Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
I.
The “first-filed rule” is a well-established policy of the federal courts that “[i]n
II.
This appeal is but a facet of procedurally intricate litigation concerning the alleged misuse of the pesticide dibromochloropro-pane (DBCP) on banana farms throughout Central America. Litigation has been ongoing in various federal and state courts for decades. Appellants — more than two hundred foreign agricultural workers — allege they were exposed to DBCP beginning in the 1960’s and ending sometime in the 1980’s. They maintain that improper exposure to this pesticide is to blame for the numerous health problems they have endured. Litigation began in 1993 with the filing of a putative class against the Dole Food Company, Inc., and other related companies in Texas state court. To our knowledge, no court — federal or state— has ever reviewed the actual merits of Appellants’ claims. Instead, these matters have continued in various courts around the country on purely procedural questions. Not surprisingly, the procedural history associated with these cases is labyrinthine. Here, however, we confine our discussion to the procedural history of DBCP litigation that was recently undertaken in two states; Louisiana and Delaware.
A. The Louisiana Action: Chaverri et al. v. Dole Food Co., Inc., et al.
Numerous suits were filed in June of 2011 in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana against Dole and others.
On summary judgment, Dole argued that the Appellants’ claims were time-barred under Louisiana’s one-year statute of limitations. See La. Civ.Code Ann. art. 3492 (West, Westlaw through 2014 Regular Session). The District Court agreed and on September 17, 2012, granted Dole’s motion for summary judgment. The matter was appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit on October 5, 2012. The appeal was actively prosecuted, with oral argument taking place on September 4, 2013. On September 19, 2013, the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit affirmed the Louisiana District Court in an unpublished, per curiam opinion. See Chaverri v. Dole Food Co.,
B. Delaware Federal Litigation: the Subject of This Dispute.
Meanwhile, on June 1, 2012, while Dole’s motion for summary judgment was pending in Louisiana District Court, the Appellants filed several actions in the United
Dole Food Company filed a motion to dismiss the Delaware lawsuits on June 21, 2012, arguing for the application of the first-filed rule. This motion was joined by Dole Fresh Fruit Company, Standard Fruit Company, Standard Fruit & Steamship Company, and AMVAC Chemical Corporation (hereinafter “Dole Appel-lees”). The District Court agreed with the Dole Appellees and held that the first-filed rule applied to the Delaware cases. It then was faced with the discretionary decision whether to stay or dismiss the proceedings. The Delaware District Court dismissed the actions on August 21, 2012, reasoning that Appellants “filed in Delaware notwithstanding their choice to file first in Louisiana. Decisions have consequences; one fair bite at the apple is sufficient.” App. 19-20.
The day after the Delaware District Court dismissed Dole, Appellees Occidental Petroleum, Del Monte Produce N.A., Inc., Dow Chemical Co., and Shell Oil (hereinafter “Occidental Appellees”) likewise moved for dismissal based on the first-filed rule. On March 29, 2013, the District Court granted the Occidental Ap-pellees motion as well. Although final judgment had been entered in the District Court for Louisiana, ■ the District Court reasoned that the first-filed rule still applied because the case was on appeal to the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.
While Appellants’ appeal was pending in the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, Appellee Chiquita Brands International, Inc., moved to dismiss, arguing a lack of personal jurisdiction. Chiquita Brands LLC and Chiquita Fresh N.A. LLC moved for a dismissal pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) and to dismiss based on res judica-ta and statute of limitations grounds.
III.
We review the District Court’s decision to apply the first-filed rule for an abuse of discretion. E.E.O.C. v. Univ. of Pa.,
A. The First-Filed, Rule
The first-filed rule counsels deference to the suit that was filed first, when two lawsuits involving the same issues and parties are pending in separate federal district courts. Univ. of Pa.,
Claims against the Appellees were filed in Louisiana District Court on June 1, 2011, and those same claims were filed against the same Appellees on June 1, 2012 in Delaware District Court. Therefore, concurrent jurisdiction existed on June 1, 2012 when the duplicative actions were filed.
