Legal Case Summary

A.S.Miller v. Smithkline Beecham


Date Argued: Thu Sep 11 2014
Case Number: D063363
Docket Number: 2592486
Judges:Not available
Duration: 32 minutes
Court Name: Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit

Case Summary

**Case Summary: A.S. Miller v. SmithKline Beecham** **Docket Number:** 2592486 **Court:** [Specify Court, e.g., United States District Court, etc.] **Date:** [Include date of the case decision] **Jurisdiction:** [Include the relevant legal jurisdiction] **Facts of the Case:** A.S. Miller (Plaintiff) brought a lawsuit against SmithKline Beecham (Defendant) concerning [insert key issues, such as product liability, breach of contract, employment discrimination, etc.]. The case arose from [provide a brief description of the circumstances leading to the lawsuit, such as specific incidents or actions taken by the Defendant]. **Legal Issues:** The primary legal issues in this case included: 1. [First issue, e.g., whether the defendant was negligent in their actions]. 2. [Second issue, e.g., whether the product in question was defectively designed]. 3. [Additional issues, as applicable]. **Arguments:** - **Plaintiff's Argument:** A.S. Miller contended that [summarize the plaintiff's main arguments, such as failing to uphold safety standards, seeking damages for injuries, etc.]. - **Defendant's Argument:** SmithKline Beecham argued that [summarize the defendant’s counterarguments, such as compliance with laws, lack of evidence for claims, etc.]. **Court's Decision:** The court ruled in favor of [Plaintiff/Defendant]. The decision was based on [briefly summarize the court's rationale, referencing evidence, legal precedents, and applicable law]. The court concluded that [specific findings made by the court]. **Outcome:** The court's ruling included [any orders such as monetary damages awarded to the plaintiff, injunctive relief, or reversal of prior decisions]. This case highlights [mention any implications or significance of the decision on law or society]. **Conclusion:** The case of A.S. Miller v. SmithKline Beecham serves as an important reference for [mention any relevant legal principles, public policy considerations, or industry practices impacted by the ruling]. **Note:** [Add any additional relevant information, such as further appeal possibilities or similar cases if applicable.] *Disclaimer: This summary is a fictional representation and may not reflect actual case details.*

A.S.Miller v. Smithkline Beecham


Oral Audio Transcript(Beta version)

I'm called a case of AS, a minor versus Smith-Kind Meijum Court, and Mr. Bashman, you're representing the parliament. Thank you, Your Honor. Please, the Court, with the Court's commission, I'd like to reserve four minutes for a ball. Grands. Thank you. Your Honor, this Court's ruling in Doe versus American Red Cross furnishes the answers to three of the most critical questions that this appeal presents. First, Doe recognizes that Section 1447D of Title 28 prohibiting review of an order of remand by appeal or otherwise prohibits the defendant from a moving case on the same grounds as originally rejected in the first remand. Second, Doe recognizes that for a second remand to be proper, it must satisfy one of the two paragraphs of Section 1446B. And third, Doe resolves the otherwise very difficult question of whether the first paragraph or the second paragraph of Section 1446B applies where intervening law makes clear that the original remand was legally aromance. In that regard, Doe holds that the second paragraph applies, and you don't treat the cases, though, it was originally removable, but rather you treated as though it has become removable. Even if the decision whether it was originally removable or not turns out to be incorrect. So your view is Johnson is not a new ground. Well, I believe that's what the other side is arguing that Johnson is not a new ground, but we do say that Johnson does not satisfy the second paragraph of 1446B. But even if it does, that, of course, they fall outside of the one-year time period that that second paragraph provides. And that's why that third holding of Doe is of such great significance because the second paragraph of Section 1446B, but there is, I mean, I ended up being somewhat confused after hearing or after reading all of the arguments here as to whether people were maintaining the Johnson is or is not a new ground. This relation back theory that seems to be really a predicate for the position taken by one of the parties is in fact a legal fiction. Is it not? Well, that's, as I understand one of the main arguments that G.S.K

. is making. And you're actually right, and I haven't found any cases where relation back applies where you have a final judgment that it would eviscerate. It applies in cases that are still pending in some way in the court where the relation back is taken place. So what I was about to say is that whether Johnson is a new ground or not for purposes of plaintiffs argument is not at all critical because in fact 1446B requires an order to invoke the second paragraph. About what was accomplished before the second removal petition had been filed in State Court and whether anything else has happened since the removal petition was filed on the pretrial process? Right. At the time this case was removed the second time to Federal Court. It was four months away from going to trial. So it was, I guess, because they literally on the eve of trial. And since then, so considerable process had been undergone. Correct. Since then, the case was transferred to the military to Pennsylvania because these are Pennsylvania plaintiffs. So that the original remand here was on two bases. It was on the basis of no diversity on the basis of a violation of the so-called form defendant rule. And so since then, the case has just been stayed. And in fact, there are all these other cases out there. And every other case except for one pending in Minnesota has also been stayed. So in the State Court cases as well have been stayed? Well, even the cases that were remanded by judges Belsen and Padova, as I understand it, those remands were never effectuated. But if G.S

. They were never carried out. So that the judges stayed the matter before actually sending a records back to State Court before implementing it. So even though Judge Belsen, who we believe is 100% correct, and Judge Padova, who's ruling agrees with us, said that these cases do not belong in a federal court based on the second removal. So those cases have not been remanded. But think about G.S.K.'s argument. If they're right in those cases had been remanded. After these court rules, they could bring those cases back to the federal court a third time and say, well, we timely remove them originally. And therefore, we're entitled to a do over as many times as is necessary until a federal judge agrees with us. And then at that point the case stays in federal court because we were right all along. And so G.S.K.'s argument, they're trying to say it's such a narrow argument, but in fact it's unlimited in number of removal and in time of removal because they say that time provisions don't apply. So let's say G.S.K

. did not remove the case right after Johnson was decided. But rather, waited until this case was on the eve of trial, or even on the eve of verdict. They didn't like how the evidence went in. According to G.S.K., they could remove the case at that point and say this case deserves to be in federal court. And there's nothing they can do to say you're wrong because in fact the original decision was wrong. What they're trying to ask in this Court to recognize is a loo poll that says that even though 1447D says you can't appeal and notwithstanding this Court in Doe saying that applies to second removal on the same ground as the first removal, which also the Hunt case and the Transpens Wax case of this Court also recognized, they're saying that the original removal service that timely placeholder and we can remove it again and again seeking a second opinion. If that loo poll were a valid loo poll, I'm sure it would have been recognized by some court before this case arose. Can't we recognize a first time occasion? Well, I'm not challenging this Court's ability to have a ruling that was legally erroneous, but I really would conflict with the Doe opinion that's binding on this panel because Indo, the Court recognized that a second removal on the same ground as the first is not proper under 1447D, which is a jurisdictional provision. And that panel, which was a stellar panel consisting of Al Dacer who wrote the opinion former Chief Judge Sirica before he became Chief Judge and of course Justice Alito, who was on the Court at that time, that opinion was so careful in saying this is not- The way opinions by the judges that were on the panel- No, I hope not. But that opinion was so careful in saying that this is not a same ground's removal. And I guess GFK is saying, you know, that aspect of Doe should just be ignored, but if in fact that were the case Indo, Doe would have been such a simple case to decide. But isn't there also so specific in saying when there is new law, so to speak, that law has to contemplate a direction that grants the right to re-remove and ultimately so so special? The Dough case and the case, the U.S. Supreme Court case on which it depended, the American Red Cross versus AS. The history of that case is that I guess it's analogous to Federal question, but it's a suit and these suit charter that Congress created that allowed the Red Cross to sue or be sued in Federal court. But didn't Judge Olisert go to great pains also in Dough to suggest how narrow it was and how narrow its implication? I mean, even in the very last paragraph, the next paragraph, under these unique circumstances

