RALPH R. BEISTLINE, District Judge.
This action is based on injuries sustained by the Plaintiff as a result of lithium toxicity. Following the filing of an administrative tort claim and a state court action for medical malpractice, this matter was removed to federal court, and the United States was substituted as a defendant, because the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. § 2671 et seq., provides the exclusive remedy for claims against a federal agency.
The United States, after removal to this Court, filed a Motion to Dismiss the initial complaint as premature under the FTCA. Doc. 9. Plaintiff then amended her Complaint to include an FTCA claim and noted the expiration of the administrative claim review period. Doc. 9, ¶ 8-11. The United States again moved to dismiss, arguing that the filing of an amended complaint could not cure the defect in subject matter jurisdiction that existed at the time the action was filed in state court. Docket 11. The Court now considers all of these issues.
28 U.S.C. § 2675(a). Although Plaintiff filed this suit in state court before expiration of the statutory administrative review period, more than six months had passed since the filing of the administrative claim when the action was removed on August 19, 2014. Docket 15 at 10. The parties disagree as to when jurisdiction of this Court arose.
The Ninth Circuit has explained that in a case, such as this one, where the "original complaint neither named the United States as a defendant nor stated a claim under the [Federal Tort Claims] Act," the filing of an amended complaint following the exhaustion of administrative remedies is adequate. Valadez-Lopez v. Chertoff, 656 F.3d 851, 855-56 (9th Cir. 2011). The Court dismissed "the government's central thesis . . . that `[t]he filing of an amended complaint is not the equivalent to instituting an action following the exhaustion of administrative remedies.'" Id. at 855. Nor was the Court persuaded by the government's argument that the court was "required to dismiss the FTCA claim in the amended complaint and to require the plaintiff to file an entirely new lawsuit founded on the same nucleus of facts," concluding that "[t]here is nothing in the statute or our case law that would prevent a plaintiff from amending an existing complaint asserting non-FTCA claims to name the United States as a defendant and include FTCA claims once those claims have been administratively exhausted." Id. at 856. The Court specifically distinguished cases which attempted to invoke federal jurisdiction under the FTCA before the administrative process was completed. The Ninth Circuit stressed that precedent "ought not be read as preventing a plaintiff who wishes to state a number of federal and state law claims against an array of defendants from filing a complaint alleging common facts and amending it after exhaustion to state an additional claim under the FTCA. Such a reading would require undue acrobatics of such a plaintiff, given the different statutes of limitations at play." Id. at 857. This Court concludes that Valadez-Lopez controls the outcome here.
In light of the foregoing, the Motions at