This ease arose when The Wellness Community®-National (Wellness Community) and its affiliate The Wellness Community® Chicago/Western Suburbs (Wellness House) decided to part ways. Recognizing that this required it to change its name, The Wellness Community® Chicago/Western Suburbs ultimately settled on “Wellness House.” Wellness Community believes that the new name might be confusing to the public, and thus that Wellness House breached the termination clause of the contract. Interesting though this question is, we do not reach it in this opinion. Because we conclude that federal jurisdiction was never established under 28 U.S.C. § 1332, and that the supplemental jurisdiction provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 1367 could not apply here, we vacate the judgment below and dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.
Both Wellness Community and Wellness House are charitable corporations in the business of providing free psychological and social support to cancer patients. Wellness Community is a California corporation, with its principal place of business in California; Wellness House is an Illinois corporation, with its principal place of business in Illinois. On July 13, 1989, the parties entered into an affiliation agreement, in which Wellness House agreed to carry out the Wellness Community program in the western Chicago area, and Wellness Community agreed to furnish various forms of assistance. Section 8 of the Agreement gave either party the right to terminate upon giving ninety days’ *48 notice. In that event, the Agreement specified that
[¿Immediately upon giving notice or receiving notice of revocation, Grantee shall take all steps so that the words “The Wellness Community” and all similar words which might prove confusing to the public shall be deleted from all of Grantee’s activities of any and all types and kinds, and Grantee shall immediately take all steps as are necessary so that all persons will know that Grantee is no longer associated with [Wellness Community].
In August 1993, Wellness/Western Suburbs decided to disaffiliate from Wellness Community. It did so officially on November 1,1993, when it adopted as its new name “Wellness House.” Less than three weeks later, Wellness Community filed this suit in federal court.
Wellness Community’s original complaint raised claims under both federal and state law, and alleged both federal question and diversity jurisdiction. Count II of the original complaint claimed violations of Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a), while Counts I and III-VI raised a variety of state law claims, both under the contract and otherwise. Wellness Community requested a permanent injunction that would require its former affiliate to eliminate the word “Wellness” from its name. Wellness House counterclaimed for declaratory relief that would confirm its right to use its new name.
After some months of preliminary skirmishing over motions for judgment on the pleadings, on April 20, 1994, the parties submitted an agreed motion to dismiss all but the breach of contract count. The next day, they filed another motion, urging the court “promptly [to] dispose of this matter,” again referring only to the breach of contract issue. The district court initially denied the motion, but on June 7, 1994, it entered an order scheduling a pretrial conference, setting a trial date, and noting that plaintiff orally dismissed counts 2 through 6 of the complaint and that defendant orally withdrew its counterclaim.
On June 30, the court granted Wellness Community’s motion to file an amended complaint. The amended complaint alleged only diversity jurisdiction, and it included only state law claims. Wellness House’s answer, filed on July 5, denied that the amount in controversy exceeded $50,000. The answer also contested several allegations that might have indicated the amount in controversy, such as the assertion in First Amended Complaint Paragraph 15 referring to Wellness Community’s planned $11,500,000 fund-raising and expansion program, and the claim in Paragraph 16 that the start-up cost for a new facility is approximately $200,000, and annual costs run $25,000 to $50,000. The answer to Paragraph 17 specifically denied the allegations that implied that Wellness House’s former accomplishments were due in any significant part to its use of the name “The Wellness Community®/Western Suburbs.”
Most of the four-day trial to the court dealt with the use of the term “wellness” in Wellness House’s new name, and whether it was on the one hand likely to mislead the public into thinking that Wellness House was still affiliated with Wellness Community, or on the other hand whether the word “wellness” has become generic in the health care industry. At the close of Wellness Community’s case, Wellness House moved for judgment, both on the merits and on the ground that the plaintiff had not proven that its claim satisfied the amount in controversy requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Although the trial court denied the motion, it did not make any findings on the jurisdictional amount question. The court again denied a similar motion at the close of all the evidence.
In its Memorandum Opinion, the district court recognized that a serious jurisdictional question existed. The court did not, however, make a clear finding on the existence of diversity jurisdiction, stating only that “we likely have diversity jurisdiction.”
