Court Opinion

ID: 4651958
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-01-15 18:00:36.197892+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:01:44.088462
License: Public Domain

FILED
                                                                   United States Court of Appeals
                                        PUBLISH                            Tenth Circuit

                      UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                       January 15, 2021

                             FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT                     Christopher M. Wolpert
                         _________________________________                 Clerk of Court

 ROSE WOODS,

       Plaintiff - Appellant,

 v.                                                            No. 19-5089
                                                   (D.C. No. 4:18-CV-00327-TCK-JFJ)
 ROSS DRESS FOR LESS, INC., a foreign                          (N.D. Okla.)
 corporation,

       Defendant - Appellee,

 and

 MEGAN BUTLER, an individual,

       Defendant.
                         _________________________________

                               PUBLISHED DISSENT
                         _________________________________

Before HARTZ, Circuit Judge.
                     _________________________________

       I.     OVERVIEW

       I confess that I am baffled by the majority opinion. Its reasoning begins well

enough. It correctly recognizes that when the district court entered judgment there was

not the diversity of citizenship necessary for federal jurisdiction because Ms. Woods, the

plaintiff, and Ms. Butler, an unserved defendant, were both citizens of Oklahoma. But its

reaction to the jurisdictional flaw—remanding for the district court to decide whether to

cure the flaw by dismissing Ms. Butler—is itself flawed because this court should cure
the flaw by simply dismissing her ourselves. I will address the governing law in more

depth later; a sketch will suffice for now.

       To begin with, the remand accomplishes nothing but wasting time and effort. The

dismissal of Ms. Butler by the district court is virtually inevitable. True, there will be

occasions when dismissal of the nondiverse defendant would be improper; and

sometimes fact-finding—which is better conducted by the district court—is necessary to

assess the propriety of dismissal. See, e.g., Ravenswood Inv. Co., LP v. Avalon Corral.

Servs., 651 F.3d 1219, 1225–26 (10th Cir. 2011). But the record in this case compels the

conclusion that dismissal is singularly appropriate and in the interests of all the parties.

Ms. Woods filed her complaint more than two years ago. When Ms. Butler was not

served within 90 days, the district court, either on its own initiative or on motion from a

party, could have dismissed Ms. Butler as a defendant absent a showing by Ms. Woods of

good cause why she had not yet served Ms. Butler. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 4(m); Henderson

v. United States, 517 U.S. 654, 661–63 (1996). Yet Ms. Woods has not even hinted at

good cause, and the record establishes that there is none. She has made no attempt to

serve Ms. Butler, even when Ms. Butler appeared for a deposition. Indeed, it appears that

the parties simply assumed (incorrectly) that Ms. Butler had never become a party to the

case because she was not timely served. As will be set forth in more detail below, both

Ms. Woods and Ross have expressed their opposition to a remand devoted to determining

whether to dismiss Ms. Butler, acknowledging that dismissal of Ms. Butler would be

inevitable. The dismissal would merely formalize what the district court and the parties

had already assumed: namely, that Ms. Butler was not a party when the court entered

                                               2
summary judgment. On remand the district court will surely recognize reality by

dismissing her, perhaps even by an order entered nunc pro tunc to some time before

judgment was entered. At that point the district court need take no further action. Ms.

Woods can then pursue another appeal, and this court can proceed as we should be doing

on this appeal. That is, as discussed below, we can determine whether the summary

judgment should be affirmed, and, if not, order that the case be remanded to state court.

       Nor is remand necessary for technical reasons. On the contrary, the remand is an

abdication of this court’s responsibility. When a district court has already taken a case to

judgment, the appellate court has a duty to try to preserve a proper judgment, even if the

district court lacked diversity jurisdiction when it entered judgment and even if the case

had been improperly removed from state court. The Supreme Court has expressly

recognized the authority of an appellate court to cure a problem with diversity

jurisdiction by dismissing on its own a nondiverse defendant that is not indispensable

under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 19. To act otherwise, it said, is to compel the

parties to “jump through . . . judicial hoops merely for the sake of hypertechnical

jurisdictional purity.” Newman-Green, Inc. v. Alfonso-Larrain, 490 U.S. 826, 837

(1989). Likewise, even when a district court improperly denied a motion challenging the

removal of the case from state court, the Supreme Court has instructed appellate courts to

uphold a proper judgment by the district court, explaining, “Once a diversity case has

been tried in federal court, with rules of decision supplied by state law under the regime

of Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938), considerations of finality, efficiency, and

economy become overwhelming.” Caterpillar, Inc. v. Lewis, 519 U.S. 61, 75 (1996). In

                                             3
neither Newman-Green nor Caterpillar did the Court suggest that the appellate court

should remand the issue for the district court to exercise its discretion when the facts are

clear. In some cases, as here, there is no reason to think that the district court is better

positioned to make the call than we are.

       II.    THE CONTROLLING LAW

       The issue before the court is straightforward. But to understand the positions of

the parties, it is necessary to clear some brush and properly set the scene. Although it is

now obvious that the district court lacked diversity jurisdiction when it entered judgment,

that jurisdiction was not presented as an issue in the appellate briefing. Ms. Woods

challenged the removal of the case from state court, but solely on the ground of an

alleged “snap removal” by Ross before Ms. Woods had a full opportunity to serve Ms.

