Bolton v. Travelers Insurance Company

Decision Date09 March 1973
Docket NumberNo. 72-2568 Summary Calendar.,72-2568 Summary Calendar.
PartiesFaye BOLTON, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. The TRAVELERS INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant-Appellant.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Fifth Circuit

Glynn Purtle, Wichita Falls, Tex., for defendant-appellant.

Bob Wilson, Wichita Falls, Tex., for plaintiff-appellee.

Before JOHN R. BROWN, Chief Judge, and GOLDBERG and MORGAN, Circuit Judges.

JOHN R. BROWN, Chief Judge:

This is a Texas diversity case. Desirous of deciding it with dispatch but worshipping accuracy more dearly than speed we awaited the decision of the Supreme Court of Texas in Latham v. Security Insurance Company of Hartford, Tex., 1972, 491 S.W.2d 100. The questions which this appeal presents which are deserving of serious consideration were dealt with frontally by the Texas high Court which laid down rules for their resolution. Nonetheless, we must still beat a hasty retreat from ignorance to speculation and determine whether we think the Texas Supreme Court would hold, under its second rule announced in Latham, that a party who voluntarily places himself within the Court's jurisdiction shall be considered to have been "joined". Believing that the Texas Court would so hold, we reverse the District Court's dismissal for want of jurisdiction and remand for trial on the merits.1

Appellee Bolton was injured within the course and scope of her employment by Walter Kidde & Co. Inc., Webber Aircraft. She filed her claim against Employer and Travelers with the Industrial Accident Board (IAB) of the state of Texas on June 28, 1971. Travelers notified the IAB that the "Charter Oak Fire Insurance Company" was the correct carrier. Travelers and Charter Oak, corporate pere et fil, shared common claims offices, officers, management and staffs.2 The IAB found that indeed, Charter Oak was the correct carrier and its award ordered the payment of over $17,000 in a lump sum as compensation for total permanent disability. Appellee Bolton, through her counsel, gave written notice of appeal to the IAB and the parties naming Employer and Charter Oak in the caption which was incorporated by reference in the body of the notice as "the final ruling—and award of * * * IAB * * * in the above styled and numbered cause—." Counsel then filed suit to set aside the Board's award naming only Travelers as a defendant with no mention of Charter Oak.

If suit is not filed within 20 days of the IAB's award that award is final. The rule is harshly applied in Texas. Latham, supra; Richards v. Consolidated Underwriters, Tex.Civ.App., 1967, 411 S.W.2d 436, writ ref'd.; Mosqueda v. Home Indemnity Co., Tex.Civ.App., 1969, 443 S.W.2d 901, writ ref'd. n. r. e. (approved in Latham, supra). Very simply, 20 days means 20 days.

The Employee timely filed suit naming Travelers, but not Charter Oak, in its appeal from the award. Travelers answer came 25 days after the date of the award—well before the date upon which it must appear and defend. F.R. Civ.P. 12.3 In its answer4 Travelers affirmatively stated that Charter Oak was the actual insurer and asked that it be substituted for Travelers as the proper defendant.5 Thus, Charter Oak did not file suit or become a party to a suit—or so the Appellee would have us hold—until sometime after the expiration of 20 days following the award of the IAB.

The Employee then moved for a dismissal, arguing that the District Court did not have jurisdiction of the award to her against Charter Oak because Charter Oak had not filed suit within 20 days and had not been named as a party to a suit filed within the same time period.6 Agreeing that Charter Oak had not appealed from the award from the Industrial Accident Board by bringing suit or being named as defendant and cross-claiming the District Court held that it had no jurisdiction over a suit between Charter Oak and plaintiff Bolton. Accordingly it dismissed the action for lack of jurisdiction.

In its appeal Charter Oak contended originally that (i) the question should be governed under the precepts of F.R.Civ.P. 1 insofar as it deals with liberal construction and treatment of procedural questions, and (ii) that the entire action which was before the IAB including all of its parties, came before the District Court upon the instigation of suit by any party.7

On the first of these bases— though it could be argued forcefully if we had no guidance from Lathamwe could now only summarily affirm the holding of the District Court. A statute of limitations cannot be ignored under the rubric of enlightened procedure.

As to the second, we would have been thrown into the thicket of controlling Texas decisions, several from Courts of Civil Appeals with the enigma flowing from the Supreme Court's not allowing a writ of error. But all the brambles here are gone by virtue of the Texas Supreme Court's decision in Latham, supra. The struggle there was how to reconcile the irreconcilable.8

The opinion of Justice Reavley for a unanimous Court is a fine example of constructive judicial statesmanship. Instead of trying to reconcile the irreconcilable they have chosen—as they have a right and duty to do—the principles that ought to control and spelled them out in categorical fashion. It makes quite clear that parties before the Industrial Accident Board who are not parties to suit either as Plaintiff, Defendant, or by joinder within 20 days from the rendition of the award by the Board must—with one critical exception—accept as inevitable the finality of the IAB's award. This is clearly the import of the third rule as stated in Latham, supra.9

However, Latham also specifies in Rule 2, supra, that "Defendants in a law suit to set aside an award of the Board shall have until their appearance date to join other parties who have been before the Board." This means, of course, that parties can be brought before the District Court after the 20 day statute of limitations has run if they are brought in by a Defendant in an action to set aside the Board's award.

In our Erie role we could just stop with Rule 2. But we think that behind Rule 2 was the Court's feeling that this is obviously a sensible construction of the statute since any other would allow an employee to wait 19 days to sue one Defendant-insurer if it were his desire to keep a second insurer out of the litigation to thus lay the trap for increased benefits (see note 5, supra). The sued Defendant-insurer, who might have been happy with a partial compensation award, would of necessity have to give notice of appeal as to other insurers and then sue all other defendants without waiting to be sued itself in order to protect itself from paying a judgment which someone else should have paid. We think it is likewise sensible to hold that a party who voluntarily submits itself to the jurisdiction of the District Court and makes itself liable to all the obligations, disabilities, and control by the District Court, as would be one who is formally joined as a party by cross claim or impleader. F.R.Civ.P. 13 and 14, followed by the usual service of process, is before the Court within the meaning of Rule 2.

It is true that Charter Oak was not joined as a party by the defendant Travelers. But it was as certainly a party after making an appearance by counsel and suggesting a substitution of names as if it had been joined. Employee cannot seriously contend that Appellant-Charter Oak was not before the District Court. Since this appearance had all the effects of joinder and occurred before the appearance day (i. e. answer day) of Travelers—the time limit set by Rule 2, we think that the Texas Supreme Court would hold that Appellant Charter Oak had been "joined" by the Appellant Travelers within the required time.

With that conclusion we sound recall and send the case back to the District Court.

Reversed and remanded.

1 We do not mean to forescast the necessity of a full-blown trial. That...

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