Lorita Savoie v. Huntington Ingalls, Inc. , 817 F.3d 457 ( 2016 )


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  •      Case: 15-30514   Document: 00513434249     Page: 1   Date Filed: 03/22/2016
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    No. 15-30514                          March 22, 2016
    Lyle W. Cayce
    LORITA M. SAVOIE; MARCIA SAVOIE MEDLIN; CRAIG M. SAVOIE; Clerk
    TANIA SAVOIE ALEXANDER; RODNEY A. SAVOIE; GRETA SAVOIE
    BOUDOIN; DALE J. SAVOIE,
    Plaintiffs - Appellees
    v.
    HUNTINGTON INGALLS, INCORPORATED, formerly known as Northrop
    Grumman Shipbuilding, Incorporated, formerly known as Northrop
    Grumman Ship Systems, Incorporated, formerly known as Avondale
    Industries, Incorporated, formerly known as Avondale Shipyards,
    Incorporated, formerly known as Avondale Marine Ways, Incorporated;
    ALBERT L. BOSSIER, JR.; J. MELTON GARRETT; ONEBEACON
    AMERICA INSURANCE COMPANY, as Successor to Commercial Union
    Insurance Company and Employers Commercial Union Insurance Company;
    PENNSYLVANIA GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY, formerly known as
    American Employers' Insurance Company,
    Defendants - Appellants
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Louisiana
    Case: 15-30514      Document: 00513434249         Page: 2    Date Filed: 03/22/2016
    No. 15-30514
    Before CLEMENT, GRAVES, and COSTA, Circuit Judges.
    COSTA, Circuit Judge:
    From 1952 through 1976, the great majority of ocean-going vessels built
    at Avondale Shipyard 1 in Louisiana fulfilled contracts from the federal
    government.      The specifications for these Navy and Coast Guard vessels
    required asbestos insulation through at least 1968. In this lawsuit brought by
    survivors of a worker who allegedly contracted mesothelioma while working at
    the shipyard during this time, the question is whether strict liability claims
    based on the existence of asbestos at the shipyard give rise to federal
    jurisdiction under the federal officer removal statute.
    I.
    Joseph Savoie was employed at the shipyard between 1948 and 1996.
    During his tenure there, Savoie worked both as a clean-up laborer, which
    involved cleaning up various insulation materials, and as a painter–blaster on
    vessels the shipyard constructed for the Navy and Coast Guard. The contracts
    between the shipyard and the government listed numerous specifications,
    some of which mandated that the shipyard use asbestos in the vessels’ thermal
    insulation. The Navy utilized a quality control system to ensure that the
    shipyard complied with all contractual requirements, and the shipyard was
    required to certify compliance for each stage of a particular vessel before the
    government would release even a single installment payment.
    The Plaintiffs contend that although the government supervised the
    construction of the vessels to ensure that they were in compliance with the
    contractual requirements, the government did not control the shipyard’s safety
    1 At the time Savoie was employed at the shipyard it was owned by Avondale.
    Avondale has a long history of different titles, but Huntington Ingalls, Inc. is the current
    successor in interest and one of the Defendants in this action. For clarity, we refer to
    Avondale and its successors as “the shipyard.”
    2
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    department. The Defendants counter that the Navy inspectors were heavily
    involved in overseeing the construction process and had final control over any
    safety issues that arose.
    Savoie ultimately contracted mesothelioma, allegedly as a result of
    asbestos exposure from working on these vessels. Before his death, he filed
    this suit in state court. He brought numerous negligence claims, such as
    failure to warn, failure to take reasonable precautions, and failure to use
    nonasbestos products when permitted by contract. He also brought strict
    liability claims. He passed away just a month after filing suit. His wife and
    children substituted as plaintiffs.
    The Defendants 2 timely removed the case under the federal officer
    removal statute, but the Plaintiffs sought remand. The district court construed
    all of the Plaintiffs’ claims as negligence claims. It then found that federal
    jurisdiction did not exist because the shipyard retained discretion in its safety
    policies and could have complied with both the government’s requirements for
    the vessels’ construction and its state law duties of care.
    II.