. I mean, he, and that's not the only place he has indicated in limiting language. You think the narrow focus of Dough and that regard, though, assists the plaintiff much more than the defendant? Because the, the, the, the narrowness that he's talking about is that the court was asked to construe the phrase order or other paper under the second paragraph from 1446P, which again, is written in our argument that where there is a removal, section 1446P does apply. And if you, if you turn to section 1446P, which I'll try to walk the court through the time remaining, you'll see that it clearly does apply based on his plain language, but to, to, to to answer your question. Where he said that we're just being really narrow here, he said, well, he, he's construing the meaning of the word order. We don't have to constru the meaning of the word other paper. And so to that extent, we're being very narrow. But, but that, that is the import of that language as I read it. If, if you turn to section 1446, which applies, which appears in Exhibit C, the blue brief towards the back, you'll see it says procedure for removal. And GSK followed various paragraphs of section 1446 in removing this case for a second time. It followed paragraph A that says you have to file a notice of removal. The, the title of the whole section is procedure for removal. It doesn't say procedure for first removal only. The case had to be removed the second time, or else it wasn't going to be a federal court. They followed sub, subsection D, which says you have to notify the other parties and the state court, because then the state court can't take any further actions. And then if you turn directly to, to some section B, the one that I'm referring to, there's the two paragraphs, the first words in there are the notice of removal. Well, that refers right back to the A notice of removal, but it is described in subsection A. So, to say that they did file a notice of removal to get the case back in the federal court, but the notice of removal, which clearly relates back to that, doesn't only apply to their earlier removal, the very first time. That, that makes no sense whatsoever. So, we submit that both DO and, in fact, the plain language of 1446B indicate that it applies to any removal for second or third

. And if Johnson was law that applied to all GSK cases, then wouldn't, in fact, be be ground by Brewer. Well, that, that of course, Brewer didn't go up to the third circuit. The Brewer was previous law that, that is still extant, so that, even if we think it's incorrect, it, it, it, the district court level has equal weight with Johnson. I'm not sure I understand the question, but let's take the hypothetical where today, the same type of cases filed in state court, and then GSK removes that, and it says, based on Johnson, we can remove it under the first paragraph of 1446B. And of course, 1446B has been changed around a little bit, but those paragraphs still are in there. And the district judge, let's say, doesn't want to follow the law, and thinks that Johnson was wrongly decided, which, of course, would be utterly inappropriate. I'm not saying any district judge would ever do that. But let's say district judge thinks that it was wrongly decided, and because he knows that his decision can't be appealed or mandamus, he's going to dismiss the case based on lack of diversity of jurisdiction. And that's today, for tomorrow. And you know, under GSK's argument, you know, all they have to do to get the case into Feb, or court is remove it again, second time, and hope at different judge disagree. So we say that that's wrong, and if the original decision here was wrong, well, they're in the same situation, you know, that's the way that Congress wanted it to work. And once the year is up, the time is up. I see my time is up. Yes, we'll have you back in the room, little. I'm sorry. Is black? Thank you, and may it please the court. My name is Lisa Glad, and I represent Blacksosmith Klein or GSK. Yes, Black, can you cite us to a single case that has applied 1446 these first paragraph to a re-removal that's premised on a subsequent clarification to change it along? There aren't, there's not this exact case, but there are plenty of cases where there's a second removal either following a remand or not that are not necessarily in paragraph two, which is the other side's argument. The other side's argument is there's no such thing as a second removal, unless it's every scenario but this case

. This is the only case that you can't second remove. Of course, we remove a spawning remand happen all the time, and that's what happen in go. So it's almost misdefined, but their theory of re-removal is. But ask Antony Dubsonist's question. There's no scenario, no case law that you found that says we remove on the change of a case law. What is the side doubt for a second? It's doubtless. Putting aside the case that's controlling, there's Ray from the ninth circuit and Midlock and Benson from the seventh circuit that say a subsequent change on the law is not a total case is, well, because this was once remanded, it can't be removed based on the subsequent change in controlling law, which is precisely what DO held. So their argument is basically that a case once remanded can never be re-removed. And DO says, no, no. As long as you have a definitive source from a higher court, you're beyond the bar of 1447. It doesn't also have like three parts, and the final part is, and there is a directive that allows you to re-remove the pending case, the Supreme Court language that they quoted, I believe. Isn't that your biggest hurdle over the bill? No, because the court views the work independent. I mean, you can look at the opinion. It's in three separate parts. The Supreme Court, N.S.G. ignored 1447. That's their first reasoning

. Their second reasoning is, this isn't even an appeal. We're actually the appellee here. We're not appealing the earlier remand here. So by its terms, it doesn't apply. Plus, it's a new and definitive source. And then thirdly, the Supreme Court, and I mean, seriously, the Supreme Court obviously has no power to overwool a statute. The Supreme Court can't say, and we authorize re-removable and courts. The Supreme Court obviously didn't think it was telling courts to ignore 1447. Well, that's what it did do. It told them we're going to, if the Red Cross is the party, out of state court, I thought it was rather perceived that the Supreme Court thought it wasn't violating a federal statute, which is all the courts and appeals. They have no citation, zero citation. Well, maybe that's why it was a five-four decision to the Supreme Court. But clearly, it's just that- That was on Red Cross, not on 1447. Clearly, as Judge Schwartz questioned suggests, the panel of the Third Circuit cited that third reason is an independent reason that persuades them. We will require the yield to this specific mandate. And the same means the previous two paragraphs were also independent. And I mean, I can keep quoting it. It said, American Red Cross is neither appealing the earlier remand nor asserting the same grounds because there is a controlling decision of a higher court. Nothing changed in Doe, other than a Supreme Court case

. The basis for jurisdiction was always the same. It is 100 percent on all fours with this case. Nothing has changed in terms that's always been diversity of citizenship. The only thing that has changed is this Court's decision in Johnson. Every circuit that has considered the issue and no circuit has found to the contrary that when you have a definitive, higher intervening controlling decision, that puts 1447 to the aside and it's not a bar. That's the seventh circuit and the ninth circuit. How do you get over the one-year bar in 1446, the second B, the second paragraph as the statute states out? That is the easiest part because that section by its terms, by the statutory terms, only is triggered if a case stated by the initial pleading is not removable. The case stated by the initial pleading was removable because we know that there was complete diversity of citizenship at the time. And how do you get over the first paragraph, which is if it's stated by the initial pleading, you had to remove time. You want us to relate back to the case, right? So let's see, please. There's no question that 1446 B, that first paragraph applied, GSK was required to remove the case and no one argues to the contrary within 30 days. And GSK did that. Which, now which 20s and 30s of what event? The first removal. First removal, got it. There's a quieter to be filed within 30 days of the complaint. Yeah. So we know this is not followed within the second paragraph. It was initially removable and GSK complied with 1446 B's first paragraph. The argument is, well, what about that second removal? Doesn't that also have to be 30 days within the complaint? Now, we have two arguments

