American Law Cafe
đď¸ Civil Procedure Spotlight: Jurisdiction, Venue & Removal Explained â How Courts Decide Who Can Hear the Case (and Where It Belongs) In this episode, we break down how courts get authority over a case â and how defendants can move one from state to federal court. Part 1 â Subject Matter Jurisdiction (SMJ) SMJ = a courtâs power over the type of case. Federal courts can only hear cases they have statutory power to hear. * Federal Question (§1331): Case arises under the Constitution, federal law, or treaties. * Diversity (§1332): Parties from different states + amount in controversy > $75,000. * Complete Diversity: No plaintiff can share citizenship with any defendant. * Non-waivable: Can be raised anytimeâif missing, the case is void. Part 2 â Personal Jurisdiction (PJ) PJ = the courtâs power over the defendant. Rooted in due process fairness. * Rule (International Shoe): Defendant must have minimum contacts with the forum so jurisdiction doesnât offend âfair play and substantial justice.â * Specific PJ: Contacts relate to the lawsuit (e.g., contracts, targeted actions, sales). * General PJ: Defendant is âat homeâ â usually the state of incorporation or main office. * Consent & Tag: Defendants can consent by contract or service while present. đ Tennessee Note: NV Sumatra (no PJ over foreign manufacturer); Crouch Consulting (PJ upheld for TN-targeted contract). Part 3 â Venue Venue = which district is the right place for trial. * Proper where any defendant resides (if all in same state) or where key events occurred (§1391). * Transfer (§1404): To another proper district for convenience. * Improper Venue (§1406): Court can dismiss or transfer. * Forum Non Conveniens: Dismiss if another countryâs court is clearly better. đ TN Rule: Real property cases filed where the land lies; transitory actions where the cause arose or defendant resides. Part 4 â Removal (28 U.S.C. §§ 1441â1446) Removal = a defendantâs tool to shift a case from state to federal court. * Only defendants can remove. * Federal court must have original jurisdiction (SMJ). * Forum Defendant Rule: No removal if any defendant is from the forum state. đ§ Mnemonic: âHome field, no removal.â * Unanimity Rule: All served defendants must consent. * Timing: 30 days after service; later-served defendants get their own 30 days. * 1-Year Limit: Diversity removals barred after 1 year unless plaintiff acted in bad faith. đ§ž Remand: Plaintiffs can move to send the case back if removal was improper. * 30 days for procedural defects; anytime for lack of SMJ. đŻ Takeaway Civil Procedure is about power and place: * SMJ = courtâs authority over the case * PJ = courtâs reach over the defendant * Venue = proper location * Removal = defendantâs path to federal court Get any piece wrong â and the case heads right back to state court. đ§ For more clear, law-school-friendly breakdowns, search and subscribe to The American Law CafĂŠ on YouTube. #CivPro #Jurisdiction #Venue #Removal #LawSchool #BarPrep #AmericanLawCafe #FederalCourt  Introductory Music for American Law Cafe. In Jazz Short by moodmode / Vlad Krotov. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2429305/support] đś Intro Music: "In Jazz Short" by moodmode / Vlad Krotov đ Content Created by Heather Mora đď¸ Hosted on Buzzsprout: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2429305 [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2429305]
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