Joinder Flashcards
Purpose of joinder rules
Joinder rules define the scope of the case.
Determines how many parties and claims can be joined into one case.
What is the rule for plaintiffs joining claims?
The plaintiff (or other party asserting a claim) may join any additional claim she likes, even if the additional claim is unrelated to an original claim. But, all the claims must invoke SMJ.
When can plaintiffs sue together as co-plaintiffs?
(they need not, but may)
When their claims:
- Arise from the same transaction or occurrence, and
- they raise at least one common question.
When can a plaintiff or co-plaintiffs sue more than one defendant?
(they don’t have to though)
When the claims against the defendants:
- Arise from the same transaction or occurrence, and
- raise at least one common question.
(same as permissive joinder of plaintiffs)
Joining absentees
After the case is filed, the court might force some nonparty (‘absentee”) to join the case.
The court does this when the absentee is necessary.
When is an absentee necessary (also called required)?
When:
- Without A, the court cannot accord complete relief among existing parties (worried about multiple suits); OR
- A’s interest may be harmed if he is not joined practical harm); OR
- A claims an interest that subjects a party (usually D) to a risk of multiple obligations.
Number 2 is most likely to show up on the bar exam.
Are joint tortfeasors necessary?
No. Joint tortfeasors are never necessary.
When does a party typically become necessary?
When the effects of the plaintiff’s win would hurt the party’s interests in some way.
e.g. canceling the party’s stock in a company
Feasibility of joinder
After determining if a party is necessary, joinder must also be feasible.
joinder is feasable when:
- There is PJ over the party, and
- Joining the party will not goof up diversity jurisdiction.
(the court determines whether the party would come in as a P or
a D to see if bringing them in will goof up diversity).
If joinder is found to be feasible, what happens next?
The court orders joinder of the absentee.
If the necessary party cannot be joined, what must the court do?
- Proceed without the party, or
- dismiss the entire case.
How the court decides what to do with a case when a necessary party can’t be joined
Always Look Sideways
It looks at these factors:
- Is there an alternative forum available? (maybe some state court);
- What is the actual likelihood of harm to the party?
- Can the court shape relief to avoid that harm to the party?
Indispensable absentee
if the court decides to dismiss instead of proceed with the case sans the necessary party, the absentee is labeled indispensable.
What is a counterclaim?
A claim against an opposing party that is not the original claim bringing the lawsuit.
After D serves a counterclaim against P, what must P do?
Make a rule 12 response within 21 days of service.
What are the two types of counterclaims?
- Compulsory:
- Arises from the same transaction or occurrence as the plaintiff’s claim.
- Unless the party has already filed the claim in another case, they must assert it in this case. (this is the only compulsory counterclaim in the world.)
- Permissive
- Does not arise from the same transaction or occurrence as the plaintiff’s claim.
- The party need not file the claim in the case at hand, and can do so in a separate case.
Timeline of compulsory counterclaim
Counterclaims that arise from the same t/o are only compulsory when D is required to answer.
e.g. D wins on an initial rule 12 motion. He can still bring what would have been a compulsory counterclaim as a plaintiff in another case.
What is a crossclaim?
A claim against a co-party.
requirement to assert a crossclaim
In order to assert a crossclaim, the claim must arise from the same t/o as the underlying action.
Crossclaims are never…
compulsory. They may be asserted in the initial claim or separately.
Every single claim, including counterclaims and crossclaims, must have SMJ.
What does a claimant do if it doesn’t?
Try for supplemental jurisdiction.
P (CA) sues Draper (NY) and Sterling (NY) for personal injuries of $500,000 arising from a car collision (Draper was driving Sterling’s car). It’s a
diversity case in federal court. Sterling doesn’t know who’s at fault between the two drivers, but knows his car (worth $200,000) is totaled.
What should Sterling do?
File a compulsory counterclaim.
P (CA) sues Draper (NY) and Sterling (NY) for personal injuries of $500,000 arising from a car collision (Draper was driving Sterling’s car). It’s a diversity case in federal court. Sterling doesn’t knowwho’s at fault between the two drivers, but knows his car (worth $200,000) is totaled.
Sterling files a compulsory counterclaim against P.
Does sterling’s counterclaim have SMJ?
Yes, it’s against P, a citizen of a different state, and the AIC is over $75,000.
P (CA) sues Draper (NY) and Sterling (NY) for personal injuries of $500,000 arising from a car collision (Draper was driving Sterling’s car). It’s a diversity case in federal court. Sterling doesn’t knowwho’s at fault between the two drivers, but knows his car (worth $200,000) is totaled.
Sterling files a compulsory counterclaim against P.
What can sterling do in the event Draper is liable for the wreck?
File a crossclaim against Draper. He need not do this in P’s action though.
P (CA) sues Draper (NY) and Sterling (NY) for personal injuries of $500,000 arising from a car collision (Draper was driving Sterling’s car). It’s a diversity case in federal court. Sterling doesn’t knowwho’s at fault between the two drivers, but knows his car (worth $200,000) is totaled.
Sterling files a compulsory counterclaim against P.
Sterling also files a crossclaim against Draper. Do they have SMJ? If not, what should Sterling do?
No SMJ because they’re citizens of the same state. Sterlling should seek supplemental jurisdiction.
P (CA) sues Draper (NY) and Sterling (NY) for personal injuries of $500,000 arising from a car collision (Draper was driving Sterling’s car). It’s a diversity case in federal court. Sterling doesn’t knowwho’s at fault between the two drivers, but knows his car (worth $200,000) is totaled.
Sterling files a compulsory counterclaim against P.
Sterling also files a crossclaim against Draper, but no SMJ.
How likely is sterling to receive supplemental jurisdiction?
Very likely. Sterling’s claim against Draper arises from the same transaction or occurrence as the intial case.