In Re: John Amendt , 169 F. App'x 93 ( 2006 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2006 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    2-16-2006
    In Re: John Amendt
    Precedential or Non-Precedential: Non-Precedential
    Docket No. 05-2458
    Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2006
    Recommended Citation
    "In Re: John Amendt " (2006). 2006 Decisions. Paper 1569.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2006/1569
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    NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 05-2458
    IN RE: JOHN AMENDT; BRUCE APPLEMAN; DAVID ARMBRECHT; JAMES ASHMORE,
    SR.; GEORGE BACSKAI; JOHN H. BEATTY; LYNN BEEKMAN; RAYMOND BEHN;
    WILLIAM BOICE; VICTORIA BOND; CLARENCE BRINKER; THOMAS BRYFOGLE, SR.;
    JAMES BUCHMAN; MYRON BUTLER; JAMES CAHILL, SR.; THOMAS CAHILL; JOHN
    CANAVAN; CHARLES CARSON; DOROTHY CASEY; CHARLES CHIDSEY; DION
    CLARK; FAITH GOGAN; FRANCIS CORTRIGHT, SR.; JOHN CRAIGLE; DELBERT
    CRESSMAN; PAULINE CROSSON; JOHN CSISEK; RICHARD DAILEY; ROBERT
    DAILEY; HAROLD DE LONG; CHARLES DEWEY; PATRICK DINAN; ALBERT DORKO;
    MARLYNN DORKO; GARY EVERITT; ELWOOD EYER; ELWOOD FAHRINGER;
    WILLIAM FAZEKAS; JERRY FLANK; MINNIE FOLWEILER; HAROLD FOSS; JOHN
    FRANK; HAROLD FRANKENFIELD; ROSEMARIE FRASIER; JUNE GITTINS; FRANK
    GLANZ; RONALD GODSHALK; ARNOLD GONZALEZ; ROLLA GREGORY; JOSEPH
    GROMLOWICZ; RAYMOND HAINES; ROBERT HANS; RUSSELL HARING; RONALD
    HART; JACK HATCH; RICHARD HATCH; ROBERT HAWK; FREDERICK HECKMAN;
    LESTER HEINRICH; ALFRED HENDERSHOT; WILLIAM HUGHES; CARL INDERELST;
    JAMES JOHNSON; LAWRENCE JONES; JAMES KENNEDY; GEORGE KINSEY;
    WILLIAM LABAR; FRANCIS LEH; RICHARD LILLY; ROBERT LIPPINCOTT; ADOLPH
    LOCHER, JR.; BARBARA LOSAGIO; CHARLES LUCAS; DONNA LUCAS; RICHARD
    LUCAS; GEORGE MANNERS, JR.; ROBERT MATYAS; MAE MILLER; DOUGLAS
    MOYLE; ELKE NACE; ANNA OVADY; LEE PETTIT; GEORGE PIATT; BERNARD
    PRICE; JOSEPH PUCCIO; HOWARD PYATT; SHIRLEY PYATT; BETTY REESE;
    STANLEY REIGER; CHARLES RODGERS; ANTHONY ROMAGNOLI; ELMER RUSH;
    PAULINE RYAN; ALFRED SAGAZIO; ALEEN SALISBURY; DANIEL SCHAFER;
    ARTHUR SERFASS; ROBERT SHOEMAKER; NORMAN SMITH; ROBERT SMITH;
    RICHARD SNYDER; ROBERT SPILLER; ROGER SPONDER; SHARRON STEFANO;
    DANIEL STILL; ROBERT STOCKER; RUSSELL STORM; RONALD STUEBER; LASZLO
    SZABO; CHARLOTTE TERSIGNI; KENNETH THOMPSON; AUGUSTINE TRINCHERIA;
    SAMUEL UVARY; EDWARD VAN HORN; HAROLD VANSETERS; WILLIAM VENNER;
    MARY VENNER; FRANCIS WALLBILLICH; SANDRA WALLBILLICH; KENNETH
    WEAVER; ZACHARIAH WILLIAMS; FLOYD WISMER; RICHARD YOUPA; DENISE
    YOUPA; REBECCA YOUPA; AARON YOUPA; RICHARD YOUPA, JR.; JOHN ZAGRA;
    GENE ECKERT; EDITH EVERITT; WILLIAM HOLDEN, JR.; HERBERT LAUGHLAND;
    JOSEPH MICKEY; WAYNE MORRIS; GEORGE SNYDER, SR.,
    Petitioners
    Petition for a Writ of Mandamus to the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. No. 04-cv-05299)
    District Judge: Honorable James K. Gardner
    Argued January 18, 2006
    Before: ROTH, FUENTES, and BECKER, Circuit Judges.
