FOR PUBLICATION FILED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS SEP 8 2020
MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
CLAYTON SALTER, individually, and on No. 20-55709
behalf of all others similarly situated,
D.C. No.
Plaintiff-Appellee, 2:20-cv-00479-JFW-JPR
v.
OPINION
QUALITY CARRIERS, INC., an Illinois
Corporation; QUALITY DISTRIBUTION,
INC., a Florida Corporation,
Defendants-Appellants.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Central District of California
John F. Walter, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted August 11, 2020
Pasadena, California
Before: Diarmuid F. O'Scannlain and Consuelo M. Callahan, Circuit Judges, and
Michael H. Watson,* District Judge.
Opinion by Judge Callahan
Clayton Salter, a truck driver, filed this putative class action against Quality
Carriers, Inc. and Quality Distribution, Inc. (collectively “Quality”), alleging that
*
The Honorable Michael H. Watson, United States District Judge for
the Southern District of Ohio, sitting by designation.
Quality failed to provide truck drivers with meal breaks, rest periods, overtime
wages, minimum wages, and reimbursement for necessary expenditures as required
by California law. The crux of Salter’s claim is that Quality misclassified the truck
drivers as independent contractors rather than employees. In January 2020,
Quality removed the action to the United States District Court for the Central
District of California asserting that the amount in controversy exceeded $5 million.
Salter filed a motion to remand to state court. The district court granted the motion
finding that the declaration submitted by Quality failed to adequately show that the
amount in controversy exceeded $5 million. We hold that Salter challenged the
form, not the substance, of Quality’s showing, and the form of that showing was
sufficient under our case law. Accordingly, we vacate the remand order and
remand this case to the district court.
I
In October 2019, Clayton Salter filed a class action lawsuit against Quality
in the Los Angeles Superior Court, alleging that Quality misclassified its truck
drivers as independent contractors, rather than employees. The complaint asserted
claims under California law for: (1) failure to provide required meal periods; (2)
failure to provide required rest periods; (3) failure to pay overtime wages; (4)
failure to pay minimum wages; (5) failure to pay all wages due to discharged or
quitting employees; (6) failure to maintain required records; (7) failure to provide
2
accurate itemized statements; (8) failure to indemnify employees for necessary
expenditures incurred in discharge of duties; (9) unlawful deductions from wages;
and (10) unfair and unlawful business practices. Quality was served on October
18, 2019.
In January 2020, Quality filed a notice of removal with the district court
invoking federal court jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C § 1332(d), the Class
Action Fairness Act of 2005 (CAFA).1 Section 1332(d)(2) provides that a district
court “shall have original jurisdiction of any civil action in which the matter in
controversy exceeds the sum or value of $5,000,000, exclusive of interest and
costs.” Salter moved to remand the case to state court asserting that Quality’s
notice of removal failed to demonstrate that at least $5 million was in controversy.
Quality responded by submitting a declaration by Cliff Dixon, its Chief
Information Officer, in support of its assertion that the amount in controversy
exceeded $5 million.
Dixon’s declaration states that he has been the Chief Information Officer
since February 2018, has personal knowledge and understanding of company
practices and records, and is familiar with Quality’s record keeping programs.
According to Dixon, those records reflect that: (1) between October 2015, and
1
Salter challenged the timeliness of the notice of removal in the district court,
but the district court did not reach this issue, and we decline to consider it in the
first instance on appeal.
3
January 2020, “approximately 118 Contractors performed work in connection with
one of [Quality’s] California terminals”; (2) “[o]ne hundred and six or 89.8% of
the Contractors are California residents as determined by their mailing addresses”;
and (3) “approximately 186 Contractors who were connected with [Quality’s]
“independently owned California terminals received settlement statements between
October 3, 2015 and November 9, 2019.” The critical paragraphs of Dixon’s
declaration state that Quality’s records indicated that between October 2015 and
November 2019 it deducted over $14 million from the truck drivers’ weekly
settlements, including a total of $11,512,642.46 for fuel purchases alone. Dixon’s
declaration further states that based on the records maintained by Quality as part of
the International Fuel Tax Agreement, of a total of approximately 105,177, 266
miles reported driven during the relevant time period, approximately 67, 376,290
miles, or 64% were driven in California.2
The district court found that the notice of removal assumed that Quality had
deducted in excess of $5 million for fuel, insurance, maintenance, repairs, and tax
expenses. The court concluded that the “unsupported and conclusory statements in
Dixon’s declaration are insufficient to establish that the amount in controversy
2
Because the deductions for fuel far exceed the $5 million jurisdictional
threshold, we need not consider the other deductions mentioned in Dixon’s
declaration. Even if the fuel deductions are reduced to reflect only those miles
driven in California, they still exceed $5 million.
