Glenda Johnson v. SmithKline Beecham Corp , 724 F.3d 337 ( 2013 )


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  •                               PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    Nos. 12-2561/2562/2563/2564/2565
    _____________
    GLENDA JOHNSON;
    STEVEN LUCIER,
    Appellants in 12-2561
    v.
    SMITHKLINE BEECHAM CORPORATION, doing
    business as GLAXOSMITHKLINE; GLAXOSMITHKLINE,
    LLC; GLAXOSMITHKLINE HOLDINGS LLC; SANOFI-
    AVENTIS, U.S., L.L.C.; AVANTOR PERFORMANCE
    MATERIALS; GRUNENTHAL U.S.A.; GRUNENTHAL
    GMBH
    SmithKline Beecham Corporation;
    GlaxoSmithKline, LLC; and
    GlaxoSmithKline Holdings, LLC
    Appellants in 12-2562
    Avantor PerformanceMaterials,
    Appellant in 12-2563
    Sanofi-Aventis U.S.,LLC,
    Appellant in 12-2564
    Grunenthal U.S.A.,
    Appellant in 12-2565
    _______________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. No. 2-11-cv-05782)
    District Judge: Hon. Paul S. Diamond
    _______________
    Argued
    March 5, 2013
    Before: AMBRO, JORDAN, and VANASKIE, Circuit
    Judges.
    (Filed: June 7, 2013)
    _______________
    Steve W. Berman
    Craig R. Spiegel [ARGUED]
    Nick Styant-Browne
    Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro
    1918 Eighth Avenue - #3300
    Seattle, WA 98101
    Mary A. Geppert
    Jeffrey L. Kodroff
    John A. Macoretta
    Spector, Roseman, Kodroff & Willis
    1818 Market Street - #2500
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    2
    Kay G. Reeves
    6815 Lakeshore Drive
    Dallas, TX 75214
    Counsel for Appellants/Cross-Appellees
    Lisa S. Blatt [ARGUED]
    Sarah M. Harris
    R. Stanton Jones
    Arnold & Porter
    555 Twelfth Street, NW
    Washington, DC 20004
    Michael T. Scott
    Melissa A. Wojtylak
    Reed Smith
    1650 Market Street - #2500
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Counsel for Appellees/Cross-Appellants, SmithKline
    Beecham Corp., GlaxoSmithKline, and
    GlaxoSmithKline Holdings LLC
    Anand Agneshwar
    Bruce R. Kelly
    Arnold & Porter
    399 Park Avenue
    New York, NY 10022
    Kenneth A. Murphy
    Drinker, Biddle & Reath
    18th & Cherry Streets
    One Logan Square - #2000
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    3
    Daniel S. Pariser
    Arnold & Porter
    555 Twelfth Street, NW
    Washington, DC 20004
    Counsel for Appellees, Sanofi-Aventis US Inc.,
    and Avantor Performance Materials
    Albert G. Bixler
    Rachel C. Rosser
    Eckert, Seamans, Cherin & Mellott
    50 S. 16th Street – 22nd Fl.
    Philadelphia, PA 19102
    Sara J. Gourley
    Eugene A. Schoon
    Sidley Austin
    One South Dearborn St.
    Chicago, IL 60603
    Counsel for Appellees/Cross-Appellants
    Grunenthal USA and Grunenthal GmbH
    _______________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    _______________
    JORDAN, Circuit Judge.
    Plaintiffs Glenda Johnson and Steven Lucier appeal an
    order of the United States District Court for the Eastern
    District of Pennsylvania denying their motion to remand this
    action to Pennsylvania state court. They contend that the
    District Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over their
    claims because the parties do not have complete diversity of
    4
    citizenship. We conclude that the District Court‟s assessment
    of citizenship was correct, and that none of the Defendants is
    a citizen of the same state as either Plaintiff. Accordingly, we
    will affirm.
    I.     Background1
    Johnson, a Louisiana citizen, and Lucier, a
    Pennsylvania citizen (collectively, “Plaintiffs”), suffer from
    birth defects allegedly caused by their mothers‟ use of the
    drug thalidomide during pregnancy in the 1960s.2
    1
    The parties agreed to proceed on the jurisdictional
    record made in Brewer v. SmithKline Beecham Corp., 
    774 F. Supp. 2d 720
     (E.D. Pa. 2011), a similar case against many of
    the same defendants, supplemented by additional documents
    and affidavits.
    2
    Thalidomide was developed in the 1950s, and from
    1957 to 1961 it was prescribed to treat a variety of conditions,
    including morning sickness during pregnancy.             Emma
    Wilkinson, Thalidomide Survivors To Get £20M, BBC News,
    Dec.          23,          2009,           available          at
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8428838.stm (last visited on Feb.
    11, 2013). It was taken off the market after being linked to
    widespread, serious birth defects, including malformed
    organs and shortened or nonexistent limbs. 
    Id.
     In Europe,
    more than 10,000 children were born with birth defects linked
    to thalidomide before the drug was banned. Carl Zimmer,
    Answers Begin to Emerge on How Thalidomide Caused
    Defects, New York Times, Mar. 15, 2010, available at
    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/16/science/16limb.html?ref
    =science&pagewanted=all&_r=0 (last visited on Feb. 11,
    2013). The drug was not FDA-approved during that period,
    5
    Defendants, described in more depth below, are drug
    companies (and their successors-in-interest) that developed,
    designed, manufactured, and distributed thalidomide.
    According to Plaintiffs, “newly-accessible evidence reveals”
    that Defendants were aware of the drug‟s risks even while
    marketing it to pregnant women, and that for the last 60 years
    they have been engaged in an elaborate cover-up to avoid
    liability for those actions. (Appellants‟ Opening Br. at 8.)
    Seeking redress for lifelong physical and emotional
    suffering, Plaintiffs filed this personal injury action against
    Defendants in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas on
    August 26, 2011. Within thirty days, on September 14, 2011,
    Defendants removed the case to federal court, asserting
    diversity jurisdiction.     Plaintiffs then filed a motion to
    remand the action to state court, arguing that diversity
    jurisdiction is lacking and removal was improper because
    four of the Defendants – GlaxoSmithKline Holdings (“GSK
    Holdings”), GlaxoSmithKline LLC (“GSK LLC”),
    SmithKline Beecham Corporation (“SmithKline Beecham”),
    and Avantor Performance Materials (“Avantor”) – are
    Pennsylvania citizens, as is Plaintiff Steven Lucier.3 The
    and therefore its alleged effects were less widespread in the
    United States. Id.; see also Anita Bernstein, Formed by
    Thalidomide: Mass Torts as a False Cure for Toxic Exposure,
    
