ELIZABETH ERNY FOOTE, District Judge.
Before this Court is an appeal from Magistrate Judge Hornsby's Memorandum Order that denied the Motion For Leave To File Amended Complaint filed by the Plaintiff, DL Star, LLC. [Record Document 11]. This case came before the Court based on its diversity jurisdiction: the Plaintiff, a LLC in Louisiana, originally filed suit against the Defendant, Royal Seal Construction, Inc., a Texas corporation, as the general contractor in a now disputed construction contract. The Plaintiff sought leave to file an amended complaint to add as a defendant Somdal Associates, LLC ("Somdal"), a Louisiana LLC, the architect for the construction project. The Plaintiff's proposed amendment was filed after the Defendant made allegations in its counterclaim concerning Somdal's role in the dispute. [Record Document 8]. If Somdal is added as a defendant in this matter, this Court will be divested of jurisdiction and must remand the case to state court. For the reasons set forth below, this Court
The case arises from the alleged breach of a construction contract between the Plaintiff and the Defendant regarding a Carl's Jr. Restaurant and an Orange Leaf Yogurt Shop. Record Document 12-1, p.1. After the Plaintiff set forth its original allegations in a state court petition in the First Judicial District Court in Caddo Parish, Louisiana, the case was removed to this Court on May 7, 2014, based on diversity. Record Document 1, p.2. The Defendant then filed an answer and a counterclaim on May 30, 2014, specifically alleging that Somdal, as the construction project's architect, was the cause of many of the inconsistencies, delays, and modifications that affected the Defendant's ability to properly complete the project on time. Record Document 7, p.11.
On June 12, 2014, the Plaintiff filed its Motion for Leave To File Amended Complaint that sought to add Somdal as a defendant as well. Record Document 8. In its Memorandum in Support, the Plaintiff alleges that its claim against Somdal arises out of the same transaction or occurrence-the construction project-as its claim against the Defendant. Record Document 8-1, p.3. The Defendant filed its opposition and argued that in light of the factors outlined in
After consideration, the Magistrate Judge denied the Plaintiff's motion based on an analysis of the
The present procedural dispute now comes before this Court after the Plaintiff's appeal of the Magistrate Judge's Memorandum Order. Record Document 12.
Under 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(A), a district court reviews a magistrate judge's ruling on a non-dispositive pretrial motion to determine whether that decision was clearly erroneous or contrary to law. 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(A) (2012);
As the Magistrate Judge correctly set forth in his Memorandum Order, when a court is faced with making the determination of whether to amend a pleading to name a non-diverse defendant, such as Somdal, a court "should scrutinize that amendment more closely than an ordinary amendment."
Under the jurisprudence of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, courts considering whether to grant leave to amend a pleading for a non-diverse defendant are required to balance the original defendant's interest in remaining in the federal forum with a plaintiff's interest in not having parallel suits in both state and federal courts.
Both the Plaintiff and the Defendant focused their discussions on the first factor: to what extent the purpose of the amended pleading to add Somdal was to defeat diversity jurisdiction. The Magistrate Judge found that this factor weighed heavily in the Defendant's favor, reasoning the Plaintiff knew of Somdal's identity and the factual basis for any suit against Somdal relating to the construction project at the time the original state claim was filed. Record Document 11, p.3. Rather than include Somdal in the state petition initially, the "Plaintiff simply chose not to sue Somdal until Defendant invoked its right to a federal forum."
In its objection to the Memorandum Order, the Plaintiff explains that it had no reason to add Somdal as a possible defendant in this matter until the Defendant attempted to "shift blame" to Somdal in the counterclaim for some of the construction project's issues. Record Document 12-1, pp.3-4. It was not until the counterclaim, the Plaintiff reasons, that it had a basis or reason to add Somdal as a defendant.
These circumstances indicate that not only was Somdal's identity known to the Plaintiff, but the factual basis for any claim against Somdal was also apparent at the time of the Plaintiff's initial state court petition, especially if Somdal's involvement in the project was terminated six months earlier. Thus, given this context, the Court finds that these facts support the Magistrate Judge's determination that this first
Second, in terms of whether the Plaintiff was dilatory in seeking the amendment, the Magistrate Judge found the Plaintiff was not dilatory in the general sense, but it did fail to provide an explanation for why Somdal was not included in the initial state court petition. Record Document 11, p.3.
Third, the Magistrate Judge found that the next factor was balanced fairly equally between the parties. In determining whether or not the Plaintiff would be significantly injured if the amendment were not allowed, the Magistrate Judge reasoned that the "Plaintiff is no worse off than it was when Plaintiff initially filed suit in state court without naming Somdal as an additional defendant," because the Plaintiff must still litigate the project's issues in state court. Record Document 11, p.3. In objecting to this finding, the Plaintiff argues that suing Somdal in state court means that it will be forced to litigate "complex construction claim[s] against separate defendants in separate forums, doubling the time, effort, and expense of an already expensive venture." Record Document 12-1, p.5. While this is a genuine concern, the Court is not persuaded that the Magistrate Judge's decision was clearly erroneous given the facts. As the Defendant notes in opposition, if the Plaintiff was truly concerned about the burden of litigating separate claims, it would have included Somdal in the original state action given what it knew of Somdal's potential fault. Record Document 14, p.7.
Finally, the Magistrate Judge found that the fourth factor-other factors bearing on the equities-weighs in the Defendant's favor. Record Document 11, p.3. As explained in the Memorandum Order, the decision to grant leave to amend a complaint for a nondiverse defendant requires analyzing the original defendant's interest in litigating the suit in its chosen forum.
When taken together, the facts and arguments presented by both parties fail to demonstrate that the Magistrate Judge's weighing of the
For the foregoing reasons, this Court