OPINION and ORDER
Plaintiff John Louis Moder filed this lawsuit in state court, alleging that defendants violated several state laws when they distributed false statements about his health and performance during his employment at defendant L.E. Meyers Company. Defendants removed the case and have now moved to dismiss plaintiffs complaint, contending that plaintiffs state law claims are preempted by federal law or, in the alternative, fail to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. 1 Plaintiff has filed a motion for entry of default judgment against defendant James M. Ogden, con *1046 tending that he had failed to timely answer his complaint in state court before it was removed. I am denying plaintiffs motion for entry of default judgment and granting defendants’ motion to dismiss except for one state law defamation claim against defendant James Ogden. Whether that claim remains in federal court depends on whether defendants take advantage of a last chance to provide adequate information about plaintiffs domicile.
I. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
As a threshold matter, I must consider defendants’ basis for removing this case to ensure that this court has subject matter jurisdiction. In their notice of removal, defendants identified two bases for exercising jurisdiction: federal question jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Is there a federal question here? Plaintiff raises only state law claims in his complaint, but he alleges injuries related to a collective bargaining agreement between him and his union. Because of this, defendants assert preemption on the basis of section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act.
Generally, complaints raising only state law claims are not removable on the ground of a preemption defense.
Caterpillar Inc. v. Williams,
In his complaint, plaintiff alleges that the defendants, by preparing and distributing false and injurious statements after he was terminated by defendant L.E. Meyers, committed these tortious acts:
(1) Conspired tortiously to interfere with the collective bargaining agreement;
(2) Negligently interfered with the collective bargaining agreement (including a negligently induced breach);
(3) Defamed plaintiff;
(4) Invaded plaintiffs privacy;
(5) Conspired to injure plaintiffs reputation; and
(6) Prevented plaintiff from asserting his rights under Wisconsin’s unemployment compensation laws.
As explained below, plaintiffs claims for tortious interference with the agreement, negligent interference with the agreement, negligent inducement of breach, invasion of privacy and conspiracy to injure plaintiffs reputation are preempted by § 301 of the LMRA because they require interpretation of the collective bargaining act. As a result, jurisdiction is present for those claims under § 1331.
This court may exercise jurisdiction over plaintiffs third and sixth claims only if there is diversity jurisdiction present under § 1332, as defendant contends, or if it is appropriate to exercise supplemental jurisdiction pursuant to § 1367.
With respect to diversity jurisdiction, on November 20, 2008, I ordered defendants to provide this court with verification of the diversity of citizenship between them and plaintiff because the record was unclear regarding the citizenship
*1047
of the parties. Defendants responded by providing information regarding the citizenship of defendants, but failed to address plaintiffs citizenship, instead simply repeating that “[according to his Second Amended Complaint, Plaintiff John Moder resides in Wisconsin.” But this statement fails to demonstrate diversity jurisdiction: as I explained in the November 20 order, defendants as the removing parties, had the burden to lay out the parties’ citizenship to establish diversity, and citizenship is determined by
domicile,
not “residency.”
Dakuras v. Edwards,
That said, there does not appear to be any serious dispute that plaintiff is domiciled in Wisconsin, so I am going to give defendants a second chance to nail this down properly. This is important because as becomes apparent in the discussion below, the answer to this question matters. Given the current state of the record, I am assuming for the purposes of the instant order that the parties are not diverse. Thus, to decide plaintiffs state law claims, I must resort to supplemental jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a), under which I may exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state law claims that “form part of the same case or controversy” as those claims preempted by the LMRA. However, by the time I reach the merits of those claims, I will have dismissed the only “federal” claims in the case, the claims that are completely preempted by the LMRA. Under § 1367(c), a federal court “may” decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over state law claims once federal claims have been dismissed, and the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has cautioned that the “may” in § 1367(c) is closer to “must”; unless the circumstances of the case are “unusual,” dismissal (or in this case remand) of state law claims is proper once the federal claims are dismissed.
