RULING ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR LEAVE TO AMEND PLAINTIFF’S FIRST SUPPLEMENTAL COMPLAINT AND MOTION TO REMAND
POLOZOLA, District Judge.
This motion requires the Court to determine the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1447(e). Specifically, the Court must determine whether a post-removal amendment to a complaint which adds a non-diverse party would destroy the Court’s subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332 and 28 U.S.C. § 1447(e).
Plaintiff has filed motions for leave to amend her complaint and to remand. The proposed amendment seeks -to add a non-diverse party. Plaintiff contends that if the Court allows her to add a non-diverse party, the Court must remand the case. Defendant contends that diversity jurisdiction is determined at the time of removal and any post-removal amendment to add a non-diverse party would not destroy diversity jurisdiction.
The Court heard oral arguments on this motion and found that if a non-diverse party is added after the case is removed to federal court, the clear language of 28 U.S.C. § 1447(e) requires the Court to remand the suit. The Court now supplements its oral reasons with this opinion.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Plaintiff, Mavis D. Sharp, originally filed this lawsuit in the Nineteenth Judicial District, Parish of East Baton Rouge, State of Louisiana against Kmart Corporation (“Kmart”) and Fred Pininger, á manager of Kmart. Kmart is a foreign corporation, and Pininger and Sharp are Louisiana citizens.
Defendants timely removed the matter to this Court arguing the Court has subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § .1332.
The plaintiff filed her first motion to remand, arguing that this Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because the parties were not completely diverse. Kmart, on the other hand, argues that the party sought to be joined was fraudulently joined solely for the purpose of defeating diversity jurisdiction. This Court initially agreed with the defendant and denied plaintiffs first motion to remand, finding that there was no possibility of recovering against the non-diverse defendant in this case.
After this Court’s initial ruling, the parties participated in discovery.
On May 12,1997, the plaintiff filed a motion for leave of court to file a first supplemental and amending petition for damages. In this amended complaint, the plaintiff seeks to add Saveli Enterprises, Inc., a Louisiana corporation. Shortly thereafter, the plaintiff filed a second motion for remand. In this second remand motion, the plaintiff argued that if her motion for leave to amend was granted, complete diversity would not be present, and the Court would have to remand for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Kmart opposed both motions.
It is well settled that lack of complete diversity between the parties when a suit is brought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332 deprives a federal court of jurisdiction.
Both Sharp and Kmart cite 28 U.S.C. § 1447(e) and
Hensgens v. Deere & Company
as the controlling law on the question of whether diversity is destroyed if a non-diverse party is added to a suit after the case is removed to federal court. However, there are some cases which suggests that the
Hensgens
analysis is no longer controlling after the United States Supreme Court decision in
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. v. KN Energy
Inc.
Thus, the Court must now decide which standard the Court should apply in determining whether a non-diverse party may be added to the suit which was removed to federal court on the basis of diversity jurisdiction. This Court will first examine
Hensgens
case and the history behind Section 1447(e) and then turn to
Freeport-McMoRan
case.
A
Hensgens v. Deere & Company
Rule 15(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that leave to amend a complaint should be given freely when “justice so requires.” The question which remains is whether that same standard applies when a party desires to amend a suit which has been removed to federal court, particularly when the amendment would destroy complete diversity of citizenship. This question was answered by the Fifth Circuit in
Hensgens v. Deere & Co.
In
Hensgens,
the Fifth Circuit found that where a district court is faced with a motion to amend the complaint to add a non-diverse defendant in a removed case, the district court should scrutinize the amendment more closely than it does an ordinary amendment.
In short, the right to freely amend set forth in Rule 15 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure does not apply where a party seeks to add a non-diverse party in a removed case.
When a case is removed to federal court, diversity must exist at the time the action is commenced and when the notice of •removal is filed.
The
Hensgens
court explained, however, that the addition of a non-diverse party after removal will defeat juris- . diction.
The court stated, while “most post-removal developments — amendment of pleadings to below the jurisdictional amount or change in citizenship of a party — -will not divest the Court of subject matter jurisdiction, an addition of a non-diverse defendant to a case will do so.”
