ANTHONY W. ISHII, District Judge.
This is a wrongful death case that stems from the death of Craig Backer ("Decedent"). Plaintiffs are the surviving wife and minor son of decedent. The operative complaint is the Original Complaint, which contains a single claim for wrongful death based on medical negligence by the United States Department of Veteran's Affairs. Before the Court is the United States' Rule 12(b)(7) motion to dismiss. For the reasons that follow, the motion will be denied.
From the Complaint, Decedent died on April 2, 2010 from complications associated with a brain tumor that was not timely diagnosed and not appropriately treated. Decedent had various conditions and complaints that were ignored, not properly diagnosed, or not properly treated by either the West Los Angeles Department of Veterans of Affairs Medical Center or the Bakersfield VA Community Clinic (collectively "VA Clinics"). Plaintiffs alleges various acts of negligence by the VA including failure to train healthcare providers, failure to prescribe appropriate mediations, failure to consult with physicians, failure to schedule examinations, failing to follow appropriate procedures, failure to adopt rules/procedures, failure to diagnose and treat, and failure to conduct diagnostic tests.
On September 20, 2010, Plaintiffs filed a claim for damages with the Department of Veterans Affairs ("DVA"). On October 23, 2012, the DVA informed Plaintiffs' then counsel, Phillip Levy ("Levy"), that their claim was denied. Once the claim was denied, Plaintiffs hired current counsel, Douglas Smith ("Smith"), and filed this case on April 22, 2013.
The Decedent had two other minor children, C.B. and T.B., when he died on April 2, 2010.
The United States argues that California law requires all heirs be joined as parties to a wrongful death cause of action. C.B. and T.B. are heirs of the Decedent, but they are not parties to the case. Since C.B. and T.B. are necessary parties who have not been joined, dismissal is proper.
Plaintiffs argue that neither joinder nor dismissal is required. T.B. and C.B. cannot recover against the United States because they failed to exhaust administrative remedies under the Federal Tort Claims Act, and the time to exhaust has now passed. Any claims that T.B. and C.B. may have had are now time-barred. As a result, T.B. and C.B. have no legitimate interest in this suit, and the United States is not subject to incurring multiple liabilities. The Court should either find T.B. and C.B.'s claims time barred, or join them as involuntary plaintiffs.
In reply, the United States responds that it does not oppose either an order finding T.B. and C.B.'s claims to be time barred and thus they are not indispensable, or add C.B. and T.B. as involuntary plaintiffs. If the former course is taken, the United States would file a motion to dismiss based on the failure to timely exhaust mandatory administrative procedures.
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(7) permits a party to move for dismissal due to the failure to join a necessary party under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 19.
Rule 19 imposes a three-step inquiry: "(1) Is the absent party necessary (i.e., required to be joined if feasible) under Rule 19(a)? (2) If so, is it feasible to order that the absent party be joined? (3) If joinder is not feasible, can the case proceed without the absent party, or is the absent party indispensable such that the action must be dismissed?"
The California wrongful death cause of action is a statutory creation, and it is the legislature that created and limited the remedy.
There is no dispute that both C.B. and T.B. are heirs of the Decedent. Nor is there a dispute that all heirs must be joined into one wrongful death lawsuit under California law.
In both A.D. and Estate of Burkhart, the Court found that because the absent heir's claims were time-barred, it was equitable and proper to permit the case to go forward without the missing heirs. In A.D., the court explained:
Under the Federal Tort Claims Act, any person who attempts to bring a tort claim against the United State must file an administrative claim with the appropriate Federal agency within 2-years after the claim accrues.
Here, there is a strong indication that C.B. and T.B.'s California wrongful death claims against the United States are time-barred by the Federal Tort Claims Act. The evidence shows that C.B., T.B., and Farin where informed of the Decedent's death in April 2010. The evidence also shows that Levy informed Farin of Smith's contact information, which indicates that Levy had informed Farin about a potential lawsuit prior to the filing of the Complaint. It has been more than 4 years since the Decedent's death in April 2010. There is no record of C.B. or T.B. filing a Federal Tort Claims Act claim with the Department of Veterans' Affairs, nor is there an indication that C.B. or T.B. have any interest in pursuing a claim based on Decedent's death. Farin did not contact Smith when Levy gave her Smith's contact information. Farin apparently left a telephone message with Smith in response to a March 2014 letter from Smith, but Farin has not attempted to return Smith's calls.
At this time, the Court sees no distinction between this case and Burkhart, which also involved the Federal Tort Claims Act 2-year limitations period and a claim for wrongful death. Under the rationale of A.D. and Burkhart, the Court will deny the United States' Rule 12(b)(7) motion because it does not appear that C.B. and T.B. are indispensable parties and it is equitable for this case to proceed.
Accordingly, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Defendant's Rule 12(b)(7) motion to dismiss is DENIED.