MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This matter is before the Court on the Motion of Defendant Dorsey Trailers, Inc. (“Dorsey”) for Summary Judgment and the Motion of Defendant Dyro-Tech Industries, Inc. d/b/a “CorTec” (“CorTec”) to Dismiss 1 on the basis of res judicata. Previously the Defendants had moved this Court to dismiss, transfer, or stay this proceeding because a parallel case was pending in the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana (“Louisiana case”) involving the same parties and the same transaction as herein involved. Before this Court had an opportunity to rule on those motions, the Louisiana case was dismissed for failure to timely file within the Louisiana statute of limitations. The Defendants now argue that this action should be dismissed because of the res judicata effect of the Louisiana decision. There are no disputes as to any material facts; the issue is strictly a matter of law regarding the effect of the dismissal of the Louisiana case.
Steve D. Thompson Trucking, Inc. (“Thompson”) filed an action against Dorsey Trailers and CorTec in state court in Louisiana on June 30, 1986, to recover for alleged defects in 100 trailers sold to Thompson by Dorsey from May, 1981, to January, 1982. Dorsey manufactured the trailers which were constructed with Cor-Tec fiberglass reinforced plywood panels. The action was removed to the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana, Monroe Division, on August 8,1986, on the basis of diversity jurisdiction. The Defendants raised the question of Louisiana’s one-year prescriptive period for the action. Thompson then filed the present action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, Jackson Division, on May 7, 1987, asserting substantially similar claims and stating that Mississippi law properly applied to the transaction. The Plaintiff also sought to fall within the Mississippi six-year statute of limitations.
Thompson unsuccessfully moved the court in Louisiana to stay the Louisiana case pending the outcome of this Mississippi proceeding. A motion for summary judgment was filed in the Louisiana case by Dorsey and CorTec urging that the Louisiana one-year prescriptive period barred the action in the Louisiana district court. Thompson responded by asserting that the Louisiana one-year prescriptive period in redhibition did not apply and that the Mississippi six-year statute of limitations as well as Mississippi substantive law did apply to the case. On August 20, 1987, the United States District Court in Louisiana held that the Louisiana prescriptive period applied to bar that action, and the court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment.
See Thompson v. Dorsey,
The Defendants in this Mississippi action now assert that the prior Louisi
*480
ana decision has a
res judicata
effect on this second action. The Court notes Fifth Circuit law provides that the effect of a prior federal diversity judgment is controlled by federal
res judicata
rules rather than state law.
See Sidag Aktiengesellschaft v. Smoked Foods Products Company, Inc.,
There is no dispute that the parties in the Louisiana case and this present case are identical: Plaintiff Steve D. Thompson Trucking, Inc. sued Defendants Dorsey Trailers, Inc. and CorTec, in its two corporate names, in both actions. The prior judgment was rendered by the District Court in the Western District of Louisiana which undisputedly had subject matter jurisdiction and personal jurisdiction of the action, thus it was a court of competent jurisdiction. The same cause of action regarding recovery for alleged defects in the trailers sold to Thompson is involved in both suits.
The remaining question is whether the dismissal based on the Louisiana prescriptive period was a final judgment on the merits. The Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has held, “A final judgment for purposes of
res judicata
must finally dispose of some matter which under the substantive law to be applied and the procedural law of the forum can be, and has been, finally disposed of.”
Republic Supply,
A case more closely on point regarding statutes of limitations from different forums is
Cummings v. Cowan,
...Furthermore, it is untenable for the insurer to assert, as it does, that the state court’s dismissal with prejudice constitutes a res judicata bar to the present action. That dismissal in no way implicated the merits of plaintiff’s claims, but was grounded solely on the bar presented by the Tennessee statute of limitations. Since, as we have seen, that statute is only a procedural bar to enforcement of a statutory remedy, and not an integral part of the substantive right itself, the Tennessee state court judgment is not a merits determination.
Cummings,
Furthermore, the Fifth Circuit has cited with approval the Restatement of Judgments that dismissal of a case on limitations grounds in one jurisdiction is not a bar to another action in another jurisdiction.
[I]f the plaintiff brings an action to enforce a claim in one State and the defendant sets up the defense that the action is barred by the Statute of Limitations in that State, the plaintiff is precluded from thereafter maintaining an action to enforce the claim in that State. He is not, however, precluded from maintaining an action to enforce the claim in another State if it is not barred by the Statute of Limitations in that State.
Henson v. Columbus Bank and Trust Co.,
The Louisiana court was presented with the argument that Mississippi substantive law, as well as the Mississippi six-year statute of limitations, applied to the action. Issue preclusion, or collateral estoppel, bars a party from relitigating issues of fact or law that were necessary to the court’s judgment and actually determined in a prior action.
See Sidag,
The Court finds that the Louisiana decision has no res judicata effect on this action proceeding in a federal district court in Mississippi which applies its own procedural law. The Defendants’ Motions for Summary Judgment and for Dismissal will be denied. The Court notes, however, that the Louisiana case is on appeal to the Fifth Circuit. Should the Fifth Circuit reverse the decision of the Louisiana district court and reinstate that action, the parties would be faced with simultaneous actions in two forums and the Plaintiff still would have his choice of where to proceed. In the interest of judicial economy, this Court finds that it should stay further proceedings in this action pending the outcome of the appeal of the Louisiana case. The Court hereby denies the Defendants’ Motions but grants a stay of the proceedings..
It appears to the Court that this situation is proper for an interlocutory appeal so that in the interest of judicial economy this proceeding and the Louisiana decision may be joined and presented to the Fifth Circuit. The Court will entertain a motion under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) if one of the parties desires such an interlocutory appeal.
Notes
. Defendant CorTec has presented matters outside the pleadings in support of its Motion to Dismiss, therefore the Motion will be treated as one for summary judgment. See Rule 12(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