Wright v. Associated Ins. Companies Inc.,
One claim, however — -plaintiff s defamation claim against defendant Ogden for the post-termination memo — is entangled with state law issues; therefore, absent diversity jurisdiction, it is appropriate to decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over this claim and remand it to state court. Perhaps defendants will decide that they would just as soon return to state court to resolve this claim, but if not, then they will a brief opportunity to establish that this court actually has jurisdiction over it.
II. Plaintiffs Motion for Default Judgment Against Defendant Ogden
Plaintiff has filed an amended motion for entry of default judgment as to defendant James M. Ogden. Dkt. 44. I am denying that motion for the same reason that this court denied plaintiffs original motion for entry of default judgment (dkt. 35). See Sept. 2, 2008 order, dkt. 42.
III. Defendants’ Motion To Dismiss the Complaint
As for defendants’ motion to dismiss, it will be granted on all of plaintiffs claims except one because the claims either re *1048 quire interpretation of the collective bargaining act, which means they are preempted, or the claims are barred by the applicable two-year statute of limitations. All that remains is plaintiffs defamation claim against Ogden.
To decide the motion to dismiss, I rely on the allegations set forth in plaintiffs second amended complaint, which is the operative pleading. In addition, I have included relevant paragraphs from the collective bargaining agreement that governed plaintiffs employment with defendant L.E. Meyers. The agreement was mentioned in plaintiffs second amended complaint but was not attached to it; however, defendant submitted a copy of it as an attachment to its motion to dismiss. Dkt. 50-2. Because the agreement is central to plaintiffs claims, I may consider it without converting the motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment.
Wright,
PLAINTIFF’S ALLEGATIONS OF FACT
Plaintiff John Louis Moder was and is a member in the Local Union 2150 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers of Waukesha, Wisconsin. The Union has signed a letter of “assent” to become a party to a collective bargaining agreement with defendant L.E. Meyers. The agreement governed the terms and conditions of employment with defendant L.E. Meyers. It provided defendant L.E. Meyers Co. with general discretionary powers:
The employer shall therefore have no restrictions, except those specifically provided for in [this agreement] in planning, directing, and controlling the operation of all his work, in deciding the number and kind of employees to properly perform the work, in hiring and laying off employees, in transferring employees from job to job within the local Union’s geographical jurisdiction, in determining the need and number as well as the employer’s and/or owner’s rules and regulations not inconsistent with this agreement, in requiring all employees to observe all safety regulations, and in discharging employees for proper cause.
Dkt. 50-2, at § 2.01. Regarding termination of employees, the agreement provided that:
When a[n employee] is terminated, the employer shall complete a three (3) part termination notice, furnished by the Union, and give one copy to the terminated employee, mail one copy to the Local Union Office, and retain one copy for his files. The termination report shall include the actual hours of work due the employee at the time of layoff.
Id. at § 3.15.
The Agreement establishes a process for addressing “all grievances or questions in dispute.” Id. at §§ 1.05-1.08, 3.25.
Plaintiff was hired by defendant L.E. Meyers on February 3, 2005 for an electric utility line replacement project in Lincoln County. Plaintiff worked as a Foreman Journeyman Lineman under the collective bargaining agreement, heading up a crew of apprentices to assemble steel structure poles for the project.
Defendant Jeffrey Ferguson, Foreman for defendant L.E. Meyers, made false statements in three “Dent, Ding, and Incident Reports” describing incidents that oc *1049 curred on March 10, April 6 and April 8, 2005. In the March 10 report, Ferguson stated that plaintiff “[pjarked manhaul next to a crane that was to be set-up. Extended rigger caused damage to driver side rear bin door. Door needs replaced.” The April 6 report stated that plaintiff “Jack-knifed trailer causing damage to right-rear corner of manhaul and passenger side rear bin door.” Finally, the April 8 report stated that plaintiff “ran over the bat wings which caused them to strike the bottom of the radiator. Radiator had to be replaced.” Although these incident reports described incidents occurring in March and early April, they were not prepared until on or after April 20, 2005. The reports were circulated to others.