    97 Colum. L. Rev. 2153
    , 2154 (1997).
    3
    There are three other defendants – Grunenthal
    U.S.A., Grunenthal GmbH, and Sanofi-Aventis U.S., Inc. –
    whose citizenship is uncontested.     Sanofi-Aventis and
    Grunenthal U.S.A. are citizens of both Delaware and New
    Jersey, and Grunenthal GmbH is a German citizen.
    6
    District Court disagreed and denied Plaintiffs‟ motion, but it
    certified that order for interlocutory review.4 Johnson v.
    SmithKline Beecham Corp., 
    853 F. Supp. 2d 487
    , 498 (E.D.
    Pa. 2012). Plaintiffs then requested permission to appeal,
    which we granted on May 22, 2012. On appeal, Plaintiffs
    repeat their argument that the District Court lacks subject
    matter jurisdiction because GSK LLC, GSK Holdings,
    SmithKline Beecham, and Avantor are all citizens of
    Pennsylvania.
    GSK LLC is a large pharmaceutical company that is
    responsible for operating the U.S. division of
    GlaxoSmithKline plc, the British entity that is the “global
    head” of the GlaxoSmithKline group of companies.
    (Appellees‟ Br. at 6.) It was formed on October 27, 2009,
    when its predecessor – SmithKline Beecham – was converted
    from a Pennsylvania corporation into a Delaware limited
    liability company (“LLC”). More specifically, SmithKline
    Beecham underwent a two-step conversion, first becoming a
    Delaware corporation by filing a “certificate of conversion”
    with the Delaware Secretary of State, in accordance with
    Delaware Code Title 8, Section 265, and then converting into
    a Delaware LLC under Sections 18-201 and 18-214 of the
    Delaware Limited Liability Company Act, Del. Code Ann. tit.
    6, ch. 18. The LLC was formed under Delaware law because
    it “permits a corporation to convert to an LLC without any
    break in the continuity of the legal entity.” (Id. at 10.)
    4
    As discussed in more depth below, we have
    jurisdiction to review an interlocutory order when a district
    court certifies in writing that its order involves “a controlling
    question of law as to which there is substantial ground for
    difference of opinion.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 1292
    (b).
    7
    The purpose of that conversion was to obtain the tax
    benefits of LLC status and thus facilitate the formation of a
    joint entity with Pfizer, Inc. called “ViiV Healthcare,” which
    was created to “develop critical treatments for HIV/AIDS at
    not-for-profit pricing.” (Appellees‟ Br. at 9.) According to
    Defendants, “[i]f [SmithKline Beecham] had remained a
    corporation, it would have incurred hundreds of millions of
    dollars in unnecessary tax liability for transferring its existing
    HIV/AIDS assets to the new entity – a „prohibitive‟ obstacle
    that would have prevented the venture from being financially
    viable.”     (Id.)   Following the conversion, SmithKline
    Beecham dissolved under Pennsylvania law, which allows
    dissolution “[w]henever a domestic business corporation has
    domesticated itself under the laws of another jurisdiction.”
    15 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 1980.
    Despite that change in entity form and domicile,
    SmithKline Beecham was, at least operationally, largely
    unaffected by its conversion to GSK LLC. The company‟s
    headquarters is still in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where it
    occupies 650,000 square feet of office space and employs
    1,800 people. Its management is substantively intact.
    SmithKline Beecham‟s board of directors became GSK
    LLC‟s “board of managers,” and those managers operate
    from the same offices they did before, with three located in
    Philadelphia and a fourth in North Carolina. The ownership
    structure of the business is also unchanged. SmithKline
    Beecham‟s sole shareholder had been Defendant GSK
    Holdings, a Delaware corporation founded in 1999 that holds
    GlaxoSmithKline plc‟s investments in the United States.
    Following the conversion, GSK Holdings became GSK
    LLC‟s sole member. Although the default rule under
    8
    Delaware law provides that “the management of a limited
    liability company shall be vested in its members,” 
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 6, § 18-402
    , GSK LLC assigned that task to the
    board of managers, making it a “manager-managed,” rather
    than a “member-managed,” LLC.5 Therefore, both before
    and after the conversion, GSK Holdings acted solely as the
    owner, not as the operator, of the company.
    Because it is a holding company, rather than an
    operating company, GSK Holdings‟ own activities are quite
    limited, consisting mostly of approving the financial
    statements from its investments.6 It also decides whether to
    pay dividends, make new investments, and approve proposed
    restructurings. GSK Holdings‟ three-member board of
    directors has the exclusive authority to control all of those
    activities, which it does through resolutions it adopts at
    quarterly and special board meetings. For most of the time
    relevant to this lawsuit, that board consisted of Michael
    5
    That structure was established in accordance with
    Delaware law by GSK LLC‟s limited liability company
    agreement. See 
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 6, § 18-402
     (permitting
    an LLC agreement to vest management authority in a
    manager). That agreement provided that “[t]he members of
    the Board of Directors of SmithKline Beecham Corporation
    shall continue as the initial manager of the company,
    following the conversion, without the need for further
    action.” (App. at 681.)
    6
    At all times relevant to this lawsuit, those
    investments primarily included money market investments,
    intra-group accounts, and the ownership interest in GSK
    LLC.
    9
    Corrigan, a senior officer of GSK LLC based in Philadelphia,
    Julian Heslop, the chief financial officer of GlaxoSmithKline
    plc based in London, and Donald McLamb, a Wilmington-
    based employee of Wilmington Trust Services (“Wilmington
    Trust”), a company that provides “corporate services to
    Delaware holding companies” (App. at 756).7 In his capacity
    as an employee of Wilmington Trust, McLamb also serves as
    a director or officer of 50 to 75 other companies.
    Since 2001, GSK Holdings‟ board meetings have been
    held in Wilmington, Delaware at the Wilmington Trust
    headquarters.8 They typically last 15 to 30 minutes, and,
    7
    Those three directors were in office when discovery
    was conducted in Brewer. See 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 726
    . Julian
    Heslop retired on March 31, 2011, and therefore was not a
    member of the board of directors at the time this case was
    removed. Plaintiffs argue that we must therefore disregard
    his role in the corporation, but they have presented no
    evidence that GSK Holdings‟ corporate structure has changed
    in the wake of Heslop‟s retirement. Moreover, they agreed to
    proceed on the record developed in Brewer, see supra note 1,
    and they themselves rely extensively on Heslop‟s deposition
    testimony. Therefore, we assume that although Heslop
    himself may no longer be carrying out the functions of GSK
    Holdings‟ London-based director, his testimony is still
    indicative of the corporation‟s structure and activities.
    8
    From 1999 until 2001, the company‟s board meetings
    took place in Philadelphia, and that city was therefore listed
    in GSK Holdings‟ bylaws as the location of its headquarters
    and board meetings. Although that location changed in 2001,
    the company failed to update those bylaws until recently,
    when this litigation brought the mistake to their attention.
    10
    although McLamb always attends them in person, directors
    Corrigan and Heslop often participate telephonically from
    other offices. The parties disagree about the extent of the
    actual decision-making that occurs at the meetings. Plaintiffs
    argue that GSK Holdings conducted its substantive work in
    Philadelphia and London, and that the board meetings served
    merely to “ratify decisions made somewhere other than
    Delaware.” (Appellants‟ Opening Br. at 32.) Defendants, on
    the other hand, insist that GSK Holdings‟ directors “reached
    decisions about GSK Holdings‟[] investments only at board
    meetings and based on their own independent judgment”
    (Appellees‟ Br. at 21), and that the board had exclusive
    “direction, control, and coordination” of GSK Holdings‟
    activities (id. at 40).
    Apart from those meetings, GSK Holdings‟ presence
    in Wilmington is minimal. It subleases a small, ten-by-ten
    foot office from Wilmington Trust, but that office is rarely
    visited, and it serves primarily to house GSK Holdings‟ books
    and records. GSK Holdings‟ other Wilmington activities
    consist mostly of administrative and secretarial functions,
    such as paying monthly bills for the office. Those functions
    are usually conducted by Elizabeth Bothner, GSK Holdings‟
    sole employee, who devotes about 20 hours per year to the
    company. GSK Holdings has one Delaware bank account
    that, as of November 2010, had less than $25 in it.
    Although GSK Holdings‟ board has the sole authority
    to manage the company‟s activities, it receives various
    support services from individuals in both Philadelphia and
    London. Officers Jan Lyons and Sarah-Jane Chilver-Stainer,9
    9
    GSK Holdings has six corporate officers. In addition
    11
    who are based in Philadelphia and London, respectively,
    provide tax assistance and facilitate GSK Holdings‟
    investment transactions, as does Philadelphia-based GSK
    LLC employee Audrey Klijian. Complex tax issues are
    sometimes addressed by Helen Jones, a London-based GSK
    employee. George Brown, another GSK employee based in
    London, maintains GSK Holdings‟ financial records, and
    overall strategic guidance comes from the London office.
    The GSK Holdings board has also authorized a number of
    people in both Philadelphia and London to sign documents on
    GSK Holdings‟ behalf and enter into certain routine
    transactions for the company. Finally, directors Corrigan and
    Heslop generally prepare for board meetings at their
    respective offices, and staff at the Philadelphia office compile
    and circulate the materials that the board reviews during those
    meetings.
    Beyond those limited functions, GSK Holdings has no
    operations. It produces no products, conducts no research,
    and has no sales. Rather, as is typical for a holding company,
    its role is confined to owning its interest in its subsidiary –
    GSK LLC. See Black‟s Law Dictionary 298 (8th ed. 2004)
    (defining a holding company as a “company formed to
    control other companies, [usually] confining its role to
    owning stock and supervising management”); 19 William
    Meade Fletcher et al., Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of
    Corporations, glossary at 13 (perm. ed., rev. vol. 2006)
    (defining a holding company as “a corporation whose
    principal business is the holding of stocks of other
    to Lyons and Chilver-Stainer, Holdings‟ three directors serve
    as officers, as does Elizabeth Bothner, the company‟s
    Wilmington-based part-time employee.
    12
    corporations”). That subsidiary, on the other hand, has
    widespread and complex operations, as it develops, produces,
    and sells pharmaceutical products nationwide. Such a
    corporate structure, in which an operating company is wholly
    owned by a holding company, has many features that are
    appealing to large business enterprises. For example, the
    holding company structure gives each subsidiary the
    autonomy to manage its business without regard to other
    business units, it allows the enterprise to prevent liabilities
    incurred by one investment from jeopardizing other
    investments, and it facilitates borrowing transactions and
    restructurings. See Robert Charles Clark, The Regulation of
    Financial Holding Companies, 
    92 Harv. L. Rev. 789
    , 816-
    825 (1979) (describing the benefits of holding company
    formation). Director Heslop testified that, for those reasons,
    including a holding company within an enterprise‟s corporate
    structure “is a very, very common thing.” (App. at 705.)
    The last defendant – Avantor Performance Materials –
    is a New Jersey corporation that is not part of the
    GlaxoSmithKline group of companies. Until 2011, it had its
    principal place of business in New Jersey. In February 2011,
    Avantor announced that it was relocating its headquarters to
    Center Valley, Pennsylvania. The corporation officially
    moved its rank-and-file employees to its new headquarters on
    September 19, 2011, five days after Defendants removed this
    action. The parties disagree on precisely when Avantor‟s
    high-level officers began directing activities from
    Pennsylvania. Plaintiffs note that Avantor‟s website, a
    corporate directory, and many technical documents and
    federal filings listed its address in Center Valley starting
    before this action was removed. They also observe that
    Avantor‟s CEO gave an interview from the new headquarters
    13
    two days before the official move date. Defendants argue that
    those actions were all part of the preparation for the move,
    which multiple affidavits, an internal company memo, and a
    news story demonstrate occurred on September 19.
    The District Court reviewed all of the foregoing
    evidence and concluded none of the Defendants was a
    Pennsylvania citizen at the time of removal. It thus held that
    diversity jurisdiction is present. Johnson, 853 F. Supp. 2d at
    489, 498. Specifically, the Court found that GSK Holdings
    has its principal place of business in Wilmington, Delaware,
    where its board of directors manages its investments. Id. at
    495. It is therefore a Delaware citizen, as is GSK LLC,
    which, as a limited liability company, assumes the citizenship
    of its owner. Id. at 491. As for the remaining Defendants, the
    Court held that Avantor was still a New Jersey citizen when
    the case was removed, id. at 495, and that SmithKline
    Beecham‟s citizenship is irrelevant because, as a dissolved
    corporation whose assets and liabilities have been assumed by
    another entity, it is a nominal party with no interest in the
    litigation, id. at 496-97. Accordingly, the Court concluded it
    had jurisdiction over the case, and denied Plaintiffs‟ motion
    to remand. Id. at 498. This timely appeal followed.
    II.   Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
    The District Court determined that it had jurisdiction
    pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    . In denying remand, it certified
    for interlocutory review the jurisdictional question of whether
    two of the Defendants – GSK Holdings and GSK LLC
    (collectively, the “GSK Defendants”) – are Pennsylvania
    citizens, in order to resolve the uncertainty created by
    “contrary determinations as to the GlaxoSmithKline
    14
    Defendants‟ citizenship” that have emerged recently. Id. at
    490. To date, six judges from the Eastern District of
    Pennsylvania have ruled on the issue of the GSK Defendants‟
    citizenship. Four of them concluded that GSK Holdings and
    GSK LLC are Pennsylvania citizens, and thus granted
    motions for remand due to lack of diversity. See Brewer v.
    SmithKline Beecham Corp., 
    774 F. Supp. 2d 720
     (E.D. Pa.
    2011) (Savage, J.); Yeatts v. SmithKline Beecham Corp., No.
    11-6711, 
    2012 WL 5488907
     (E.D. Pa. Mar. 29, 2012)
    (Slomsky, J.); Murray v. SmithKline Beecham Corp., No. 11-
    3510, 
    2012 WL 5488905
     (E.D. Pa. Mar. 29, 2012) (Jones, J.);
    Monroe v. SmithKline Beecham Corp., No. 10-2140, 
    2010 WL 2606682
     (E.D. Pa. June 25, 2010) (Joyner, J.). Two
    others, including the District Judge in this case, reached the
    opposite conclusion. See Johnson, 853 F. Supp. 2d at 489
    (Diamond, J.); White v. SmithKline Beecham Corp., No. 10-
    2141, 
    2010 WL 3119926
     (E.D. Pa. Aug. 6, 2010)
    (McLaughlin, J.). Due to that disagreement, and to the
    likelihood that it will continue absent our decision, the
    District Court certified the issue of the GSK Defendants‟
    citizenship as “a controlling question of law as to which there
    is substantial ground for difference of opinion.” Johnson, 853
    F. Supp. 2d at 490 (quoting 
    28 U.S.C. § 1292
    (b)) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    We therefore have jurisdiction to review the Court‟s
    order pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1292
    (b),10 which we accepted
    by granting Plaintiffs‟ request for permission to appeal.
    Although the District Court noted only the issue of the GSK
    10
    Our references to the District Court are, unless
    otherwise noted, to the Court acting through the Honorable
    Paul S. Diamond in this case.
    15
    Defendants‟ citizenship as requiring interlocutory review, we
    have jurisdiction to “address any issue fairly included within
    the certified order.” Yamaha Motor Corp., U.S.A. v. Calhoun,
    
