Nixon v. Waste Management, Inc.

156 F. App'x 784
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 21, 2005
Docket04-6290
StatusUnpublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 156 F. App'x 784 (Nixon v. Waste Management, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nixon v. Waste Management, Inc., 156 F. App'x 784 (6th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

DAVID A. NELSON, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from an order granting a defense motion for summary judgment in a retaliatory discharge action. There are *785 two issues before us: (1) whether this case, in which the plaintiff claims that he was constructively discharged in retaliation for his pursuit of Tennessee workers’ compensation benefits, was properly removed from the Tennessee court where it was originally filed; and (2) whether, as the district court held, the law of Mississippi, rather than the law of Tennessee, governs the parties’ substantive dispute.

Guided by Harper v. AutoAlliance International, Inc., 392 F.3d 195 (6th Cir. 2004), we conclude that the case did not, strictly speaking, arise under the Tennessee workers’ compensation laws. Accordingly, a federal statute barring removal of civil actions “arising under [state] workmen’s compensation laws” has no application to the case at bar, and removal to federal district court on diversity grounds was proper.

We also conclude that the district court erred in its choice of the law to be applied in adjudicating the plaintiffs action on the merits. Although Mississippi has significant ties to the parties and to the alleged injury, Tennessee does too — and we think that Tennessee’s statutorily expressed policy of ensuring that its injured workers receive compensation gives it a more significant relationship to the dispute, at least where Tennessee is the locus of the injury for which the workers’ compensation claim was brought. We conclude that the governing law is therefore that of Tennessee.

The defendant not having shown that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of Tennessee law, the judgment entered by the district court will be reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings.

I

The plaintiff, Cletus Wayne Nixon, drove a garbage truck for the defendants, Waste Management, Inc., and/or Waste Management of Mississippi, Inc. (There appears to be a factual dispute as to which corporate entity actually employed Mr. Nixon in the first instance.) A resident of Tennessee, Mr. Nixon reported to work each day in Corinth, Mississippi, and then returned to Tennessee to cover his route there. (Corinth is said to be about two miles from the state line.)

Mr. Nixon injured his back in September, 2002, while on the job in Tennessee. He sought and received benefits under Tennessee’s workers’ compensation law, Tenn.Code Ann. §§ 50-6-101 et seq. When he was cleared to return to work, Mr. Nixon was told that he was no longer needed in Tennessee but could work instead as a truck washer for Waste Management of Mississippi in Tupelo, Mississippi. According to the defendants, Nixon’s absence from his route in Tennessee demonstrated that four drivers could do the work that had previously been done by five; it was this opportunity for “downsizing” that allegedly led to the reassignment offer. Be that as it may, Mr. Nixon accepted the offer.

After about three months of washing trucks, Mr. Nixon quit the new job. Alleging that the “humiliation, inconvenience and decreased pay” associated with his new position had effected a constructive discharge, Nixon sued Waste Management 1 on the theory that it discharged him in retaliation for his pursuit of workers’ compensation benefits. The lawsuit was originally filed in the circuit court of Hardin County, Tennessee.

Waste Management removed the action to federal district court on diversity grounds. Mr. Nixon then moved to remand the action on the basis of 28 U.S.C. *786 § 1445(c), which provides that state-court actions arising under state workers’ compensation laws are not removable. The district court denied the motion, holding that Nixon’s “retaliatory discharge claim does not arise under the workers’ compensation laws of Tennessee.” The court also denied a motion for reconsideration of this ruling.

Waste Management subsequently moved for summary judgment on the ground that the parties’ dispute was governed by Mississippi law, which does not recognize a cause of action for retaliatory discharge. The district court granted the motion and entered final judgment in favor of the defendants. Mr. Nixon filed a timely appeal.

II

Section 1445(c) of Title 28, United States Code, says that “[a] civil action in any State court arising under the workmen’s compensation laws of such State may not be removed to any district court of the United States.” Mr. Nixon’s retaliatory discharge action must be remanded to the Hardin County court, therefore, if the action “aris[es] under” Tennessee’s “workmen’s compensation laws.”

This court interpreted the phrases “arising under” and “workmen’s compensation laws” in Harper v. AutoAlliance International, Inc., 392 F.3d 195 (6th Cir.2004). We held there that “[a] civil action arises under a state workmen’s compensation law when either (1) the workmen’s compensation law created the cause of action or (2) the plaintiffs right to relief necessarily depends on resolution of a substantial question of workmen’s compensation law.” Harper, 392 F.3d at 203. We held further that common law which recognizes a “cause of action for retaliatory discharge in violation of the public policy to protect workmen’s compensation claimants” does not itself constitute a “workmen’s compensation law” within the meaning of § 1445(c). Id. at 207.

The workers’ compensation statute at issue in Harper expressly prohibited retaliatory discharge, see Mich. Comp. Laws § 418.301(11), but the statute had been amended to do so only after the Michigan courts “had held that a discharge for exercising rights under the [statute] gives rise to a cause of action for wrongful discharge in violation of public policy.” Harper, 392 F.3d at 203. Further, the statute did not specify a remedy or means of enforcement, an omission from which we inferred that “the legislature intended [use of] the judicially-crafted wrongful discharge cause of action to remedy retaliatory discharges.” Id. at 207. We concluded that the Michigan statute did not create, but merely codified, a cause of action for retaliatory discharge. See id. at 204-05. Because it was grounded in general principles of common law, we held that “the cause of action for retaliatory discharge in violation of the public policy to protect workmen’s compensation claimants is not one of Michigan’s ‘workmen’s compensation laws,’ but merely one iteration of a common law tort that potentially applies to a myriad of different wrongs in the employment setting.” Id. at 207.

A Tennessee cause of action for retaliatory discharge was first recognized in Clanton v. Cain-Sloan Co., 677 S.W.2d 441 (Tenn.1984). The Tennessee Supreme Court acknowledged in Clanton

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156 F. App'x 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nixon-v-waste-management-inc-ca6-2005.