Semanick v. State Automobile Mutual Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedFebruary 5, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-00298
StatusUnknown

This text of Semanick v. State Automobile Mutual Insurance Company (Semanick v. State Automobile Mutual Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Semanick v. State Automobile Mutual Insurance Company, (N.D. Ind. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA HAMMOND DIVISION BRITTNEY SEMANICK, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) 2:23CV298-PPS/JEM ) STATE AUTOMOBILE MUTUAL ) INSURANCE COMPANY, ) ) Defendant. ) OPINION AND ORDER On July 4, 2018, Brittney Semanick was crossing a street in Los Angeles, California when she was struck by a drunk driver and severely injured. She brought a claim for underinsured motorist coverage against State Automobile Mutual Insurance Company in Los Angeles County Superior Court on June 1, 2020, and the case has been stuck in a procedural snarl ever since.1 On or about September 17, 2020, the insurer removed the case to the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California on the basis of diversity jurisdiction. The federal court promptly remanded the case to Los Angeles County after finding that the insurer’s allegations of Semanick’s citizenship were inadequate to satisfy its burden of showing that diversity jurisdiction existed to support the removal. Back in Los Angeles County Superior Court, the case was dismissed on October 4, 2021, for lack of personal jurisdiction over the insurer. That dismissal was affirmed by the California Court of Appeals on January 25, 2023. 1 Semanick claimed coverage as a “resident-relative” under an insurance policy issued by State Auto to her parents, Patty and Daniel Semanick, Indiana residents. Semanick then refiled her claim against State Auto in the Superior Court of Lake County, Indiana on August 1, 2023. Her Lake County complaint invokes Indiana’s so- called Journey’s Account Statute, Ind. Code §34-11-8-1 to foreclose “any potential

defenses based on the applicable statute of limitations or any contractual period of limitations.” [DE 1-1 at ¶5.] The historical origins of such statutes were explained by Justice Gorsuch in a dissent in Artis v. District of Columbia, 583 U.S. 71, 95-96 (2018): such “grace periods appear to find their roots in a common law rule known as the ‘journey’s account’ that expressly sought to account for and afford to a dismissed party ‘the

number of days which [he] must spend in journeying to the court’ to refile his claim.” (Quoting 37 C.J., Limitations of Actions §526, p. 1082 (1925).) Modern-day “Journey’s Account” statutes are tolling provisions that “seek[] to provide the plaintiff who finds her case dismissed because she filed in the wrong court a reasonable grace period to journey to the right court to refile.” Id. at 96. 2

Again the insurer has removed the case to federal court, invoking the court’s diversity jurisdiction. Now before me are two motions. Semanick has moved to remand 2 The Indiana Code’s Journey’s Account provision reads:

34-11-8-1 New action; continuation of action Sec. 1. (a) This section applies if a plaintiff commences an action and: (1) the plaintiff fails in the action from any cause except negligence in the prosecution of the action; (2) the action abates or is defeated by the death of a party; or (3) a judgment is arrested or reversed on appeal. (b) If subsection (a) applies, a new action may be brought not later than the later of: (1) three (3) years after the date of the determination under subsection (a); or (2) the last date an action could have been commenced under the statute of limitations governing the original action; and be considered a continuation of the original action commenced by the plaintiff. 2 the case, arguing that State Auto’s Indiana removal is untimely and is otherwise barred by the ”law of the case” doctrine. State Auto has filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings, arguing that the California court’s dismissal with prejudice precludes

Semanick from re-filing her case in Indiana and proceeding here. Timeliness of Removal Semanick contends, quoting §34-11-8-1, that her Indiana action is “considered a continuation of the original action commenced by the plaintiff.” [DE 9 at ¶7.] On that theory, Semanick argues that State Auto’s removal from Lake County in September 2023

ran afoul of both 28 U.S.C. §1446(b)(1) and (c)(1). State Auto’s first response to Semanick’s timeliness arguments is a general one: that a state statute cannot be relied on to defeat removal. [DE 11 at 1.] For this broad proposition, the insurer cites the introductory clause of the removal statute, 28 U.S.C. §1441(a): “Except as otherwise expressly provided by Act of Congress, any civil action

brought in a State court of which the district courts of the United States have original jurisdiction, may be removed by the defendant....” (emphasis added). [DE 11 at 4.] State Auto cites no caselaw to support this questionable bit of statutory interpretation. In reply, Semanick is ready with contrary authority. In Price v. Wyeth Holdings Corp., 505 F.3d 624, 628-29 (7th Cir. 2007), the Seventh Circuit examined Indiana law to

determine what constituted the “initial pleading” for purposes of the timeliness of removal under §1446, noting that “[b]ecause federal procedure does not apply until removal occurs, FED.R.CIV.P. 81(c), we apply state rules to preremoval conduct.” 3 Similarly here, Indiana law governs the determination of what constitutes “the initial pleading setting forth the claim for relief” for purposes of §1446(b)(1) and “commencement of the action” for purposes of §1446(c)(1). Nonetheless, I still don’t find

application of the Journey’s Account statute significant to the timeliness analysis. Section 1446(b)(1) provides that a notice of removal “shall be filed within 30 days after the receipt by the defendant, through service or otherwise, of a copy of the initial pleading setting forth the claim for relief....” Obviously State Auto did not file its Indiana removal within 30 days of the filing of the California complaint in 2020. Even

more obviously, the case could not then have been removed to this district. But State Auto did then file the only notice of removal it could, to the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, and there has been no suggestion that it was not timely done. There is also no assertion that State Auto’s notice of removal to this court was not filed within 30 days of its receipt of the Lake County complaint.

Price is not on point in its particulars, as it involved the re-filing of a voluntarily- dismissed prior action. For what it’s worth, Price held that in such circumstances, the new lawsuit “‘stands as if it had not been dismissed.’” Id. at 629, quoting Waitt v. Waitt, 429 N.E.2d 6, 7 (Ind.App. 1981). Semanick argues that likewise in this case, “the procedural obligations of the parties pick up exactly where they left off.” Id. at 629. But

State Auto did timely remove, both in California and in Indiana. I am not persuaded that State Auto can be faulted under §1446(b)(1).

4 For her other timeliness argument, Semanick suggests that §1446(c)(1) requires any diversity removal to occur “no later than one year after the commencement of the action.” [DE 9 at 2.] This is an incomplete, and therefore inaccurate, reading of the

limitations of §1446(c)(1), however. That provision expressly applies to removals under “subsection (b)(3).” Section 1446(b)(3) addresses removals of cases in which the initial pleading was not removable, but a “subsequent amended pleading, motion, order or other paper” first reveals the basis for removal.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
Semanick v. State Automobile Mutual Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/semanick-v-state-automobile-mutual-insurance-company-innd-2024.