Gloria DEAN; Eunice Aldridge; Richard F. Aldridge; Dorothy Cook; Dwight Cook; Carolyn Sue Delaney; Debra Dove; James Dove; Carolyn Durst; Jo Ann Killmon; Charles Killmon; Sharena Montaigne; Doug Montaigne; Deborah Redman; Carolyn Ridenour; Irvin Ridenour; Melissa Robin; Phyllis Stewart; Charles Stewart; Rose Wolf; Carolyn Talghader, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. PILGRIM‘S PRIDE CORPORATION; Gilmer Industries, Incorporated, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 04-1054.
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
Argued: Oct. 28, 2004. Decided: Jan. 26, 2005.
395 F.3d 471
Before WIDENER and GREGORY, Circuit Judges, and HAMILTON, Senior Circuit Judge.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge GREGORY wrote the opinion, in which Judge WIDENER and Senior Judge HAMILTON joined.
OPINION
GREGORY, Circuit Judge:
This case finds its origins in a personal injury suit brought in federal district court in the Western District of Virginia by individuals working at Pilgrim‘s Pride Corporation (“Pilgrims Pride“), owner of a poultry processing plant located in Moorefield, West Virginia. Approximately one year after plaintiffs filed suit, the federal district court in the Western District of Virginia granted a voluntary dismissal under
I.
On October 27, 1999, five plaintiffs filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia against Pilgrim‘s Pride, WLR, Inc., Wampler Foods, Inc.,1 and Gilmer Industries, Inc. (“Virginia suit“). Plaintiffs asserted that they were exposed to toxic gases at the West Virginia poultry plant. Subsequently, plaintiffs amended their complaint and added fifteen additional plaintiffs, bringing the number of plaintiffs to twenty. Over the objections of defendants, plaintiffs requested a voluntary dismissal under
Notes
(1) there were too many potential plaintiffs who have come forward, but are on a waiting list for, and [have not yet undergone] a medical examination to determine whether they should actually be added to [the] case as named plaintiffs, and (2) plaintiffs’ counsel is in need of and seeking competent co-counsel, but co-counsel is hesitant to join [the] federal lawsuit.
J.A. 31.
The magistrate judge recommended plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss be granted and that plaintiffs be required to refile their action in federal court. Both parties filed objections to the magistrate judge‘s report and recommendation. Plaintiffs’ objections were centered on the requirement that they refile their claims in federal court. Specifically, plaintiffs argued:
[t]he first reason for why the Plaintiffs must be able to refile in state court is the statute of limitations. By the calculations of Plaintiffs’ counsel, the statute of limitations for a number of the current Plaintiffs has run during the pendency of the present suit. Under West Virginia‘s saving statute, the Plaintiffs would have up to a year to refile their lawsuit. In federal court they have no such right. An action dismissed without prejudice does not toll the statute of limitations.
J.A. 102. The district court granted plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss and did not require plaintiffs to refile their suit in federal court. Defendants filed an appeal to this court and in an unpublished per curiam opinion we affirmed the district court‘s decision.
The identical plaintiffs who filed the Virginia suit filed the present lawsuit in state court in West Virginia, asserting the same personal injury claims as were asserted in the Virginia suit.2 Defendants subsequently removed the case to the Northern District of West Virginia based on diversity jurisdiction.3 Plaintiffs filed a motion to remand and defendants filed motions to dismiss.
Defendants argued that the statute of limitations had expired and that West Virginia‘s savings statute which gives a plaintiff a year to refile a lawsuit “if the initial pleading was timely filed and: (i) the action was involuntarily dismissed for any reason not based upon the merits of the action,”
II.
The raising of the statute of limitations as a bar to plaintiffs’ cause of action constitutes an affirmative defense and may be raised by motion pursuant to
The record in this case shows that both parties were given a reasonable opportunity to present evidence upon which the trial court could properly determine whether summary judgment should be entered. Therefore, it is proper for this court on appeal to consider this as a motion for summary judgment. Plante v. Shivar, 540 F.2d 1233 (4th Cir.1976). Appellate courts review grants of summary judgment de novo. Higgins v. E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co., 863 F.2d 1162, 1166-67 (4th Cir.1988). Accordingly, the narrow questions before us on de novo review are whether any genuine issues of material fact exist for the trier of fact, and if not, whether the district court erred in applying the substantive law. Charbonnages de France v. Smith, 597 F.2d 406, 414 (4th Cir.1979); See also
III.
It is undisputed that West Virginia substantive law applies in this case and that the statute of limitations in a personal injury action is two years. See
Plaintiffs contend that this court must apply the version of the statute that was available on August 11, 2000, the date plaintiffs moved for dismissal of the Virginia suit. In August 2000, before the revised statute was in effect,4 West Virginia‘s savings statute stated in relevant part:
If any action or suit . . . commenced within due time . . . should be arrested or reversed on a ground which does not preclude a new action or suit for the same cause, or if there be occasion to bring a new action or suit by reason of such cause having been dismissed for want of security for costs, or by reason of any other cause which could not be plead in bar of an action or suit, . . . in every such case, notwithstanding the expiration of the time within which a new action or suit must otherwise have been brought, the same may be brought within one year after such abatement, dismissal or other cause, or after such arrest or reversal of judgment or decree, or such loss or destruction, but not after.
