This case is before the court on defendant-appellant Ford Motor Company’s appeal from an order of the district court dismissing plaintiff-appellee Reta McCants’ suit without prejudice pursuant to Rule 41(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
FACTS
Appellee Reta McCants, administratrix of the estate of Johnny McCants, deceased, commenced this suit against appellant Ford Motor Company in federal district court in Alabama. The action arose out of an accident in which appellee’s decedent, a member of the United States Army Reserve, was killed while riding in a military jeep on a two week active duty training mission. The accident occurred in Mississippi, and the complaint sought damages under Mississippi products liability law.
The decedent was killed on July 24, 1982. Appellee filed suit against A.M. General, the company she believed had manufactured the military jeep in question, on July 20, 1983. Appellee maintains that she subsequently learned through discovery that appellant rather than A.M. General manufactured the jeep, and she sought leave to amend her action to substitute appellant as party defendant. Instead of allowing the amendment, the district court denied her motion to amend and dismissed the suit without prejudice. Appellee then filed this action, naming appellant as defendant, on November 14, 1983.
Discovery began in December of 1983 and continued through most of the following year. In January of 1985 the district court issued an order granting plaintiff-ap-pellee’s motion that the case be dismissed without prejudice. Although the action had been pending for more than a year, during which time considerable activity had taken place, the district court declined to attach any conditions to its order of dismissal.
Appellant argues on this appeal that the dismissal without prejudice and the failure to attach conditions were an abuse of the district court’s discretion.
DISCUSSION
I. The Dismissal Without Prejudice
Rule 41(a)(2) allows a plaintiff, with the approval of the court, to dismiss an action voluntarily and without prejudice to future litigation at any time. The rule provides in relevant part as follows:
Except as provided in paragraph (1) of this subdivision of this rule [concerning dismissal by stipulation or by plaintiff prior to answer or motion for summary judgment], an action shall not be dismissed at the plaintiff’s instance save upon order of the court and upon such terms and conditions as the court deems proper ... Unless otherwise specified in the order, a dismissal under this paragraph is without prejudice.
The purpose of the rule “is primarily to prevent voluntary dismissals which unfairly affect the other side, and to permit the imposition of curative conditions.”
Alamance Industries, Inc. v. Filene’s,
As we have noted previously, however, in most cases a dismissal should
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be granted unless the defendant will suffer clear legal prejudice,
other than the mere ;prospect of a subsequent lawsuit,
as a result.
Id. See also Holiday Queen Land Corp. v. Baker,
In this case, appellant argues it will suffer plain legal prejudice as a result of the district court’s dismissal without prejudice, as it will lose the complete defense it claims it is afforded by the applicable statute of limitations in Alabama. Appellee, as well as the district court in which she originally filed, apparently assumed that either the six year statute of limitations applicable to wrongful death actions under Mississippi law or the two year statute applicable to wrongful death actions in Alabama would be used to determine the timeliness of her suit. As the case developed, however, and the parties dedicated further research to the legal issues involved, it became clear that a very strong argument could be made for the application of the general one year statute of limitations applicable to actions not otherwise specifically provided for in other sections of the Alabama code. See Ala.Code § 6-2-39 (1977).
Appellant did not plead the one year statute of limitations in its original answer to the complaint. The issue first appears in the record in an amended answer filed July 18, 1984, in which it was simply stated that appellee’s claims were barred by the applicable statute of limitations. Appellant then filed a motion for summary judgment on the basis of the one year statute on August 24, 1984; the district court denied that motion the day before it granted ap-pellee’s motion for dismissal without prejudice. Although no opinion accompanied the district court’s denial of the motion for summary judgment, appellant argues that the district court, in its denial of the summary judgment motion, must have erroneously determined the one year statute of limitations to be inapplicable. Appellant thus argues not only that it suffered legal prejudice in that it lost the statute of limitations defense when the case was dismissed without prejudice, but that the district court abused its discretion when it failed even to acknowledge that important fact in its balancing of the equities.
Considering appellant’s latter claim first, we are not convinced that the district court judge misunderstood the law applicable to the cause of action in this case, even if appellant correctly maintains that the one year Alabama statute should apply. Under the cii’cumstances of this case, the district court’s denial of the pending motion for summary judgment without opinion simply cannot be taken to imply that the district judge did not believe a serious statute of limitations problem to exist in this case. Rather, the more plausible interpretation of the district court’s order, considered in context, is precisely to the contrary. It is clear from the face of the Rule 41(a)(2) *858 motion to dismiss that the motion was filed because of the same statute of limitations problem that prompted the motion for summary judgment. The motions were argued together before the district court, and the court ruled on them almost simultaneously. If the district court had not considered a serious statute of limitations problem to exist, the dismissal without prejudice would have been unnecessary. Thus we decline to assume, on the basis of the district court’s disposition of the motion for summary judgment, that the court erroneously failed to recognize the strength of appellant’s statute of limitations defense. The district court may instead have determined that it should rule on the motion for summary judgment before dismissing the action without prejudice, and thus may have ruled as it did simply to clear the way for the subsequent order of dismissal. Under the circumstances of this case, we cannot consider the district court’s denial of appellant’s motion for summary judgment to reflect the court’s view of the applicable statute of limitations in Alabama as clearly as appellant suggests that it does, and that ruling can be of no consequence to our determination of whether the court abused its discretion when it granted the dismissal without prejudice.
