Siemens Industry Inc v. East Chicago Indiana City of
Filing
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OPINION AND ORDER The Citys motion to remand the state court suit andfor fees and costs ( No. 2:13 CV 334, DE # 10) is GRANTED as to remand, and DENIED as to fees and costs. The Sureties and Siemens motion for a hearing on the motion to remand (No. 2:13 CV 334, DE # 22) is DENIED. The Citys motion for abstention (No. 2:13 CV 273, DE # 11 ) is also DENIED. This action remains pending and case no. 2:13cv334 is remanded to State Court. Signed by Senior Judge James T Moody on 3/10/14. (kjp)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA
HAMMOND DIVISION
SIEMENS INDUSTRY INC.,
Plaintiff,
v.
CITY OF EAST CHICAGO,
Defendant.
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No. 2:13 CV 273
OPINION and ORDER
I.
BACKGROUND
In 2008, the plaintiff, Siemens Industry, Inc. (“Siemens”) and the defendant, the
City of East Chicago (“the City”), entered into an agreement under which Siemens was
to supply a membrane filtration system for the City’s new water treatment plant.
Siemens’ performance bond sureties, Federal Insurance Company and Fidelity and
Deposit Company of Maryland (“the Sureties”), bound themselves to perform on
Siemens’ behalf in the event that Siemens defaulted. (No. 2:13 CV 334, DE # 1 at 51-52.)
According to the City, Siemens did exactly that. On August 7, 2013, the City filed
suit against Siemens and the Sureties in the Circuit Court of Lake County, Indiana,
alleging breach of contract and demanding that the Sureties perform on the contract.
(No. 2:13 CV 334, DE # 1.) That same day, Siemens filed suit against the City (but not
the Sureties) in federal court, alleging breach of contract and demanding a declaratory
judgment regarding the parties’ rights and responsibilities. (No. 2:13 CV 273, DE # 1.)
On September 20, 2013, Siemens removed the state court suit to federal court (No. 2:13
CV 334, DE # 2); Siemens invoked diversity jurisdiction despite the fact that the state
court plaintiff (the City) and some of the defendants (at least one of the Sureties) were
citizens of the same state (Indiana). The cases were consolidated under Case No. 2:13
CV 273 before the undersigned on October 21, 2013. (No. 2:13 CV 273, DE # 22.)
The City has moved to remand Case No. 2:13 CV 334 to state court, citing the
lack of complete diversity in the case. (No. 2:13 CV 334, DE # 10.) Siemens has opposed
the motion. (No. 2:13 CV 334, DE # 21.) The City also has filed a motion requesting that:
(1) the court abstain from presiding over the federal suit filed by Siemens because of the
existence of parallel state court proceedings; and (2) the court exercise its discretion to
abstain from hearing the declaratory judgment claim in the federal suit filed by
Siemens. (No. 2:13 CV 273, DE # 11.) Siemens has not responded to either of the City’s
abstention arguments, but contends that the City’s first argument is moot because the
state court case is now in federal court. (No. 2:13 CV 273, DE # 17.) Both motions are
fully briefed and ripe for ruling.
II.
DISCUSSION
A.
The City’s Motion to Remand Case No. 2:13 CV 334
The City has moved to remand Case No. 2:13 CV 334 for lack of jurisdiction. As
explained above, this case was originally filed in state court and was removed to this
court by defendant Siemens, despite the fact that the City and at least one of the Sureties
were citizens of the same state, seemingly in violation of 28 U.S.C. § 1332 (“The district
courts shall have original jurisdiction of all civil actions where the matter . . . is between
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. . . citizens of different States.”). Siemens claims that it appropriately removed the case
to this federal forum because the Sureties were not proper parties in the state court suit.
Without the Sureties as defendants in the case, Siemens argues, the remaining litigants
are diverse in citizenship. In short, Siemens claims that the Sureties were fraudulently
joined in the state case in order to keep the case out of federal court.
The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals has stated that “[f]raudulent joinder is
difficult to establish” and that a defendant attempting the feat faces a “‘heavy burden.’”
Schur v. L.A. Weight Loss Centers, Inc., 577 F.3d 752, 764 (7th Cir. 2009) (quoting Poulos v.
Naas Foods, Inc., 959 F.2d 69, 73 (7th Cir. 1992)). A defendant claiming fraudulent joinder
“must demonstrate that, ‘after resolving all issues of fact and law in favor of the
plaintiff, the plaintiff cannot establish a cause of action against the in-state defendant.’”