. That the ninth circuit, in two cases, that ray case and the rough case, and those slew of cases cited in footnote eight of our brief have held that 1446 B does not cover the waterfront on grimovals. So, yes. Tell me where the gap is. Where's the big old home? Because you talk about a gap between first paragraph and the second paragraph. What is the gap? In footnote eight, case after case, grimovals happen all the time. This is not some big mystery. And it happened the ninth circuit recently, and a decision by Billy Fletcher said, you know, what I think is the best opinion on this just says when when when the circumstances of that paragraph apply, you got to follow which GSK did do here. But on the second paragraph, I mean, the section is just silent altogether whether a case can be re-remove of initially removable complaint. And the other side has to come up with an express part of removal. There's no question that there are 29 cases that were paid, stayed pending jobs, and in every case today pursues in federal court. There's no question this case is removable. The only question is, is there an express provision that prohibits it? 1447 not only doesn't apply on its terms, it doesn't apply on every case it's considered the issue, and they have no case. So, the fact that the district court decides wrong on the first removal, isn't that covered by 1447, isn't that meant to prevent any not only appeal, but other attempts to get around a reconsideration of the first ruling? And less it's based on a new and different grounds, meaning if it's, it's based on the same grounds, except saying that the first judge got it wrong. There is no question in though, it was always sustained ground of the Red Cross. The Red Cross didn't start making up stuff. They just said we're a federal charter here, okay? The only thing that changed in Doe between the first and second removals was an intervening higher court decision that pierced through law of the case, so that the district court's earlier remand was annulled. The district court in Doe remanded the case. So, the very same argument could be made. In fact, it was made

. They said, how can you re-remove in Doe? You've already remanded it. Who cares if it was wrong? And the paneling unanimously said, well, we care, because you're not appealing it. It's supposed to be an appeal or otherwise. And it's a controlling authority. It's a new citation. Nothing happened, but US Supreme Court site. That's the only thing that got added. The arguments were the same. The identical language was the same. The statute was the same. It was the citation of authority. And that's all that's happened here, is we have Johnson now. And Justice Holmes has said judicial decisions about retroactively to at least a thousand years. There's no question that Johnson definitively holds that this case was initially removable and always has been removable. So, back to the two points on how do you get around the 30-day requirement. So we have our initial broader argument is that it just doesn't apply because, Fortune 46 doesn't set forth the exclusive grounds for the second removal. But we also have the relation back argument. And this court in that USX versus Adriatic held that after an intervening change in the law, an amended notice could relate back seven years. It's pretty extraordinary. Seven years to the original removal in the case. But wasn't you, and correct me if I'm wrong, was USX still pending in the district court when that amendment took place? Yes. And here we don't have that. So what is it relating back to? Sure. What you have is, again, they have no cases to the contrary. Case after case says you can have relation back as long, even if the pleading the complaint has been dismissed. It's been acted upon, has disappeared into thin air, as long as it cases pending somewhere. Even if it's state court. And that's the yellow freight case. They don't have any case to the contrary. They don't really cite you any case. Was that case so, you know, if it was at a dismissal without prejudice, such it was in the final order as compared to in this circuit, a re-meaning the end order is a final order. Is it not the difference between the cases you mentioned in the Court? Not sure, because in, I don't know whether yellow freight was a dismissal with it without prejudice, but the DC Circuit, too, has said, and that I think may have been with prejudice, it doesn't matter about the complaint being dismissed with it without prejudice, as long as a case is pending. But if you just look at the statute and common sense, no one questions, and this is the same case. There may have been a final judgment for purposes of black and bush, and that it was immediately appealable on some other purpose. But no one says, and even the statute says, when you flip back between state and federal court, it's still the same case. It's just pending in state court. So I don't know how, and remember, we filed a notice of removal in state court, too. So the same identical documents that are being filed in federal court are being filed in state court, too

. Seven years to the original removal in the case. But wasn't you, and correct me if I'm wrong, was USX still pending in the district court when that amendment took place? Yes. And here we don't have that. So what is it relating back to? Sure. What you have is, again, they have no cases to the contrary. Case after case says you can have relation back as long, even if the pleading the complaint has been dismissed. It's been acted upon, has disappeared into thin air, as long as it cases pending somewhere. Even if it's state court. And that's the yellow freight case. They don't have any case to the contrary. They don't really cite you any case. Was that case so, you know, if it was at a dismissal without prejudice, such it was in the final order as compared to in this circuit, a re-meaning the end order is a final order. Is it not the difference between the cases you mentioned in the Court? Not sure, because in, I don't know whether yellow freight was a dismissal with it without prejudice, but the DC Circuit, too, has said, and that I think may have been with prejudice, it doesn't matter about the complaint being dismissed with it without prejudice, as long as a case is pending. But if you just look at the statute and common sense, no one questions, and this is the same case. There may have been a final judgment for purposes of black and bush, and that it was immediately appealable on some other purpose. But no one says, and even the statute says, when you flip back between state and federal court, it's still the same case. It's just pending in state court. So I don't know how, and remember, we filed a notice of removal in state court, too. So the same identical documents that are being filed in federal court are being filed in state court, too. So, to some extent, you could say our state court notice, a second notice, related back to the first. So that seems to me an awfully hyper-technical not to do relate back. But the best argument on why this is timely is simply that GSK actually timely filed the 30 days. And the other thing is that, in terms of just opening up the floodgates, no happened over two decades ago. Two decades ago, it said, re-releave all you want. If you get a higher court to say the earlier remand was wrong. We demand all you want. It's happened three times at most in 20 years. It happened once in the ninth circuit following the NOLS decision, and it's happened in Johnson in this case, and it happened with the SU case. So that's three times. It is a confluence of events, which is what all the district courts have said. The five that have acted have said, this is unique because the case is for still pending. Johnson came up in the NRO. Can we talk about the first year, the one-year rule, and the purpose behind it, which is to avoid disruption. One of the questions we asked our adversary was, what was going on and see quest part of the removal, and your adversary represented four months from trial. Right? Wouldn't allowing this to occur undermined the goal of that very provision? But disruptions think about it. You could have a case that was even in the middle of the trial. It wasn't within the one year. So if we didn't file this four months earlier, that would be remarkable

