OPINION OF THE COURT
(July 21, 2011)
In this аppeal, we review the District Court’s grant of defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction based on its determination that plaintiff Gloria Washington was domiciled in the Virgin Islands at the time she filed her complaint against defendants Hovensa, LLC (“Hovensa”) and Triangle Construction and Maintenance, Inc. (“Triangle”), notwithstanding her insistence that she was domiciled in Texas. In reviewing a district court’s conclusion regarding where a party is domiciled, our reviеw is for clear error as to the court’s factual determination but
de novo
as to the applicable legal principles and the court’s conclusions of law.
See McCann v. Newman Irrevocable Trust,
Although a court’s inquiry into where a party is domiciled involves a predominantly factual determination,
see McCann,
I.
On April 5,2006, Gloria Washington was injured while driving a rental car on Hovensa’s property in the Virgin Islands. She alleged in her complaint that, at the time she was driving, improperly trained Triangle employees were conducting sandblasts without proper supervision or barricades and using faulty sandblasting equipment. A sandblast that hit Washington’s vehicle shattered the driver’s side window, resulting in physical injuries to Washington and damage to her rental car. On July 24, 2006, she filed a complaint in the District Court of the Virgin Islands against Hovensa and Triangle, citizens of the Virgin Islands, based on diversity of citizenship, claiming that they were responsible for her physical injuries and the damage to the vehicle.
At the time Washington filed this complaint, she had ties to both the Virgin Islands and Texas. She owned a home in Baytown, Texas, but also had an apartment in St. Croix, where she had been living and working for seven months. She had been employed in Baytown, Texas by Sabine Storage Operations, a Texas corporation, but went to the V.I. in December 2005 to work as a pipe inspector for Sabine; there, she was assigned to work at the Hovensa refinery in St. Croix. When asked by opposing counsel at her deposition whether she knew, in December 2005, “how long the assignment [at the Hovensa refinery] was going to be, or was it indefinite,” she replied: “I didn’t know. It was indefinite.” In summarizing her testimony on this point, the District Court stated that her “work assignment at the Hovensa refinery was for an indefinite period of time,” a fact the Court considered “significant.”
Washington was bom in St. Croix, and several of her family members, including her mother, sister, and brothers, resided there in July 2006. Upon returning to the Virgin Islands in December 2005, Washington rented and furnished an apartment that she was living in at the time of the accident. The District Court found that her apartment “was in close proximity” to her “mother, sisters, brothers, nieces and nephews” and that “she socialized with them on a regular basis.” The record clearly establishes only that she lived in the same area as her sister and that, at the time of her deposition, she went swimming every couple of weeks with her family. In addition, Washington began a romantic relationship with a V.I. resident after arriving in St. Croix but before filing her complaint. Between her arrival in St. Croix and the time of the accident, Washington had not returned to Texas.
At the time she filed her complaint, Washington also had several links to Texas: she owned the home in Baytown, Texas, which she was maintaining at the time
II.
Washington sued Hovensa and Triangle in the District Court of the Virgin Islands on July 24, 2006. At the end of the discovery period that followed, both parties filed motions, the disposition of which Washington challenges on appeal. After failing to reach an agreement with defendants’ counsel to extend expert discovery deаdlines, Washington filed a Motion to Extend the Expert Deadlines on the basis that her vocationalist and economist did not yet haye access to a hearing test that they needed in order to testify. The Magistrate Judge denied her motion, which was filed after the expiration of the deadline set by the District Court’s Final Scheduling Order, finding that Washington failed to establish good cause for modifying the scheduling order under FED. R. Civ. R Rule 16(b)(4).
Washington also delayed in getting the Independent Medical Examination (“IME”) at Triangle’s expense that the parties agreed she would undergo. She canceled her first appointment and refused to have X-rays taken at the second. In response, Triangle filed an Emergency Motion for Physical Examination of Washington at her expense, which the Magistrate Judge granted. Washington then moved for reconsideration, which the Magistrate Judge denied.
After these motions were resolved, defendants filed a Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction pursuant to Fed. R. Crv. P. Rule 12(h)(3), on the ground that Washington was domiciled in the V.I. when she filed her complaint, not in Texas, and, thus, that the District Court lacked jurisdiction over her cause of action. The District Court granted defendants’ motion, finding it significant that “the center of [Washington’s] business, domestic, and social life was in St. Croix,” and that she was living and working in the V.I. when the complaint was filed.
Washington v. Hovensa, LLC,
In determining Washington’s domicile, the District Court determined that her own affidavit statement declaring her intention to return to and permanently reside in Texas “must be disregarded.” It explained that
“ ‘[o]ne’s testimony as to his intention to establish a domicile, while entitled to full and fair consideration, is subject to the infirmity of any self-serving declaration, and it cannot prevail to establish domicile when it is contradicted or negatived by an inconsistent course of conduct; otherwise stated, actions speak louder than words.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Korn
v.
Korn,
On appeal, Washington challenges the District Court’s dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, arguing that, at the time she filed her complaint, she was on temporary assignment in the Virgin Islands for her Texas employer but that she remained a Texas domiciliary who intended to return to, and permanently reside in, Texas. She also challenges the Magistrate Judge’s denial of her Motion to Extend Expert Deadlines and grant of Triangle’s Emergency Motion for Physical Examination at Washington’s expense.
We have jurisdiction over this appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, as we аre reviewing a final order of the district court.
III.
