Plaintiff-Appellant Melissa L. Phillips contends that Defendants-Appellees, various officials and employees of Coffeyville, Kansas, committed wrongful acts against her during and after a 2007 flood in Coffeyville. The district court dismissed Ms. Phillips’s complaint for failure to comply with the notification requirements imposed by the Kansas Tort Claims Act on plaintiffs seeking to pursue state tort claims against municipalities and their employees. Exercising our jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we AFFIRM.
I. Background
Ms. Phillips vocally disagreed with the actions taken by Coffeyville police officers and officials in connection with a summer 2007 flood. She was concerned that ehemical-and-bacteria laden waters had contaminated parts of the city. According to Ms. Phillips, she was wrongly silenced, arrested, charged, threatened, stalked, harassed, and searched for trying to advise officials and warn citizens of potential dangers.
Ms. Phillips, a law student proceeding pro se, filed a complaint in federal court listing numerous state tort claims, including negligence, malicious prosecution, false arrest, continuing trespass, intentional infliction of emotional distress, defamation, slander, libel, battery, and fraud. She also filed a “motion for an emergency order” seeking an emergency declaration and injunction to enforce a variety of environmental statutes, a declaration preventing the police from further harassing her, and a declaration that, if she is jailed again, *1270 she be placed in county jail where the city defendants will be unable to harm her. Appellees filed for dismissal on two grounds: lack of federal jurisdiction and lack of compliance with Kansas statutory notice requirements.
Although Phillips focused on state law torts in her complaint, the district court liberally construed Phillips’s complaint as raising both state law claims and federal law claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Given the presence of a federal question, the district court concluded that it could exercise jurisdiction over the case. However, the district court dismissed the entire complaint because Ms. Phillips did not provide Coffeyville with advance notice of her claim, as required by Kan. Stat. Ann. § 12-105b(d). 1 Ms. Phillips appeals this ruling, arguing that the Kansas notice-of-claim statute is unconstitutional and, even if it is constitutional, it does not apply to at least some of her claims.
II. Analysis
A. Jurisdiction
Before reaching the merits of this appeal, we address sua sponte two jurisdictional issues.
See Kennedy v. Lubar,
We agree with the district court that, despite the fact that the substance of Ms. Phillips’s complaint is based on state tort law, her pro se complaint can be liberally construed to allege claims under § 1983. For example, Phillips alleged that, while she was held in jail, she complained of chest pain and, despite her complaints, she was not allowed to use her asthma inhaler. Although her complaint does not specify any federal cause of action, in her response to the Appellees’ motion to dismiss she alleged, inter alia, that her Fourteenth Amendment rights were violated when she was denied access to medical treatment.
See Johnson v. Johnson,
Further, we hold that the district court’s dismissal in this case constituted a final and appealable order under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. “In
Moya v. Schollenbarger,
[
This case does not fall within the first principle in
Moya,
because the district court’s order did not “expressly and unambiguously dismiss [the] plaintiffs entire action.”
Id.
at 450. On page four, the district court stated that “plaintiffs
complaint
is dismissed
without
prejudice.” (Emphasis added). Similarly, on page three, the district court stated that Phillips’s
“complaint
[] should be dismissed for failure to abide by K.S.A. § 12-105b(d).” (Emphasis added.) This language seems to indicate that the court was merely interested in dismissing the complaint and, presumably, would have allowed Phillips to cure this defect and refile.
See B. Willis, C.P.A., Inc. v. BNSF Ry. Corp.,
Even if the district court had unambiguously stated that the dismissal was only of the complaint, “an order is not necessarily devoid of finality simply because it speaks in terms of dismissal of a complaint. Rather, we ‘endeavor to scrutinize [complaint dismissals] ... closely in order to pinpoint those situations wherein, in a practical sense, the district court by its order has dismissed a plaintiffs action as well.’ ”
Moya,
This case falls squarely within the second principle laid out in
Moya,
which provides that a dismissal of a complaint without prejudice is a final and appealable order where “the district court’s grounds for dismissal are such that the defect cannot be cured through an amendment to the complaint, [so] dismissal (even if it is ambiguous or nominally of the complaint) is for practical purposes of the entire action and therefore final.”
