Travelers Property Casualty v. Good ( 2012 )


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  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 11-2790
    T RAVELERS P ROPERTY C ASUALTY and
    T RAVELERS INDEMNITY C OMPANY,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    R OSS G OOD , individually and on behalf of a class,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 1:11-cv-00694—Joan Humphrey Lefkow, Judge.
    A RGUED JANUARY 17, 2012—D ECIDED JULY 27, 2012
    Before E ASTERBROOK, Chief Judge, and C UDAHY and
    H AMILTON, Circuit Judges.
    H AMILTON, Circuit Judge. This case is an appeal from
    the district court’s discretionary decision not to exercise
    jurisdiction over a declaratory judgment action because
    parallel state court proceedings were pending. We affirm
    the dismissal, but on a different ground. After exploring
    2                                               No. 11-2790
    some of the more arcane borders of federal jurisdiction
    based on diversity of citizenship, we conclude that the
    district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction. The plain-
    tiffs’ small disputes with many claimants cannot be
    aggregated to satisfy the amount-in-controversy require-
    ment of 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (a).
    I. Facts and Procedural Background
    The plaintiffs-appellants are two affiliated insurance
    companies we will simply call “Travelers.” They filed
    this federal action seeking a declaratory judgment that
    they had no duty to defend their insured, Rogan Shoes,
    Inc., in a class action suit brought against it in Illinois
    state court for violations of the federal Fair and Accurate
    Credit Transactions Act of 2003, 15 U.S.C. § 1681c(g). That
    act prohibits businesses from including on sales receipts
    the expiration date or more than the last five digits of the
    purchaser’s credit or debit card, authorizing damages of
    up to $1,000 per unlawful receipt. § 1681n(a). On behalf
    of a class, customer Ross Good sued Rogan Shoes in state
    court for violating the act by printing 387,291 receipts
    displaying the expiration dates of his and other class
    members’ charge cards in 2008 and 2009. Good sought
    statutory damages for class members in the staggering
    amount of $387 million. Rogan Shoes tendered Good’s
    suit to Travelers for defense pursuant to its liability
    insurance policies. Travelers denied coverage, leaving
    Rogan Shoes to its own devices.
    Rogan Shoes eventually settled with Good and the
    class for $16 million, but not in cash, or at least not Rogan
    No. 11-2790                                               3
    Shoes’ cash. The settlement agreement specified that the
    judgment would be satisfied only through proceeds
    from Rogan Shoes’ insurance policies with Travelers,
    with the exception of an up-front cash payment by Rogan
    Shoes of $50,000 to cover Good’s legal costs. As part of the
    settlement agreement, Rogan Shoes assigned to the plain-
    tiffs all of its “claims against and rights to payments
    from Travelers” under the policies, excepting the store’s
    claim for attorney fees in defending the suit and its
    claim for reimbursement of its $50,000 out-of-pocket
    payment. The state trial court approved the settlement
    on July 1, 2010.
    On January 4, 2011, Good filed a supplementary action
    in the state court to discover Travelers’ assets for the
    satisfaction of his judgment against Rogan Shoes. In
    Illinois, such actions are called “citation” proceedings.
    See 735 ILCS 5/2-1402. The state court citation was
    served on Travelers’ agent two days later. The citation
    summoned Travelers to court to appear in court on Feb-
    ruary 1 to produce several categories of documents rele-
    vant to the insurance policies Travelers had issued
    to Rogan Shoes. On January 31, Travelers filed this
    action in federal district court seeking a declaratory
    judgment that insurance policies it had issued to Rogan
    Shoes did not cover Good’s statutory claims based on
    the credit card receipts. The district court dismissed
    Travelers’ complaint on the basis of Wilton/Brillhart ab-
    stention, under which a federal district court has
    discretion to dismiss a declaratory judgment action
    when parallel proceedings are pending in state court. See
    Wilton v. Seven Falls Co., 
    515 U.S. 277
     (1995); Brillhart v.
    4                                              No. 11-2790
    Excess Ins. Co. of America, 
    316 U.S. 491
     (1942). Travelers
    has appealed, arguing that the district court abused its
    discretion by dismissing its action. During oral argu-
    ment we ordered supplemental briefing on the issue of
    subject matter jurisdiction. We directed the parties to
    address whether the case satisfies the amount-in-contro-
    versy requirement for diversity jurisdiction, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (a), in light of the fact that Rogan Shoes had
    assigned its interests in its Travelers policies to Good
    and his fellow class members, none of whom individually
    claim a share of more than $75,000.
    II. Discussion
    To invoke the diversity jurisdiction of the federal
    courts, a party must establish both that diversity of citi-
    zenship is complete and that “the matter in controversy
    exceeds the sum or value of $75,000, exclusive of
    interest and costs.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (a). Complete
    diversity is present in this case. Both Travelers com-
    panies are Connecticut corporations that also have their
    principal places of business in that state. Good is
    a citizen of Illinois, and Rogan Shoes is a Wisconsin
    corporation with its principal place of business in Wis-
    consin. The amount-in-controversy requirement, how-
    ever, bars the exercise of federal jurisdiction here.
    We address first the general rule against aggregating
    different parties’ claims to meet the amount in con-
    troversy and some of its exceptions. We then turn to
    issues that arise from the fact that Rogan Shoes assigned
    its claims against Travelers to the plaintiff class, and
    No. 11-2790                                                5
    address how an insurer in Travelers’ position could
    obtain a federal forum for such disputes.
    A. The Rule Against Aggregation and its Exceptions
    No individual defendant, including Rogan Shoes, has
    a claim for more than $75,000 against Travelers. The
    general rule is that the claims of multiple litigants
    cannot be aggregated to reach the jurisdictional amount
    in controversy. See Snyder v. Harris, 
    394 U.S. 332
    , 335
    (1969). The anti-aggregation rule applies both to cases in
    which multiple plaintiffs seek to combine their claims
    against a single defendant, see Thomson v. Gaskill, 
    315 U.S. 442
     (1942), and to those brought by a single
    plaintiff against multiple defendants, see Middle
    Tennessee News Co. v. Charnel of Cincinnati, Inc., 
    250 F.3d 1077
    , 1081 (7th Cir. 2001); see also 14AA Charles Alan
    Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper, Federal
    Practice and Procedure, § 3704, at 566-95 (2011) (hereinafter
    “Wright & Miller”) (collecting cases).
    Travelers contends that there is no need for aggrega-
    tion in this case because “from Travelers’ perspective,
    there is only one claim, by its insured, for the $16 million
    judgment entered against it.” In support of this theory,
    Travelers cites Meridian Security Insurance Co. v. Sadowski,
    