On April 14, 2005, defendant L.E. Meyers terminated plaintiffs employment. Defendant Ferguson prepared a Termination Report describing falsely the circumstances of plaintiffs termination. The report was dated April 20, 2005 and stated
Abuse to company vehicle; Destruction of Private Property (tore down sec. service and caught fire to ground and trees); Did not fulfill Foreman expectations (Left apprentices by themselves to frame str.).
This termination report was also circulated to others.
Twelve days later, on April 26, 2005, defendant James Ogden a member of plaintiffs apprentice crew, submitted a hand-written Vk page letter that contained untrue statements regarding plaintiffs treatment of his crew. 2 Defendant Ogden was acting at the request of defendant Ferguson and defendant Dale Whaley, defendant L.E. Meyers’s “business manager.” Among other things, the letter states that plaintiff failed to provide direction or supervision to the crew, prohibited the crew from using the radio to communicate with other crews, often was absent throughout the day except at the workday’s start and end, and delegated his responsibility to an apprentice. The letter closed with: “John Moder was many times very forgetful and the word bandied around between us was the senility had creeped in.” The letter was addressed to “Dale” and included a note stating “Notes from crew Rec. 4-26-05 D.W.” The crew letter was circulated to management and decisionmakers for defendant L.E. Meyers after plaintiff had been terminated and was subsequently “filed and republished” to others.
Plaintiff filed a grievance with the Union concerning the termination of his employment, but he was not rehired. According to plaintiff, the false statements prepared in the incident reports, termination report and crew letter were part of a conspiracy between defendants, “orchestrated” by defendant L.E. Meyers to cover up the real reason it fired plaintiff, which was to replace plaintiff with a younger Foreman Journeyman Lineman. Or, at the very least, that the false statements prepared by defendants Ferguson and Ogden were “condoned” by defendants Whaley and L.E. Meyers.
On April 11, 2008, plaintiff filed his complaint in state court. Defendants removed the action to this court.
ANALYSIS
A. Preemption
Defendants contend that most of plaintiffs claims are preempted by § 301(a) of the Labor Management Relations Act, which provides:
Suits for violation of contracts between an employer and a labor organization representing employees in an industry affecting commerce as defined in this *1050 chapter, or between any such labor organizations, may be brought in any district court of the United States having jurisdiction of the parties, without respect to the amount in controversy or without regard to the citizenship of the parties.
29 U.S.C. § 185(a). It is well-established that § 301 serves not only as a basis for providing federal-court jurisdiction over collective bargaining disagreements, but also as a basis for preempting state law claims that involve collective bargaining agreements.
Lingle v. Norge Division of Magic Chef, Inc.,
Plaintiffs first argument against preemption is that § 301 does not apply to him at all because he is no longer an “employee” under the Labor Management Relations Act. This argument must fail. Plaintiff alleges that he continues to be a member in good standing of his union, and has continued to receive employment pursuant to the collective bargaining agreement since his employment with defendant L.E. Meyers ended. As the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has explained, § 301 continues to govern post-termination beefs by union members so long as they continue to be subject to the agreement. As the court stated in
Merk v. Jewel Companies, Inc.,
Persons represented by a union and covered by a collective bargaining agreement—even those no longer working— must exhaust union remedies before filing suit under § 301, which may imply that the union always administers the collective bargaining agreement even for those no longer classified as statutory “employees.”
Id. at 766.
Moreover, § 301 preemption is not focused on the current status of the “employee,” but rather the need to analyze the agreement,
Lueck,
(1) Breach of contract claims recast as tort claims
Defendants contend that plaintiffs claims for “tortious interference with contract,” “negligent interference with contract” and “negligent inducement of breach” are nothing more than thinly-veiled contract claims related to his collective-bargaining agreement. Plaintiff suggests that these claims are for interference with a contract other than the collective bargaining agreement, but his second amended complaint states otherwise: plaintiff complains of interference and inducement of breach of the “AGREEMENT,” Pit's Second Am. Cpt., ¶¶ 23-24, 26, which he defines as the collective bargaining agreement, id., ¶ 9.