Butler, whose presence as a defendant citizen of the forum state would have precluded

removal. A review of some of the requirements of diversity jurisdiction and removal will

show where the parties missed the boat and help anchor the discussion.

              A.      Diversity of Citizenship

       A federal court has diversity jurisdiction under § 1332(a)(1) only if there is

complete diversity—that is, no plaintiff is a citizen of the same state as any defendant.

See Wis. Dep’t of Corr. v. Schacht, 524 U.S. 381, 388 (1998). Since the tenure of Chief

Justice Marshall, federal courts have evaluated jurisdiction by reference to the “‘state of

things at the time of the action brought.’” Grupo Dataflux v. Atlas Glob. Grp., L.P., 541

U.S. 567, 570 (2004) (quoting Mollan v. Torrance, 22 U.S. 537, 539 (1824)). Under this

“time-of-filing” rule, the citizenship of every plaintiff at the time the complaint is filed

                                               4
must be diverse from the citizenship of every defendant at the time the complaint is filed;

a later change in the citizenship of a party (as opposed to a change in who the parties are)

can neither create nor destroy complete diversity. See id. at 574 (“Where there is no

change of party, a jurisdiction depending on the condition of the party is governed by that

condition, as it was at the commencement of the suit.” (emphasis, brackets, and internal

quotation marks omitted)). The parties whose citizenship matters for the court’s diversity

evaluation are those named in the complaint, see Lincoln Prop. Co. v. Roche, 546 U.S.

81, 84 (2005), although there are limited exceptions, as when a party has been

“‘improperly or collusively’” named solely to create or defeat federal jurisdiction, id. at

91–92 (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 1359); see James Wm. Moore, 16 Moore’s Federal

Practice—Civil § 107.52[2], [3], [4], at 107–79–107–103 (3d ed. 2020) (describing

named parties that can be ignored for purposes of diversity jurisdiction). 1

       Whether a defendant has been served is not relevant to whether the complete-

diversity requirement is satisfied. See Pullman Co. v. Jenkins, 305 U.S. 534, 541 (1939)

(when the plaintiff is a resident of the forum state, “the fact that the resident defendant

has not been served with process does not justify removal by the non-resident defendant,”

because in such circumstances “there is no diversity of citizenship”); United States ex rel.

Gen. Rock & Sand Corp. v. Chuska Dev. Corp., 55 F.3d 1491, 1495 (10th Cir. 1995)

1
  It should be noted that even though Ms. Butler’s presence as a party would ordinarily
defeat diversity jurisdiction, that would not be the case if her joinder as a defendant was
solely for the purpose of defeating removal. See Lincoln Prop., 546 U.S. at 91–92. And
that appears to be the situation here. Ms. Woods made absolutely no effort to bring Ms.
Butler into the case as a defendant other than including her in the caption. I see no need
to resolve the issue at this stage of the proceeding. But it could arise later on.
                                              5
(“[D]iversity jurisdiction must be determined from the face of the pleading and not from

returns of service of process or lack thereof[.]” (original brackets and internal quotation

marks omitted)); Howell v. Tribune Ent. Co., 106 F.3d 215, 217–18 (7th Cir. 1997)

(rejecting argument that the citizenship of a defendant could be ignored because the

defendant had never been served).

       The Supreme Court has, however, recognized an exception to the time-of-filing

rule. Even when there is not diversity jurisdiction at the outset of the case, that defect can

be cured if the nondiverse parties are dismissed before final disposition of the case on

appeal or certiorari. See Grupo Dataflux, 541 U.S. at 572 (“[C]uring a jurisdictional

defect [by dismissing the party that had destroyed diversity] ha[s] long been an exception

to the time-of-filing rule.”). For example, in Caterpillar, 519 U.S. at 64–66, 73, the

jurisdictional defect in the action was cured when the intervenor-plaintiff settled all its

claims against the nondiverse defendant and the court dismissed the nondiverse defendant

from the action. Cf. Grupo Dataflux, 541 U.S. at 568, 577–80 (diversity was lacking

because at time of filing the complaint two partners of plaintiff limited partnership were

foreign citizens, as was the defendant; when aliens later left the partnership, the

partnership no longer had a foreign citizenship but that did not cure the jurisdictional

defect). A lack of diversity jurisdiction can also be cured without resolving the merits of

the diversity-destroying claim when the court is able to dismiss the nondiverse party

because its interests are severable and the dismissal would not create unfairness (in other

words, if the dismissed party is not indispensable, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 19(b), 21). See

Grupo Dataflux, 541 U.S. at 572–73.

