ORDER
HAND, Senior District Judge.
On November 8, 1993, defendant Champion International Corporation filed a notice of removal of this action from state court to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Alabama (tab 1). Now before this court are the plaintiffs’ motion (tab 5) to transfer this action to the Honorable Richard W. Vollmer, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Alabama, a defendant’s motion (tab 2) to strike the plaintiffs’ amendment to second amended complaint, and the plaintiffs’ motion to remand (tab 14).
1. Background
Plaintiffs James H. and Jacqueline M. Lane, and Eugenia H. Elebash filed this action in the state Circuit Court of Baldwin County, Alabama, on November 9, 1992, on behalf of themselves and others who own real property on Perdido Bay in Baldwin County,
Alabama, and Escambia County, Florida.
The original defendants included Champion International Corporation (Champion), which has a paper mill in Cantonment, Escambia County, Florida; Doug Owenby, a citizen and resident of Florida who manages Champion’s Cantonment plant; and several fictitious defendants. The plaintiffs’ claims arise from their allegations that the fictitious defendants improperly released toxins and other pollutants into Eleven Mile Creek, which flows into Perdido Bay, and into Perdido Bay itself.
These allegations were previously before this court when defendant Champion filed another notice of i-enaoval
based on diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Although plaintiffs James H. and Jacqueline M. Lane and defendant Owenby were Florida domiciliaries, which would ordinarily prohibit diversity jurisdiction,
defendant Champion contended diversity jurisdiction was possible because the plaintiffs had fraudulently joined Owenby. Judge Vollmer held that Owenby was not fraudulently joined and remanded the action to Baldwin County Circuit Court.
Lane v. Champion Int'l Corp.,
827 F.Supp. 701, 706-10 (S.D.Ala.1993) (hereinafter Order of June 14).
Since then there have been several occurrences. On October 19, 1993, the plaintiffs amended their second amended complaint to state “each class member is individually seeking damages, including compensatory and punitive damages, in an amount less than $50,000.” Plaintiffs’ Amendment to the Second Amended Complaint (hereinafter the Amendment).
In so doing, the plaintiffs reduced their
ad damnum
considerably but
did not otherwise change their allegations. Their original complaint claimed actual, compensatory, and punitive damages of $250 million for negligence and $500 million for each of the following: wantonness; breach of duty to warn; fraud, misrepresentation and deceit; nuisance; trespass; battery; assault; negligent infliction of emotional distress; intentional infliction of emotional distress; outrage; and strict liability. The plaintiffs also sought interest, costs, and attorneys fees, but interests and costs are irrelevant in computing the amount in controversy under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a).
In another astonishing move, the plaintiffs’ Amendment dropped all the requests for in-junctive relief which the plaintiffs had made in their complaint. They had requested preliminary and permanent injunctions to stop the defendants from using, producing, creating, manufacturing, and releasing into Eleven Mile Creek and Perdido Bay, any toxic substances or other pollutants. They had also requested injunctions to force the defendants to clean up and remove from Eleven Mile Creek and Perdido Bay all toxins and other pollutants they had released there.
It is curious that the plaintiffs filed the ' Amendment one week after defendant Champion revealed to them its belief that if defendant Owenby were dismissed, the voluntary/involuntary rule
would not
prohibit Champion from again removing the action to federal court.
See
Letter of Chason and Chason, P.C., attorneys for defendant Champion, to the Honorable Charles C. Partin, Circuit Court Judge, Baldwin County (Oct. 12, 1993) (copy sent to the plaintiffs). It is curious because an affidavit submitted by the defense and unrefuted by the plaintiffs suggests that on October 1, 1993, before the plaintiffs reduced the
ad damnum,
the plaintiffs believed the voluntary/involuntary rule
would
bar removal of this action if defendant Owenby were dismissed.
See
Affidavit of Katherine Armstrong, attorney for defendant Champion (Nov. 8, 1993). Then on October 19, 1993, after receiving a copy of the letter to Judge Partin, the plaintiffs filed the Amendment, reducing the
ad damnum
considerably and dropping all requests for in-junctive relief. They now vigorously assert the Amendment bars removal.
