ORDER
In this action before the court 1 pursuant to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e et seq., plaintiff sought recovery against her employer, defendant Pioneer Logging Machinery, Inc. (hereinafter “Pioneer”), for Pioneer’s failure to reinstate plaintiff to her position after she had taken a maternity leave of absence. Plaintiff also asserted in her second amended complaint four state law claims against Pioneer and/or LeGrand White and Sara Rabón, both employees and agents of Pioneer who were originally named as defendants, and alleged that this court had jurisdiction over such claims based on the.doctrine of pendent jurisdiction. Although the question of the court’s jurisdiction to hear plaintiff’s state claims was addressed in defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment, the court also raised the jurisdictional question sua sponte, thus obviating any need to respond to plaintiff’s contention that defendants had waived their right to challenge the court’s jurisdiction.
On November 18,1982, the court concluded that it was without power to adjudicate plaintiff’s state law claims and that, even assuming that it had jurisdiction, as a matter of discretion, it would decline to exercise such power. Accordingly, for the reasons set forth and the authority cited herein, the court dismissed from this action the pendent claims and defendants White and Rabón.
In addition to the Title VII claim, the plaintiff’s second amended complaint contained the following four state-law claims for relief:
1. Alleged breach of an oral contract by defendant Pioneer relating to Pioneer’s claimed promise to reinstate plaintiff after her maternity leave in return for plaintiff’s locating and training her temporary replacement (second cause of action);
2. Alleged tortious interference with the aforementioned oral contract between plaintiff and Pioneer by defendant Rabón (third cause of action):
3. Alleged tortious interference by Pioneer with an oral contract between plaintiff and Rabón based on the claimed promise of Rabón to give up her temporary position when plaintiff decided to return to work (fourth cause of action); and
4. Alleged tort of outrage or intentional infliction of emotional distress by all defendants in connection with the termination of plaintiff’s employment (fifth cause of action).
In determining whether state law claims can be appended to a federal claim the court turns to the analysis used by the
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Supreme Court in
United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
Factually, plaintiff’s federal and state claims are quite divergent. The second, third, and fourth causes of action are founded upon the operative facts of alleged oral contracts that came into existence months before the failure to reemploy, the focal point of the Title VII claim. Likewise, the operative facts relating to an alleged discriminatory refusal to reinstate differ substantially from the facts of extreme and outrageous conduct and severe emotional distress which would form the basis of the fifth cause of action. Other courts have held that similar differences in operative facts between the state and federal claims make compliance with the second prong of the
Gibbs
test impossible.
See, e.g., Sanders v. Duke University,
The better rule, however, and the view of the Fourth Circuit, appears to require only a loose factual connection between the claims to satisfy the requirement that they arise from a common nucleus of operative fact. Only when the state law claim is totally different from the federal claim is there no power to hear the state claim.
See
Wright, Miller & Cooper,
Federal Practice and Procedure: Jurisdiction
§ 3567, pp. 445-47;
Webb v. Bladen,
Gibbs
delineated the constitutional limits of federal judicial power under Article III of the Constitution. As the Supreme Court has since made clear in
Aldinger v. Howard,
[T]here must be an examination of the posture in which the nonfederal claim is asserted and of the specific statute that confers jurisdiction over the federal claim, in order to determine whether “Congress in [that statute] has ... expressly or by implication negated” the exercise of jurisdiction over the particular nonfederal claim.
Owen Equipment & Erection Co. v. Kroger,
In
Aldinger,
the Supreme Court reasoned that because (under the then case law) Congress had excluded political subdivisions from the “persons” answerable to claims brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Congress had “by implication” negated the existence of pendent party jurisdiction over nonfederal claims raised against such entities in actions predicated upon Section 1983 and its jurisdictional counterpart, 28 U.S.C. § 1343(3).
The Supreme Court in
Kroger
engaged in a similar analysis. After examining the legislative and judicial history of the federal diversity statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1), the Court emphasized that the “statute and its predecessors have consistently been held to require complete diversity of citizenship” and concluded that this history “clearly demonstrates a congressional mandate that diversity jurisdiction is not available when any plaintiff is a citizen of the same state as any defendant.”
At least three district courts have held that the Title VII statute and its judicial history reveal an implied congressional command negating pendent jurisdiction in Title VII based actions.
See Bennett v. Southern Marine Management Co.,
The most carefully reasoned of the decisions finding a congressional intent in Title VII against entertaining state claims of the kind presented herein is Jong-Yul Lim v. International Institute of Metropolitan Detroit, supra, where, in addition to his Title VII claim based on sex discrimination, the plaintiff alleged pendent claims under the Michigan fair employment practices law and under Michigan common law of contract. Relying upon Aldinger and Kroger, the Lim court held that several procedural characteristics of Title VII, as well as a specific congressional limitation on the nature of the relief and the amount of recovery available under that federal statute, negated by implication the exercise of jurisdiction over the particular nonfederal claims set forth in the complaint.
