Opinion by
11 Plaintiff Robert Dean McCutcheon appeals from an order dismissing without prejudice his breach of contract action against Defendants Britton, Ramsey and Gray, P.C. (BR & G) because there was another action pending in federal court. McCutcheon was a former shareholder and employee of the professional corporation Britton, Gray, Ramsey and McCutcheon, P.C. The members all signed a Stock Transfer Agreement, which required any member who terminated his employment to sell his stock to the corporation as specified in the Agreement. McCut-cheon voluntarily terminated his employment in November or December of 2003 and endorsed his stock over to BR & G. BR & G then deducted federal and state taxes, FICA and Medicare as if the payment was ordinary income and paid McCutcheon approximately $106,500.00. MeCutcheon demanded that BR & G pay him the amount of the taxes withheld, approximately $47,800.00. MecCut-cheon asserted the payment was for his stock redemption, for which he would only have to pay capital gains taxes.
12 BR & G filed a Complaint for declaratory judgment in the Western District of Oklahoma on May 10, 2004. BR & G asked the federal court to declare that the payment was ordinary income and not capital gains. BR & G also sought attorney fees and costs, which are allowed to the prevailing party under the Agreement McCut-cheon responded with a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. On December 13, 2004, the federal court dismissed the declaratory judgment action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The court held the federal tax exception to the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201(a), applied because determining whether MecCutcheon's payment was subject to federal withholding requirements would directly impact the amount of tax the Government could collect. BR & G timely filed a notice of appeal on January 11, 2005. 1
13 Before BR & G filed the federal appeal and on the same day the federal action was dismissed, McCutcheon filed the current state action against BR & G for breach of contract. McCutcheon alleged BR & G breached the Stock Transfer Agreement by failing to pay him the remaining amount due of approximately $47,800.00, and failing to account for that money. He asked for damages, prejudgment and post-judgment interest, costs and attorney fees. BR & G filed a Motion to Dismiss based on 12 O.S. Supp. 2004 § 2012(B)(8), on the ground that there was another action pending in federal court. As evidence that the federal action was between the same parties and for the same claim, BR & G attached a copy of the Complaint, McCutcheon's Motion to Dismiss, the Order dismissing for lack of subject matter Jurisdiction, and BR & G's Notice of Appeal. After reviewing the pleadings, the trial court dismissed this state action without prejudice. McCutcheon appeals from this order. 2
T4 A defendant may by motion interpose the pendency of other litigation as a
[Where a plea of another action pending is interposed to work an abatement and a dismissal of a suit, the action pleaded shall be considered as pending, if it is between the same parties, and involves the same cause or causes of action, and is in a court which has jurisdiction of that class or character of action, and this is true, until the right of the first court invoked to hear and determine the particular cause has been fimally adjudged.
Myers v. Garland,
T5 Here, the parties to both causes of action are the same, McCutcheon and BR & G, even though their positions were reversed in the federal action. In addition, the causes of action are essentially the same, because the same amount of money withheld by BR & G to pay the taxes is at issue in both cases. In the federal case, BR & G wants a declaration that they properly withheld the money for taxes. In the state action, McCutcheon wants the same money paid to him, alleging the same act of withholding by BR & G was a breach of contract. Further, the underlying facts and the transaction at issue are the same. The termination, the corporation's policies, the payment, and the interpretation of the Agreement will be common to both cases. Thus, the cases have the same parties and the same cause of action.
T6 As noted in T8 above, McCut-cheon filed the instant state action subsequent to the dismissal of the federal action, but before the notice of appeal was filed. Thus, in McCutcheon's view, the federal case was not pending when the state case was filed. We disagree because a case is pending until it has been "finally adjudged," which would include a timely appeal. Myers 114,
T7 Several other courts have held that a federal court retains jurisdiction after a dismissal on jurisdictional grounds until the federal appeal is final, even if a state action is filed between the dismissal and the notice of federal appeal. E.g., Darin v. Haven,
T8 AFFIRMED.
