Texas Municipal League Intergovernmental Risk Pool v. Burns

209 S.W.3d 806, 2006 WL 3377568
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 21, 2006
Docket2-05-368-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 209 S.W.3d 806 (Texas Municipal League Intergovernmental Risk Pool v. Burns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Municipal League Intergovernmental Risk Pool v. Burns, 209 S.W.3d 806, 2006 WL 3377568 (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

WILLIAM H. BRIGHAM, Justice (Retired).

I. Introduction

In this workers’ compensation case, The City of the Colony and Texas Municipal League Intergovernmental Risk Pool (TML Risk Pool) 1 appeal the trial court’s judgment dismissing their appeal of a workers’ compensation benefits award in favor of Brandon Burns and Juliann Burns, as guardian for Brandon Burns (collectively, Burns). In five issues, appellants complain that the trial court improperly (1) struck the City’s petition in intervention as untimely, (2) ruled that TML Risk Pool lacked standing to appeal the workers’ compensation appeals panel’s decision, and (3) awarded attorney’s fees. In his cross-appeal, Burns complains that the trial court abused its discretion and violated equal protection standards by not ruling on Burns’s motions for attorney’s fees until after the court had held an evidentia-ry hearing on the motions, even though the court approved appellants’ motions for attorney’s fees without a hearing. We affirm.

II. Background Facts & Procedural History

Brandon Burns was injured while performing volunteer services for the City. At the time of the injury, the City provided its employees workers’ compensation benefits under an interlocal agreement that created a self-insurance pool among the City and other political subdivisions. 2 The *810 TML Risk Pool was the administrative agency charged with supervising performance of the interlocal agreement, 3 including, among other things, (1) processing and handling all workers’ compensation claims, (2) negotiating with the injured employee and his or her attorney, (3) defending the City in workers’ compensation proceedings, and (4) controlling all aspects of litigation, including retaining and supervising legal counsel and deciding whether to appeal a workers’ compensation ruling. The express terms of the interlocal agreement provided, however, that “[a]ny suit brought or defended by [the TML Risk Pool] shall be in the name of the [City].”

As a result of his injury, Burns filed a claim for workers’ compensation benefits from the City. TML Risk Pool received the notice of injury and denied the claim on the ground that Burns’s intoxication or horseplay was the producing cause of the injury. On the notice denying the claim, TML Risk Pool listed itself as the insurance carrier and the City as the employer.

A contested case hearing followed, at which the parties stipulated that Burns was an employee of the City 4 and that the City provided workers’ compensation coverage through self-insurance. After hearing the evidence, the hearing officer concluded that “the carrier is not relieved of liability” because Burns was not intoxicated and horseplay was not a producing cause of Burns’s injury. The hearing officer’s decision and order incorrectly identify TML Risk Pool as the insurance carrier.

TML Risk Pool appealed the hearing officer’s decision. On August 20, 2002, a workers’ compensation appeals panel rendered a decision affirming the hearing officer’s ruling. Although the appeals panel’s decision is styled, “Texas Municipal League Intergovernmental Risk Pool, A Self-Insured, Governmental Entity v. Brandon Burns,” the decision states that “[t]he true corporate name of the self-insured is CITY OF THE COLONY” and gives the name and address of the City’s registered agent for service of process.

TML Risk Pool decided to appeal the workers’ compensation panel’s decision to state district court. Contrary to the inter-local agreement, however, TML Risk Pool prepared and filed a Plaintiffs Original Petition in which it named itself as plaintiff. Thereafter, TML Risk Pool and the City realized that the district court lawsuit had not been filed in the City’s name, as required by the interlocal agreement. Consequently, on January 17, 2003, nearly five months after the appeals panel rendered its decision, the City filed a petition in intervention naming itself as the self-insured. The City alleged that it “has a justiciable interest in the matters in controversy in this litigation in that it is a self-insured carrier of the claimant [Burns] and is liable for any compensation awarded to the claimant.”

*811 Burns moved to strike the City’s petition in intervention, to dismiss the case for lack of jurisdiction, and for sanctions. Burns asserted that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the case because the proper self-insured insurance carrier— the City — had not filed suit by the fortieth day after the appeals panel rendered its decision upholding the benefits award and TML Risk Pool had no standing to sue on the City’s behalf. 5

Appellants moved for leave to substitute the City for TML Risk Pool as the party-plaintiff. In support of their motion, appellants alleged that (1) TML Risk Pool is a governmental entity that administers workers’ compensation claims on behalf of its members, (2) TML Risk Pool does not, however, insure its members, (3) the members of TML Risk Pool, including the City, are self-insured governmental entities, (4) the administrative proceedings incorrectly identified TML Risk Pool as the insurance carrier rather than the City, but the appeals panel’s final order did note that “[t]he true corporate name of the self-insured is CITS’ OF THE COLONY,” and (5) the City was the proper plaintiff in this case because the City was “the proper ‘insurance carrier’ as that term is defined by section 401.011(27X0” 6 of the labor code.

Initially, the trial court denied Burns’s motions to strike and to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction but took the motion for sanctions under advisement. The trial court granted appellants’ motion to substitute plaintiff in part and “permitted [the City] to become a plaintiff in this case,” but it refused to remove TML Risk Pool from the case, ruling instead that TML Risk Pool “will be carried as an involuntary plaintiff.”

Thereafter, the trial court reversed its prior rulings and rendered a judgment in which it (1) struck the City’s petition in intervention on the ground that the City had not timely appealed the appeals panel’s August 2002 decision and (2) dismissed TML Risk Pool’s suit for lack of standing on the ground that TML Risk Pool was not a party entitled to judicial review under labor code section 410.252(a). The trial court also awarded attorney’s fees to Burns’s attorneys and the attorney ad li-tem. This appeal followed.

III. The City’s Petition in Intervention

In their first issue, appellants complain that the trial court improperly struck the City’s petition in intervention on the ground that it was untimely under labor code section 410.252(a). Appellants contend that a party’s failure to comply with the forty-day filing deadline in section 410.252(a) does not deprive a trial court of jurisdiction over the case because the deadline is simply a statute of limitations, not a jurisdictional prerequisite.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 S.W.3d 806, 2006 WL 3377568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-municipal-league-intergovernmental-risk-pool-v-burns-texapp-2006.