*1051
In
Kimbro v. Perpsico,
(2) Other tort claims involving the collective bargaining agreement
In a second category of claims that defendants contend are preempted, plaintiff asserts several claims that are more tenuously related to the collective bargaining agreement itself. These include his claims that defendants invaded his privacy, conspired to injure his reputation and defamed him. Defendant does not assert a preemption argument for defendants’ unemployment compensation claim. As I explain below, that claim will be dismissed as frivolous.
First, as to plaintiffs claim for invasion of privacy, the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has found an invasion of privacy claim such as plaintiffs to be preempted under § 301 because it would require interpretation of a “residual clause” in the collective bargaining agreement that gave the employer discretionary rights to manage the business.
Matter of Amoco Petroleum Additives Co.,
Next, plaintiff contends that defendants engaged in a “conspiracy to injure his reputation” in violation of Wis. Stat. § 134.01, which prohibits “any 2 or more persons” from conspiring together “for the purpose of willfully or maliciously injuring another in his or her reputation, trade, business or profession.” This statutory prohibition on any “willful” injury to reputation could interfere with the employer’s rights under the collective bargaining agreement to make certain statements that may injure plaintiffs reputation, for instance, when determining whether there are proper grounds for termination under § 2.01. Thus, as with the invasion of privacy claim, determining liability under the state law could interfere with rights established under the collective bargaining agreement and would require interpretation of the terms of the agreement. Therefore, this claim, too is preempted.
This leaves plaintiffs defamation claims. These claims involve allegations that supervisors and co-workers made and circulated false, injurious statements about plaintiffs work performance and health. It is hard to see how such a claim could require the interpretation of a collective bargaining agreement. But defendants point out that defamation claims involve an element of “fault amounting at least to negligence on the part of the publisher,”
Bay View Packing Co. v. Taff,
Defendants point to a number of cases in support of its position that defamation claims involving statements made in the context of proceedings authorized by the collective bargaining agreement are preempted.
E.g., Hasten v. Phillips Petroleum,
The next question is what to do with the preempted claims.
Lueck,
B. The Merits of Plaintiffs Remaining State Law Claims
The only claims remaining are plaintiffs Wisconsin Unemployment Compensation claims and the defamation claims. As explained below, the Wisconsin Unemployment Compensation claim is frivolous and two of the three defamation claims clearly are barred by the statute of limitations. *1053 As for those claims, exercising supplemental jurisdiction to decide them is not problematic because their resolution is clear under state law. However, the remaining defamation claim is trickier: defendants have raised an argument for its preemption that raises difficult questions of state law. Rather than decide this issue, it is appropriate to decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction on this remaining claim and remand the case back to state court.
(1) No claim exists under Wisconsin Unemployment Compensation laws.
In his second amended complaint, plaintiff appears to assert a claim for his loss of rights under the Wisconsin Unemployment Compensation laws. This claim is frivolous. As defendant points out and plaintiff does not dispute, those laws do not provide a private cause of action. Wis. Stat. § 108.10(1). Therefore, this claim will be dismissed.
(2) Two of plaintiffs defamation claims are barred by the statute of limitations
Plaintiffs defamation claims involving the incident reports and the termination report will be dismissed as well because they are barred by the two-year statute of limitations governing such claims. The statute provides that actions “to recover damages for libel [or] slander ... shall be commenced within 2 years after the cause of action accrues or be barred.” Wis. Stat. § 893.57.
Wisconsin has adopted the “discovery rule” for determining accrual of claims for tort actions not governed by a legislatively created discovery rule, which include claims for defamation.
Hansen v. A.H. Robins, Inc.,
Although plaintiff acknowledges that he filed suit more than two years after discovery of the incident reports and termination report, he offers two flimsy arguments for why the statute of limitations should have tolled. First, citing Wis. Stat. § 893.19, plaintiff contends that the statute was tolled while defendants were out of state. However, that statute states that it does not apply to out-of-state defendants who “may be subjected to personal jurisdiction in the courts of this state,” Wis. Stat. § 893.19(2), and defendants could be subjected to personal jurisdiction in Wisconsin because plaintiffs claims arise from defendants’ activities in Wisconsin. Next, plaintiff contends that the statute was tolled when the Equal Rights Division entered an “Order of Abeyance” in a case before it involving an age discrimination claim related to the allegations in this case. Plaintiff cites Wis. Stat. § 893.23 in support of his position that the Equal Rights Division order tolled his statute of limitations for his defamation claims. But § 893.23 only tolls the statute of limitations when a plaintiff is enjoined or statutorily prohibited from commencing
the tolled action.