                                              6
       In appropriate circumstances this dismissal can be effected by an appellate court

after the district court has entered judgment. In Newman-Green a panel of the Seventh

Circuit recognized at oral argument (just as the panel did in this case) that the district

court did not have subject-matter jurisdiction when it entered judgment because there was

not diversity of citizenship of the parties. See 490 U.S. 826, 828–29 (1989). The

problem was a subtle one; one of the defendants was a citizen of the United States but

was living in Brazil and not domiciled in any State. See id. The circuit court solved the

problem by dismissing the nondiverse defendant, noting that he was not an indispensable

party and his dismissal would not prejudice any party. See id. at 829. It then ruled

largely in favor of the plaintiff-appellant. See id. The en banc court granted rehearing

and reversed, holding that the appellate court lacked authority to dismiss the defendant

and (just as the panel majority here is doing) remanded to the district court “to determine

whether it would be prudent to drop [the defendant] from the litigation.” Id. at 829–30.

The Supreme Court disagreed. It held that the court of appeals had authority to dismiss a

dispensable nondiverse party and that “the practicalities weigh heavily in favor of the

decision made by the Court of Appeals panel to grant [the] motion to dismiss [the

nondiverse party].” Id. at 837. It pointed out: “If the entire suit were dismissed, [the

plaintiff] would simply refile in the District Court against the [diverse defendants] and

submit the discovery materials already in hand. The case would then proceed to a

preordained judgment.” Id. In language that I wish the panel majority here would have

heeded, the Court summed up that the plaintiff “should not be compelled to jump through

these judicial hoops merely for the sake of hypertechnical jurisdictional purity.” Id. This

                                               7
court has followed Newman-Green in published opinions on at least two occasions. See

Grice v. CVR Energy, Inc., 921 F.3d 966, 968–70 (10th Cir. 2019); Weber v. GE Group

Life Assur. Co., 541 F.3d 1002, 1009 n.8 (10th Cir. 2008).

              B.      Removal

       Turning to the subject of removal of state-court cases to federal court, the

existence of diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a) is not the only requirement

for removal. The removal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1441, also imposes nonjurisdictional

limitations. See Grupo Dataflux, 541 U.S. at 574 (explaining the distinction between a

jurisdictional flaw and a statutory defect in removal proceedings); Charles A. Wright,

Arthur R. Miller, et al., 14C Federal Practice & Procedure—Jurisdiction and Related

Matters § 3721, at 1 (rev. 4th ed. 2018) (“The right to remove a case from a state to a

federal court is purely statutory and its scope and the terms of its availability therefore are

entirely dependent on acts of Congress.” (footnotes omitted)); id. at 11 (“[R]emoval is

not a kind of jurisdiction. . . . Rather, it is a means of bringing cases within federal courts’

original jurisdiction into those courts.”). Two statutory limitations are relevant here. One

relates to the parties, the other is temporal.

       First, even when the parties have diverse citizenship, removal may be prohibited

when one of the defendants is a citizen of the forum state. See 28 U.S.C. § 1441(b)(2)

(“A civil action otherwise removable solely on the basis of the jurisdiction under section

1332(a) of this title may not be removed if any of the parties in interest properly joined

and served as defendants is a citizen of the State in which such action is brought.”) This

provision is sometimes called the “forum-defendant rule.” It reflects the view that the

                                                 8
purpose of removal under diversity jurisdiction is to protect defendants who fear

parochial bias in state courts, so local defendants have no legitimate need to remove cases

to federal court. See 16 Moore’s Federal Practice, supra, § 107.55[1], at 107–108 (“The

justification for the forum defendant rule is simple. The purpose of diversity jurisdiction

is to provide litigants with an unbiased forum by protecting out-of-state litigants from

local prejudices. Therefore, it makes no sense to allow an in-state defendant to take

advantage of removal on the basis of diversity jurisdiction.”).

       Second, unlike jurisdictional requirements that need only be satisfied by the time

of final disposition, the removal statute must be fully satisfied at the time of removal. In

particular, although a later change in the parties may cure a problem with diversity

jurisdiction, there remains the statutory requirement that there must have been diversity at

the time of removal. See Caterpillar, 519 U.S. at 73 (“The jurisdictional defect was

cured, i.e., complete diversity was established before the trial commenced. . . . But a

statutory flaw—[Defendant]’s failure to meet the § 1441(a) requirement that the case be

fit for federal adjudication at the time the removal petition is filed—remained in the

unerasable history of the case.”); Grupo Dataflux, 541 U.S. at 574 (“failure to comply

with the requirement of the removal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a), that there be complete

diversity at the time of removal” was a “statutory defect,” not a “jurisdictional defect”);

Lexecon v. Milberg Weiss, 523 U.S. 26, 43 (1998) (characterizing the situation in

Caterpillar as “untimely compliance” with statutory requirements of removal rather than

“continuing defiance”); 14C Wright & Miller, supra, § 3723, at 294 (“[A] long line of

authority supports the proposition that when diversity of citizenship is the basis of

                                              9
removal, diversity must exist not only at the time the action was filed in the state court,

but also at the time the case is removed to federal court.”).