    516 U.S. 199
    , 205 (1996). The certified order from which
    this appeal originated denied all Plaintiffs‟ bases for remand,
    including the alleged Pennsylvania citizenship of SmithKline
    Beecham and Avantor. We therefore have jurisdiction to
    review the District Court‟s citizenship determination for each
    of the challenged Defendants, not just for GSK Holdings and
    GSK LLC. See 
    id.
     (noting that “it is the order that is
    appealable, and not the controlling question identified by the
    district court” (internal quotation marks omitted) (emphasis in
    original)); cf. Morris v. Hoffa, 
    361 F.3d 177
    , 196 (3d Cir.
    2004) (“Although the scope of review on an interlocutory
    appeal is generally constrained to the questions certified for
    review by the district court, we may consider any grounds
    justifying reversal.” (internal quotation marks omitted)
    (emphasis in original)).
    We exercise plenary review over issues of jurisdiction.
    Grand Union Supermarkets of the V.I., Inc. v. H.E. Lockhart
    Mgmt., Inc. 
    316 F.3d 408
    , 410 (3d Cir. 2003). Under that
    standard, we review determinations of law de novo, but a
    court‟s factual findings regarding domicile or citizenship are
    reviewed for clear error. McCann v. Newman Irrevocable
    Trust, 
    458 F.3d 281
    , 286 (3d Cir. 2006). When reviewing for
    clear error, an appellate court “must accept the trial court‟s
    findings” unless it is “left with the definite and firm
    conviction that a mistake has been committed.” Inwood
    Labs., Inc. v. Ives Labs., Inc., 
    456 U.S. 844
    , 855 (1982)
    (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Frett-Smith v.
    Vanterpool, 
    511 F.3d 396
    , 399 (3d Cir. 2008) (applying that
    standard to the factual findings which underpin a court‟s
    16
    determination of diversity jurisdiction). Put another way,
    “[i]f the district court‟s account of the evidence is plausible in
    light of the record viewed in its entirety, the court of appeals
    may not reverse it even though convinced that had it been
    sitting as the trier of fact, it would have weighed the evidence
    differently.” Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, 
    470 U.S. 564
    , 573-74 (1985).
    Plaintiffs argue that it would be unfair to apply the
    clearly erroneous standard to the factual findings in this case
    because of the contrary outcomes reached by different district
    judges on this jurisdictional issue. But varying outcomes do
    not change that we are called upon to review only the
    particular order on appeal, nor do they put us in a better
    position to make our own factual findings. See Inwood Labs.,
    
    456 U.S. at 855
     (recognizing the “unique opportunity
    afforded the trial court judge to evaluate the credibility of
    witnesses and to weigh the evidence”). Rule 52(a) of the
    Federal Rules of Civil Procedure makes clear that “[f]indings
    of fact … must not be set aside unless clearly erroneous, and
    the reviewing court must give due regard to the trial court‟s
    opportunity to judge the witnesses‟ credibility.” Fed. R. Civ.
    P. 52(a)(6). The Supreme Court has held that that standard
    applies “even when the district court‟s findings do not rest on
    credibility determinations, but are based instead on physical
    or documentary evidence or inferences from other facts.”
    Anderson, 
    470 U.S. at 574
    . We are therefore not at liberty to
    substitute our own jurisdictional facts for those credited by
    the District Court, unless that Court‟s findings are clearly
    erroneous. We reiterate, however, that our overall review is
    plenary, and thus we do not defer to the District Court‟s
    application of the law to those facts.
    17
    III.   Discussion
    A civil action brought in state court may be removed
    by the defendant to federal district court if the federal court
    would have had original jurisdiction over the claim. 
    28 U.S.C. § 1441
    (a). “Diversity of citizenship subject matter
    jurisdiction falls within the original jurisdiction of the district
    court,” pursuant to § 1332(a) of Title 28 of the United States
    Code, and thus “a state court case that implicates diversity
    jurisdiction” may generally be removed, Brown v. Francis, 
    75 F.3d 860
    , 865 (3d Cir. 1996), provided that the defendant is
    not a citizen of the state in which the action is brought, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1441
    (b)(2). See also 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (a) (granting
    jurisdiction in cases between citizens of different states in
    which the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000).
    Jurisdiction under § 1332(a) requires “complete diversity,”
    meaning that “no plaintiff can be a citizen of the same state as
    any of the defendants.” Grand Union Supermarkets, 
    316 F.3d at 410
    . Diversity of citizenship must have existed at the
    time the complaint was filed, 
    id.,
     and at the time of removal,
    Abels v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 
    770 F.2d 26
    , 29 (3d Cir.
    1985), and the burden is on the removing party to establish
    federal jurisdiction, 
    id.
     “Because lack of jurisdiction would
    make any decree in the case void and the continuation of the
    litigation in federal court futile, the removal statute should be
    strictly construed and all doubts resolved in favor of remand.”
    Brown, 
    75 F.3d at 864-65
     (quoting Abels, 
    770 F.2d at 29
    )
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Plaintiffs argue that removal of their case was
    improper because the federal courts lack subject matter
    jurisdiction over it. They contend that each of the four
    Defendants involved in this appeal is a Pennsylvania citizen,
    18
    and thus that diversity jurisdiction is lacking because Plaintiff
    Steven Lucier is also a citizen of that state.11 Specifically,
    they maintain that GSK Holdings‟ principal place of business
    is in Philadelphia, and, because a limited liability company‟s
    citizenship is determined by the citizenship of its members,
    both GSK Holdings and GSK LLC are therefore
    Pennsylvania citizens. Plaintiffs further argue that although
    SmithKline Beecham dissolved, Pennsylvania law preserves
    its citizenship for purposes of diversity jurisdiction. As for
    Avantor, it became a Pennsylvania citizen when it moved its
    headquarters to Center Valley, Pennsylvania, which Plaintiffs
    claim may have happened before the case was removed.12
    We address each of those arguments in turn and conclude, as
    the District Court did, that none of the Defendants was a
    Pennsylvania citizen at the time of removal.
    11
    For the same reason, they also contend that removal
    of the case violated the rule barring removal when any
    “defendant is a citizen of the forum state.” Lincoln Property
    Co. v. Roche, 
    546 U.S. 81
    , 84 (2005); see 
    28 U.S.C. § 1441
    (b)(2). Plaintiffs do not dispute that the amount in
    controversy exceeds $75,000, as required by 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (a).
    12
    Plaintiffs do not specify when Avantor moved its
    headquarters to Pennsylvania. Rather, they contend that
    “Avantor has not met its burden of proving that its principal
    place of business was in New Jersey, not Pennsylvania, when
    Defendants removed this action on September 14, 2011.”
    (Appellants‟ Opening Br. at 47.)
    19
    A.     Citizenship of the GSK Defendants
    Section 1332(a) grants federal courts jurisdiction over
    civil actions between “citizens of different [s]tates,” 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (a)(1), and it is well established that a
    corporation is considered a “citizen” for purposes of that
    provision, Carden v. Arkoma Assocs., 
    494 U.S. 185
    , 189
    (1990). Since 1844, the Supreme Court has recognized that a
    corporation is “capable of being treated as a citizen … as
    much as a natural person.”            Louisville, Cincinnati &
    Charleston R.R. Co. v. Letson, 
    43 U.S. 497
    , 558 (1844). It
    has taken considerably longer, however, for Congress and the
    Court to decide how a corporation‟s citizenship should be
    determined. In 1958, after years of studying the matter,
    Congress amended § 1332 to provide that a corporation is a
    citizen of both its state of incorporation and the state “where
    it has its principal place of business.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (c)(1);
    see also Hertz Corp. v. Friend, 
    559 U.S. 77
    , 
    130 S. Ct. 1181
    ,
    1189-90 (2010) (describing the legislative history of that
    enactment). But applying the phrase “„principal place of
    business‟ … proved more difficult … than its originators
    likely expected,” Hertz, 
    130 S. Ct. at 1190
    , and that difficulty
    resulted in “divergent and increasingly complex
    interpretations” by the courts of appeals, id. at 1192. In 2010,
    the Supreme Court stepped in to resolve the confusion,
    holding in Hertz that “the phrase „principal place of business‟
    refers to the place where the corporation‟s high level officers
    direct, control, and coordinate the corporation‟s activities,”
    which is often “metaphorically called its „nerve center.‟” Id.
    at 1186.
    In endorsing the “nerve center” test, the Court
    “place[d] primary weight upon the need for judicial
    20
    administration of a jurisdictional statute to remain as simple
    as possible,” id., and it rejected other approaches involving
    complex multifactor tests designed to pinpoint a corporation‟s
    “center of gravity,” id. at 1191. Instead, it adopted the
    comparatively simpler method of identifying the single place
    that is the corporation‟s “brain” – its “actual center of
    direction, control, and coordination” – which is usually its
    headquarters. Id. at 1192-93; see also id. at 1193 (“A
    corporation‟s „nerve center,‟ usually its main headquarters, is
    a single place.”). Hertz also warned courts to guard against
    jurisdictional manipulation by ensuring that a corporation‟s
    headquarters is actually its center of direction, “not simply an
    office where the corporation holds its board meetings,” id. at
    1192, or “a bare office with a computer,” id. at 1195. If there
    is evidence of such manipulation, Hertz explained that courts
    should look past that manipulation, and “take as the „nerve
    center‟ the place of actual direction, control, and
    coordination, in the absence of such manipulation.” Id.
    Hertz said nothing, however, about how to determine
    the citizenship of an unincorporated entity. Such entities do
    not have the same legal status as a corporation, and the
    Supreme Court has made clear that, “[w]hile the rule
    regarding the treatment of corporations as „citizens‟ has
    become firmly established,” that treatment cannot be
    extended to other entities. Carden, 
    494 U.S. at 189
    ; see also
    