The parties have not yet agreed on the statute of limitations applicable to this suit, as brought in Alabama, although appellant argues persuasively that Alabama’s one year statute would apply. Appellee essentially argues her case on this appeal on the basis of the assumption that Alabama’s one year statute bars the suit as brought in Alabama, and that a similar suit would not be time-barred in Mississippi, where appel-lee now intends to sue. We, too, will assume without deciding that the one year Alabama statute bars this suit as filed, but that it could be refiled in Mississippi under the statute of limitations applicable there. We thus must determine whether it constitutes an abuse of discretion for a district court to dismiss without prejudice an action that is time-barred as brought, where the purpose or effect of such dismissal is to allow the plaintiff to refile the action in a place or manner in which it is not similarly barred.
Only a few reported cases are on point. In
Love v. Silas Mason,
We find further support for this view in a binding decision of the former Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. In
Durham v. Florida East Coast Railway Co.,
Noting that “[t]he record does not disclose any prejudice to the defendant, had a voluntary dismissal been granted, other than the annoyance of a second litigation upon the same subject matter,” the court of appeals reversed the decision of the district court and remanded the case with instructions that it be reinstated.
Durham,
Appellant argues vigorously that, under the circumstances of this case, a dismissal without prejudice was an abuse of discretion even if the defendant’s loss of its statute of limitations defense alone constitutes no clear legal bar to the dismissal. According to the defendant, the great costs it has incurred in defending this suit so far, in combination with the loss of the defense, together require us to find an abuse of discretion in the district court’s decision to grant a dismissal without prejudice.
We reject this argument. We have already held the loss of a valid statute of limitations defense not to constitute a bar to a dismissal without prejudice. Appellant has cited no “practical prejudice” it has suffered so far that could not be alleviated by the imposition of costs or other conditions upon the dismissal without prejudice. Thus we cannot find the district court’s dismissal without prejudice, when considered apart from the question of whether costs or other conditions should have been imposed, to have been an abuse of the district court’s broad equitable discretion.
II. The Refusal to Attach Conditions
Appellant argues that if the district court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing the action without prejudice, it should have at least imposed certain costs and attached certain conditions to the dismissal. Appellant elaims the district court should have conditioned the dismissal on the payment by appellee of full compensation for the considerable time and effort it claims it wasted in defending this action. Further, *860 appellant argues that the district court should have imposed non-monetary conditions that would have the effect of insuring that appellant retains the benefits it claims it is due under the terms of a discovery order with which appellee apparently failed to comply. According to appellant, under the clear terms of an order of the district court in this litigation, appellee would not have been able to call any expert witnesses at trial if this case had not been dismissed, because she failed to furnish to appellant certain information the court ordered her to furnish concerning the expert witnesses she intended to call at trial. According to appellant, it should be permitted to retain the benefits of the sanction thereby imposed in any subsequent litigation.
A plaintiff ordinarily will not be permitted to dismiss an action without prejudice under Rule 41(a)(2) after the defendant has been put to considerable expense in preparing for trial, except on condition that the plaintiff reimburse the defendant for at least a portion of his expenses of litigation.
See LeCompte,
Appellant assures us, and appellee does not dispute, that appellant opposed the motion for dismissal without prejudice filed by appellee on January 15, three days before appellant’s motion for summary judgment was set to be heard, and that appellant asked that any dismissal of the action without prejudice include the imposition of specified conditions designed to alleviate the prejudice appellant would otherwise suffer. Appellant’s memorandum in opposition to appellee’s motion to dismiss, apparently prepared virtually overnight so it would be before the court when it heard argument on both motions on January 18, does not appear in the record on appeal. Only a motion filed by appellant in September of 1984, in opposition to an earlier motion for dismissal without prejudice that was subsequently withdrawn, provides any insight into the factors appellant might have urged the district court to consider in response to the rather sudden motion filed by appellee four months later. Further, the district court did not explicitly rule on appellant’s request, instead simply denying it by implication by failing to impose or discuss any conditions when the dismissal without prejudice was ordered.
As a result, the record now before this court is insufficient to allow us to evaluate the district court’s exercise of
its
discretion in rejecting appellant’s request for the attachment of conditions to its order dismissing the case. It is clear that discovery had proceeded and that interrogatories had been served, objected to, and answered to some extent. Depositions had been taken. Appellant had obviously incurred considerable litigation expense. Just how much of the work done by appellant in this case was wasted and how much will be useful in further litigation in Mississippi is not clear. While appellee does not concede that her suit in Alabama is barred by the statute of limitations, it is apparent that appellant’s position on the statute of limitations motivated the motion for dismissal without prejudice. As the record makes clear, however, the parties were aware of the statute of limitations problem long before appellee
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filed the motion to dismiss that was granted by the district court. The district court judge is in a far better position than we are to weigh and advise us concerning the equities, whether currently in the record or not, that militate for and against the imposition of the various conditions appellant claims are due. We simply cannot properly evaluate the district court’s exercise of its discretion in this regard without the benefit of some record of the factors it took into consideration in reaching its decision. We thus remand the case, with instructions as indicated below, for further proceedings in the district court.
See LeCompte,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, we VACATE the district court’s order dismissing this case without prejudice and REMAND the case to the district court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. On remand, the district court is instructed to rule on appellant’s request that conditions be attached to any dismissal of this case without prejudice, and to state the findings and conclusions that lead the court to arrive at the decision it reaches in that regard. The district court may hold further hearings to aid it in determining the conditions that may be appropriate if it so desires. The court need not do so, however, if it finds the current record sufficient to allow it to prepare the order it deems appropriate. During the remand, we will retain jurisdiction over this appeal. We are mindful of the heavy workload under which the district court is now operating. If the district court’s calendar will permit it, however, v/e ask that the order contemplated by this remand be forwarded within 45 days.
