ORDER
On September 20, 1981, plaintiff was shopping at a Raley’s store in Reno. She alleges, inter alia, that a Raley’s employee (defendant Kim) assaulted and battered her, that Raley’s wrongfully charged her with creating a disturbance, and that as a result, she was wrongfully placed under “civil protective custody” by an officer of the Reno Police Department.
Plaintiff has sued the City of Reno, as the employer of the police officers involved in this incident, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. 1 *125 As such, there appears to be a basis for federal jurisdiction over the claims against this defendant under 28 U.S.C. § 1343. However, plaintiff does not claim that there is a similar basis for jurisdiction over her claims against the Raley’s defendants. Instead, she
seeks to include the State claims including assault and battery, infliction of emotional distress, liable [sic], slander and malicious prosecution against Raley’s and its employees under the discretionary power of this Court to hear pendent ancillary jurisdiction issues.
Opposition to Motion for Dismissal (Document # 10) at 2. The Raley’s defendants contend that plaintiff’s claims against them-should be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1).
Plaintiff responds that
The controlling question of whether a Federal District Court should exercise its discretion to hear related state claims is whether the federal claim is “derived from a common nucleus of operative facts, [”] United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,383 U.S. 715 , 725,16 L.Ed.2d 218 ,86 S.Ct. 1130 , [1138] (1969).
Opposition,
supra,
at 3. However,
in Aldinger v. Howard,
Instead, where a plaintiff seeks to add a pendent party, based on “a state-law claim over which there is no independent basis of federal jurisdiction,” the scope of the statute conferring jurisdiction “should be construed in light of the scope of the cause of action as to which federal power
has
been extended by Congress.”
Id.
at 14 & 17,
We need not, in the context of the motion now before us, undertake the statutory analysis contemplated in the first element of the
Aldinger
test, because the Ninth Circuit has decided that Article III does not permit the exercise of pendent party jurisdiction.
See Ayala v. United States,
IT IS, THEREFORE, HEREBY ORDERED that the Motion for Dismissal filed by the Raley’s defendants is GRANTED.
Notes
. Also sued under § 1983 are various officers and employees of the City of Reno.
