Vicki Mikulecky v. Marriott Corporation

854 F.2d 115, 1988 WL 86818
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 14, 1988
Docket87-3600
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 854 F.2d 115 (Vicki Mikulecky v. Marriott Corporation) 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
Vicki Mikulecky v. Marriott Corporation, 854 F.2d 115, 1988 WL 86818 (5th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

ALVIN B. RUBIN, Circuit Judge:

This diversity-jurisdiction suit to recover damages for personal injuries was filed in Louisiana more than one year after the automobile accident on which it is based occurred in North Carolina. The defendant *117 conceded liability and sought to negotiate a settlement for an amount the plaintiff considered inadequate. The defendant also stipulated in a formal pretrial order that it was liable to the plaintiff for her injuries and contested only the amount of general damages due her, apparently not contesting reimbursement for her medical expenses. Thereafter, after the North Carolina statute of limitations had run, the defendant filed a motion to dismiss the suit because the one-year Louisiana prescriptive period had accrued before suit was filed, contending that the defendant’s actions during the one-year period were not sufficient to constitute an interruption of prescription and its actions thereafter did not constitute a renunciation of prescription after the prescriptive period had run. The district court granted the motion and refused the plaintiffs request to transfer the case to North Carolina, whose statute of limitations is longer than Louisiana’s. While we find that the settlement negotiations during the one-year period were insufficient to interrupt prescription, the defendant’s actions after prescription had accrued, including its formal declarations to the court admitting liability for the accident, were sufficient to indicate an intent to renounce the benefit of prescription, and we therefore reverse the judgment of dismissal.

I.

Vicki Mikulecky, a Louisiana resident employed as a flight attendant for Delta Air Lines, travelled to North Carolina on duty. Awaiting her return flight, she was a guest of a hotel owned by The Marriott Corporation. An hotel employee was driving her to the airport in a hotel van when she was injured in an accident on February 26,1984. Her lawyer wrote to the adjuster for Marriott’s insurer on April 18, 1984, stating that he represented Mikulecky. He again wrote on June 29, sending copies of medical reports. On July 10, the adjuster sent the lawyer a letter acknowledging receipt of the reports and stating that he did not have medical reports from the North Carolina hospital where Mikulecky had been treated immediately after the accident.

There is no evidence of further communication between Marriott’s adjuster and the lawyer until April 24, 1985, more than one year after the accident, when the adjuster wrote the lawyer asking for documentation of Mikulecky’s expenses .so that the claim could be evaluated and an offer of settlement “attempted.” Thereafter, Mikulecky retained a new lawyer who wrote to the adjuster on May 16, stating that he now represented Mikulecky. He enclosed a number of documents, including medical bills, to support her claim, and discussed the possibility of attempting to settle the claim without suit. The letter also stated that he had spoken to another lawyer handling other cases arising from the same accident and had been informed that the parties had agreed to stipulate liability. On June 5, the adjuster responded with an offer to settle the claim for $1,000.

Mikuleeky’s new lawyer, her second, then filed suit in federal district court for the Eastern District of Louisiana on February 25, 1986, which was almost two years after the accident. Marriott answered on July 11,1986, denying liability and pleading prescription as its fourth defense. On July 11, counsel for Marriott wrote to Miku-lecky’s lawyer seeking a formal request for settlement and stating that he needed Mi-kulecky’s medical bills before presenting her lawyer’s offer of settlement to his client. On November 10, 1986, Marriott’s lawyer sent Mikulecky’s lawyer an offer of $4,000 to settle her claims. On December 1, Marriott’s lawyer wrote Mikulecky’s lawyer a letter in which he asked for a response to his settlement offer, failing which he would set the matter for trial. On December 11, 1986, Marriott’s lawyer increased the offer to $6,000.

On December 10, the district court held a pretrial conference. A formal pretrial order was entered, signed by counsel for both parties and the trial judge. The order states, in part, “Defendants stipulate that $10,000.00 may be involved in this claim and that jurisdiction of this Court is admitted .... Defendants do not contest the *118 happening of the accident and will admit liability at trial. The extent of injuries of the plaintiff is contested.” Prescription was not pleaded. The court scheduled a non-jury trial that was initially set for March 1987 and later postponed. The district court instructed each party to file a brief memorandum “concisely stating their contentions of fact and law in separately numbered paragraphs.” In response to this order, Marriott filed a pretrial memorandum stating, “The Marriott Corporation has stipulated that their employee was at fault and that such fault caused the accident in question. Thus, the only issue before this Honorable Court is the quantum worth of plaintiffs alleged injuries.” Marriott’s memorandum also reviewed awards in allegedly similar cases and concluded that the award should be in the range of $3,000 to $5,000, but “should this Honorable Court feel that the plaintiff is entitled to a larger award, the $7,000.00 figure decided on in [a cited Louisiana case] is the highest general damage figure which this Court could reasonably award....” In June 1987, Mikulecky discharged the second lawyer and retained her third and present attorney. A month later, on July 10, Marriott moved to dismiss the suit on the ground that the one-year Louisiana prescriptive period for tort actions, set forth in Civil Code Article 3492, barred her action.

Mikulecky contended that the claim was still alive either because the North Carolina three-year statute of limitations applied; or because, if the Louisiana one-year period applied, Marriott had acknowledged the debt, thus interrupting prescription; or because, after prescription had run, Marriott had renounced it; or because Marriott had waived the plea. Because of the conclusion we reach, we discuss only the issues of interruption and renunciation of prescription.

II.

Louisiana law permits interruption of a prescriptive period that has begun to accrue, but has not yet run. 1 “If prescription is interrupted, the time that has run is not counted. Prescription commences to run anew from the last day of interruption.” 2 “Prescription is interrupted when one acknowledges the right of the person against whom he had commenced to prescribe.” 3

This acknowledgment may be express or tacit, 4 but it must amount to an admission of the creditor’s right. In Flowers v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., the Louisiana Supreme Court held that neither an insurance company’s acknowl-edgement of a husband’s right to reimbursement of his wife’s medical expenses for injuries suffered in an accident nor the company’s offer to negotiate a settlement of the wife’s personal injury claim was sufficient to interrupt prescription of the wife’s claim for personal injuries. 5

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Bluebook (online)
854 F.2d 115, 1988 WL 86818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vicki-mikulecky-v-marriott-corporation-ca5-1988.