    Orders remanding a case to state court are generally not reviewable. See
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1447
    (d). The statute governing removal procedure provides for
    only two exceptions: remand orders involving certain civil rights cases, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1443
    , and remand orders involving the federal officer removal statute,
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1442
    . See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1447
    (d).
    2  The shipyard and its successors, as well as various insurance company defendants,
    jointly removed this action. Our analysis focuses on the shipyard because it is the defendant
    that had the contractual relationship with the government.
    3
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    Our unusual ability to review a remand order in this context reflects the
    importance Congress placed on providing federal jurisdiction for claims
    asserted against federal officers and parties acting pursuant to the orders of a
    federal officer. See Watson v. Philip Morris Cos., 
    551 U.S. 142
    , 147 (2007);
    Winters v. Diamond Shamrock Chem. Co., 
    149 F.3d 387
    , 398 (5th Cir. 1998)
    (both noting that the Supreme Court has long required “liberal” construction
    of the statute). The reasons for federal jurisdiction in cases against federal
    officers and their agents borrow from the rationales for both diversity and
    federal question jurisdiction. 3 See Watson, 
    551 U.S. at 150
     (describing the
    purposes of federal officers’ right to remove cases to federal court). As with
    diversity jurisdiction, there is a historic concern about state court bias. See 
    id.
    (“State-court proceedings may reflect ‘local prejudice’ against unpopular
    federal laws or federal officials.” (quoting Maryland v. Soper (No.1), 
    270 U.S. 9
    , 32 (1926))); Willingham v. Morgan, 
    395 U.S. 402
    , 405 (1969) (“Obviously, the
    removal provision was an attempt to protect federal officers from interference
    by hostile state courts.”). As with federal question jurisdiction, there is a desire
    to have the federal courts decide the federal issues that often arise in cases
    involving federal officers.      See Watson, 
    551 U.S. at 150
     (emphasizing the
    importance of “federal officials [having] a federal forum in which to assert
    federal immunity defenses”); see also 14C Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R.
    Miller, FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 3726 (4th ed. 2015) (noting that
    3  The federal officer removal statute actually has a more venerable lineage than the
    general federal question jurisdiction statute. The first federal officer removal statute was
    enacted in 1815 to address state court claims brought by shipowners against federal customs
    officials in New England states that opposed a trade embargo with England enacted during
    the War of 1812. See Watson, 
    551 U.S. at
    147–48 (citing Customs Act of 1815, ch. 31, § 8, 
    3 Stat. 198
    ). It has since been amended a number of times. 
    Id.
     148–49. In contrast, aside from
    its inclusion in the Judiciary Act of 1801, which was repealed the next year, the general
    federal question jurisdiction statute has only been on the books since 1875. See Richard H.
    Fallon, Jr., et al., HART AND WECHSLER’S THE FEDERAL COURTS AND THE FEDERAL SYSTEM
    34, 905 (5th ed. 2003).
    4
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    one of the statute’s “basic purposes” is to ensure federal officers have a “federal
    forum in which to assert federal immunity defenses”).
    Given these purposes, it is not surprising that the statute speaks in
    broad language allowing the removal of any state case commenced against:
    The United States or any agency thereof or any officer (or any
    person acting under that officer) of the United States or of any
    agency thereof, in an official or individual capacity, for or relating
    to any act under color of such office or on account of any right, title
    or authority claimed under any Act of Congress for the
    apprehension or punishment of criminals or the collection of the
    revenue.
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1442
    (a)(1). Recognizing that such “broad language is not limitless,”
    even in a statute that should be afforded a “liberal construction,” the Supreme
    Court has articulated limits based on the statute’s “language, context, history,
    and purposes.” Watson, 
    551 U.S. at 147, 157
     (holding that a company does not
    “act[] under” an officer of the United States merely because it is subject to
    federal regulation). The result is a three-part inquiry for determining whether
    federal officer removal is proper that aims to ensure that removal occurs when
    there is a “federal interest in the matter.” Winters, 
    149 F.3d at 398
     (quoting
    Willingham, 
    395 U.S. at 406
    ).
    The first question is whether the defendant seeking to remove is a
    “person” within the meaning of the statute. 
    Id.
