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Why Suing LLCs in Federal Court Under Diversity Jurisdiction Can Be So Complicated
Seems hard to justify, especially since corporations are treated quite differently; but there it is.
From Wednesday's decision by District Judge Cogan (E.D.N.Y.) in Coward v. Nat'l Railroad Passenger Corp.:
The lack of knowledge of the membership of a limited liability company or limited partnership has at times caused an enormous waste of judicial and party resources when a party purports to invoke diversity jurisdiction and it turns out later that there wasn't any. As the Seventh Circuit held in Belleville Catering Co. v. Champaign Market Place, LLC (7th Cir. 2003):
Once again litigants' insouciance toward the requirements of federal jurisdiction has caused a waste of time and money…. Counsel tells us that, because the lease between Belleville Catering and Champaign Market Place refers to Belleville Catering as "a Missouri corporation," he assumed that it must be one. That confesses a violation of Fed. R. Civ. P. 11…. [C]ounsel must secure jurisdictional details from original sources before making formal allegations.
The Court sees no reason to take that risk here….
Plaintiff brought this purported diversity case alleging he is a "resident" of Sicklerville, New Jersey {an inadequate jurisdictional allegation[ because jurisdiction turns on citizenship and not mere residence]} and that defendant Second Street Leasing, LLC is a "limited liability company formed and existing under the laws of the [s]tate of Connecticut."
As plaintiff subsequently recognized, this was an inadequate allegation of defendant's citizenship because the citizenship of an LLC has nothing to do with its state of formation or principal place of business; rather, the citizenship of an LLC consists of the imputed citizenship of each one of its members. This Court therefore issued an Order requiring plaintiff to show cause why the cause of action should not be dismissed for failing to adequately plead subject matter jurisdiction.
Plaintiff responded to the Order to Show Cause, in part, with a proposed amended complaint. It repeats the irrelevant allegation (because Second Street is an LLC) that Second Street is formed and existing under Connecticut law, and the equally irrelevant allegation (again, because Second Street is an LLC) that its principal place of business is in Connecticut. The proposed amended complaint then alleges that "upon information and belief, Mr. Mathew Zaloumis was and is a citizen of the State of Connecticut" and, most importantly, that "upon information and belief, Mr. Matthew Zaloumis, was the sole member of defendant Second Street." Plaintiff has also submitted Second Street's certificate of organization, which shows Zaloumis is the "managing member" of Second Street and that his residence address is in Connecticut….
If there were an adequate basis for the "upon information and belief" allegation that Zaloumis is the sole member of Second Street, plaintiff would have properly invoked diversity jurisdiction. But there isn't. The only basis plaintiff has identified is that Second Street's certificate of organization is signed by its managing member, who happens to be Zaloumis. The certificate, consistent with limited liability company law in almost all 50 states, does not state that he is the only member; for all plaintiff's lawyer knows, there could be two, three, or dozens of other members in addition to Zaloumis, of whose citizenship he has no idea. Positing that Zaloumis is the "sole member" is just wishful thinking on his part so he can get into federal court.
The pleading standard set forth by the Supreme Court … requires courts to remove conclusory assertions and legal conclusions in assessing the sufficiency of a complaint. There seems little doubt that the same standard governing substantive allegations in a complaint also applies to jurisdictional allegations. Subject matter jurisdiction, after all, is the keystone upon which every event that occurs in the case depends.
Plaintiff has direct evidence from Second Street's certificate of organization that Zaloumis is a member of Second Street and a Connecticut resident because the certificate so states. From that, plaintiff has inferred that Zaloumis is a Connecticut citizen, although citizenship requires a much more detailed inquiry than residency. He has further inferred that Zaloumis is the sole member of Second Street. But even allowing that Zaloumis's citizenship based on his residence might be a "plausible" inference rather than a merely "possible" one under Twombly and Iqbal, it is a step too far to infer that Zaloumis is the only member of Second Street.
The certificate does not support an inference as to that question one way or the other. Under Connecticut law, there is no requirement to publicly identify even a single member of the LLC. It may designate either a manager or a member. And as noted above, the certificate of organization has nothing to do with addressing how many members the LLC has.
If the inference as to sole membership could be drawn from the mere identification of one member, it would be all too easy to assert jurisdiction over any foreign LLC based on its certificate of organization. In almost all jurisdictions, an LLC certificate identifies the member or a manager upon whom service may be made – and that's it.
As the use of LLCs in lieu of the corporate form has greatly expanded, the Supreme Court has acknowledged that from a business perspective, it may not make sense for diversity of citizenship purposes to distinguish between LLCs, limited partnerships, and other unincorporated business entities, on the one hand, and corporations, on the other hand: "The resolutions we have reached [regarding this distinction] can validly be characterized as technical, precedent-bound, and unresponsive to policy considerations raised by the changing realities of business organization." Nevertheless, the Supreme Court has concluded that any change is "'properly a matter for legislative consideration which cannot adequately or appropriately be dealt with by this Court.' … In other words, … we have left further adjustments to be made by Congress." Moreover, there have been proposals to amend the Judicial Code to treat LLCs the same as incorporated entities for purposes of diversity jurisdiction, but none have ever been adopted.