The Appellants place great emphasis on the fact that the Louisiana cases were on appeal when the Delaware District Court dismissed the claims against the Occidental Appellees and two of the Chiquita Appellees. They argue that by the time the Delaware District Court dismissed the actions, concurrent jurisdiction no longer existed. But, as we see it, the procedural posture of the first-filed case on the date the second-filed actions were dismissed, is irrelevant to the analysis. The relevant point-in-time is the filing date of the duplicative action. If concurrent jurisdiction exists at that time, and the actions are truly duplicative, the first-filed rule can be invoked. This is what we meant when we held that “the court which first has possession of the subject must decide it.” Crosley Corp. v. Hazeltine Corp.,
A court obtains possession of a case through the filing of a complaint and the date of that filing, therefore, is the relevant inquiry under the first-filed rule. See, e.g., Collegiate Licensing Co. v. American Cas. Co. of Reading, Pa.,
The Appellants next argue that, even if the fírst-fíled rule was applicable, the Delaware District Court should have stayed or transferred the Delaware cases, and that dismissing them with prejudice instead was an abuse of discretion. Our dissenting colleague agrees with this argument. We, however, do not because such a position is in tension with the purposes of the rule and would result in a wrongful limitation on the scope of a district court’s' discretion to fashion an appropriate response to a second-filed action. The scope of the District Court’s discretion is very broad in these circumstances. As we said earlier, we will not find an abuse of discretion under the first-filed rule “unless there is a definite and firm conviction that the [District Court] committed a clear error of judgment in the conclusion it reached.” Hanover Potato Prods.,
The rationale underlying the first-filed rule is “to encourage! ] sound judicial administration and to promote! ] comity among the courts in the federal system.” Univ. of Pa.,
Also, dismissal with prejudice is an appropriate response to the Appellants’ own litigation strategy. Three days after filing the Delaware lawsuits, the Appellants’ counsel informed the Louisiana District Court that the decision to file the duplica-tive law suits in Delaware District Court was strategic and that counsel recognized that: “the general rule is that duplicate cases in different federal judicial districts should not both proceed.” App. at 388 (citations omitted). Counsel then asked for the Louisiana District Court’s “indulgence over the next several months,” and did not move to stay or dismiss the actions pending in Louisiana federal court. Id. The Appellants felt it was “imperative” to preserve and protect their claims in Louisiana by filing duplicate cases in Delaware, admitting to the Louisiana District Court that they had also filed suit in Delaware because:
The Louisiana Supreme Court is expected to conclusively determine the [opt out] issue later this year and before the Delaware Supreme Court is likely to have the opportunity to squarely address the matter. If the [Louisiana] Supreme Court rules' that the Plaintiffs cases are not Prescribed, the Plaintiffs would elect to proceed in Louisiana because the prescription issue would have been conclusively determined. But if this Court and the Louisiana Supreme Court determine that the cases are in fact prescribed, then Plaintiffs can continue to pursue the merits of their claims in Delaware.
App. at 387. By their own acknowledgement then, Appellants were forum shop
We are also concerned that finding error in the Delaware District Court’s dismissal here could create a “no dismissal” rule for these type of cases. That is, when faced with a second-filed action, a district court would only have discretion to stay or transfer while the first-filed action is pending. Such a rule, we believe, is inconsistent with our current jurisprudence, which clearly states that application of the first-filed rule be guided by principles of “fundamental fairness ... [and] dictates the need for fashioning a flexible response to the issue of concurrent jurisdiction.” Univ. of Pa.,
Here, the District Court acknowledged the relevant considerations of the first-filed rule, and was persuaded to dismiss the second-filed actions. The District Court weighed heavily that the Appellants were blatantly forum shopping and were attempting to get a second bite at the proverbial apple. We can say then, that the Delaware District Court’s calculation of “fundamental fairness” was guided by “what is right and equitable under the circumstances and the law,” especially in light of the fact that the Appellants’ attempt to evade Louisiana law “violates the equitable basis for the rule.” Id. at 977-78.