It is also curious that the Amendment appears not to have been the first amendment which the plaintiffs considered filing. On October 18, 1993, the plaintiffs served on defendant Champion, but did not file in Baldwin County Circuit Court, an amendment (not
the
Amendment) reducing the
ad dam-mom
to less than $50,000 per class member but not mentioning injunctive relief. Letter of Richard A. Freese to G. Sage Lyons, John Earle Chason, Barbara Wrubel, and Louis C. Woolf (Oct. 19, 1993). Enclosed with the October 19th letter was a copy of the Amendment, the one actually filed, which in addition to reducing the
ad damnum,
dropped the plaintiffs’ requests for injunctive relief. This is curious because, in computing the amount in controversy in diversity actions seeking injunctive relief, some courts have considered the cost to the defendant of complying with injunctions.
See Justice v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co., 921
F.2d 503, 505 (10th Cir.1991);
but see Indianer v. Franklin Life Ins. Co.,
113 F.R.D. 595, 605 (S.D.Fla.1986). It appears the plaintiffs reasoned that if this court were inclined to use the so-called “defendant’s viewpoint,” the amount in controversy might exceed the diversity-jurisdiction requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a). By their Amendment, the plaintiffs eliminated any consideration of injunctive relief.
Another curiosity has more recently presented itself. One of the named plaintiffs has expressed goals for this lawsuit
which
can be achieved with certainty only through injunctions, despite the fact that the plaintiffs, via the Amendment, dropped their requests for injunctive relief, requests which, again, might have conferred the subject-matter jurisdiction of this court. The plaintiffs contend that a massive monetary award alone, with no injunctions, would force Champion to clean up Perdido Bay. That is not necessarily true.
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ORDER
HAND, Senior District Judge.
On November 8, 1993, defendant Champion International Corporation filed a notice of removal of this action from state court to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Alabama (tab 1). Now before this court are the plaintiffs’ motion (tab 5) to transfer this action to the Honorable Richard W. Vollmer, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Alabama, a defendant’s motion (tab 2) to strike the plaintiffs’ amendment to second amended complaint, and the plaintiffs’ motion to remand (tab 14).
1. Background
Plaintiffs James H. and Jacqueline M. Lane, and Eugenia H. Elebash filed this action in the state Circuit Court of Baldwin County, Alabama, on November 9, 1992, on behalf of themselves and others who own real property on Perdido Bay in Baldwin County,
Alabama, and Escambia County, Florida.
The original defendants included Champion International Corporation (Champion), which has a paper mill in Cantonment, Escambia County, Florida; Doug Owenby, a citizen and resident of Florida who manages Champion’s Cantonment plant; and several fictitious defendants. The plaintiffs’ claims arise from their allegations that the fictitious defendants improperly released toxins and other pollutants into Eleven Mile Creek, which flows into Perdido Bay, and into Perdido Bay itself.
These allegations were previously before this court when defendant Champion filed another notice of i-enaoval
based on diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Although plaintiffs James H. and Jacqueline M. Lane and defendant Owenby were Florida domiciliaries, which would ordinarily prohibit diversity jurisdiction,
defendant Champion contended diversity jurisdiction was possible because the plaintiffs had fraudulently joined Owenby. Judge Vollmer held that Owenby was not fraudulently joined and remanded the action to Baldwin County Circuit Court.
Lane v. Champion Int'l Corp.,
827 F.Supp. 701, 706-10 (S.D.Ala.1993) (hereinafter Order of June 14).
Since then there have been several occurrences. On October 19, 1993, the plaintiffs amended their second amended complaint to state “each class member is individually seeking damages, including compensatory and punitive damages, in an amount less than $50,000.” Plaintiffs’ Amendment to the Second Amended Complaint (hereinafter the Amendment).
