The district judge dismissed Shah’s suit for failure to state a claim, precipitating this appeal, which presents a number of procedural issues. According to the allegations of the complaint, stripped of extraneous detail, the plaintiff and a partner had leased space from the defendant for the operation of two gift shops in hotels owned by the defendant in Chicago. The defendant decided to merge the two hotels, which were next door to each other at 505 *280 and 535 North Michigan Avenue in Chicago, and convert the two gift shops into a single, larger gift shop to serve the merged facility. Under the lease, which continued despite the merger, the lessee was required to pay for the renovation necessary to create the new store. When the lease (which had been renewed once) expired, the plaintiff (who had broken with his partner and become the sole lessee) informed the defendant that he wanted to renew it. The defendant did not respond, and instead “contracted with Caucasian individuals, who had no prior relationship with Defendant and who had no knowledge of the store’s functions .... Defendant’s decision to select less qualified and knowledgeable Caucasian individuals to lease it’s [sic] business premises when other non-Caucasian individuals [viz. the plaintiff] were available with more qualifications is clearly discriminatory when based on race and national origin” and “is in violation of Illinois Public Policy,” which “dictates that such corporate decisions as the one set forth and described in this complaint should not be based solely on race or national origin.” As a detail we note that the reference to racial discrimination is inaccurate, since Shah is an Indian (from India — not an American Indian) and Indians are Caucasians. But we take the complaint to be alleging that his national origin is different from that of the Caucasians to whom the space he had renovated was let.
The complaint was originally filed in an Illinois state court, and was removed to federal district court by the defendant on the basis of diversity of citizenship. Four days later the district judge dismissed the complaint on his own initiative without a statement of reasons except to remark that the dismissal was “without prejudice to the filing of any appropriate amended federal complaint.” Shah’s lawyer took this to mean that he should recaption the complaint to indicate that his suit was now in federal court and to include federal jurisdictional allegations to help the court satisfy itself that the case was indeed removable. This was a curious reaction, since it is the defendant’s burden to establish that a case is removable to federal court,
Workman v. United Parcel Service, Inc.,
Shah’s lawyer told the defendant’s lawyer he wouldn’t be able to attend the September 25 motion call and asked the lawyer to ask the judge to set a briefing schedule for the 12(b)(6) motion. When the motion was called on September 25, the defendant’s lawyer duly relayed the *281 request for a briefing schedule. The judge responded by ordering the complaint dismissed, though without prejudice. He gave no reason for the dismissal, or for making it without prejudice, saying only that the plaintiff had “until October 17, 2001 to file a motion for reconsideration with case authority” and that failure to do so would result in the dismissal’s becoming a dismissal with prejudice. On October 17 the plaintiffs lawyer filed a motion for reconsideration in which he stated that discrimination in a real estate transaction violates the Illinois Human Rights Act. 775 ILCS 5/3-102. But he failed to file the required notice of presentment, though he had been warned by the defendant’s lawyer that failure to file such a notice was a ground under Rule 78.2 for “striking” (actually for denying, but that is what he meant) the motion. The defendant moved to “strike” the motion for reconsideration on that ground, and the district court granted the motion.
The order granting the motion to strike was docketed on November 29 and the notice of appeal was filed on December 28. The defendant argues that the appeal, insofar as it seeks to challenge the dismissal of the suit back in September rather than just the denial of the motion for reconsideration, is untimely because the notice of appeal was filed more than 30 days after the dismissal was docketed (which was on September 26). But an order dismissing a suit without prejudice is not a final, appealable order unless it is apparent that the district court has finished with the case.
Strong v. David,
The striking of the motion for reconsideration was a harsh sanction, possibly unreasonably so, see
Goss Graphics Systems, Inc. v. DEV Industries, Inc., supra, 261
F.3d at 627; cf.
Davis v. Ruby Foods, Inc., supra,
The most important question presented by the appeal is whether the complaint stated a claim. The fact that the judge dismissed the amended complaint on the basis of the defendant’s 12(b)(6) motion that erroneously argued that a complaint governed by the federal civil rules must plead facts and offer statutory or other legal authority suggests that the judge too may misconceive the pleading requirements under these rules. And by failing to explain the grounds for his action he violated 7th Cir. R. 50, which requires a district judge to “give his or her reasons” for resolving a claim on the merits or terminating a suit.
Members v. Paige,
The civil rules, as both the Supreme Court and this court have emphasized repeatedly, e.g.,
Swierkiewicz v. Sorema N.A.,
Shah’s complaint alleges that he had a lease with the defendant pursuant to which he invested money in renovating space for a gift shop and the defendant refused to renew the lease, in effect confiscating the improvements that the plaintiff had made through his renovations, because of animosity to people born in India. If the complaint had stopped there, it clearly could not have been dismissed consistent with Rule 8 of the civil rules. True, the defendant might be quite unsure what statute, state or federal, or common law principle the conduct alleged in the complaint might violate, but he could smoke out the plaintiffs theory of the case by serving a contention interrogatory on him.
Ryan v. Mary Immaculate Queen Center,
The complication here is the plaintiffs confusing reference to “Illinois Public Policy,” combined with the inapt reference in the motion to reconsider (the motion the district judge denied) to the Illinois Human Rights Act, and the astonishing answer that the plaintiffs lawyer gave us at argument when asked what his legal theory was: his answer was that it was fraud. Had the plaintiff alleged not that the defendant had violated “Illinois Public Poli
*283
cy” but that he had violated the Rule Against Perpetuities or the Geneva Conventions, the district judge would have been within his rights in dismissing the suit as frivolous. The complaint would fail, in the most literal sense, to state a claim upon which relief might be granted. But that is not quite this case. The reference to “Illinois Public Policy” could be intended to invoke Illinois statutory and common law principles (not necessarily limited to the Human Rights Act) that would create a remedy for someone denied a contractual advantage on grounds of national origin, although we do not know whether such a remedy is available under Illinois law. And with a little research the plaintiffs lawyer would have discovered 42 U.S.C. § 1982, which forbids discrimination against racial and related minorities in the sale and lease of real estate.
Shaare Tefila Congregation v. Cobb,
But we think he should have an opportunity to try to show that the complaint has a legal basis. The dismissal was premature and the case must be remanded. But we emphasize that the defendant is entitled to be supplied by the plaintiff one way or another with a road map of the plaintiffs suit so that he can know how to defend itself. We have suggested that the simplest way to do this is either for the judge to ask the plaintiff for a legal memorandum or for the defendant to serve the plaintiff with a contention interrogatory.
Reversed and RemaNded.
