Appealing Waiver-Based Remands


July 30, 2024
By Bryan Lammon

In Abraham Watkins Nichols Agosto Aziz & Stogner v. Festeryga, the Fifth Circuit held that it lacked jurisdiction to review an order that remanded a removed action because the defendant had waived the right to remove. But the panel doubted that doing so was correct. Indeed, the panel seemed almost certain that its decision was wrong. But it was bound by the Fifth Circuit’s decision in In re Weaver, which held that 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d) barred review of such a remand.

The Waiver-Based Remand

Only a little background is necessary. Abrams Watkins started as a Texas state court action involving a variety of business torts. The defendant responded in state court with an anti-SLAPP motion that sought dismissal of the action.

About two weeks later, the defendant removed the action to federal court. But the district court remanded the action after concluding that the defendant waived the right to removal. According to the district court, waiver occurred because the defendant invoked the state court’s jurisdiction by moving to dismiss the action.

The defendant then appealed. But the Fifth Circuit concluded that § 1447 deprived it of appellate jurisdiction.

The Limits on Remand Appeals

With exceptions irrelevant to the present discussion, 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d) generally bars appeals from remand orders:

An order remanding a case to the State court from which it was removed is not reviewable on appeal or otherwise, except that an order remanding a case to the State court from which it was removed pursuant to section 1442 or 1443 of this title shall be reviewable by appeal or otherwise.

The statute’s language would seem to bar all remand appeals. But the Supreme Court has long held that § 1447(d) must be read in the context of the rest of § 1447. So in Thermtron Products, Inc. v. Hermandsdorfer, the Court held that § 1447(d)’s prohibition on remand appeals applied only to remands authorized by the neighboring § 1447(c). And § 1447(c) addresses remands for (1) a lack of subject matter or (2) a procedural defect in removal. Putting subsections (c) and (d) together, the courts of appeals still have jurisdiction to review any other type of remand.

The Fifth Circuit Precedent on Waiver-Based Remand Appeals

The remand in Watkins Nichols was based on waiver: the district court determined that the defendant waived the right to remove by participating in the state court action. The Fifth Circuit recognized that, at least at first (and perhaps also last) look, this remand was not one of those addressed in § 1447(c). So the court would seem to have jurisdiction to review the remand order.

But in 1980’s In re Weaver, the Fifth Circuit said that waiver-based remands are jurisdictional:

Even though the specific language of § 1447(c) was not used, it seems apparent that at the time of the remand order, [the district-court judge] believed the case was not removable, leading to the logical inference that he felt jurisdiction was lacking. Such a holding is within the guidelines of § 1447(c).

Because the waiver-based remand in Watkins Nichols was jurisdictional, § 1447(d) barred review. And no intervening change in law undermined Weaver.

Doubts About Weaver

The Fifth Circuit thus “reluctantly” followed Weaver and dismissed the appeal. But the court (and a concurring judge) doubted that Weaver was correct, going so far as to say that the decision “misunderstood the niceties of waiver, jurisdiction, and their relation to § 1447(c).”

The Fifth Circuit also explained that courts of appeals have split on this issue. The Ninth Circuit agrees with the Fifth. But the Tenth Circuit has rejected Weaver, noting that it could “fathom no explanation” for Weaver’s holding. A divided Seventh Circuit did, too, calling Weaver’s rationale “unsound,” “illogical,” and “unpresuasive.”

So Watkins Nichols might be headed for en banc review. Or it might be a good (and easy) candidate for cert.

Abraham Watkins Nichols Agosto Aziz & Stogner v. Festeryga, 2024 WL 3533052 (5th Cir. July 25, 2024), available at the Fifth Circuit and Westlaw

Final Decisions PLLC is an appellate boutique and consultancy that focuses on federal appellate jurisdiction. We partner with lawyers facing appellate-jurisdiction issues, working as consultants or co-counsel to achieve positive outcomes on appeal. Contact us to learn how we can work together.

Learn More Contact

Related Posts


In People ex rel Harrison v. Express Scripts, Inc., the Ninth Circuit held that an appeal from a remand order does not automatically stay the remand. In so holding, the Ninth Circuit weighed in on the split over whether the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Coinbase, Inc. v. Bielski requires a stay after a remand appeal. […]

Continue reading....

In Abraham Watkins Nichols Agosto Aziz & Stogner v. Festeryga, the en banc Fifth Circuit held that 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d) does not bar review of waiver-based remands. In so holding, the court overruled its decision in In re Weaver.

Continue reading....

In City of Martinsville v. Express Scripts, Inc., a divided Fourth Circuit held that a court must stay proceedings—and not process a remand order—if the defendant appeals before the district court can send the remand order to the state court. The majority thought that the rule of Griggs v. Provident Consumer Discount Co.—particularly as the […]

Continue reading....

In Dubon v. Jaddou, the Fourth Circuit dismissed an appeal from an order remanding a naturalization action to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. The court acknowledged that this remand order would be unreviewable in any future proceedings. But it thought that this lack of review was harmless, as the applicant could eventually obtain judicial […]

Continue reading....

In Roberts v. Smith & Wesson Brands, Inc., the Seventh Circuit affirmed a district court order remanding an action to state court. Although remand orders are generally not reviewable on appeal, the defendants in Roberts had invoked federal-officer removal and thus could obtain plenary review. But the Seventh Circuit seemed to think that this invocation […]

Continue reading....

Recent Posts


This month’s roundup features two decisions on litigants’ attempts to voluntarily dismiss some of their claims. In one, a defendant filed a written, pretrial notice that it abandoned one of its counterclaims. In another, the parties stipulated to a dismissal, but one defendant did not sign the stipulation. In both cases, the court deemed the […]

Continue reading....

In Gessele v. Jack in the Box Inc., the Ninth Circuit held that when a district court alters its judgment by granting a post-judgment motion, the time to appeal runs from the entry of an amended judgment. Unlike orders denying post-judgment motions, the appeal clock does not start with the order itself.

Continue reading....

In Simmons v. USI Insurance LLC, the Eleventh Circuit held that the purported abandonment of a counterclaim before trial was ineffective and thus precluded appellate jurisdiction. The counterclaim was the only theory of relief that had not been resolved at summary judgment or trial. And in a written notice before trial, the defendant had said […]

Continue reading....

September’s biggest development in federal appellate jurisdiction concerned appeals from denials of anti-SLAPP motions under California law. The Ninth Circuit overruled its longstanding rule that defendants can immediately appeal from these denials via the collateral-order doctrine. But only a week later, the Federal Circuit followed that now-overruled caselaw and heard an anti-SLAPP appeal. It will […]

Continue reading....

Last month saw the Ninth Circuit apply its rule that a minute order can count as a separate document for purposes of starting the appeal clock. The Sixth Circuit explained when it cannot review contract-formation issues in an arbitration appeal. And the Fourth Circuit declined to exercise pendent appellate jurisdiction over standing and ripeness issues […]

Continue reading....