    441 F.3d 536
     (7th Cir. 2006), in which an insurer sought
    a declaratory judgment that its liability policy did not
    cover a suit under the Telephone Consumer Protection
    Act then pending in state court against its insured. We
    held that the case satisfied the amount-in-controversy
    6                                              No. 11-2790
    requirement. The anti-aggregation rule “does not apply
    to a federal declaratory-judgment action between a
    single plaintiff and a single defendant, just because the
    unitary controversy between these parties reflects the
    sum of many smaller controversies.” 
    Id. at 539
    , citing
    Hunt v. Washington State Apple Advertising Comm’n, 
    432 U.S. 333
    , 347-48 (1977).
    The decisive difference between this case and Meridian
    Security is that at the time the insurer filed the declara-
    tory judgment action in that case, the insured’s arguable
    right to recover under its policy was still completely
    its own. No assignment had been made. By the time
    Travelers filed this action, however, Rogan Shoes had
    already assigned its claims to the members of the Good
    class, and no individual class member had a claim for
    more than $75,000.
    According to Travelers, the fact of an assignment in
    this case is immaterial because the assignment “does not
    change whose claim it is.” But that is precisely what an
    assignment does. It transfers one person’s property,
    interest, or rights to another. Once Rogan Shoes made
    the assignment of rights, this was no longer a “unitary
    controversy” between the insurer and its insured. It had
    become a multi-party dispute between Travelers and
    thousands of class claimants. Meridian Security is
    inapposite.
    For purposes of this case, the most relevant exception
    to the general rule against aggregation is that the claims
    of co-parties may be added together when they have a
    “common and undivided interest” in a “single title or
    No. 11-2790                                                 7
    right.” Snyder v. Harris, 
    394 U.S. 332
    , 335 (1969). Can the
    relatively small claims of these class members be aggre-
    gated as “common and undivided” interests in a
    “single title or right”? Travelers declined to address this
    question in its supplemental memorandum, and it took
    that course at its peril. Jurisdictional objections cannot
    be forfeited or waived, of course, for this court has an
    “independent obligation to satisfy itself that federal
    subject matter jurisdiction exists.” Smith v. American
    General Life & Accident Ins. Co., 
    337 F.3d 888
    , 892 (7th
    Cir. 2003). The court need not bend over backwards to
    construct alternative theories to persuade itself that
    subject matter jurisdiction exists, see Travelers Indem. Co.
    v. Dingwell, 
    884 F.2d 629
    , 637 (1st Cir. 1989), but since
    the district court considered the case and we raised
    this issue, we address it here.
    The anti-aggregation rule had its origin in a case in-
    volving the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court
    rather than the original subject matter jurisdiction of the
    district courts. See Oliver v. Alexander, 31 U.S. (6 Pet.) 143
    (1832). Much later, in 1893, “the original Alexander con-
    struction of [the Court’s] appellate jurisdiction was
    applied to the jurisdictional-amount requirement for
    federal trial courts.” Zahn v. International Paper Co., 
    414 U.S. 291
    , 294 n.3 (1973), citing Walter v. Northeastern R.R.
    Co., 
    147 U.S. 370
    , 373 (1893). Apparently, little thought
    was given to whether “different aggregation policies
    might be of greater importance for original federal
    court jurisdiction than for appellate jurisdiction.” 14AA
    Wright & Miller § 3704, at 596. By 1916, however, the
    Court was able to describe the anti-aggregation principle
    8                                                   No. 11-2790
    as a “settled rule” of diversity jurisdiction, Pinel v. Pinel,
    