    id.
     (“That rule must not be extended.” (internal quotation
    marks omitted)). In Carden v. Arkoma, the Court held that,
    because unincorporated entities are not considered “citizens”
    in their own right, “diversity jurisdiction in a suit by or
    against [an unincorporated] entity depends on the citizenship
    of … each of its members.” 
    Id. at 195-96
     (citations and
    internal quotation marks omitted). In other words, because
    21
    such an entity is not recognized as a legal person, courts
    should look to the citizenship of the people or corporations
    who comprise it to determine if diversity jurisdiction exists.
    The principal place of business of an unincorporated entity is
    therefore irrelevant to determining its citizenship.
    That rule holds true despite the substantive similarities
    between corporations and other entities. 
    Id. at 196
    . The
    Court in Carden acknowledged that unincorporated entities
    can be “functionally similar” to corporations, and that
    “[c]onsiderations of basic fairness and substance over form”
    may “require that [they] receive similar treatment.” 
    Id.
     (first
    alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). Yet
    it nonetheless enforced the rigid jurisdictional distinction
    between corporations and other entities. See id.; see also
    Hoagland ex rel. Midwest Transit, Inc. v. Sandberg, Phoenix
    & Von Gontard, P.C., 
    385 F.3d 737
    , 739-40 (7th Cir. 2004)
    (holding that a nonbusiness corporation, even though it may
    differ from business corporations in more respects than
    unincorporated entities do, is nonetheless treated as a citizen
    for diversity jurisdiction purposes). Such adherence to
    mechanical rules may seem at first glance to be unfair, but it
    comports with the Court‟s unwavering insistence that
    jurisdictional rules “remain as simple as possible.” Hertz,
    
    130 S. Ct. at 1186
    ; see also Carden, 
    494 U.S. at 196
     (“The
    resolutions we have reached above can validly be
    characterized      as     technical,    precedent-bound,     and
    unresponsive to policy considerations raised by the changing
    realities of business organization. But, … that has been the
    character of our jurisprudence in this field … .”). As the
    United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has
    explained:
    22
    Functional approaches to legal questions are
    often, perhaps generally, preferable to
    mechanical rules; but the preference is reversed
    when it comes to jurisdiction. When it is
    uncertain whether a case is within the
    jurisdiction of a particular court system, not
    only are the cost and complexity of litigation
    increased by the necessity of conducting an
    inquiry that will dispel the uncertainty but the
    parties will often find themselves having to start
    their litigation over from the beginning, perhaps
    after it has gone all the way through to
    judgment.
    Hoagland, 
    385 F.3d at 739-40
    . For that reason, although the
    rise of new business structures may make the rigid divide
    between corporations and other entities appear outdated, the
    Supreme Court has explicitly left to Congress the task of
    “accommodating our diversity jurisdiction to the changing
    realities of commercial organization,” if it sees fit to do so.
    Carden, 
    494 U.S. at 197
    .
    In recognition of those principles, this and every other
    Circuit Court to face the question have held that the
    citizenship of a limited liability company “is determined by
    the citizenship of each of its members.” Zambelli Fireworks
    Mfg. Co. v. Wood, 
    592 F.3d 412
    , 418 (3d Cir. 2010); see also
    
    id. at 420
     (collecting cases from our sister circuits). In
    Zambelli, we noted that limited liability companies “resemble
    corporations in many respects,” but we recognized that the
    Supreme Court has “flatly rejected arguments in favor of
    extending the rule of corporate citizenship to analogously
    formed business entities.” 
    Id.
     at 419 (citing Carden, 
    494 U.S. 23
    at 189). Therefore, we opted to treat limited liability
    companies as we do partnerships and other “unincorporated
    associations,” and held that courts must look to the
    citizenship of a limited liability company‟s members to
    determine if there is diversity jurisdiction. Id. at 420.
    Both sides in the dispute before us now agree that,
    under Zambelli, GSK LLC‟s citizenship is defined by that of
    its sole member: GSK Holdings. As a corporation, GSK
    Holdings is a citizen of its state of incorporation and of the
    state where it has its principal place of business, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (c)(1), which Hertz defined as its “nerve center.” 
    130 S. Ct. at 1186
    . It is undisputed that GSK Holdings is
    incorporated in Delaware, so it is clearly a Delaware citizen.
    Therefore, in order for GSK Holdings – and, by extension,
    GSK LLC – to also be Pennsylvania citizens, as Plaintiffs
    claim, GSK Holdings‟ “actual center of direction, control, and
    coordination,” i.e., its nerve center, id. at 1192, must be
    located in Pennsylvania.
    Plaintiffs provide two explanations for why they
    believe GSK Holdings‟ nerve center is in Pennsylvania, both
    of which were endorsed in a trilogy of opinions from the
    Eastern District of Pennsylvania. See Patton ex rel. Daniels-
    Patton v. SmithKline Beecham Corp., 
    2011 WL 6210724
    , at
    *5 (E.D. Pa. Dec. 14, 2011); Maldonado ex rel. Maldonado v.
    SmithKline Beecham Corp., 
    841 F. Supp. 2d 890
    , 897 (E.D.
    Pa. 2011); Brewer, 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 729-30, 732
    .13 First,
    13
    Those opinions were authored by the Honorable
    Timothy J. Savage. Brewer, as Judge Savage‟s first statement
    on the matter, provides the core of his analysis. See 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 729-32
    . Maldonado supplemented and clarified
    24
    they argue that we should consider GSK LLC‟s activities in
    the determination of GSK Holdings‟ citizenship, because, as
    Plaintiffs put it, GSK Holdings had the authority to manage
    GSK LLC, but “delegated” that power to GSK LLC‟s
    managers. (Appellants‟ Opening Br. at 25.) Under that
    “delegation theory,” GSK Holdings‟ nerve center is in
    Philadelphia, because that is where GSK LLC‟s managers are
    based. Second, they maintain that, even if we do not consider
    GSK LLC‟s management, “Holdings‟ own holding-company
    activities” are directed from Philadelphia, and thus that is its
    principal place of business. (Id. at 27.) We are unpersuaded
    by either of those arguments.
    1.     The Delegation Theory
    Plaintiffs‟ novel delegation theory makes GSK LLC‟s
    management the focus in assessing GSK Holdings‟ nerve
    center. Noting that the default rule under Delaware law is
    that “the management of a limited liability company shall be
    vested in its members,” 
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 6, § 18-402
    ,
    Plaintiffs conclude, as the court did in Brewer, that “[GSK]
    Holdings had the exclusive right and power to control, direct,
    run, manage, and operate [GSK] LLC.” 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 729
    . According to Plaintiffs, GSK Holdings opted not to
    retain that power, instead “delegat[ing] that duty to
    Philadelphia-based managers.” (Appellants‟ Opening Br. at
    26 (citing Brewer, 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 729
     (explaining that
    GSK Holdings had delegated “the operational decision-
    making authority and power of [GSK] LLC to [GSK] LLC‟s
    aspects of the Brewer holding. See 841 F. Supp. 2d at 894-
    97. Patton repeats Maldonado‟s analysis. 
    2011 WL 6210724
    , at *5.
    25
    officers and directors”)).) Looking at that delegation, the
    court in Brewer concluded that “[t]he „managers‟ of [GSK]
    LLC are still part of [GSK] Holdings because they are
    managing [GSK] LLC on behalf of [GSK] Holdings.”
    Brewer, 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 729
     (emphasis in original). Based
    on that premise, Plaintiffs argue that GSK LLC‟s
    Philadelphia-based management decisions should be
    considered “„corporate activities‟ for which GSK Holdings
    was responsible.” (Appellants‟ Opening Br. at 26.) Those
    corporate activities far outweigh GSK Holdings‟ other limited
    holding-company functions, and thus, say Plaintiffs, its
    principal place of business is in Philadelphia. As Brewer put
    it, because “[GSK] Holdings has effectively transplanted the
    vast majority of its „brain‟ or „nerve center‟ to its managers in
    Philadelphia,” it must be considered a Pennsylvania citizen.
    