       Nevertheless, just as a failure of diversity jurisdiction can be cured by dismissal of

the nondiverse party, a failure to comply with the removal statute can be properly ignored

in certain circumstances. If the district court enters judgment in a case that was

improperly removed, the appellate court should still affirm a proper judgment. To repeat

what the Supreme Court said in Caterpillar, 519 U.S. at 75, “Once a diversity case has

been tried in federal court, with rules of decision supplied by state law under the regime

of Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938), considerations of finality, efficiency, and

economy become overwhelming.” Echoing the same sort of pragmatism that underlay

Newman-Green, it explained, “To wipe out the adjudication postjudgment, and return to

state court a case now satisfying all federal jurisdictional requirements, would impose an

exorbitant cost on our dual court system, a cost incompatible with the fair and

unprotracted administration of justice.” Id. at 77.

       III.   APPLICATION TO THIS CASE

              A.     Procedural Background

       The source of the failure of the parties in this case to appreciate the absence of

diversity jurisdiction is unclear. Ms. Woods may not have understood the complete-

diversity requirement. See Aplt. Br. at 1 (“Woods contends that as to Ross, diversity

jurisdiction is probably proper under 28 U.S.C.A. § 1332(a)(1) [the diversity-jurisdiction

statute], because the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000.00, exclusive of interest and

costs, and is between citizens of different states. . . . However, Woods and Butler are

                                             10
both Oklahoma citizens, making diversity jurisdiction improper under 28 U.S.

§ 1441(a)(2) [the removal statute].” (misciting § 1441(b)(2))); id. at 2 (stating the

nonmerits “issue[] presented” as “Did the district court err by denying [Ms. Woods’s]

motion to remand notwithstanding the existence of a named, yet unserved, forum

defendant?” (capitalization and emphasis omitted)). Also, at oral argument Ms. Woods

suggested that the district court “proceeded on the [incorrect] assumption that once the

180 [sic] days passed without service on [Ms. Butler], that took her out of the lawsuit,”

Oral Arg. at 4:15, so she would no longer defeat diversity. As for Ross, it apparently

thought that unserved parties are not considered in assessing whether there is diversity

jurisdiction. See Aplee. Br. at 1. Regardless of the reasons, diversity jurisdiction was not

an issue in the appellate briefs, which focused on the merits and the removal statute.

       At oral argument this court questioned its own appellate jurisdiction on the ground

that the district-court judgment did not dispose of all claims—namely, it failed to dispose

of the claim against Ms. Butler. We asked whether we needed to reverse and remand for

the district court to dispose of that claim before we could hear the appeal. Ms. Woods

said that such a remand would be unfortunate:

       I’m suggesting we should amongst all of us, be able to figure out a way that we
       don’t have to remand simply for the purpose of dismissing that defendant who has
       not been served within 180 days and then either starting over, the court brings it
       back just for argument on the second issue [that is, Ms. Woods’s challenge to the
       merits of the district-court decision]. That just all does not make much sense to
       me, although I am sensitive to the concept that you’ve got to have appellate
       jurisdiction.

Oral Arg. at 8:49–9:24. We also mentioned that there was not diversity jurisdiction even

at the time of judgment, although that could be cured by the district court’s dismissing

                                             11
Ms. Butler. During rebuttal oral argument, Ms. Woods noted the possibility of

“remand[ing] to the trial court for the limited purpose of dismissing the unserved

defendant and then bring[ing] it back to the Tenth Circuit; which doesn’t make too much

sense.” Oral Arg. at 39:15–39:31.

       At the conclusion of argument we told counsel that they could submit

supplemental authority on the jurisdictional issues under Federal Rule of Appellate

Procedure 28(j). The responses, which are limited by the Rule to 350 words, were brief.

Ms. Woods cited Bristol v. Fibreboard Corp., 789 F.2d 846 (10th Cir. 1986) (per

curiam), for the proposition that we have appellate jurisdiction so long as the district

court’s judgment disposes of all claims by and against the served defendants. Ross also

cited Bristol, and further stated that appellate courts have authority to dismiss dispensable

nondiverse parties, citing Newman-Green and Wyles v. Sussman, 661 F. App’x 548, 550

n.1 (10th Cir. 2016). It is clear that the parties believed that dismissal of Ms. Butler by

the district court on remand would be a foregone conclusion and remand for that purpose

should be avoided as unnecessary.

       The majority opinion states that it disagrees with my claim that “Ms. Woods did

not challenge the district court’s diversity jurisdiction in her briefs,” and proceeds to

assert that she raised lack of diversity jurisdiction in her briefs on appeal. Maj. Op. at 14.

But it misreads Ms. Woods’s opening brief. To be sure, a subheading in the brief begins

with the sentence: “There is no diversity of citizenship.” Aplt. Br. at 10. But the brief

uses the term diversity of citizenship in an incorrect, idiosyncratic manner. The

discussion under the subheading does not refer to the statutory requirement of complete

                                              12
diversity in 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1). Rather, it refers to the requirement of the removal

statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1441(b)(2), that removal is improper if any defendant is a citizen of

the forum state. This is clear from the “Jurisdictional Statement” on page 1 of the brief.

