Appellees Mr. and Mrs. Chai brought a diversity action in the Hawaiian District Court for damages resulting from a collision between a motorcycle driven by Mr. Chai and a car driven by appellant Mrs. Hymer. Mr. Chai sought $75,000 damages for personal injuries and damage to his motorcycle and Mrs. Chai claimed $7500 for loss of consortium. The jury returned a $48,000 verdict for Mr. Chai and a $5000 verdict for Mrs Chai.
Mrs. Hymer asserts several grounds for reversal, but only two need be discussed: (1) Did the court have jurisdiction to adjudicate the claim of Mrs. Chai for loss of consortium? (2) Did the court prejudicially err in failing to give Mrs. Hymer’s requested instruction concerning exercise of the right of way at an intersection? We have concluded that both issues must be resolved in favor of Mrs. Hymer and, therefore, both judgments must be reversed.
Mrs. Chai’s claim for loss of consortium
Mrs. Chai’s claim of $7500 damages for loss of consortium fell below the monetary minimum necessary to sustain federal diversity jurisdiction (28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)), and no independent basis for federal jurisdiction existed. The District Court had no jurisdiction to entertain Mrs. Chai’s action unless her claim can be tacked to her husband’s action by the doctrinal thread known as “pendent jurisdiction.”
The doctrine of pendent jurisdiction permits a federal court to accept jurisdiction of a party’s nonfederal claims which are intertwined with his federal claims in a case in which all of the claims emerge from “a common nucleus of operative fact.” (United Mine Workers v. Gibbs (1966)
Joinder of claims, not joinder of parties, is the object of the doctrine. It was not designed to permit a party without a federally cognizable claim to invoke federal jurisdiction by joining a different party plaintiff asserting an independent federal claim growing out of the same operative facts. (United Mine
*138
Workers v. Gibbs,
supra;
Hurn v. Oursler (1932)
Mrs. Chai contends that the doctrine should be extended to encompass her claim because her action for loss of consortium is ancillary to her husband’s personal injury claim and both claims should be tried together to avoid piecemeal litigation. To support her argument she cites two decisions of the Third Circuit, Wilson v. American. Chair & Cable Co. (1966)
Mr. Chai’s personal injury action
The collision occurred during the morning rush hour traffic on heavily traveled Kamehameha Highway in Honolulu, Hawaii. Mrs. Hymer was attempting to make a left turn from Kamehameha onto Lipoa Street. Mr. Chai was traveling on Kamehameha approaching the intersection from the opposite direction. Kamehameha consists of three lanes in each direction, with the outside lane extending approximately one tenth of a mile in each direction from Lipoa Street. Mr. Chai was riding his motorcycle in the outside lane. In the stop- and-go traffic, cars in the two primary *139 lanes of Kamehameha stopped to allow Mrs. Hymer to make her turn. She did not see any vehicles in the third lane and slowly began making her turn. Meanwhile, Mr. Chai was riding his motorcycle at about 32 miles per hour down the outside lane.
Neither party saw the other until just before the collision. Mr. Chai’s motorcycle struck the right side of Mrs. Hymer’s car. The motorcycle was demolished and Mr. Chai was seriously injured.
Mr. Chai's theory of liability was that he had the right of way and that Mrs. Hymer was negligent in failing to yield it to him. The court instructed the jury, in accordance with the Honolulu Traffic Code, that the driver of a vehicle making a left turn must yield the right of way to an approaching vehicle which is close enough to constitute an immediate hazard and further instructed that violation of that provision is evidence of negligence.
Mrs. Hymer contends that the court prejudicially erred in refusing her requested instruction “that a right of way is not absolute but at all times relative and subject to the fundamental doctrine that a party shall exercise the right so as to avoid any injury to himself and others.” Both parties agree that the refused instruction correctly states the Hawaiian law. (State v. Arena (1963)
Mr. Chai says that there was no error in refusing the instruction because its substance was adequately covered by the instructions given.
In addition to giving general instructions defining negligence and contributory negligence, the court told the jury that Mrs. Hymer had to yield the right of way to Mr. Chai “unless otherwise instructed”
7
and that the right of way is “a privilege” and not “a right.”
8
The court’s description of the right of way as a privilege and not a right simply does not convey to the jury the message contained in the rejected instruction. (Cf. Young v. Price (Haw.1968)
The failure to give the requested instruction was prejudicial error. The evidence of negligence and contributory negligence was in delicate balance. Both parties at the time of trial recognized that the right of way question was the fulcrum of liability.
The judgment in favor of Mr. Chai is reversed; the judgment in favor of Mrs. Chai is reversed with directions to dismiss.
Notes
. United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
supra,
. Mrs. Chai also relies on our decision in Yuba Consolidated Gold Fields v. Kilkeary (9 Cir., 1953)
. In Wilson v. American Chain & Cable Co.,
supra,
. In both Borror and Raybould, diversity cases, an administrator sued as personal representative of the decedent for damages for decedent’s personal injuries surviving death and as representative of the decedent’s heirs for damages for decedent’s wrongful death; one claim was in excess, of the jurisdictional minimum and the other was below the minimum. In both instances pendent jurisdiction was invoked to bring the nonfederally cognizable claim into the federal court.
. The District Court applied Borror to sustain jurisdiction of a husband’s action for loss of consortium joined with his wife’s claim for personal injuries. The District Court in Morris and the Third Circuit in Wilson and Borror were influenced by the Pennsylvania rules compelling the claims in issue to be tried in the same action.
. Section 1301(e) of the 1965 draft of the American Law Institute’s Study of the Division of Jurisdiction Between States and Federal Courts would codify the pendent jurisdiction principles adopted by the Third Circuit, but only in diversity cases in which the plaintiff invoking such jurisdiction is not a citizen of the state in which the action is brought. (§ 1302 (a).) Mrs. Chai could not invoke federal jurisdiction under the proposed ALI rule because she was a resident of Hawaii.
. “Vehicles intending to turn leit from a divided highway — and this is what Mrs. Hymer was doing — exit from which is made by means of a left turn deceleration lane constructed in the medial strip area, shall enter the deceleration lane and shall yield the right of way to approaching vehicles before proceeding with caution across the intersection and into the intersecting roadway, unless otherwise instructed.”
. “The driver of a vehicle within an intersection intending to turn left shall yield the right of way to any vehicle approaching from the opposite direction which is within the intersection, or so dose thereto as to constitute an immediate hazard.
“We have to go back to the right of way again. What is the right of way? A right of way is a privilege. It doesn’t say it is a right. It is a privilege, immediate priority of the use of the roadway.
“Attention to driving. Every operator of a motor vehicle shall exercise due care in the operation of such vehicle upon any street or highway in order to avoid collision with any person, vehicle or other property or on or off such street or highway.”