    240 U.S. 594
    , 596 (1916), and it certainly is so now. The
    rule is:
    When two or more plaintiffs, having separate and
    distinct demands, unite for convenience and economy
    in a single suit, it is essential that the demand of each
    be of the requisite jurisdictional amount; but when
    several plaintiffs unite to enforce a single title or
    right, in which they have a common and undivided
    interest, it is enough if their interests collectively
    equal the jurisdictional amount.
    Zahn, 
    414 U.S. at 294
     (emphases added), quoting Troy
    Bank v. G. A. Whitehead & Co., 
    222 U.S. 39
    , 40-41 (1911).1
    The anti-aggregation rule thus distinguishes between
    “separate and distinct interests,” which cannot be aggre-
    gated to reach the jurisdictional minimum, and “common
    and undivided interests,” which can be aggregated.
    The Supreme Court has opined that the “lower courts
    have developed largely workable standards for deter-
    mining when claims are joint and common, and
    therefore entitled to be aggregated, and when they are
    1
    The general rule in Zahn has been modified in respects not
    material here. For example, under the supplemental jurisdic-
    tion statute, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1367
    , if one plaintiff’s claim satisfies
    the amount-in-controversy requirement, the smaller claims of
    other plaintiffs can be joined as long as diversity of citizenship
    remains complete and all claims are part of the same case
    or controversy. Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Allapattah Services, Inc.,
    
    545 U.S. 546
    , 549 (2005); Stromberg Metal Works, Inc. v. Press
    Mechanical, Inc., 
    77 F.3d 928
    , 930-32 (7th Cir. 1996).
    No. 11-2790                                                 9
    separate and distinct and therefore not aggregable.”
    Snyder, 
    394 U.S. at 341
    . Other courts and commentators
    have taken a less sanguine view. See, e.g., Morrison v.
    Allstate Indem. Co., 
    228 F.3d 1255
    , 1262 (11th Cir. 2000)
    (noting “pervasive criticism of the ‘separate and distinct’
    versus ‘common and undivided’ distinction as arcane
    and confusing”); Eagle v. American Tel. and Tel. Co., 
    769 F.2d 541
    , 546 (9th Cir. 1985) (“The dividing line is not
    clear.”); Local Div. No. 714, Amalgamated Transit Union, v.
    Greater Portland Transit Dist., 
    589 F.2d 1
    , 10 (1st Cir. 1978)
    (“The distinction between ‘a common and undivided
    interest’ and ‘separate and distinct’ claims is not entirely
    clear.”), overruled on other grounds by Jackson Transit
    Auth. v. Local Div. 1285, Amalgamated Transit Union,
    