The first sentence of the third paragraph, contrary to the majority opinion’s statement that

Ms. Woods has consistently challenged diversity jurisdiction under § 1332, states:

“Woods contends that as to Ross, diversity jurisdiction is probably proper under 28

USCA § 1332(a)(1) . . . .” The next paragraph begins with the sentence: “However,

Woods and Butler are both Oklahoma citizens, making diversity jurisdiction improper

under 28 US[C] § 1441(a)(2).” (Misciting § 1441(b)(2)) (Emphasis added). The next

page of the brief states the two issues presented in the case. The nonmerits issue is: “Did

the district court err by denying Plaintiff’s Motion to Remand notwithstanding the

existence of a named, yet unserved, forum defendant?” That issue clearly relates to

§ 1441, not § 1332. And if there were any doubt about the intent of Ms. Woods, one

need only listen to the oral argument. Her attorney stated that there were two issues in

the case, and diversity jurisdiction under § 1332 was not one of them. When a member

of the panel asked about diversity jurisdiction (and nothing in the record indicates that

any other participant at the oral argument had recognized the issue), counsel appeared

surprised.

              B.     The Proper Path Forward

       In this light, I fail to see any reason for not following Newman-Green and curing

the jurisdictional defect by dismissing Ms. Butler. The majority opinion objects that

“neither party . . . addressed Rule 19(b) dispensability in their briefs.” Maj. Op. at 9. But

                                             13
the obvious reason why that issue was not briefed was that no one had raised diversity

jurisdiction as an issue on appeal until the court brought it up for the first time at oral

argument. That was also the case in Newman-Green itself; the issue of diversity

jurisdiction was first raised by a circuit judge during oral argument. See 490 U.S. at 828.

The majority also faults Ross for failing to address in its Rule 28(j) letter “how the Rule

19(b) dispensability factors apply to this case.” Maj. Op. at 9 n.3. But this is unfair to

Ross and hardly an excuse for us not to do our duty. At oral argument the panel

requested counsel for both parties to submit Rule 28(j) letters addressing jurisdiction.

Such a letter is not supposed to be a brief. Its purpose is to provide “pertinent and

significant authorities” to the court. Fed. R. App. P. 28(j). There is certainly no need for

such a letter, or any submission to the court, to belabor the obvious. I cannot think of

anyone who is more obviously not an indispensable party than one who has not been

served and has been treated as a nonparty by the parties and the judge throughout the

district-court proceedings. This court’s ability to resolve the issue has hardly been

hampered by the absence of a discussion of the applicability of the dispensability factors

in Ross’s letter.

       In addition, both parties, recognizing the obviousness of the issue, have made

known their common view that remanding to the district court to decide whether or not to

dismiss Ms. Butler would be a waste of time and resources. The panel majority obscures

this point by noting that Ms. Woods has consistently wanted the case ultimately to be

remanded to state court. But she has sought that relief on the grounds that Ross was not

entitled to summary judgment and improperly removed the case from state court, not

                                               14
because she thinks anything would be gained by a remand to the federal district court to

determine whether Ms. Butler should be dismissed—which she considers an unnecessary

exercise with a foregone conclusion, delaying any ultimate success she could obtain in

federal court. In arguing for a remand to state court she had always assumed that Ms.

Butler was not a party to the case when judgment was entered; and at oral argument—

when we pointed out the error of her assumption—she expressed a desire that we could

cure that error without wasting time with a remand to the district court to decide whether

to dismiss Ms. Butler, so that the merits of her appeal (a challenge to both removal and

the propriety of summary judgment) could proceed apace.

       The panel majority repeatedly quotes Newman-Green for the proposition that

appellate-court authority to dismiss a dispensable nondiverse party “should be exercised

sparingly.” 490 U.S. at 837. But it ignores the Supreme Court’s explanation of that

language and its ruling in that very case. The use of the word sparingly is not an

invitation to arbitrarily refuse to dismiss a party. The Supreme Court was not setting

some crude quota, limiting the number of dismissals of nondiverse parties. Rather, it was

introducing the analysis that the appellate courts should apply in determining whether to

exercise the power to dismiss a party. Immediately after the “sparingly” language, the

Court explained what it meant:

       In each case, the appellate court should carefully consider whether the
       dismissal of a nondiverse party will prejudice any of the parties in the
       litigation. It may be that the presence of the nondiverse party produced a
       tactical advantage for one party or another. If factual disputes arise, it
       might be appropriate to remand the case to the district court, which would
       be in a better position to make the prejudice determination.

                                            15
Id. at 837–38. This passage implies that absent any factual disputes or possibility of

prejudice, the appellate court should not require a wasteful remand to dismiss the

nondiverse party. In keeping with this reasoning, Newman-Green analyzed the

circumstances, noted no factual disputes, and saw no possibility of prejudice. See id. at

838. The Court reversed the en banc Seventh Circuit’s refusal to dismiss the nondiverse

party, explaining, in language that clearly applies equally to the case before us: “Nothing

but a waste of time and resources would be engendered by remanding to the District

Court or by forcing these parties to begin anew.” Id.

       There will certainly be cases, perhaps the great majority of those cases in which

the possibility of dismissing a nondiverse party arises, when factual issues or the

complexity of the litigation counsels that the district court should be the one to determine

whether dismissal is appropriate. This is not such a case. It is inconceivable that either

party in this case could be prejudiced by our dismissal of Ms. Butler. She did not

participate as a party in any way during the district-court proceedings. Her sole

participation was as a deposed witness. Nor can I conjure up any reason why she would

be indispensable.