. So, to some extent, you could say our state court notice, a second notice, related back to the first. So that seems to me an awfully hyper-technical not to do relate back. But the best argument on why this is timely is simply that GSK actually timely filed the 30 days. And the other thing is that, in terms of just opening up the floodgates, no happened over two decades ago. Two decades ago, it said, re-releave all you want. If you get a higher court to say the earlier remand was wrong. We demand all you want. It's happened three times at most in 20 years. It happened once in the ninth circuit following the NOLS decision, and it's happened in Johnson in this case, and it happened with the SU case. So that's three times. It is a confluence of events, which is what all the district courts have said. The five that have acted have said, this is unique because the case is for still pending. Johnson came up in the NRO. Can we talk about the first year, the one-year rule, and the purpose behind it, which is to avoid disruption. One of the questions we asked our adversary was, what was going on and see quest part of the removal, and your adversary represented four months from trial. Right? Wouldn't allowing this to occur undermined the goal of that very provision? But disruptions think about it. You could have a case that was even in the middle of the trial. It wasn't within the one year. So if we didn't file this four months earlier, that would be remarkable. Wouldn't she say, being going in a decimal case, be ready to go to trial one year, that would be great. The statute allows for it, but not only does this not apply, I mean, you can't just say, well, there's some provision out in the US code that if it applied would be barred here, it doesn't apply. But on one side about prejudice, because the case was initially removable. I can't understand that. But if you were just going to make up a rule about prejudice, you should. On relation back, they were freed, are you prejudiced? They didn't. You can argue prejudice. You can say you can relate back here, would be prejudiced. You can argue latches. If we waited a year after Johnson, I hope we do laugh that of course. I would hope a disreport would say, you've got to be kidding me. Right. And let me just say something else about the eight other cases. And those eight other cases, none of them are Pennsylvania citizens. You got Colorado, Minnesota, South Dakota, Florida, Mississippi. This is the one case in Pennsylvania. And even the case in Minnesota, that's preceded in federal court. So I mean, let me ask you another question. We're dealing with the Pennsylvania State Court

. Wouldn't she say, being going in a decimal case, be ready to go to trial one year, that would be great. The statute allows for it, but not only does this not apply, I mean, you can't just say, well, there's some provision out in the US code that if it applied would be barred here, it doesn't apply. But on one side about prejudice, because the case was initially removable. I can't understand that. But if you were just going to make up a rule about prejudice, you should. On relation back, they were freed, are you prejudiced? They didn't. You can argue prejudice. You can say you can relate back here, would be prejudiced. You can argue latches. If we waited a year after Johnson, I hope we do laugh that of course. I would hope a disreport would say, you've got to be kidding me. Right. And let me just say something else about the eight other cases. And those eight other cases, none of them are Pennsylvania citizens. You got Colorado, Minnesota, South Dakota, Florida, Mississippi. This is the one case in Pennsylvania. And even the case in Minnesota, that's preceded in federal court. So I mean, let me ask you another question. We're dealing with the Pennsylvania State Court. It's a good state court system. The case is going to trial. It's close to trial. We aren't saying that your case is dismissed or will disappear if you don't get removal again. The purpose of a no appeal of a remand is to show some comedy, I think, to the state court systems and to make sure that when cases are proceeding there, they proceed to trial. So what's the problem with the trial? What's, yeah, I mean, you sound like the poor guy in the American Red Cross, you said two years have passed. How can you do this to me? That's not an answer. Let me answer. Let me answer. Congress has clearly made a policy determination here that mistakes will be made. Mistakes will be made. And yet, they still will not permit review. Are you not asking for a decision that really is a derogation of that policy that's clearly reflected in subsection D, a 1447? No. Insofar as it wasn't anymore. When the third circuit based in and doe and the ninth circuit and the seventh circuit, every court to have considered this looks at the language. I want policy. Then this question to the side of Johnson courts always second guess and can collaterally attack remands. We are not appealing the earlier remand. So this bizarre interpretation of 1447 has not been interpreted by any court

. It's a good state court system. The case is going to trial. It's close to trial. We aren't saying that your case is dismissed or will disappear if you don't get removal again. The purpose of a no appeal of a remand is to show some comedy, I think, to the state court systems and to make sure that when cases are proceeding there, they proceed to trial. So what's the problem with the trial? What's, yeah, I mean, you sound like the poor guy in the American Red Cross, you said two years have passed. How can you do this to me? That's not an answer. Let me answer. Let me answer. Congress has clearly made a policy determination here that mistakes will be made. Mistakes will be made. And yet, they still will not permit review. Are you not asking for a decision that really is a derogation of that policy that's clearly reflected in subsection D, a 1447? No. Insofar as it wasn't anymore. When the third circuit based in and doe and the ninth circuit and the seventh circuit, every court to have considered this looks at the language. I want policy. Then this question to the side of Johnson courts always second guess and can collaterally attack remands. We are not appealing the earlier remand. So this bizarre interpretation of 1447 has not been interpreted by any court. You'd be creating a split with the third circuit. I don't know anything bizarre about it. In fact, I'd look like pretty plain language to me. The third circuit, this court projected it, you're bound by doe and you would be creating a split with the seventh circuit and the ninth circuit. When you're not. Well, maybe it would be a good idea to do that. Then you got to go on bomb. If you want to go on bomb with doe, we can brief it. And I would really have to go on bomb if we wanted to split from the seventh. Where did you say we would be different from seventh? If we would go. But who's I thought it was because we were split from the seventh and ninth circuit? You would. And she said that would be great. But you could also doe holds that when you're not appealing, we're not appealing. Remember, we won below. We're not appealing the remand order. And you have a citation and new site. You're not barbed by 1447. It's an independent holding. In addition to the first part of the opinion that said 1447 can't be a bar because we know the Supreme Court ignored it

. You'd be creating a split with the third circuit. I don't know anything bizarre about it. In fact, I'd look like pretty plain language to me. The third circuit, this court projected it, you're bound by doe and you would be creating a split with the seventh circuit and the ninth circuit. When you're not. Well, maybe it would be a good idea to do that. Then you got to go on bomb. If you want to go on bomb with doe, we can brief it. And I would really have to go on bomb if we wanted to split from the seventh. Where did you say we would be different from seventh? If we would go. But who's I thought it was because we were split from the seventh and ninth circuit? You would. And she said that would be great. But you could also doe holds that when you're not appealing, we're not appealing. Remember, we won below. We're not appealing the remand order. And you have a citation and new site. You're not barbed by 1447. It's an independent holding. In addition to the first part of the opinion that said 1447 can't be a bar because we know the Supreme Court ignored it. And then it said also in doe itself, it said American Cross can remove any case. It cannot believe with a. The wildest imagination that the Supreme Court was thinking, are we writing this decision for retroactive application? They were just making a holding that the American Red Cross sue and be sued charter and first federal jurisdiction. But the court methodically went through the three bases for jurisdiction. But there's three, four, five paragraphs that say 1447D by its own terms doesn't apply. They said we see nothing in the language that would apply. And it was two years. The case had been pending for over two years. It was not like nothing had happened. And the case had been sitting in state court. But I do strongly disagree on comedy when there's zero connection to Pennsylvania. There's not even a Pennsylvania citizen at any of the other eight cases. I see my comedy is not a doctrine of jurisdiction. The citizenship is not necessary for considerations by a federal court toward a state court system. And that's a fair point. And you just have the language it says. Well, where I said something, you're resident. Thank you. Thank you

