In its recent per curiam opinion in Rea v. Michaels Stores, Inc., the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit clarified rules and procedures relevant to defendants seeking to remove cases to federal court.

In Rea, the plaintiffs filed a class action alleging that Michaels improperly classified California store managers as exempt from overtime. Michaels removed the action to federal court under the Class Action Fairness Act (CAFA), but the district court remanded the case back to state court because Plaintiffs had expressly waived the right to recover more than $4,999,999.99, meaning that the case fell one-cent shy of the necessary $5 million amount in controversy requirement. After remand, the U.S. Supreme Court decided Standard Fire Ins. Co. v. Knowles, which invalidated purported damage waivers used by plaintiffs to defeat CAFA removal. Michaels once again removed to federal court under CAFA, but the district court deemed Michaels’ attempted removal barred by CAFA’s 30-day rule and found that Michaels failed to show that the amount in controversy exceeded $5 million.

The Ninth Circuit reversed, finding that the California state court’s post-remand decision to certify the class could not defeat federal removal jurisdiction “if jurisdiction was properly invoked as of the time of the filing.” As to Michaels’ failure to remove within 30 days of receiving the complaint, the Ninth Circuit held that that CAFA’s 30-day time period does not start to run until a complaint or an amended pleading, motion, order, or other paper “affirmatively reveals on its face” that the case is removable. Because controlling law generally recognized damages waivers as valid and effective when plaintiffs filed their complaint, the Ninth Circuit ruled that the complaint did not “affirmatively reveal” the facts necessary for federal court jurisdiction and, therefore, did not trigger the initial 30-day removal period. Here, the Court explained, Michaels’ 30-day limit did not commence until the U.S. Supreme Court decided Standard Fire, after which Michaels timely filed for removal. Even so, the Court found that Standard Fire amounted to “a relevant change in circumstances” that justified reconsideration of Michaels’ “successive, good faith petition for removal.”

The Ninth Circuit also held that Michaels satisfied CAFA’s $5 million amount-in-controversy requirement by providing evidence that managers were expected to work at least 45 hours per week and by pointing out that named plaintiffs testified that they actually worked at least 45 hours per week. This, the Court found, was “substantial, plausible evidence” that the amount in controversy could exceed $5 million, despite the fact that Michaels did not proffer evidence that any of the other class members actually worked more than 45 hours per week.

Rea thus fortifies employers’ right to remove class actions under CAFA. Particularly valuable is Rea’s rejection of the “legal certainty” standard for establishing the amount in controversy and holding that defendants can establish the amount in controversy by pointing to plausible, rather than actual, damages. Using such tactics, defendants should have an easier time establishing removal jurisdiction, especially since Rea indicates any plausible showing of an amount in controversy exceeding $5 million effectively shifts the burden to plaintiffs to affirmatively prove that the value of their case is less than $5 million, which few plaintiffs are likely to want to do.