       The panel majority describes the Newman-Green decision as merely “allow[ing] a

court of appeals to consider whether it should dismiss a nondiverse and possibly

dispensable defendant to cure a jurisdictional defect” and “did not mandate this course.”

Maj. Op. at 10. But surely it mandated dismissal by the circuit court in the very case

before it. It said that remanding to the district court to decide whether to dismiss the

nondiverse party would engender “[n]othing but a waste of time and resources.” 490

                                             16
U.S. at 838. It is hard for me to imagine what stronger language the Court could have

used to tell the circuit court what to do. Although Newman-Green does not always

require the appellate court to dismiss a nondiverse party, it also does not countenance

refusing to do so when it is clear that the nondiverse party is dispensable and dismissal

would not prejudice any party. To refuse to do so would be an abuse of discretion. 2

       Lower courts, despite noting the “sparingly” language, have regularly proceeded

to dismiss nondiverse parties when there was no reason to think that any prejudice would

follow. See, e.g., Grice, 921 F.3d at 968–70 (10th Cir.) (acknowledging Supreme Court’s

“sparingly” language, but dismissing nondiverse party to restore complete diversity,

where no party had identified a factual dispute or argued that the remaining parties would

suffer unfair prejudice); Trans Energy, Inc. v. EQT Production Co., 743 F.3d 895, 901–

02 (4th Cir. 2014) (Rule 21 authority should be exercised sparingly, but it was

appropriate to dismiss the nondiverse party on appeal because the nondiverse party was

not indispensable and there would be no prejudice); Molinos Valle del Cibao, C.A. v.

Lama, 633 F.3d 1330, 1343 (11th Cir. 2001) (recognizing that appellate courts are to use

2
  The majority opinion also says that Grupo Dataflux “cautioned against applying the
Caterpillar statement [that “[o]nce a diversity case has been tried in federal court . . .
considerations of finality, efficiency, and economy become overwhelming,” 519 U.S. at
75] when a jurisdictional defect persists through judgment.” Maj. Op. at 12. But once
again the majority opinion misses the point of a Supreme Court opinion. Grupo Dataflux
repeatedly recognizes the rule of Newman-Green that a jurisdictional defect that persists
through judgment can be cured on appeal by dismissing a nondiverse party. See 541 U.S.
at 573. What Grupo Dataflux refused to do was to extend Newman-Green (or
Caterpillar) to permit a jurisdictional flaw to be cured by recognizing a change in the
citizenship of a party (as opposed to dismissing a nondiverse party, as in Caterpillar,
Newman-Green, and, I would have hoped, this case). Nothing in Grupo Dataflux
supports the majority opinion or undercuts this dissent’s application of Newman-Green.
                                             17
Rule 21 “sparingly” but dismissing the nondiverse defendant because of “another

command from the Supreme Court: ‘Once a diversity case has been tried in federal court,

considerations of finality, efficiency, and economy become overwhelming.’” (quoting

Caterpillar, 519 U.S. at 75) (ellipsis omitted)); Casas Office Machines, Inc. v. Mita

Copystar Am., Inc., 42 F.3d 668, 675–78 (1st Cir. 1994) (acknowledging that appellate

court should exercise its Rule 21 authority sparingly, but holding that dismissal was

appropriate because the nondiverse defendants were not indispensable; remanding to

district court to determine whether dismissal should be with prejudice); Turtur v.

Rothschild Registry Int’l., Inc., 26 F.3d 304, 308 (2d Cir. 1994) (acknowledging that

power to dismiss dispensable party should be exercised sparingly, but nevertheless

dismissing nondiverse dispensable party); Sweeney v. Westvaco Co., 926 F.2d 29, 41–42

(1st Cir. 1991) (Breyer, C.J.) (court’s Rule 21 authority was to be exercised sparingly, but

it was appropriate to dismiss a nondiverse party because the party was not indispensable

and no prejudice would result).

       The circumstances here are at least as compelling as in similar cases where

appellate courts had little hesitation in deciding to dismiss the nondiverse defendant. See,

e.g., Gorfinkle v. U.S. Airways, Inc., 431 F.3d 19, 21–23 (1st Cir. 2005) (After the

plaintiff’s suit against the airline was removed to federal court, the plaintiff added a

skycap as a defendant, but no one noticed that this addition destroyed diversity. On

appeal from a summary judgment against the plaintiff, the appellate court cured the

jurisdictional defect by dismissing the skycap with prejudice.); Sweeney, 926 F.2d at 34,

41–42 (In a tort lawsuit, the plaintiff obtained a jury verdict against the defendant

                                              18
company and three supervisory employees, one of whom destroyed diversity; the

appellate court dismissed the nondiverse defendant and affirmed judgment against the

others.); Turtur, 26 F.3d at 308 (“[D]ismissal of the nondiverse dispensable party” was

“particularly appropriate” because the plaintiffs “failed for almost five years to prosecute

their claim against the nonappearing, non-diverse party, and it will spare the parties and

the courts the necessity of relitigation.” (internal quotation marks omitted)); see also

Grice, 921 F.3d at 968–70 (10th Cir.); Weber, 541 F.3d at 1009 n.8 (10th Cir.) (formally

dismissing nondiverse parties who had been dismissed “for all intents and purposes” in

district court).