Id. (quoting Poulos, 959 F.2d at 73). “Framed a different way, the district court must ask
whether there is ‘any reasonable possibility’ that the plaintiff could prevail against the
non-diverse defendant.” Id. (quoting Poulos, 959 F.2d at 73.). In determining whether a
fraudulent joinder has occurred, the court must examine state law to determine whether
the plaintiff has any reasonable possibility of success. Id.
Whether the Sureties were properly joined in the state suit comes down to
whether the City has a reasonable possibility of success on its claim against the Sureties,
despite non-compliance with Section 5 of the performance bond. In Section 5, the parties
agreed that the City would provide a written notice to the Sureties demanding that it
perform under the bond; 15 days later (assuming the Sureties did not perform), the
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Sureties would be deemed in default, and the City would be entitled to enforce any
remedies available to it. (Bond § 5, DE # 1 at 52.) The City does not seem to dispute that
it did not follow Section 5 to the letter. Indeed, the record suggests that the City sent the
Sureties correspondence on July 29, 2013, stating that the City “presume[d] the sureties
deny all liability and will not be taking any action [on] the Bond” (DE # 19-4 at 1), and
then filed suit nine days later. In other words, the City does not appear to have
demanded performance nor allowed 15 days before pursuing its remedies.
Siemens claims that this issue is black-and-white: the City failed to comply with a
condition precedent appearing at Section 5 in the Bond before filing suit, and therefore
the City’s claim against the Sureties is meritless. But the issue actually involves shades
of grey. Though there is no controlling Indiana law on the subject, states are split
regarding what constitutes a material breach of a performance bond sufficient to relieve
a surety of its obligations. Compare, e.g., Dragon Const., Inc. v. Parkway Bank & Trust, 678
N.E.2d 55, 58 (Ill. App. 1997) (failure to provide notice as specified in performance bond
constituted material breach); with Kilpatrick Bros. Painting v. Chippewa Hills Sch. Dist.,
No. 262396, 2006 WL 664210, at *4 (Mich. Ct. App. Mar. 16, 2006) (“We decline to follow
cases from other jurisdictions [such as Dragon Construction] that allow a surety’s
responsibilities to be discharged for technical violations of the bond.”).
It is impossible to predict precisely what an Indiana court would do if faced with
this issue. For fraudulent joinder purposes, the court is to resolve “‘all issues of fact and
law’” in favor of the City. Schur, 577 F.3d at 764 (quoting Poulos, 959 F.2d at 73)
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(emphasis added). Accordingly, the court must conclude that the City has a reasonable
possibility of success in its suit against the Sureties. This means that the Sureties were
not fraudulently joined as defendants in the City’s state court suit. Schur, 577 F.3d at
764. Therefore, the state court suit properly contained a claim by a citizen of Indiana
(the City) against another citizen of Indiana (at least one of the Sureties). This lack of
diversity of citizenship between the parties in the state court suit means that its
removal, by Siemens, to this federal forum was improper. See 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1). In
short, this court lacks jurisdiction over the state court case, and the City’s motion to
remand must be granted.
The City has asked for an award of costs and fees due to Siemens’ improper
removal of this case. “An order remanding the case may require payment of just costs
and any actual expenses, including attorney fees, incurred as a result of the removal.”
28 U.S.C. § 1447(c). However, “[a]bsent unusual circumstances, courts may award
attorney’s fees under § 1447(c) only where the removing party lacked an objectively
reasonable basis for seeking removal. Conversely, when an objectively reasonable basis
exists, fees should be denied.” Martin v. Franklin Capital Corp., 546 U.S. 132, 141 (2005).
As explained above, the City’s claim against the Sureties depends upon an unsettled
issue of law in Indiana. It is possible that an Indiana court will rule in Siemens’ favor on
the question, and because of this possibility, Siemens possessed an objectively
reasonable basis for seeking removal, even if removal was ultimately deemed improper.
Accordingly, the City’s request for costs and fees is denied.
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B.
The City’s Motion to Abstain in Case No. 2:13 CV 273
The City has also filed a motion requesting that this court abstain from presiding
over Case No. 2:13 CV 273, which Siemens filed in this federal forum. The City argues,
first, that the court should abstain due to the pendency of nearly identical state
proceedings (namely, Case No. 2:13 CV 334, which the court has just remanded back to
state court) under Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United States, 424 U.S. 800,
818 (1976). Second, the City argues that the court should exercise its discretion under
Wilton v. Seven Falls Co., 515 U.S. 277 (1995), and Brillhart v. Excess Insurance Co. of
America, 316 U.S. 491 (1942), and abstain from hearing Siemens’ declaratory claim.