    (Filed February 16, 2006)
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    IRA B. SILVERSTEIN (Argued)
    Thorp, Reed & Armstrong
    One Commerce Square, Suite 2010
    2005 Market Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Attorney for Petitioners
    NANCY G. ROSS (Argued)
    MICHAEL T. GRAHAM
    McDermott Will & Emery LLP
    227 West Monroe Street
    Chicago, Illinois 60606
    Attorneys for Respondent
    BECKER, Circuit Judge.
    This case comes to us on a petition for a writ of mandamus. Although the petitioners,
    a group of retirees, brought suit against Bowe Bell + Howell Company (“BB+H”) in the
    Eastern District of Pennsylvania, the District Court transferred the case to the Northern
    2
    District of Illinois, where BB+H had commenced a declaratory judgment action involving
    similar issues and parties a year earlier. Concluding the retirees have failed to meet the
    exacting standard for mandamus, we will deny the petition.
    I. Facts
    The retirees are former hourly employees at BB+H’s facility in Allentown,
    Pennsylvania. They allege that during a labor strike in 2001, Bell & Howell Company (the
    predecessor to BB+H) induced them to retire early, thus freeing the company to hire non-
    unionized employees. At the time of the strike, the retirees’ pension plans provided lifetime
    medical benefits for the employees and their spouses. The retirees allege that they were
    promised that if they retired early, they would retain lifetime benefits; otherwise, they would
    lose these benefits.
    According to the complaint, on January 1, 2004, well after they had retired due to the
    alleged promise of lifetime benefits, BB+H reneged on its promise, reducing benefits for
    retirees younger than 65, and eliminating all health coverage for retirees age 65 and older.
    On November 12, 2004, the retirees brought this action against BB+H in the Eastern District
    of Pennsylvania (the “Pennsylvania action”), alleging violations of the Employee Retirement
    Income Security Act (“ERISA”) and state law. The Pennsylvania action is the only litigation
    before this Court.
    A full year before the retirees commenced the Pennsylvania action, on November 10,
    2003, BB+H brought a declaratory judgment action in the Northern District of Illinois (“the
    3
    Illinois action”), seeking a declaration that it could lawfully modify the retirees’ benefit plans
    (the “Illinois Action”). BB+H also sought to preliminarily and permanently enjoin the
    retirees from asserting claims relating to the plan modifications in other venues. BB+H
    brought this action before the modifications in the benefits plans went into effect. BB+H
    named as defendants the retirees’ union and three retirees as representatives of two defendant
    classes.
    On February 5, 2004, still well before the commencement of the Pennsylvania action,
    the union and two retirees filed a motion to dismiss the Illinois Action, or in the alternative,
    to transfer that case to the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. The District Court for the
    Northern District of Illinois denied the motion. On July 9, 2004, the retirees answered
    BB+H’s complaint in the Illinois action and asserted counterclaims.
    The two actions are mirror images of each other: In the Illinois action, BB+H seeks
    a declaration that the plan modifications were lawful, and in the Pennsylvania action, the
    retirees assert that the plan modifications were unlawful. In fact, the retirees’ counterclaims
    in the Illinois action are almost identical to the claims they now assert in the Pennsylvania
    action.1 The sections listing requested relief are also strikingly similar.
    On March 14, 2005, the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania granted
    BB+H’s motion to transfer the Pennsylvania action to the Northern District of Illinois. The
    1
    The Illinois action counterclaims also include a breach of contract claim omitted in
    the Pennsylvania action claims.