    457 U.S. 15
     (1982); Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Graves,
    
    381 F. Supp. 1159
    , 1162-63 (W.D. La. 1974) (“We also
    realize that the rules on aggregation of claims to satisfy
    the requirements of minimum amount in controversy ‘. . .
    turn on a mystifying conceptual test.’ ”) (ellipsis in origi-
    nal), quoting Wright, Law of Federal Courts § 36, at 121;
    14AA Wright & Miller § 3704, at 600-01 (“terms such
    as ‘common’ and ‘several’ are poor words for a
    subject matter jurisdiction test — or anything else for
    that matter — since they have little or no clear and ascer-
    tainable meaning.”) (some internal quotations omitted).
    The dichotomy between common and undivided inter-
    ests and separate and distinct interests is workable in
    the easy, paradigm cases. For example, where there is a
    “single indivisible res, such as an estate” or “a piece
    of property (the classic example),” it makes sense to
    think of co-parties’ claims to the res as “common and
    10                                              No. 11-2790
    undivided.” Gilman v. BHC Sec., Inc., 
    104 F.3d 1418
    , 1423
    (2d Cir. 1997), quoting Bishop v. General Motors Corp., 
    925 F. Supp. 294
    , 298 (D.N.J. 1996). Conversely, where the
    plaintiffs’ claims are “cognizable, calculable, and correct-
    able individually,” Gibson v. Chrysler Corp., 
    261 F.3d 927
    ,
    945 (9th Cir. 2001), — say, personal injuries arising from
    mass torts — they are clearly “separate and distinct”
    and may not be aggregated to meet the amount in con-
    troversy. Thus in the foundational Troy Bank case, the
    two plaintiffs could not aggregate their claims under
    separate promissory notes made payable by the de-
    fendant, but they could aggregate their claims based on
    a vendor’s lien that they owned jointly. 
    222 U.S. at 41
    .
    In closer cases, the distinction between common and
    undivided interests and separate and distinct interests
    is less useful. It has proven particularly slippery in cases
    involving insurance claims. For example, in Motorists
    Mutual Ins. Co. v. Simpson, 
    404 F.2d 511
     (7th Cir. 1968), an
    insured had caused an accident that resulted in damage
    to a rental vehicle and the death of its driver. The
    insured had been found liable to both the deceased
    driver’s widow and the owner of the rented vehicle. The
    insurer then sought a declaratory judgment that it was
    not required to cover liability to the widow for the
    death or to the owner for the property damage. Under
    the policy, neither type of liability was sufficient alone
    to meet the amount-in-controversy requirement, but if
    they were combined, they would exceed the minimum.
    The district court found that aggregation of the relief
    sought against two claimants was appropriate be-
    cause both claims arose under the same instrument. We
    No. 11-2790                                                11
    reversed, reasoning that the claims of the widow and
    the vehicle owner were separate and distinct, so that
    the insurer’s potential liability to them would have been
    several rather than joint. 
    Id. at 513
    , quoting Thomson v.
    Gaskill, 
    315 U.S. 442
    , 447 (1942) (“Aggregation of plaintiffs’
    claim cannot be made merely because the claims are
    derived from a single instrument.”); accord, e.g., Crenshaw
    v. Great Central Ins. Co., 
    482 F.2d 1255
    , 1259-60 (8th Cir.
    1973) (denying aggregation of claims against insurance
    company on uninsured motorist policy by parents of
    deceased for wrongful death and by their daughter for
    her own personal injuries); Eagle Star Ins. Co. v. Maltes,
    
    313 F.2d 778
    , 781-82 (5th Cir. 1963) (denying aggregation
    to three plaintiffs who sued insurer after obtaining sepa-
    rate judgments against insured); Jeffrey L. Rensberger,
    The Amount in Controversy: Understanding the Rules of
    Aggregation, 
    26 Ariz. St. L.J. 925
    , 945 & n.134 (1994)
    (“Courts also will not aggregate claims when an in-
    sured sues for coverage on a loss or an insurer sues for a
    declaration of non-coverage.”) (collecting cases).
    Other courts have taken different approaches. In
    Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Woolsey, 
    287 F.2d 531
    , 532 (10th Cir.
    1961), for example, the court allowed aggregation of
    claims of nine creditors to whom an insured had
    separately assigned proceeds of a fire insurance policy,
    presumably because the creditors cross-assigned to one
    another their interests in the proceeds “so that each
    might share pro rata in the recovery against the de-
    fendants and . . . agreed to waive against each other any
    priorities which might exist between them.” See also
    Manufacturers Casualty Ins. Co. v. Coker, 
    219 F.2d 631
    , 633
    12                                                No. 11-2790
    (4th Cir. 1955) (in declaratory judgment action brought
    by auto insurer for declaration of non-liability, allowing
    aggregation of claims of 23 children injured in school
    bus accident on ground that all claims “arise out of a
    single instrument”).
    Confronting the aggregation question in the insurance
    context, several circuits have attempted to distill some
    consistent meaning from the confusion. In a class action
    brought by automobile insureds against their insurers
    to recover the diminished value of their vehicles after
    they were repaired, the Eleventh Circuit held that the
    plaintiffs’ claims could not be aggregated because they
    were “asserting rights arising from their individual
    insurance policies, and if successful, they [would] recover
    the amount of excessive premiums each paid under
    his own policy.” Morrison v. Allstate Indem. Co., 
    228 F.3d 1255
    , 1264 (11th Cir. 2000). The court adopted a formula-
    tion of the distinction between “separate and distinct”
    interests and “common and undivided” interests first
    articulated in Eagle Star by Judge Tuttle for the Fifth
    Circuit. Under this test, aggregation is permitted “only
    in those situations where there is not only a common
    fund from which the plaintiffs seek relief, but where
    the plaintiffs also have a joint interest in that fund,
    such that if plaintiffs’ rights are not affected by the
    rights of co-plaintiffs, then there can be no aggregation.” 
    Id. at 1262-63
    , quoting Eagle Star, 
    313 F.2d at 781
    . In other
    words, the Eagle Star rule is that the claims of co-parties
    are “common and undivided” — and thus can be aggre-
    gated — only where each claim (1) is part of a “common
    fund” and (2) could not be adjudicated on an individual
    basis without affecting the interests of the other claimants.
    No. 11-2790                                               13
    At least five other circuits have endorsed the Eagle Star
    formulation or its functional equivalent. See Everett v.
    Verizon Wireless, Inc., 
    460 F.3d 818
    , 824 (6th Cir. 2006)
    (“Aggregation is permitted ‘where there is not only a
    common fund from which the plaintiffs seek relief, but
    where the plaintiffs also have a joint interest in that fund,
    such that if plaintiffs’ rights are not affected by the
    rights of co-plaintiffs then there can be no aggregation.
    In other words, the obligation to the plaintiffs must be
    a joint one.’ ”) (emphasis in original), quoting Eagle
    Star, 
    313 F.2d at 781
    ; In re Ford Motor Co./Citibank (South
    Dakota), N.A., 
    264 F.3d 952
    , 959 (9th Cir. 2001) (claims
    of cardholder plaintiffs against credit card companies
    arising out of the termination of a purchase rebate
    program could not be aggregated as common and undi-
    vided interests because they “do not implicate a
    ‘single indivisible res,’ and could be adjudicated on an
    individual basis because the consolidated plaintiffs
    (and putative class members) have no common and
    undivided interest in accruing rebates under the pro-
    gram.”); Martin v. Franklin Capital Corp., 
    251 F.3d 1284
    ,
    1292 (10th Cir. 2001) (“[A] common interest in a pool of
    funds is not the type of interest that permits aggregation
    of claims under the ‘common fund’ doctrine. Each class
    member could sue separately for punitive damages
    and have his right to recovery determined without im-
    plicating the rights of every other person claiming
    such damages.”) (citation and some quotation marks omit-
    ted); Gilman, 
    104 F.3d at 1423
     (holding that claims of
    plaintiff-investors against defendant-brokerage for
    illegally charging “order flow payments” on securities
    14                                               No. 11-2790
    transactions could not be aggregated because they “do not
    implicate a ‘single indivisible res,’ and could be ad-
    judicated on an individual basis”); Dierks v. Thompson,
    