In so doing, the plaintiffs reduced their
ad damnum
considerably but
did not otherwise change their allegations. Their original complaint claimed actual, compensatory, and punitive damages of $250 million for negligence and $500 million for each of the following: wantonness; breach of duty to warn; fraud, misrepresentation and deceit; nuisance; trespass; battery; assault; negligent infliction of emotional distress; intentional infliction of emotional distress; outrage; and strict liability. The plaintiffs also sought interest, costs, and attorneys fees, but interests and costs are irrelevant in computing the amount in controversy under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a).
In another astonishing move, the plaintiffs’ Amendment dropped all the requests for in-junctive relief which the plaintiffs had made in their complaint. They had requested preliminary and permanent injunctions to stop the defendants from using, producing, creating, manufacturing, and releasing into Eleven Mile Creek and Perdido Bay, any toxic substances or other pollutants. They had also requested injunctions to force the defendants to clean up and remove from Eleven Mile Creek and Perdido Bay all toxins and other pollutants they had released there.
It is curious that the plaintiffs filed the ' Amendment one week after defendant Champion revealed to them its belief that if defendant Owenby were dismissed, the voluntary/involuntary rule
would not
prohibit Champion from again removing the action to federal court.
See
Letter of Chason and Chason, P.C., attorneys for defendant Champion, to the Honorable Charles C. Partin, Circuit Court Judge, Baldwin County (Oct. 12, 1993) (copy sent to the plaintiffs). It is curious because an affidavit submitted by the defense and unrefuted by the plaintiffs suggests that on October 1, 1993, before the plaintiffs reduced the
ad damnum,
the plaintiffs believed the voluntary/involuntary rule
would
bar removal of this action if defendant Owenby were dismissed.
See
Affidavit of Katherine Armstrong, attorney for defendant Champion (Nov. 8, 1993). Then on October 19, 1993, after receiving a copy of the letter to Judge Partin, the plaintiffs filed the Amendment, reducing the
ad damnum
considerably and dropping all requests for in-junctive relief. They now vigorously assert the Amendment bars removal.
It is also curious that the Amendment appears not to have been the first amendment which the plaintiffs considered filing. On October 18, 1993, the plaintiffs served on defendant Champion, but did not file in Baldwin County Circuit Court, an amendment (not
the
Amendment) reducing the
ad dam-mom
to less than $50,000 per class member but not mentioning injunctive relief. Letter of Richard A. Freese to G. Sage Lyons, John Earle Chason, Barbara Wrubel, and Louis C. Woolf (Oct. 19, 1993). Enclosed with the October 19th letter was a copy of the Amendment, the one actually filed, which in addition to reducing the
ad damnum,
dropped the plaintiffs’ requests for injunctive relief. This is curious because, in computing the amount in controversy in diversity actions seeking injunctive relief, some courts have considered the cost to the defendant of complying with injunctions.
See Justice v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co., 921
F.2d 503, 505 (10th Cir.1991);
but see Indianer v. Franklin Life Ins. Co.,
113 F.R.D. 595, 605 (S.D.Fla.1986). It appears the plaintiffs reasoned that if this court were inclined to use the so-called “defendant’s viewpoint,” the amount in controversy might exceed the diversity-jurisdiction requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a). By their Amendment, the plaintiffs eliminated any consideration of injunctive relief.
Another curiosity has more recently presented itself. One of the named plaintiffs has expressed goals for this lawsuit
which
can be achieved with certainty only through injunctions, despite the fact that the plaintiffs, via the Amendment, dropped their requests for injunctive relief, requests which, again, might have conferred the subject-matter jurisdiction of this court. The plaintiffs contend that a massive monetary award alone, with no injunctions, would force Champion to clean up Perdido Bay. That is not necessarily true. If Champion lost or settled such a lawsuit, it could pay the plaintiffs and then not choose to spend the additional sums on the bay.
Since the Circuit Court of Baldwin County dismissed defendant Owenby from this action on November 4, 1993, there has been complete diversity. The named plaintiffs are citizens of Florida and Alabama, and defendant Champion is a citizen of New York and Connecticut.
