Plaintiff-appellant Cathy Glater brought this diversity action in the District Court for the District of New Hampshire against Eli Lilly & Co. (Lilly) to recover monetary damages for injuries allegedly caused by her exposure in útero to diethylstilbestrol (DES) manufactured and distributed by Lilly. By its order dated October 13,1982, the district court granted Lilly’s motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(2) for lack of personal jurisdiction. This appeal followed.
I. Facts and Proceedings Below
The issues in this case stem from the question of whether or not Glater, who had lived in New Hampshire for a period of years beginning in 1975, was a resident and citizen of that state when this action commenced. She filed her complaint with the district court in January 1981. In this complaint she alleged, inter alia, that she was a resident of Hooksett, New Hampshire, and that Lilly was a foreign corporation doing business in the state. Lilly answered that it lacked knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to Glater’s residence, but admitted to doing business in New Hampshire. At her deposition on March 5, 1981, Glater testified that she lived in Hooksett and commuted from there to her job in Burlington, Massachusetts.
More than thirteen months after Glater filed her complaint Lilly, in the course of discovery, received information indicating that Glater actually resided in Lynn, Massachusetts. Further discovery revealed that she had leased an apartment in Lynn beginning in August 1980, five months before filing her complaint in this action. Around this same time Glater, who had been working for the Allstate Insurance Company in Bedford, New Hampshire, transferred to an Allstate office in Burlington, Massachusetts. She maintains that she continued to be a domiciliary and citizen of New Hampshire even after her move to Massachusetts in August 1980. From September to November 1980 she apparently spent several nights a week at a friend’s apartment in Hooksett and from that time through April 1981 she spent several weekends a month there in an effort to maintain her status as a New Hampshire domiciliary. She also points to other factors, such as her driver’s license, auto registration and insurance, and *737 her income tax returns to support her claim of continued New Hampshire citizenship after August 1980 and throughout the course of this litigation.
On June 11, 1982, after taking additional depositions to substantiate Glater’s Massachusetts connections, Lilly moved under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(a) for leave to amend its answer to include the defenses of lack of jurisdiction over the person and improper venue and moved to dismiss under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(2) and 12(b)(3). It denied both that Glater was a New Hampshire resident and that its business activities in New Hampshire were sufficient to confer jurisdiction in this case.
In its order from which Glater now appeals the district court granted Lilly’s motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction and, because it found this issue dispositive, did not reach the question of venue. Glater had objected to the motion to amend on the ground that it was too late at that time to raise these defenses. The district court found, however, that the original pleadings were sufficient, without amendment, to raise the jurisdictional issue because Lilly’s answer that it lacked knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to Glater’s residence constituted a denial of her averment that she resided in New Hampshire.
In its analysis of the jurisdictional question the court noted that the New Hampshire long-arm statute extends jurisdiction over foreign corporations to the constitutional limit. Relying heavily on our opinion in
Keeton v. Hustler Magazine, Inc.,
II. Availability of the Personal Jurisdiction Defense
On appeal Glater argues that Lilly’s answer that it lacked information sufficient to form a belief as to Glater’s residence was not sufficient to raise the defense of lack of personal jurisdiction, that at best this answer only raised a factual question about the plaintiff’s residency. She also argues that under the Federal Rules Lilly had waived its right to raise this defense by not including it in the original answer and that the rules prohibit amending the answer to raise it.
It is settled law that a defendant’s good faith answer that it lacks knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the truth of an averment constitutes a denial.
E.g.,
Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(b); 5 C. Wright & A. Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 1262 (1969). And with respect to a question such as the existence of diversity jurisdiction it seems reasonable that a defendant’s answer that it lacks knowledge on which to form a belief as to plaintiff’s residence is sufficient to raise the issue.
See Barthel v. Stamm,
With respect to the question of personal jurisdiction, however, there is some appeal in Glater’s argument that a response of lack of knowledge to form a belief as to
plaintiff’s
residence does not raise the issue of
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jurisdiction over the
defendant.
1
This argument is bolstered by the fact that Lilly’s subsequent statements made to support its motion for leave to amend its answer clearly showed that it had no intention of raising the jurisdictional issue in its original answer.