4
exceeds $5 million.” The court noted that “Dixon fails to attach a single business
record, spreadsheet, or other supporting document to his declaration to corroborate
his testimony.” It further noted that although Dixon states he is familiar with
Quality’s record keeping program, “absent from his declaration is any attestation
as to precisely what these records include or whether he actually reviewed any
records before his declaration was drafted.” Addressing Quality’s damage
calculations, the district court noted that Quality “simply assumes” that Salter
“seeks the return of 100 percent of the deductions made . . . without setting forth
any basis in Plaintiff’s Complaint or otherwise supporting that assumption.”
II
We review a district court remand order de novo. Greene v. Harley-
Davidson, Inc., 965 F.3d 767, 771 (9th Cir. 2020); Ibarra v. Manheim Inv., Inc.,
775 F.3d 1193, 1196 (9th Cir. 2015); Abrego v. Dow Chem. Co., 443 F.3d 676, 679
(9th Cir. 2006).
III
A.
CAFA gives federal courts jurisdiction over specified class actions if the
amount in controversy exceeds $5 million.3 28 U.S.C § 1332(d). In order to
3
The statute imposes other criteria such as the putative class having more
than 100 members and the parties being minimally diverse, see 28 U.S.C. §
1332(d)(2), (d)(5)(3), but they are not at issue in this case.
5
remove a class action filed in state court to federal court, the defendant must file “a
notice of removal signed pursuant to Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure and containing a short and plain statement of the grounds for removal.”
28 U.S.C. § 1446(a). Where “it is unclear or ambiguous from the face of a state-
court complaint whether the requisite amount in controversy is pled, the removing
defendant bears the burden of establishing, by a preponderance of the evidence,
that the amount in controversy exceeds the jurisdictional threshold.” Fritsch v.
Swift Transp. Co. of Ariz., LLC, 899 F.3d 785, 793 (9th Cir. 2018) (quoting Urbino
v. Orkin Servs. of Cal., Inc., 726 F.3d 1118, 1121-22 (9th Cir. 2013).
The Supreme Court in Dart Cherokee Basin Operating Sys. Co., LLC v.
Owens, 574 U.S. 81, 83 (2014), considered the question: “To assert the amount in
controversy adequately in the removal notice, does it suffice to allege the requisite
amount plausibly, or must the defendant incorporate into the notice of removal
evidence supporting the allegation?” The Court answered that “[a] statement
‘short and plain’ need not contain evidentiary submissions.” Id at 84. The Court
noted that “no antiremoval presumption attends cases invoking CAFA, which
Congress enacted to facilitate adjudication of certain class actions in federal court.”
Id. at 89. The Court further explained that where a plaintiff contests a defendant’s
allegation concerning the amount in controversy, both sides may “submit proof and
the court decides, by a preponderance of the evidence, whether the amount-in-
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controversy requirement has been satisfied.” Id. at 88.
Following Dart, we held that when the claimed amount in controversy is
challenged “CAFA’s requirements are to be tested by consideration of real
evidence and the reality of what is at stake in the litigation, using reasonable
assumptions underlying the defendant’s theory of damages exposure.” Ibarra, 775
F.3d at 1197-98. Developing this reasoning further in Arias v. Residence Inn by
Marriott, 936 F.3d 920 (9th Cir. 2019), we stated:
First, a removing defendant’s notice of removal “need not contain
evidentiary submissions” but only plausible allegations of the
jurisdictional elements. Second, when a defendant’s allegations of
removal jurisdiction are challenged, the defendant’s showing on the
amount in controversy may rely on reasonable assumptions.
Id. at 922 (quoting and citing Ibarra, 775 F.3d at 1197-99).
B.
This appeal focuses on what a defendant must show for removal of a class
action under CAFA when the amount in controversy is not clear from the
complaint. Here, because the amount in controversy was not clear from Salter’s
complaint, Quality submitted Dixon’s declaration to show that more than $5
million was in controversy. The district court, however, held that “[t]he
unsupported and conclusory statements in Dixon’s declaration are insufficient to
establish that the amount in controversy exceeds $5 million.” In support of the
district court, Salter notes, quoting Abrego, 443 F.3d at 682, that “the removing
7
defendant has ‘always’ borne the burden of establishing federal jurisdiction,
including any applicable amount in controversy requirement.” He further argues
that pursuant to Leite v. Crane Co., 749 F.3d 1117, 1121 (9th Cir. 2014), Quality
“must support [its] jurisdictional allegations with competent proof, under the same
evidentiary standard that governs in the summary judgment context.”