     At first glance, this may seem
    like a difficult hurdle, as a private shipyard does not seem like the typical
    “federal officer” defendant that might face state court hostility.        Yet the
    Supreme Court has long recognized that the removal statute also applies to
    private persons and corporate entities “‘who lawfully assist’ the federal officer
    ‘in the performance of his official duty.’” Watson, 
    551 U.S. at 151
     (quoting
    Davis v. South Carolina, 
    107 U.S. 597
    , 600 (1883)). The current statute reflects
    this understanding with its “or any person acting under that officer” provision.
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1442
    (a)(1). Whether the shipyard is a “person” entitled to invoke
    5
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    the statute thus turns out to be the easiest inquiry. See Winters, 
    149 F.3d at 398
     (holding that a government contractor that supplied Agent Orange was a
    “person” that could invoke federal officer removal statute). Indeed, the parties
    agree that the shipyard and its executive officers constitute “persons” under
    the statute.
    The additional two inquiries are the subject of this appeal. First is
    whether the federal government was directing the defendant’s conduct and
    whether that federally-directed conduct caused the plaintiff’s injuries. See
    Bartel v. Alcoa S.S. Co., 
    805 F.3d 169
    , 172–74 (5th Cir. 2015) (explaining that
    mere federal involvement does not satisfy the causal nexus requirement;
    instead, the defendant must show that its actions taken pursuant to the
    government’s direction or control caused the plaintiff’s specific injuries). This
    “causal nexus” requirement is the one the district court found lacking. As a
    result, it did not reach the final inquiry, which is whether the defendant
    asserts a colorable federal defense. 
    Id. at 172
    .
    Before reviewing the district court’s finding of no causal nexus, we note
    another manifestation of the statute’s “liberal construction” that impacts our
    analysis. Although the principle of limited federal court jurisdiction ordinarily
    compels us to resolve any doubts about removal in favor of remand, see Acuna
    v. Brown & Root, Inc., 
    200 F.3d 335
    , 339 (5th Cir. 2000), courts have not
    applied that tiebreaker when it comes to the federal officer removal statute in
    light of its broad reach, see Watson, 
    551 U.S. at 147
     (emphasizing the statute’s
    “broad language”).    We thus review the district court’s decision de novo,
    without a thumb on the remand side of the scale. See Winters, 
    149 F.3d at 398
    (“[The] right [of removal] is not to be frustrated by a grudgingly narrow
    interpretation of the removal statute.”); see also Durham v. Lockheed Martin
    Corp., 
    445 F.3d 1247
    , 1252 (9th Cir. 2006) (“We take from [the statute’s] history
    a clear command from both Congress and the Supreme Court that when federal
    6
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    officers and their agents are seeking a federal forum, we are to interpret
    section 1442 broadly in favor of removal.”); City of Cookeville, Tenn. v. Upper
    Cumberland Elec. Membership Corp., 
    484 F.3d 380
    , 390 (6th Cir. 2007) (the
    same) (citing Durham).
    With respect to the negligence claims, we agree with the district court
    that the federal government’s mandate of asbestos insulation did not cause the
    shipyard to engage in the challenged conduct. Negligence claims typically
    involve allegations that the defendant acted unreasonably or failed to act when
    it would have been reasonable to take some additional measures. Most of the
    claims in this case are of the latter sort. For example, the Savoies allege that
    the shipyard is liable for “[f]ailing to provide clean, respirable air and proper
    ventilation,” “[f]ailing to provide necessary showers and special clothing,” and
    “[f]ailing to warn of the dangers of exposure to asbestos.”
    Just last year, we decided that nearly identical allegations of a failure to
    warn or take safety precautions concerning asbestos did not challenge actions
    taken under color of federal authority even though the government was
    responsible for the existence of the asbestos. See Bartel, 805 F.3d at 174.
    Bartel was brought against the operators of ships owned by the Navy. We
    explained that although the federal government had installed asbestos in the
    ships, it had not prevented the operators from warning plaintiffs about the
    dangers of asbestos or from adopting safety procedures to minimize the
    workers’ asbestos exposure. Id. at 173–74. We thus affirmed the remand of
    the case to state court for lack of a causal nexus. Id. at 174–75.