Plaintiffs assert that their attorney‘s admission that he accidently misinterpreted the West Virginia law supra when he pursued the voluntary dismissal in the district court in Virginia establishes that plaintiffs did not intend to voluntarily abandon their previous lawsuit. Thus, “the mistake or inadvertence of plaintiffs’ counsel negate[s] the required intent to abandon necessary for a dismissal to be ‘voluntary’ under West Virginia law.” J.A. 23.
Plaintiffs aver that Crawford v. Hatcher, 804 F.Supp. 834, 837 (D.W.Va.1992), supports their position. In dicta, the court in Crawford suggests that there is
a valid practical rationale for holding that the savings statute prevents dismissal in instances of mistake, inadvertence or simple neglect, but not where the original suit has been abandoned. The person who suffers when a suit is barred by the statute of limitations is the plaintiff. Mistake, inadvertence and neglect are more likely to be the fault of counsel than of the party. Conversely, in most cases of abandonment of a cause of action, the client will have participated in that decision. Thus, refusing to apply the savings statute in the former case is to punish the party for the fault of his counsel, while in the latter case we simply hold him to the consequences of his own conscious decision.
Id. at 838. The “mistake” the court in Crawford is referring to is one of negligence or inadvertence. In Crawford, the plaintiffs’ case was dismissed by the court because the plaintiffs failed to serve the defendant within the statutorily required time. The court found that even prior to the 2001 revision, a “line of cases has developed in which the West Virginia Supreme Court has held that a voluntary dismissal by plaintiff of his original action takes the case out of the protection of the savings statute.” Id. at 837. The court held that “‘voluntary’ dismissals should be confined to those cases in which the plaintiff has specifically or by implication abandoned his original action . . . . while plaintiff has in some respects been less than diligent, his lack of diligence never manifested, or even suggested, an intention to give up his original suit” against the defendant. Id. Here, there was no inadvertence, lack of diligence, or simple neglect. Thus, we find that plaintiffs intended to dismiss their Virginia suit.
Moreover, longstanding West Virginia case law does not support plaintiffs’ assertion. Unlike this case, in all of the cases where West Virginia‘s savings statute has been held to be applicable, there was an element of inaction on the part of the plaintiffs or erroneous action by the court that caused the suit to be dismissed. Crawford, 804 F.Supp. at 835 (finding that plaintiff‘s failure to effect service within the original 120-day time period was not a voluntary dismissal, because it was based on the inadvertent inaction of plaintiff‘s counsel);
Thus, West Virginia case law held in August 2000, as it does now, that West Virginia‘s savings statute applies only where a dismissal is the result of a plaintiff‘s mistake or inadvertence due to inaction or lack of diligence by the party, or where an error of law is made by the court. Crawford, 804 F.Supp. at 837. Plaintiffs in this case clearly intended to voluntarily dismiss their Virginia suit, there was no inadvertence, and their counsel‘s misinterpretation of West Virginia law does not negate that intent.
Plaintiffs not only filed a motion to voluntarily dismiss their Virginia suit, clearly a volitional action, they also opposed defendants’ appeal of the grant of dismissal in this court. West Virginia courts have repeatedly held that “a dismissal of an action which will save a second action from the effects of a statute of limitations must not be the result of voluntary action on the part of plaintiff, or must not amount to an abandonment of the action by the plaintiff.” Henthorn v. Collins, 146 W.Va. 108, 118 S.E.2d 358, 360 (1961); Armor v. Michelin Tire Corp., 923 F.Supp. 103, 108 (D.W.Va.1996) (concluding that “[b]ecause the Complaint in this action was filed more than two years after the accident at issue, Plaintiffs’ claims are barred by
Plaintiffs repeatedly argue that neither the Fourth Circuit, the district court in West Virginia, nor the West Virginia Supreme Court has ever specifically addressed plaintiffs’ question of whether the mistake or inadvertence of plaintiffs’ counsel can negate the intent to abandon that is necessary to make a dismissal voluntary. Put simply, plaintiffs are mistaken. The district court in West Virginia‘s findings of fact and conclusions of law aptly answer plaintiffs’ question. Specifically, the district court states that “Plaintiffs’ prosecution of their motion to voluntarily dismiss
Accordingly, we find that plaintiffs’ counsel‘s misinterpretation of West Virginia‘s savings statute does not negate the voluntary dismissal and intended abandonment of plaintiffs’ Virginia suit. Consequently, having abandoned their original suit, West Virginia‘s savings statute,
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
ROGER L. GREGORY
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