Siemens did not respond to the merits of the City’s motion, and presents no
defense, whatsoever, to the City’s Wilton/Brillhart abstention argument. As for the City’s
Colorado River argument, Siemens simply argues that the point is moot because Siemens
removed the case to federal court, meaning there was no parallel state proceeding.1
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In the last line of its brief, Siemens stated: “In the event the Court deems the
present Motion not to be moot, Siemens requests that the Court grant it an additional
ten days to respond to the City’s motion.” (DE # 17 at 5.) Siemens’ approach, in this
regard, is inappropriate. Perhaps Siemens could have requested permission, in advance,
to narrow its response to the issue of mootness and delay a more substantive response,
but it did not do so. Instead, Siemens made one argument assuming it would succeed,
and attempted to reserve the right to come up with something else if it did not. No local
or federal rules allow a litigant to “save its bullets” in this manner. Not only would this
practice require more time for the City to file additional reply briefs, but the court
would have to rule on the City’s motion in a piecemeal process, resulting in further
delays, costs, and expenditure of judicial resources, all for Siemens’ sole benefit.
Siemens had fourteen days within which to file its response to the City’s motion (N.D.
IND. L.R. 7-1), and then asked for – and received – an additional fourteen days (DE
# 15). These twenty-eight days constituted Siemens’ window of opportunity to present
all of its arguments in response to the City’s motion to abstain.
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Unfortunately for Siemens, this contention is now, itself, moot because this court has
just remanded Siemens’ case back to state court. However, quite fortunately for
Siemens, the City’s arguments regarding abstention are not compelling.
1.
Colorado River Abstention
The first abstention issue rests on the multi-factor test first articulated by the
Supreme Court in Colorado River, 424 U.S. 800. That case permits district courts to
abstain from exercising jurisdiction in an otherwise proper federal case due to
concurrent state proceedings in “exceptional” circumstances. Id. Importantly, there is a
presumption against abstention. Huon v. Johnson & Bell, Ltd., 657 F.3d 641, 646 (7th Cir.
2011). The Supreme Court also has made it clear that, generally speaking, “the
pendency of an action in the state court is no bar to proceedings concerning the same
matter in the Federal court.” Colorado River, 424 U.S. at 817, and that federal courts have
a “virtually unflagging obligation” to exercise the jurisdiction that Congress has given
them unless the case is “exceptional.” Id. The Seventh Circuit takes the Supreme Court’s
guidance on this issue “seriously” and requires a “strong justification” to overcome the
presumption against abstention. AXA Corp. Solutions v. Underwriters Reins. Corp., 347
F.3d 272, 279 (7th Cir. 2003).
To determine whether abstention is appropriate, a district court must first
evaluate whether the federal and state cases are parallel. Huon, 657 F.3d at 646. In other
words, the court must ascertain whether “substantially the same parties are
contemporaneously litigating substantially the same issues in another forum.” Id.
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(internal quotation marks omitted). In this case, it cannot be disputed that the cases are
almost identical. Though the state case involves the Sureties and the federal case
includes a declaratory judgment claim, these differences are minute compared to the
virtually indistinguishable factual basis of the parties’ claims.
Once a court has determined that two cases are parallel, as this court has done, it
must carefully weigh a number of nonexclusive factors in deciding whether to abstain:
(1) whether the state has assumed jurisdiction over property;
(2) the inconvenience of the federal forum; (3) the desirability
of avoiding piecemeal litigation; (4) the order in which
jurisdiction was obtained by the concurrent forums; (5) the
source of governing law, state or federal; (6) the adequacy of
state-court action to protect the federal plaintiff’s rights; (7) the
relative progress of state and federal proceedings; (8) the
presence or absence of concurrent jurisdiction; (9) the
availability of removal; and (10) the vexatious or contrived
nature of the federal claim.
Huon, 657 F.3d at 647-48.
The City is correct that a few factors work in its favor, though only slightly so.
Certainly it would be more desirable for this litigation to proceed in only one forum, as
opposed to two, to avoid this case being decided in a piecemeal fashion (factor 3), but
isolation of the issues to the federal forum would solve this problem just as easily.
Further, Indiana law governs the parties’ contract dispute (factor 5), and the court is
confident that the Indiana courts could adequately protect Siemens’ rights (factor 6), but
the Seventh Circuit advises that federal courts should not shy away from deciding
issues of state law. Diginet, Inc. v. Western Union ATS, Inc., 958 F.2d 1388, 1395 (7th Cir.
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1992). As explained in detail above, the state action is, indeed, non-removable (factor 9),
and this weighs in the City’s favor.