In
Hensgens
the Fifth Circuit noted that when the court is faced with a motion to amend to add a non-diverse party after removal, justice requires that the district court consider a number of factors to balance the defendant’s interest in maintaining the federal forum with the competing interests of not
having parallel law suits. The
Hensgens
court stated:
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RULING ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR LEAVE TO AMEND PLAINTIFF’S FIRST SUPPLEMENTAL COMPLAINT AND MOTION TO REMAND
POLOZOLA, District Judge.
This motion requires the Court to determine the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1447(e). Specifically, the Court must determine whether a post-removal amendment to a complaint which adds a non-diverse party would destroy the Court’s subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332 and 28 U.S.C. § 1447(e).
Plaintiff has filed motions for leave to amend her complaint and to remand. The proposed amendment seeks -to add a non-diverse party. Plaintiff contends that if the Court allows her to add a non-diverse party, the Court must remand the case. Defendant contends that diversity jurisdiction is determined at the time of removal and any post-removal amendment to add a non-diverse party would not destroy diversity jurisdiction.
The Court heard oral arguments on this motion and found that if a non-diverse party is added after the case is removed to federal court, the clear language of 28 U.S.C. § 1447(e) requires the Court to remand the suit. The Court now supplements its oral reasons with this opinion.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Plaintiff, Mavis D. Sharp, originally filed this lawsuit in the Nineteenth Judicial District, Parish of East Baton Rouge, State of Louisiana against Kmart Corporation (“Kmart”) and Fred Pininger, á manager of Kmart. Kmart is a foreign corporation, and Pininger and Sharp are Louisiana citizens.
Defendants timely removed the matter to this Court arguing the Court has subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § .1332.
The plaintiff filed her first motion to remand, arguing that this Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because the parties were not completely diverse. Kmart, on the other hand, argues that the party sought to be joined was fraudulently joined solely for the purpose of defeating diversity jurisdiction. This Court initially agreed with the defendant and denied plaintiffs first motion to remand, finding that there was no possibility of recovering against the non-diverse defendant in this case.
After this Court’s initial ruling, the parties participated in discovery.
On May 12,1997, the plaintiff filed a motion for leave of court to file a first supplemental and amending petition for damages. In this amended complaint, the plaintiff seeks to add Saveli Enterprises, Inc., a Louisiana corporation. Shortly thereafter, the plaintiff filed a second motion for remand. In this second remand motion, the plaintiff argued that if her motion for leave to amend was granted, complete diversity would not be present, and the Court would have to remand for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Kmart opposed both motions.
It is well settled that lack of complete diversity between the parties when a suit is brought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332 deprives a federal court of jurisdiction.
Both Sharp and Kmart cite 28 U.S.C. § 1447(e) and
Hensgens v. Deere & Company
as the controlling law on the question of whether diversity is destroyed if a non-diverse party is added to a suit after the case is removed to federal court. However, there are some cases which suggests that the
Hensgens
analysis is no longer controlling after the United States Supreme Court decision in
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. v. KN Energy
Inc.
Thus, the Court must now decide which standard the Court should apply in determining whether a non-diverse party may be added to the suit which was removed to federal court on the basis of diversity jurisdiction. This Court will first examine
Hensgens
case and the history behind Section 1447(e) and then turn to
Freeport-McMoRan
case.
A
Hensgens v. Deere & Company
Rule 15(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that leave to amend a complaint should be given freely when “justice so requires.” The question which remains is whether that same standard applies when a party desires to amend a suit which has been removed to federal court, particularly when the amendment would destroy complete diversity of citizenship. This question was answered by the Fifth Circuit in
Hensgens v. Deere & Co.
In
Hensgens,
the Fifth Circuit found that where a district court is faced with a motion to amend the complaint to add a non-diverse defendant in a removed case, the district court should scrutinize the amendment more closely than it does an ordinary amendment.
In short, the right to freely amend set forth in Rule 15 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure does not apply where a party seeks to add a non-diverse party in a removed case.
When a case is removed to federal court, diversity must exist at the time the action is commenced and when the notice of •removal is filed.
The
Hensgens
court explained, however, that the addition of a non-diverse party after removal will defeat juris- . diction.
The court stated, while “most post-removal developments — amendment of pleadings to below the jurisdictional amount or change in citizenship of a party — -will not divest the Court of subject matter jurisdiction, an addition of a non-diverse defendant to a case will do so.”
