MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
FITZWATER, District Judge.
A forum skirmish typically fought in two Texas state courts requires this
Erie
court to determine whether Texas permits an insurer who is completely successful before the Industrial Accident Board (“IAB”) to appeal the IAB’s final award. Concluding that Texas does not permit such an appeal, the court grants defendant’s motion for summary judgment
and dismisses this action for want of subject matter jurisdiction,
I.
BACKGROUND
As they pertain to the question presented, the facts are undisputed. Plaintiff, Allstate Insurance Company (“Allstate”), an Illinois corporation with its principal place of business in Illinois, filed this complaint on June 26, 1987 appealing from a final award of the IAB in
favor
of Allstate. Allstate’s insured is Sears, Roebuck & Company, also an Illinois citizen. Defendant, Carl Shelby (“Shelby”), a workers’ compensation claimant, is a Texas citizen. There is thus complete diversity of citizenship, even under
Hernandez v. Travelers Insurance Co.,
489 F.2d 721, 723-24 (5th Cir.1974), and
Campbell v. Insurance Co. of North America,
552 F.2d 604, 605 (5th Cir.1977) (diversity of citizenship lacking when insurer is diverse citizen to claimant but insured employer is not), and this court may, in turn, determine as an
Erie
court whether it possesses subject matter jurisdiction under Texas law.
Allstate filed its appeal within 20 days of the IAB final award, as required by Texas law, TEX.REV.CIV.STAT.ANN. art. 8307, § 5 (Vernon Supp.1987), and seeks to set aside the IAB award. On July 8, 1987, Shelby also appealed from the IAB decision, filing suit in a Texas state court in Van Zandt County, Texas.
Texas workers’ compensation law provides that an appeal
de novo
from an IAB award in a non-death, non-occupational disease case may be prosecuted in either of two places: the county where the injury occurred or the county where the employee
resided at the time the injury occurred.
Id.
As noted below, where lawyers perceive there to be a tactical advantage to litigating in one forum versus another, there inevitably ensues a race to the courthouse and forum skirmish. The race to the courthouse in the instant case is apparent from the summary judgment record. Don Burt, Allstate’s compensation manager in Dallas, testified by affidavit that, at a mandatory pre-hearing conference, Shelby’s attorney told the IAB pre-hearing officer that he hoped the officer found against Shelby and rendered a zero award recommendation so that Shelby could appeal the case to Van Zandt County, where Shelby’s attorney believed a jury would be good to his client. (Burt Aff. at 1). According to Burt, Shelby’s attorney indicated that he had no intention of permitting a take-nothing award issued by the IAB to become final.
Id.
at 1-2. Upon learning this, Burt instructed Allstate’s counsel to appeal the IAB ruling to this court.
Id.
at 2. Burt further testified:
In my years of experience in handling and supervising workers’ compensation cases, I have found that choice of forum is sometimes the most important single thing in any lawsuit. Realizing this, and realizing Carl Shelby intended to file suit to set aside the Industrial Accident Board’s award in the forum of his choice, Allstate Insurance Company filed suit in this Court, an impartial Federal forum.
Id.
at 2-3.
Shelby moves for summary judgment in this court on the ground that, as a matter of law, Allstate cannot appeal from a final award of the IAB that denies the claimant all relief sought. Allstate opposes the motion, contending there is a Texas court decision that supports its right to appeal and that article 8307, § 5
provides that “any interested party” can prosecute an appeal from an IAB award.
II.
ANALYSIS
The court begins its analysis by reviewing the jurisprudential boundaries within which it operates. In a diversity case this court, as an
Erie
court, must decide the question presented according to the substantive law of Texas,
see Burns v. Gleason,
819 F.2d
555, 556 (5th
Cir.1987), which in this case requires the application of Texas law. Further, where, as here, there is no definite decision of the state’s highest civil tribunal,
the court will look to decisions of the state’s intermediate appellate courts. A decision of the Texas court of appeals is controlling on questions of state law absent a strong indication that the Texas supreme court would decide the question differently.
Mott v. Mitsubishi International Corp.,
636 F.2d 1073, 1074 (5th Cir.1981). A federal district court will not lightly re-examine a state intermediate court’s decision on an issue of state law unless there are persuasive indications that the highest court of the state would decide otherwise.
