Kirk Huffman owned stock in the Vi-dette-Messenger Company (“Vidette”), an Indiana corporation that published a newspaper in Valparaiso, Indiana. In January, 1985, Huffman decided to sell his Vidette stock to his mother. In anticipation of the sale, Huffman hired Gene Hains, a certified public accountant, to appraise the stock.
Hains determined that the Vidette stock was worth $3,900 per share. Based in part upon Hains’ appraisal, and in part upon a lower appraisal his mother had provided, Huffman agreed to sell his stock to his mother for $2,750 per share. Five months later, Huffman’s mother sold all her Vi-dette stock to Thomson Newspapers, Inc., for $14,300 per share. According to Huffman, his mother and other Vidette directors had been negotiating the Thomson deal, unbeknownst to Huffman, before he sold his stock to his mother.
Understandably irritated that he was unable to share in the Thomson bonanza, Huffman filed this suit in January, 1986. In his original complaint, Huffman alleged that various defendants, including his mother and Hains, had violated section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and S.E.C. Rule 10b-5. Huffman also brought various counts against the defendants based on state-law theories, including a count against Hains for malpractice.
1
Since diversity did not exist between Huffman and Hains (both were residents of Indiana), Huffman invoked the district court’s pendent jurisdiction in bringing his malpractice claim against Hains.
See United Mine Workers of America v. Gibbs,
In August, 1986, Huffman dismissed all his claims against Hains except the malpractice claim. Eight months later, in April, 1987, Hains filed a motion to dismiss the malpractice claim. In the motion, Hains asserted that since Huffman had dismissed his federal claims against Hains, it was proper for the district court, pursuant to
Gibbs,
By the time that Hains had filed his motion to dismiss, the statute of limitations had run on the malpractice claim. Huffman filed a response to Hains’ motion to dismiss. In that response, however, Huffman did not argue that the statute of limitations might bar the malpractice claim in state court.
While Hains’ motion to dismiss was pending, Huffman and the other defendants settled their disputes. Pursuant to the settlement, the district court dismissed these other defendants in July, 1987. Thus, by the time the district court decided Hains’ motion to dismiss, the only claim left in the case was the malpractice claim against Hains, which the district court dismissed. 2 Huffman asked the district court to reconsider its decision, arguing for the first time that the statute of limitations might bar his malpractice claim against Hains in the state court. The district court refused to reinstate the claim. Huffman appeals.
*922 Hains contends that since Huffman dismissed his federal claims against him, the district court would have had to exercise pendent party jurisdiction (as opposed to pendent claim jurisdiction) over the malpractice claim. Although his brief is not clear on this point, Hains seems to argue that this circuit has rejected the concept of pendent party jurisdiction.
Pendent claim jurisdiction arises when a plaintiff brings both federal and related state claims against the same defendant in federal court, and no independent basis of federal jurisdiction (for example, diverse citizenship) exists regarding the state claim. This is the type of jurisdiction involved in
Gibbs, supra.
There is little, if any, debate over the federal courts’ power to exercise pendent claim jurisdiction, provided that the federal claims are not frivolous on their face, “[t]he state and federal claims ... derive from a common nucleus of operative fact,” and the federal and state claims “are such that [the plaintiff] would ordinarily be expected to try them all in one judicial proceeding....”
Gibbs,
On the other hand, pendent
party
jurisdiction arises when a plaintiff brings a federal claim in federal court against one party, and brings a related state-law claim against
another
party without an independent basis of federal jurisdiction. Unlike pendent claim jurisdiction, there is still some debate over whether the federal courts have the power to exercise pendent party jurisdiction. In the two cases in which it faced the question, the Supreme Court decided the jurisdictional issue on narrower grounds, and refused to explicitly state whether Article III grants such power.
See Aldinger v. Howard,
Although this circuit has called pendent party jurisdiction an “embattled” concept,
Citizens Marine Natl. Bank v. United States Dept. of Commerce,
Whether pendent party jurisdiction exists in a particular case and, indeed, whether pendent party jurisdiction in general is constitutionally permissible, are “subtle and complex” questions.
Aldinger,
By the time the district court decided Hains’ motion to dismiss, all of Huffman’s federal claims — against Hains and against the other defendants — had dropped from the case.
Gibbs
set forth the general principle that a federal court need not “tolerate a litigant’s effort to impose upon it what is in effect only a state law case”; therefore, if the federal claims drop from the case before trial, the district court should dismiss the state-law claims as well.
Gibbs,
Hains, however, protests that the district court abused its discretion in dismissing his malpractice claim because considerations of judicial economy favored retaining jurisdiction over the claim. According to Huffman, the district judge was familiar with both the facts and law in this case; forcing Huffman to bring his claim in state court would require the parties to educate a new judge. Huffman further notes that the parties have undertaken extensive discovery, and that duplicating that discovery would be burdensome and expensive (though he cites no authority for his claim that the parties would have to duplicate the discovery). In a related vein, Huffman asserts that his mother, whom he claims would have been a key witness, is now dead, and he may not be able to introduce her deposition testimony in state court (again, though, citing no authority for this proposition).