    We are not persuaded by the Defendants’ attempt to distinguish Bartel
    based on either the nature of the negligence claims alleged here or the degree
    of the shipyard’s discretion. The Savoies’ allegations are essentially the same
    as the ones made in Bartel alleging “failure to warn, failure to train, and failure
    to adopt procedures for the safe installation and removal of asbestos.” Id. at
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    173. As in Bartel, the shipyard has failed to demonstrate that its contracts
    with the government prevented it from taking any of these protective measures
    identified by Plaintiffs. The only evidence it presented to the contrary is the
    affidavit of Edward Blanchard, the shipyard’s supervisor and executive officer,
    who stated that the Navy inspected and oversaw the vessels for safety. But
    even he later clarified in a deposition that no federal officer “directed or
    controlled the [the shipyard’s] [s]afety [d]epartment.” Other evidence in the
    record, including testimony from the shipyard’s own safety officer, confirms
    that the government had no control over the shipyard’s safety procedures. At
    most, the Navy may have had the power to shut down projects that failed to
    comply with federal regulations, but the Navy neither imposed any special
    safety requirements on the shipyard nor prevented the shipyard from imposing
    its own safety procedures.
    The Savoies’ negligence claims thus challenge discretionary acts of the
    shipyard free of federal interference. As a result, the government’s directions
    to the shipyard via the contract specifications did not cause the alleged
    negligence, and those claims do not support removal.
    This analysis was sufficient to affirm the remand order in Bartel because
    the negligence claims were the only ones we considered. The plaintiffs had
    also argued that a maritime claim for unseaworthiness, which is essentially a
    strict liability claim, 4 could satisfy the causal nexus requirement, but they did
    so too late having raised the issue only on appeal. Id. at 174. We thus had no
    4  See also McBride v. Estis Well Serv., L.L.C., 
    768 F.3d 382
    , 394 (5th Cir. 2014)
    (Clement, J., concurring) (observing that “unseaworthiness was ‘an obscure and relatively
    little used remedy’ until it became a strict liability action during the 1940s” (quoting Miles v.
    Apex Marine Corp., 
    498 U.S. 19
    , 25 (1990)).
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    occasion to determine whether federal officer removal was proper for
    unseaworthiness or other strict liability causes of action. 
    Id.
    This case requires us to answer that question as the Savoies assert strict
    liability causes of action under Louisiana law. LA. CIV. CODE ANN. art. 2317.
    And removal of the entire case is appropriate so long as a single claim satisfies
    the federal officer removal statute. Wright & Miller, § 3726.
    The district court found that the claims the Savoies labeled as “strict
    liability” causes of action in actuality alleged negligence. This is true of some
    of the claims given that label such as the one that alleges that the shipyard
    “was aware or should have been aware of the dangerous condition presented by
    exposure to asbestos” yet “failed and/or willfully withheld from Mr. Savoie
    knowledge of the dangers to his health from exposure to asbestos fiber.”
    (emphasis added). But others—“All defendants had care, custody, and control
    of the asbestos, which asbestos was defective and which presented an
    unreasonable risk of harm, which asbestos resulted in the injury of Mr. Savoie
    and for which these defendants are strictly liable under Louisiana law”—are
    based on the mere use of asbestos on the ships and therefore fit the strict
    liability label.
    As for these claims that sound in strict liability, there is an additional
    wrinkle. The wrongful death claims cannot be based on strict liability. Those
    claims are governed by the law in effect at the time the decedent passes away.
    See Landry v. Avondale Indus., Inc., 
    877 So. 2d 970
    , 972 (La. 2004). “Strict
    liability was abolished in Louisiana in 1996. See, e.g., Small v. Baloise Ins. Co.
    of Am., 
    753 So. 2d 234
    , 240 (La. App. 4 Cir. 1998) (“‘By requiring knowledge or
    constructive knowledge under Article 2317.1, the Legislature effectively
    eliminated strict liability under Article 2317, turning it into a negligence claim.
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    This substantive change should not apply retroactively . . . .’” (quoting Frank
    L. Maraist & Thomas C. Galligan, LOUISIANA TORT LAW § 14–1, at 331 (1996))).
    But as a survival action allows survivors to bring the claims the decedent
    could have asserted were he still alive, survival claims based on asbestos
    exposure are governed by the law in effect when the exposure occurred. See,
    e.g., Rando v. Anco Insulations Inc., 
    16 So. 3d 1065
    , 1072 (La. 2008) (explaining
    that “law effective on the date of [] significant exposure to asbestos” applies to
    claim alleging occupational asbestos exposure) (internal quotations omitted).