    414 F.2d 453
    , 456 (1st Cir. 1969) (approving aggregation
    of multiple plaintiffs’ claims to reach jurisdictional
    amount because they “are seeking to establish a trust
    fund as distinguished from individual cash claims
    against the defendants” and the “fact that the individual
    plaintiffs’ beneficial interests may be of fixed proportion
    does not vary the fact that the existence of a single trust
    res is of common importance”).
    In accord with our colleagues in these other circuits,
    we adopt the Eagle Star rule: we “allow aggregation only
    in those situations where there is not only a common
    fund from which the plaintiffs seek relief, but where the
    plaintiffs also have a joint interest in that fund, such
    that . . . plaintiffs’ rights are . . . affected by the rights
    of co-plaintiffs.” 
    313 F.2d at 781
    . Unlike the more
    abstract terminology from Troy Bank and Zahn, it has
    the virtue of making this case fairly easy to resolve.
    First, the potential proceeds from the Travelers policies
    do not qualify as a “common fund.” The existence of a
    “common fund” depends on the “nature of the right
    asserted, not whether successful vindication of the
    right will lead to a single pool of money that will be
    allocated among the plaintiffs.” Gilman, 
    104 F.3d at 1427
    .
    Thus, a common fund exists when “plaintiffs share[ ] a pre-
    existing (pre-litigation) interest in the subject of the
    litigation.” 
    Id.
     In this case, the Good class members did
    not share a pre-existing interest in recovery against
    Rogan Shoes or its insurers. The class members’ claims
    No. 11-2790                                              15
    all arose from separate transactions. As the Second
    Circuit said in Gilman: “There is no fund. The claim
    remains one on behalf of separate individuals for the
    damage suffered by each due to the alleged conduct of the
    defendant.” 
    Id.
     (ellipses omitted), quoting Rock Drilling
    Local Union No. 17 v. Mason & Hanger Co., 
    217 F.2d 687
    ,
    695 (2d Cir. 1954).
    Even if Travelers could meet the common fund element
    of the Eagle Star formulation, the claims of the Good
    class members also fail the second element because
    each claimant’s “rights are not affected by the rights
    of co-plaintiffs.” 
    313 F.2d at 781
    .
    Under the terms of the settlement agreement between
    Good and Rogan Shoes, each class member would
    receive a pro rata (per receipt) share of the $16 million
    recovery that is sought, with a maximum award of
    $1,000 regardless of the number of unlawful receipts
    that Rogan Shoes issued any individual. After attorney
    fees are deducted, roughly $10.67 million would remain
    in the pot. Because of the $1,000 cap on individual
    awards, in order for any one class member’s claim to
    be affected by the claims of other class members, at least
    10,667 claimants would have to submit viable claims.
    Is that likely? We do not know.
    In all cases, the party asserting federal jurisdiction has
    the burden of proof to show that jurisdiction is proper.
    E.g., McNutt v. General Motors Acceptance Corp., 
    298 U.S. 178
    , 189 (1936). The “proponent of jurisdiction may be
    called on to prove facts that determine the amount in
    controversy,” and must do so by a preponderance of the
    16                                              No. 11-2790
    evidence. Meridian Security, 
    441 F.3d at 541
    . Here, Travelers
    has not done so. On the basis of the settlement agree-
    ment alone, we cannot conclude that it is more likely
    than not that the class will produce more than 10,667
    claimants and, if so, that “if one plaintiff cannot or does
    not collect his share, the shares of the remaining
    plaintiffs [would be] increased.” See Sellers v. O’Connell,
    