Cormier v. Williams/Sed
co/Horn Constructors,
460 F.Supp. 1010, 1012 (ED.La.1978).
Two Texas intermediate courts have decided the question presented by the instant summary judgment motion. In 1981, the Fort Worth court of civil appeals,
in
United States Fire Insurance Co. v. Bishop,
613 S.W.2d 52, 54 (Tex.Civ.App.1981, writ ref d n.r.e.), held that an injured claimant can appeal a favorable IAB decision to state court. In
Bishop,
the claimant’s attorney testified that he appealed to state court a favorable IAB award of total and permanent disability after he became aware that the insurer intended to appeal the award. The claimant’s attorney appealed the favorable award for a purely tactical reason: because “[cjhoice of forum is sometimes the most important single thing in any lawsuit____”
Id.
at 54. The attorney proved to be correct, for his client obtained the same favorable award from a state court jury. The insurer thereafter appealed on various grounds, one of which challenged the validity of the claimant’s appeal of the IAB award. The Fort Worth court affirmed, reasoning that article 8307 provides that “any interested party” may appeal and that the injured claimant desired a total and permanent award and was “simply unwilling to abide by the Board’s award which was not a final judgment.”
Id.
In 1982, however, a panel
of the Fort Worth court, in
Texas Employers Insurance Association v. Spann,
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MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
FITZWATER, District Judge.
A forum skirmish typically fought in two Texas state courts requires this
Erie
court to determine whether Texas permits an insurer who is completely successful before the Industrial Accident Board (“IAB”) to appeal the IAB’s final award. Concluding that Texas does not permit such an appeal, the court grants defendant’s motion for summary judgment
and dismisses this action for want of subject matter jurisdiction,
I.
BACKGROUND
As they pertain to the question presented, the facts are undisputed. Plaintiff, Allstate Insurance Company (“Allstate”), an Illinois corporation with its principal place of business in Illinois, filed this complaint on June 26, 1987 appealing from a final award of the IAB in
favor
of Allstate. Allstate’s insured is Sears, Roebuck & Company, also an Illinois citizen. Defendant, Carl Shelby (“Shelby”), a workers’ compensation claimant, is a Texas citizen. There is thus complete diversity of citizenship, even under
Hernandez v. Travelers Insurance Co.,
489 F.2d 721, 723-24 (5th Cir.1974), and
Campbell v. Insurance Co. of North America,
552 F.2d 604, 605 (5th Cir.1977) (diversity of citizenship lacking when insurer is diverse citizen to claimant but insured employer is not), and this court may, in turn, determine as an
Erie
court whether it possesses subject matter jurisdiction under Texas law.
Allstate filed its appeal within 20 days of the IAB final award, as required by Texas law, TEX.REV.CIV.STAT.ANN. art. 8307, § 5 (Vernon Supp.1987), and seeks to set aside the IAB award. On July 8, 1987, Shelby also appealed from the IAB decision, filing suit in a Texas state court in Van Zandt County, Texas.
Texas workers’ compensation law provides that an appeal
de novo
from an IAB award in a non-death, non-occupational disease case may be prosecuted in either of two places: the county where the injury occurred or the county where the employee
resided at the time the injury occurred.
Id.
As noted below, where lawyers perceive there to be a tactical advantage to litigating in one forum versus another, there inevitably ensues a race to the courthouse and forum skirmish. The race to the courthouse in the instant case is apparent from the summary judgment record. Don Burt, Allstate’s compensation manager in Dallas, testified by affidavit that, at a mandatory pre-hearing conference, Shelby’s attorney told the IAB pre-hearing officer that he hoped the officer found against Shelby and rendered a zero award recommendation so that Shelby could appeal the case to Van Zandt County, where Shelby’s attorney believed a jury would be good to his client. (Burt Aff. at 1). According to Burt, Shelby’s attorney indicated that he had no intention of permitting a take-nothing award issued by the IAB to become final.
Id.
at 1-2. Upon learning this, Burt instructed Allstate’s counsel to appeal the IAB ruling to this court.
Id.
at 2. Burt further testified:
In my years of experience in handling and supervising workers’ compensation cases, I have found that choice of forum is sometimes the most important single thing in any lawsuit. Realizing this, and realizing Carl Shelby intended to file suit to set aside the Industrial Accident Board’s award in the forum of his choice, Allstate Insurance Company filed suit in this Court, an impartial Federal forum.
Id.
at 2-3.
Shelby moves for summary judgment in this court on the ground that, as a matter of law, Allstate cannot appeal from a final award of the IAB that denies the claimant all relief sought. Allstate opposes the motion, contending there is a Texas court decision that supports its right to appeal and that article 8307, § 5
provides that “any interested party” can prosecute an appeal from an IAB award.
II.