But the City argues unpersuasively that the state action is more advanced,
procedurally (factor 7), simply because the Sureties are already part of the state suit and
will need to be joined in the federal suit. The Sureties have not yet been joined in the
federal action because the City has not yet attempted to join them. While it may not be
appropriate or efficient for them to have done so yet, the fact that joinder has not yet
occurred does not tilt the Colorado River analysis in their favor. To the extent that it
matters at all, it matters little, and the suits appear to be otherwise generally analogous
in terms of procedural development to date. The City also argues that the federal suit
was contrived and vexatious (factor 10), but as the City points out, Siemens’ federal suit
is virtually identical to the City’s state suit, so one appears no more contrived or
vexatious than the other.
The remaining factors, as the City points out, are either inapplicable or neutral.
Factor 1 is inapplicable because there is no property at issue; factor 2 is neutral because
the state and federal forums (less than one mile apart) are equally convenient; factor 4 is
neutral because the lawsuits were filed on the same day; and factor 8 is neutral because
the federal and state courts at issue have concurrent jurisdiction. What the City fails to
mention in its briefing, and what damns its case on this point, is that neutral or
inapplicable factors weigh in favor of exercising jurisdiction. Huon, 657 F.3d at 648.
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In total, the result of the Colorado River assessment in this case is a handful of
factors that weigh slightly in favor of absention, and another handful of factors
weighing in favor of exercising jurisdiction. Given the stern admonishments from both
the Supreme Court and Seventh Circuit that abstention is permissible only in the most
“exceptional” cases, the court must conclude that no “strong justification” exists in this
case to abstain. AXA, 347 F.3d at 279. Accordingly, the City’s request that the court
abstain under the Colorado River doctrine is denied.
2.
Wilton/Brillhart Absention
The City has also argued that the court should exercise its discretion to decline to
hear Siemens’ declaratory judgment claim. This argument turns on the “Wilton/
Brillhart” doctrine, named after the two primary Supreme Court cases on the subject.
Wilton, 515 U.S. 277; Brillhart, 316 U.S. 491. The doctrine applies in a diversity case
where a declaratory judgment is sought and a “parallel state proceeding” also exists.
Envision Healthcare, Inc. v. PreferredOne Ins. Co., 604 F.3d 983, 986 (7th Cir. 2010).
For purposes of the Wilton/Brillhart doctrine, “[t]wo actions are parallel when
substantially the same parties are contemporaneously litigating substantially the same
issues in two fora.” Id. It seems obvious that the state and federal actions at issue here
are parallel. However, even if they are, the next step of the analysis does not operate in
the City’s favor:
Where state and federal proceedings are parallel and the federal suit contains
claims for both declaratory and non-declaratory relief, the district court
should determine whether the claims seeking non-declaratory relief are
independent of the declaratory claim. If they are not, the court can exercise
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its discretion under Wilton/Brillhart and abstain from hearing the entire
action. But if they are, the Wilton/Brillhart doctrine does not apply and, subject
to the presence of exceptional circumstances under the Colorado River
doctrine, the court must hear the independent non-declaratory claims.
R.R. St. & Co., Inc. v. Vulcan Materials Co., 569 F.3d 711, 716-17 (7th Cir. 2009). “A claim
for non-declaratory relief is ‘independent’ of the declaratory claim if: 1) it has its own
federal subject-matter-jurisdictional basis, and 2) its viability is not wholly dependent
upon the success of the declaratory claim.” Id. at 717 n.6.
In this case, were the declaratory claim dropped from the federal case, this court
would still have diversity jurisdiction over Siemens’ breach of contract claim. Further,
the requested declaratory relief is not a prerequisite to resolution of the breach of
contract claim.2 In other words, Siemens’ breach of contract claim is “independent of the
declaratory claim because [it] could stand alone in federal court—both jurisdictionally
and substantively—irrespective of the declaratory claim.” Id. at 717. Therefore, the
Wilton/Brillhart doctrine does not apply and the City’s abstention argument fails.
III.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the City’s motion to remand the state court suit and
for fees and costs (No. 2:13 CV 334, DE # 10) is GRANTED as to remand, and DENIED
as to fees and costs. The Sureties’ and Siemens’ motion for a hearing on the motion to
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This is so even if a decision on the legal issues involved in the declaratory claim
would be dispositive of all of the legal issues in the non-declaratory claim. R.R. St., 569
F.3d at 717 & n.9. The question is not whether one claim would affect the other claim;
rather, the question is whether one is “wholly dependent upon the success” or is the
“prerequisite” of the other. Id.
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remand (No. 2:13 CV 334, DE # 22) is DENIED. The City’s motion for abstention (No.
2:13 CV 273, DE # 11) is also DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
Date: March 10, 2014
s/ James T. Moody
JUDGE JAMES T. MOODY
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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