. And then it said also in doe itself, it said American Cross can remove any case. It cannot believe with a. The wildest imagination that the Supreme Court was thinking, are we writing this decision for retroactive application? They were just making a holding that the American Red Cross sue and be sued charter and first federal jurisdiction. But the court methodically went through the three bases for jurisdiction. But there's three, four, five paragraphs that say 1447D by its own terms doesn't apply. They said we see nothing in the language that would apply. And it was two years. The case had been pending for over two years. It was not like nothing had happened. And the case had been sitting in state court. But I do strongly disagree on comedy when there's zero connection to Pennsylvania. There's not even a Pennsylvania citizen at any of the other eight cases. I see my comedy is not a doctrine of jurisdiction. The citizenship is not necessary for considerations by a federal court toward a state court system. And that's a fair point. And you just have the language it says. Well, where I said something, you're resident. Thank you. Thank you. Mr. Bashman will have you back on the bottle. Thank you, Your Honours. The one part of Dohern is last argument can really ignore us as that it says under 1447D. This is a different ground removal. Well, she says, I guess we can't take that part of the decision of face value because she says this is much of the same grounds as this case. But Judge Alvastar makes very clear that the reason the 1447D did not apply is because it was not even move on the same grounds as the original remand. And that's also supported by the hunt and trans pens wax case, all of which recognized the 1447D does not allow repetitive same grounds or moveals where the case has been remanded. Now, the first and second paragraphs of 1446B are mutually exclusive. Either the case is original removal or it has become removable. And what do further recognizes is that where you're based on intervening law that shows that the first remand was wrong. You arise under the second paragraph of 1446B. This is not a chicken of the egg problem. We have to figure out which came first. Dohern answers that question as well. I agree with her. The AS case meant that the original decision remanding Doe was wrong. But the first paragraph or second paragraph are mutually exclusive. Doe can't say that this case is removable under the second paragraph, which is what it says

. Mr. Bashman will have you back on the bottle. Thank you, Your Honours. The one part of Dohern is last argument can really ignore us as that it says under 1447D. This is a different ground removal. Well, she says, I guess we can't take that part of the decision of face value because she says this is much of the same grounds as this case. But Judge Alvastar makes very clear that the reason the 1447D did not apply is because it was not even move on the same grounds as the original remand. And that's also supported by the hunt and trans pens wax case, all of which recognized the 1447D does not allow repetitive same grounds or moveals where the case has been remanded. Now, the first and second paragraphs of 1446B are mutually exclusive. Either the case is original removal or it has become removable. And what do further recognizes is that where you're based on intervening law that shows that the first remand was wrong. You arise under the second paragraph of 1446B. This is not a chicken of the egg problem. We have to figure out which came first. Dohern answers that question as well. I agree with her. The AS case meant that the original decision remanding Doe was wrong. But the first paragraph or second paragraph are mutually exclusive. Doe can't say that this case is removable under the second paragraph, which is what it says. If in fact the case was removable under the first paragraph. So there are even that their cases are removable under the first paragraph and Doe supports that. It's absolutely wrong. Now, to touch on those nine certain cases, one of which is the Roth case. Those cases both arose under the Class Action Fairness Act. No relation. I have no relation. And what the Roth case said was that if neither paragraph of 1446B is triggered and they agree this triggered here, so Roth doesn't even apply here. Then the defendant can remove it assuming it's timely if the defendant discovers through its own research that the case satisfies CAFA. What happened there was the plaintiff's complaint. It was unclear. It was a wage-and-hour act type case. The defendant went into its own files and discovered that one of the plaintiffs lived in Nevada. So it's satisfied the mental diversity. And they asked their account and guy just said, you know, this case has worked more than $5.9. And so the defendant removed them and I, Circuit, said, if you discovered on your own, you can remove it. And if the plaintiff doesn't want you to do that, the plaintiff should give you notice and now it's got the clock running. So those cases don't help them at all either

. If in fact the case was removable under the first paragraph. So there are even that their cases are removable under the first paragraph and Doe supports that. It's absolutely wrong. Now, to touch on those nine certain cases, one of which is the Roth case. Those cases both arose under the Class Action Fairness Act. No relation. I have no relation. And what the Roth case said was that if neither paragraph of 1446B is triggered and they agree this triggered here, so Roth doesn't even apply here. Then the defendant can remove it assuming it's timely if the defendant discovers through its own research that the case satisfies CAFA. What happened there was the plaintiff's complaint. It was unclear. It was a wage-and-hour act type case. The defendant went into its own files and discovered that one of the plaintiffs lived in Nevada. So it's satisfied the mental diversity. And they asked their account and guy just said, you know, this case has worked more than $5.9. And so the defendant removed them and I, Circuit, said, if you discovered on your own, you can remove it. And if the plaintiff doesn't want you to do that, the plaintiff should give you notice and now it's got the clock running. So those cases don't help them at all either. Unless the court has any other questions for me, I think that everyone understands. Thank you. Thank you very much. It's a fascinating question. The case was well argued. We'll take it under advise. And pass the clerk to recess the receipt. I'll start here. Good for her. All right.