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 730
    .
    At the outset, it is important to note that the record
    does not support that description of GSK Holdings‟
    relationship to GSK LLC. To say that GSK Holdings
    “transplanted … its „brain‟ or „nerve center‟” to GSK LLC‟s
    managers implies that at some point GSK Holdings‟ activities
    included directing and controlling GSK LLC. But GSK
    Holdings has never occupied such a role. It has always
    functioned solely as the owner of GSK LLC, just as it did
    when it was the sole shareholder of GSK LLC‟s predecessor,
    SmithKline Beecham. The only decision by GSK Holdings
    that arguably has affected GSK LLC‟s management was the
    decision to structure that company as a manager-managed
    LLC – in other words, GSK Holdings‟ decision not to manage
    GSK LLC. It is hard to see how that decision, which resulted
    in GSK Holdings continuing to operate as it had before
    SmithKline Beecham‟s conversion to GSK LLC, could
    26
    involve the kind of transplant that Plaintiffs and Brewer
    describe.14
    But even if we were to accept Brewer‟s
    characterization, adopting the delegation theory would require
    that we turn our holding in Zambelli upside down. Zambelli
    and the Supreme Court opinions on which it is based, e.g.,
    Carden, 
    494 U.S. at 189
    ; United Steelworkers of Am. v. R.H.
    Bouligny, Inc., 
    382 U.S. 145
    , 146-47 (1965), instruct courts
    that the citizenship of an unincorporated association like a
    limited liability company is determined by looking to the
    citizenship of its members. 
    592 F.3d at 420
    . We are not
    supposed to focus on GSK LLC‟s activities; rather, precedent
    dictates that we turn our attention to the citizenship of GSK
    LLC‟s sole member, GSK Holdings.                  While they
    acknowledge that precedent, Plaintiffs ask us to define GSK
    Holdings‟ citizenship by contemplating its status as a member
    of GSK LLC. Put more simply, to determine the citizenship
    of a limited liability company using Plaintiffs‟ approach, we
    must look to its member, but then, if that member is a holding
    14
    Notably, Plaintiffs identify no cases, other than
    Brewer and its progeny, that characterize the relationship
    between a manager-managed LLC and its sole member in
    such a manner. Moreover, Brewer has been rejected in at
    least two district court cases, and Plaintiffs identify no other
    districts that endorse its approach. See Jennings v. HCR
    ManorCare Inc., -- F. Supp. 2d -- , No. 12-1397, 
    2012 WL 5360911
    , at *3 (D.S.C. Oct. 3, 2012) (“The Court declines to
    adopt the reasoning of Brewer.”); Dalton v. Georgia-Pacific
    L.L.C., No. 12-415, 
    2012 WL 2072766
    , at *5 (D.S.C. May 4,
    2012) (same).
    27
    company, we must immediately look back to the limited
    liability company, reversing the Zambelli analysis entirely.15
    GSK Holdings‟ allegedly “unique” relationship with
    GSK LLC does not justify applying that inverted approach.
    See Brewer, 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 729
     (describing “the unique
    circumstance where the holding company is the sole member
    of a manager-managed limited liability company”).
    According to Brewer, “[w]here the sole member of a limited
    liability company is a holding company … we are presented
    with an anomaly in applying the „nerve center‟ test,” and we
    should consider the LLC‟s activities despite Zambelli‟s
    instruction to the contrary.16 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 728-29
    . But
    15
    That analysis would also not be limited to the facts
    of this case, as Brewer appears to indicate. 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 728-29
    ; see also Maldonado, 841 F. Supp. 2d at 897 (“The
    Brewer holding is narrower than GSK makes it out to be. It
    does not apply to all limited liability companies. Nor does it
    apply to all manager-managed limited liability companies.”).
    According to Brewer, the delegation theory applies only in
    situations “[w]here the sole member of a limited liability
    company is a holding company that holds one constituent
    company and several intra-group accounts.” Id. But whether
    an LLC‟s members are holding companies, operating
    companies, or individuals, they must establish the
    management structure for the LLC, either by “delegating”
    that management authority or assuming it (or some
    combination thereof). Brewer bases its holding on just that –
    the member‟s decision to delegate management authority –
    and there is nothing in that reasoning that limits its
    application to holding companies.
    16
    Maldonado stepped back from that characterization
    28
    the situation presented here is hardly anomalous. Holding
    companies are ubiquitous, especially in large business
    enterprises, and courts have been determining their nerve
    centers for decades.17 See, e.g., Taber Partners, I v. Merit
    Builders, Inc., 
    987 F.2d 57
    , 63 (1st Cir. 1993) (determining
    the nerve center of two holding companies that were partners
    in a limited partnership). The fact that the holding company
    at issue here holds an LLC rather than a corporation does not,
    in itself, complicate the nerve center analysis.
    The argument that we must look to GSK LLC‟s
    activities to identify GSK Holdings‟ nerve center also ignores
    the well-established rule that a parent corporation maintains
    separate citizenship from a subsidiary unless it has exerted
    somewhat, explaining that “holding companies and single
    member limited liability companies are not unusual and are,
    indeed, common.” 841 F. Supp. 2d at 894. It explained that
    the point of Brewer was that “where the sole member of a
    limited liability company is a holding company,” the rules in
    Zambelli and Hertz “intersect,” which raises the “novel”
    question of how the holding company‟s citizenship should be
    defined. Id. Therefore, while Maldonado may agree that
    GSK LLC‟s structure is common, it still bases its holding on
    the supposedly unique questions raised by that structure.
    17
    Although Hertz is a recent decision, many circuits
    applied the “nerve center” test before its formal adoption by
    the Supreme Court. In fact, the First Circuit long ago
    identified the “nerve center” test as the “most appropriate in
    the case of a holding company,” Lugo-Vina v. Pueblo Int’l,
    Inc., 
    574 F.2d 41
    , 43 n.2 (1st Cir. 1978), because such
    companies do not have physical operations, Diaz-Rodriguez
    v. Pep Boys Corp, 
    410 F.3d 56
    , 60 (1st Cir. 2005).
    29
    such an overwhelming level of control over the subsidiary
    that the two companies do not retain separate corporate
    identities. Quaker State Dyeing & Finishing Co. v. ITT
    Terryphone Corp., 
    461 F.2d 1140
    , 1142 (3d Cir. 1972); see
    also Taber Partners, 
    987 F.2d at 62-63
     (emphasizing that, “in
    determining a corporation‟s principal place of business, [the]
    inquiry must focus solely on the business activities of the
    corporation whose principal place of business is at issue”).
    Plaintiffs do not allege that GSK Holdings and GSK LLC
    disregarded corporate formalities, nor do they claim that GSK
    Holdings controls its subsidiary‟s operations. In fact, they
    argue the opposite, suggesting that we consider GSK LLC‟s
    nerve center in assessing GSK Holdings‟ citizenship because
    GSK Holdings has exerted no managerial control over GSK
    LLC, which is just the opposite of what is typically required
    to consider a parent‟s and subsidiary‟s citizenships jointly.18
    18
    Plaintiffs attempt to support their approach by citing
    our decision in Mennen Co. v. Atlantic Mutual Insurance Co.,
    
    147 F.3d 287
     (3d Cir. 1998). In that case, which was decided
    before Hertz, we held that a corporation‟s principal place of
    business was the location in which its “day-to-day activities”
    were carried out. Mennen, 
    147 F.3d at 293
    . That location
    happened to also be the center of operations of a different
    company, which, pursuant to a management services contract,
    was conducting “the practical work” of the company whose
    citizenship was at issue. 
    Id.
     Based on that precedent,
    Plaintiffs argue that “a court should consider services
    performed by one company on another company‟s behalf to
    determine the latter‟s principal place of business.” (Reply Br.
    at 1-2.) But, in addition to being of questionable utility
    because it applied what is now an outdated test for
    determining a corporation‟s principle place of business,
    30
    Plaintiffs imply that that counterintuitive approach is
    required by Hertz. They note that Hertz instructs courts to
    identify a company‟s “actual center of direction, control, and
    coordination,” 
    130 S. Ct. at 1192
    , and, because GSK
    Holdings exercises no control over GSK LLC‟s operations,
    they suggest that treating GSK Holdings‟ headquarters
    location as determinative of GSK LLC‟s citizenship would, in
    the words of Maldonado, “exalt form over substance.”
    Maldonado, 841 F. Supp. 2d at 897. In support of that “form
    over substance” argument, Plaintiffs note the seamless change
    in corporate form from SmithKline Beecham, which was
    indisputably a Pennsylvania citizen, to GSK LLC, which
    Defendants now claim is a Delaware citizen. No people,
    offices, or operations moved from one state to the other
    during that transition, and so a change in citizenship seems to
    Plaintiffs to be in conflict with Hertz‟s concentration on a
    company‟s “actual center of direction, control, and
    coordination.” 
    130 S. Ct. at 1192
    .
    The argument is not without logical appeal, but it
    suffers from two significant problems. First, it is GSK
    Holdings‟ nerve center – not GSK LLC‟s – that is at issue
    here. As described above, Hertz‟s “nerve center” test is a
    means of identifying a corporation‟s principal place of
    Mennen is readily distinguishable from this case. Here, GSK
    LLC did not enter into a contract to perform GSK Holdings‟
    corporate activities; rather, it manages its own affairs as it is
    required to do by its LLC agreement. Plaintiffs provide no
    explanation for how a contractual agreement to perform
    services on a company‟s behalf is in any way analogous to the
    establishment of the management structure of an LLC, and
    their citation to Mennen is unpersuasive.
    31
    business. A limited liability company‟s citizenship is not
    defined by its principal place of business, and thus the
    location of its nerve center is not at issue for purposes for
    establishing diversity jurisdiction. Hertz therefore does not
    require that we identify the actual center of direction and
    control for GSK LLC – it requires only that we determine
    GSK Holdings‟ center of control.
    More fundamentally, as troubling as those like
    Plaintiffs may find it, form matters for purposes of
    establishing jurisdiction, and the distinction between a
    corporation and an unincorporated entity has tremendous
    jurisdictional significance.      The Supreme Court has
    emphasized that, although a corporation has citizenship,
    unincorporated entities do not, regardless of their substantive
    similarities to corporations. Carden, 
    494 U.S. at 195
    .
    Plaintiffs may denounce that rule as elevating form over
    substance, but it is entirely consistent with the Supreme
    Court‟s approach to jurisdictional questions. See 
    id. at 196
    (explaining that adherence to rigid rules “has been the
    character of our jurisprudence in this field”); see also Hertz,
    
