any plaintiff.
In the present case, diversity is incomplete on the face of the Complaint because the City and the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants are all citizens of Maryland. Nonetheless, Endo urges the Court to deny the City's Motion to Remand for two reasons. First, Endo maintains that the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants are severable under Rule 21 because they are unnecessary and dispensable parties. Second, Endo contends that the Court may ignore the citizenship of the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants under the fraudulent misjoinder doctrine. The Court considers these arguments in turn.
At bottom, the Court concludes that the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants are not severable under Rule 21 because they are necessary and dispensable parties.
Rule 21 grants the Court discretion to sever nondiverse parties to achieve complete diversity.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 19(a)(1). Further, a necessary party is indispensable if the action cannot proceed without that party "in equity and good conscience."
In
Here, by contrast, the City's claims against the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants are factually and legally intertwined with its claims against the Manufacturer Defendants. First, the City brings public nuisance and negligence claims against all Defendants, alleging that all Defendants contributed to the opioid crisis in Baltimore. Additionally, the City alleges that the Manufacturer Defendants violated the Maryland False Claims Act by making false and misleading statements about the nature of opioids, thereby causing the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants to supply City employees with massive quantities of prescription opioids. (Compl. ¶¶ 218-20, 272-80). The City also alleges that the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants repeated and disseminated the Manufacturer Defendants' false messages about opioids and received payments directly from the Manufacturer Defendants. (
Because the City's claims against the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants are factually and legally intertwined with its claims against the Manufacturer and Distributor Defendants, the Court concludes that the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants are necessary and indispensable under Rule 19. Thus, the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants are not severable under Rule 21. The Court, therefore, will not sever the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants to create complete diversity among the parties.
The Court next turns to whether complete diversity is achieved under the fraudulent misjoinder doctrine.
Endo urges the Court to apply the fraudulent misjoinder doctrine to ignore the citizenship of the nondiverse Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants in this action. The City contends that the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit has yet to adopt the fraudulent misjoinder doctrine and, in any event, the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants are not fraudulently misjoined. The Court agrees with the City.
Fraudulent misjoinder "is an assertion that claims against certain defendants, while provable, have no real connection to the claims against other defendants in the same action and were only included in order to defeat diversity jurisdiction and removal."
Nonetheless, this Court applied the fraudulent misjoinder doctrine in Stephens. 807 F.Supp.2d 375 at 381-85. In doing so, the Court concluded that the relevant inquiry is whether a plaintiff has satisfied the requirements of Rule 20(a), which governs permissive joinder of claims.
Applying the first prong of Rule 20(a) to the present case, it is clear that the City's claims against the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants are logically related to its claims against the Manufacturer and Distributor Defendants. As discussed above, the City brings public nuisance and negligence claims against all Defendants, alleging that all Defendants contributed to the opioid crisis in Baltimore. Further, the City alleges that the Manufacturer Defendants' false and misleading statements about the nature of opioids caused the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants to supply City employees with massive quantities of prescription opioids. (Compl. ¶¶ 218-20, 272-80). The City also alleges that the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants received payments directly from the Manufacturer Defendants. (
As to the second prong, the City's allegations against the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants and the Manufacturer and Distributor Defendants raise at least one common question of law or fact. For example, the issue of whether the Manufacturer Defendants violated the Maryland False Claims Act turns, in part, on whether the Manufacturer Defendants caused the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants to present "false or fraudulent claims" or use "false statements to get false or fraudulent claims paid or approved by the City." (Compl. ¶ 275). The City's allegations, therefore, raise at least one common question of law and fact.
In sum, the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants are not severable under Rule 21 and are properly joined. The Court, therefore, cannot sever the Rosen-Hoffberg Defendants or ignore their citizenship to create complete diversity among the parties. Because there is not complete diversity among the parties, the Court does not have subject matter jurisdiction over this action. Accordingly, the Court will grant the City's Motion to Remand.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will grant the Mayor & City Council of Baltimore's Motion to Remand (ECF No. 7). A separate order follows.