Champion then filed its November 8, 1993, notice of removal (tab 1), which has brought this state-court action to federal court a second time.
2. Transfer
The first motion before the court is the plaintiffs’ motion to transfer this action to Judge Vollmer. The plaintiffs contend that since Judge Vollmer is already familiar with the complex facts and procedural history of this action from having entered the Order of June 14, it should be transferred to him. The defendant counterargues that the issues now presented are different from those presented to Judge Vollmer. Although the issues do overlap to some extent, the issues are not so similar that they justify transfer in these particular circumstances.
3. Removal
3(a). The Voluntary/Involuntary Rule
The second motion before the court is the plaintiffs’ motion to strike the Amendment, which could affect diversity jurisdiction. Also tied to the diversity-jurisdiction issue is the voluntary/involuntary rule.
The court notes that the right of removal is statutory and must be construed “to limit federal jurisdiction and prevent encroachment on the state court’s right to decide cases properly brought before it, especially in diversity cases. The removing defendant or defendants bear the burden of establishing the right to invoke federal jurisdiction.”
Harris v. Huffco Petroleum Corp.,
633 F.Supp. 250, 253 (S.D.Ala.1986) (citations omitted).
The court will first consider the voluntary/involuntary rule. In objecting to this court’s diversity jurisdiction, the plaintiffs assert that on June 14, 1993, it was
“held
that ‘this court is aware that Champion would be unable to remove this action if the state court, on remand, were to grant Owenby’s motion to dismiss.’ ” Plaintiffs’ Motion to Transfer at 2, quoting Order of June 14 at 705, citing
Weems v. Louis Dreyfus Corp.,
380 F.2d 545, 545-49 (5th Cir.1967) (discussing the voluntary/involuntary rule) (emphasis added).
The defendant, by contrast, asserts that this sentence from the Order of June 14 is
dictum,
not a holding, and that the question of what would happen if Owenby were dismissed was not before the court then.
A reading of the entire Order of June 14 reveals that the court did not decide what
would happen if Owenby were dismissed.
In remanding the action, the court considered only whether Owenby had been fraudulently joined. Concluding he had not been, the court remanded the action. Order of June 14 at 705-10. In any event, this aspect of the Order of June 14 is no longer relevant to removal because, as will be seen, it has been superseded by the application of an eleventh circuit decision to the Baldwin County Circuit Court’s dismissal of Owenby.
After Owenby was dismissed, Champion again removed this action to federal court. Under the voluntary/involuntary rule, a defendant may remove a qualified diversity action from state to federal court after the dismissal of a nondiverse defendant only if the plaintiff voluntarily dismissed the nondiverse defendant.
See Weems,
380 F.2d at 547-49. Under an exception to this rule, a qualified diversity action may be removed after the dismissal of a nondiverse defendant when the plaintiff did not voluntarily dismiss the nondiverse defendant,
if
the involuntarily dismissed defendant was fraudulently joined in the first place.
Insinga v. La Bella,
845 F.2d 249, 254 (11th Cir.1988). The eleventh circuit held that “a trial court’s finding that it lacks jurisdiction over a resident defendant is akin to a finding of fraudulent joinder of that defendant in that it involves a determination by the court that the resident defendant was never properly before the court[.]”
Id.
3(b). Applying the Rule and its Exception
In this action, the plaintiffs did not voluntarily dismiss Owenby, so this action may be removed to federal court under the exception to the voluntary/involuntary rule if (1) Owen-by was fraudulently joined, and (2) the action is otherwise qualified for removal.
The Circuit Court of Baldwin County did indeed find that it lacked in personam jurisdiction over Owenby when it dismissed him on November 4, 1993.