Under § 1332(a)(1), federal district courts have original jurisdiction over civil actions where the matter in controversy exceeds the sum or value of $75,000 and is between “citizens of different States.” 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1). We determine the citizenship of the parties based on the relevant facts at the time the complaint was filed.
S. Cross Overseas Agencies, Inc. v. Wah Kwong Shipping Grp. Ltd.,
A party’s citizenship is determined by her domicile, and “ ‘the domicile of an individual is his true, fixed and permanent home and place of habitation. It is the place to which, whenever he is absent, he has the intention of returning.’ ”
McCann,
As we explained in
McCann,
a court considers several factors in determining an individual’s domicile, including “ ‘declarations, exercise of political rights, payment of personal taxes, house of residence, and place of business.’ ”
McCann,
IV.
We begin our review of the District Court’s domicile determination by noting a legal precept that may not have been stressed before the District Court
This presumption does not shift the
burden of proof
to establish diversity of citizenship away from the proponent of federal jurisdiction; the party asserting diversity jurisdiction — here, Washington — retains the burden of proving that diversity of citizenship exists by a preponderance of the evidence.
See Krasnov,
Here, while it is conceivable that defendants presented enough evidence to meet their burden of production, it is not clear from the District Court’s opinion that it even considered the presumption as it weighed the evidence. Where so many facts that our caselaw regards as important bolster the baseline presumption that Washington retained her established residence in Texas — from Washington’s home ownership, driver’s license, vehicle registration,
The second legal principle we wish to stress relates to the consideration to be given to an admittedly self-serving affidavit. Washington submitted an affidavit after defendants filed their motion to dismiss, stating that, at the time she filed her complaint, she intended to return to Texas and to continue to live in Texas once her project in the V.I. was completed. Citing
Korn,
the District Court determined that the affidavit “must be disregarded.”
Washington,
In
Korn,
we stated that “[o]ne’s testimony as to his intention to establish a domicile, while entitled to full and fair consideration, is subject to the infirmity of any self-serving declaration, and it cannot prevail to establish domicile when it is
contradicted or negatived
by an inconsistent course of conduct.”
However, this is not a case like
Korn
where “the surrounding fаcts and circumstances clearly indicate” that plaintiff’s testimony is fabricated.
We think it is important that a court be guided by these key legal principles in determining domicile, and we will remand for it tо do so and render its ruling giving them due consideration.
V.
The District Court also made an error of fact. In its brief consideration of the facts pointing toward the V.I., and those pointing toward Texas, the District Court twice mentioned that Washington’s business, domestic and social life was centered in St. Croix. Yet, little evidence in the record supports this conclusion as to Washington’s life at the time she filed the complaint. Washington testified to living in the same neighborhood as hеr sister and to starting a romantic relationship with a V.I. resident prior to filing her complaint, but the record is otherwise lacking in evidence that she socialized often with her family or with other V.I. residents or that her “business life” in the V.I. went beyond her temporary employment assignment there.
On the other hand, the record does contain indicia that her stay in the V.I. was transient and not permanent when she filed her complaint. As mentioned above, Washington set up nonе of the trappings of a “true, fixed and permanent home,”
McCann,
This factual error does not render the District Court’s entire decision clearly erroneous, but it should be corrected on remand, as it is not supported by evidence in the record.
VI.
Relatedly, we note that, while it is generally useful to analogize fact patterns of other cases and base rulings on outcomes in similar cases, it may not be quite so useful in this type of case, where the facts presented can vary so slightly, and yet the slightest variation leads to a different result. 5
Accordingly, we will vacate and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
VII.
Washington also challenges the Magistrate Judge’s orders denying her motion for extension of expert deadlines and granting defendants’ motion to compel a medical examination.
6
We find that, because Washington failed to follow the proper procedure to object to the Magistrate Judge’s order denying extension of expert deadlines, she has waived her right to challenge this order on appeal.
See United Steelworkers of Am. v. New Jersey Zinc Co.,
Notes
See also Fed. R. Evid. Rule 301 (“In all civil actions and proceedings not otherwise provided for by Act of Congress or by these rules, a presumption imposes on the party against whom it is directed the burden of going forward with evidence to rebut or meet the presumption, but does not shift to such party the burden of рroof in the sense of the risk of nonpersuasion, which remains throughout the trial upon the party on whom it was originally cast.”).
The burden of proof in a civil case has two distinct components — the burden of going forward with proof, which is referred to as the “burden of production,” and the burden of persuading the trier of fact, known as the “burden of persuasion.”
McCann,
Numerous cases focus on these very indicia as being important.
See, e.g., Frett-Smith,
Plaintiff was a doctor who had practiced osteopathic medicine in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania for thirty-one years before going to St. Thomas. He had been convicted in Philadelphia of performing an illegal abortion and was in the midst of divorce proceedings in both Philadelphia and New Jersey when he lеft suddenly for St. Thomas, discontinued the pending actions, and commenced a new divorce suit. Despite his testimony that he was coming to the V.I. to “make a new life” and start a new practice there, he made no attempt to ascertain the requirements for medical licensing until five months after arriving there. Moreover, at the time he filed the divorce action, he had made no attempt to establish a permanent home in the V.I., had travelеd back and forth to the U.S. several times, had checked in and out of several hotels in the V.I., continued to list his address on official documents as Philadelphia, PA, and continued to maintain his health insurance in Philadelphia.
Korn,
Cf. Gallagher v. Philadelphia Transp. Co.,
We review a district court’s discovery order for abuse of discretion, and we will not disturb such an order absent a showing of actual or substantial prejudice.
Anderson v. Wachovia Mortg. Corp.,