    130 S. Ct. at 1186
     (insisting that jurisdictional rules “remain
    as simple as possible”). Therefore, the formal conversion of
    SmithKline Beecham to GSK LLC changes the jurisdictional
    calculus, despite the substantive continuity of business
    operations. Whereas SmithKline Beecham – a corporation –
    was a citizen of the state in which it had its principal place of
    business, GSK LLC‟s citizenship is defined solely by the
    citizenship of its sole member, GSK Holdings. Plaintiffs‟
    delegation theory is an adroit attempt to shift the focus back
    onto GSK LLC‟s nerve center, but that is contrary to the
    approach required by the Supreme Court in Carden and by us
    in Zambelli. There is nothing in Hertz to change that fact, as
    32
    Hertz deals solely with the definition of a corporation‟s
    “principal place of business.”
    We thus reject Plaintiffs‟ delegation theory, and
    instead proceed, as the District Court in this case did, to
    determine GSK Holdings‟ citizenship by considering its own
    activities, not those of GSK LLC.
    2.      GSK Holdings’ Corporate Activities
    Plaintiffs argue that, even looking solely at the
    activities of GSK Holdings, it must be recognized as a citizen
    of Pennsylvania. As each court to examine GSK Holdings has
    agreed, its activities are very limited in scope. Because it is a
    holding company, not an operating company, GSK Holdings
    has no sales or production, only one part-time employee, and
    little infrastructure. Instead, its activities consist primarily of
    owning its interest in GSK LLC, holding intra-company
    accounts, issuing and receiving dividends, and paying taxes.
    As the District Court put it, “all holding companies do is
    „hold,‟” Johnson, 853 F. Supp. 2d at 493, and GSK Holdings
    is typical in that regard.
    Hinging its decision largely on that fact, the District
    Court concluded that GSK Holdings‟ principal place of
    business is in Wilmington, Delaware. Id. at 493. Although it
    acknowledged that the company‟s “Wilmington „footprint‟ is
    certainly modest,” the Court “measure[d] that footprint …
    against the modest scope of Holdings‟[] activities.” Id. at
    492. Finding that GSK Holdings‟ three-person board controls
    all of its limited, ownership-related activities, and that it does
    so “through resolutions that are considered and passed in
    Wilmington,” id., the Court concluded that its actual center of
    33
    direction, control, and coordination is in Delaware. Id. at
    492-96; see also Hertz, 
    130 S. Ct. at 1192
     (holding that a
    corporation‟s principal place of business is “the place where a
    corporation‟s officers direct, control, and coordinate the
    corporation‟s activities”). Accordingly, the Court held that
    GSK Holdings is not a Pennsylvania citizen. Johnson, 853 F.
    Supp. 2d at 493; see also id. at 495 (“Holdings‟[] nerve center
    is where its ownership decisions are made: Wilmington.”).
    Plaintiffs argue that that conclusion contradicts Hertz,
    which specifically states that an office used solely for board
    meetings “attended by directors … who have traveled there
    for the occasion” should not be considered a company‟s
    actual center of direction and control. 
    130 S. Ct. at 1192
    ; see
    also id. at 1195 (warning that an “alleged „nerve center‟ [that]
    is nothing more than a mail drop box, a bare office with a
    computer, or the location of an annual executive retreat”
    might be an attempt at jurisdictional manipulation). GSK
    Holdings‟ ten-by-ten foot office in Wilmington closely fits
    that description, and Plaintiffs contend that the evidence
    demonstrates that no substantive decision-making could have
    occurred there. As Brewer put it, “the undisputed fact that the
    quarterly board meetings of [GSK] Holdings last no more
    than 15 or 20 minutes belies any argument that any
    operational or strategic decisions affecting the business
    activities are made during [those] brief meetings.” 774 F.
    Supp. 2d. at 731. Plaintiffs also dismiss the role of GSK
    Holdings‟ Wilmington-based director, Donald McLamb,
    noting that he “performs only administrative functions”
    (Appellants‟ Opening Br. at 33), spends only about four hours
    per year conducting GSK Holdings‟ business, and serves as a
    director for numerous other companies. Citing all of those
    facts, Plaintiffs argue that no real decisions could have been
    34
    made during the board meetings and that the board‟s
    decisions must have been made elsewhere and simply ratified
    in Wilmington. Therefore, Plaintiffs say, Wilmington cannot
    be GSK Holdings‟ principal place of business under Hertz, as
    it is not GSK Holdings‟ actual center of direction and control.
    Again Plaintiffs‟ reasoning has force but there are
    flaws that substantially weaken it. First, as the District Court
    rightly noted, the kind of board meetings denigrated in Hertz
    were being considered in the context of a case involving “a
    sprawling operating company,” with “extensive activities
    carried out by 11,230 employees at facilities in 44 states.”
    Johnson, 853 F. Supp. 2d at 493. For a holding company
    such as GSK Holdings, relatively short, quarterly board
    meetings may well be all that is required to direct and control
    the company‟s limited work. As former director Julian
    Heslop explained, the board generally conducts three tasks at
    each meeting: (1) it approves or corrects the minutes from the
    previous meeting, (2) it reviews the company‟s financial
    statements with George Brown, a London-based accountant
    who provides financial services to GSK Holdings, and (3) it
    addresses “any other business required to come before the
    meeting,” such as authorizing agents to sign documents,
    making changes to the officers, paying a dividend, or,
    occasionally, restructuring the company‟s holdings. (App. at
    709.) Generally, such business is straightforward and takes
    little time, yet it constitutes GSK Holdings‟ primary activity:
    managing its assets. The location of board meetings is
    therefore a more significant jurisdictional fact here than it was
    in Hertz, and the meetings‟ brevity does not necessarily
    reflect an absence of substantive decision-making.19
    19
    The significance of that fact is further demonstrated
    35
    Second, the District Court‟s factual finding that GSK
    Holdings‟ board controls its investment activities through
    consensus-based resolutions at its meetings in Wilmington is
    not clearly erroneous. See McCann, 
    458 F.3d at
    286
    by the numerous post-Hertz cases that have determined the
    principal place of business of a holding company by looking
    to the location in which its officers or directors meet to make
    high-level management decisions. See Lewis v. Lycoming,
    No. 11-6475, 
    2012 WL 2422451
    , at *5 (E.D. Pa. June 27,
    2012) (concluding that a holding company‟s nerve center is
    the place where its officers made major business decisions,
    not the location of its “public persona”); Freedom Envtl.
    Servs., Inc. v. Borish, No. 12-665, 
    2012 WL 2505723
    , at *1
    (M.D. Fla. June 20, 2012) (considering the location of a
    holding company‟s board meetings in assessing its
    citizenship); Sebastian Holdings, Inc. v. Kugler, No. 08-1131,
    
    2012 WL 1190837
    , at *3 (D. Conn. Mar. 30, 2012)
    (determining a holding company‟s citizenship based on the
    location in which its owner and director made management
    decisions); Balachander v. AET Inc., No. 10-4805, 
    2011 WL 4500048
    , at *1 (S.D. Tex. Sept. 27, 2011) (relying on the
    location in which the company‟s chief officers make
    management decisions); Ortiz v. Chesapeake Operating, Inc.,
    No. 11-0055, 
    2011 WL 3584832
    , at *2 (W.D. La. Aug 12,
    2011) (looking to where the holding company‟s directors
    make overall policy decisions, not to where its subsidiaries
    manage their day-to-day activities); cf. Astra Oil Trading N.V.
    v. Petrobras Am. Inc., No. 09-1274, 
    2010 WL 3069793
    , at *3
    (S.D. Tex. Aug. 4, 2010) (declining to use the location of the
    board of directors, but only because the company‟s sole
    officer had “significant independent authority as CEO … to
    direct, control, and coordinate [the company‟s] activities”).
    36
    (applying clear error review to factual findings regarding
    citizenship and domicile). Each of GSK Holdings‟ three
    directors testified that only the board can authorize GSK
    Holdings to take a new action relating to its investments, and
    that the board does so by adopting resolutions at quarterly or
    special board meetings. None of GSK Holdings‟ individual
    directors or officers can take “new, unauthorized actions” on
    GSK Holdings‟ behalf, nor can GlaxoSmithKline plc, its
    ultimate parent in London, do so. (App. at 707-08.) The
    directors further explained that although individuals in
    Philadelphia and London provide various services to the
    board and sometimes sign documents, receive money, or pay
    taxes for GSK Holdings, the scope of their actions is
    “constrained by what the Board of Directors authorizes.”
    (App. at 714.) Those individuals cannot make fundamental
    decisions – that power lies solely with the board.
    The evidence also supports the District Court‟s finding
    that the board actually makes its decisions during its
    meetings, rather than simply ratifying decisions made
    elsewhere, as Plaintiffs claim. Although it is uncontested that
    “strategic direction and guidance … emanate[] from London”
    (App. at 710), as they likely do for all of the companies in the
    GSK group, GSK Holdings‟ directors insist that the board‟s
    decisions are not preordained. On the contrary, director
    Heslop explained that “[w]e sit down as a Board at our
    meetings … and go through the papers and make the
    decisions required of those meetings.” (App. at 709.) Each
    director, including Wilmington-based director Donald
    McLamb, testified that he exercises his independent judgment
    in making those decisions and is not controlled by the other
    directors, officers, or corporate entities. In fact, McLamb
    explained that, as a Certified Public Accountant (“CPA”) with
    37
    significant experience working under Delaware corporate
    law, he occupies an important role on the board, providing
    “assurance that [the] company will operate within the laws
    and proper corporate governance of Delaware,” “looking out
    for the best interest of the shareholders” as an independent
    director, and ensuring that the board‟s decisions “are
    reasonable in nature and make good business sense.” (App.
    at 785.) Such evidence, credited by the District Court, is
    enough to support the finding that the board engages in
    substantive decision-making during its meetings in
    Wilmington. See Anderson, 
    470 U.S. at 573-74
     (holding that
    a court of appeals may not reverse a district court‟s factual
    finding if that court‟s “account of the evidence is plausible in
    light of the record viewed in its entirety”).20
    20
    Our concurring colleague disagrees, and says that
    “[t]he record does not support” the District Court‟s finding.
    (Concurring Op. at 6.) Rather, in his view, there is “no
    doubt” that any direction, control, or coordination exercised
    by GSK Holdings‟ board must have “been in line with the
    wishes of Heslop.” (Id.) While our colleague is free to
    harbor his doubts, we are bound to a standard of review that
    does not permit us “to conduct a de novo review of the
    evidence.” Newark Branch, N.A.A.C.P. v. City of Bayonne,
    