Lane v. Champion Int’l Corp.,
Case No. CV-92-781.80 (Circuit Court of Baldwin County, Ala., Nov. 4, 1993). Therefore, under
Insinga,
defendant Owenby was fraudulently joined. The
Insinga
analysis from the Eleventh Circuit supersedes this court’s earlier holding
that Owenby was not fraudulently joined. However, whether this action is otherwise qualified for diversity jurisdiction is a more complicated issue. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a), district courts have subject-matter jurisdiction over civil diversity actions “where the matter in controversy exceeds the sum or value of $50,000, exclusive of interests and costs.” 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a) (1988). Had the plaintiffs filed the Amendment
after
the defendant removed the action to federal court, it is clear that diversity jurisdiction would exist.
St Paul Mercury Indemnity Co. v. Red Cab Co.,
303 U.S. 283, 293, 58 S.Ct. 586, 592, 82 L.Ed. 845, 850-51 (1938).
This issue is more complicated
when, as here, the plaintiffs reduce the
ad damnum before
removal.
3(b)(1). The Motion to Strike the Amendment
Despite that complication, Champion suggests that the “good-faith” requirement of
St. Paul
should apply in this action, even though the Amendment was filed before removal. Champion in effect suggests that the claim in the Amendment should control only “if the claim is apparently made in good faith.”
See id.
at 288, 58 S.Ct. at 590, 82 L.Ed. at 848.
Champion previously also suggested that the plaintiffs did not file the Amendment in good faith and moved that the court strike the Amendment because it was a “sham pleading,” one designed to allow the plaintiffs to avoid -the subject-matter jurisdiction of this court.
If this court struck the Amendment, the
ad damnum
would again be above the statutory amount; diversity jurisdiction would then exist, and this action would be qualified for removal. To support its contention that the plaintiffs were trying in bad faith to avoid federal subject-matter jurisdiction, Champion cited the actions they have taken since the Order of June 14. It asserted the amount in controversy was the hundreds of millions of dollars sought in' the pre-Amendment complaint, not the fraction thereof sought in the Amendment. The plaintiffs contend that striking the Amendment ignores the principle that the plaintiff is “master of his complaint.” . They cite an Alabama civil procedure rule permitting amendment of complaints until 42 days before trial,
St. Paul,
and
Lindsey v. Alabama Tel. Co.,
576 F.2d 593 (5th Cir.1978).
3(b)(2). Alternatives to Striking the Amendment
Absent a striking of the Amendment, the court must consider how to treat the
ad damnum
reduction.
One approach is to hold that the requirements for diversity jurisdiction in this case must be met at both the commencement of the action and the time of removal.
Sayers v. Sears, Roebuck and Co.,
732 F.Supp. 654, 656 (W.D.Va.1990).
However,
Sayers
combined with the new clause of the removal statute prohibiting removal of a diversity-based action to federal court more than one year after commencement of the action in state court
would allow the plaintiffs to do
what defendant Champion expressly fears: wait for a remand to state court and increase the
ad damnum
again when it is too late for removal. Since the first anniversary has already passed, this approach would lock Champion out of federal court even if the current named plaintiffs or other plaintiffs later increase the amount in controversy back to hundreds of millions of dollars. Permitting this would defeat one of the purposes of diversity jurisdiction: to provide a fairer forum for financially more significant diversity cases. The framers of the Constitution knew that rivalries among regions of the country could hinder the chances of just results when non-resident parties faced resident parties in state courts. To reduce this risk, the framers created federal diversity jurisdiction.
C.f., Grassi v. Ciba-Geigy, Ltd.,
894 F.2d 181, 185 (5th Cir.1990).
Congress has created diversity jurisdiction and the right of removal under 28 U.S.C. § 1441 for the purpose of protecting nonresident litigants from local prejudice. Although there are many, including (or especially) members of the federal judiciary, who question the continuing need for its existence, removal based on diversity of citizenship is a right conferred by Congress, the need for which ‘may well be greatest when the plaintiff tries hardest to defeat it.’ ... We have recognized the authority of federal courts to protect their own jurisdiction.
Id.
(citations omitted).
The seventh circuit has considered and rejected an alternative to simple remand when the plaintiff reduces his
ad damnum
after removal.
