Douglas Long v. Lori McKinney

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 2002
Docket2003-IA-00849-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Douglas Long v. Lori McKinney (Douglas Long v. Lori McKinney) 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
Douglas Long v. Lori McKinney, (Mich. 2002).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2003-IA-00849-SCT

DOUGLAS LONG, EDWARD LONG, RICHARD LONG, AND EARL LONG

v.

LORI McKINNEY ON BEHALF OF ALL WRONGFUL DEATH BENEFICIARIES OF HUEY P. LONG, DECEASED

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/19/2002 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JERRY O. TERRY, SR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HARRISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: WILLIAM B. WEATHERLY ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: MARIANO JAVIER BARVIE' A. NORRIS HOPKINS, JR. ALBEN N. HOPKINS NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - WRONGFUL DEATH DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED - 12/02/2004 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

DICKINSON, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. In this wrongful death case, we are called upon to address issues which ought to have

been settled long ago. Two law firms representing different wrongful death heirs filed separate

wrongful death suits in the same circuit court. The attorneys and their respective clients are

now embroiled in a battle over consolidation, joinder, and “control” of the litigation. No area

of the law has historically provided more muddled, misquoted and misunderstood procedural

rules, than civil claims for wrongful death. The blame for the perennial scrap over the rules

can be traced to at least two sources. ¶2. First, although the issue has been debated, the American judiciary – federal and state

– has failed to squarely address the question of whether substantive claims for wrongful death

originated in the common law, rendering them subject to substantial judicial discretion; or are

creatures of statute, requiring strict, statutory construction.

¶3. Secondly, it appears that in the waning years of the Nineteenth Century, our own

wrongful death statute (the “Statute”) took a wrong turn into procedural territory where it had

no license to travel. When one branch of government (well-intentioned though it may be)

crosses the line into the purview of another, the balance of powers necessary for efficient and

effective government is upset. So it was with the Statute. As a result, this Court has, for over

a century, attempted to provide procedural guidance mislabeled as statutory interpretation;

much like attempting to place a square peg into a round hole. Consequently, little progress has

been made in settling many troubling issues related to wrongful death litigation. The same

issues and problems continually appear, and have been addressed on an ad hoc basis, leaving

little in the way of dependable precedent.

¶4. Today, we are provided an opportunity to address and clarify several of these problems,

and to provide guidance for these issues to the bar and judiciary.

¶5. In reaching our decision today, we have carefully reviewed the history of the wrongful

death cause of action and the path which led to the enactment of our first wrongful death statute

in 1857. A brief overview of that history is provided herewith as Appendix A.

¶6. Additionally, because the linchpin of our decision in this case is the Mississippi

Constitution, we also provide in Appendix B a brief analysis of its history and provisions, as

they relate to the case before us.

-2- ¶7. The case before us should be, procedurally at least, an uncomplicated case. However,

previous attempts to interpret the procedural provisions of our Statute have complicated

wrongful death litigation, and have provided our trial judges and trial bar with unnecessary

difficulty. Accordingly, we must now meet our constitutional responsibility by scrutinizing

the Statute for those matters which are judicial (including procedural provisions),1 and by

establishing the procedure to be followed in wrongful death litigation, those provisions

notwithstanding.

¶8. This Court is loathe to declare unconstitutional any statutory provision enacted by the

legislature. To do so requires a careful and diligent review, and a conclusion that no

constitutional alternative exists. In promulgating the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure,

this Court held that – in the event of a conflict between procedural statutes and the rules – the

“rules shall control.” See Supreme Court order entered May 26, 1981, published in

Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure. In Newell v. State, 308 So. 2d 71, 76 (Miss. 1975), this

Court characterized procedural statutes as “legislative suggestions,” to be followed “unless

determined to be an impediment to justice or an impingement upon the constitution.” We are

obligated to walk that same path in deciding the matters before us today.

¶9. Accordingly, because we find provisions of the Statute which are not in accord with this

opinion to be “an impingement upon the constitution,” we hold that, where provisions of this

opinion conflict with the Statute, the provisions herein shall control. In doing so, it is our

1 Interestingly, the most recent amendment to the Statute includes the following commentary: “SECTION 5. . . . Procedural provisions of this act including subsections (1)(a, (b), (c) and (d) of Section 2 [§ 11-1-65] shall apply to all pending actions in which judgment has not been entered on the effective date of the act and all actions filed on or after the effective date of the act. . . .”

-3- purpose to not only fulfill our constitutional responsibility, but also, to improve our judicial

and legal systems so that cases and controversies may more efficiently and fairly move through

the courts, providing proper resolution to the litigants.

¶10. It is against this background that we now proceed to resolve the case sub judice. We

begin with a review of the factual background.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶11. On October 5, 2002, while hospitalized for heart by-pass surgery, Huey P. Long

suffered a premature death. His will left everything to his daughter, Lori McKinney, and

“specifically excluded all of [his] other children and stepchildren” from his will “because each

of them has no physical or mental conditions requiring participation in [his] estate.”

¶12. Twelve days later, Lori signed a contingency fee contract of employment with Hopkins,

Barvie & Hopkins, P.L.L.C., (the “Hopkins Firm”), engaging that law firm to represent her and

file suit on her behalf. Specifically, the contract provides, as follows:

In consideration of the legal services to be rendered by the law firm of HOPKINS, BARVIE’ & HOPKINS, P.L.L.C. . . . for any claims that I, the undersigned client, . . . may have against the parties responsible for the injuries and/or damages sustained by client on the ___ day of ________, 20_____, I the undersigned client, do hereby employ HOPKINS, BARVIE’ & HOPKINS, P.L.L.C., to represent and institute proceedings for damages in my behalf against Memorial Hospital; Dr’s for the aforesaid injuries and/or damages.

The contract does not mention Huey P. Long, his estate, his wrongful death beneficiaries, or

his death. 2 On that same day, the Hopkins Firm filed a complaint in the Circuit Court of the

2 The Hopkins Firm doubtless relied on the wording of the Statute, discussed infra, which appears to approve of a single wrongful death beneficiary instigating litigation on behalf of all beneficiaries, and on behalf of the personal representative, without naming them as parties, and with no notice to the personal representative or other beneficiaries.

-4- First Judicial District of Harrison County, identifying the plaintiffs as “Lori, individually, and

on behalf of all wrongful death beneficiaries of Huey P.

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