According to Salter, Quality failed to meet this standard by offering only a
short declaration by one of its employees and not providing a single business
record to support that declaration. He contends that the district court properly
rejected the declaration because evidence submitted at summary judgment must
satisfy the “best evidence rule,” which requires that a party provide “the original of
a writing, recording, or photograph” to “prove the contents thereof.” Salter argues
that because the best evidence rule applies whenever the contents of a document
are sought to be proved, a declarant may not simply testify to the contents of a
document, he must actually produce the document for it to be considered.
Salter fails to grasp the import of Leite. It was not a CAFA case, but instead
concerned the federal officer removal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1442(a)(1). More
importantly, Leite recognized the difference between “facial” and “factual” attacks
on jurisdictional allegations. “A ‘facial’ attack accepts the truth of the plaintiff’s
allegations but asserts that they ‘are insufficient on their face to invoke federal
jurisdiction.’” 749 F.3d at 1121 (quoting Safe Air for Everyone v. Meyer, 373 F.3d
8
1035, 1039 (9th Cir. 2004)). For a facial attack, the court, accepting the allegations
as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in the defendant’s favor, “determines
whether the allegations are sufficient as a legal matter to invoke the court’s
jurisdiction.” Id. A factual attack, by contrast, “contests the truth of the plaintiff’s
factual allegations, usually by introducing evidence outside the pleadings.” Id.
When a factual attack is mounted, the responding party “must support her
jurisdictional allegations with ‘competent proof’ . . . under the same evidentiary
standard that governs in the summary judgment context.” Id. (citation omitted).
Here, Salter mounted only a facial attack, rather than a factual attack. In
other words, he has not really challenged the truth of Quality’s “plausible
allegations.” He did not question that there are over a hundred contractors who
performed work for Quality between October 2015 and January 2020. Nor did he
dispute that Quality deducted over $11 million from the weekly settlements for
fuel purchases.4 Salter did not assert that Quality misinterpreted the thrust of his
complaint and did not offer any declaration or evidence that challenged the factual
4
Salter did argue that deductions related to work performed outside of
California were not covered. But this is not a meaningful challenge because the
amount deducted for fuel alone is considerably more than $5 million, even when
adjusted to discount for miles driven outside of California. Furthermore, because
the deductions for fuel exceed $5 million, we need not consider the sufficiency of
the allegations concerning the other deductions.
9
bases of Quality’s plausible allegations.5
We hold that the district court erred by applying the standard for reviewing a
factual attack on jurisdiction to Salter’s facial attack on Quality’s presentation.
Salter did not challenge the rationality, or the factual basis, of Quality’s assertions.
Instead, he argued only that Quality “must support its assertion with competent
proof.” But such a challenge is foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Dart and our opinion in Arias. In Dart, the Supreme Court indicated that a
defendant “may simply allege or assert that the jurisdictional threshold has been
met,” 574 U.S. at 88-89, and in Arias we held that a removing defendant’s notice
of removal “‘need not contain evidentiary submissions’ but only plausible
allegations of jurisdictional elements.” Arias, 936 F.3d at 922 (quoting Ibarra, 775
F.3d at 1197);. see also Ehrman v. Cox Commc’ns, Inc., 932 F.3d 1223, 1227-28
(9th Cir. 2019) (holding that a defendant seeking to remove under CAFA should
not have been required to present evidence in support of its jurisdictional
allegations when the plaintiff asserted a facial, rather than a factual, challenge to
the notice of removal).
We therefore hold that the district court erred in treating Salter’s attack on
5
In contrast, in Ibarra, we found that the defendant’s interpretation of the
plaintiff’s complaint was unreasonable. Ibarra, 775 F.3d at 1199 (“Because the
complaint does not allege that Manheim universally, on each and every shift,
violates labor laws by not giving rest and meal breaks, Manheim bears the burden
to show that its estimated amount in controversy relied on reasonable assumptions.
10
Quality’s presentation as a factual, rather than facial, challenge. The district court
faulted Quality’s presentation as relying on the “unsupported and conclusory
statements in Dixon’s declaration.” But that is the inherent nature of “plausible
allegations”: they rely on “reasonable assumptions.” Arias, 936 F.3d at 922.
Salter, however, has not challenged any of Quality’s essential assumptions or
shown that any one was unreasonable. Accordingly, because Quality only needed
to “include a plausible allegation that the amount in controversy exceeds the
jurisdictional threshold,” Dart, 574 U.S. at 89, the district court’s remand order is
vacated and this matter is remanded to the district court.
VACATED and REMANDED
11