MATTHEW W. BRANN, District Judge.
When a self-proclaimed energy healer was employing his powers to alter the molecular composition of water and a university research assistant publicly derided this claim, it is unlikely that either could have foreseen the future of their dispute as it is now, a question of the outerlimits of a federal court's supplemental jurisdiction. The quarrel between the parties has taken an unpredictable trajectory, but leads to a well-known conclusion: "Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction."
On December 28, 2011, Plaintiffs, Mahendra Kumar Trivedi, Trivedi Foundation, and Trivedi Master Wellness, LLC
Slawecki filed multiple answers to the complaint. In the first, dated December 13, 2012, Slawecki alleged three counterclaims against Trivedi — abuse of process, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and violation of Electronic Communications Privacy Act.
Slawecki filed a motion for summary judgment on August 25, 2014
The Court granted the motion for summary judgment, with the aforementioned exception, on December 3, 2014.
Because Slawecki did not brief her motion for summary judgment on the abuse of process counterclaim, the Court presumed that it was her intention voluntarily dismiss the claim, as it appeared to have been abandoned. However, a telephone conference was subsequently held between the Court and the parties, who asked the Court for leave to file dispositive motions on the abuse of process counterclaim. The request of the parties was granted, and the parties were given until April 3, 2015 to file summary judgment motions on the abuse of process counterclaim. Cross motions for summary judgment were also later filed.
Some weeks later, Slawecki filed a "Motion for Leave to File Supplemental Counterclaims,"
Although the Court had intended to retain its supplemental jurisdiction over the sole of abuse of process counterclaim, as the undersigned had retained jurisdiction over it since the year 2012, the motion to supplement, predicated on state law issues, forces me to relinquish jurisdiction. Accordingly, the Court will deny all motions in their entirety, without prejudice, and will decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over what is now an entirely state law matter; I conclude that this Court has no basis for original jurisdiction over this matter.
It is by now well-established that "[f]ederal district courts have original jurisdiction over all civil actions either "arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States" or where complete diversity of citizenship exists and the matter in controversy exceeds $75,000."
"Because federal jurisdiction over this counterclaim is supplemental to the diversity jurisdiction of plaintiff's claims, whether to retain jurisdiction now that plaintiffs' claims have been dismissed is within the discretion of the court."
It should be noted that "[w]hen making this decision [whether or not to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a counterclaim once plaintiff's claims have been dismissed], courts consider several factors, including judicial economy, the relationship between the dismissed and remaining claims, comity, and fairness to litigants."
For the sake of comity, this Court will not permit Slawecki to supplement her existing counterclaim with four new state law claims. In sum, this Court no longer has original jurisdiction over the matter. To proceed over an entirely state law matter with no independent basis for original jurisdiction would be overreach by this Court.
Moreover, for the sake of judicial economy, this Court will now relinquish jurisdiction over the abuse of process counterclaim. Although it may seem at first blush inequitable to have retained jurisdiction over the one remaining state law counterclaim only to now relinquish it, I conclude that it is not. "[W]hen the dismissal of all claims with independent jurisdiction occurs early in the action, before trial, dismissal is appropriate."
Had Slawecki not moved to supplement her counterclaims, the Court would have retained jurisdiction and disposed of the abuse of process counterclaim on its merits. I would have acted accordingly because the parties had spent time in litigation in this Court, and because the best exercise of discretion would have been to retain jurisdiction over that last claim. But Slawecki has moved to change the nature of this action. This Court does not have original jurisdiction over the four new claims Slawecki moved to supplement. Should she choose to file an action in the appropriate court with these four new claims, she should also litigate the state law abuse of process claim in one action with the four new claims, again for the sake of judicial economy.
As Judge Frank Easterbrook of the Seventh Circuit memorably commenced an opinion: "Once again litigants' insouciance toward the requirements of federal jurisdiction has caused a waste of time and money."
New Rock Asset Partners, L.P. v. Preferred Entity Advancements, Inc., 101 F.3d 1492, 1505 (3d Cir. 1996)