Civil Procedure - Federal Flashcards
What is Personal JDX?
Court’s power over the parties.
What is Subject Matter JDX?
Court’s power over the case.
What is the PJ two-step analysis?
1) The exercise of PJ must first fall within a long-arm state statute; and
2) The exercise of PJ must satisfy the Due Process analysis.
For the constitutional analysis, we ask: Does the D have such minimum contacts with the forum so JDX does not offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice?
To answer this question, what set of factors do we assess?
1) Contact
2) Relatedness
3) Fairness
Under the “minimum contacts” element in the PJ analysis, what are two factors that must be addressed?
1) Purposeful availment - the contact must result from D’s purposeful availment (voluntary act); and
2) Foreseeability - is it foreseeable that D could be sued in the forum?
Under the “Relatedness” element in the PJ analysis, what do we ask?
Does Plaintiff’s claim arise from or relate to D’s contact with the forum?
If yes - Specific JDX
If no - investigate if General JDX is possible
For specific PJ JDX, the court must look at the fairness factors to asses whether PJ would be fair or reasonable under the circumstances. What are the three fairness factors?
1) Burden on the D and witnesses (relative wealth of the parties is not determinative)
2) State’s Interest
3) Plaintiff’s Interest
What is General PJ?
Court may have power over a Defendant on a claim that arose anywhere in the world. However, to have general PJ, the D must be at home in the forum.
For General PJ purposes, where is a human “at home”?
Where they are domiciled - Where they reside with the intent to remain indefinitely.
For General PJ purposes, where is a corporation subject to general PJ?
The company must be “at home” in the forum.
1) The State in which it is incorporated; and
2) the State in which it has its principal place of business.
In addition to PJ, the D is entitled to notice that she has been sued. Notice must be “reasonably circulated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the action. In a regular lawsuit, notice consists of two documents that create “Process.” What are they?
1) Summons - A formal court notice of suit and the timing for response;
2) A copy of the complaint.
Who can serve process?
Any person who is at least 18 years old and NOT a party to the action.
When must service process be served?
Service must take place within 90 days of the filing of the complaint.
If a D waives service of process, does he waive any defenses like lack of PJ?
NO
Waiving service of process does NOT waive any defenses like lack of PJ.
Under Subject Matter JDX, there are two main avenues for a federal court to hear a case:
1) Federal Question JDX;
2) Diversity of Citizenship.
What are the two requirements for the diversity of citizenship SMJ?
1) The case is between citizens of different U.S. States (diversity) (any plaintiffs cannot be a citizen of the same State as any defendants; the diversity is determined when the case is filed); AND
2) The amount in controversy exceeds $75,000.
For there to be federal question JDX, the plaintiff’s claim must “arise under” federal law. For FQ JDX, the pleader must follow:
The “Well Pleaded Complaint” rule. The plaintiff’s claim itself MUST “arise under” federal law.
Ask if the plaintiff is enforcing a federal right.
If yes - the case can go to federal court under FQ JDX
If no - the case cannot go to federal court under FQ JDX
What is Removal?
The Defendant might be able to “remove” the case from State court to Federal court.
This is only available to defendants.
What is Remand?
The federal court may “remand” the case down to State court.
When must the defendant remove the case to federal court?
No later than 30 days after service (not filing) of the first paper that SHOWS the case is now removable.
What cases may be removed?
The Defendant may remove a case that meets the requirements for:
1) Diversity of citizenship; OR
2) FQ JDX
There are two limitations to removing a case based solely on diversity of citizenship. What are they?
1) The case should not be removed if any defendant is a citizen of the forum state (the “in-State defendant rule”); AND
2) The case should not be removed more than 1 year after the case was filed in State court.
When a defendant removes to the federal district court “embracing” the State court where the case was filed, does it matter if the venue is proper or not?
NO! IT does not matter if this venue would have been proper under the venue statutes.
Supplemental JDX is not similar to FQ or Diversity of citizenship. What is the main difference?
FQ or Diversity of citizenship get CASES into federal court
Supplemental JDX gets CLAIMS into a federal case, even though the claims cannot use diversity of citizenship or FQ SMJ.
Assuming we want to get a claim into the case through supplemental JDX. To do this, there are two steps:
1) The additional claim must share a “common nucleus of operative fact” (CNOF) with the claim that satisfied federal SMJ. This test is broader than Transaction/occurrence test.
2) If the main claim is valid under diversity of citizenship, then the additional claim may NOT be brought in under Supp JDX if the PLAINTIFF is seeking to bring this claim in. . . this limitation does not apply to defendants.
