Patricia Chandler v. F. Hampton Roy ( 2001 )


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  •                      United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 00-3888
    ___________
    Patricia A. Chandler;                    *
    and Roger Chandler,                      *
    *
    Appellants,                 *
    * Appeal from the United States
    v.                                 * District Court for the Eastern
    * District of Arkansas.
    F. Hampton Roy, M.D.,                    *
    Arkansas Cataract Center, P.A.,          *
    a professional association,              *
    *
    Appellees.                  *
    ___________
    Submitted: June 15, 2001
    Filed: December 6, 2001
    ___________
    Before LOKEN and MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judges, and
    BATAILLON,1 District Judge
    ___________
    MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.
    Following surgery in March, 1995, Patricia Chandler brought a medical
    malpractice action against Dr. F. Hampton Roy in federal district court in Arizona.
    That action was dismissed in December 1997 for lack of personal jurisdiction. Less
    1
    Joseph F. Bataillon, United States District Judge for the District of Nebraska,
    sitting by designation.
    than a year later, Ms. Chandler brought the same claim in federal district court in
    Arkansas. The issue that this case presents is whether this latter action, although filed
    after Arkansas's two-year statute of limitations had run, was nonetheless timely
    because of an Arkansas statute commonly called the "savings statute." See Ark. Code
    Ann. § 16-56-126. The district court concluded that the savings statute did not apply
    and that the action was therefore barred, and Ms. Chandler appealed. We reverse the
    district court's judgment.
    I.
    The Arkansas savings statute provides in relevant part that "if any action is
    commenced within the time prescribed ... and the plaintiff therein suffers a nonsuit
    ... the plaintiff may commence a new action within (1) one year after the nonsuit
    suffered." Ark. Code Ann. § 16-56-126. In short, the statute requires a plaintiff to
    satisfy two conditions: the original action must be timely "commenced," and the
    plaintiff must suffer a "nonsuit." See Follette v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 
    47 F.3d 311
    ,
    313 (8th Cir. 1995), cert. denied, 
    516 U.S. 814
    (1995). We therefore consider, in
    turn, whether within the meaning of the statute the action in Arizona, which was
    dismissed less than one year before the action was filed in Arkansas, was
    "commenced," and whether its dismissal constituted a "nonsuit."
    Under Ark. R. Civ. P. 3, "[a] civil action is commenced by filing a complaint
    with the clerk of the proper court." Dr. Roy argues that the prior action in Arizona
    was not commenced in a "proper court"; such a court, under the Arkansas Rules of
    Civil Procedure, must have "jurisdiction of the subject matter and parties described
    in the complaint," Ark. R. Civ. P. 3, Reporter's Note 4. The Arkansas Supreme Court,
    however, has construed the commencement requirement of the Arkansas savings
    statute liberally to ensure that litigants do not forfeit their rights, and has applied it
    even when the original court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over the action. See
    Linder ex rel. Linder v. Howard, 
    296 Ark. 414
    , 416-18, 
    757 S.W.2d 549
    , 550-51
    (1988). See also LaBarge v. Universal Circuits, Inc., 
    751 F. Supp. 807
    , 808-11
    -2-
    (W.D. Ark. 1990), where the court reached a similar conclusion, citing a long line of
    precedents interpreting the Arkansas savings statute liberally.
    While the district court endorsed a broad construction of the Arkansas savings
    statute, it felt constrained to conclude that Ms. Chandler's action was barred because
    of our holding in Biby v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co., 
    629 F.2d 1289
    (8th Cir. 1980).
    In Biby, we held that the filing of a complaint in California did not constitute a
    commencement for the purposes of the Arkansas savings statute because the
    California action was not filed in good faith. See 
    id. at 1294.
    The district court
    concluded that Ms. Chandler's filing of a complaint in Arizona did not constitute a
    commencement for the purposes of the Arkansas saving statute because Ms. Chandler
    did not have a "good faith expectation of obtaining personal jurisdiction"; her filing,
    the district court thought, like the one in Biby, was a "procedural ploy."
    We believe, however, that the facts in the case at bar make it distinguishable
    from Biby. In 
    Biby, 629 F.2d at 1294
    , the record indicated that the plaintiffs did not
    have any intention of proceeding in California: they made no effort to serve the
    defendants while the complaint was pending in California, and ten days after the
    complaint was filed they sought to transfer the case to Arkansas. Their sole purpose
    for filing in California was to toll the statute of limitations. See 
    id. In contrast,
    Ms. Chandler wanted her case to be heard and adjudicated in Arizona: the defendants
    were served; Ms. Chandler never requested a change of venue; and for nearly six
    months she made every effort to proceed in Arizona, opposing a motion to dismiss
    the case for a lack of jurisdiction.
    The fact that Ms. Chandler's selection of Arizona as a forum may have turned
    out to have been erroneous is not a sufficient basis for a conclusion that she did not
    act in good faith. See 
    Biby, 629 F.2d at 1294
    ; see also Goldlawr, Inc. v. Heiman, 
    369 U.S. 463
    , 466 (1962). In assessing a party's good faith, the reasonableness of a party's
    decision to select a forum is not dispositive; our focus instead is on the party's intent
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    to proceed in that forum. Although Ms. Chandler's filing in Arizona may have been
    based on incorrect suppositions about the facts or on dubious legal reasoning, Dr. Roy
    failed to show that Ms. Chandler lacked an intention to proceed in Arizona. We
    therefore believe that she acted in good faith and that her filing in Arizona constituted
    a commencement for the purposes of the Arkansas savings statute.
    We also conclude that the dismissal of Ms. Chandler's action in Arizona
    constituted a nonsuit within the meaning of the Arkansas savings statute. Under that
    statute, a nonsuit occurs when plaintiffs "from causes incident to the administration
    of law, are compelled to abandon their present action, whether by their own act or the
    act of the court, when either would leave them a cause of action, yet undetermined."
    State Bank v. Magness, 
    11 Ark. 343
    , 346 (1850). The dismissal of a plaintiff's suit
    due to a lack of jurisdiction is one instance of a nonsuit. See Carton v. Missouri
    Pacific RR Co., 
    295 Ark. 126
    , 128, 
    747 S.W.2d 93
    , 94 (1988); 
    Linder, 296 Ark. at 417-18
    , 757 S.W.2d at 551. Since Ms. Chandler's action in Arizona was dismissed
    due to lack of personal jurisdiction, she suffered a nonsuit under the Arkansas savings
    statute.
    II.
    In sum, we believe that the filing of Ms. Chandler's action in Arizona
    constituted a "commencement" and that its dismissal was a "nonsuit" for the purposes
    of triggering the Arkansas savings statute, and that the statute therefore saved her
    subsequent action in Arkansas. We therefore reverse the district court's judgment and
    remand for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
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    A true copy.
    Attest:
    CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
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