Yohannes v. Minnesota IT Services (\MNIT\")"

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Yohannes v. Minnesota IT Services (\MNIT\")"

Trial Court Opinion

             UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                 DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                               
              CIVIL NO.: 23-1875(DSD/DTS)                            

Barnabas A. Yohannes,                                                     

Plaintiff,                                                           

v.                                              ORDER                     

Minnesota IT Services and                                                 
Anne Sheridan,                                                            

Defendants.                                                          


This matter is before the court upon the motion to dismiss by        
defendants Minnesota IT Services and Anne Sheridan.  Based on a           
review of the file, record, and proceedings herein, and for the           
following reasons, the motion is granted.                                 

                      BACKGROUND                                     
This  employment  discrimination  dispute  arises  from  pro  se     
plaintiff Barnabas Yohannes’s tenure with MNIT.  MNIT provides IT         
related  services  to  all  state  agencies  within  Minnesota.    Am.    
Compl., ECF No. 40, ¶ 12.  MNIT assigned Mr. Yohannes to work for         
various  state  agencies  during  his  employment  with  MNIT.    See     
generally id.  Defendant Anne Sheridan supervised Mr. Yohannes at         
times relevant to this lawsuit.  Id. ¶ 140.                               
In  2021,  Mr.  Yohannes  sued  MNIT  in  this  court  alleging      
employment  discrimination  under  Title  VII  based  on  his  race,      
national origin, and color.1  Taylor Decl. Ex. A, at 2-4.  He             

alleged that MNIT’s discrimination – and that of the state agencies       
he was assigned to work for - resulted in the failure to hire and         
promote  him,   termination  of   his  employment,   differential         
treatment, retaliation, and harassment.  Id. at 4.  The factual           
basis of his complaint spanned from 2006 to 2021.  See generally          
id.  Mr. Yohannes remained employed by MNIT throughout most of the        
lawsuit.                                                                  
In August 2021, Chief Judge Schiltz dismissed Mr. Yohannes’s         
color discrimination and harassment claims for failure to exhaust         
administrative  remedies,  dismissed  the  retaliation  claim  as         
untimely,   and   dismissed  the   race   and   national   origin         
discrimination claim for failure to state a claim under Federal           

Rule  of  Civil  Procedure  12(b)(6).    Taylor  Decl.  Ex.  F.    Mr.    
Yohannes then filed a motion to amend the complaint to add more           
claims, which Magistrate Judge Wright denied.  See Yohannes v.            
MNIT, Case No. 21-cv-620, ECF Nos. 46, 75.2                               

1   Chief  Judge  Patrick  J.  Schiltz  and  Magistrate  Judge       
Elizabeth Cowan Wright presided over the case.                            
2  In comparing the two cases, defendants repeatedly cite to         
the amended complaint as the operative complaint in the earlier           
suit.  See ECF No. 46; Taylor Decl. Ex. C.  As noted, however, Mr.        
Yohannes was not granted leave to file an amended complaint in            
that case.  As a result, the court will not consider the amended          
complaint in Case No. 21-cv-620 in assessing whether this case may        

                           2                                         
On August 9, 2022, MNIT terminated Mr. Yohannes’s employment.        

Am. Compl. ¶ 192.  In October 2022, Mr. Yohannes agreed to dismiss        
the  2021  lawsuit  with  prejudice  “together  with  all  causes  of     
actions  and  claims  that  were  or  that  might  have  been  alleged    
therein.”  Taylor Decl. Ex. E.                                            
On June 20, 2023, Mr. Yohannes commenced this action alleging        
that MNIT discriminated against him in violation of Title VII, the        
Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 
42 U.S.C. § 1981
, the        
Minnesota Human Rights Act (MHRA), the Minnesota Fair Pay Act, and        
the Minnesota Whistleblower Act, and on the basis of his race,            
religion, national origin, color, and age.3  Compl., ECF No. 1, at        
2-4.    Like  in  his  first  lawsuit,  Mr.  Yohannes  alleges  that      
defendants’ discrimination led to the failure to hire and promote         

him,  termination  of  his  employment,  differential  treatment,         
retaliation, and harassment.  
Id. at 4
.  He also alleges that MNIT        
defamed and libeled him after terminating his employment.  
Id.
            