In the Matter of Shell Oil Company,
970 F.2d 355 (7th Cir.1992). In
Shell Oil,
the district court remanded a diversity-based action when the plaintiff stipulated that if he won, he would not collect more than $50,000. The seventh circuit rejected this as inconsistent with
St. Paid. Id.
at 356;
see supra
note 10. In the case
sub judice,
the plaintiffs reduced their
ad dam-num
before removal, so
Shell
Oil’s rejection of such a stipulation does not apply.
The sixth circuit has articulated, and district courts in the seventh circuit have employed, a third approach to use when the defendant seeks to remove an action in which the plaintiff claims less than the amount-in-controversy requirement. In this court’s view, the sixth circuit recognized situations in which plaintiffs’ careful maneuvering could defeat the above-stated constitutional purpose of diversity jurisdiction: plaintiffs could claim in their complaint
an amount lower than the federal amount-in-eontroversy requirement in an attempt to defeat federal jurisdiction, while actually seeking and perhaps obtaining damages far in excess of the federal requirement. Thus, courts have considered allowing removal where the defendant establishes a “substantial likelihood” or “reasonable probability” that the plaintiff intends to seek damages in excess of the federal amount-in-controversy requirement.
See, e.g., Vail v. Orkin Exterminating Co.,
No. 91 C 3053, [1991 WL 134275, at 2] 1991 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 9633, at * 6 (N.D.Ill. July 12, 1991) (employing the “substantial likelihood” test in a case where plaintiffs complaint included an ad damnum clause limiting damages to an amount below the federal requirement);
Cole v. Freightliner Corp.,
No. 91 C 733, [1991 WL 42163, at 2] 1991 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 3408, at * 3-* 4 (N.D.Ill. Mar. 21 [sic], 1991) (using the “reasonable probability” test in a case where plaintiffs complaint specifically prayed for damages less than the federal requirement).
Gafford v. General Elec. Co.,
997 F.2d 150, 158 (6th Cir.1993).
3(c). Discussion
The motion to strike the Amendment presents this court with a difficult choice. The court is mindful of the plaintiffs’ prerogative to be masters of their complaint. If they wish to claim less than $50,000 apiece and drop their requests for injunctive relief, this court does not wish to force them to do otherwise and thereby lock them inside federal court. The court is also mindful of the constitutional purposes of diversity jurisdiction and of the defendant’s concern that the
plaintiffs could again amend the
ad damnum
when the one-year bar of 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b) would prohibit removal. Properly amending the
ad damnum
is the plaintiffs’ prerogative, but it is not their prerogative to evade the constitutionally proper subject-matter jurisdiction of the court. Given the procedural history of this action,
the jurisdictional shell game which the plaintiffs seem to be playing in an effort to avoid federal subject-matter jurisdiction,
and the complex and expensive environmental issues involved, this court is persuaded that there is a “substantial likelihood” or a “reasonable probability” that the plaintiffs (meaning the current named plaintiffs), future named plaintiffs,
or
members of a class, if a court certifies one, will seek more than the federal amount-in-controversy requirement if this case is remanded to state court. The plaintiffs contended at a January 6, 1994, hearing before this court that they have “no intention” to amend the
ad dam-num
again; nevertheless, it would tax credulity to suggest and it would be naive to believe that upon remand neither they nor anyone else would.
Indeed, counsel acknowledged at the hearing that subsequent change in circumstance may well dictate a change in the
ad damnum
claim.
Despite the “substantial likelihood” or “reasonable probability” that upon remand some plaintiffs would seek more than the federal amount-in-controversy requirement, this court is not convinced the approaches of
Vail
and
Cole,
as articulated in
Gafford,
are appropriate. A court either has subject-matter jurisdiction or it does not. A federal court in a diversity action does not have subject-matter jurisdiction if the amount in controversy is less than the statutory amount. In this action, it is the Amendment which brings the amount in controversy below that amount. 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a) (1988).