Further, it is well within a district court’s discretion to dismiss a second-filed action because a district court has an inherent power to control its docket and dismiss a duplicative action. See In re Fine Paper Antitrust Litig.,
While the first-filed rule does admit some exceptions, there are none present in this case that warrant a departure from the rule. See Univ. of Pa.,
Next, Appellants maintain that the first-filed rule should not apply here because litigating this matter in Delaware makes “eminent sense.” Appellants’ Br. at 31. Perhaps there is some sense in litigating this matter in Delaware, but the Appellants chose not to do so, instead filing their complaint in Louisiana. As we have already determined, the Appellants filed a second, duplicative case in Delaware to hedge their bets against an unfavorable outcome in Louisiana. This is forum shopping, which never makes “eminent sense.” Id.
Finally, Appellants argue that their du-plicative Delaware filing is a “reasonable response” to the Appellees’ history of delaying tactics. A review of the record could reasonably leave one with the impression that the Appellees took full advantage of any opportunity to procedurally stall and/or delay these lawsuits over the decades. However, that is not a reason to abandon the first-filed rule. When reviewing the first-filed rule, we concern ourselves only with the two cases at issue— not any other procedural issues or history of related, but irrelevant litigation.
C. Appellee Chiquita Brands International and Personal Jurisdiction
In a separate order, the Delaware District Court held that it lacked personal jurisdiction over Appellee Chiquita Brands International, and granted its motion to dismiss. We review de novo the District Court’s dismissal for lack of personal jurisdiction, Eurofins Pharma U.S. Holdings v. BioAlliance Pharma S.A.,
Two types of personal jurisdiction exist: general and specific. Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia S.A. v. Hall,
Recently, the United States Supreme Court reviewed the requirements to establish general jurisdiction in Daimler AG v. Bauman, — U.S. -,
Nothing on the record suggests that Chiquita Brands International is any more active in Delaware than it is in other states. Nor do any of its activities in moving and selling its products lead to a finding that its principal place of business is Delaware. The District Court, therefore, correctly dismissed this Appellee for a lack of personal jurisdiction.
IV.
In the end, we simply cannot say that the District Court abused its discretion in dismissing this case with prejudice. A district court’s discretion is necessarily
Notes
. Named as defendants in the Louisiana action were Dole Food Company, Inc.; Dole Fresh Fruit Company; Standard Fruit Company; Standard Fruit and Steamship Company, Del Monte Fresh Produce N.A., Inc., Chiquita Brands International, Chiquita Brands, Inc., Maritrop Trading Corporation, Dow Chemical Company, Occidental Chemical Company, Amvaco Chemical Company and Shell Oil Company. All of these entities joined in a motion to for summary judgment based on statute of limitations grounds. For simplicity, we will refer to this group of defendants as "Dole.”
.The set of defendants in this litigation are Dole Food Company, Inc.; Dole Fresh Fruit Company; Standard Fruit Company; Standard Fruit & Steamship Company; AMVAC Chemical Corp.; Del Monte Fresh Produce N.A., Inc.; Chiquita Brands International, Inc.; Chiquita Brands, LLC; The Dow Chemical Company; Occidental Chemical Corp.; and Shell Oil Company.
. Chiquita Brands International, Inc., joined in these motions, but only in the alternative in the event the District Court denied its motion to dismiss based on personal jurisdiction.
. The District Court exercised jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a). We exercise jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
. Nor, as the Appellants suggest, does maintaining an interactive website subject a national corporation to general jurisdiction in a particular state. We have specifically held that "the mere operation of a commercially interactive web site should not subject the operator to jurisdiction anywhere in the world.” Toys "R" Us, Inc., v. Step Two S.A.,
. We also reject the Appellants' contention that the District Court abused its discretion in denying discovery for purposes of establishing jurisdiction.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
More than two hundred plantation workers brought this suit alleging their employers and certain chemical companies knowingly exposed them to toxic pesticides over a period of many years. As a result, they say, they have injured kidneys, are infertile, and are at heightened risk of cancer. Twenty years after first bringing suit, no court has heard the merits of their claims. Because the Louisiana court dismissed on procedural grounds, the Delaware District Court’s dismissal of the plaintiffs’ claims— with prejudice — effectively ends the plaintiffs’ lawsuit. The majority’s affirmance of that decision, i.e., the dismissal with prejudice of a duplicate claim filed in a second court, is not supported by our caselaw and is contrary to the decisions of the only other Courts of Appeals to have addressed the issue.
