Creel v. BRIDGESTONE/FIRESTONE NO. AM. TIRE

950 So. 2d 1024, 2007 WL 686141
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 2007
Docket2005-CA-01875-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 950 So. 2d 1024 (Creel v. BRIDGESTONE/FIRESTONE NO. AM. TIRE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Creel v. BRIDGESTONE/FIRESTONE NO. AM. TIRE, 950 So. 2d 1024, 2007 WL 686141 (Mich. 2007).

Opinion

¶ 1. In this appeal we are asked to consider the propriety of the Jefferson County Circuit Court's transfer of a suit to Rankin County and the Rankin County Circuit Court's subsequent grant of summary judgment to defendants. Because we have mandated that plaintiffs misjoined under Miss. R. Civ. P. 20 must be dismissed without prejudice and that judicially articulated rules on severance and transfer will be applied retroactively on appeal, the Jefferson County Circuit Court erred in transferring the case to Rankin County. Instead, the circuit court should have dismissed the case without prejudice for failure to meet the joinder requirements of Rule 20 and because Jefferson County was never an appropriate venue for the claims raised in the complaint. The Rankin County Circuit Court's grant of summary judgment is therefore reversed, and this cause is dismissed without prejudice.

FACTS
¶ 2. On January 31, 2001, Kimberly Crum Creel, a resident of Louisiana, filed a product liability suit in the Jefferson County Circuit Court against Ford Motor Company and Bridgestone Firestone North America Tire, LLC, for injuries and property damage arising from a rollover accident in Webster Parish, Louisiana. She claimed the accident was caused by product defects in her 1991 Ford Explorer and in her Firestone Wilderness AT tires. Creel acknowledges that no element of her claims had any connection to Mississippi: She was a resident of Louisiana at the time the suit was filed and remains a resident of Louisiana today; she purchased her car and tires in Louisiana; her accident occurred in Louisiana; and her treatment for her injuries occurred in Louisiana. Her claims were originally part of *Page 1026 a mass action suit filed in Jefferson County as CynthiaKing, et at. v. Ford Motor Co., et al., involving forty-one individual plaintiffs and twenty-seven accidents.

¶ 3. After the multi-plaintiff action was filed, Ford and Firestone removed it to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, which then transferred it to the Ford/Firestone Multi District Litigation (MDL) panel in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana. After proceeding in the MDL, the action was remanded to the Circuit Court of Jefferson County.

¶ 4. After the action was remanded, Ford and Firestone filed, and the circuit court granted, motions to sever the improperly joined plaintiffs and transfer them to appropriate venues. Creel and the other severed plaintiffs were ordered to provide the court with an order transferring venue to an appropriate venue of their choice. While there is no indication in the record that Creel or any of the other misjoined plaintiffs provided the circuit court with such an order, the plaintiffs filed a motion for a stay of the proceedings, arguing that the court should require Ford and Firestone to waive any statutes of limitations so that non-resident plaintiffs could dismiss their claims and refile claims in appropriate venues. The court denied the motion to stay and transferred Creel's case, along with several others, to the Circuit Court of Rankin County, where both Ford and Firestone maintained agents for service of process. Creel then filed a petition for an interlocutory appeal, which was denied.

¶ 5. After the cases were transferred, Ford and Firestone filed a motion for summary judgment, and Creel responded by filing a motion to dismiss the case under the doctrine of forum non conveniens. The circuit court granted Ford and Fire-stone's motion, finding that Creel's claims were time-barred under the Louisiana statute of limitations, which was applied pursuant to Mississippi's "borrowing statute," Miss. Code Ann. § 15-1-65 (Rev. 2003), and dismissed Creel's motion as moot. Creel now appeals the grant of summary judgment, claiming that the Jefferson County Circuit Court erred in transferring her claim to Rankin County, and that the Rankin County Circuit Court misapplied Louisiana law in finding that the statute of limitations on her claim had run.

DISCUSSION
¶ 6. Creel raises three issues on appeal, arguing that (1) the Jefferson County Circuit Court erred in transferring her claim to Rankin County; (2) the Rankin County Circuit Court erred in denying her motion to dismiss for forum non conveniens; and (3) the Rankin County Circuit Court misapplied Louisiana law in finding that the statute of limitations on her claim had run. Because the first issue is dispositive, the second and third issues will not be considered in detail.

Whether the Jefferson County Circuit Court Erred in Transferring Creel's Suit to Rankin County

¶ 7. The issue of the transfer of Creel's case concerns the procedural implications of Janssen Pharmaceutica v.Armond, 866 So.2d 1092 (Miss. 2004), in which we held that plaintiffs may not be joined unless their claims are connected by a distinct, litigable event. Armond,866 So.2d at 1099. If a plaintiff fails to meet the requirements for joinder and venue is not proper before the forum court, the trial judge must determine an appropriate venue and transfer the case.Id. at 1102. However, because Armond did not provide guidelines to the lower courts for determining venue and transferring severed cases, we found it necessary to revisit *Page 1027 these matters in Canadian National/Illinois Cent. R.R. v.Smith, 926 So.2d 839 (Miss. 2006).

¶ 8. In Canadian National, we recognized that requiring trial courts to determine the appropriate venue for-misjoined plaintiffs created a number of procedural difficulties and restricted the plaintiffs' traditional right to choose a venue. In light of these problems, we adopted an amended rule for severance and transfer:

Where plaintiffs are misjoined and severance is required, we hold that the better rule — and the one we adopt today — is for the trial court to (1) allow a plaintiff whose case is properly before the court (if any), and all properly joined plaintiffs, to proceed in the filed action, (2) allow misjoined plaintiffs who are properly before the trial court to proceed with separate actions in the forum court, and (3) sever and dismiss all misjoined plaintiffs who lack proper venue in the forum court, allowing each severed plaintiff to file a new complaint in an appropriate venue selected by that plaintiff.

Canadian National, 926 So.2d at 845. This rule adheres to the general principle that misjoined plaintiffs whose claims were not appropriate in the forum court should be dismissed without prejudice. See Amchem Prods., Inc. v. Rogers,912 So.2d 853, 859 (Miss. 2005) ("The out-of-state Plaintiffs with no connection to the State of Mississippi and whose causes of action accrued out of state should be dismissed without prejudice based upon forum nonconveniens."); Harold's AutoParts, Inc. v. Mangialardi, 889 So.2d 493, 495 (Miss. 2004) (ordering dismissal without prejudice of plaintiffs claim for failure to meet joinder requirements). On appeal, Creel argues that Canadian National, which was decided nearly two years after her case was transferred, should be applied retroactively to the Jefferson County Circuit Court's decision to transfer her case to Rankin County.

¶ 9.

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Bluebook (online)
950 So. 2d 1024, 2007 WL 686141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/creel-v-bridgestonefirestone-no-am-tire-miss-2007.