Even if the requirements for supplemental JDX are met, the court has discretion to decline it. It can do so if the State law claim is complex or State law issues would predominate the case. But the more likely one is this:
It can decline supplemental JDX if the claim on which federal SMJ is based is dismissed early in the case
The Erie doctrine is used in a diversity of citizenship case in federal court where the federal judge must decide a particular issue. She must use the Erie doctrine to determine whether to follow State law or ignore it.
There is a three step approach for Erie questions. What are they?
Step 1: Ask: Is there some federal law on point that directly conflicts with State law? If so, apply the federal law so long as its valid. FRCP are presumptively valid and are ok if they are arguably procedural.
Step 2: If there is no federal law on point, the federal judge must apply State law if the issue to be decided is “substantive.” There are 5 issues that are clearly “substantive” and the federal court must apply State law on these issues:
1) Conflict (or choice) of law rules;
2) Elements of a claim or defense;
3) Statutes of Limitations;
4) Rules for tolling statutes of limitations; AN
5) The standard for granting a new trial because the jury’s damages award was excessive or inadequate.
Step 3: If there is no federal law on point and the issue is not one of the 5 listed above, the federal judge must determine whether the issue is “substantive.” There are three factors to determine this:
1) Outcome determinative: would applying or ignoring the state rule affect the outcome of the case? If so, it’s probably a substantive rule, so the court should use the State law.
2) Balance of Interests: Does either the federal or State system have strong interest in having its rule applied? The one with the greater interest should have its law applied.
3) Avoid forum shopping: If the federal court ignores State law on this issue, will it cause parties to flock to federal courts? If so, then use State law.
What is Venue?
It tells us exactly where to bring the case. In which federal court to bring it in.
The plaintiff may lay venue in any district where:
1) All defendants reside if in the same State (residential venue); OR
2) A substantial part of the claim arose or a substantial part of the property involved in the lawsuit is located (transactional venue).
These rules only apply for cases initially filed in federal court. They do NOT apply if the case was removed from State to federal court. For removed cases, venue is in the federal district embracing the State court where the action was filed.
For venue purposes, where do humans and businesses reside?
1) Humans “resides” in the federal district where she is domiciled (physical presence with intent to remain indefinitely);
2) Businesses resides in all districts where it is subject to PJ for the case.
What is transfer of Venue and what are the requirements?
Transfer goes from one trial court in a judicial system to another trial court in the SAME judicial system.
Original court - “Transferor”
Receiving court - “Transferee”
The Transferee must be a proper venue AND have PJ over the defendant. Must be true without any waiver by the Defendant.
What is Forum Non Conveniens?
Like transfer, Forum Non applies when there is another court that is the center of gravity for the case.
But here, the court cannot transfer the case to that court because the intended transferee is in a different judicial system.
The court invoking Forum Non will stay or dismiss the case.
The filing of the complaint commences an action. The complaint must contain:
1) A statement of grounds of subject matter JDX;
2) A short and plain statement of the claim (must plead sufficient facts to support a PLAUSIBLE claim) showing that the plaintiff is entitled to relief; AND
3) A demand for relief sought.
The plaintiff need NOT allege grounds for PJ or venue.
Rule 12 requires the defendant to respond from a complaint filed and served in one of two ways:
1) By motion; OR
2) By answer.
To avoid default, the defendant must respond no later than 21 days after being served with process. If the D waived service, the defendant has how long from when the plaintiff mailed the waiver form to respond?
60 Days
Some Rule12(b) defenses are WAIVED if not put in the first Rule 12 RESPONSE (motion or answer). They are:
1) Lack of PJ;
2) Improper Venue;
3) Improper Process (a problem with the papers); AND
4) Improper service of process
Some Rule12(b) defenses are NOT waived even if they are not included in the first response. They are:
1) A failure to state a claim and a failure to join an indispensable party. (These motions can be made as late as at trial)
2) A lack of SMJ may be raised at ANY TIME.
An answer is a pleading. The defendant does two things in the answer:
1) Respond to the allegations in the complaint (Admit or deny); and
2) Raise affirmative defenses.
The rule is that the claims by multiple plaintiffs or against multiple defendants must:
1) arise from the same transaction or occurrence (“T/O”); and
2) Raise at least 1 common question of law or fact.
Two things must be true regarding joinder:
1) The joinder must be allowed by the Federal Rules; AND
** 2) There must be SMJ over the case. **
Every single claim in federal court must have SMJ
Under compulsory joinder, the court might force some non-party (“absentee”) to join the case, usually on motion by the defendant. There are three questions to ask:
1) Is the absentee necessary?
2) If the absentee is necessary, can the absentee be joined?; AND
3) If the absentee can’t be joined, can the case proceed anyway?