Inong D.D.S. v. Protective Life Insurance Company ( 2023 )


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  • 1 2 3 4 5 6 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 7 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 8 9 10 MAYWELL INONG D.D.S., 11 Plaintiff, No. C 23-03595 WHA 12 v. 13 PROTECTIVE LIFE INSURANCE ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFF'S COMPANY, MOTION TO REMAND TO STATE 14 COURT Defendant. 15 16 INTRODUCTION 17 In this disability insurance action, plaintiff insured moves to remand to state court. The 18 basic issue is whether joinder of a non-diverse defendant in a state court action defeats removal 19 after the state court’s severance of that defendant. This order holds removal is proper. 20 STATEMENT 21 Plaintiff filed this action in state court against two named defendants: Protective Life 22 Insurance Company, a diverse defendant, and the Commissioner of the California Department of 23 Insurance, an in-state defendant. Protective moved to sever plaintiff’s claim against the Commissioner from plaintiff’s other claims. The state court did so in a June 21, 2023 order, 24 leaving only the diverse plaintiffs in this action. Protective then removed the case to federal court. 25 Plaintiff has not argued that the parties before this Court are non-diverse. Nor has plaintiff 26 suggested that the amount in controversy does not meet the required threshold. Plaintiff presents 27 1 rule, and (2) removal is premature because, despite the entry of the state court’s order severing the 2 non-diverse defendant, the clerk of the court has not yet issued a new case number to the non- 3 diverse defendant. 4 This order follows full briefing and oral argument. 5 ANALYSIS 6 1. THE VOLUNTARY/INVOLUNTARY RULE DID NOT BAR REMOVAL. 7 Plaintiff’s counsel has struck upon a tactic for defeating removal by joining the 8 Commissioner in an ordinary case against an insurer. In both 2017 and 2019, defendant-insurers 9 successfully removed actions brought by plaintiff’s counsel to federal court upon the state court’s 10 severance of claims against the Commissioner. Vincent K. Siefe, D.D.S. v. Unum Group et al, No. 11 2:17-cv-08199 (C.D. Cal. Nov. 9, 2017); Bonnie Jue. v. Unum Group et al, No. 3:19-cv-08299 12 (N.D. Cal. Dec. 19, 2019). Counsel persisted. Two weeks before our hearing in this action, for 13 example, Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley rejected counsel’s attempt to remand yet another matter 14 that was removed by a defendant-insurer after the severance of the Commissioner by the state 15 court. Jason Kiang v. Nationwide Life and Annuity Insurance Company, No. 3:23-CV-04861- 16 JSC, 2023 WL 8018254 (N.D. Cal. Nov. 20, 2023). The severance order issued by the state court 17 in Kiang noted: “Joining a writ of action against the insurance commissioner to a bad faith case 18 against an insurer is a recurring tactic by this plaintiffs’ counsel. The tactic has been rejected by 19 severance four times in recent years by three judges of this court.” Id. at 2. In the present action 20 counsel seeks, yet again, to defeat diversity jurisdiction via joinder of the Commissioner. 21 Therefore, as to the application of the voluntary/involuntary rule to an action where a state 22 court has created diversity jurisdiction through the severance of any in-state defendants, this order 23 endorses and adopts the analysis contained in the November 20 order by Judge Corley. Id. at 2-8. 24 Counsel severely misunderstands the limits of judicial deference to a plaintiff’s choice of 25 forum. Counsel says that a plaintiff may at all times foreclose on diversity jurisdiction by simply 26 joining an unrelated claim against a non-diverse defendant and then objecting to severance. To 27 hold that both courts and defendants are at the mercy of such transparent (and in the case of 2. DEFENDANT’S REMOVAL WAS NOT PREMATURE. Plaintiff next suggests that removal was premature. The argument goes: “though the state court entered an order severing the Commissioner, removal was premature because the clerk of ° court had not yet assigned the Commissioner’s now-severed matter a new case number, as requested by the court.” The law cited in support of this assertion is inapposite. In Mertan vy. ° E.R. Squibb & Sons, Inc., for example, the state court ordered counsel to prepare and file a ° proposed written dismissal of a non-diverse defendant after an oral settlement with such ’ defendant in open court. 581 F. Supp. 751, 753 (C.D. Cal. 1980). The defendant in Mertan ° attempted to remove before the state court approved any such written dismissal. Ibid. (“The ° State Court has not signed or filed any such written Dismissal.”). As plaintiff notes, in the 8 instant matter, “on June 21 and 22, 2023, the state court entered orders granting Protective’s " motion to sever” (Br. 3-4). E Section 1446 requires that defendant file a notice of removal “within 30 days after receipt 8 by the defendant, through service or otherwise, of a[n] . . . order or other paper from which it S may first be ascertained that the case is one which is or has become removable.” 28 U.S.C. §1446(b)(3). In Mertan, the order from which removal could be ascertained—the proposed dismissal—had not been entered. Defendant was not on the clock. Here, Protective was on the clock (and filed its removal 29 calendar days after the severance order was entered). A 18 defendant’s statutory right to removal may not be thwarted by a clerk’s administrative delay. ° CONCLUSION For the foregoing reasons, plaintiff's motion to remand is DENIED. 22 IT IS SO ORDERED. 23 24 Dated: December 7, 2023 25 A Pee 26 WILLIAM ALSUP UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE 28

Document Info

Docket Number: 3:23-cv-03595

Filed Date: 12/7/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/20/2024