       Footnote 4 of the majority opinion suggests that this court may not be conserving

judicial resources if we cure the jurisdictional defect by dismissing Ms. Butler. It points

out that we may ultimately have to remand the case to state court anyway. That is

because Caterpillar allows us to overlook the defect in removal only if we determine that

the district court was correct on the merits. If we decide instead that the district court

erred, we must remand to that court with instructions to remand the case to state court. In

that event we would have expended time and effort addressing a state-law issue that

should have been presented in the state court to begin with.

       I am not persuaded. The fatal flaw in this argument is that it contradicts Supreme

Court and Tenth Circuit precedent. The potential inefficiency suggested by the majority

opinion is present in every case in which Caterpillar would govern. Before an appellate

court can apply Caterpillar and disregard an improper removal, it must first determine

that the district court’s judgment was correct on the merits. Thus, it must conduct an

                                              19
analysis that, in the end, may lead to the conclusion that the district court erred, requiring

remand to state court. There is always the possibility that the appellate court’s efforts

will be “inefficient,” because ultimately the state court will have to re-examine the entire

case. But if this possibility of an occasional inefficiency tells us not to apply Caterpillar

and examine the merits of the district-court judgment, then the rule of Caterpillar would

be eviscerated. I do not believe that Justice Ginsburg and her colleagues overlooked this

possibility when she wrote for the Court that “[t]o wipe out the adjudication

postjudgment, and return to state court a case now satisfying all federal jurisdictional

requirements, would impose an exorbitant cost on our dual court system, a cost

incompatible with the fair and unprotracted administration of justice.” Caterpillar, 519

U.S. at 77. The appellate court has a duty to try to uphold the judgment and avoid the

overwhelming inefficiency of a redo in state court. It should not decline to determine

whether the district-court judgment can be saved simply on the chance that the district

court committed reversible error on the merits, requiring remand to the state court.

Caterpillar implicitly held that any efficiency lost in those cases, or any purported

offense to federalism from an “advisory opinion” where remand results, is far offset by

eliminating unnecessary redos. Moreover, even if remand to the state court is necessary,

the appellate court’s efforts need not go for naught. The state court to which the case is

remanded is free, of course, to reject the federal appellate court’s reasoning (it may

conclude that the rulings by the federal district court were actually correct) but I would

think that it would generally benefit from being advised of that reasoning. The appellate

                                              20
court’s analysis may increase the efficiency of the state court’s consideration of the case

(although, in that particular case, the Caterpillar doctrine does create inefficiency).

       This court pursued the proper path in Huffman v. Saul Holdings Limited

Partnership, 194 F.3d 1072 (10th Cir. 1999). The federal district court had resolved all

the claims and counterclaims through summary judgment. See id. at 1074. On appeal we

held that the case had been improperly removed from state court because the notice of

removal was untimely. See id. We then recognized, however, that this holding did not

end the matter. First, following Caterpillar, we held that “a defect in removal procedure

does not warrant a remand to state court if subject matter jurisdiction existed at the time

the district court entered judgment. The same considerations apply whether judgment is

based on the outcome of a trial or a district court’s ruling on a dispositive motion.” Id. at

1080. On the other hand, “the rationale of efficiency, economy and the interest in finality

does not apply [to justify disregarding the improper removal] where the judgment

reached by the trial court must be reversed on the merits and the case remanded to the

trial court for further proceedings.” Id. (ellipsis and internal quotation marks omitted).

We concluded: “We must therefore turn to the merits of the case to determine whether

the premise of Caterpillar rules out a remand to state court.” Id. We proceeded to

review each claim and counterclaim on which summary judgment had been granted and

held that the district court had erred on all of them. See id. at 1080–84. As a result, we

had to reverse and remand the district-court judgment with instructions to remand the

action back to state court. See id. at 1084.

                                               21
       Huffman is compelling precedent that we should strive to preserve district-court

judgments even though ultimately we may fail (so that our efforts have gone for naught).

We did not hesitate to consider, and opine on, the merits of the district court’s summary-

judgment rulings just because our efforts might not result in affirming the judgment

below and the case would need to be litigated in state court. On the contrary, we said that

“[w]e must therefore turn to the merits of the case to determine whether the premise of

Caterpillar rules out a remand to state court.” Id. at 1080 (emphasis added). The policy

reasons given by the majority opinion for remanding to district court in this case would

have required us to decide Huffman differently. They would have persuaded us not to

examine the merits of the district-court judgment in Huffman because of the possibility

(which actually occurred in that case) that we would decide that the district-court

judgment was incorrect and would therefore “produc[e] something akin to an advisory

opinion” and because “federalism . . . concerns caution against advising the state court of

how summary judgment should be decided.” Maj. Op. at 9-10 n.4. We proceeded

nonetheless to issue such an “advisory opinion” and order a remand to state court. In

other words, we complied with Caterpillar.