Congress must, of course, be aware of the promulgation of LLCs as a desirable business entity form. It must also be aware that few, if any, states require under their limited liability company statutes that organizers publicly file a list of their members, making it more difficult to allege their citizenship in federal court. Although one cannot read too much intent into a congressional failure to act, Congress has in fact considered, and rejected, whether to bring the definition of LLC citizenship in line with that of a corporation. Indeed, in the Class Action Fairness Act, it has redefined the citizenship of an LLC for purposes of diversity, thus making cases involving LLCs more amenable to federal jurisdiction. But it has not done so generally, and courts should not liberalize the requirements where Congress has not.
No doubt, this can make it hard for a plaintiff to sue an LLC in federal court, as one of the purposes of forming an LLC may be to deter public identification of its members…. "While various state legislatures have decided to permit the members of LLCs to remain anonymous to the public at large, Congress has not created an exception to the requirements of diversity jurisdiction which would allow the members of LLCs to remain anonymous in federal court." … As the Eleventh Circuit has noted, this means there is "difficulty [in] applying established diversity jurisdiction principles to 21st-century business organizations." But that is the way Congress has left it. The Court is not going to circumvent the statute by finding that it has diversity jurisdiction based on a conclusory allegation than an interest holder is the sole interest holder….
Plaintiff's second cause of action is dismissed for lack of diversity jurisdiction.
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Hear, hear.
I had a recent case in federal court where it turned out one of the "silent partners" was in-state. This was uncovered only after the judge took it upon herself to order discovery on diversity (the other side had voiced no objection to jurisdiction).
That is a well-articulated "it's screwed up but it's Congress' job to fix" opinion. And I agree. As a policy matter, it makes no sense to treat LLCs, limited partnerships and other unincorporated business entities differently from traditional corporations for jurisdiction purposes.
I'd distinguish between unincorporated associations where the "members" have personal liability, from those where they do not.
So true partnerships and sole proprietorships would be different from LLCs, LPs etc.
For some legal decisions, that makes sense. Why does that make sense for jurisdiction analysis?
Because partners of a partnership are essentially parties to the litigation by virtue of their personal liability. Limited partners of an LP, or members of an LLC are much more analogous to shareholders of a corporation.
Agreed with your distinction.
I think it's a situation where the exception was made for corporations because true diversity among every shareholder would be absurd. Partnerships that share liability count the members, which also makes sense. LLCs should get the same exception as corporations, but they sort of got left behind. Once you view corporations as an exception, it becomes more understandable why that exception wasn't expanded.
I'd argue is for the courts to fix to. They can do their job. "Registered in CT? Then it's a CT business, and nothing else matters". But they'd rather not do their job.
Judge Cogan is an excellent judge, but (or maybe 'and thus') a major stickler. Some judges will allow jurisdictional discovery before dismissing a (portion of) a case like this, but it does not appear that the plaintiff requested same.
I am far from an expert on this, but don't most diversity complaints allege citizenship, LLC membership, PPoB etc. "on information and belief"? Did Iqbal nuke that practice?
He may be a major stickler. But lots of judges take subject matter jurisdiction seriously -- which SCOTUS has repeatedly stated they should.
When I was first starting out, a partner in my firm was giving a presentation on employment law, and asked me to research recent cases for her. I found a Third Circuit case where an employment case had been litigated for five years and gone to trial. Then, on appeal, Third Circuit ruled there was no subject matter jurisdiction, vacated the judgment, and sent the parties to state court for another trip around the merry-go-round. That kind of result haunts many federal judges.
To be clear, my "major stickler" was not intended as criticism of Judge Cogan; he's one of my favorite district judges.
Weren't the 2022 amendments to FRCP 7.1 (requiring citizenship disclosure in diversity cases) supposed to take care of this, without the need to request or order jurisdictional discovery? Are judges just not enforcing the disclosure requirements before dismissing cases?
I think that applies to the party filing the case, not the defendant. The reverse would be true in case of removal.
No, Rule 7.1 disclosures — both the longstanding ones about corporate ownership and the diversity ones — apply to all parties.
My mistake. I was only looking at (a)(2) which seemed to indicate only when the case is filed which indicated plaintiff. I didn't look further to section (b)
1) Based on the docket, the LLC in question hadn't been served, so that rule couldn't be enforced against it.
2) That still goes to the substance of the question; here, Judge Cogan sua sponte dismissed it for being inadequately pleaded. The plaintiff still needed to properly allege jurisdiction before the court gets to the question of whether those allegations have merit.
"From that, plaintiff has inferred that Zaloumis is a Connecticut citizen, although citizenship requires a much more detailed inquiry than residency."
Huh? I thought the 14th amendment provided that persons *were* "citizens . . . of the State wherein they reside." What am I missing?
