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53 Emory L.J. 55 (2004)
The Cauldron Boils: Supplemental Jurisdiction, Amount in Controversy, and Diversity of Citizenship Class Actions

handle is hein.journals/emlj53 and id is 67 raw text is: THE CAULDRON BOILS: SUPPLEMENTAL JURISDICTION,
AMOUNT IN CONTROVERSY, AND DIVERSITY OF
CITIZENSHIP CLASS ACTIONS
Richard D. Freer*
1.  INTRODUCTION    ..................................................................................   55
II. THE ZAHN ANOMALY AND THE DEBATE OVER DIVERSITY
OF CITIZENSHIP JURISDICTION ........................................................... 60
III. THE THREE APPROACHES OF THE COURTS OF APPEALS
(AND PROBLEMS WITH EACH) ............................................................ 66
A.   The Textual or Plain Meaning Approach ......................... 66
1. How § 1367 Overrules Zahn .............................................. 66
2. The Rest of the Plain Meaning Story:
M ultiple D efendants ............................................................. 69
B.   Problems with Relying on Legislative History to
Preserve  Zahn ...........................................................................   72
C.   Problems with Relying on Statutory Language to
Preserve  Zahn ...........................................................................   79
IV. SOME COMMENTS ON DRAFTING AND
INTERPRETING JURISDICTIONAL STATUTES ........................................ 85
V .  C ONCLUSION   .....................................................................................  88
I. INTRODUCTION
In December 1990, while writing an essay for this Journal to comment on
the Supreme Court's lamentable decision in Finley v. United States,1 I received
an interesting telephone call from a law professor acquaintance. He told me
that we now have a supplemental jurisdiction statute and that it had gone into
* Robert Howell Hall Professor of Law, Emory University. I am grateful to Bobby Ahdieh, Tom Arthur,
Michael Broyde, Howard Fink, Peter Hay, Julie Seaman, Robert Schapiro, and Charlie Shanor for helpful
comments and suggestions.
1 490 U.S. 545 (1989) (rejecting pendent parties jurisdiction over a state-law claim against a nondiverse
defendant when original jurisdiction was based upon the Federal Tort Claims Act).

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