On November 15, 2023, Mr. Yohannes filed an amended complaint4       

proceed.                                                                  
3 Before  filing  the  current  action,  Mr.  Yohannes  filed  a     
charge  of  discrimination  with  the  Equal  Employment  Opportunity     
Commission (EEOC) and received a right to sue letter.  See ECF No.        
1-1.  The record does not include the charge of discrimination or         
a description of its contents.                                            
4  The amended complaint is titled “2nd Amended Complaint” but       
is in fact the first amended complaint.  See ECF Nos. 23, 38, 40.         

                           3                                         
adding Anne Sheridan as a defendant and withdrawing his claims            

under the Minnesota Human Rights Act (MHRA), the Minnesota Fair           
Pay Act, and the Minnesota Whistleblower Act.  See Am. Compl., ECF        
No. 40, at 3-4.                                                           
Mr.   Yohannes    seeks   injunctive   relief,    employment         
reinstatement, and damages.  Defendants now move to dismiss on the        
basis of res judicata and failure to state a claim.                       

                      DISCUSSION                                     
Under the doctrine of res judicata, “a final judgment on the         
merits of an action precludes the parties or their privies from           
relitigating issues that were or could have been raised in that           
action.”  Yankton Sioux Tribe v. U.S. Dept. of Health & Human             

Servs., 
533 F.3d 634, 639
 (8th Cir. 2008) (citation and quotation         
omitted).    To  establish  that  res  judicata  bars  Mr.  Yohannes’s    
claim, defendants must show that: “(1) the first suit resulted in         
a final judgment on the merits; (2) the first suit was based on           
proper jurisdiction; (3) both suits involve the same parties (or          
those in privity with them); and (4) both suits are based upon the        
same claims or causes of action.”  
Id.
 (citation and quotation            


For clarity, the court will refer to the operative pleading as the        
“amended complaint.”                                                      

                           4                                         
omitted).                                                                 

The parties’ disagreement here centers on whether both suits         
are based on the same claims.5  Mr. Yohannes maintains that this          
suit is separate and distinct from the first suit because, here,          
his amended complaint focuses on his termination and MNIT’s post-         
termination defamation/libel.  Defendants argue that the amended          
complaint in this case alleges facts similar or identical to those        
raised in the first lawsuit and is thus barred.                           
In assessing whether the two cases are based on the same             
claims, the court applies the transactional test set forth in the         
Restatement (Second) of Judgments, which provides that:                   
  [w]hen a valid and final judgment ... extinguishes                 
  the  plaintiff’s  claim  ...  the  claim  extinguished             
  includes  all  rights  of  the  plaintiff  to  remedies            
  against the defendant with respect to all or any                   
  part  of  the  transaction,  or  series  of  connected             
  transactions, out of which the action arose.                       

  What factual grouping constitutes a ‘transaction’                  
  and what groupings constitute a ‘series,’ are to be                
  determined  pragmatically,  giving  weight  to  such               
  considerations as whether the facts are related in                 
  time,  space,  origin,  or  motivation,  whether  they             
  form  a  convenient  trial  unit,  and  whether  their             
  treatment  as  a  unit  conforms  to  the  parties’                
  expectations, business understanding or usage.                     


5  There is no dispute that Sheridan, who was not named as a         
defendant  in  the  first  lawsuit,  is  in  privity  with  MNIT,  her    
employer.  Her addition to this suit therefore does not affect the        
court’s ability to apply res judicata.                                    

                           5                                         
Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 24(1)-(2) (1982); see Banks v.        

Int’l  Union  Electronic,  Elec.,  Technical,  Salaried  &  Mach.         
Workers, 
390 F.3d 1049, 1052
   (8th   Cir.   2004) (applying         
transactional test).  Otherwise stated, “a claim is barred by res         
judicata if it arises out of the same nucleus of operative facts          
as  the  prior  claim.”   Banks, 
390 F.3d at 1052
 (citation  and       
quotation omitted).                                                       
As defendants note, much of the amended complaint alleges            
discrimination and retaliation that was also alleged in the first         
lawsuit.  The amended complaint begins by discussing misconduct           
beginning in 2018 through 2022, which was also a period at issue          
in the first lawsuit.6  Compare Am. Compl. ¶¶ 17-126 with Case No.        
21-620,  Compl.  ¶¶  222-72.    The  amended  complaint  also  raises     

specific  allegations  regarding  Mr.  Yohannes’s  termination  from      
MNIT while the first lawsuit was still pending.  Am. Compl. ¶¶ 127-       
90.  Rather than seek to amend    the  complaint in that case to          
include a claim for retaliatory termination, which he now claims          
here, Mr. Yohannes instead chose to voluntarily dismiss that case         
with prejudice.                                                           


6   The  first  lawsuit  includes  allegations  predating  the       
allegations  in  this  case,  but  both  cases  involve  the  same        
allegations from 2018 to Mr. Yohannes’s termination in August 2022.       