In
Hensgens
the Fifth Circuit noted that when the court is faced with a motion to amend to add a non-diverse party after removal, justice requires that the district court consider a number of factors to balance the defendant’s interest in maintaining the federal forum with the competing interests of not
having parallel law suits. The
Hensgens
court stated:
[T]he court should consider the extent to which the purpose of the amendment is to defeat federal jurisdiction, whether plaintiff has been dilatory in asking for amendment, whether plaintiff will be significantly injured if amendment is not allowed, and any other factors bearing on the equities. The district court, with input from the defendant, should then balance the equities and decide whether amendment should be permitted.
The law in the Fifth Circuit was clear after
Hensgens.
If a court allows the joinder of a non-diverse party, the case must be remanded; however, if the court denies the motion to amend, it need not remand the suit to state court.
B. Section 1447(e)
In 1988, after
Hensgens
was decided, Congress amended 28 U.S.C. § 1447 to include subsection (e). Section 1447(e) states in pertinent part: “If after removal the plaintiff seeks to join additional defendants whose joinder would destroy subject matter jurisdiction, the court may deny joinder, or permit joinder and remand the action to the State court.” The Fifth Circuit has cited
Hensgens
with approval after the passage of Section 1447(e).
Moreover, some courts have noted that Section 1447(e) was a codification of the
Hensgens
opinion.
The legislatiye history behind the passage of Section 1447(e) is instructive. Essentially, Section 1447(e) gives the court two options when a diversity case has been removed and the plaintiff then seeks to add a party whose citizenship would destroy complete diversity requirement: (1) deny the motion and retain the case; or, (2) grant the motion and remand the suit to state court. Congress had considered a middle ground, which would have allowed the joinder and at the same time allowed a court in its discretion to keep the case and decide it on its merits.
Congress rejected this last alternative because it would have manifested a departure from the traditional requirement of complete diversity and “provide[d] a small enlargement of diversity jurisdiction.”
Congress adopted the narrow language reflected in Section 1447(e) to avoid expanding federal diversity jurisdiction.
C. Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. v. KN Energy Inc. And Its Prodgeny
There are a number of recent opinions from federal district courts that follow the
Hensgens
case.
Some district courts, however, have held that
Hensgens
is no longer controlling
after the United States Supreme Court case of
Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. v. KN Energy, Inc.
In
Freeport,
a gas seller (McMoRan Oil and Gas Company) and its parent company (Freeport-McMoRan, Inc.) sued a buyer (KN Energy, Inc.) for breach of contract. Federal subject matter jurisdiction was based on diversity of citizenship. Thereafter, petitioners sought leave to amend their complaint to substitute non-diverse party as a plaintiff under Rule 25(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
The district court permitted petitioners to add the party. After trial in favor of petitioners, the court of appeals reversed the district court’s decision finding that the suit should have been dismissed because the addition of the non-diverse party after suit was filed destroyed diversity jurisdiction.
The United States Supreme Court reversed the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals holding that diversity jurisdiction, once established, is not defeated by the addition of a non-diverse party to the action. The Court reasoned that “a contrary rule could well have, the effect of deterring normal business transactions during the pendency of what might be a lengthy litigation.”
The Supreme Court also explained that the case of
Owen Equipment & Erection Co. v. Kroger
“casts no doubt ... that diversity jurisdiction is to be assessed at the time the lawsuit is commenced.”
The
Freeport
Court limited its holding to parties who were not indispensable. The Court found that if the party who has been added was indispensable at the time the plaintiff filed its complaint, the addition of a non-diverse party would defeat diversity jurisdiction.
The language in
Freeport
—“diversity jurisdiction, once it is established, is not defeated by the addition of a non-diverse party to the action” — read in a vacuum could vastly change the law in diversity cases where a new party is added who would have otherwise destroyed diversity jurisdiction. But one commentator noted, “[i]t is doubtful that this broad statement applies to
defendants newly joined
by plaintiff.”
Commentators and a recent court of appeals opinion characterized
Freeport’s
holding as follows: the addition of a non-diverse, non-indispensable party pursuant to Rule 25(c) does not deprive the court of subject matter jurisdiction.
The Fifth Circuit has analyzed and applied the Freeport decision in
Whalen v. Carter.
