Rsl Funding, LLC and Rsl Special-Iv Limited Partnership v. Rickey Newsome

569 S.W.3d 116
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 2018
DocketNO. 16-0998
StatusPublished
Cited by102 cases

This text of 569 S.W.3d 116 (Rsl Funding, LLC and Rsl Special-Iv Limited Partnership v. Rickey Newsome) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rsl Funding, LLC and Rsl Special-Iv Limited Partnership v. Rickey Newsome, 569 S.W.3d 116 (Tex. 2018).

Opinion

Justice Devine delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Structured Settlement Protection Act requires court approval to validate the transfer of a payee's structured-settlement-payment rights to another. TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 141.004. The court here approved the transfer but did so in two different orders, creating a dispute between the parties over which order should control. One of the parties moved to compel arbitration of this dispute and others under an arbitration provision included in their transfer agreement. The trial court denied the motion, and the court of appeals affirmed, concluding that the dispute over which order controlled was not an arbitrable issue despite the existence of an arbitration agreement that assigned issues of arbitrability to the arbitrator. 559 S.W.3d 169 , 175 (Tex. App.-Dallas 2016) (mem. op.). Because the parties agreed to have the arbitrator decide issues of arbitrability, we conclude that the court of appeals erred in determining that the dispute here was one that could not be arbitrated. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals' judgment and remand the case to the trial court with instructions to grant the motion to compel arbitration.

I

Rickey Newsome settled a personal injury suit several decades ago and has since received structured settlement payments from Allstate Insurance Company. RSL Funding and its related entities offer lump-sum payments to purchase structured-settlement agreements from recipients like Newsome. Newsome assigned 120 monthly payments of varying amounts to RSL in exchange for a payment of $53,000. Their contract included a mandatory arbitration clause that identified the Federal Arbitration Act as the controlling law. The clause delegates to an arbitrator not only contractual disputes but also whether a dispute is arbitrable. The relevant part reads:

Disputes under this Agreement of any nature whatsoever ... shall be resolved through demand by any interested party to arbitrate the dispute.... The parties hereto agree that the issue of arbitrability shall likewise be decided by the arbitrator, and not by any other person. That is, the question of whether a dispute itself is subject to arbitration shall be decided solely by the arbitrator and not, for example by any court.

Under the Structured Settlement Protection Act, a court must approve a transfer of structured-settlement payments before the transfer is effective. TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 141.004. The court that approves the transfer is the court of original jurisdiction that authorized the settlement. Id. § 141.002(2)(A). But if the original court no longer has jurisdiction, approval must be sought from a district court or other designated court in the payee's county. Id. § 141.002(2)(B). Because the original court signed the judgment on the structured settlement decades before this transfer, it no longer retained jurisdiction, and so RSL petitioned a district court in Newsome's resident county to approve the agreement.

The district court signed an order approving the transfer that included the requisite statutory findings. See id. § 141.004 (stating the "express findings" the court must make to approve the transfer). The order, however, included an additional requirement in a handwritten note by the judge that provided: "Transferee to pay Mr. Newsome the sum of $53,000 in 10 days from this order being signed or transferee will be required to pay Mr. Newsome $106,000." The transferee did not pay the $53,000 within the allotted ten days.

Seven months later, Newsome wrote a letter to the judge complaining that he had not been paid. The district court responded by ordering the parties to mediation, which resulted in an agreed motion to remove the ten-day payment penalty from the order approving the transfer. The court granted the motion and issued a corrected order nunc pro tunc.

After several more months passed without payment, Newsome filed a new pleading in the district court, titled "Original Petition for Bill of Review and Application for Injunctive Relief." This pleading attacked both the original and nunc pro tunc approval orders. Newsome argued the nunc pro tunc order was void because it corrected a judicial error after the expiration of the court's plenary power. He further asserted that the court's original transfer order therefore remained in full force and effect and subject to enforcement. But Newsome also asked the district court, in the alternative, to vacate the original approval order, although he did not assert a basis for doing so or specifically request that relief in the bill of review's prayer. A subsequent motion for summary judgment elaborated on the basis for Newsome's alternative request, asserting that the original transfer order should be vacated because RSL had not complied with it. RSL responded that it had not yet paid Newsome because of his refusal to accept the agreed purchase price of $53,000 and his failure to cooperate in transferring the settlement payments to RSL. RSL moved to compel arbitration of the dispute under the parties' contract, while Newsome pursued his motion for summary judgment.

The district court granted Newsome's summary judgment motion in part, declaring the nunc pro tunc order void, but the court did not decide whether the original transfer order should also be set aside. Instead, the court reserved judgment on Newsome's alternative claim for future proceedings. The court also denied RSL's motion to compel arbitration.

RSL took an interlocutory appeal from the district court's order denying arbitration. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 51.016 (authorizing interlocutory appeal). In a divided decision, the court of appeals affirmed the district court's order, reasoning that Newsome's bill of review, which challenged the approval orders' validity, offered "nothing for an arbitrator to determine" because approval of such transfers under the Structured Settlement Protection Act was a "purely judicial function." 559 S.W.3d at 175 . A dissenting justice disagreed, arguing that the parties had agreed to arbitrate all matters raised in Newsome's bill of review, including whether the nunc pro tunc order was effective and whether the penalty added by the trial court properly altered the parties' transfer agreement. Id. at 176 (Schenck, J., dissenting).

RSL petitioned this Court to review the order denying arbitration, and we granted its petition.

II

The U.S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
569 S.W.3d 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rsl-funding-llc-and-rsl-special-iv-limited-partnership-v-rickey-newsome-tex-2018.