Thompson v. Phillips 66 Company

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedNovember 9, 2023
Docket4:23-cv-01083
StatusUnknown

This text of Thompson v. Phillips 66 Company (Thompson v. Phillips 66 Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Phillips 66 Company, (S.D. Tex. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT November 09, 2023 FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS Nathan Ochsner, Clerk HOUSTON DIVISION

§ SANDY SANTOS THOMPSON as next § friend of SHANNON THOMPSON, § § Plaintiff, § CIVIL ACTION NO. H-23-1083 v. § § PHILLIPS 66 COMPANY and CAVERN § SOLUTIONS, INC., § § Defendants. §

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER Shannon Thompson was working in the oil field for Universal Wellhead Services when the well on which he was working blew out. He was terribly burned. In March 2023, his wife, Sandy Santos Thompson, sued Phillips 66 Company, the well owner and operator, and Cavern Solutions, Inc., a contractor working on the well. Sandy Thompson sued in Texas state court on her husband’s behalf, alleging negligence and seeking damages. A short time later, Phillips 66 removed to this court in a “snap removal” filed before the in-state codefendants had been served. Because the Thompsons lived in New Mexico at the time, removal jurisdiction was present. Within a week of removal, Phillips 66 answered the complaint; two months later, Cavern also answered. (Docket Entry Nos. 5, 11). In May 2023, Sandy Thompson sued Phillips 66, Cavern, and other defendants in Texas state court, seeking damages on her own behalf for loss of consortium and related claims. (Docket Entry No. 17 at 3). The Thompsons had moved to Texas, so she sued as a Texas citizen. Her state-court case asserted the same factual and legal bases for liability as this first-filed federal case. The state-court case presents no basis for federal jurisdiction. Phillips 66 moved in the state court for an abatement or stay on the ground that the state case was derivative of, and second to, this first filed federal case. On that same date, before meaningful discovery but after Phillips 66 had successfully moved to designate Universal Wellhead Solutions as a responsible third-party, the Thompsons moved for voluntary dismissal without prejudice of this federal case under Rule 41(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

(Docket Entry Nos. 17, 24). The primary basis of the motion to dismiss is their desire to refile and proceed in the Texas state court. The Thompsons have been in Texas since a few months after the accident and intend to make Texas their domicile. Phillips 66 and Cavern oppose, arguing that this court has “dominant jurisdiction,” and that the Thompsons are improperly using voluntary dismissal to achieve untimely remand. (Docket Entry No. 25 at 1). Based on the parties’ briefs, the record, and the relevant law, the court grants the Thompsons’ motion for voluntary dismissal. The reasons are set out below. I. The Legal Standard for Dismissal Rule 41(a)(2) “precludes a plaintiff from dismissing a lawsuit without the court's permission if either an answer or a motion for summary judgment has been served on the plaintiff

and the defendant does not consent to dismissal.” Hyde v. Hoffman–La Roche, Inc., 511 F.3d 506, 509 (5th Cir. 2007) (citing Fed. Rule Civ. P. 41(a)(2)). The court may dismiss the action only “on terms that [it] considers proper.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(a)(2). “A district court’s decision to dismiss a lawsuit under Rule 41(a)(2) is reviewed for abuse of discretion.” Hyde, 511 F.3d at 509. A motion for voluntary dismissal should be granted “unless the non-moving party will suffer some plain legal prejudice other than the mere prospect of a second lawsuit.” Elbaor v. Tripath Imaging Inc., 279 F.3d 314, 317 (5th Cir. 2002). “The primary purpose of Rule 41(a)(2) is to prevent voluntary dismissals which unfairly affect the other side, and to permit the imposition of curative conditions.” Id. (quotation omitted). “Where the plaintiff does not seek dismissal until a late stage and the defendants have exerted significant time and effort, the district court may, in its discretion, refuse to grant a voluntary dismissal.” Hartford Acc. & Indem. Co. v. Costa Lines Cargo Servs., Inc., 903 F.2d 352, 360 (5th Cir. 1990). II. Analysis Phillips 66 and Cavern argue that because the Thompsons filed this case before Sandy

Thompson filed her state-court loss-of-consortium case, this case must, or at least should, proceed to resolution first and the second-filed state-court case should be abated. Phillips 66 and Cavern moved in the state court to abate that case, asserting the doctrine of dominant jurisdiction as the basis of what they described as a mandatory abatement, and the principle of comity as the basis of a discretionary abatement. (Docket Entry No. 27 at 1). They argued that Sandy Thompson’s loss- of-consortium claim pending in the state court is derivative of Shannon Thompson’s negligence claims, while acknowledging that if this federal case is dismissed without prejudice, the Thompsons will assert their negligence claims in the pending state-court loss-of-consortium case. (Docket Entry No. 25 at 3). The state court has stayed the case before it until this court decides the Thompsons’ motion to dismiss.

Phillips 66 and Cavern argue that they would be prejudiced by dismissal, even at this early stage of this case. They cite as evidence of prejudice “the loss of abatement in the second-filed case,” the loss of the work done in this case—initial disclosures and designation of a responsible third party—the delay in resolving questions about the Owner Controlled Insurance Programs that were apparently in place, and the unjustified “reward [for] Plaintiffs’ flagrant forum shopping.” (Docket Entry No. 27 at 4). Phillips 66 and Cavern acknowledge that “the issue of whether dismissal under Rule 41(a)(2) is proper under these circumstances appears to be a matter of first impression.” (Docket Entry No. 30 at 1). They do not acknowledge, at least not directly, that plaintiffs always “shop” for—or, less pejoratively, choose—their forum, and that snap removals are themselves a form of defense-side forum shopping. Adam B. Sopko, Swift Removal, 13 FED. CTS. L. REV. 1, 10 (2021) (“A strict text-based reading of § 1441(b)(2) places a thumb on the scale for defendants to engage in forum shopping[.]”). In response, the Thompsons argue that this federal suit is in an early stage, noting that

“there is no dispositive motion on file . . . [t]he defendants have not been required to . . . exert any significant time or effort on the case merits [and] [d]ismissal will not impair any legal defense.” (Docket Entry No. 24 at 3). The Thompsons point to cases in which voluntary dismissal was granted at far more advanced stages of litigation, including after a summary judgment motion was filed, Miller, Next Friend of RM v. Christus St. Michael Health Sys., No. 5:17-CV-00130, 2019 WL 8301674 (E.D. Tex. July 10, 2019), and on the eve of trial, Robles v. Atl. Sounding Co., 77 F. App’x 274 (5th Cir. 2003). The key issue is whether granting the Thompsons’ motion to dismiss Shannon Thompson’s claims in this case without prejudice, in order to assert his claims with Sandy Thompson’s claims

for loss of consortium in the pending state-court case, will prejudice Phillips 66 and Cavern. The defendants cite to Elbaor v. Tripath Imaging, Inc., 279 F.3d 314 (5th Cir. 2002), in which the Fifth Circuit vacated the district court’s dismissal of a case with prejudice.

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Thompson v. Phillips 66 Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-phillips-66-company-txsd-2023.