I'm called a case of AS, a minor versus Smith-Kind Meijum Court, and Mr. Bashman, you're representing the parliament. Thank you, Your Honor. Please, the Court, with the Court's commission, I'd like to reserve four minutes for a ball. Grands. Thank you. Your Honor, this Court's ruling in Doe versus American Red Cross furnishes the answers to three of the most critical questions that this appeal presents. First, Doe recognizes that Section 1447D of Title 28 prohibiting review of an order of remand by appeal or otherwise prohibits the defendant from a moving case on the same grounds as originally rejected in the first remand. Second, Doe recognizes that for a second remand to be proper, it must satisfy one of the two paragraphs of Section 1446B. And third, Doe resolves the otherwise very difficult question of whether the first paragraph or the second paragraph of Section 1446B applies where intervening law makes clear that the original remand was legally aromance. In that regard, Doe holds that the second paragraph applies, and you don't treat the cases, though, it was originally removable, but rather you treated as though it has become removable. Even if the decision whether it was originally removable or not turns out to be incorrect. So your view is Johnson is not a new ground. Well, I believe that's what the other side is arguing that Johnson is not a new ground, but we do say that Johnson does not satisfy the second paragraph of 1446B. But even if it does, that, of course, they fall outside of the one-year time period that that second paragraph provides. And that's why that third holding of Doe is of such great significance because the second paragraph of Section 1446B, but there is, I mean, I ended up being somewhat confused after hearing or after reading all of the arguments here as to whether people were maintaining the Johnson is or is not a new ground. This relation back theory that seems to be really a predicate for the position taken by one of the parties is in fact a legal fiction. Is it not? Well, that's, as I understand one of the main arguments that G.S.K. is making. And you're actually right, and I haven't found any cases where relation back applies where you have a final judgment that it would eviscerate. It applies in cases that are still pending in some way in the court where the relation back is taken place. So what I was about to say is that whether Johnson is a new ground or not for purposes of plaintiffs argument is not at all critical because in fact 1446B requires an order to invoke the second paragraph. About what was accomplished before the second removal petition had been filed in State Court and whether anything else has happened since the removal petition was filed on the pretrial process? Right. At the time this case was removed the second time to Federal Court. It was four months away from going to trial. So it was, I guess, because they literally on the eve of trial. And since then, so considerable process had been undergone. Correct. Since then, the case was transferred to the military to Pennsylvania because these are Pennsylvania plaintiffs. So that the original remand here was on two bases. It was on the basis of no diversity on the basis of a violation of the so-called form defendant rule. And so since then, the case has just been stayed. And in fact, there are all these other cases out there. And every other case except for one pending in Minnesota has also been stayed. So in the State Court cases as well have been stayed? Well, even the cases that were remanded by judges Belsen and Padova, as I understand it, those remands were never effectuated. But if G.S. They were never carried out. So that the judges stayed the matter before actually sending a records back to State Court before implementing it. So even though Judge Belsen, who we believe is 100% correct, and Judge Padova, who's ruling agrees with us, said that these cases do not belong in a federal court based on the second removal. So those cases have not been remanded. But think about G.S.K.'s argument. If they're right in those cases had been remanded. After these court rules, they could bring those cases back to the federal court a third time and say, well, we timely remove them originally. And therefore, we're entitled to a do over as many times as is necessary until a federal judge agrees with us. And then at that point the case stays in federal court because we were right all along. And so G.S.K.'s argument, they're trying to say it's such a narrow argument, but in fact it's unlimited in number of removal and in time of removal because they say that time provisions don't apply. So let's say G.S.K. did not remove the case right after Johnson was decided. But rather, waited until this case was on the eve of trial, or even on the eve of verdict. They didn't like how the evidence went in. According to G.S.K., they could remove the case at that point and say this case deserves to be in federal court. And there's nothing they can do to say you're wrong because in fact the original decision was wrong. What they're trying to ask in this Court to recognize is a loo poll that says that even though 1447D says you can't appeal and notwithstanding this Court in Doe saying that applies to second removal on the same ground as the first removal, which also the Hunt case and the Transpens Wax case of this Court also recognized, they're saying that the original removal service that timely placeholder and we can remove it again and again seeking a second opinion. If that loo poll were a valid loo poll, I'm sure it would have been recognized by some court before this case arose. Can't we recognize a first time occasion? Well, I'm not challenging this Court's ability to have a ruling that was legally erroneous, but I really would conflict with the Doe opinion that's binding on this panel because Indo, the Court recognized that a second removal on the same ground as the first is not proper under 1447D, which is a jurisdictional provision. And that panel, which was a stellar panel consisting of Al Dacer who wrote the opinion former Chief Judge Sirica before he became Chief Judge and of course Justice Alito, who was on the Court at that time, that opinion was so careful in saying this is not- The way opinions by the judges that were on the panel- No, I hope not. But that opinion was so careful in saying that this is not a same ground's removal. And I guess GFK is saying, you know, that aspect of Doe should just be ignored, but if in fact that were the case Indo, Doe would have been such a simple case to decide. But isn't there also so specific in saying when there is new law, so to speak, that law has to contemplate a direction that grants the right to re-remove and ultimately so so special? The Dough case and the case, the U.S. Supreme Court case on which it depended, the American Red Cross versus AS. The history of that case is that I guess it's analogous to Federal question, but it's a suit and these suit charter that Congress created that allowed the Red Cross to sue or be sued in Federal court. But didn't Judge Olisert go to great pains also in Dough to suggest how narrow it was and how narrow its implication? I mean, even in the very last paragraph, the next paragraph, under these unique circumstances. I mean, he, and that's not the only place he has indicated in limiting language. You think the narrow focus of Dough and that regard, though, assists the plaintiff much more than the defendant? Because the, the, the, the narrowness that he's talking about is that the court was asked to construe the phrase order or other paper under the second paragraph from 1446P, which again, is written in our argument that where there is a removal, section 1446P does apply. And if you, if you turn to section 1446P, which I'll try to walk the court through the time remaining, you'll see that it clearly does apply based on his plain language, but to, to, to to answer your question. Where he said that we're just being really narrow here, he said, well, he, he's construing the meaning of the word order. We don't have to constru the meaning of the word other paper. And so to that extent, we're being very narrow. But, but that, that is the import of that language as I read it. If, if you turn to section 1446, which applies, which appears in Exhibit C, the blue brief towards the back, you'll see it says procedure for removal. And GSK followed various paragraphs of section 1446 in removing this case for a second time. It followed paragraph A that says you have to file a notice of removal. The, the title of the whole section is procedure for removal. It doesn't say procedure for first removal only. The case had to be removed the second time, or else it wasn't going to be a federal court. They followed sub, subsection D, which says you have to notify the other parties and the state court, because then the state court can't take any further actions. And then if you turn directly to, to some section B, the one that I'm referring to, there's the two paragraphs, the first words in there are the notice of removal. Well, that refers right back to the A notice of removal, but it is described in subsection A. So, to say that they did file a notice of removal to get the case back in the federal court, but the notice of removal, which clearly relates back to that, doesn't only apply to their earlier removal, the very first time. That, that makes no sense whatsoever. So, we submit that both DO and, in fact, the plain language of 1446B indicate that it applies to any removal for second or third. And if Johnson was law that applied to all GSK cases, then wouldn't, in fact, be be ground by Brewer. Well, that, that of course, Brewer didn't go up to the third circuit. The Brewer was previous law that, that is still extant, so that, even if we think it's incorrect, it, it, it, the district court level has equal weight with Johnson. I'm not sure I understand the question, but let's take the hypothetical where today, the same type of cases filed in state court, and then GSK removes that, and it says, based on Johnson, we