    Because Savoie worked at the shipyard for almost half a century prior to
    Louisiana’s abolition of strict liability, that pre-1996 law governs.
    So the question becomes: do the survival claims alleging strict liability
    based on mere use of asbestos at the shipyard give rise to federal jurisdiction?
    The Savoies argue that even under the old “strict liability” regime, Louisiana
    law still required a showing that the defendant failed to act with reasonable
    care, which would bring the claims under Bartel. But our best reading of
    Louisiana law is that a strict liability plaintiff need only prove the following:
    (1) that the asbestos-containing products that caused his damages were in the
    “care, custody, and control” of the defendant; (2) that the asbestos-containing
    products had a “vice, ruin, or defect that presented an unreasonable risk of
    harm”; and (3) “that the vice, ruin, or defect was the cause-in-fact of the
    plaintiff’s damages.” Dupree v. City of New Orleans, 
    765 So. 2d 1002
    , 1007–08
    & n.5 (La. 2000) (stating the elements for a strict liability claim prior to 1996
    and recognizing that the exercise of reasonable care was not a defense to strict
    liability); see also Wilde v. Huntington Ingalls, Inc., 616 F. App’x 710, 715 (5th
    Cir. 2015) (per curiam); Watts v. Ga.-Pac. Corp., 
    135 So. 3d 53
    , 59 (La. App. 1
    Cir. 2013) (recognizing that occupational exposure to asbestos can give rise to
    10
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    strict liability claims). 5 Of course, strict liability is not automatic liability as
    the “unreasonable risk of harm” element requires cost-benefit analysis to
    establish a defect. W. Page Keeton et al., PROSSER AND KEETON ON THE LAW
    OF TORTS    §§ 78, 99, at 555–56, 695 (5th ed. 1984). Yet that defect question is
    determined at the time of design or manufacture, with downstream users like
    a shipyard becoming responsible once that defect is proven (thus the “strict
    liability” label). Id. § 99, at 695–96.
    This analysis of the elements of strict liability under pre-1996 Louisiana
    law largely resolves the “causal nexus” inquiry for federal officer removal. The
    strict liability claims rest on the mere use of asbestos, and that use at the
    shipyard was pursuant to government directions via contract specifications.
    Unlike claims based on negligence, those based on strict liability do not turn
    on discretionary decisions made by the shipyard. See Bartel, 805 F.3d at 172–
    74 (discussing what is required to support a claim for negligence and how a
    strict liability claim for unseaworthiness might be different).
    We have previously recognized that strict liability claims support federal
    officer removal when the government obligates the defendant to use the
    allegedly defective product that causes the plaintiff’s harm. See Winters, 149
    5 The Plaintiffs rely heavily on language from Kent v. Gulf States Utilities Co., 
    418 So. 2d 493
     (La. 1982) that suggests that reasonable care is a defense to strict liability, which
    would make their claims based on strict liability essentially indistinguishable from their
    negligence claims for the purposes of this case. But that language was merely dicta, and
    other language in the same opinion suggests that reasonable care would not be a defense to
    a strict liability claim. See 
    id. at 497
     (“Under strict liability concepts, the mere fact of the
    owner’s relationship with and responsibility for the damage-causing thing gives rise to an
    absolute duty to discover the risks presented by the thing in custody.”). Indeed, that case did
    not even rest on a decision about strict liability, but on negligence because the defendant had
    actual knowledge of the risk of harm. See Hebert v. Gulf States Utilities Co., 
    426 So. 2d 111
    ,
    114 (La. 1983) (noting that Kent was a negligence case). And in any event, the Louisiana
    Supreme Court’s more recent decision almost two decades later in Dupree is binding on this
    court. See Ford Motor Co. v. Dall. Power & Light Co., 
    499 F.2d 400
    , 410 n.17 (5th Cir. 1974)
    (noting that when interpreting state laws, federal courts are “Erie-bound” by the state
    supreme court’s most recent authority).
