Under the Class Action Fairness Act (CAFA), federal courts have jurisdiction over class action claims. There are exceptions, however, including what is known as the “local controversy exception.”
The plaintiff, Opelousas General Hospital Authority, sued in state court three defendants, located in Texas, Illinois and Louisiana, for violations of the Louisiana Racketeering Act. The defendants removed the case to a federal district court under the Class Action Fairness Act and diversity of jurisdiction. The defendants were able to claim diversity of jurisdiction because they asserted that joinder of the only in-state defendant, LEMIC, was fraudulent. The plaintiffs then attempted to remand the case back to state court, asserting that the case fit within CAFA’s narrow “local controversy exception.”
The “local controversy exception” of the CAFA allows a plaintiff to bring a class action lawsuit in state court rather than federal court when several requirements are satisfied. These requirements are that: 1) more than 2/3 of the proposed plaintiffs (as a class) are citizens of the state in which the action was originally filed; 2) principal injuries resulting from the alleged or related conduct of each defendant occurred in-state, and 3) at least one defendant falls under a very specific category. This category covers defendants who meet all of the following: 1) significant relief is being sought from that defendant, 2) the defendant’s conduct forms a significant basis for the claims, 3) it is a citizen of the originally-filed state, and 4) the principal injuries the plaintiffs suffered happened in the originally-filed state. In such a case, the federal district court will “decline to exercise its jurisdiction” and the case will go back to state court. Additionally, for the 3 years before the original class action is filed, no other similar class action, alleging similar facts, can have been filed against any of the defendants.