can remove it under the first paragraph of 1446B. And of course, 1446B has been changed around a little bit, but those paragraphs still are in there. And the district judge, let's say, doesn't want to follow the law, and thinks that Johnson was wrongly decided, which, of course, would be utterly inappropriate. I'm not saying any district judge would ever do that. But let's say district judge thinks that it was wrongly decided, and because he knows that his decision can't be appealed or mandamus, he's going to dismiss the case based on lack of diversity of jurisdiction. And that's today, for tomorrow. And you know, under GSK's argument, you know, all they have to do to get the case into Feb, or court is remove it again, second time, and hope at different judge disagree. So we say that that's wrong, and if the original decision here was wrong, well, they're in the same situation, you know, that's the way that Congress wanted it to work. And once the year is up, the time is up. I see my time is up. Yes, we'll have you back in the room, little. I'm sorry. Is black? Thank you, and may it please the court. My name is Lisa Glad, and I represent Blacksosmith Klein or GSK. Yes, Black, can you cite us to a single case that has applied 1446 these first paragraph to a re-removal that's premised on a subsequent clarification to change it along? There aren't, there's not this exact case, but there are plenty of cases where there's a second removal either following a remand or not that are not necessarily in paragraph two, which is the other side's argument. The other side's argument is there's no such thing as a second removal, unless it's every scenario but this case. This is the only case that you can't second remove. Of course, we remove a spawning remand happen all the time, and that's what happen in go. So it's almost misdefined, but their theory of re-removal is. But ask Antony Dubsonist's question. There's no scenario, no case law that you found that says we remove on the change of a case law. What is the side doubt for a second? It's doubtless. Putting aside the case that's controlling, there's Ray from the ninth circuit and Midlock and Benson from the seventh circuit that say a subsequent change on the law is not a total case is, well, because this was once remanded, it can't be removed based on the subsequent change in controlling law, which is precisely what DO held. So their argument is basically that a case once remanded can never be re-removed. And DO says, no, no. As long as you have a definitive source from a higher court, you're beyond the bar of 1447. It doesn't also have like three parts, and the final part is, and there is a directive that allows you to re-remove the pending case, the Supreme Court language that they quoted, I believe. Isn't that your biggest hurdle over the bill? No, because the court views the work independent. I mean, you can look at the opinion. It's in three separate parts. The Supreme Court, N.S.G. ignored 1447. That's their first reasoning. Their second reasoning is, this isn't even an appeal. We're actually the appellee here. We're not appealing the earlier remand here. So by its terms, it doesn't apply. Plus, it's a new and definitive source. And then thirdly, the Supreme Court, and I mean, seriously, the Supreme Court obviously has no power to overwool a statute. The Supreme Court can't say, and we authorize re-removable and courts. The Supreme Court obviously didn't think it was telling courts to ignore 1447. Well, that's what it did do. It told them we're going to, if the Red Cross is the party, out of state court, I thought it was rather perceived that the Supreme Court thought it wasn't violating a federal statute, which is all the courts and appeals. They have no citation, zero citation. Well, maybe that's why it was a five-four decision to the Supreme Court. But clearly, it's just that- That was on Red Cross, not on 1447. Clearly, as Judge Schwartz questioned suggests, the panel of the Third Circuit cited that third reason is an independent reason that persuades them. We will require the yield to this specific mandate. And the same means the previous two paragraphs were also independent. And I mean, I can keep quoting it. It said, American Red Cross is neither appealing the earlier remand nor asserting the same grounds because there is a controlling decision of a higher court. Nothing changed in Doe, other than a Supreme Court case. The basis for jurisdiction was always the same. It is 100 percent on all fours with this case. Nothing has changed in terms that's always been diversity of citizenship. The only thing that has changed is this Court's decision in Johnson. Every circuit that has considered the issue and no circuit has found to the contrary that when you have a definitive, higher intervening controlling decision, that puts 1447 to the aside and it's not a bar. That's the seventh circuit and the ninth circuit. How do you get over the one-year bar in 1446, the second B, the second paragraph as the statute states out? That is the easiest part because that section by its terms, by the statutory terms, only is triggered if a case stated by the initial pleading is not removable. The case stated by the initial pleading was removable because we know that there was complete diversity of citizenship at the time. And how do you get over the first paragraph, which is if it's stated by the initial pleading, you had to remove time. You want us to relate back to the case, right? So let's see, please. There's no question that 1446 B, that first paragraph applied, GSK was required to remove the case and no one argues to the contrary within 30 days. And GSK did that. Which, now which 20s and 30s of what event? The first removal. First removal, got it. There's a quieter to be filed within 30 days of the complaint. Yeah. So we know this is not followed within the second paragraph. It was initially removable and GSK complied with 1446 B's first paragraph. The argument is, well, what about that second removal? Doesn't that also have to be 30 days within the complaint? Now, we have two arguments. That the ninth circuit, in two cases, that ray case and the rough case, and those slew of cases cited in footnote eight of our brief have held that 1446 B does not cover the waterfront on grimovals. So, yes. Tell me where the gap is. Where's the big old home? Because you talk about a gap between first paragraph and the second paragraph. What is the gap? In footnote eight, case after case, grimovals happen all the time. This is not some big mystery. And it happened the ninth circuit recently, and a decision by Billy Fletcher said, you know, what I think is the best opinion on this just says when when when the circumstances of that paragraph apply, you got to follow which GSK did do here. But on the second paragraph, I mean, the section is just silent altogether whether a case can be re-remove of initially removable complaint. And the other side has to come up with an express part of removal. There's no question that there are 29 cases that were paid, stayed pending jobs, and in every case today pursues in federal court. There's no question this case is removable. The only question is, is there an express provision that prohibits it? 1447 not only doesn't apply on its terms, it doesn't apply on every case it's considered the issue, and they have no case. So, the fact that the district court decides wrong on the first removal, isn't that covered by 1447, isn't that meant to prevent any not only appeal, but other attempts to get around a reconsideration of the first ruling? And less it's based on a new and different grounds, meaning if it's, it's based on the same grounds, except saying that the first judge got it wrong. There is no question in though, it was always sustained ground of the Red Cross. The Red Cross didn't start making up stuff. They just said we're a federal charter here, okay? The only thing that changed in Doe between the first and second removals was an intervening higher court decision that pierced through law of the case, so that the district court's earlier remand was annulled. The district court in Doe remanded the case. So, the very same argument could be made. In fact, it was made. They said, how can you re-remove in Doe? You've already remanded it. Who cares if it was wrong? And the paneling unanimously said, well, we care, because you're not appealing it. It's supposed to be an appeal or otherwise. And it's a controlling authority. It's a new citation. Nothing happened, but US Supreme Court site. That's the only thing that got added. The arguments were the same. The identical language was the same. The statute was the same. It was the citation of authority. And that's all that's happened here, is we have Johnson now. And Justice Holmes has said judicial decisions about retroactively to at least a thousand years. There's no question that Johnson definitively holds that this case was initially removable and always has been removable. So, back to the two points on how do you get around the 30-day requirement. So we have our initial broader argument is that it just doesn't apply because, Fortune 46 doesn't set forth the exclusive grounds for the second removal. But we also have the relation back argument. And this court in that USX versus Adriatic held that after an intervening change in the law, an amended notice could relate back seven years. It's pretty extraordinary. Seven years to the original removal in the case. But wasn't you, and correct me if I'm wrong, was USX still pending in the district court when that amendment took place? Yes. And here we don't have that. So what is it relating back to? Sure. What you have is, again, they have no cases to the contrary. Case after case says you can have relation back as long, even if the pleading the complaint has been dismissed. It's been acted upon, has disappeared into thin air, as long as it cases pending somewhere. Even if it's state court. And that's the yellow freight case. They don't have any case to the contrary. They don't really cite you any case. Was that