Wе have a threecornered dispute that raises a tangle of jurisdictional and procedural issues. The plaintiff, Greenwell, suffered back pain while walking in a casino boat on which she was employed by the owner, Aztar. (On the origins and popularity of modern riverboat gambling, see Lori Chápman, “Riverboat Gambling in the Great Lakes Region: A Pot of Gold at the End of the Rainbow or Merely ‘Fool’s Gold?,’” 26 U. Toledo L.Rev. 387, 390-91 (1995); Ronald J. Rychlak, “The Introduction of Casino Gambling: Public Policy and the Law,” 64 Miss. L.J. 291, 309 (1995).) The boat was afloat on a navigable waterway of the United States in Indiana. Az-tar referred Greenwell to two doctors, Kern and Loomis, who operated on her back — negligently, she claims. Yet her suit, which charges both a work-related injury to her back and medical malpractice and related torts in the treatment of the injury, is not against the doctors but against Aztar. Aztar, however has im-pleaded the doctors, contending that they are the primary wrongdoers.
Greenwell bases federal jurisdiсtion primarily on the Jones Act, which applies the principles of the FELA to maritime workers, 46 U.S.C.App. § 688(a);
Miles v. Apex Marine Corp.,
Had Greenwell’s back pain been caused by an injury sustained at work, as she originally charged, and had the malpractice in treating her been committed by a doctor employed by Aztar, her employer, Aztar would have been liable in accordance with standard principles of respondeat superior. It would have been liable under both the Jones Act and the doctrine of maintenance and cure, because the malpractice would have been cоmmitted by a fellow employee acting within the scope of his employment.
De Zon v. American President Lines, Ltd.,
That’s a big “if.” Steering a patient to a doctor who commits malpractice is not itself malpractice or otherwise tortious unless the steerer believes or should realize that the doctor is substandard, and that is not claimed. Yet the district judge, instead of dismissing the malpractice claim on the merits and therefore with prejudice, dismissed it without prejudice. He thought it merely premature, because Greenwell hadn’t completed the pre-complaint review procedure to which Indiana subjects claims of medical malpractice. Ind.Code § 34-18-8-4;
Hill v. Porter Memorial Hospital,
Both dismissals are interlocutory, because the remainder of Greenwell’s complaint, consisting of fraud claims against Aztar that invoke the district court’s supplemental jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1367, remains pending in the district court. The general rule in the federal system is that only final judgments are appealable. 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The judge purported to make the dismissals appeal-able by entering partial final judgments under Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b). This was improper with respect to the dismissal of Greenwell’s claims. Rule 54(b) can be used only to enter judgment “as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims or parties,” with “clаim” defined to include all legal grounds that are based on closely related facts.
Indiana Harbor Belt R.R. v. American Cyanamid Co.,
Now it is true that interlocutory appeals are authorized in admiralty cases by 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(3), but this route isn’t open to Greenwell either, and for two reasons. First, as we’ll see, Greenwell failed to invoke admiralty procedurеs,
Continental Casualty Co. v. Anderson Excavating & Wrecking Co.,
That leaves only one route for Greenwell’s appeal: the doctrine of pendent appellate jurisdiction. The dismissal of Aztar’s third-party comрlaint against the doctors is appealable by virtue of Fed. R.CIv.P. 54(b), as we have said, and Green-well’s appeal is closely related to it. But after the Supreme Court questioned the existence of the doctrine in
Swint v. Chambers County Commission,
So we can proceed to the merits, where we first observe that the district judge erred in dismissing Greenwell’s claim on the basis of the Indiana medical-review statute. The statute governs claims under Indiana law (thus including diversity suits,
Jones v. Griffith,
There is an anterior question, however, of whether Greenwell successfully invoked federal admiralty jurisdiction. Her contention that Aztar violated its duty of maintenance and cure by steering her to the doctors who operated on her establishes a maritime connection: she’s a maritime employee and Aztar a maritime employer. At one time no more would have been necessary to place the case within the admiralty jurisdiction.
Jerome B. Grubart, Inc. v. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co.,
But jurisdiction depends on the facts as they appear when the complaint is filed.
Keene Corp. v. United States,
As for Greenwell’s claim under the Jones Act, a claim within the federal-question jurisdiction of the district court, it too evaporated because of facts that emerged after the complaint was filed: that the doctors who operated on her were neither employeеs of the defendant nor acting on behalf of Aztar, thus eliminating any basis for vicarious liability, and that Aztar was not negligent in selecting them,
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thus eliminating any basis for holding it directly liable for the consequences of the operation on Greenwell’s back. More fundamentally, the Jones Act, like the doctrine of maintenance and cure,
Braen v. Pfeifer Oil Transportation Co.,
The district judge mistakenly thought that Greenwell had a viable federal admiralty or Jones Act claim, just one that was premature. Let us now consider whether he was also mistaken in believing that Aztar could not implead thе doctors under the admiralty impleader rule, Fed. R.Civ.P. 14(e), a rule “designed to expedite and consolidate admiralty actions by permitting a third-party plaintiff to demand judgment against a third-party defendant in favor of the plaintiff.”
Texaco Exploration & Production Co. v. AmClyde Engineered Products Co.,
The district judge’s ground for refusing to permit Aztar to use Rule 14(c) was that Greenwell had failed to designate her claim as an admiralty claim under Fed. R.Civ.P. 9(h). Rule 14(c) permits its special impleader procedure (as well as the special statute permitting certain interlocutory appeals in admiralty cases) only “when a plaintiff asserts an admiralty or maritime claim within the meaning of Rule 9(h).” The distinction is between a case being within the admiralty jurisdiction and the speсial admiralty procedures being applicable to the case.
So we go to Rule 9(h) and discover there that a pleading which sets forth a claim for relief that is within both the admiralty jurisdiction and some other grant of federal jurisdiction, as is the case here (where there is both a maintenance and cure сlaim and a Jones Act claim), “may contain a statement identifying the claim as an admiralty or maritime claim for the purposes of Rule 14(c) [and other special admiralty rules].” The purpose is to enable the plaintiff to notify his opponent and the court that he’s invoking those rules,
Carey v. Bahama Cruise Lines,
But all this is supremely unimportant in this case. For the significance of Rule 14(c) is that it permits the plaintiff to obtain relief directly from the third-party defendant, cutting out the middleman, the third-party plaintiff. If the third-party plaintiff, Aztar here, is not seeking to bow out, but is content to remain the middleman, paying the plaintiff if she obtains a judgment and then turning around and seeking reimbursement from the third-party defendants, rather than, as Rule 14(c) permits, substituting the third-party defendants (the doctors, in this case) for itself, it can use Rule 14(a), the ordinary impleader rule. Rule 14(c) drops out of the picture, see
In re Oil Spill by Amoco Cadiz,
This - point is academic too, however, because Greenwell’s malpractice claim (maintenance and cure and Jones Act) has to be dismissed and with it goes any claim by the malpractice defendаnt (Aztar) against third parties. The remaining significance of the cross-appeal is that without it Aztar could not ask us to modify the judgment in its favor against Green-well to make it a judgment on the merits dismissing her malpractice claim with prejudice rather than a procedural order dismissing' it without prejudice.
El Paso Natural Gas Co. v. Neztsosie,
The district court’s judgment is modified to рlace dismissal of the malpractice claim on the merits, and as so modified is affirmed. Because the claims over which the district court had original jurisdiction have thus dropped out before trial, the court will almost certainly want to dismiss the plaintiffs supplemental claims as well. See 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3). But that is a judgment for that court to make in the first instance.