The court in
Lim
began its analysis by noting that the relief which Congress has provided under Title VII is equitable in nature, including only reinstatement and backpay, see 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(g);
EEOC v. Detroit Edison Co.,
The
Lim
court also noted that several procedural provisions of Title VII strongly supported the finding of a congressional negation of the exercise of pendent jurisdiction. Foremost in the court’s reasoning were the congressional mandates that Title VII cases be tried to a judge, not a jury,
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and that such actions be expedited. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(4)-(5). The court noted the statute provided that if a Title VII case could not be tried within the 120 days prescribed, it was empowered by the statute to refer the case to a master. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(5). These and other provisions, in the court’s opinion, indicated a clear congressional policy that Title VII cases were to be adjudicated as promptly as possible. To consider state contract and tort claims in a Title VII action would conflict with this policy. Such claims would expand the scope of issues to be resolved and support a right to a jury trial, the exercise of which would confuse and delay determination of a Title VII claim and possibly prevent a court from expediting the Title VII case by referring it to a master.
In the very recent case of
Bennett v. Southern Marine Management Co., supra,
the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida essentially adopted the
Lim
reasoning in holding that hearing certain state claims as pendent claims in a Title VII suit would conflict with a congressional policy underlying Title VII.
See Bennett,
The court discerns yet another reason why it is without jurisdiction as to defendants White and Rabón and the pendent claims asserted against them. As the court in
Kiss v. Tamarac Utilities, Inc.,
In sum, the court concludes that Title VII and its judicial history reveal an implied congressional command negating pendent jurisdiction over the particular nonfederal claims set forth in plaintiff’s second amended complaint.
See Lim, supra; Bennett, supra;
and
Kiss, supra.
In so concluding, the court recognizes that other lower federal courts, as pointed out by plaintiff, have upheld pendent jurisdiction in Title VII actions without ever acknowledging the
Bennett-Lim-Kiss
line of decisions.
See Guyette v. Stauffer Chemical Co.,
Even assuming that the court were not to follow
Bennett-Lim-Kiss
and that the
power
to hear plaintiff’s state claims existed, it does not follow necessarily that the court
must
hear those claims, (emphasis added). The exercise of pendent jurisdiction is committed to the informed discretion of the district court.
See United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
The Supreme Court in
Gibbs
identified several factors which militate in favor of dismissing pendent claims. In the Court’s view, discretion to dismiss state claims should be exercised (1) when divergent state or federal theories of relief are likely to cause jury confusion; (2) when state issues are found to predominate in terms of proof, scope of issues raised, or comprehensiveness of remedy sought; (3) when a surer-footed reading of the applicable law can be obtained in state court; or (4) when considerations of judicial economy, convenience, and fairness for the litigants are not present.
See
As stated, plaintiff’s state and federal claims are quite divergent, as between each other and among the state claims themselves. The three state contract-based claims are founded on two separate oral agreements 3 which allegedly came into being as a result of different sets of conversations that occurred during the spring, summer, and fall of 1980. The event which gives rise to the Title VII claim is the failure to reinstate, which occurred in late January 1981. Although the failure to reemploy also constitutes the alleged breach under plaintiff’s contract-based claims, and forms the predicate for the infliction of emotional distress cause, the state claims overlap the federal claim and each other only to this extent.
Moreover, while the mere fact of refusal to reinstate may be legally significant under the contract claims, and defendants’ intentional acts to cause breach may be significant to the tortious interference claims, it is Pioneer’s allegedly unlawful and discriminatory motivation in failing to reemploy, rather than the failure to reinstate itself, that is significant for purposes of the Title VII claim. Lastly, the allegedly extreme or outrageous type conduct which underlies the cause for intentional infliction of emotional distress is not in any way involved in the question of failure to reinstate because of pregnancy. The infliction of emotional distress claim also differs substantially from the other state causes.
The court believes that plaintiff’s state claims are so dissimilar factually and legally from each other and with respect to the Title VII claim that there would be a substantial likelihood of jury confusion were the state and federal claims tried together.
See Mazzare v. Burroughs Corp.,
It is also the court’s belief that many of plaintiff’s pendent claims would involve the court in needless decisions of state law which could be decided on surer-footing by a state court. That the tort of intentional infliction of emotional distress has only recently been recognized in South Carolina,
see Ford
v.
Hutson,
Finally, the plaintiff has made virtually no showing that the considerations of judicial economy, convenience, and fairness to the litigants would be enhanced by the court’s exercise of pendent jurisdiction.
See Madery v. International Sound Technicians,
For the foregoing reasons, plaintiff’s pendent claims must be dismissed because the court is without power to hear them and, assuming the existence of such power, the court as a matter of discretion declines to exercise jurisdiction.
IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED that all of plaintiff’s claims except the Title VII claim are dismissed from this action without prejudice.
Notes
. Subsequent to the dismissal of the pendent state claims, plaintiffs Title VII claim was tried to the court on November 19, 1982, with judgment being entered against plaintiff on that claim on that date.
. The court’s conclusion that the state and federal claims share a common nucleus of operative fact so as to satisfy the Gibbs test of constitutional power to hear the state claims clearly does not preclude a determination that the state and federal theories are so divergent, or the state issues so predominate, that the court, in its discretion, should refrain from exercising pendent jurisdiction. See infra.
. All of plaintiffs state claims except the cause for the tort of outrage or intentional infliction of emotional distress are based directly or indirectly on alleged oral contracts.
