This personal injury case arises from a workplace accident at Long Island MacArthur Airport in 2021 that injured the plaintiff, who sues under the Federal Tort Claims Act. Plaintiff sued in state court, but the government removed the case to federal court on the basis that federal court has exclusive jurisdiction over FTCA cases, and that any claims against federal employees also can only be filed in federal court. This interplay between state and federal court gives rise to an interesting statute of limitations issue for which there is a Circuit split that might someday reach the Supreme Court.
The case is Fiermonte v. Deonarain, a summary order issued on March 4. What injured the plaintiff was being electrocuted. A coworker died from that electrocution. Plaintiff filed suit on November 10, 2022 in state court. The following April, plaintiff submitted an administrative claim to the Federal Aviation Administration, which wrote back denying his claim and advising he could file suit in federal court under the FTCA no later than six months after this letter was mailed. Within that six-month window, on February 12, 2024, plaintiff amended the complaint in state court, naming Deonarain as a defendant and claiming that this defendant acted within the scope of his federal employment with the FAA. After the federal government removed the case to federal court, the district court dismissed the case on statute of limitations grounds, reasoning that the case reached federal court more than six months after he exhausted his administrative remedies.
The Court of Appeals (Walker, Sack and Lee) reinstates the case, as it might actually be timely. The district court will have to take a closer look at this issue.
Section 2401(b) of the FTCA requires that a plaintiff commence an 'action' within six months of exhausting their administrative remedies. 28 U.S.C. § 2401(b). However, the statute is silent on whether the action must be filed in federal court or, alternatively, whether a complaint initially filed in state court within the six-month time period and then later removed to federal court—as was the case here—may nonetheless satisfy Section 2401(b)."
This is an esoteric statute of limitations question, and Courts of Appeal around the country have reached different holdings. The Fourth and Fifth Circuits hold that filing suit in state court does not toll the statute of limitations, requiring dismissal of the case if it reaches federal court after six months. The Seventh and Ninth Circuit have reached a contrary conclusion. Since we have divided authority on this issue, but limited briefing, the Court of Appeals returns the case to the district court to rule on this issue.