Hayhurst v. Henry
This text of 102 F. Supp. 306 (Hayhurst v. Henry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiff herein, Hayhurst, a citizen of Missouri, has sued the defendants Henry and wife, citizens of Texas, to recover damages in excess of $3,000.00 for personal injuries sustained December' 1, 1949. The plaintiff at said time was an employee of the Hereford Gin Company at Hereford, Texas, a subscriber under the Texas Workmen’s Compensation Law, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 8306 et seq., and its insurer was Texas National Mutual Insurance Company of Fort Worth, Texas, incorporated under the laws of Texas. The plaintiff claimed that his injuries in question were compensable, and has been paid compensation (but less than the amount of his sued for damages), by said insurer corporation, and it consequently owns a subrogation interest in the plaintiff’s alleged cause of action under the terms of the Revisad Statutes of Texas 1925, Art. 8307, sec. 6a.1 The said subrogee is not a party or intervener herein, nor could it be joined herein without ousting the jurisdiction of court, as in that event citizens of Texas would be adversely opposed in the suit. The defendants nevertheless have filed a motion contending that the insurer is an indispensable party but being joined the suit must be dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
The defendants in support of said motion have cited the case of Orange Ice, Light & Water Company v. Texas Compensation Insurance Company, 5 Cir., 278 F. 8, 10. In that case the compensation insurer, a corporate citizen of Delaware, having paid the injured employee some statutory compensation until his ensuing death, and then paid the statutory death liability to his widow, brought suit as subrogee and also for the use of the employee at first and his widow 'later against two defendants, both corporate citizens of Texas, for his personal injuries and death, but neither the employee in his lifetime nor his widow afterwards was joined as a party plaintiff in said suit. The defendants challenged the jurisdiction of the court on the ground that the employee and his widow successively were in the position of a joint plaintiff, and both were citizens of Texas when the suit was filed. The court held that the aforesaid statutory article noted in the margin “had deprived the employe and his representatives, who elected to hold the insurance association of all right to institute an action against a wrongdoer”, and that the insurer having the “entire legal title to the cause of action”, was thus “the sole party plaintiff on whose citizenship the jurisdiction depended.” This case was decided in 1922, when the compensation law was comparatively new in Texas, and the decision on its face is clearly in point, but no less clearly out of step with the later growth of [308]*308■decisions in the State courts construing t)he statute in question. The present State holdings are that an injured employee, claiming and collecting compensation, still owns any cause of 'action for his injuries against a third party, subject to the insurer’s subrogation interest,2 and that the employee has the right under the statute to institute and maintain a suit of this kind without the insurer as a party to the suit,3 although ordinarily on objection for non-joinder the insurer will be made a party, and many such suits have been maintained in Texas, usually where the insurer had failed and refused to file suit,4 or had requested the employee to act alone in the prosecution of the suit,5 hut also where the employee alone sued and apparently gave no reason for failing to join the insurer.6 All of the above goes to show that under the State law the insurer as subrogee is certainly not an indispensable party in a suit against a third person sued as wrongdoer liable for the employee’s injuries. This is also7 the majority rule in such cases throughout the country.’
An examination of the question strictly from the standpoint of Federal practice comes to the same conclusion. The present insurer as subrogee definitely is not an indispensable party in this pending suit, and a recent decision of the Supreme Court is cited on the point.8 The Court of Appeals for this Circuit, in dealing with a case brought by an injured employee, after collecting statutory compensation, as sole plaintiff against a third party to recover damages for said injuries, reformed the plaintiff’s judgment by a reduction equal to the amount of his paid compensation, anid with that change affirmed the judgment of the trial court.9 Obviously such action by the court necessarily implies that the compensation insurer was not an indispensable party in the employee’s suit against the alleged tort-feasor. Once it is determined that the present compensation insurer is not an indispensable party then the proper course herein is plain under Rule 19(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 28 U.S.C.A.10 It is deemed a proper exercise of discretion herein under the Rule to abide the non-joinder of said compensation insurer and retain jurisdiction for trial and judgment as between the present parties to this suit. Such action is not only sanctioned by the present Rule, hut [309]*309also by long standing practice in the Federal courts.11 Of . course care will be taken not to prejudice the rights of the -absent insurer and subrogee.
The defendants’ motion accordingly is overruled.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
102 F. Supp. 306, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayhurst-v-henry-txnd-1951.