¶ 1 Appellant Penny Osuna appeals from the trial court’s grant of the appellees’, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. and Sam’s Club (collectively, Wal-Mart), motion to dismiss and asserts the court abused its discretion in denying her leave to amend her second amended complaint. Because we lack jurisdiction, we dismiss the appeal.
Factual and Procedural Background
¶2 In September 2001, Brian Thacker, Staci Thacker, Patricia Carrillo, and Tamela Wyble filed a putative class action against Wal-Mart. The complaint alleged Wal-Mart had “forc[ed] Plaintiffs and the Class to work off-the-clock, ... not pa[id] them for time
¶3 Wal-Mart filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), Ariz. R. Civ. P., 16 A.R.S., Pt. 1, asserting the statute of limitations had run on the claims alleged by the Thackers and Carillo. Wal-Mart also argued its employee handbook and policies did not constitute a written contract and the complaint failed to state a claim for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The trial court granted the motion, dismissing all of the Thackers’ and Carillo’s claims, and Wyble’s claims for breach of written employment agreement and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The court denied the plaintiffs’ subsequent motions for reconsideration and “clarification,” as well as their request for certification of the judgment for appeal pursuant to Rule 54(b), Ariz. R. Civ. P., 16 A.R.S., Pt. 2.
¶ 4 The trial court granted Wyble’s subsequent request for leave to amend the complaint, but informed Wyble she would not be permitted to “resurrect any claim which [the trial court] ha[d] dismissed.” The amended complaint omitted the Thackers and Carillo as plaintiffs and added Penny Osuna as a plaintiff. A second amended complaint, filed pursuant to stipulation, omitted Wyble, leaving Osuna as the sole plaintiff, and alleged Wal-Mart had breached “an implied-in-law” contract with Osuna and the class, and included claims of quantum meruit and restitution.
¶ 5 Osuna filed a motion for class certification in October 2003. After extensive briefing and discovery, the trial court denied the motion, stating the second amended complaint contained “no separate claim for contract ... that would remove individualized review of the facts and law. Rather, there exists only that quasi-contract which can be implied by a Court within the realm of an unjust enrichment claim.” The court also noted Osuna’s claims for restitution and quantum meruit did not describe separate claims, but instead asserted only the remedy and measure of damages for unjust enrichment.
¶ 6 Osuna then requested leave to again amend her complaint, stating she intended to “clarif[y]” her breach of contract claim by including claims for breach of both an implied-in-fact contract and an implied-in-law contract. Osuna also sought to add a claim “under the Arizona Wage Act, A.R.S. § 23-350 et seq.,” and a claim asserting Wal-Mart had violated A.R.S. § 23-202. The trial court denied Osuna leave to amend, stating she was “seeking to, in part, revisit the issue of the contract claims made earlier” and present claims “that could have been pled much earlier.” The court also denied Osu-na’s request to certify for appeal its ruling on class certification. Subsequently, pursuant to stipulation, Osuna moved to dismiss her unjust enrichment claim under Rule 41(a), Ariz. R. Civ. P., 16 A.R.S., Pt. 1, stating the dismissal would “fully dispose of [her] Second Amended Complaint.” The court granted the motion and entered final judgment in favor of Wal-Mart. This appeal followed.
¶ 7 Before Osuna filed her opening brief, Wal-Mart filed a motion in this court to dismiss Osuna’s appeal of the trial court’s class certification ruling. Wal-Mart argued Osuna had voluntarily dismissed her unjust enrichment claim, the sole subject of the class certification motion, and thus lacked standing to appeal the ruling. We granted Wal-Mart’s motion in March 2006 and directed Osuna to file her opening brief.
Discussion
¶ 8 Osuna’s voluntary dismissal of her complaint raises the question of whether we have jurisdiction over this appeal. Our draft decision, distributed to the parties in anticipation of oral argument,
1
proposed that we
¶ 9 “[T]he right to appeal exists only by force of statute.”
Cordova v. City of Tucson,
¶ 10 The trial court’s order granting Osuna’s stipulated motion to dismiss also stated the order “enter[ed] final judgment in favor of Defendants.” We reject Osuna’s contention that this statement means her complaint was dismissed with prejudice. An order of dismissal pursuant to Rule 41, Ariz. R. Civ. P., 16 A.R.S., Pt. 1, is without prejudice unless “otherwise specified.”