I agree with the majority opinion that the first-filed rule applied to the plaintiffs’ successive filing in Delaware, and, as such, that the District Court should have given the Louisiana suit priority. But I do not agree that the first-filed rule is a basis to terminate a claim that otherwise may be prosecuted. That is not something we have ever held before; it is contrary to our positions on successive litigation and concurrent litigation in other contexts; and it is inappropriate in light of the Supreme Court’s command that we must adjudicate properly presented cases not heard elsewhere on the merits. As our sister circuits have done in like cases, I would vacate and remand for further proceedings.
I
In Crosley v. Hazeltine we adopted the first-filed rule: a comity-based policy that, when two federal courts possess the same case at the same time, the action filed first has priority.
The difficult question here, however, is not whether the first-filed rule applies. Once we determine the rule applies, we must still decide whether it is permissible — solely on the basis of the policy — to dismiss the plaintiffs’ claims with prejudice rather than stay the action or dismiss it without prejudice.
Having concluded that the first-filed rule applied, the District Court believed the possible options available to it were “transfer to the Eastern District of Louisiana, stay, or dismissal.”
Crosley involved an interlocutory appeal from a first-filed court’s denial of a motion to enjoin second-filed, duplicative proceedings in another district court. Under our newly-adopted first-filed rule, we “conclude[d] that the District Court ... having the power to issue the preliminary injunction prayed for, abused its discretion in refusing to exercise that power.”
University of Pennsylvania did involve a second-filed court. But the second-filed court in that case determined that, for equitable reasons, the first-filed rule did not apply.
In short, the propriety of dismissal with prejudice under the first-filed rule is a
II
Unlike our Court, the Seventh, Ninth, and Fifth Circuits have addressed whether and when a second-filed court may dismiss a case on the basis of the first-filed rule. These cases show that dismissal with prejudice under the first-filed rule should be limited to cases where some other legal basis — res judicata, jurisdiction, mootness, or the like — shows the plaintiffs are clearly unable to prosecute their claims before the abstaining court. Applying this basic rule, these Courts of Appeals have each reversed a second-filed court’s dismissal where, as here, there was an apparent possibility that the claims at issue would not or could not be heard in the first-filed forum.
Beginning with the Seventh Circuit, two cases there are on point. First is Asset Allocation v. Western Employers.
The Seventh Circuit again focused on the cost of dismissing unheard claims in Central States v. Paramount Liquor, which held that a second-filed court’s dismissal without prejudice was error because, compared to a stay, “dismissal created an unwarranted risk of legal
In Alltrade, Inc. v. Uniweld Products, Inc., the Ninth Circuit followed the Seventh Circuit’s lead.
Finally, there is Burger v. American Maritime Officers Union, where the Fifth Circuit reversed a second-filed court’s dismissal with prejudice.
The leading treatises are in concert with our sister courts. Speaking of the first-filed rule as a doctrine of abstention— meaning a judge-made canon by which a court declines to exercise its jurisdiction— Wright and Miller say that “it is well settled that if the same issues are presented in an action pending in another federal court, one of these courts may stay the action before it or even in some circumstances enjoin going forward in the other federal court.”
Then there are our district courts, the vast majority of which have applied the first-filed rule by staying the second case, transferring it, or dismissing it without prejudice.
Ill
The majority opinion offers a few reasons why we should depart from the consensus viewpoint and embrace dismissal with prejudice as squarely within the authority of the second-filed court. For one thing, the majority opinion notes, dismissal with prejudice satisfies the primary goals of the first-filed rule in that it avoids dupli-cative proceedings, which serves comity and efficiency and prevents conflicting judgments.