    134 F.3d 113
    , 120 (3d Cir. 1998) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Under Rule 52 of the Federal Rules of Civil
    Procedure, “[f]indings of fact, whether based on oral or other
    evidence, must not be set aside unless clearly erroneous.”
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a)(6). The District Court considered the
    evidence, including statements by the board members, all of
    whom said they exercised independent judgment at board
    meetings and that the resolutions they adopted were not
    preordained. The District Court thus had a reasonable basis
    38
    Finally, despite Plaintiffs‟ insistence to the contrary,
    Hertz actually reinforces the District Court‟s conclusion that,
    in light of those factual findings, GSK Holdings‟ nerve center
    is in Wilmington. Even while cautioning courts to identify a
    corporation‟s actual center of direction and control, Hertz
    “place[d] primary weight upon the need for judicial
    administration of a jurisdictional statute to remain as simple
    as possible.” 
    130 S. Ct. at 1186
    . The Supreme Court
    recognized that adopting the “nerve center” test would not
    resolve every ambiguity, and that “there will be hard cases.”
    Id. at 1194. In fact, the Court specifically observed that, “in
    this era of telecommuting, some corporations may divide their
    command and coordinating functions among officers who
    work at several different locations, perhaps communicating
    over the Internet.” Id. Rather than requiring courts facing
    such situations to weigh those different functions, Hertz
    reminded us that the “nerve center” test “points courts in a
    single direction, towards the center of overall direction,
    control, and coordination.” Id.
    on which to draw a factual conclusion about who was making
    decisions for GSK Holdings and where they were doing it.
    We are not at liberty to substitute our own reading of the facts
    when, as here, there is evidence directly supporting the
    District Court‟s finding. See McCann, 
    458 F.3d at 268
    (“[O]ur sole function is to review the record to determine
    whether the findings of the District Court were clearly
    erroneous, i.e., whether we are left with a definite and firm
    conviction that a mistake has been committed.” (internal
    quotation marks omitted)).
    39
    Here, it is clear that people in both Philadelphia and
    London contribute to GSK Holdings‟ operations. From
    London, George Brown prepares the financial documents
    reviewed during board meetings, Helen Jones oversees
    complex tax matters, Sarah-Jane Chilver-Stainer facilitates
    certain investments, and Julian Heslop‟s staff provide overall
    strategic guidance. From Philadelphia, Jan Lyons prepares
    GSK Holdings‟ tax return and provides tax advice, Audrey
    Klijian facilitates other investments and payments, and
    Michael Corrigan prepares for board meetings and carries out
    actions on GSK Holdings‟ behalf. Faced with this situation,
    we “do not have to try to weigh” those various corporate
    functions to determine GSK Holdings‟ principal place of
    business, but rather should look “towards the center of overall
    direction, control, and coordination.” 
    Id.
     All of the functions
    described above are intended to inform or facilitate the
    decisions of GSK Holdings‟ board of directors, which has the
    sole authority to adopt binding resolutions affecting the
    corporation‟s investments. Thus, the “single direction” in
    which the nerve center test points is toward the location of
    those decisions. As the District Court ably concluded from
    the evidence, that location is in Wilmington, Delaware.21
    21
    In so concluding, we are not, as our concurring
    colleague implies, carving out a holding-company exception
    to Hertz.      Rather, we are faithfully applying Hertz‟s
    instruction to identify “the actual center of direction, control,
    and coordination” of a corporation. 
    130 S. Ct. at 1192
    . To do
    so, we first have to acknowledge the nature of the
    corporation‟s activities, as it is difficult to locate a
    corporation‟s brain without first identifying its body. In this
    case, GSK Holdings‟ sole function is to hold assets.
    Therefore, the question under Hertz is where that activity is
    40
    controlled and directed. When, as here, the evidence suggests
    that the board of directors actually controlled that activity, we
    do not think that Hertz requires us to ignore that fact and look
    instead to the location of certain corporate officers.
    Moreover, even if we were to look to GSK Holdings‟ officers
    (three of whom are also the members of the board of
    directors), the conclusion regarding the company‟s nerve
    center is not as clear as our colleague suggests. GSK
    Holdings has two officers in London, two in Philadelphia, and
    two in Wilmington, and each performs different functions. If
    we were to weigh those functions, we might agree that some
    of the most important work is performed in London, but that
    involves the type of balancing that Hertz eschews, and, in any
    event, it is not necessary when the facts, as found by the
    District Court, suggest that this particular corporation did not
    vest the relevant decision-making in its officers.
    Our conclusion on this record does not mean that the
    location of board meetings will always determine a holding
    company‟s citizenship. If a holding company‟s officers, not
    its directors, actually control the company‟s core activities, or
    if the company‟s board makes decisions in one location and
    simply ratifies them in another, the holding company is
    unlikely to be a citizen of a state simply because that is where
    it holds its board meetings. Here, however, the record
    supports the conclusion that, although an array of support
    services were provided from different locations, the board
    controlled the company‟s core activities through decision-
    making at board meetings located in Delaware. In such an
    instance, Hertz encourages rather than discourages our
    looking to the location of the board meetings as the center of
    direction and control.
    41
    3.     Jurisdictional Manipulation
    Having concluded that GSK Holdings‟ nerve center is
    in Delaware, we now turn briefly to Plaintiffs‟ contention that
    that outcome is impermissible under Hertz because it would
    condone jurisdictional manipulation. Hertz cautioned that, “if
    the record reveals attempts at [jurisdictional] manipulation
    …[,] the courts should instead take as the „nerve center‟ the
    place of actual direction, control, and coordination, in the
    absence of such manipulation.” Id. at 1195. Plaintiffs argue
    that there is evidence of jurisdictional manipulation here and
    that we should not encourage that manipulation by
    concluding that GSK Holdings is a Delaware citizen.
    Specifically, they note that GSK Holdings altered its bylaws
    and sought to amend government documents associating it
    with a Philadelphia address. They allege that GSK Holdings
    made those post-discovery alterations to “bolster [its]
    contention … that [its] principal place of business is in
    Wilmington” (Appellants‟ Opening Br. at 46 (quoting
    Brewer, 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 731
    )), and thus facilitate its
    removal of “hundreds of personal injury cases” that
    previously were in Pennsylvania state court (id. at 45).
    Brewer agreed, commenting that the post-discovery alteration
    “smacks of jurisdictional manipulation.”22 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 730
    .
    22
    Brewer was careful to explain that it did not consider
    the transition from SmithKline Beecham to GSK LLC to
    itself be an attempt at jurisdictional manipulation, noting that
    “[GSK] LLC was formed to accomplish a legitimate business
    purpose and not to manipulate jurisdiction for litigation
    purposes.” 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 730
    . Plaintiffs conceded that
    point at oral argument, but they suggest that GSK Holdings
    42
    The record, however, squarely contradicts that
    contention. Although Defendants concede that, until recently,
    GSK Holdings‟ bylaws indicated that its headquarters and
    board meetings were in Philadelphia, as did a number of
    summaries of government contracts produced by government
    agencies, Defendants also presented uncontested evidence
    that those documents were inaccurate, and thus they could not
    have affected GSK Holdings‟ principal place of business. See
    Hertz, 
    130 S. Ct. at 115
     (rejecting the notion that “the mere
    filing of a form … listing a corporation‟s „principal executive
    offices‟ would, without more, be sufficient proof to establish
    a corporation‟s „nerve center‟”); Mennen Co. v. Atlantic Mut.
    Ins. Co., 
    147 F.3d 287
    , 293-94 (3d Cir. 1998) (rejecting
    representations of a company‟s principal place of business
    that “run contrary to the empirical facts with which the
    jurisdictional inquiry is concerned”).         Adjusting those
    documents to reflect the reality of GSK Holdings‟ operations
    therefore did not affect jurisdiction, much less “manipulate” it
    improperly. Furthermore, although Plaintiffs express concern
    that GSK Holdings could easily manipulate jurisdiction by
    changing the location of its board meetings, they do not allege
    that that actually occurred here. Had GSK Holdings moved
    its board meetings in anticipation of litigation, the analysis of
    this issue could very well be different, but GSK Holdings‟
    board has been meeting in Wilmington since 2001. There is
    simply no evidence of jurisdictional manipulation, and the
    District Court properly concluded that GSK Holdings‟
    may have located its meetings in Delaware to gain a
    jurisdictional benefit. They presented no evidence of such an
    intent, however, and that suggestion is belied by the fact that
    GSK Holdings began holding its board meetings in Delaware
    long before GSK LLC was formed.
    43
    principal place of business has consistently been in Delaware.
    The conclusion thus remains that, as GSK Holdings is GSK
    LLC‟s sole member, neither of the GSK Defendants is a
    Pennsylvania citizen.23
    B.      Citizenship of the Remaining Defendants
    Plaintiffs‟ fall-back argument is that SmithKline
    Beecham and Avantor Performance Materials are
    Pennsylvania citizens, which, if true, would defeat diversity
    23
    Our concurring colleague worries about
    manipulation in future cases, expressing concern that our
    approach “will encourage parties to shift the location or
    formal authority of their corporate boards in order to create
    citizenship where those board meetings are held.”
    (Concurring Op. at 8.) We repeat, however, that evidence of
    manipulation – which is entirely lacking here – may well alter
    the calculus. If there is such evidence, Hertz authorizes
    courts to disregard the attempts at manipulation, so the
    expressed concern is inordinate. Of much greater concern
    would be a rule in keeping with our colleague‟s focus on the
    location of strategic decision-making, as it would risk
    disregarding the distinctions among the various corporate
    entities that often comprise large business enterprises. Julian
    Heslop‟s team in London likely made strategic decisions that
    guided the activities of all of the corporations in the GSK
    group. Under our colleague‟s approach, London could
    therefore be considered the “brain” of each and every GSK-
    related corporation, thus defining all of their citizenships.
    Such an outcome would disregard our rule that parent and
    subsidiary corporations retain separate corporate identities.
    See Quaker State, 
    461 F.2d at 1142
    .
    44
    jurisdiction even though the GSK Defendants are citizens of
    Delaware. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (a)(1) (requiring complete
    diversity). They contend that, although SmithKline Beecham
    converted to GSK LLC and dissolved as a Pennsylvania
    entity, Pennsylvania law preserves its citizenship for diversity
    jurisdiction purposes. As for Avantor, Plaintiffs concede that
    the corporation officially moved its operations from New
    Jersey to Pennsylvania five days after Defendants removed
    this action, but they suggest that Avantor‟s leadership may
    have already been operating from Pennsylvania at the time of
    removal. The District Court disagreed on both counts,
    finding that Avantor‟s headquarters moved at the same time
    as the rest of its operations, Johnson, 853 F. Supp. 2d at 496,
    and concluding that SmithKline Beecham‟s preserved
    citizenship is irrelevant because it is a nominal party that
    lacks a “real interest in the litigation,” id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted).24 We see no reason to disturb those rulings.
    1.     SmithKline Beecham
    “[T]he „citizens‟ upon whose diversity a plaintiff
    grounds jurisdiction must be real and substantial parties to the
    24
    The District Court did not specifically address
    SmithKline Beecham‟s citizenship in its discussion of
    diversity jurisdiction, but Plaintiffs raised SmithKline‟s
    citizenship as a basis for remand, and the Court analyzed
    whether the company retained an interest in the litigation
    before denying Plaintiffs‟ request. Johnson, 853 F. Supp. 2d
    at 489, 496-97. Therefore, we understand that it declined to
    treat SmithKline as a Pennsylvania citizen due to its
    conclusion that the company was not a “real party in interest”
    to the controversy. Id. at 497.
    45
    controversy.” Navarro Savings Ass’n v. Lee, 
    446 U.S. 458
    ,
    460 (1980). “Thus, a federal court must disregard nominal or
    formal parties,” 
    id. at 461
    , and can base its jurisdiction only
    upon the citizenship of parties with “a real interest in the
    litigation,” Bumberger v. Ins. Co. of N. Am., 
    952 F.2d 764
    ,
    767 (3d Cir. 1991).
    Plaintiffs are correct that, generally speaking,
    Pennsylvania law preserves for a limited time a dissolved
    corporation‟s interest in litigation against it.          The
    Pennsylvania code provides that, “[e]very business
    corporation that is dissolved … shall, nevertheless, continue
    to exist for the purpose of … prosecuting and defending
    actions or proceedings by or against it … .” 15 Pa. Cons.
    Stat. Ann. § 1978. It also ensures that the dissolution of a
    corporation does “not eliminate nor impair any remedy
    available to or against” it for a period of two years. Id.
    § 1979. We have held that when such a state statute renders a
    dissolved corporation “sufficiently alive to sue,” the
    corporation also retains its citizenship for purposes of
    diversity jurisdiction. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co. v. Klaxon Co.,
    