                           6                                         
As  alleged,  Mr.   Yohannes’s  termination  was  simply  a          

continuation  of  MNIT’s  alleged  acts  of  discrimination   and         
retaliation that were the crux of the first lawsuit.  Moreover,           
the new allegations occurred before the court entered judgment in         
the first case.  As such, the claims raised here “arise[] out of          
the same nucleus of operative facts as the prior claim” and thus          
could  have,  and  should  have,  been  raised  in  the  first  suit.     
Banks, 
390 F.3d at 1052
 (citation and quotation omitted).  Mr.            
Yohannes’s federal claims for discrimination and retaliation must         
therefore be dismissed under the doctrine of res judicata.7               
The court finds otherwise with respect to Mr. Yohannes’s post-       
termination claim for defamation/libel.  Because the facts giving         
rise to that claim appear to have occurred after Mr. Yohannes             

dismissed his first lawsuit and involve new acts on the part of           
MNIT that are separate and distinct from the conduct at issue in          
the first lawsuit, the court is not persuaded that it is barred by        

7 Mr. Yohannes also contends that MNIT interfered with his           
right  to  contract  due  to  his  race,  in  violation  of  
42 U.S.C. § 1981
.  He fails, however, to provide any allegations to support         
such a claim in his amended complaint.  In his opposition to the          
motion to dismiss, he points to the alleged discrimination that           
underpinned  his  first  lawsuit,  and  which  the  court  has  deemed    
untenable under res judicata, as the basis for his § 1981 claim.          
See ECF No. 52, at 7-9.  Accordingly, the § 1981 claim must also          
be dismissed for failure to state a claim and under the doctrine          
of res judicata.                                                          


                           7                                         
res judicata.  See TechnoMarine SA v. Giftports, Inc., 
758 F.3d 493, 500
  (2d  Cir.  2014)  (“[W]hen  post-judgment  conduct  is         
sufficient to state a cause of action on its own — without the            
need to incorporate facts that preceded the first suit — the later        
course of conduct underlying the second suit gives rise to a new          
cause of action that is not barred by res judicata.”).                    
Where, as here, “all federal-law claims are eliminated before        
trial, the balance of factors to be considered under the pendent          
jurisdiction doctrine — judicial economy, convenience, fairness,          
and comity — will point toward declining to exercise jurisdiction         
over the remaining state-law claims.”  Dodson v. Univ. of Ark. for        
Med.  Scis.,  
601 F.3d 750
,  756  (8th  Cir.  2010) (per  curiam)       
(quoting Carnegie–Mellon Univ. v. Cohill, 
484 U.S. 343
, 350 n.7           

(1988)); see also Kapaun v. Dziedzic, 
674 F.2d 737, 739
 (8th Cir.         
1982) (“The  normal  practice  where  federal  claims  are  dismissed     
prior to trial is to dismiss pendent claims without prejudice,            
thus leaving plaintiffs free to pursue their state-law claims in          
the state courts.”).                                                      
Based on a consideration of the pendent jurisdiction factors,        
the court declines to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Mr.         
Yohannes’s state-law claim, as it depends solely on determinations        
of state law.  See Farris v. Exotic Rubber and Plastics of Minn.,         


                           8                                         
Inc., 
165 F. Supp. 2d 916, 919
 (D. Minn. 2001) (“State courts, not        

federal  courts,  should  be  the  final  arbiters  of  state  law.”)     
(quoting Baggett v. First Nat’l Bank of Gainesville, 
117 F.3d 1342, 1353
 (11th Cir. 1997)).  Further, the parties have yet to engage          
in discovery, and the court has not expended substantial resources        
tending to this matter.  Under the circumstances, the court is            
satisfied  that  declining  to  exercise  supplemental  jurisdiction      
will not harm the parties.  The court therefore dismisses the             
state-law claim without prejudice.                                        

                      CONCLUSION                                     
Accordingly, based on above, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:              
1.   The motion to dismiss [ECF No. 43] is granted;                  

2.   The federal claims are dismissed with prejudice; and            
3.   The  defamation/libel   claim  is   dismissed   without         
prejudice with leave to file in state court.                              
LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.                                      

Dated: March 12, 2024         s/David S. Doty                             
                         David S. Doty, Judge                        
                         United States District Court                



                           9                                         

Trial Court Opinion

             UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                 DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                               
              CIVIL NO.: 23-1875(DSD/DTS)                            

Barnabas A. Yohannes,                                                     

Plaintiff,                                                           

v.                                              ORDER                     

Minnesota IT Services and                                                 
Anne Sheridan,                                                            

Defendants.                                                          


This matter is before the court upon the motion to dismiss by        
defendants Minnesota IT Services and Anne Sheridan.  Based on a           
review of the file, record, and proceedings herein, and for the           
following reasons, the motion is granted.                                 