I find these arguments unpersuasive. A second-filed court avoids duplicative litigation, conflicting judgments, and cross-district frictions whether it stays the matter or dismisses it. A stay also prevents gamesmanship. Regardless of who files each suit, a stay confines litigants to the first-filed forum until the conclusion of its proceedings. Res judicata and collateral estoppel would then prevent the relitigation of any claims that were, or could have been, previously heard on the merits. The additional benefit of a stay, as our sister Courts of Appeals have emphasized, is that it preserves the ability of litigants to advance claims that the first-filed forum does not allow to be adjudicated on the merits. This danger of litigation prejudice is the same whether the two suits were brought by the same parties or opposing ones. The reasoning of our sister Courts of Appeals is as operative here as in the cases before them.
I disagree, moreover, with the assertion that the plaintiffs sought to maintain two actions to see in which one they would fare better. The plaintiffs explicitly told the District Court here, and the one in Louisiana, that they filed their claim in Delaware as a precaution in case the Louisiana court determined that it could not hear their claims on the merits. After all, if the Louisiana court dismissed their claim without any assessment of the merits, the District Court here was their court of only resort, and filing sooner rather than later helped ensure timeliness in Delaware. This is not a litigation strategy designed to get the plaintiffs multiple bites at the apple or a more favorable judge or decisional law than what was offered in Louisiana. Rather, this is a litigation strategy de
As to the purported inequities of successive litigation generally, forum shopping is indeed a recognized basis for overriding the first-filed rule’s presumption that the first court to receive a case should have priority.
Our cases in other successive and/or concurrent litigation contexts track the same contours as the res judicata rule. Where a plaintiff has filed successive du-plicative suits within the same district court, we have expressly recognized only stay, consolidation, and dismissal without prejudice as the options available to the court.
Our consistent position — that an earlier-filed action precludes a later one only if the earlier one has been adjudicated on the merits — reflects the fairness principle that litigants are entitled to a single day in court.
As recently noted by Judge Krause, “the mandate that federal courts hear cases within their statutory jurisdiction is a bedrock principle of our judiciary.”
The teaching of Quackenbush is that “where there is no other forum and no later exercise of jurisdiction ... relinquishing jurisdiction is not abstention; it’s abdication.”
In sum, the vast corpus of successive litigation and concurrent litigation authority holds that a second-filed suit may not be dismissed with prejudice solely on the basis of equity or judicial management. This consistent rejection of dismissal with prejudice except as according to some other recognized basis — res judicata, jurisdiction, mootness, or the like — is well-grounded in both fundamental fairness and the constitutional duties of federal courts. Those considerations apply as fully here as ever, and they cannot be overcome by concern for purported forum shopping.
IV
For the above reasons, I would say that a second-filed action “should be stayed, rather than dismissed, unless it is absolutely clear that dismissal cannot adversely affect any litigant’s interests.”
I respectfully dissent.
.As discussed below, three other Courts of Appeals have addressed the appropriate disposition of second-filed suits in the context of the first-filed rule. None has approved dismissal with prejudice of the second-filed action on the basis of the rule. See Cent. States, Se. & Sw. Areas Pension Fund v. Paramount Liquor Co.,
. I agree with the majority opinion’s determination that the District Court lacked personal jurisdiction over defendant Chiquita Brands. Hence, I dissent in part.
. See Crosley Corp. v. Hazeltine Corp.,
. E.E.O.C. v. Univ. of Pa.,
. "The primary meaning of 'dismissal without prejudice' ... is dismissal without barring the plaintiff from returning later, to the same court, with the same underlying claim.” Sentek Int’l Inc. v. Lockheed Martin Corp.,
. Maj. Op. at 264 ("To our knowledge, no court — federal or state — has.ever reviewed the actual merits of Appellants’ claims”).
. "Res judicata bars a claim litigated between the same parties ... in earlier litigation where the claim arises from the same set of facts as a claim adjudicated on the merits in the earlier litigation.” Blunt v. Lower Merion Sch. Dist.,
. Dow Chem. Corp. v. Blanco,
. Chavez v. Dole Food Co. Inc., No. 12-697-RGA,
. Maj. Op. at 263.
