OPINION
This is an appeal from a summary judgment entered against appellant on its suit for contribution.
In September 1976, John D. Redmond, an employee of Malone Trucking Company, was overcome with chemical fumes while loading a vacuum truck. The chemical had been picked up at one of the appellant’s facilities. Redmond filed a negligence cause of action against appellant and recovered judgment in May 1981. Appellee was not a named party to that lawsuit.
On or about June 4, 1982, appellant filed suit against appellee seeking contribution. Appellee filed a motion for summary judgment asserting that because plaintiff’s primary cause of action against appellee was barred by limitations, appellant had no right of contribution from appellee. In support of this motion, appellee relied primarily upon two cases: (1)
Powell v. Charles Offutt Co.,
On September 9, 1985, the trial court granted appellee’s motion for summary judgment. It is from that judgment that appellant appeals.
In one point of error, appellant contends that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment because the applicable limitations period for contribution suits begins to run with the accrual of the contribution cause of action, not with the accrual of the primary lawsuit. Specifically, appellant asserts the following: (1) the underlying federal court case relied upon by the court,
Powell v. Charles Offutt Co.,
We conclude that the trial court erred in its ruling and that any reliance upon Powell and Hunter was misplaced because (1) Powell misinterprets and misapplies Texas contribution law, and (2) Hunter is inappo-site to the case at bar.
In Powell, the federal court was presented with the identical question as the case at bar. Plaintiff, Kenneth Powell, was injured and his wife was killed when the tire and wheel-rim assembly on the tractor-trailer rig, in which they were riding, came apart. Plaintiff filed his original suit in 1980 against Offutt, who had sold and mounted the tire and tube.
On September 16, 1982, Offutt filed a second third-party complaint seeking contribution and/or indemnity against five third-party defendants. Plaintiff thereupon filed its second amended original complaint naming these five as additional defendants.
On June 13, 1983, Firestone, one of the five, was granted summary judgment as to plaintiff’s claims, because of limitations; on June 20, 1983, summary judgment, because of limitations, was granted in favor of a second defendant, Freightliner. Both defendants presented to the Powell court their motions for summary judgment as to Offutt’s third-party action, contending that the claims for contribution and/or indemnity were barred because of the summary judgments entered in their favor.
The
Powell
court started from the basic premise that by reason of the derivative nature of Texas contribution and indemnity claims, neither claim is recoverable from a third party against whom the plaintiff has no cause of action.
Id.
The court based its decision upon the Texas Supreme Court’s holding in
Hunter v. Fort Worth Capital Corp.,
In Hunter, the plaintiff was injured 11 years after the corporation dissolved. Plaintiff sued the former shareholders of the dissolved corporation and six other defendants, who then filed cross-actions against the former shareholders for contribution and indemnity. The Texas Supreme Court held that neither contribution nor indemnity was recoverable against the shareholders because of the time limitation provisions of article 7.12.
On the basis of the
Hunter
decision, the federal court in
Powell
concluded that “it would be more consistent with Texas law to apply the general rule precluding recovery for contribution or indemnity in
all
situations, including those in which the third party is protected from liability by the running of the statute of limitations.”
Id.
With due respect to the federal court decision in Powell, we respectfully decline to follow the rationale of that decision because, in our opinion, the court has incorrectly interpreted Texas contribution and indemnity law.
In 1917, the Texas Legislature enacted Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 2212 (Vernon 1917), repealed by Ch. 959, sec. 9(1), 1985 Tex.Gen.Laws 7218, re-codified in Tex.Civ. Prac. & Rem. sec. 32.001-32.003 (Vernon 1986), which grants an enforceable right of contribution in favor of a party who has paid a judgment, and who establishes a right of recovery based upon a “pro rata” allocation of liability determined by the number of defendants found liable.
Beech Aircraft Corp. v. Jinkins,
Although article 2212 created a contribution cause of action, it did not prescribe a procedure for its accomplishment. The procedure was, and is, that the claimant must assert (1) that a final judgment has been entered, (2) that he has paid the injured party, and (3) that he has secured a release that satisfies the liability of the alleged tortfeasors against whom contribution is sought.
Beech Aircraft,
In 1973, article 2212a was enacted to govern causes of action arising in negligence. Section 2(g) of article 2212a provides that claims for contribution between named defendants shall be determined in the primary suit, except that a named defendant may proceed against a person who is not a party to the primary suit and who has not effected a settlement with the claimant. In 1985, article 2212a, section 2(g) was re-codified in Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem. sec. 33.017; however, none of the substance of the section 2(g) language has been changed.
Thus, contribution claims between named defendants must be determined in the primary suit or they are waived, unless, as in the instant case, a right of contribution comes within the language in the last phrase of the section, i.e., the right exists because a third party was not part of the primary suit and has made no settlement with the plaintiff.
Beaumont Coca Cola Bottling Co. v. Cain,
Under Texas law, the rights of indemnity and contribution are derivative of the plaintiff’s primary cause of action, and because of this derivative nature, neither contribution nor indemnity is recoverable from a third party against whom the plaintiff has no cause of action.
Powell,
We agree with the
Powell
court that the situation presented in
Hunter
is of the same special nature as that of an employer or the state that is protected from liability for certain policy reasons. The
Hunter
court determined that Tex.Bus.Corp.Act Ann. art. 7.12 was designed to restrict preexisting, pre-dissolution claims against shareholders and “to protect the shareholders, officers, and directors of a dissolved corporation from prolonged and uncertain liability.”
Hunter,
However, we perceive a distinction between those cases in which no cause of action ever existed and those in which the cause of action is barred by limitations, pursuant to Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 5526, repealed by Ch. 959, sec. 9(1), 1985 Tex.Gen.Laws 7218, re-codified in Tex.Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code 16.003(a) (Vernon 1986), which provides for the commencement of a cause of action for injury within two years of its accrual. In the latter, a plaintiff has a cause of action that he may or may not prosecute against all co-tortfeasors. Consequently, because of the derivative nature of contribution law, should plaintiff fail to name a party defendant, the defendants held liable may proceed against third-party defendants for contribution.
In 1904, the Texas Supreme Court was faced with a similar situation in determining whether the two-year statute of limitations, applicable to a suit for personal injuries, would preclude a suit for contribution.
City v. Talerico,
No limitation against the city ever commenced to run so long as it had no cause of action, and a cause of action could only arise in its favor when it sustained damage from the act of the asylum. According to the strict rules of the common law it could not have brought any other party into this litigation, and could have maintained no independent action, until the suit had terminated by judgment, or it had paid the damages to plaintiff. Hence no limitation would have run against it.
Id.
In
Missouri Pacific Railroad Co. v. Southern Pacific Co.,
In
Beaumont Coca Cola Bottling Co. v. Cain,
In
Pate v. Tellepsen Construction Co.,
Finally, in
Brown & Root, Inc. v. Rust Engineering,
We have reviewed recent Texas case law and find no case that embraces the Powell interpretation of contribution law, or which applies the Hunter decision to the two-year statute of limitations. We conclude that the Powell court has misinterpreted Texas contribution and indemnity law. Therefore, the trial court’s reliance thereon was misplaced, and the summary judgment was improvidently rendered.
Because of our disposition of the appeal on this portion of appellant’s point of error, we find it unnecessary to address the remaining arguments raised in appellant’s brief. Appellant’s first point of error is sustained.
The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause is remanded.