ANALYSIS
The court begins its analysis by reviewing the jurisprudential boundaries within which it operates. In a diversity case this court, as an
Erie
court, must decide the question presented according to the substantive law of Texas,
see Burns v. Gleason,
819 F.2d
555, 556 (5th
Cir.1987), which in this case requires the application of Texas law. Further, where, as here, there is no definite decision of the state’s highest civil tribunal,
the court will look to decisions of the state’s intermediate appellate courts. A decision of the Texas court of appeals is controlling on questions of state law absent a strong indication that the Texas supreme court would decide the question differently.
Mott v. Mitsubishi International Corp.,
636 F.2d 1073, 1074 (5th Cir.1981). A federal district court will not lightly re-examine a state intermediate court’s decision on an issue of state law unless there are persuasive indications that the highest court of the state would decide otherwise.
Cormier v. Williams/Sed
co/Horn Constructors,
460 F.Supp. 1010, 1012 (ED.La.1978).
Two Texas intermediate courts have decided the question presented by the instant summary judgment motion. In 1981, the Fort Worth court of civil appeals,
in
United States Fire Insurance Co. v. Bishop,
613 S.W.2d 52, 54 (Tex.Civ.App.1981, writ ref d n.r.e.), held that an injured claimant can appeal a favorable IAB decision to state court. In
Bishop,
the claimant’s attorney testified that he appealed to state court a favorable IAB award of total and permanent disability after he became aware that the insurer intended to appeal the award. The claimant’s attorney appealed the favorable award for a purely tactical reason: because “[cjhoice of forum is sometimes the most important single thing in any lawsuit____”
Id.
at 54. The attorney proved to be correct, for his client obtained the same favorable award from a state court jury. The insurer thereafter appealed on various grounds, one of which challenged the validity of the claimant’s appeal of the IAB award. The Fort Worth court affirmed, reasoning that article 8307 provides that “any interested party” may appeal and that the injured claimant desired a total and permanent award and was “simply unwilling to abide by the Board’s award which was not a final judgment.”
Id.
In 1982, however, a panel
of the Fort Worth court, in
Texas Employers Insurance Association v. Spann,
632 S.W.2d 906, 908 (Tex.App.1982, writ dism’d w.o.j.),
held that an insurer who has received a favorable award from the IAB cannot appeal the decision to state court.
Spann
involved an IAB award which held that the claimant was not entitled to any compensation. Two days after the IAB rendered its decision, the insurer filed suit in state court in Dallas County, Texas. The insurer did not in its petition request that the IAB award be set aside and held for naught, but it did request a trial
de novo.
Thereafter, the claimant filed suit in state court in Tarrant County, Texas. The insurer filed a plea of privilege (a venue challenge) in the Tarrant County court, requesting that the suit be transferred to Dallas County, the county of the insurer’s suit. The insurer also requested that the Tarrant County court abate the claimant’s suit because the insurer’s suit was first filed. The Tarrant County court overruled both motions and the Fort Worth court of appeals affirmed.
The
Spann
court reasoned that, because the Board’s decision was favorable to the insurer, the insurer had suffered no legal injury and, in turn, possessed no cause of action.
Id.
Thus, the carrier “had no appeal from the award of the Industrial Accident Board for the simple reason that it had prevailed before the Board.”
Id.
In
explicably, the
Spann
panel did not address its
Bishop
opinion decided one year earlier even though Justice Spurlock, who wrote
Bishop,
was on the
Spann
panel and joined the court’s opinion.
A second Texas court, the Houston court of appeals, fourteenth district, addressed the question in 1984 in
Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Co. v. Shaw,
684 S.W.2d 195, 196 (Tex.App.1984, no writ). Without mentioning
Bishop,
the Houston court expressly followed
Spann
and held that an insurer cannot prosecute an appeal where the insurer has prevailed before the IAB.
As might be expected, Allstate argues that the Fort Worth court’s
Bishop
opinion should control this court’s disposition of Shelby’s summary judgment motion. Allstate points out that
Bishop
was reviewed by the Texas supreme court, which refused the application for writ of error with the notation, “Refused. No Reversible Error.” Allstate contends the supreme court thereby rendered a decision on the merits and, without approving or disapproving the language of the Fort Worth court, approved the result. Allstate contends that the Houston court’s
Shaw
opinion, in contrast, is a “no writ” case which was not presented to the supreme court for review, and that the appeal of the Fort Worth court’s
Spann
opinion was dismissed by the supreme court for want of jurisdiction,
which is not a decision on the merits. Allstate also urges this court to follow
Bishop
on the basis of its facts (claimant obtained all relief to which he was entitled and was nevertheless permitted to appeal) and on the basis that
Bishop
is better reasoned than are
Spann
and
Shaw.