case so, you know, if it was at a dismissal without prejudice, such it was in the final order as compared to in this circuit, a re-meaning the end order is a final order. Is it not the difference between the cases you mentioned in the Court? Not sure, because in, I don't know whether yellow freight was a dismissal with it without prejudice, but the DC Circuit, too, has said, and that I think may have been with prejudice, it doesn't matter about the complaint being dismissed with it without prejudice, as long as a case is pending. But if you just look at the statute and common sense, no one questions, and this is the same case. There may have been a final judgment for purposes of black and bush, and that it was immediately appealable on some other purpose. But no one says, and even the statute says, when you flip back between state and federal court, it's still the same case. It's just pending in state court. So I don't know how, and remember, we filed a notice of removal in state court, too. So the same identical documents that are being filed in federal court are being filed in state court, too. So, to some extent, you could say our state court notice, a second notice, related back to the first. So that seems to me an awfully hyper-technical not to do relate back. But the best argument on why this is timely is simply that GSK actually timely filed the 30 days. And the other thing is that, in terms of just opening up the floodgates, no happened over two decades ago. Two decades ago, it said, re-releave all you want. If you get a higher court to say the earlier remand was wrong. We demand all you want. It's happened three times at most in 20 years. It happened once in the ninth circuit following the NOLS decision, and it's happened in Johnson in this case, and it happened with the SU case. So that's three times. It is a confluence of events, which is what all the district courts have said. The five that have acted have said, this is unique because the case is for still pending. Johnson came up in the NRO. Can we talk about the first year, the one-year rule, and the purpose behind it, which is to avoid disruption. One of the questions we asked our adversary was, what was going on and see quest part of the removal, and your adversary represented four months from trial. Right? Wouldn't allowing this to occur undermined the goal of that very provision? But disruptions think about it. You could have a case that was even in the middle of the trial. It wasn't within the one year. So if we didn't file this four months earlier, that would be remarkable. Wouldn't she say, being going in a decimal case, be ready to go to trial one year, that would be great. The statute allows for it, but not only does this not apply, I mean, you can't just say, well, there's some provision out in the US code that if it applied would be barred here, it doesn't apply. But on one side about prejudice, because the case was initially removable. I can't understand that. But if you were just going to make up a rule about prejudice, you should. On relation back, they were freed, are you prejudiced? They didn't. You can argue prejudice. You can say you can relate back here, would be prejudiced. You can argue latches. If we waited a year after Johnson, I hope we do laugh that of course. I would hope a disreport would say, you've got to be kidding me. Right. And let me just say something else about the eight other cases. And those eight other cases, none of them are Pennsylvania citizens. You got Colorado, Minnesota, South Dakota, Florida, Mississippi. This is the one case in Pennsylvania. And even the case in Minnesota, that's preceded in federal court. So I mean, let me ask you another question. We're dealing with the Pennsylvania State Court. It's a good state court system. The case is going to trial. It's close to trial. We aren't saying that your case is dismissed or will disappear if you don't get removal again. The purpose of a no appeal of a remand is to show some comedy, I think, to the state court systems and to make sure that when cases are proceeding there, they proceed to trial. So what's the problem with the trial? What's, yeah, I mean, you sound like the poor guy in the American Red Cross, you said two years have passed. How can you do this to me? That's not an answer. Let me answer. Let me answer. Congress has clearly made a policy determination here that mistakes will be made. Mistakes will be made. And yet, they still will not permit review. Are you not asking for a decision that really is a derogation of that policy that's clearly reflected in subsection D, a 1447? No. Insofar as it wasn't anymore. When the third circuit based in and doe and the ninth circuit and the seventh circuit, every court to have considered this looks at the language. I want policy. Then this question to the side of Johnson courts always second guess and can collaterally attack remands. We are not appealing the earlier remand. So this bizarre interpretation of 1447 has not been interpreted by any court. You'd be creating a split with the third circuit. I don't know anything bizarre about it. In fact, I'd look like pretty plain language to me. The third circuit, this court projected it, you're bound by doe and you would be creating a split with the seventh circuit and the ninth circuit. When you're not. Well, maybe it would be a good idea to do that. Then you got to go on bomb. If you want to go on bomb with doe, we can brief it. And I would really have to go on bomb if we wanted to split from the seventh. Where did you say we would be different from seventh? If we would go. But who's I thought it was because we were split from the seventh and ninth circuit? You would. And she said that would be great. But you could also doe holds that when you're not appealing, we're not appealing. Remember, we won below. We're not appealing the remand order. And you have a citation and new site. You're not barbed by 1447. It's an independent holding. In addition to the first part of the opinion that said 1447 can't be a bar because we know the Supreme Court ignored it. And then it said also in doe itself, it said American Cross can remove any case. It cannot believe with a. The wildest imagination that the Supreme Court was thinking, are we writing this decision for retroactive application? They were just making a holding that the American Red Cross sue and be sued charter and first federal jurisdiction. But the court methodically went through the three bases for jurisdiction. But there's three, four, five paragraphs that say 1447D by its own terms doesn't apply. They said we see nothing in the language that would apply. And it was two years. The case had been pending for over two years. It was not like nothing had happened. And the case had been sitting in state court. But I do strongly disagree on comedy when there's zero connection to Pennsylvania. There's not even a Pennsylvania citizen at any of the other eight cases. I see my comedy is not a doctrine of jurisdiction. The citizenship is not necessary for considerations by a federal court toward a state court system. And that's a fair point. And you just have the language it says. Well, where I said something, you're resident. Thank you. Thank you. Mr. Bashman will have you back on the bottle. Thank you, Your Honours. The one part of Dohern is last argument can really ignore us as that it says under 1447D. This is a different ground removal. Well, she says, I guess we can't take that part of the decision of face value because she says this is much of the same grounds as this case. But Judge Alvastar makes very clear that the reason the 1447D did not apply is because it was not even move on the same grounds as the original remand. And that's also supported by the hunt and trans pens wax case, all of which recognized the 1447D does not allow repetitive same grounds or moveals where the case has been remanded. Now, the first and second paragraphs of 1446B are mutually exclusive. Either the case is original removal or it has become removable. And what do further recognizes is that where you're based on intervening law that shows that the first remand was wrong. You arise under the second paragraph of 1446B. This is not a chicken of the egg problem. We have to figure out which came first. Dohern answers that question as well. I agree with her. The AS case meant that the original decision remanding Doe was wrong. But the first paragraph or second paragraph are mutually exclusive. Doe can't say that this case is removable under the second paragraph, which is what it says. If in fact the case was removable under the first paragraph. So there are even that their cases are removable under the first paragraph and Doe supports that. It's absolutely wrong. Now, to touch on those nine certain cases, one of which is the Roth case. Those cases both arose under the Class Action Fairness Act. No relation. I have no relation. And what the Roth case said was that if neither paragraph of 1446B is triggered and they agree this triggered here, so Roth doesn't even apply here. Then the defendant can remove it assuming it's timely if the defendant discovers through its own research that the case satisfies CAFA. What happened there was the plaintiff's complaint. It was unclear. It was a wage-and-hour act type case. The defendant went into its own files and discovered that one of the plaintiffs lived in Nevada. So it's satisfied the mental diversity. And they asked their account and guy just said, you know, this case has worked more than $5.9. And so the defendant removed them and I, Circuit, said, if you discovered on your own, you can remove it. And if the plaintiff doesn't want you to do that, the plaintiff should give you notice and now it's got the clock running. So those cases don't help them at all either. Unless the court has any other questions for me, I think that everyone understands. Thank you. Thank you very much. It's a fascinating question. The case was well argued. We'll take it under advise. And pass the clerk to recess the receipt. I'll start here. Good for her. All right