    4
    District Court took note of several factors favoring transfer, including: (1) the modifications
    to the benefits plan occurred in the Northern District of Illinois; (2) most documents and
    witnesses related to BB+H’s decision to modify the plan are located in the Northern District
    of Illinois; and (3) the Northern District of Illinois had a substantial interest in resolving the
    dispute. The District Court stated that the retirees’ causes of action in both cases are “almost
    literally verbatim” and that “the cases are identical, for all practical purposes.” The District
    Court also suggested that in filing the Pennsylvania action, the retirees were attempting to
    make an end run around the Illinois District Court’s refusal to transfer the Illinois Action to
    Pennsylvania.2
    On March 24, 2005, the retirees moved the District Court for the Eastern District of
    Pennsylvania to stay the transfer of the Pennsylvania action to Illinois and to certify the
    transfer order for immediate appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). As of May 5, 2005, the
    District Court had yet to rule on either motion, and the retirees filed a petition for a writ of
    mandamus, asking this Court to order the District Court not to transfer the case. On June 3,
    2005, the District Court refused to certify the appeal and to stay the transfer order.
    II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
    Mandamus is the only conceivable basis for our jurisdiction. See Sunbelt Corp. v.
    Noble, Denton & Assocs., Inc., 
    5 F.3d 28
    , 30 (3d Cir. 1993) (“Mandamus is . . . the
    2
    We reject the contention that the District Court did not independently decide the issue
    but simply deferred to, or considered itself bound by, the Northern District of Illinois
    decision.
    5
    appropriate mechanism for reviewing an allegedly improper transfer order.”) (citations
    omitted).3
    The requirements for issuing a writ of mandamus place a heavy burden on the retirees.
    “Generally, a writ will only issue if the district court did not have the power to enter the
    order, and then ‘only if the party seeking the writ meets its burden to demonstrate that its
    right to the writ is clear and indisputable.’” 
    Id. (citation omitted).4
    Thus, “[a] writ of
    mandamus is an extraordinary remedy.” 
    Id. III. Analysis
    The statute governing transfers of venue, 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a), provides: “For the
    convenience of parties and witnesses, in the interest of justice, a district court may transfer
    any civil action to any other district or division where it might have been brought.” The
    burden of showing a need for transfer is on the movant, in this case, BB+H. See Jumara v.
    State Farm Ins. Co., 
    55 F.3d 873
    , 879 (3d Cir. 1995).
    We have provided an extensive list of factors that may be relevant to transfer of
    3
    Appeal through the ordinary statutory channel, 28 U.S.C. § 1291, is not available
    because an order transfering venue is not a “final decision” under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. See In
    re Fed.-Mogul Global, Inc., 
    300 F.3d 368
    , 378 (3d Cir. 2002) (“It is a well-established rule
    in this circuit (and generally) that orders transferring venue are not immediately appealable.”)
    (citations and quotations omitted); Sunbelt 
    Corp., 5 F.3d at 30
    . Likewise, because the
    District Court denied the retirees’ motion to certify the transfer order for appeal, 28 U.S.C.
    § 1292(b) does not provide an avenue to this Court.
    4
    A petitioner seeking a writ of mandamus must also show that there is no adequate
    alternative remedy. See Sunbelt 
    Corp., 5 F.3d at 30
    . The retirees have met this requirement
    because an appeal from a final judgment of the transferee forum (in this case, the Northern
    District of Illinois) “is not an adequate alternative to obtain the relief sought.” 
    Id. 6 venue:
    (1) the plaintiff’s choice of forum; (2) the defendant’s choice of forum; (3) where the
    claim arose; (4) “convenience of the parties as indicated by their relative physical and
    financial conditions”; (5) “the convenience of the witnesses—but only to the extent that the
    witnesses may actually be unavailable for trial in one of the fora”; (6) the location of books
    and records; (7) the enforceability of the judgment; (8) practical considerations that could
    expedite or simplify trial; (9) the level of court congestion in the two fora; (10) “the local
    interest in deciding local controversies at home”; (11) the public policies of the fora; and (12)
    in a diversity case, the familiarity of the two courts with state law. 
    Id. at 879-80.
