KOVALEV v. City Of Philadelphia

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 10, 2025
Docket2:25-cv-02820
StatusUnknown

This text of KOVALEV v. City Of Philadelphia (KOVALEV v. City Of Philadelphia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
KOVALEV v. City Of Philadelphia, (E.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

SERGEI KOVALEV : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 25-2820 : CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, LAMONT : ROGERS, LAWRENCE S. KRASNER, : PHILADELPHIA DISTRICT : ATTORNEY’S OFFICE, : PHILADELPHIA POLICE : DEPARTMENT, PHILADELPHIA : DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH, : PHILADELPHIA DEPARTMENT OF : LICENSES AND INSPECTIONS, : CHERELLE L. PARKER, KEVIN J. : BETHEL, MARQUES NEWSOME, : PALAK RAVAL-NELSON, BRIDGETT : COLLINS-GREENWALD, BASIL L. : MERENDA, JOHN DOES 1-5 :

MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. July 10, 2025 A Philadelphian repeatedly sues the City of Philadelphia and its officials in state court for a variety of perceived transgressions including blaming the City for not stopping a neighbor allegedly creating a nuisance. He amended a long-pending case two months ago claiming his neighbor is a nuisance to add civil rights claims against the City and its officials under federal law. The City removed the case on behalf of itself and most of the named City officials. But the City did not include one of its officials in the removal; it left one official in state court. The Philadelphia litigant promptly moved to remand arguing we lack subject matter jurisdiction and not all served defendants removed here or consented to removal. The City counters we enjoy subject matter jurisdiction and should excuse the inadvertent omission of one of its officials from the removal or allow it to amend the notice of removal beyond the thirty days set by Congress. We agree with the City as to our subject matter jurisdiction. We disagree as to our ability to disregard the City’s inadvertence violating the bedrock rule of unanimity requiring all served defendants to remove. The City left one of its officials in state court. It cannot now amend to remove her to this case beyond the thirty days set by Congress. We remand to the state court for all further proceedings. I. Factual Background

Philadelphian Sergei Kovalev pro se sued his neighbor, Lamont E. Rogers, for nuisance and related state law claims in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas on January 2, 2025.1 Mr. Kovalev also sued the City of Philadelphia, the Philadelphia Police Department, the Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Does 1-5 asserting state law claims, including negligence, for not shutting down Mr. Rogers’s nuisance property.2 Mr. Kovalev amended his complaint in the Philadelphia action on February 13, 2025 adding Mayor Cherelle Parker, Police Commissioner Kevin Bethel, Captain and Commander of the 15th Police District Marques Newsome, Health Commissioner Palak Raval-Nelson, Commissioner of the Department of Licenses and Inspections Bridget Collins-Greenwald, and

Commissioner of the Department of Licenses Basil L. Merenda in their individual capacities again asserting state law claims, including negligence and nuisance.3 Mr. Kovalev amended his complaint for a second time on March 31, 2025, this time adding the Philadelphia Department of Licenses and Inspections, the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office, and District Attorney Lawrence S. Krasner in his individual capacity, asserting the same state law claims.4 Mr. Kovalev amended his complaint for the third time on May 12, 2025, adding new federal civil rights claims against the City of Philadelphia, Philadelphia Police Department, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, Philadelphia Department of Licenses and Inspections, the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office, Mayor Parker, Police Commissioner Bethel, Captain, Newsome, Health Commissioner Raval-Nelson, Commissioner Collins-Greenwald, Commissioner Merenda, and District Attorney Krasner. 5 The City, Police Department, Department of Health, Department of Licenses and Inspections, Police Commissioner Bethel, Captain Newsome, Health Commissioner Raval-

Nelson, Commissioner Collins-Greenwald, and Commissioner Merenda—but not Mayor Parker— filed a timely notice of removal on June 2, 2025.6 Attorneys for the City’s Law Department entered their appearances for the City, Police Department, Department of Public Health, Department of Licenses and Inspections, Mayor Parker, Commissioner Bethel, Captain Newsome, Health Commissioner Raval-Nelson, Commissioner Collins-Greenwald, and Commissioner Merenda.7 Mr. Kovalev had not served the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office and District Attorney Krasner with the Complaint and the City’s Law Department does not represent the District Attorney’s Office and District Attorney Krasner.8 The City’s Notice of removal invokes our jurisdiction over Mr. Kovalev’s federal civil

rights claims. The Removing Defendants obtained Mr. Rogers’s consent to removal through an email attached to the Notice even though there is no proof of service of the operative complaint on Mr. Rogers.9 The Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas docket shows service of Mr. Kovalev’s original complaint on Mr. Rogers and the entry of default judgment against Mr. Rogers for failure to respond to the complaint on February 10, 2025.10 There is nothing in the Philadelphia County docket showing service of the amended Complaint, second amended Complaint, or third amended Complaint on Mr. Rogers. After removal, the Removing Defendants—but not Mayor Parker—moved to dismiss Mr. Kovalev’s third amended Complaint.11 Mr. Kovalev responded by filing an amended Complaint here and timely moving to remand the action.12 The Removing Defendants oppose remand.13 II. Analysis Mr. Kovalev makes multiple arguments for remand raising both procedural and

jurisdictional defects. Mr. Kovalev argues we lack subject matter jurisdiction because his third amended Complaint in the Philadelphia action does not raise a federal question. Mr. Kovalev also identifies three procedural defects: (1) the Notice of removal purportedly on behalf of individual Defendants Mayor Parker, Police Commissioner Bethel, Captain Newsome, Health Commissioner Raval-Nelson, Commissioner Collins-Greenwald, and Commissioner Merenda is ineffective because they are sued in their individual capacities, which requires each of them to individually consent to removal; (2) Mayor Parker is not named in the Notice of removal; and (3) Mr. Rogers did not properly consent to removal. We disagree we lack subject matter jurisdiction. But we agree the Removing Defendants’

failure to name Mayor Parker in the Notice of removal is a procedural defect and cannot now be cured by an amended Notice. We disagree with Mr. Kovalev’s other procedural defect arguments. Congress, through 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a), allows defendants to remove civil actions from a state court to a federal district court as long as the district court would have had subjection matter jurisdiction had the action been originally filed before it.14 If a plaintiff seeks remand of an action removable under section 1441(a), the plaintiff must identify a provision prohibiting removal.15 A plaintiff may seek remand for procedural defects, but section 1447(c) limits a plaintiff’s ability to challenge removal and limits a district court’s authority to remedy abuses of the removal procedure.16 Our Court of Appeals instructs removal statutes must be strictly construed against removal and all doubts should be resolved in favor of remand.17 The Supreme Court distinguishes between “properly removed” cases and cases “failing in subject-matter jurisdiction.”18 A motion for remand for any defect in the removal procedure must be made within thirty days after the filing of the notice of removal.19 A motion to remand based on

the district court’s lack of subject matter jurisdiction “at any time before final judgment” requires remand.20 Mr. Kovalev raises both procedural defects and a jurisdictional defect requiring remand.

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KOVALEV v. City Of Philadelphia, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kovalev-v-city-of-philadelphia-paed-2025.