                      BACKGROUND                                     
This  employment  discrimination  dispute  arises  from  pro  se     
plaintiff Barnabas Yohannes’s tenure with MNIT.  MNIT provides IT         
related  services  to  all  state  agencies  within  Minnesota.    Am.    
Compl., ECF No. 40, ¶ 12.  MNIT assigned Mr. Yohannes to work for         
various  state  agencies  during  his  employment  with  MNIT.    See     
generally id.  Defendant Anne Sheridan supervised Mr. Yohannes at         
times relevant to this lawsuit.  Id. ¶ 140.                               
In  2021,  Mr.  Yohannes  sued  MNIT  in  this  court  alleging      
employment  discrimination  under  Title  VII  based  on  his  race,      
national origin, and color.1  Taylor Decl. Ex. A, at 2-4.  He             

alleged that MNIT’s discrimination – and that of the state agencies       
he was assigned to work for - resulted in the failure to hire and         
promote  him,   termination  of   his  employment,   differential         
treatment, retaliation, and harassment.  Id. at 4.  The factual           
basis of his complaint spanned from 2006 to 2021.  See generally          
id.  Mr. Yohannes remained employed by MNIT throughout most of the        
lawsuit.                                                                  
In August 2021, Chief Judge Schiltz dismissed Mr. Yohannes’s         
color discrimination and harassment claims for failure to exhaust         
administrative  remedies,  dismissed  the  retaliation  claim  as         
untimely,   and   dismissed  the   race   and   national   origin         
discrimination claim for failure to state a claim under Federal           

Rule  of  Civil  Procedure  12(b)(6).    Taylor  Decl.  Ex.  F.    Mr.    
Yohannes then filed a motion to amend the complaint to add more           
claims, which Magistrate Judge Wright denied.  See Yohannes v.            
MNIT, Case No. 21-cv-620, ECF Nos. 46, 75.2                               

1   Chief  Judge  Patrick  J.  Schiltz  and  Magistrate  Judge       
Elizabeth Cowan Wright presided over the case.                            
2  In comparing the two cases, defendants repeatedly cite to         
the amended complaint as the operative complaint in the earlier           
suit.  See ECF No. 46; Taylor Decl. Ex. C.  As noted, however, Mr.        
Yohannes was not granted leave to file an amended complaint in            
that case.  As a result, the court will not consider the amended          
complaint in Case No. 21-cv-620 in assessing whether this case may        

                           2                                         
On August 9, 2022, MNIT terminated Mr. Yohannes’s employment.        

Am. Compl. ¶ 192.  In October 2022, Mr. Yohannes agreed to dismiss        
the  2021  lawsuit  with  prejudice  “together  with  all  causes  of     
actions  and  claims  that  were  or  that  might  have  been  alleged    
therein.”  Taylor Decl. Ex. E.                                            
On June 20, 2023, Mr. Yohannes commenced this action alleging        
that MNIT discriminated against him in violation of Title VII, the        
Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 
42 U.S.C. § 1981
, the        
Minnesota Human Rights Act (MHRA), the Minnesota Fair Pay Act, and        
the Minnesota Whistleblower Act, and on the basis of his race,            
religion, national origin, color, and age.3  Compl., ECF No. 1, at        
2-4.    Like  in  his  first  lawsuit,  Mr.  Yohannes  alleges  that      
defendants’ discrimination led to the failure to hire and promote         

him,  termination  of  his  employment,  differential  treatment,         
retaliation, and harassment.  
Id. at 4
.  He also alleges that MNIT        
defamed and libeled him after terminating his employment.  
Id.
            
On November 15, 2023, Mr. Yohannes filed an amended complaint4       

proceed.                                                                  
3 Before  filing  the  current  action,  Mr.  Yohannes  filed  a     
charge  of  discrimination  with  the  Equal  Employment  Opportunity     
Commission (EEOC) and received a right to sue letter.  See ECF No.        
1-1.  The record does not include the charge of discrimination or         
a description of its contents.                                            
4  The amended complaint is titled “2nd Amended Complaint” but       
is in fact the first amended complaint.  See ECF Nos. 23, 38, 40.         