Reside in the amendment is read as synonymous with domicile. You are domiciled essentially where you intend to remain. But you can temporarily reside elsewhere. The most easy example is that college kids that go out of state usually reside in the state of the university but would still be domiciled at home unless there are other indications they are going to stay in the state of the university. It is also common for some jobs where someone who does travelling for a more sustained job may be there for say 6 months. They reside in the new state at that time but are still domiciled at their permanent home.
From a technical standpoint the judge is correct that residing in Connecticut isn't enough to prove he is a citizen of it at the pleading stage I think he is being a bit harsh on that statement as it is far more likely that a person is currently a resident of their domiciled state than not so it more than meets the plausible inference standard. He is however correct about the rest.
I continue to disagree with the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence holding that a corporation is a distinct legal person constitutional nally entitled to its own constitutional rights in a way that an LLC, partnership. Etc. is not.
In United States v. Craft, the Supreme Court rejected a claim that Michigan’s “tenancy by the entireties” form of property ownership, in which the marriage owns the property as a distinct entity from the husband and wife, protects the property against a federal tax lien against one of the spouses. In doing so, the Court called the venerable idea that a marriage creates something more than just the sum of the spouses “nothing but a “state law fiction” and called the idea of marriage entitling the parties to shield marital property from federal claims against one of the spouses “absurd.”
I think Justice Thomas stated the point well in his dissent when he said while marriage may be nothing more than a “state law fiction,” exactly the same could be said of a corporation or a partnership. And of course, Ogerbefell, whatever else can be said about it, is certainly inconsistent with the idea that marriage is nothing more than a “state law fiction” of no federal significance, and the idea that regarding a marriage as creating something more than the sum of its parts is “absurd.”
My question here is, why should the Supreme Court put so much respect into the sanctity of the separate personhood of corporations, yet turn around and consider the idea that a marriage creates a separate legal personhood meaningless and absurd when doing so happens to interfere with federal tax collection? What warrant is there, what basis in the constitution or the common law, for the Supreme Court to treat one so different from the other?
I think that in fact corporations are creatures of state law with no Platonic constitutional existence. States are free to change the forms of business organizations as they see fit.
For the purposes of diversity, "a corporation shall be deemed to be a citizen of every State and foreign state by which it has been incorporated and of the State or foreign state where it has its principal place of business," 28 USC 1332(c)(1). So Congress has made that call, not SCOTUS.
This bit seems odd to me.
To the extent that "citizenship" exists for an individual person at the state level, isn't it established by residency?
I posted a response to a similar question by Seamus above. Residence is not the same as domicile though will one usually resides in his domicile
I think Rule 27 of civil procedure should be expanded to allow this type of presuit discovery. I don't know that the current rule can accommodate this since it isn't about perpetuating evidence, but maybe it can be stretched, and the the Supreme Court through promulgation can certainly change it without need for congress. Part of the rule is to prevent "failure or delay of justice." Diversity jurisdiction is specifically for the fear that a home court would favor it's citizens of foreigners (here about states not nations). Presuit discovery of the identity of expected defendants to determine if jurisdiction exists seems perfectly reasonable to accomplish this. Rule 27 already requires there be a basis for suit, it isn't about finding facts to state a claim, and those must be disclosed in the application for such a discovery order. So there is already the guardrail in place to prevent fishing expeditions to discover the identity of members just for the sake of it.
The Judge's opinion doesn't quote the passage in Belleville Catering of most interest to lawyers:
"The costs of a doomed foray into federal court should fall on the lawyers who failed to do their homework, not on the hapless clients. Although we lack jurisdiction to resolve the merits, we have ample authority to govern the practice of counsel in the litigation. The best way for counsel to make the litigants whole is to perform, without additional fees, any further services that are necessary to bring this suit to a conclusion in state court, or via settlement. That way the clients will pay just once for the litigation. This is intended not as a sanction, but simply to ensure that clients need not pay for lawyers' time that has been wasted for reasons beyond the clients' control."
Also, there were two jurisdictional issues in Belleville Catering, and the one quoted in the Judge's opinion dealt with an ordinary corporation. The Court's clerks identified the error with a standard on-line search of state corporate databases.
It would seem to me to be appropriate in such a circumstance to allow very limited discovery to determine whether than court had jurisdiction. A simple one question interrogatory, "Does Zaloumis have any members in N.Y.?" would resolve the question of jurisdiction.
"When, as in this case, the jurisdictional question intertwines with the merits of the case, see p. 5, some discovery on the merits may be necessary, and general discovery may be permitted. 4 Moore's Federal Practice ¶ 26.70[2] at 26-520." Wyatt v. Kaplan, 686 F.2d 276, 283 (5th Cir. 1982)
Plaintiff brought this purported diversity case alleging he is a "resident" of Sicklerville, New Jersey.
I've lived in NJ for over 50 years, and this is the first I heard of that municipality. My quick internet search reveals:
Sicklerville is an unincorporated community and census-designated place located within Winslow Township in Camden County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. It was founded in 1851 by John Sickler, who lived in the area when the present-day town was located within Gloucester Township.
I clerked and this came up all the time. We took the same, strict approach as here.