3(d). Recent Events
Also at the January 6th hearing, the court articulated the possibility of remanding this action under the condition that the amount in controversy in state court not exceed the statutory amount which suffices for diversity jurisdiction in federal court. In a January 7, 1994, letter to the court, plaintiffs counsel stated,
After discussing this matter in great detail with my clients and obtaining their consent, I can now represent to the Court that if this action is remanded, the plaintiffs
will not
amend the complaint to increase their claim for damages above the $50,000 jurisdictional amount or reassert their claims for injunctive relief.
They offered to supplement the record with affidavits stating the same. Letter of Peter A. Grammas, attorney for the plaintiffs, to the Honorable William Brevard Hand (Jan. 7, 1994) (emphasis added).
The January 7th letter overrides their statement at the January 6th hearing that they had “no intention” to amend the
ad damnum
but that they could not promise not to amend the
ad
damnum.
When the
plaintiffs refer to “their'claim for damages” and “their claims for injunctive relief,” they agree to limit not only their own damages and whatever injunctions they as individuals might desire but also their own claim. Their claim is “on behalf of themselves and others similarly situated,” and their Amendment limits “what each class member is individually seeking.” It follows that the plaintiffs and their counsel represent to this court that upon remand they will never amend the
ad damnum
to increase any claim for damages above the $50,000 jurisdictional amount or reassert any claims for injunctive relief. It should be noted that although the plaintiffs state clearly and unequivocally that they will not amend the
ad damnum,
they do not— indeed they cannot — state that no one else will amend the
ad damnum.
Whether someone else would be allowed to amend the
ad damnum
is a question not before this court.
Champion responded (tab 15) to the plaintiffs’ letter and their motion to remand by requesting that the plaintiffs sign and notarize a stipulation rather than affidavits. It offered not to oppose remand at this time if the plaintiffs signed an appropriate stipulation.
When the plaintiffs declined to sign Champion’s stipulation, Champion submitted a supplemental response (tab 16) to the motion to remand. It urged the court to “rule on its motion to strike and Plaintiffs’ motion to remand based upon the prior representations made by Plaintiffs’ counsel”; moreover, Champion surprisingly proposed that the court issue an order finding, based on the January 7th letter, that the Amendment “is not a sham pleading” and that Champion “has indicated that in light of Plaintiffs’ agreement to limit the amount of damages and scope of relief sought, it will
not
oppose Plaintiffs’ Motion to Remand” (emphasis added).
4. Conclusion
Since both the plaintiffs and Champion now seek remand of this action, the court need not decide whether, in light of the one-year bar of 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b), the “good-faith” requirement of
St. Paul
applies to pre-removal
ad damnum
amendments. The court also need not decide whether the plaintiffs’ actions provide sufficient evidence to establish a jurisdictional shell game, or whether the Amendment was “a sham pleading” or was filed in “good faith.” Because this action was filed in state court on November 9, 1992, and removed on November 8,
1993, the one-year bar of 28 U.S.C. § 1446(b) did not prevent removal. The constitutionality of the one-year bar is not before the court.
Accordingly, the court DENIES the plaintiffs’ motion to transfer this action to Judge Vollmer. There being no opposition to remand, and the current named plaintiffs and their counsel having committed themselves upon remand never to amend the
ad dam-num
to increase any claim for damages above the $50,000 jurisdictional amount or reassert any claims for injunctive relief, the court DENIES Champion’s motion to strike the Amendment. This action does not now qualify for removal; therefore, the court GRANTS the plaintiffs’ motion to remand to the Circuit Court of Baldwin County, Alabama. The clerk is DIRECTED to effectuate this transfer and provide the state court with a copy of this order so that court might understand the parties’ agreements.
Should any of the issues in this action arise in this court again, for example upon subsequent removal of this action, or upon the facts of this case giving rise to another action, the clerk is DIRECTED to assign the action to this judge. Such an assignment would be consistent with the plaintiffs’ recommendation, in their motion to transfer, that a judge familiar with the complex facts and procedural history of an action consider them if they again come to the court’s attention.
SO ORDERED.