OPINION
On certification from the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, we are called upon to decide whether:
a plaintiff in the particular circumstances of this case, whose favorable verdict and judgment was vacated on appeal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, [may] bring the same claim under a different legal theory *501 and be saved by the operation of Minnesota’s savings statute[,] [Minn.Stat.] § 541.18, from the bar of the statute of limitations under Minn.Stat. § 541.07(5).
We answer the question in the affirmative.
The relevant facts are undisputed. In 1990, plaintiff James Kulinski was the national sales manager for defendant Medtronic Bio-Medieus, Inc. (then Bio-Medicus, Inc.) when it became a subsidiary of Medtronic, Inc. Prior to the merger, Kulinski signed two change-of-control termination agreements which provided Kulinski with certain severance benefits in the event of a takeover.
Just before the merger, Medtronic proposed a two-year contract under which Ku-linski would continue as national sales manager of Medtronic Bio-Medicus (“Bio-Medieus”); however, the proposed salary represented a pay cut. After the merger, Bio-Medicus notified Kulinski that it would not honor either of the termination agreements, and Kulinski resigned. Bio-Medi-cus refused to pay Kulinski severance benefits pursuant to either of the termination agreements, on the ground that neither termination agreement was ratified properly by Bio-Medicus.
In February 1991, Kulinski sued Bio-Med-icus in federal district court, asserting that the corporation’s refusal to pay him severance under the termination agreement constituted a breach of an “employee welfare benefit plan” under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. § 1002(1). Kulinski alleged that the district court had federal question jurisdiction over the matter, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(a), and the district court agreed. After a short trial in August 1992, the district court held for Kulinski.
Holding that the termination agreements did not constitute ERISA “plans,” the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed the appeal, vacated the district court’s judgment, and remanded the matter, directing the district court to dismiss Kulinski’s complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
See Kulinski v. Medtronic Bio-Medicus, Inc.,
After the district court dismissed the first complaint but before the Eighth Circuit affirmed the dismissal, Kulinski filed a second action in federal district court. In this complaint, Kulinski claimed that Bio-Medicus’ refusal to pay severance benefits constituted a breach of contract. He alleged diversity of citizenship as a basis for the district court’s jurisdiction.
In granting Bio-Medicus’ motion to dismiss, the district court held that Kulinski’s breach of contract claim was barred by the statute of limitations governing wage claims. See Minn.Stat. § 541.07(5) (1996). The district court found the “savings statute of limitations,” Minn.Stat. § 541.18 (1996), inapplicable because Kulinski “asserifed] a new claim” in the second action. Kulinski appealed the dismissal, and Bio-Medicus cross-appealed, asserting that the claim was barred by res judicata. 1 The Eighth Circuit panel reversed the dismissal but affirmed the district court on the cross-appeal, holding that section 541.18 saved the contract claim and that the contract claim was not precluded because it raised a different legal theory and jurisdictional basis than had the ERISA claim.
However, the Eighth Circuit panel subsequently granted Bio-Medieus’ petition for rehearing and vacated its opinion. The panel reaffirmed the district court’s rulings on the issues of res judicata and the applicable stat *502 ute of limitations. However, the Eighth Circuit panel also certified to this court the question of whether Minnesota’s savings statute, section 541.18, saved the contract claim from the applicable statute of limitations.
I.
Most states have “savings” statutes — also known as “renewal” or “extension” statutes — which allow plaintiffs to bring new actions within a certain period of time when their original actions have “failed for some reason other than a decision on the merits,” although the applicable statute of limitations has run. 51 Am.Jur.2d Limitation of Actions § 302 (1970). Minnesota’s savings statute provides:
Except where the uniform commercial code otherwise prescribes, if judgment be recovered by plaintiff in an action begun within the prescribed period of limitation and such judgment be afterward arrested or reversed on error or appeal, the plaintiff may begin a new action within one year after such reversal or arrest.
Mmn.Stat. § 541.18. This measure was enacted in Minnesota’s territorial days and has been amended only once in the intervening years. See id (1961) (amended 1965).
The certified question raises two issues pertaining to section 541.18. First, this court must decide whether an action dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, after judgment for the plaintiff and at the direction of an appellate court, is “arrested or reversed on error or appeal.” Id (1996). The second, and more difficult, issue is whether claims brought in the “new action” must be based upon the same legal theory or theories raised in the original action in order to be “saved” by section 541.18. See id
Because a certified question presents a matter of law, this court reviews it independently.
See Foley v. Honeywell, Inc.,
II.
