Standard Insurance Company (“Standard”) appeals the district court’s dismissal without prejudice of Joanna Russ’s action for wrongful termination of disability benefits. Standard argues that the district court, prohibited from exercising its power under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 39(b) to excuse Russ’s failure to make a timely demand for a jury trial, cannot dismiss the ease pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(a)(2) so that Russ can refile her action and gain another ten days in which to make a timely demand for a jury. We agree and therefore reverse the district court’s order.
I. Facts
Russ filed suit in Arizona Superior Court on August 28,1995. She did not make a jury demand. Standard removed the ease to federal court on September 25, 1995, and then filed its answer on October 2, 1995. Russ made her demand for a jury trial on November 9,1995.
On November 13,1995, Standard moved to strike plaintiff’s jury demand on the ground that it was untimely. Russ filed a cross-motion for a jury trial under Rule 39(b). On February 2, 1996, the district court, relying on
Craig v. Atlantic Richfield Co.,
On February 14, 1996, Russ filed a motion to dismiss this action without prejudice pursuant to Rule 41(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The district court granted this motion on April 11, 1996. The order states that Russ’s motion to dismiss without prejudice under Rule 41(a)(2) is granted “so that plaintiff, who failed to make a timely demand for jury trial, may refile the same claims in the United States District Court for the District of Arizona, and make a timely demand for jury trial.” Standard filed its notice of appeal on May 2,1996.
II. The Scope of Rule 41(a)(2)
The district court could not order a trial by jury under Rule 39(b) because Russ’s attorney admitted that the reason for the untimely jury demand was inadvertence.
See Lewis,
The question whether a district court may employ the broad discretion granted in Rule 41 to accomplish indirectly what we have held cannot be accomplished directly under Rule 39(b) has not been presented in this circuit.
Two other circuits have addressed this issue and have reached conflicting results. In the Second Circuit, as in our circuit, the district court is not permitted under Rule 39(b) to excuse an inadvertent failure to request a jury trial.
See Noonan v. Cunard
*990
S.S. Co., 375
F.2d 69, 72 (2d Cir.1967).
1
Further, the Second Circuit has held that a district court may not circumvent the explicit limitation on its power under Rule 39(b) by dismissing a case pursuant to Rule 41(a)(2).
See id.
The Eighth Circuit, which, unlike our circuit, does not read Rule 39(b) to prohibit district courts from excusing an inadvertent failure to request a jury trial, has held that the discretion granted in Rule 41 is broad enough to permit the district court to allow voluntary dismissal and refiling in order to preserve a plaintiff’s right to a jury.
See Hoffmann v. Alside, Inc.,
We believe the Second Circuit in
Noonan
correctly analyzed the issue. First, allowing the district court to accomplish under Rule 41(a)(2) what we specifically prohibit it from doing under Rule 39(b) introduces an unnecessary conflict between these two federal rules. Second, ordinarily we follow the more specific rule over one more general,
see Green v. Bock Laundry Mach. Co.,
Third, “to allow leave to discontinue ... solely [to cure an untimely demand for a jury trial] would work a discrimination ... in favor of plaintiffs whose attorneys had been guilty of inadvertent neglect in demanding a jury trial as against defendants similarly situated.”
Noonan,
Hoffmann, as noted, arose in a circuit which does not prohibit district court judges from granting jury trials under Rule 39(b) where the failure to demand resulted from mere inadvertence. Therefore, Hoffmann is not persuasive in this Circuit where we have such a prohibition. The Eighth Circuit’s rule, while commendable in preserving jury trials for the clients of careless lawyers, would, if adopted in this circuit, eliminate what has been a bright line rule and encourage venue shopping among the districts.
Another instructive case is
Walton v. Eaton Corp.,
We agree with the Second, Third, and Tenth circuits, and conclude that the general discretion granted the courts under Rule 41 does not extend to the frustration of the specific purpose of Rules 38 and 39 to encourage prompt notice of a jury demand.
REVERSED.
Notes
. The Second Circuit has exceptions to the rule that district courts are prohibited from excusing an inadvertent failure to request a jury trial under Rule 39(b). These exceptions are not relevant to our inquiry because we he have already rejected them.
See Lewis,