                           3                                         
adding Anne Sheridan as a defendant and withdrawing his claims            

under the Minnesota Human Rights Act (MHRA), the Minnesota Fair           
Pay Act, and the Minnesota Whistleblower Act.  See Am. Compl., ECF        
No. 40, at 3-4.                                                           
Mr.   Yohannes    seeks   injunctive   relief,    employment         
reinstatement, and damages.  Defendants now move to dismiss on the        
basis of res judicata and failure to state a claim.                       

                      DISCUSSION                                     
Under the doctrine of res judicata, “a final judgment on the         
merits of an action precludes the parties or their privies from           
relitigating issues that were or could have been raised in that           
action.”  Yankton Sioux Tribe v. U.S. Dept. of Health & Human             

Servs., 
533 F.3d 634, 639
 (8th Cir. 2008) (citation and quotation         
omitted).    To  establish  that  res  judicata  bars  Mr.  Yohannes’s    
claim, defendants must show that: “(1) the first suit resulted in         
a final judgment on the merits; (2) the first suit was based on           
proper jurisdiction; (3) both suits involve the same parties (or          
those in privity with them); and (4) both suits are based upon the        
same claims or causes of action.”  
Id.
 (citation and quotation            


For clarity, the court will refer to the operative pleading as the        
“amended complaint.”                                                      

                           4                                         
omitted).                                                                 

The parties’ disagreement here centers on whether both suits         
are based on the same claims.5  Mr. Yohannes maintains that this          
suit is separate and distinct from the first suit because, here,          
his amended complaint focuses on his termination and MNIT’s post-         
termination defamation/libel.  Defendants argue that the amended          
complaint in this case alleges facts similar or identical to those        
raised in the first lawsuit and is thus barred.                           
In assessing whether the two cases are based on the same             
claims, the court applies the transactional test set forth in the         
Restatement (Second) of Judgments, which provides that:                   
  [w]hen a valid and final judgment ... extinguishes                 
  the  plaintiff’s  claim  ...  the  claim  extinguished             
  includes  all  rights  of  the  plaintiff  to  remedies            
  against the defendant with respect to all or any                   
  part  of  the  transaction,  or  series  of  connected             
  transactions, out of which the action arose.                       

  What factual grouping constitutes a ‘transaction’                  
  and what groupings constitute a ‘series,’ are to be                
  determined  pragmatically,  giving  weight  to  such               
  considerations as whether the facts are related in                 
  time,  space,  origin,  or  motivation,  whether  they             
  form  a  convenient  trial  unit,  and  whether  their             
  treatment  as  a  unit  conforms  to  the  parties’                
  expectations, business understanding or usage.                     


5  There is no dispute that Sheridan, who was not named as a         
defendant  in  the  first  lawsuit,  is  in  privity  with  MNIT,  her    
employer.  Her addition to this suit therefore does not affect the        
court’s ability to apply res judicata.                                    

                           5                                         
Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 24(1)-(2) (1982); see Banks v.        

Int’l  Union  Electronic,  Elec.,  Technical,  Salaried  &  Mach.         
Workers, 
390 F.3d 1049, 1052
   (8th   Cir.   2004) (applying         
transactional test).  Otherwise stated, “a claim is barred by res         
judicata if it arises out of the same nucleus of operative facts          
as  the  prior  claim.”   Banks, 
390 F.3d at 1052
 (citation  and       
quotation omitted).                                                       
As defendants note, much of the amended complaint alleges            
discrimination and retaliation that was also alleged in the first         
lawsuit.  The amended complaint begins by discussing misconduct           
beginning in 2018 through 2022, which was also a period at issue          
in the first lawsuit.6  Compare Am. Compl. ¶¶ 17-126 with Case No.        
21-620,  Compl.  ¶¶  222-72.    The  amended  complaint  also  raises     

specific  allegations  regarding  Mr.  Yohannes’s  termination  from      
MNIT while the first lawsuit was still pending.  Am. Compl. ¶¶ 127-       
90.  Rather than seek to amend    the  complaint in that case to          
include a claim for retaliatory termination, which he now claims          
here, Mr. Yohannes instead chose to voluntarily dismiss that case         
with prejudice.                                                           


6   The  first  lawsuit  includes  allegations  predating  the       
allegations  in  this  case,  but  both  cases  involve  the  same        
allegations from 2018 to Mr. Yohannes’s termination in August 2022.       