Bio-Medicus asserts that section 541.18 cannot apply in this ease because the judgment was vacated — not, as stated in the statute, “arrested or reversed.” 2 Kulinski counters that the savings statute is remedial in nature and, thus, should be construed liberally in his favor.
Courts in other jurisdictions have cast a liberal eye upon similar savings statutes.
See, e.g., Vari v. Food Fair Stores,
The construction urged by Bio-Medicus would defeat the legislative purpose underlying section 541.18. Because a judgment entered by a court without subject matter jurisdiction is void
ab initio, see Lange v. Johnson,
III.
Our next task is to determine whether the phrase, “a new action,” encompasses only those actions that are based upon the same legal theories as were asserted in the original actions. Kulinski argues that a liberal construction of the savings statute would permit a different legal theory to be raised in a subsequent action, and he observes that the legislature could have limited, but did not limit, the statute’s reach by using more restrictive language. Cf, e.g., Mass. Ann. Laws eh. 260, § 32 (Law.Co-op.1992) (permitting a plaintiff to “commence a new action for the same cause within one year”); Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 16.064 (West 1997) (referring to “a second filing of the same action” in the event the first is dismissed for lack of jurisdiction). 3 Bio-Medi-cus maintains that the legislature intended section 541.18 to allow plaintiff a second opportunity to assert only the same claim(s) and only when judgment for the plaintiff is reversed on a “technicality.”
We agree with Bio-Medicus that the savings statute should not be given an entirely literal reading.
4
However, of the few cases that do analyze the meaning of the word “action” within the context of various savings statutes, courts have tended to take the broader view that Kulinski espouses. The prevailing view is that savings statutes operate to save actions dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Diffley v. Allied-Signal, Inc.,
In determining whether savings statutes apply, several courts have concluded that the form of the action is not dispositive, and we find their analysis persuasive.
See, e.g., Griffen v. Big Spring Indep. Sch. Dist.,
Because a savings statute represents an exception to statutes of limitations, we agree that a key to determining whether a subsequent action is saved is whether “by invoking judicial aid [in the original action], a litigant [has] give[n] timely notice to his adversary of a present purpose to maintain his rights before the courts.”
Gaines,
Bio-Medicus warns that such a broad reading of Minnesota’s savings statute will lead to rampant claim-splitting. While claim-splitting is greatly disfavored,
see, e.g., Hauser,
Accordingly, we hold that under the particular circumstances of this case, section 541.18 saves Kulinski’s breach of contract action from the statute of limitations governing wage claims. We answer the certified question in the affirmative.
Notes
. In addition to arguing that his contract claim was saved by Minn.Stat. § 541.18, Kulinski argued to the Eighth Circuit (as he had to the district court) that the statute of limitations governing wage claims did not apply to his claim and if it did, that the district court should have granted equitable relief from its application. The Eighth Circuit found no merit in the statute of limitations issue, and it did not reach the issue of equitable relief.
. The term “arrest of judgment” is somewhat archaic, at least in the civil context.
See
46 Am.Jur.2d
Judgments
§ 322 at 643 (1994) (explaining that originally defendants could not move for judgment notwithstanding the verdict; rather, they moved for arrest of judgment). The term refers to an act by the trial court.
See United States v. Sisson,
. Kulinski correctly observes that the statutory definition of "action” does not apply to section 541.18, and he urges us to employ the common-law definition instead. However, we do not find the common-law definition to be particularly helpful to interpreting the savings statute.
See, e.g., Har-Mar, Inc. v. Thorsen & Thorshov, Inc.,
. Bio-Medicus contends it would be absurd for the court to inteipret the statute to allow a plaintiff to bring any claim, regardless of its factual basis, within a year of an earlier judgment for the plaintiff being reversed on appeal. We agree that such a broad construction would render statutes of limitations meaningless in many instances. See Minn.Stat. § 645.17(1) (1996)(di-recting courts construing statutes to presume that the legislature did not intend an unreasonable or absurd result). However, it would be ineffectual to restrict the statute’s application to only those claims which are reversed on "technicalities,” as Bio-Medicus suggests. We find no support either in the plain words of the statute or in case law for inferring such a limitation, and the term cannot be defined with any precision.
.There are several exceptions to this general rule. Courts have refused to apply such statutes where the plaintiff willfully or negligently brought the original action in a court without jurisdiction,
see, e.g., White v. Tucker,
. Of the cases Kulmski cites in support of this proposition, none involved a second action that was based upon a different legal theory than the first.
See Gosnell v. Whetsel,
