Lumbermen's Mutual Casualty Company v. Rayford J. Wright

322 F.2d 759, 7 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 1, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4179
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 19, 1963
Docket19070
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 322 F.2d 759 (Lumbermen's Mutual Casualty Company v. Rayford J. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lumbermen's Mutual Casualty Company v. Rayford J. Wright, 322 F.2d 759, 7 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 1, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4179 (5th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

WISDOM, Circuit Judge.

This case started out in 1947 as a run-of-the-mine tort action. Unfortunately, it developed eccentricities and a *760 life of its own singularly resistant to routine. It is before this Court for the second time.

In the first proceedings, in 1954, the district judge held that Erie compelled

dismissal of the complaint under Article 3519 of the LSA-Civil Code. This article requires dismissal of a suit for want of prosecution for five years. In such case the interruption of prescription by filing suit is considered as having never happened. The plaintiff appealed. We reversed the district court and remanded the case for trial. Wright v. Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Company, 5 Cir., 1957, 242 F.2d 1; rehearing refused; certiorari denied, 354 U.S. 939, 77 S.Ct. 1397, 1 L.Ed.2d 1536. This time the defendant appeals; after a trial without a jury, the district court awarded the plaintiff damages for personal injuries. During oral argument of the second appeal, two members of this Court expressed doubts as to the correctness of the Court’s decision on the first appeal. Counsel for the appellant was astonished at this unexpected good fortune. In the trial below and in his original brief on this appeal he had contended that the plaintiff’s suit was prescribed by the one-year limitation for torts established by Article 3536, but he assumed that any question of applying Article 3519 to dismiss the suit was foreclosed, and he was driven therefore to distinguishing his argument on the first appeal from his argument on this appeal. Counsel for the appellee was surprised. He was unprepared to reargue the issue decided in 1957. Counsel for both parties filed supplemental briefs rearguing the points raised on the first appeal and arguing also such issues as the Law of the Case, res judicata, and waiver.

There is no doubt that the appellant is making the identical contention lie-made before. At the time suit was filed,, the one-year prescription provided in Article 3536 had not run. Filing of the-suit interrupted prescription. Unless' this Court reversed itself and applied Article 3519, requiring the dismissal of the-action and vitiating the interruption,. Article 3536 could not be invoked. Under the doctrine of the Law of the Case, we decline to reopen the issue. We affirm, the judgment below.

I.

In view of our holding, we consider it appropriate to review in some detail the-issues raised in the earlier proceedings.

The plaintiff, Rayford J. Wright, was-injured January 6, 1947, while loading asphalt in a truck. A twenty-five-foot length of steel pipe broke loose, struck him on his shoulder, and knocked him from the truck to the ground. March 25, 1948, under the Louisiana Direct Action Statute, LSA-R.S. 22:655, Wright filed a diversity suit against the defendant’s assured, an asphalt distributor, alleging that his injury was caused by the negligence of one of the assured's employees. In May a workmen’s compensation insurer intervened to present its claim as subrogee for certain payments it had made to the plaintiff. The defendant answered the initial complaint June 2, 1948, and responded to the intervention claim September 13, 1948.

Spiders spun cobwebs around the case for nearly six years. July 8, 1954, the district court on its own motion, applied Fed.R.Civ.P. 41(b) 1 and dismissed the suit, “No forward step having been taken for more than three years and in order to clear its docket”. The order of dismissal gave the plaintiff ten days in which to *761 seek reinstatement. The plaintiff’s attorney asked that the suit be reinstated. July 15, 1954, the district judge, apparently satisfied with the plaintiff’s explanation, 2 directed the clerk to reinstate "the suit. September 14, 1954, the plaintiff requested that the case be placed on the trial calendar for hearing. Seven months later, March 24, 1955, the defendant filed a pleading, termed a “Supplemental Answer”, alleging that the cause of action had prescribed under Articles 3519 and 3536 of the LSA-Civil Code. 3 The plaintiff argues that the filing of an answer, under Louisiana law, waives pleas of prescription. 4 The plaintiff contends also that this seven months delay constituted a waiver of the reinstatement of the complaint. April 29, 1955, the defendant filed a motion to dismiss on the same ground urged in its supplemental answer. At that time Article 3519 of the LSA-Civil Code provided: 5

“Art. 3519. Abandonment or discontinuance of suit If the plaintiff in this case, after having made his demand, abandons or discontinues it, the interruption shall be considered as having never happened.
“Whenever the plaintiff having made his demand shall at any time before obtaining final judgment allow five years to elapse without having taken any steps in the prosecution thereof, he shall be considered as having abandoned the same.”

Thus, Article 3536 6 provides a prescriptive period for tort actions of one *762 year; under Article 3518, 7 filing of suit interrupts prescription, but, under Article 3519 the interruption is vitiated by abandonment of the suit.

After a hearing on the defendant’s motion, the district court dismissed the suit. 134 F.Supp. 715. The district judge held that Article 3519 is “one of a series of articles supplementing Article 3536 of the Code which provides a one year prescription for tort action” and as an “integral part of the state statute of limitations” it must be applied by the federal courts in Louisiana under the Erie-York-Ragan doctrine. 8 On appeal, the defendant argued that the decision “involves the integrity and fate of Rule 41(b)” with which Article 3519 is in conflict; that the mandatory application of Article 3519 renders Rule 41(b) nugatory and deprives the district court of control of its docket; that Erie is not applicable because Article 3519 is not a law of prescription, and the Louisiana Supreme Court has “consistently viewed Article 3519 of the Civil Code to be merely a rule of procedure.” 9

This Court reversed the district court and remanded the case for trial on the merits. 242 F.2d 1. Judge Borah, for the Court, held that Erie did not require dismissal of the suit, since Article 3519 is not “ ‘an integral part of the state statute of limitations’ within the meaning of the Guaranty Trust and Ragan cases”; that “a dismissal for want of prosecution does not affect the cause, of action”.

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Bluebook (online)
322 F.2d 759, 7 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 1, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lumbermens-mutual-casualty-company-v-rayford-j-wright-ca5-1963.