    Here, the most important factor is the avoidance of duplicative litigation: Adjudicating
    almost identical issues in separate fora would waste judicial resources. The retirees waited
    an entire year from the time BB+H commenced the Illinois action to file the Pennsylvania
    action. By this time, the Illinois District Court had denied the retiree’s motion to transfer the
    Illinois action to Pennsylvania. Thus, by bringing the Pennsylvania action, the retirees
    effectively sought to relitigate the Illinois District Court’s refusal to transfer the case to
    Pennsylvania. The District Court refused to sanction this strategy, which it characterized as
    “a second bite at the apple.”
    Because the remaining factors are at best a draw, they provide no reason to allow
    essentially identical litigation to proceed in separate fora, much less to grant the extraordinary
    remedy of mandamus. The plaintiffs (the retirees) chose to litigate in the Eastern District of
    Pennsylvania but the defendant (BB+H) would prefer to litigate in the Northern District of
    7
    Illinois. Elements of the retirees’ claims arose in each of the two fora: While the alleged
    promise that the retirees would retain lifetime benefits occurred in the Eastern District of
    Pennsylvania, BB+H amended the plan in the Northern District of Illinois.
    Turning to the convenience of the parties and witnesses, the retirees state that it would
    be difficult to travel from Pennsylvania to Illinois. However, it appears unlikely that more
    than a few of the retirees would be called upon to testify at trial.5 While some BB+H
    employees with relevant knowledge (presumably, knowledge relating to the terms of the
    retirees’ early retirement) live in Pennsylvania, BB+H employees involved in the amendment
    of the benefits plan reside in Illinois. Documents relevant to the decision to modify the
    benefits plan are located in the Northern District of Illinois.
    The interests of the two fora in deciding the controversy appear roughly equal because
    the retirees live in Pennsylvania, but BB+H is headquartered in Illinois. BB+H’s Allentown
    facility has been significantly reduced, and the retirees’ former union no longer represents
    the bargaining unit at this facility.
    In short, even if we were to consider the transfer order de novo, the factors present
    here would not justify allowing the same case to be litigated in both Pennsylvania and
    Illinois. Therefore, the retirees do not even come close to meeting the exacting standard for
    a writ of mandamus. Their right to relief is certainly not “clear and indisputable.” Sunbelt
    5
    Moreover, any depositions of the retirees will be taken in Pennsylvania, proximate
    to their homes.
    8
    
    Corp., 5 F.3d at 30
    .
    As the retirees contend, this case presents a variation on our ordinary consideration
    of factors relevant to a transfer of venue. The retirees are the defendants in the Illinois
    action, even though they are the “natural” plaintiffs, that is, the parties who allege that they
    have been wronged. The retirees contend that by bringing a declaratory judgment action in
    Illinois, BB+H acted as an “artificial” plaintiff and effectively deprived the “natural”
    plaintiffs of their opportunity to select the presumptive forum.
    We are unimpressed by this contention. The retirees’ best case is ACF Industries LLC
    v. Chapman, No. 4:03CV1765, 
    2004 WL 3178257
    (E.D. Mo. Aug. 26, 2004), but even this
    case—a not precedential opinion of another Court—bears only a superficial resemblance to
    the case at bar. In the Eastern District of Missouri, ACF initiated a declaratory judgment
    action asserting that it did not breach fiduciary duties to retirees when it modified a benefits
    plan. Then, in the Southern District of West Virginia, the retirees filed a suit similar to the
    Pennsylvania action in this case, asserting that the benefits modification was unlawful. 
    Id. at *1-*2.
       The District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri transferred ACF’s
    declaratory judgment suit to West Virginia, even though the declaratory judgment action was
    filed first. 
    Id. at *2-*3.
    This case differs from Chapman in two critical respects. First, the District Court in
    Chapman was acting within its discretion to decide a transfer motion in the first instance,
    whereas this case comes to us on a petition for an extraordinary remedy, a writ of mandamus.
    9
    Second, in Chapman, the retirees responded promptly to the declaratory judgment action,
    waiting less than two months to bring their own suit. 
    Id. at *2.
    Here, the retirees waited an
    entire year, by which time the Illinois District Court had denied their motion to transfer the
    Illinois action to Pennsylvania.
    Considering the importance of avoiding duplicative litigation, the weakness of the
    factors favoring litigation in Pennsylvania, and the extraordinary hurdles that the retirees
    must surmount in order to justify a writ of mandamus, we will deny their petition.
    10