In
Whalen,
the court found that a non-diverse limited partnership which was added after the suit was filed did indeed destroy diversity jurisdiction because the limited partnership was an indispensable party.
In support for this proposition, the court cited
Freeport.
The motion to amend which is now pending before this Court involves the joinder of a
non-diverse, non-indispensable party after removal.
The non-diverse party is not being substituted into this case under Rule 25(c), but instead, the plaintiff seeks to add the party as an additional defendant in the suit. The Fifth Circuit has not addressed the issue of whether
Freeport’s
holding is limited to cases involving Rule 25(c) joinder. However, cases in the Eastern and Western District have found that
Freeport
applies not just to cases involving Rule 25(c) substitutions, but also to cases where a party seeks to add a non-diverse, non-indispensable party.
Thus, in
Kerr v. Smith Petroleum Co.,*
the plaintiffs filed suit for damages against foreign corporations that owned an offshore platform alleging jurisdiction based on diversity of citizenship. After the suit was filed, the plaintiff added two non-diverse defendants. Sometime thereafter, the plaintiffs argued that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the claims.
The district court began its analysis with
Hensgens,
but then turned to
Freeport
and
Whalen.
The
Kerr
court found that “[bjecause these nondi-verse defendants were not indispensable at the time of the filing of this lawsuit, their later addition [did] not destroy diversity jur-
isdietion under Freeport-McMoRan as construed by Whalen.”
Moreover, in
Shaw v. Meridian Oil,
Inc.,
the court held after
Freeport,
“Hensgens is no longer controlling.”
In
Shaw,
the plaintiffs originally filed suit in state court against Meridian Oil and the case was removed to federal court based on diversity jurisdiction. Later, the plaintiffs were allowed to amend their complaint to add a non-diverse Louisiana corporation as a defendant. The court held that the addition of this non-diverse party who was not an indispensable party as a defendant did not defeat the court’s subject matter jurisdiction over the entire case. The court cited
Freeport
in support of this conclusion. Interestingly enough, the court then went on to state that it was, nevertheless, necessary to examine whether the claims against this nondiverse party fell within the court’s supplemental jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a). The
Shaw
court found Section 1367(b) limits supplemental jurisdiction where the district court’s original jurisdiction was based on diversity. Because the non-diverse party was made a defendant pursuant to Rule 20 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the court, following § 1367(b), found that it could not exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the claims.
There has been no court of appeals case directly on point which followed the
Kerr
and
Shaw
interpretation of
Freeport.
There has been one First Circuit Court of Appeals case and one D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals case that are both instructive on the issue now pending before the Court regarding the applicability of
Freeport.
In fact, the
Shaw
court cited the First Circuit Court of Appeals case of
Casas Office Machines v. Mita Copystar of
America,
noting its outcome was consistent with the First Circuit although the opinion in
Casas
used different reasoning.
In
Casas,
the First Circuit Court of Appeals did cite
Freeport,
generally noting that
Freeport
held diversity jurisdiction was not defeated by the addition of a party who was not indispensable because there was complete diversity when the action commenced.
Nonetheless, the court found that the joinder or substitution of a non-diverse defendant after removal- destroys diversity, regardless of whether such defendants are dispensable or indispensable to the action.
Accordingly, when the fictitious defendants in
Casas
were replaced with non-diverse defendants after removal, the court held subject matter jurisdiction was defeated.
The
Casas
court focused its analysis on Section 1447(e) and stated “[w]e think that, had Congress decided that federal courts could retain jurisdiction over cases in which plaintiffs joined or substituted dispensable, non-diverse defendants after removal, it would have made that plain in § 1447(e).”
The recent D.C. Circuit case is also instructive. In
Burka v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
the court found that defendants’ Rule 25(c) motion to substitute a non-diverse, non-indispensable party as a defendant did not defeat diversity jurisdiction.
The
Burka
court stated that the
Freeport
case “establishes that the addition of a non-diverse party pursuant to Rule 25(e) does not deprive the District Court of subject matter jurisdiction, and hence does not require remand or clis-
missal.”