    701 F.2d 575
    , 579 (6th Cir. 1983) (“Where a group of
    plaintiffs litigate individual cash claims the amount of
    which remain unaffected by the results obtained by
    fellow plaintiffs, the litigants may not aggregate their
    claims when alleging jurisdiction.”) (citations omitted);
    Kopff v. World Research Group, LLC, 
    298 F. Supp. 2d 50
    , 56
    (D.D.C. 2003) (“plaintiffs’ claims can be aggregated
    when they make an integrated claim — in other words,
    if the right is a collective right pursuant to which one
    plaintiff’s failure to collect his or her share increases the
    remaining plaintiffs’ damages”) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). The claims of the Good class to Rogan
    Shoes’ potential insurance proceeds are not “common
    and undivided” and therefore cannot be aggregated
    to reach the jurisdictional minimum.
    B. Assignment Affecting Jurisdiction
    When assignments of rights seem to have the effect
    of creating diversity jurisdiction, federal courts give them
    close scrutiny for signs of attempts to manipulate the
    choice of forum. Congress has provided: “A district court
    shall not have jurisdiction of a civil action in which any
    party, by assignment or otherwise, has been improperly
    No. 11-2790                                               17
    or collusively made or joined to invoke the jurisdiction
    of such court.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 1359
    ; see also Kramer v.
    Caribbean Mills, Inc., 
    394 U.S. 823
    , 828-29 (1969) (affirming
    dismissal for lack of jurisdiction: “If federal jurisdiction
    could be created by assignments of this kind, which are
    easy to arrange and involve few disadvantages for the
    assignor, then a vast quantity of ordinary contract and
    tort litigation could be channeled into the federal courts
    at the will of one of the parties. Such ‘manufacture of
    Federal jurisdiction’ was the very thing which Congress
    intended to prevent when it enacted § 1359 and its prede-
    cessors.”); Airlines Reporting Corp. v. S and N Travel, Inc.,
    
    58 F.3d 857
    , 862 (2d Cir. 1995) (“We give careful scrutiny
    to assignments which might operate to manufacture
    diversity jurisdiction . . . .”).
    It is less clear how closely federal courts should scruti-
    nize assignments that have the effect of defeating
    federal diversity jurisdiction. Compare Miller v. Perry,
    