Wis. Stat. § 893.23. The order of abeyance issued by the Equal Rights Division could not have stayed plaintiffs bringing a defamation action in state court because the Equal Rights Divi
*1054
sion is not competent to hear such claims or issue orders regarding them; it “is only competent to hear claims arising under the Fair Employment Act.”
Waid v. Merrill Area Public Schools,
(3) Plaintiffs remaining claim for defamation
A single claim has survived the gauntlet so far: plaintiffs claim that after he was terminated, defendant Ogden signed on to a crew letter that defamed him. As its final attempt to knock down this claim, defendant contends that it is barred by the Wisconsin Compensation Act, which covers the scope of liability of an employer and provides that “the right to the recovery of compensation under [the Act] shall be the exclusive remedy against the employer, any other employee of the same employer and the worker’s compensation insurance carrier.” Wis. Stat. § 102.03(2).
However, as plaintiff points out, the Wisconsin Compensation Act applies only if at the time of the injury, “both the employer and employee are subject to the provisions of this chapter.” Id., § 102.03(l)(b). This analysis includes determining whether plaintiff was an “employee” at the time of the injury. Plaintiff alleges that the defamatory statements occurred after he was terminated as an employee, which would mean that plaintiff was not “subject to the provisions of’ the Act “at the time of the injury.”
Defendants contend that even claims for injuries occurring post-termination may be precluded under the Wisconsin Compensation Act, noting that the Wisconsin Court of Appeals has so held.
Wolf v. F & M Banks,
Since this is the only remaining claim, I conclude that it would be an abuse of discretion for this court to exercise supplemental jurisdiction to tackle this question. As the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit pointed out in
Wright,
Like a Móbius strip, we have circled back to where we started: notwithstanding my unwillingness to assert supplemental jurisdiction over plaintiffs orphaned state law claim, if defendants establish that this court has diversity jurisdiction over this claim, then this case will remain in federal court and we will move to the next phase in this litigation.
ORDER
IT IS ORDERED that:
(1) Plaintiffs amended motion for entry of default judgment is DENIED.
(2) Defendants The L.E. Meyers Company, Jeffrey J. Ferguson, James M. Ogden and Dale Whaley’s motion to dismiss plaintiffs complaint is GRANTED with respect to these claims:
(A) That defendants engaged in “tor-tious interference with contract,” “negligent interference with contract,” “negligent inducement of breach” and invaded his privacy and conspired to injure his reputation, because these claims are preempted by the LMRA;
(B) That defendants interfered with his rights under the Wisconsin Unemployment Compensation laws, because this claim is frivolous; and
(C) That defendants defamed him by making and distributing false statements found in incident reports and termination reports, because these claims are barred by the statute of limitations.
Judgment shall be entered in favor of defendants against plaintiff DISMISSING these claims against them with prejudice and costs.
(3) Defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiffs remaining claim, that defendant Ogden defamed him by signing the crew letter submitted on “4-26-05” is DENIED;
(4) A decision whether to remand this state law defamation claim is STAYED pending determination whether this court has diversity jurisdiction over it; and
(5) Defendants have until December 19, 2008 to establish the existence of diversity jurisdiction over this state law defamation claim.
Notes
. After defendants filed their most recent motion to dismiss, plaintiff filed a second amended complaint. Technically, this moots defendants' motion to dismiss; however, after plaintiff filed his second amended complaint, a new defendant (sued for the first time in that complaint) filed notice that he joins the other defendants in moving to dismiss the second amended complaint. From this notice it is clear that all defendants continue to seek dismissal of the second amended complaint on the same grounds as before.
. Four other crew members signed this memo but are not named as defendants.