It is true that the general rule
Gibbs
enunciated is not absolute, and that the district court’s discretion over pendent state-law claims includes the discretion to exercise pendent jurisdiction in appropriate cases.
Graf v. Elgin, Joliet and Eastern Ry. Co.,
Huffman also argues that the district court abused its discretion by dismissing his malpractice claim because the statute of limitations had run in February, 1987. The running of the statute of limitations could take this case outside
Gibbs’
general rule.
See Duckworth v. Franzen,
*924 If, after the commencement of an action, the plaintiff fails therein, from any cause except negligence in the prosecution ... a new action may be brought within five (5) years after such determination....
Ind.Code Ann. § 34-1-2-8 (West 1983). The savings statute applies in a case such as this one where a federal court dismisses a state-law claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Eves v. Ford Motor Co.,
Huffman posits several arguments for why the savings statute might not apply in this case; all those arguments, however, are quite weak. It is true, as Huffman notes, that the savings statute does not apply when a plaintiff voluntarily dismisses a claim.
Kohlman v. Finkelstein,
Huffman also suggests that because he failed to timely raise the statute of limitations argument in the district court and because he dismissed his federal claims without considering the ramifications on the pendent malpractice claim, a state court may find that the malpractice claim failed because of his own negligence. But the timeliness of Huffman’s statute of limitations argument in the district court is not a factor in our decision. And Indiana case law indicates that Indiana’s courts would apply the savings statute here. In
Torres v. Parkview Foods,
Although the court of appeals’ decision rested on tolling grounds rather than on the savings statute (which did not apply because the plaintiff sued in state court before the federal court dismissed his suit), the court drew guidance from the savings statute. The court noted that if the savings statute applied, it would have saved the plaintiff’s state court suit. Id. at 583. The court also, in effect, indicated that bringing a non-diverse state action in federal court would not be “negligence” under the savings statute. See id. Huffman’s dismissing his federal claims in federal court is no more “negligent” than bringing a state-law claim against non-diverse parties in federal court, especially since Huffman had a reasonable (although ultimately losing) argument for the district court retaining jurisdiction over his malpractice claim. Judging from Torres, it is highly unlikely that an Indiana court would find Huffman negligent and refuse to apply the savings statute.
Huffman’s arguments for why the savings statute might not apply also run counter to the liberal construction the Indiana courts have given the savings statute. In Torres, the court of appeals stated that
“[t]he statute is designed to insure to the diligent suitor the right to a hearing in court till he reaches a judgment on the merits. Its broad and liberal purpose is not to be frittered away by any narrow construction. The important consideration is that, by invoking judicial aid, a litigant gives timely notice to his adversary of a present purpose to maintain his right before the courts.”
Id.
(quoting
Gaines v. City of New York,
Still, although all indications are that the savings statute will apply here, it is impossible to predict with absolute certainty what the Indiana courts will do with Huffman’s malpractice claim. Huffman asserts that if any possibility exists that the statute of limitations might bar the state-law claim, the district court must retain jurisdiction over that claim unless the defendant agrees not to raise the statute of limitations in the state court (an agreement Hains has refused to make). But the cases Hains cites for this proposition,
Duckworth v. Franzen,
In
Duckworth,
a question existed as to whether the savings statute, which became effective after the plaintiff brought his suit, would apply retroactively.
In
O’Brien,
the relevant savings statute appeared, on its face, not to apply to involuntary dismissals. The court found no cases interpreting the savings statute.
At most, Duckworth and O’Brien stand for the proposition that where serious doubts exist about whether the plaintiff may bring his state-law claims in state court, the district court should retain pendent jurisdiction over those claims after dismissing the federal claims. Our case, however, presents almost exactly the opposite situation. Huffman has cited nothing that indicates that the Indiana savings statute would not apply in this case; as we have seen, Indiana case law indicates that the savings statute will apply. Huffman’s unsubstantiated speculation that his malpractice claim might be time-barred in state court is not sufficient to persuade us that the district court abused its discretion in dismissing that claim. Therefore, we affirm the district court’s decision.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Huffman also sued three other defendants for an injunction barring them from releasing any funds from the sale of the Vidette stock.
. Because of an oversight, Huffman did not finally dismiss with prejudice the three defendants against whom he had sought an injunction (see note 1, supra) until after the district court had dismissed the malpractice claim. However, the claims against those three defendants depended on the federal claims against the other defendants; if Huffman lost the federal claims against the other defendants, he lost his claim for an injunction. Thus, by dismissing the other federal defendants with prejudice, Huffman effectively dismissed his claim for an injunction.