    456 F.2d 63
    , 67, 66 (4th Cir. 1972) (reading Kramer as
    “injecting a new note of realism into the determination
    of diversity jurisdiction” and carefully scrutinizing at-
    tempts to defeat diversity jurisdiction, as well), with
    Messer v. American Gems, Inc., 
    612 F.2d 1367
    , 1375 (4th Cir.
    1980) (“
    28 U.S.C. § 1359
     attaches no consequences to
    steps taken to defeat diversity jurisdiction.”). In any
    event, we do not see in this case any indication that
    Rogan Shoes and Good negotiated the assignment of
    the former’s insurance proceeds for the purposes of
    thwarting Travelers’ right to a federal forum.
    We reach this conclusion in part because the assign-
    ment did not have the effect of preventing Travelers from
    18                                               No. 11-2790
    securing a federal forum to resolve this controversy. First,
    it could have sought a declaratory judgment of non-
    coverage immediately after Rogan Shoes tendered Good’s
    claims to it. Before the assignment, the amount-in-contro-
    versy requirement would have been met. See Meridian
    Security, 
    441 F.3d at 539
    .
    Second, even after the assignment, Travelers could
    have removed the state court proceeding to fed-
    eral court once Good filed that action seeking to
    discover Travelers’ assets. The state court citation pro-
    ceeding on behalf of the Good class would have
    been subject to the Class Action Fairness Act, so that
    removal would not have been barred by the one-
    year limit on removal in diversity cases. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1453
    (b). (The Class Action Fairness Act does not apply
    in this declaratory judgment action, however, because
    the act applies only where there is a plaintiff class, not
    a defendant class. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (d)(2).)
    To counter that argument, Travelers argues that the
    removal option was foreclosed by another decision
    from the district where this case was filed. The facts and
    posture of that case, Eclipse Manufacturing Co. v. United
    States Compliance Co., No. 05 C 5406, 
    2006 WL 42395
    (N.D. Ill. Jan. 4, 2006), were strikingly similar to this one.
    Although the case is not binding precedent, one could
    expect the decision to influence practice in the district,
    and it deserves our close attention. The plaintiff in
    Eclipse Manufacturing had filed a putative class action
    against a company for allegedly sending unsolicited
    advertisements by facsimile in violation of the Telephone
    No. 11-2790                                             19
    Consumer Protection Act, 
    47 U.S.C. § 227
    , and state
    law. The parties agreed to a $4 million judgment that,
    as here, could be executed only on money received from
    the defendant’s liability insurer. The state trial court
    entered a judgment approving the settlement, after
    which the class members filed a citation to discover
    assets under 735 ILCS 5/2-1402, naming the liability
    insurer as a “third-party respondent.” Instead of seeking
    a federal declaratory judgment of non-liability, as
    Travelers did here, the Eclipse Manufacturing insurer
    removed the citation action to the federal district court.
    The district court ordered remand, finding for the
    plaintiff class on two separate grounds: First, it held
    that the Illinois citation proceeding was not removable
    under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1441
    (a) because it was not a “separate
    and independent action” from the underlying suit it-
    self. Eclipse Mfg., 
    2006 WL 42395
    , at *3. Second, the
    court held that even if the citation proceeding were
    separately removable, “removal would still be improper
    because the jurisdictional amount requirement for
    diversity is not satisfied.” 
    Id. at *4
    . The court explained
    that each class member’s pro rata share of the settle-
    ment was less than $300, and aggregation was not per-
    mitted because the judgment “cannot be viewed as
    an undivided lump sum.” 
    Id.
    We disagree with the Eclipse Manufacturing court’s
    first conclusion that the citation proceeding was not a
    removable action. Section 1441 permits removal of “civil
    action[s] brought in a State court” over which federal
    district courts “have original jurisdiction.” 28 U.S.C.
    20                                              No. 11-2790
    §1441(a). The statute has long been interpreted to allow
    removal only of “independent suits” but not ancillary
    or “supplementary” proceedings. See Federal Sav. & Loan
    Ins. Corp. v. Quinn, 
    419 F.2d 1014
    , 1018 (7th Cir. 1969);
    see also Barrow v. Hunton, 
    99 U.S. 80
    , 83 (1878) (explaining
    that a supplementary action so connected with an
    original action as to form a mere incident or continua-
    tion of it is not removable as a separate suit). This pruden-
    tial doctrine seeks to avoid the waste of having federal
    courts “entertain[ ] ‘satellite elements’ of pending state
    suits and judgments.” Armistead v. C & M Transp., Inc.,
    
    49 F.3d 43
    , 46 (1st Cir. 1995), quoting 14A Wright &
    Miller § 3721.
    Whether a particular state judicial procedure qualifies
    as a separate action is not an all-or-nothing proposition.
    It depends on the context of each case in which it
    arises. See Quinn, 
    419 F.2d at 1018-19
    . Removability is
    a question of federal law, so the state’s own characteriza-
    tions of the proceeding are not decisive. See Chicago, Rock
    Island & Pac. R.R. Co. v. Stude, 
    346 U.S. 574
    , 580 (1954);
    Quinn, 
    419 F.2d at 1018
    .
    No bright-line formula exists for separating the inde-
    pendent and removable sheep from the ancillary and non-
    removable goats. But one nineteenth century judge
    offered this helpful distinction: “where the supple-
    mental proceeding is not merely a mode of execution
    or relief, but where it, in fact, involves an independent
    controversy with some new and different party, it may
    be removed into the federal court.” Buford v. Strother,
    
    10 F. 406
    , 407 (C.C.D. Iowa 1881) (Love, J.). A citation pro-
    No. 11-2790                                                 21
    ceeding (or a garnishment proceeding, as it is called in
    most jurisdictions) may often be “merely a mode of
    execution of relief.” Id.; see, e.g., Vukadinovich v. McCarthy,
    
    59 F.3d 58
    , 62 (7th Cir. 1995) (“Garnishment is a
    standard, often essential, step in the collection of a judg-
    ment, and the party holding the judgment . . . ought to
    be able to take this step without having to start a
    new lawsuit in a different court system.”).
    Consistent with Judge Love’s distinction, however,
    when garnishment proceedings present genuine dis-
    putes with new parties and raise new issues of fact
    and law, courts overwhelmingly treat them as in-
    dependent and removable actions. See 14B Wright &
    Miller § 3721, at 28-30 & n.58 (“For example, proceedings
    for garnishment . . . are considered civil actions within
    the meaning of the federal removal statute.”) (collecting
    cases); see, e.g., Butler v. Polk, 
    592 F.2d 1293
    , 1295-96
    (5th Cir. 1979) (garnishment action against third-party
    insurer was removable); Swanson v. Liberty Nat’l Ins. Co.,
    