See
9 Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 2367 at 318-19 (2d ed. 1995) (“If the court’s order is silent on [whether dismissal is with or without prejudice], the dismissal is without prejudice.”). The proper method for a court to specify that a dismissal is with prejudice is to state it in plain language; simply using the words “final judgment” is inadequate because that phrase is subject to interpretation. A dismissal without prejudice is “final” insofar as the trial court no longer has “jurisdiction to grant affirmative relief to the parties,”
Crawford v. Crawford,
¶ 12 In her supplemental brief, however, Osuna purports to “abandon[] all rights to refile this action,” and suggests this renders the trial court’s dismissal of her complaint “unequivocally final and complete.”
5
She cites several cases in which federal courts have determined similar abandonment converts an order that is not final into a final, appealable judgment.
See Tiernan v. Devoe,
¶ 13 We decline to adopt this approach. In the cases Osuna cites, each being procedurally distinguishable from this ease, the abandoned claims were not at issue on appeal.
6
See Tiernan,
¶ 14 Moreover, Rule 41(a) does not permit a plaintiff to dismiss his or her complaint unilaterally if the adverse party has filed either an answer or a motion for summary judgment. A dismissal must instead be granted “pursuant to a stipulation of dismissal signed by all the parties who have appeared in the action” or “upon order of the court and upon such terms and conditions as the court deems proper.” Furthermore, a trial court is not required to grant a plaintiffs motion to dismiss.
See Cheney v. Superior Court,
¶ 15 Osuna also argues we may “review [her appeal] pursuant to Rule 54(b), [Ariz. R. Civ. P., 16 A.R.S., Pt. 2],” despite the absence of the required “express determination that there is no just reason for delay” in the trial court’s order granting her motion to dismiss. The case Osuna relies on, however, does not suggest we have appellate jurisdiction in the absence of proper Rule 54(b) certification; it instead states that, after an appeal is dismissed “for want of the requisite determination” the parties may be “afforded ... an opportunity to apply to the trial court for the necessary determination.”
Arizona Bank v. Superior Court,
1116 Lastly, relying on
Grand,
Osuna requests, alternatively, that we accept special action jurisdiction of this matter because it would “favor judicial economy.” But, the circumstances of that case are vastly different from those before us. There, we accepted special action jurisdiction in part because a subsequent appeal would “inevitably raise the same issues [then] before us.”
Grand,
¶ 17 Moreover, unlike in
Grand,
Osuna’s appeal does not raise issues of first impression in Arizona.
See id.
¶ 22. And, perhaps most importantly, the draft decision we provided the parties in advance of oral argument in
Grand
had “noted, and declined to address, several issues the [appellant] did not raise on appeal” and could potentially raise in a subsequent appeal,
id.
¶24, a situation absent here. Additionally, it is settled law in Arizona that denial of leave to amend a complaint is a proper subject for special action review.
See Dollar A Day Rent A Car Sys., Inc. v. Superior Court,
¶ 18 Appeal dismissed.
Notes
. As this court recently noted in
Grand v. Nacchio,
As is the practice in this division of the court of appeals, one member of the panel scheduled to hear the argument prepares a draft decision, subject to revision after argument and conference, that is disseminated to counsel for the parties, and the other panel members, in advance of argument.
. The parties did not raise this issue. We, however, are obligated to examine our jurisdiction.
Cordova v. City of Tucson,
. Some authority suggests we may consider the intent of the parties and the trial court to determine whether a voluntary dismissal is with prejudice.
See Concha v. London,
. We note some courts, in analogous circumstances, have found jurisdiction had vested when the statute of limitations otherwise would have barred the plaintiff’s claim.
See Fassett v. Delta Kappa Epsilon (New York),
. As Wal-Mart correctly points out. Osuna has not unequivocally abandoned her right to refile her action. She stated in her supplemental brief that she "reserves the right to refile only to the extent that this Court finds her abandonment is ineffective and that it cannot review [this matter] because she retains a right to refile.” Although "this procedure raises interesting issues of appellate jurisdiction,”
O’Boyle v. Jiffy Lube International, Inc.,
. In
Tiernan v. Devoe,
. Although claims pled in the original complaint had been dismissed on Wal-Mart’s motion, Osuna’s amended complaint superseded her previous complaints.
See Campbell v. Deddens,