The defendants had filed a Rule 25(c) motion in
Burka
a week before the plaintiff sought to join the non-diverse defendant pursuant to Rule 19. The plaintiffs argued that joinder under Rule 19 would destroy diversity and the ease should be remanded under § 1447(e). Plaintiffs also argued that even if the court did allow defendants’ earlier motion under Rule 25(c), that Rule 25(c) triggered the application of the remand provisions set forth in § 1447(e). The
Burka
Court held a Rule 25(c) transfer-of-interest based substitution is not a form of “joinder” within the meaning of Section 1447(e).
Explaining its ruling further, the •
Burka
court concluded, “we find nothing in the law suggesting that either Rule 19 or section 1447(e) trumps Rule 25(c) when all may be applicable, especially when the Rule 25 motion was filed first in time.”
D. Does
Freeport
Tacitly Overrule
Hens-gens
?
The issue in this case is whether this Court must apply the precepts of
Hensgens
and the clear language of § 1447(e) to decide whether a non-diverse party who is not indispensable may be added to a suit, or whether the language in
Freeport
renders
Hensgens
inap-posite. The Fifth Circuit has not squarely addressed this issue. While the Fifth Circuit did discuss the precepts of
Freeport
in
Whalen,
the holding of the eourt in
Whalen
is that the addition of a nondiverse, indispensable party will divest the court of subject matter jurisdiction. That edict was clear even in
Hensgens.
This Court must focus on whether the
Freeport
and
Whalen
decisions mandate that subject matter jurisdiction will not be affected by the addition of a non-indispensable party.
There is no indication in the
Freeport
opinion that its' holding applies in circumstances such as the instant case, where a non-diverse, non-indispensable party in a removed case is joined after the case has been removed. This Court agrees with the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals characterization of the
Freeport
holding and application. The
Freeport
case centers around a Rule 25(c) transfer-of-interest-based substitution.
Freeport
precisely holds that if diversity existed at the time the law suit was filed, the fact a party later assigned its cause of action to a non-diverse party who was brought in on a Rule 25 motion does not divest the court of jurisdiction once properly attached.
Further, the
Whalen
Court, while discussing
Freeport,
simply holds that an addition of a nO'n-diverse party who
is indispensable
will indeed destroy subject matter jurisdiction. The principals set forth in
Freeport
and
Whalen,
however, do not effect the outcome in the case at hand. The instant ease does not involve a Rule 25(c) motion, nor does it involve the addition of a indispensable party. Thus, Section 1447(e) and the
Hensgens
ease control the outcome of the case at hand.
If this Court followed
Kerr
and
Shaw’s
interpretation of
Hensgens
and
Freeport
in this removal case, then Section 1447(e) would have no meaning. Kerr finds that any addition of a party does not defeat diversity jurisdiction. The legislative history of Section 1447(e) is clear that Congress was careful not to expand the federal court’s subject matter jurisdiction in the slightest.
Congress specifically rejected language which would have statutorily allowed a district court to retain jurisdiction even though a non-diverse party was added to suit after the case had been removed and the parties have established subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332. The general language in
Freeport
as interpreted by
Kerr
and
Shaw
expands a federal court’s subject matter jurisdiction. This Court finds that the United States Supreme Court’s holding
Free-
port
is limited to a case where a party is added under Rule 25(c). This holding is consistent with the clear language of 28 U.S.C. § 1447(e).
According to the unambiguous language in Section 1447(e), when a plaintiff seeks to join a non-diverse party, the district court may either grant the amendment and remand because complete diversity would no longer be present or deny the amendment and retain jurisdiction over the case because the remaining parties are completely diverse. The Court has discretion when considering whether to allow the addition of a non-diverse, non-indispensable party. In such circumstances,
Hensgens
is still applicable and sets forth factors the court may consider in exercising that discretion.
This Court finds that the holdings of the
Freeport
and
Whalen
eases do not render the Fifth Circuit ease of
Hensgens
inapposite. The
Hensgens
case is still controlling. The language of 28 U.S.C. § 1447(e) is clear. If a non-diverse party is added to the case after it is removed to federal court and destroys complete diversity of citizenship between the parties, the Court must remand the suit to state court.
II. CONCLUSION
After the Court issued its oral reasons, the parties entered into a stipulation which moots plaintiffs motion to amend and to remand. Therefore, plaintiffs motion to amend and to remand shall be denied as moot.
It is so ordered.