    353 F.2d 12
    , 13 (9th Cir. 1965) (same); Randolph v.
    Employers Mut. Liab. Ins. Co. of Wis., 
    260 F.2d 461
    , 464-65
    (8th Cir. 1958) (same); Adriaenssens v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    258 F.2d 888
    , 890 (10th Cir. 1958) (same).
    The reason is clear: when the garnishment action
    brings in a new party and raises new and distinct
    disputed issues, the proceeding is not “substantially a
    continuation of a prior suit.” See Quinn, 
    419 F.2d at 1018
    .
    Judicial economy concerns about “satellite” issues no
    longer apply. This is not to say that any garnishment ac-
    tion that involves a third party is a separate and re-
    movable action. But “[w]here the garnishment procedures
    22                                                No. 11-2790
    allow for adversarial litigation of disputed issues, and
    where the garnishment action involves a new party and
    disputed rights and issues not decided by the state
    court, removal should be permitted.” Harding Hosp. v.
    Sovchen, 
    868 F. Supp. 1074
    , 1078 (S.D. Ind. 1994) (denying
    remand after Travelers removed garnishment action that
    sought to resolve insurance coverage issue); accord,
    Johnson v. Wilson, 
    185 F. Supp. 2d 960
    , 964-65 (S.D. Ind.
    2002) (denying remand where garnishment proceeding
    involved new parties and raised legal and factual issues
    not decided in the state court litigation); see also Stewart v.
    EGNEP (Pty) Ltd., 
    581 F. Supp. 788
    , 790 (C.D. Ill. 1983)
    (denying remand of garnishment proceedings raising
    interests and defenses separate from those of judgment
    creditors).
    In light of these principles, the citation proceeding
    against Travelers was separate from the underlying suit
    between Rogan Shoes and Good. It could have been
    removed if the requirements of diversity jurisdiction
    were satisfied. Travelers was brought into state court
    under a law allowing the court to “[a]uthorize the judg-
    ment creditor to maintain an action against any person or
    corporation that, it appears upon proof satisfactory to the
    court, is indebted to the judgment debtor, for the recovery
    of the debt.” 735 ILCS 5/2-1402(c)(6) (emphases added).
    We need not specify here the precise time that the cita-
    tion proceeding might have been removable (apart
    from amount-in-controversy issues), and the removal
    statute allows a little play in the joints when it may not
    be apparent at the outset that a proceeding can be re-
    moved. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1446
    (b)(3). If not with the
    No. 11-2790                                             23
    initial citation, which on its face demanded only
    discovery of documents, then later as the dispute over
    insurance coverage crystallized in the state court, the
    citation proceeding became an “action . . . for the re-
    covery of the debt.”
    This new action was an “independent controversy
    with some new and different party” and was quite
    distinct from the underlying case between Rogan
    Shoes and Good. See Buford, 10 F. at 407. In that initial
    litigation, the issues were whether Rogan Shoes violated
    the federal statute on credit card receipts, and if so,
    how many times, and what damages should be
    awarded. The opposing parties were Rogan Shoes
    against Good on behalf of a class. In the citation pro-
    ceeding, the principal issue is whether Rogan Shoes’
    liability insurance policies with Travelers covered the
    claims for its alleged violations of the federal law, with
    Rogan Shoes and the Good class members allied together
    against a new party, Travelers. The citation proceeding
    thus features a new party, a new and distinct legal claim,
    new issues of fact and law, and even a realignment of
    the original litigants. Aside from the citation action’s
    origination in the underlying suit, it became for all
    intents and purposes a separate case. We believe the
    Eclipse Manufacturing court erred in concluding other-
    wise on nearly identical facts.
    We take no issue, however, with the Eclipse Manufac-
    turing court’s remand in that case based on the alternative
    holding that aggregation was not permitted to satisfy the
    amount-in-controversy requirement. The court’s holding
    24                                                No. 11-2790
    on that point is consistent with our analysis of anti-aggre-
    gation principles above. But that holding would have
    posed no obstacle to Travelers’ ability to remove the
    citation action against it to federal court, thanks to the
    Class Action Fairness Act of 2005. That act modified
    diversity jurisdiction rules so as to permit federal
    diversity jurisdiction where diversity is only minimal
    but the matter in controversy exceeds $5,000,000. 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (d). Section 1332(d)(6) relaxes the gen-
    eral diversity rule against aggregation and “explicitly
    provides for aggregation of each class member’s claims
    in determining whether the amount of controversy is
    at least $5,000,000.” Blockbuster, Inc. v. Galeno, 
    472 F.3d 53
    ,
    59 (2d Cir. 2006). The $16 million settlement that the
    Good class sought to collect exceeded the aggregate
    amount-in-controversy threshold, so the federal dis-
    trict court could have had subject matter jurisdiction.
    The deadline for removal, however, was 30 days after
    Travelers’ receipt of the citation or such other documents
    that would have made it ascertainable that the case was
    removable. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1446
    (b). That deadline has
    passed.
    The district court’s judgment of dismissal is A FFIRMED
    AS  M ODIFIED to reflect that the dismissal is for lack of
    jurisdiction.
    7-27-12