Initially, we must determine which complaint governs this suit. The original complaint raised both federal law and state law issues, supporting the former as a matter of federal question jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1338(a), and the latter as a matter of diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Shortly before the trial, however, the court granted plaintiffs own motion to file a First Amended Complaint, which dropped all federal claims, and alleged only diversity jurisdiction. In these circumstances, it is well established that the amended pleading supersedes the original pleading. See
Nisbet v. Van Tuyl,
Turning to the question of jurisdiction, we conclude that Wellness Community failed to establish that the amount in controversy exceeded $50,000. Ordinarily, we review a district court’s determination of amount in controversy issues for clear error, see
Rexford Rand Corp. v. Ancel,
Although monetary amounts were mentioned in the First Amended Complaint and at trial, the critical question that the district court should have resolved was the value of the object of the litigation — here, “what’s in a name.” It may be that the name “Wellness Community” was worth more than $50,000, but this was a question of jurisdictional fact. The record shows, and the district court found, only facts that related to various business expenditures or fund-raising activities. For example, during the years that Wellness House was affiliated with Wellness Community, Wellness House received $2,700,000 in donations.
We express no opinion about the way that this factual issue should have been resolved. Ideally, the district court would have made its findings of jurisdictional fact before the trial began on July 18th, bearing in mind the fact that the Answer to the First Amended Complaint, filed on July 5th, specifically stated in response to paragraph 3 that “[Wellness House] denies the amount in controversy is in excess of $50,000.” This issue was again brought to the court’s attention when Wellness House moved for judgment at the close of Wellness Community’s ease. It is enough that jurisdictional amount was contested, and that Wellness Community never showed “by competent proof’ that more than $50,000 was at stake. Without such proof, the effort to sustain this case on the basis of diversity jurisdiction fails.
Again, the district court implicitly recognized the flaws in the proof supporting diversity jurisdiction. Rather than relying on unproven assertions about the amount in controversy, the district court turned to the supplemental jurisdiction statute for support. For two independent reasons, however, supplemental jurisdiction cannot save this judgment. The first is straightforward: once the First Amended Complaint superseded the original complaint, there was no federal claim to which these state claims could be “supplemental.” No one would quarrel with the proposition that the First Amended Complaint could not have given rise to supplemental jurisdiction if it had been the first and only complaint filed in the case. The result does not differ because it was an amended complaint. (The rule in removal cases is slightly different: after a defendant removes a case from state to federal court, a plaintiff cannot defeat the federal court’s jurisdiction by amending to claim an amount less than the required amount in controversy. See
St. Paul Mercury Indemnity Co. v. Red Cab Co.,
Even if the federal claims in the original complaint somehow survived the amendment process, supplemental jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1367 cannot be established in the after-the-fact manner used by the district court here. The court relied on three factors: first, “regardless of whether we should have held the trial, we now have committed substantial judicial resources” (
None of these considerations saves supplemental jurisdiction here. The first, as the court itself realized, has the vice of the circular argument: it will always be tempting to bootstrap supplemental jurisdiction after a trial is over. If the federal question had been dismissed only at the end of the trial, it would be appropriate to consider the resources that were expended in the trial, but in this case the federal claim was abandoned by the plaintiff before the trial ever started. The propriety of continuing with the case should have been considered at that time. (Even from that perspective, the fact that the dismissal of the federal claim occurred on the eve of trial is not necessarily sufficient to justify (or, indeed, to defeat) supplemental jurisdiction. See
Timm v. Mead Corporation,
The court’s concern about the expense to the parties of further proceedings is simply another dimension of the resource question. Parties are always put to some expense when they litigate in the wrong court and then suffer a jurisdictional dismissal, but this does not override the important principle that the federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. The third factor is similarly unpersuasive. While Wellness House may not have stressed its jurisdictional objection as strongly as it might have done, the court had a
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filing before it less than two weeks before the trial began that reiterated the point, and Wellness House raised it twice during the trial. Furthermore, courts are required to notice jurisdictional faults at any time. See, e.g.,
American Fire & Casualty Co. v. Finn,
Because neither diversity jurisdiction nor supplemental jurisdiction was satisfied here, we vacate the judgment below and remand for dismissal for want of jurisdiction.