Moya,
Finally, the third principle in Moya— under which a seemingly final and appealable dismissal will be deemed unappealable where the court explicitly invites the litigant to file an amended complaint and cure the defects in the original complaint — does not apply in this case. The district court in this case gave no indication that it would accept — let alone invite — a revised complaint from Ms. Phillips. Accordingly, the district court’s dismissal was a final appealable order, and we have jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
B. The District Court Appropriately Dismissed Ms. Phillips’s State Law Claims for Failure to Provide Advance Notice
Phillips raised state law claims against the city and city employees acting within the scope of their employment. Both of these types of claims are covered by Kan. Stat. Ann. § 12-105b(d)’s notice requirement.
See Knorp v. Albert,
Phillips argues that her sexual battery/intentional infliction of emotional distress claim against Officer Sabrina Gettler alleges actions outside the scope of Gettler’s employment and, therefore, this claim should not be barred by the state notice requirements. In her complaint, Ms. Phillips alleged that Officer Gettler searched her in an overly intrusive manner in a courthouse bathroom before allowing her to attend court proceedings. In support of her argument that these allegations concern activity beyond the scope of Officer Gettler’s employment, Phillips relies heavily on
Miller v. Brungardt,
Both
Miller
and
Hicks
involved employees’ claims against their employers arising out of their supervisors’ sexually inappropriate activities.
See Hicks,
Finally, Phillips argues that the Kansas notice statute is unconstitutional because it treats the government more favorably than other tort defendants. This court has previously approved a very similar state notice statute, concluding that “the [state] legislature may place reasonable restrictions on” the right to sue the state government, and “[t]he requirement that claimants give notice of their claim is a reasonable restriction that applies equal
*1274
ly to all persons wishing to sue the government.”
Day v. Mem’l Hosp. of Guymon,
C. Ms. Phillips Failed to Argue on Appeal the Dismissal of her Federal Claims
Ms. Phillips has not argued on appeal the dismissal of her § 1983 claims, so we do not decide whether the district court erred by dismissing those claims. In her briefs on appeal, Ms. Phillips challenged the fairness and constitutionality of the Kansas notice statute, and argued that, even if Kansas’s notice statute is generally appropriate, it should not apply to her state claims of sexual battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress. She did not, however, raise and argue any explicit challenge to the application of Kansas’s notice statute to her federal claims under § 1983, so we do not reach that issue.
See Doebele v. Sprint/United Mgmt. Co.,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reason, we AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of Ms. Phillips’s claims.
Notes
. The statute provides:
Any person having a claim against a municipality which could give rise to an action brought under the Kansas tort claims act shall file a written notice as provided in this subsection before commencing such action. ... Once notice of the claim is filed, no action shall be commenced until after the claimant has received notice from the municipality that it has denied the claim or until after 120 days has passed following the filing of the notice of claim, whichever occurs first.... No person may initiate an action against a municipality unless the claim has been denied in whole or part.
Kan. Stat. Ann. § 12-105b(d).
. This court's unpublished opinion in
Brown,
Brown
is easily distinguished from our case because, as this court explicitly recognized, that case fell within the third principle laid down in
Moya,
that "when the dismissal order expressly
grants
the plaintiff leave to amend, that conclusively shows that the disIrict court intended only to dismiss the complaint; the dismissal is thus not a final decision.”
Moya,
. Even though Ms. Phillips failed to raise a challenge on appeal to the dismissal of her federal claims, we may still exercise appellate jurisdiction over the district court’s dismissal . of her state law claims. As we have observed,
[t]he scope of a federal court’s jurisdictional power ... does not fluctuate with the fate of a federal claim at trial or on appeal, but exists if the federal claim initially had substance sufficient to confer subject matter jurisdiction on the court.... Thus, a district court has the constitutional power to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over state claims even after a federal claim has been dismissed, provided the federal claim was not insubstantial from the outset. The same rule applies on appeal.
United Int’l Holdings, Inc. v. Wharf (Holdings) Ltd.,
. Although the issue is not raised on appeal, and accordingly we do not address it, for future reference we direct the attention of the district court to
Felder v. Casey,
