Sam and Marian Levine sued Steven Kot-zen and National Patient Aids, Ine., to recover on certain promissory notes. The district court, sitting with a jury, found that under Florida Statutes Annotated § 201.08 the notes were unenforceable unless taxes due on the notes were paid. Since plaintiffs presented no evidence that the taxes had been paid, the court granted defendants’ motion for a directed verdict, made at the end of plaintiffs’ case in chief, 1 and dismissed the suit without prejudice. Defendants appeal, asserting that the dismissal should have been with prejudice. They did not object below to the court’s action. Assuming that they preserved this issue for appeal, we find their contentions without merit.
Dismissal without prejudice on a motion for a directed verdict is, admittedly, extremely rare. Cases and commentators make clear, however, that a court receiving a motion for a directed verdict under Fed.R. Civ.P. 50(a) may deny that motion and instead permit plaintiff voluntarily to have his claim dismissed without prejudice under Fed.R.Civ.P. 41(a)(2).
Cone v.
West
Virginia Pulp & Paper Co.,
We find no abuse of discretion. Dismissal here was because of a technical failure of proof, a situation in which the Supreme Court has noted that action such as the district court took is proper.
Cone, supra,
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Defendants actually made a motion for involuntary dismissal under Fed.R.Civ.P. 41(b). The court orally granted that motion. The court styled its written order, however, as a grant of a motion for a directed verdict, correctly reflecting that Rule 41(b), by its explicit language, is inapplicable in jury trials.
. At the time
Safeway Stores
was issued, Rule 41(b) could be applied to both jury and non-jury cases.
See Weissinger v. United States,
. Under the circumstances at issue here, the court may act sua sponte to dismiss under Rule 41(a)(2). It need not await a motion from the plaintiff to permit voluntary dismissal without prejudice. See 9 Wright & Miller, supra, § 2533, at 585 (“[T]he court has discretion, on its own motion, to grant a dismissal without prejudice.”). Since the alternative to the court’s action would be a directed verdict against plaintiffs on the merits, we assume that plaintiffs agree with the dismissal without prejudice.