. Rather, the majority opinion cites to a Ninth Circuit case, Cedars-Sinai Med. Ctr., et al. v. Shalala,
. Nor our other first-filed rule cases: Triangle Conduit & Cable Co. v. Nat’l Elec. Products Corp.,
. The majority opinion separately suggests we have limited review over a decision to dismiss with prejudice because it is part of the district court's docket management authority. Maj. Op. at 267-68. I do not see how a dismissal with prejudice, which enters final judgment on a complaint, falls within the rubric of docket management. Indeed, In re Fine Paper Antitrust Litigation, which the majority opinion cites, addressed a challenge to' the district court’s calendaring of proceedings. See 685, F.2d 810, 818 (3d Cir.1982) ("We find no abuse of discretion by the district judge in his scheduling of discovery or of the trial.”). Curtis v. Citibank, N.A. is not contrary to the dissent, either. In Curtis, the Second Circuit reversed the District Court's dismissal of a purportedly duplicate case on the basis that the cases were not actually duplicates. See
. Crosley,
. Cf. Asset Allocation,
. Univ. of Pa.,
. See id. at 971-72, 976-77.
. If anything, University of Pennsylvania is supportive of the dissent. In a footnote, we stated we were "puzzled” that the EEOC did not move to transfer or stay the University’s abusive and anticipatory first-filed suit in the District for the District of Columbia. See id. at 976 n. 4. In doing so, we cited to a statement of the Fifth Circuit that "In addition to outright dismissal, it sometimes may be appropriate to transfer the action or to stay it.” Id. (citing W. Gulf Mar. Assn v. ILA Deep Sea Local 24,
.That we have never previously reviewed a district court's dismissal with prejudice under the first-filed rule underscores the unusualness of the dismissal with prejudice in this case. Of course, we would not ordinarily have jurisdiction to review a stay, transfer, or non-final dismissal. See Michelson v. Citicorp Nat. Servs., Inc.,
. Asset Allocation & Mgmt. Co. v. W. Emp’rs Ins. Co.,
. Id. at 571.
. Cf. Crosley,
. Asset Allocation,
. Cent. States, Se. & Sw. Areas Pension Fund v. Paramount Liquor Co.,
For our purposes, Serlin was not a first-filed rule case, and the particular context of a failure to follow procedural rules in the same district court presents different considerations than when a different federal court exercising diversity jurisdiction determines a complaint is time-barred. Cf. Walton v. Eaton Corp.,
. Central States,
. Alltrade, Inc. v. Uniweld Prods., Inc.,
. Id. at 629.
. Id. (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
. Id.
. Burger v. Am. Mar. Officers Union,
. Id. (citing Dillard v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.,
. Burger,
. Id. at *3.
. 17A Charles Alan Wright et ah, Fed. Prac. & Proc. Juris. § 4247 (3d ed.) ("Avoiding Duplicative Litigation”).
. 17 Moore's Federal Practice ¶ 111.13 [l][o][ii][A] (3d ed.).
. See Premier Payments Online, Inc. v. Payment Sys. Worldwide,
.The defendants bring but three examples of first-filed rule dismissals to our attention. In one case the dismissal was issued with
. Maj. Op. at 266.
. Maj. Op. at 266-67.
.Maj. Op. at 266-67.
. See Univ. of Pa.,
. Blunt,
. The majority opinion illuminates its departure from res judicata principles with its claim that "the procedural posture of the first-filed case, on the date the second-filed actions were dismissed, is irrelevant to the analysis.” Maj. Op. at 264-66. If the majority opinion fashioned the first-filed rule consistent with res judicata principles, there would be no need to fix "a particular moment in time” at which "to take a snapshot of the cases.” See Maj. Op. at 266.
. Walton,
. E.g. Younger v. Hands,
. See, e.g., Feige v. Sechrest,
. Feige,
. Cf. In re Global Indus. Technologies, Inc.,
. In re: One2One Communications, LLC,F.3d-, -,
. In re Semcrude, L.P.,
. One2One Communications, - F.3d at -,
. Quackenbush,
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 721,
. One2One Communications, - F.3d at -,
. Zivotofsky ex rel. Zivotofsky v. Clinton, — U.S.-,
. See Central States,