Cf. Alger v. Hayes,
Glater cites Federal Rules 12 and 15 to support her argument that Lilly waived the defense of lack of personal jurisdiction by omitting it from its original answer. Indeed, these rules do provide a strict waiver rule with respect to this defense. Rule 12(h)(1) states:
A defense of lack of jurisdiction over the person, improper venue, insufficiency of process, or insufficiency of service of process is waived (A) if omitted from a motion in the circumstances described in subdivision (g), or (B) if it is neither made by motion under this rule nor included in a responsive pleading or an amendment thereof permitted by Rule 15(a) to be made as a matter of course.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(h)(1). It is clear under this rule that defendants wishing to raise any of these four defenses must do so in their first defensive move, be it a Rule 12 motion or a responsive pleading.
See, e.g., Myers v. American Dental Association,
A close reading of Rule 12, however, does reveal an exception to this strict waiver rule that is applicable here. Rule 12(g) operates in conjunction with Rule 12(h) to require that all defenses permitted to be raised by motion must be included in the same motion. This requirement, however, extends only to defenses “then available.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(g). This language of Rule 12(g) logically also applies to Rule 12(h) with the result that under that subsection defendants do not waive the defense of personal jurisdiction if it was not available at the time they made their first defensive move.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(h) advisory committee notes (1966 Amendment) (stating that the waiver provisions reinforce the Rule 12(g) policy forbidding successive motions by imposing waiver as to those specified defenses the defense “then has” but omits from its motion). In the case before us the defense was not originally available to Lilly because Glater’s complaint did not put it on notice that her New Hampshire domicile was at least questionable. It could not waive a defense involving facts of which it was not, and could not have been expected to have been, aware.
See
C. Wright & A. Miller,
supra,
§ 1391, at 853-54 (“Rule 12(h) does not provide for waiver if the omitted defense was unavailable
*739
when the party answered, as might be the case if the complaint does not give defendant sufficient notice that plaintiff is making a certain type of claim.”);
cf. Holzsager v. Valley Hospital,
III. Effect of a Pending Class Action Involving Both Glater and Lilly
Glater is a plaintiff and Lilly a named defendant in the New Hampshire DES class action of Mertens v. Abbott Laboratories, No. 80-223 (D.N.H. filed May 13, 1980; transferred No. 80-0478 D.R.I.). Glater’s motion to join Mertens as a named plaintiff was filed on July 11, 1980, and allowed on July 29,1980. 2 A motion for class status in that case is still pending.
Glater cites
American Pipe & Construction Co. v. Utah,
American Pipe concerned a class action brought under the antitrust laws and that action’s impact on the running of the relevant statute of limitations. The court held as follows:
[A]t least where class action status has been denied solely because of failure to demonstrate that “the class is so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable,” the commencement of the original class suit tolls the running of the statute for all purported members of the class who make timely motions to intervene after the court has found the suit inappropriate for class action status.
American Pipe,
American Pipe offers Glater little aid at this juncture. Even assuming that American Pipe may have some relevance to Glater’s ability to intervene in Mertens or to bring a separate action if she is unable to pursue her claim as a member of the class, American Pipe says nothing about her ability to maintain a separate action while class certification is still pending. The policies behind Rule 23 and American Pipe would not be served, and in fact would be dis-served, by guaranteeing a separate suit at the same time that a class action is ongoing.
In sum, we hold that Lilly did not waive its right to raise the issue of personal jurisdiction and that the pendency of the Mertens class action did not preclude a dismissal of this case.
IV. Personal Jurisdiction Over Lilly
The primary issue in this appeal is that of personal jurisdiction and, as we have noted,
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the district court relied significantly on
Keeton v. Hustler Magazine, Inc.,
These factual configurations resulted in a personal jurisdiction analysis in Keeton, Seymour, and in the district court below which emphasized New Hampshire’s lack of interest in protecting the plaintiffs because of their tenuous connections with the state. It appears likely that the Supreme Court will determine the proper role of these factors in the analysis of jurisdiction when it reviews our Keeton decision. Therefore, we have decided to defer final decision in this case until the Supreme Court has acted in Keeton. Counsel are requested to notify this court when such action takes place. We will retain jurisdiction of this case until Keeton is decided.
Notes
. Of course, this argument loses some merit to the extent that one views the residency of a plaintiff as playing a vital role in the analysis of personal jurisdiction. The Supreme Court may clarify this when it reviews Keeton, a decision which turned on the forum’s interest in protecting an out-of-state plaintiff. See infra Part IV.
. The district court explicitly distinguished this case from Mertens by noting that Glater was a New Hampshire resident when she moved to join the class action.
. The statute of limitations issue in Glater’s case was not addressed below and is not before us on appeal.