    115 F.2d 268
    , 271 (3d Cir. 1940), rev’d on other grounds,
    
    313 U.S. 487
     (1941); see also Ripalda v. Am. Operations
    Corp., 
    977 F.2d 1464
    , 1468 (D.C. Cir. 1992) (“[A] state
    statute extending the life of a dissolved corporation for the
    purpose of being sued also preserves the corporation as a
    citizen of the state of incorporation for the purpose of
    determining diversity of citizenship.”).         Accordingly,
    SmithKline Beecham‟s dissolution as a Pennsylvania
    corporation did not, standing alone, destroy its Pennsylvania
    citizenship or the import of that citizenship.25
    25
    SmithKline dissolved on October 27, 2009, not quite
    46
    But SmithKline Beecham did not simply dissolve – it
    “domesticated itself under the laws of another jurisdiction,”
    15 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 1980, becoming a Delaware
    corporation and then converting to a Delaware limited
    liability company. See 
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 265
    (regarding conversion of a foreign entity into a Delaware
    corporation); 
    id.
     tit. 6, § 18-214 (regarding conversion of a
    Delaware corporation into a Delaware LLC). That company
    – GSK LLC – has stepped into SmithKline Beecham‟s shoes,
    and, under Delaware law, all of SmithKline Beecham‟s
    “debts, liabilities and duties” now lie with GSK LLC. Id. tit.
    6, § 18-214(f); id. tit. 8, § 265(f).26 SmithKline Beecham thus
    two years before Plaintiffs filed their complaint. See 15 Pa.
    Cons. Stat. Ann. § 1979 (preserving remedies against a
    dissolved company for two years).
    26
    Those two provisions govern, respectively, the
    transition from a foreign corporation to a Delaware
    corporation, and from a Delaware corporation to a Delaware
    LLC. Title 8, § 265(f) provides that:
    When an other entity has been converted to a
    corporation of this State pursuant to this
    section, the corporation of this State shall, for
    all purposes of the laws of the State of
    Delaware, be deemed to be the same entity as
    the converting other entity. … [A]ll rights of
    creditors and all liens upon any property of such
    other entity shall be preserved unimpaired, and
    all debts, liabilities and duties of the other entity
    that has converted shall remain attached to the
    corporation of this State to which such other
    entity has converted, and may be enforced
    47
    has no actual interest in the outcome of the litigation, making
    it a “nominal party.” See Bumberger, 952 F.2d at 767
    (explaining that a “nominal party” is one that lacks “a real
    interest in the litigation”); see also Strotek Corp. v. Air
    Transp. Ass’n of Am., 
    300 F.3d 1129
    , 1133 (9th Cir. 2002)
    (holding that a dissolved entity whose liabilities had been
    transferred to a different entity is not a real party in interest).
    Therefore, although SmithKline Beecham may technically
    still be a Pennsylvania citizen, we must disregard its
    citizenship for purposes of establishing diversity
    jurisdiction.27
    against it to the same extent as if said debts,
    liabilities and duties had originally been
    incurred or contracted by it in its capacity as a
    corporation of this State.
    
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 8, § 265
    (f). The language of Title 6, § 18-
    214(f) is very similar, providing, inter alia, that:
    [A]ll debts, liabilities and duties of the other
    entity that has converted shall remain attached
    to the domestic limited liability company to
    which such other entity has converted, and may
    be enforced against it to the same extent as if
    said debts, liabilities and duties had originally
    been incurred or contracted by it in its capacity
    as a domestic limited liability company.
    
    Del. Code Ann. tit. 6, § 18-214
    (f).
    27
    For the same reason, SmithKline‟s apparent failure
    to consent to removal also does not provide a basis for
    remand. Although removal generally requires “unanimity
    among the defendants,” that requirement does not extend to
    nominal parties. Balazik v. Cnty. of Dauphin, 
    44 F.3d 209
    ,
    48
    2.     Avantor Performance Materials
    Avantor‟s citizenship also does not provide a basis for
    remand. Plaintiffs argue that Defendants, who bear the
    burden of proof, have “not presented any evidence that
    [Avantor‟s] officers directed, controlled, and coordinated its
    activities in New Jersey, rather than Pennsylvania, as of the
    date of removal.” (Appellants‟ Opening Br. at 48.) Although
    Plaintiffs concede that the corporation officially moved its
    operations from New Jersey to Pennsylvania after Defendants
    removed this action, they suggest that Avantor‟s leadership
    may have begun operating from Pennsylvania before
    removal. The District Court saw things differently, finding
    that Avantor‟s headquarters moved from New Jersey to
    Pennsylvania at the same time as its rank-and-file employees
    – “five days after Defendants removed the case.” Johnson,
    853 F. Supp. 2d at 495. Based on that finding, the Court
    concluded that, “at all relevant times, Avantor was a citizen
    of New Jersey, not Pennsylvania.” Id.
    The date when Avantor‟s officers began controlling
    the company from Pennsylvania is purely a question of fact,
    and we therefore review the District Court‟s determination for
    clear error. McCann, 
    458 F.3d at 286
    . The Court based its
    finding on two affidavits from Avantor‟s general counsel, an
    internal company memorandum, and a newspaper report, each
    of which indicates that the entire company moved into its new
    213 (3d Cir. 1995); see also 
    28 U.S.C. § 1446
    (b)(2)(A)
    (requiring that “all defendants who have been properly joined
    and served must join in or consent to the removal of the
    action”).
    49
    Pennsylvania headquarters on September 19, 2011, after the
    case was removed. In response, Plaintiffs point to evidence
    that a number of corporate documents listed Avantor‟s
    Pennsylvania address prior to removal, and the fact that its
    CEO gave an interview from the new headquarters two days
    before the move (which, notably, is still after the date of
    removal). As the District Court explained, however, none of
    that evidence contradicts Avantor‟s account of the actual
    move, Johnson, 853 F. Supp. 2d at 495, and we cannot say
    that the Court‟s finding was clearly erroneous. Given its view
    of the facts, the District Court was correct to conclude that
    Avantor‟s nerve center was in New Jersey at all times
    relevant to this litigation, as its New Jersey headquarters was
    its actual center of direction and control at the time the
    complaint was filed and at the time of removal.
    IV.   Conclusion
    The District Court rightly held that GSK LLC and
    GSK Holdings are both citizens of Delaware, that SmithKline
    Beecham is a nominal party, and that Avantor was a citizen of
    New Jersey at the time this case was removed. As none of
    those Defendants was, at the time of removal, a citizen of a
    state where Plaintiffs are citizens, the parties satisfy the
    diversity of citizenship requirement of 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    . The
    District Court thus had original jurisdiction over the matter,
    making removal proper, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1441
    (a), and we must
    affirm the order denying Plaintiffs‟ motion for remand.
    50
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 12-2561, 12-2562, 12-2563, 12-2564, 12-2565

Citation Numbers: 724 F.3d 337, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 11501

Judges: Ambro, Jordan, Vanaskie

Filed Date: 6/7/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024

Authorities (28)

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Inwood Laboratories, Inc. v. Ives Laboratories, Inc. , 102 S. Ct. 2182 ( 1982 )

The Mennen Company v. Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company, ... , 147 F.3d 287 ( 1998 )

quaker-state-dyeing-finishing-co-inc-and-john-realty-co-inc-in , 461 F.2d 1140 ( 1972 )

Diaz-Rodriguez v. Pep Boys Corp. , 410 F.3d 56 ( 2005 )

joseph-c-balazik-edith-c-balazik-david-bedard-judith-l-bedard-donald-f , 44 F.3d 209 ( 1995 )

Charles E. Abels and Irene C. Abels v. State Farm Fire & ... , 770 F.2d 26 ( 1985 )

grand-union-supermarkets-of-the-virgin-islands-inc-v-he-lockhart , 316 F.3d 408 ( 2003 )

Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing Co. , 61 S. Ct. 1020 ( 1941 )

Zambelli Fireworks Manufacturing Co. v. Wood , 592 F.3d 412 ( 2010 )

jean-morris-personal-representative-of-the-estate-of-john-morris-deceased , 361 F.3d 177 ( 2004 )

barry-brown-jolie-stahl-as-they-are-trustees-of-the-long-bay-trust-v-leo , 75 F.3d 860 ( 1996 )

Yamaha Motor Corp., USA v. Calhoun , 116 S. Ct. 619 ( 1996 )

Lincoln Property Co. v. Roche , 126 S. Ct. 606 ( 2005 )

Hertz Corp. v. Friend , 130 S. Ct. 1181 ( 2010 )

Judy Ripalda v. American Operations Corporation , 977 F.2d 1464 ( 1992 )

Stentor Electric Mfg. Co. v. Klaxon Co. , 115 F.2d 268 ( 1940 )

Russell A. Lugo-Vina v. Pueblo International, Inc. , 574 F.2d 41 ( 1978 )

taber-partners-i-a-new-york-general-partnership-v-merit-builders-inc , 987 F.2d 57 ( 1993 )

Louisville, Cincinnati, & Charleston Rail-Road v. Letson , 11 L. Ed. 353 ( 1844 )

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