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    F.3d at 398–400. In Winters, the plaintiff brought strict liability claims against
    chemical manufacturers for producing Agent Orange, a toxic herbicide that the
    government used during the Vietnam War to quickly defoliate large areas in
    order to gain military advantage. Id. at 390, 399. The plaintiff claimed that
    she was exposed to Agent Orange while working as a nurse in Vietnam and
    that it caused her terminal cancer. Id. at 390. In finding federal officer
    removal proper, we concluded that the government’s detailed specifications
    and supervision over Agent Orange’s production, packaging, and delivery, as
    well as the compulsion under threat of criminal sanctions to meet the
    government’s specifications, established that the defendants had “acted
    pursuant to federal direction and that a direct causal nexus exist[ed] between
    the defendants’ actions taken under color of federal office and [the plaintiff’s]
    claims.” Id. at 399–400; see also Bartel, 805 F.3d at 173 (characterizing the
    causal nexus in Winters as resting on these grounds).
    That causal relationship also exists here between the government’s
    requirements that the shipyard use asbestos in constructing its Navy and
    Coast Guard vessels and Savoie’s asbestos exposure while working on those
    same vessels. Like the chemical manufacturers in Winters, the shipyard was
    compelled to meet the government’s detailed specifications for what products
    and materials could be used in the construction of its vessels. And “the only
    products that [the shipyard] could have used to insulate pipes . . . [as required
    by contract] on ships it built for the Navy through mid-1969 contained
    asbestos.”   As in Winters, the government exercised supervision over the
    shipyard’s work to ensure compliance with contractual requirements. And
    although the shipyard did not face criminal sanctions for failing to meet the
    government’s specifications as the manufacturers in Winters did, the shipyard
    was contractually required to comply and could receive no payments until it
    certified that all contractual requirements had been met.         Thus it is the
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    government’s detailed specifications, to which the shipyard was contractually
    obligated to follow, that required the use of asbestos that allegedly caused
    Savoie’s death. This is enough to show a causal nexus between the Savoies’
    strict liability claims and the shipyard’s actions under the color of federal
    authority. The district court erred in finding that this requirement was not
    satisfied.
    This does not necessarily mean that removal was proper. Recall a third
    requirement, whether the defendant possesses a colorable federal defense. The
    shipyard proposes two: the federal contractor defense, see Boyle v. United
    Technologies Corp., 
    487 U.S. 500
    , 512–13 (1988) (recognizing for the first time
    the federal contractor defense and setting forth its elements), and a preemption
    defense under the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, see 
    33 U.S.C. § 905
    (a)      (employer   immunity    provision),    § 933(i)   (co-employee
    immunity provision).
    As the district court never had the opportunity to consider whether these
    defenses are colorable, we will remand to allow it to do so in the first instance.
    See, e.g., Humphries v. Elliott Co., 
    760 F.3d 414
    , 417–18 (5th Cir. 2014)
    (remanding for consideration of the colorable federal defense requirement
    when the district court had not reached the issue); Cf. Robertson v. Exxon Mobil
    Corp., — F.3d —, 
    2015 WL 9592499
    , at *3 (5th Cir. Dec. 31, 2015) (remanding
    to district court to determine whether other exceptions to jurisdiction under
    CAFA apply where district court had not reached such arguments). As only
    the survival claims alleging strict liability satisfy the first two requirements of
    federal officer removal, it is only defenses to those claims—that is, defenses
    existing under the law that existed when Savoie was exposed to asbestos—that
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    should be considered in determining whether the shipyard asserts colorable
    federal defenses. 6
    ** *
    For these reasons, we VACATE the district court’s remand order and
    REMAND the case for resolution of the remaining jurisdictional requirement.
    6 This means that Defendant’s preemption defense is governed by the law at the time
    Savoie was exposed to asbestos, which occurred before the Louisiana Worker’s Compensation
    Act was amended in 1989 to eliminate any concurrent coverage between that Act and the
    federal Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act. See La. Rev. Stat. 23:1035.2
    (providing that “[n]o compensation shall be payable in respect to the disability or death of
    any employee covered by . . . the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Worker’s Compensation Act, or
    any of its extensions . . .”).
    14