The court concludes that the Texas intermediate courts now reject appeals by parties who are completely successful before the IAB and that the Texas supreme court would not decide the question differently.
The Fort Worth court of appeals, the only intermediate court to decide the question as would Allstate, reached a contrary result one year later, without even mentioning its prior decision. If the Fort Worth court did not feel compelled to follow, or even mention, its prior
Bishop
decision, this court is unwilling to conclude that
Bishop
states present Texas law. Most recently, the Houston court of appeals, fourteenth district, has decided the question adversely to Allstate’s position. The Houston court followed the Fort Worth court’s
Spann
opinion without mentioning
Bishop.
Accordingly, the latest pronouncements of the two courts that have decided the question require this court to dismiss Allstate’s appeal.
The Texas supreme court’s refusal of a writ of error in
Bishop
with the notation, “Refused. No Reversible Error,” does not require a different result. The “n.r.e.” notation does not necessarily connote substantive approval; rather, it means that the supreme court, though not satisfied that the
Bishop
court had in all respects correctly declared the law, was nevertheless of the opinion that there was no error that required reversal.
See
Tex.R.App.P. 133(a).
Moreover, neither the Fort Worth nor the Houston court of appeals has given
talismanic meaning to the supreme court’s “n.r.e.” notation in
Bishop:
neither court has elected to follow
Bishop
and each has instead reached the opposite conclusion.
Finally, the supreme court itself has recently cast doubt on whether it would decide the question as did the
Bishop
court. In
Washburn v. Associated Indemnity Corp.,
721 S.W.2d 928 (Tex.App.1986),
writ refd n.r.e. per curiam,
735 S.W.2d 243 (Tex.1987), another case involving a race to the courthouse, 721 S.W.2d at 929, the Dallas court of appeals affirmed a summary judgment granted in favor of an insurer who had appealed a favorable IAB award. The claimant, who filed an appeal subsequent to the insurer, argued that the insurer, by appealing, was estopped from denying the claimant’s compensation claim. The court of appeals rejected the estoppel arguments, and the claimant appealed. The supreme court refused the claimant’s application for writ of error with the notation, “Refused. No Reversible Error.” In an accompanying
per curiam
opinion, however, the court observed:
However, we expressly note that the questions have not been presented whether the insurance carrier brought a frivolous suit nor whether the statute permits the carrier to appeal from a
favorable
take-nothing ruling of the Industrial Accident Board.
735 S.W.2d at 243. (Emphasis in original).
The supreme court’s precaution in circumscribing the precedential effect of an “n.r.e.” notation can evidence that it will not, in the appropriate case, decide the question as did the intermediate court. For example, in
State of Texas v. Weller,
666 S.W.2d 362, 363 (Tex.App.),
writ ref'd n.r.e. per curiam,
682 S.W.2d 234 (Tex.1984), the court of appeals limited a personal injury award to $100,000 based upon the statutory maximum prescribed in the Texas Tort Claims Act. 666 S.W.2d at 362. Although the statutory damage cap effectively denied plaintiff the recovery of prejudgment interest, the court also denied recovery of such interest in a personal injury action as a matter of law.
Id.
at 363. The Texas supreme court refused the application for' writ of error with the “n.r.e.” notation. On rehearing, the court issued a
per curiam
opinion in which it emphasized that its disposition of the application “should not be construed as approval of the court of appeal’s [sic] additional holding that the award of prejudgment interest in cases of personal injury is never permissible.” 682 S.W.2d at 234-35. The court expressly reserved the question for the appropriate case. Less than one year later, in
Cavnar v. Quality Control Parking, Inc.,
696 S.W.2d 549, 551-55 (Tex.1985), the supreme court approved the awarding of prejudgment interest in personal injury actions.
That the supreme court in
Washburn
deemed it necessary to reserve the questions whether an insurer can appeal a favorable IAB award, or whether such a suit is
frivolous,
casts serious doubt upon the precedential value of
Bishop.
Had the supreme court intended to adhere to the holding in
Bishop,
it plainly did not need to issue the
per curiam
opinion in
Washburn.
Because this court concludes that the Texas intermediate courts do not permit an insurer to appeal a completely favorable IAB award, and because there is no strong showing that the Texas supreme court would hold to the contrary,
see Taylor v. Jim Walter Corp.,
731 F.2d 266, 267 (5th Cir.1984), the court does not engage in an independent analysis of article 8307, § 5
and grants the claimant’s motion for summary judgment. This case is dismissed without prejudice for want of subject matter jurisdiction.
SO ORDERED.