                           6                                         
As  alleged,  Mr.   Yohannes’s  termination  was  simply  a          

continuation  of  MNIT’s  alleged  acts  of  discrimination   and         
retaliation that were the crux of the first lawsuit.  Moreover,           
the new allegations occurred before the court entered judgment in         
the first case.  As such, the claims raised here “arise[] out of          
the same nucleus of operative facts as the prior claim” and thus          
could  have,  and  should  have,  been  raised  in  the  first  suit.     
Banks, 
390 F.3d at 1052
 (citation and quotation omitted).  Mr.            
Yohannes’s federal claims for discrimination and retaliation must         
therefore be dismissed under the doctrine of res judicata.7               
The court finds otherwise with respect to Mr. Yohannes’s post-       
termination claim for defamation/libel.  Because the facts giving         
rise to that claim appear to have occurred after Mr. Yohannes             

dismissed his first lawsuit and involve new acts on the part of           
MNIT that are separate and distinct from the conduct at issue in          
the first lawsuit, the court is not persuaded that it is barred by        

7 Mr. Yohannes also contends that MNIT interfered with his           
right  to  contract  due  to  his  race,  in  violation  of  
42 U.S.C. § 1981
.  He fails, however, to provide any allegations to support         
such a claim in his amended complaint.  In his opposition to the          
motion to dismiss, he points to the alleged discrimination that           
underpinned  his  first  lawsuit,  and  which  the  court  has  deemed    
untenable under res judicata, as the basis for his § 1981 claim.          
See ECF No. 52, at 7-9.  Accordingly, the § 1981 claim must also          
be dismissed for failure to state a claim and under the doctrine          
of res judicata.                                                          


                           7                                         
res judicata.  See TechnoMarine SA v. Giftports, Inc., 
758 F.3d 493, 500
  (2d  Cir.  2014)  (“[W]hen  post-judgment  conduct  is         
sufficient to state a cause of action on its own — without the            
need to incorporate facts that preceded the first suit — the later        
course of conduct underlying the second suit gives rise to a new          
cause of action that is not barred by res judicata.”).                    
Where, as here, “all federal-law claims are eliminated before        
trial, the balance of factors to be considered under the pendent          
jurisdiction doctrine — judicial economy, convenience, fairness,          
and comity — will point toward declining to exercise jurisdiction         
over the remaining state-law claims.”  Dodson v. Univ. of Ark. for        
Med.  Scis.,  
601 F.3d 750
,  756  (8th  Cir.  2010) (per  curiam)       
(quoting Carnegie–Mellon Univ. v. Cohill, 
484 U.S. 343
, 350 n.7           

(1988)); see also Kapaun v. Dziedzic, 
674 F.2d 737, 739
 (8th Cir.         
1982) (“The  normal  practice  where  federal  claims  are  dismissed     
prior to trial is to dismiss pendent claims without prejudice,            
thus leaving plaintiffs free to pursue their state-law claims in          
the state courts.”).                                                      
Based on a consideration of the pendent jurisdiction factors,        
the court declines to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Mr.         
Yohannes’s state-law claim, as it depends solely on determinations        
of state law.  See Farris v. Exotic Rubber and Plastics of Minn.,         


                           8                                         
Inc., 
165 F. Supp. 2d 916, 919
 (D. Minn. 2001) (“State courts, not        

federal  courts,  should  be  the  final  arbiters  of  state  law.”)     
(quoting Baggett v. First Nat’l Bank of Gainesville, 
117 F.3d 1342, 1353
 (11th Cir. 1997)).  Further, the parties have yet to engage          
in discovery, and the court has not expended substantial resources        
tending to this matter.  Under the circumstances, the court is            
satisfied  that  declining  to  exercise  supplemental  jurisdiction      
will not harm the parties.  The court therefore dismisses the             
state-law claim without prejudice.                                        

                      CONCLUSION                                     
Accordingly, based on above, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:              
1.   The motion to dismiss [ECF No. 43] is granted;                  

2.   The federal claims are dismissed with prejudice; and            
3.   The  defamation/libel   claim  is   dismissed   without         
prejudice with leave to file in state court.                              
LET JUDGMENT BE ENTERED ACCORDINGLY.                                      

Dated: March 12, 2024         s/David S. Doty                             
                         David S. Doty, Judge                        
                         United States District Court                



                           9                                         

Reference

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