RULING ON MOTIONS TO DISMISS
Thе following ruling adopts the proposed ruling of Magistrate Arthur H. Latimer:
In this civil action grounded in an open-end credit arrangement between the parties, plaintiff’s complaint allеges in separate counts defendant’s failure to provide truth in lending disclosures, cf. 15 U.S.C. § 1640, and its imposition of a finance charge exceeding that permitted by state law, cf. Conn.Gen.Stаt. § 42-133c; defendant has counterclaimed for the balance assertedly due on plaintiff’s account, and the reply in turn charges' — inter alia — violation of § 42-133c as an affirmative defense. With no independent ground of federal subject matter jurisdiction for the wholly state law claims set forth in the complaint’s second count and the counterclaim, defendant has moved to dismiss the formеr and plaintiff the latter. The common question presented is whether the necessary or appropriate consequence of plaintiff’s choice of forum under 15 U.S.C. § 1640(e) fоr the truth in lending claim is this Court’s involvement with an attendant debtor-creditor dispute of no federal significance.
Separately examined, the complaint raises a familiar issue of pendent jurisdiction. The federal court is empowered to hear a state law claim without independent jurisdictional basis but appended to a substantial federal claim if both “derive from a common nucleus of operative fact” and are such that joint resolution would ordinarily be expected,
United Mineworkers of America v. Gibbs,
If defendant’s counterclaim for debt collection stands, however, the basic state law dispute is necessarily at issue in this Court. Indeed, the action’s current scope might not be materially altered in that event by dismissal of the complaint’s pendent Count II, for limiting that pleading to the federal claim would neither affect plaintiff’s reliance on state law as an affirmative defеnse to the counterclaim, nor abridge his right to raise a counterclaim in the reply, see 3 Moore’s Federal Practice ff 13.08 at 13-181 (2d Ed. 1974); if plaintiff was actually under a
duty
to set forth the substаnce of Count II by reply counterclaim, cf.
Semmes Motors, Inc. v. Ford Motor Co.,
The question of ancillary jurisdiction over defendant’s state law counterclaim does not neatly correspond to the balancing process involved in assuming or declining to take jurisdiction of the pendent claim. If the debt counterclaim is thought to arise “out of the transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter of the opposing party’s claim”, Rule 13(a), Fed.R.Civ.P., it is compulsory аnd therefore entertained even without independent jurisdictional
basis, see, e. g.,
United States for the use and benefit of D’Agostino Excavators, Inc. v. Heyward-Robinson Co.,
But does federal counterclaim procedure’s stress on the value of a single proceeding genuinely сompel here a result fundamentally inconsistent with Solevo’s appropriate policy concern that state issues be decided by the state court ?
The'compulsory counterclaim rule expressly contemplates multiple suits in certain circumstances not present in this case; for example, the counterclaim which might otherwise be thought “compulsоry” is sensibly made optional if al
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ready the subject of another pending and earlier-commenced action, as in
Pitts, supra,
cf. Rule 13(a)(1), Fed.R.Civ.P., or when plaintiff’s action has been brought
in rem
or
quasi in rem,
cf. Rulе 13(a)(2), Fed.R.Civ.P. Multiple proceedings are more generally envisaged and frequently required when the defendant’s potential claim against plaintiff for affirmative relief is insufficiently relаted to the complaint, since such a “permissive” counterclaim “not arising out of the transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter of the opposing pаrty’s claim”, Rule 13(b), Fed.R.Civ.P., may not be interposed absent independent jurisdictional foundation, see
United States for the use and benefit of D’Agostino Excavators, Inc. v. Heyward-Robinson Co., supra,
Congressional provision of a private suit remedy was intended to facilitate and strengthen enforcement of credit disclosure standards imposed by the truth in lending law, see
Ives v. W. T. Grant, supra,
at pp. 755-756, standards created “to assure a meaningful disclosure of credit terms so that the consumer will be able to compare more readily the various credit terms available to him and avoid the uninformed use of credit”, 15 U.S.C. § 1601. However significаnt, the federal enactment represents a very limited federal intrusion into credit matters; a regulated creditor’s compliance or noncompliance with the truth in lending disclоsure duty typically does “not affect the validity or enforceability of any contract or obligation under State or Federal law”, 15 U.S.C. § 1610(d), and disposition of the truth in lending claim in this case hаs no bearing on the seriously disputed questions posed by the counterclaim. The link is credit extension, a fact established on the face of the pleadings, but the federal claim аnd state counterclaim do not stand on common ground when realistically assessed; the critical legal inquiry into each “half” of the controversy is so distinct that the parties' disputеs are actually fragmented whether pursued through two actions or as separate aspects of one. In these circumstances, wooden application of thе common transaction label does not yield real judicial economy; any perceived logical nexus is conceptual, abstract, a formal characterizаtion rather than a recognition of concrete advantage to be achieved through single forum adjudication of all the parties’ opposing claims. Even if inappropriate to weigh in the balance those policy considerations against federal court intervention, but cf.
Local No. 11 I.B.E.W. v. G. P. Thompson Electric, Inc.,
The pending motions to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction are accordingly granted.
So ordered.