       I acknowledge that the case before us has one feature not present in Caterpillar or

Huffman—namely, the district court here lacked jurisdiction at the time it entered

judgment. But so what? That defect can, and should, be readily cured by applying

Newman-Green, which, as discussed above, was motivated by much the same interests in

efficiency as the decision in Caterpillar. We need only dismiss Ms. Butler from the case.

This is particularly appropriate since the district court and the parties had all believed that

                                              22
she was no longer in the case when judgment was entered. I fail to see any way in which

dismissing her would create an inefficiency. After all, effecting the dismissal does not

require us to analyze the merits of the district court’s judgment. The efficiency concerns

expressed by the majority opinion in its footnote 4 have no application to a Newman-

Green dismissal of a party; they come into play only during the Caterpillar component of

the analysis, which does require us to evaluate the merits. Those concerns were obvious

to the panel in Huffman, which said that we nevertheless “must . . . turn to the merits of

the case.” 194 F.3d at 1080.

       The majority opinion suggests that regardless of any policy reasons, Caterpillar

does not apply in this case (at least not unless the district court decides to dismiss Ms.

Butler to create diversity jurisdiction) because the Supreme Court created a bright line

rule that Caterpillar applies only when diversity jurisdiction existed at the time the

district court entered judgment. 3 It argues that the Supreme Court drew that line in

Caterpillar when it distinguished its earlier decision in American Fire & Casualty Co. v.

Finn, 341 U.S. 6 (1951). See Maj. Op. at 7 n.2. But neither Finn nor Caterpillar

addressed whether a nondiverse party could be dismissed on appeal. The reason

Caterpillar addressed Finn was because Caterpillar, the party, relied on language in Finn

in arguing that its favorable district-court judgment should be preserved. See 519 U.S. at

3
  It is interesting to note that the district-court “judgment” was not a final judgment,
because it did not dispose of all the claims involving the parties. Ms. Butler was still a
party and had not been dismissed. Nevertheless, for purposes of exercising our appellate
jurisdiction, circuit precedent requires us to treat unserved defendants like her as having
been dismissed. See Bristol, 789 F.2d at 847. It seems to me rather inconsistent, if not
bizarre, that we then proceed to treat Ms. Butler as not having been dismissed as a party
for the purpose of determining the district court’s diversity jurisdiction.
                                              23
70. The Caterpillar opinion discussed Finn to show that the cited language in the earlier

opinion, although helpful to Caterpillar, had not resolved the issue now before the Court

because Finn had addressed only estoppel of a removing defendant to later challenge a

removal. See id. at 70–72. More importantly, absent from the majority opinion is any

rationale for why Caterpillar would draw a rigid line that would exclude curing a

jurisdictional defect under Newman-Green.

       Along the same lines, the majority opinion baldly states that Caterpillar itself

“distinguished between jurisdictional defects that persist through judgment and those that

do not.” Maj. Op. at 11. But I find nary a word in the Supreme Court opinion explaining

why it would be improper to apply the rule in Caterpillar when the appellate court must

also dismiss a nondiverse, dispensable party to establish district-court jurisdiction. And it

would have been remarkable for the Caterpillar court to make such a statement, since

substantial support for its efficiency rationale was the analysis in Newman-Green, which,

of course, involved precisely such a cure of a jurisdictional lapse. See Caterpillar, 519

U. S. at 76 (“‘Requiring dismissal after years of litigation,’ the Court stressed in

Newman-Green, ‘would impose unnecessary and wasteful burdens on the parties, judges,

and other litigants waiting for judicial attention.’” (quoting Newman-Green, 490 U.S. at

836 (brackets omitted))).

       The majority opinion relies on the statement in Caterpillar that “[d]espite a federal

trial court’s threshold denial of a motion to remand, if, at the end of the day and case, a

jurisdictional defect remains uncured, the judgment must be vacated.” 519 U.S. at 76–77

(bold font added). But that statement is fully consistent with my view. A case does not

                                              24
end before appellate review; and we are taught by Newman-Green that the day to cure a

jurisdictional defect does not end until the completion of appellate review. Thus, if an

appellate court can cure the jurisdictional defect, the judgment need not be vacated. In

Caterpillar itself the jurisdictional defect had been cured in district court and the

Supreme Court unremarkably stated, “In this case . . . no jurisdictional defect lingered

through judgment in the District Court.” Id. at 77. I think it quite a stretch for the

majority opinion to interpret that statement of fact as declaring that jurisdictional defects

can be cured in the Caterpillar context only in district court. See Maj. Op. at 12. One

would expect at least a hint of how the Court in Caterpillar was distinguishing Newman-

Green.

         To say that “the district court is better left to consider [the] issue [of the dismissal

of Ms. Butler,]” Maj. Op. at 9, not only provides an unfortunate precedent for arbitrary

failure to take appropriate action, but it contravenes the clear wishes of both the plaintiff

and defendant. Is it so hard for us to formalize what the district court and the parties had

thought for many months—that Ms. Butler was no longer a party to the action?

         I therefore must respectfully dissent. We should exercise our authority—indeed,

our duty—to cure the jurisdictional lapse and proceed to determine whether the judgment

below can be preserved under Caterpillar.

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