Case Information
*1 Before ANDERSON, Chief Judge, and DUBINA and HILL, Circuit Judges.
HILL, Circuit Judge:
CSX Transportation, Inc. and the National Railroad Passenger Corporation filed this action against the City of Garden City, Georgia seeking indemnification in connection with a train/truck collision on the city's construction site. The district court entered summary judgment for the defendant city based upon municipal immunity. CSX Transportation, Inc. and the National Railroad Passenger Corporation bring this appeal.
I.
In 1996, the City of Garden City, Georgia (Garden City or the City) decided to install water and sewer lines along the public rights-of-way that ran across, under, and parallel to CSX Transportation, Inc.'s (CSX) railroad tracks. The City contracted with CSX to use CSX's rights-of-ways and agreed to indemnify CSX for any damages arising out of the City's use of the rights-of-way. Under the contract, the City agreed to maintain insurance to cover the indemnity obligations it had assumed.
Garden City employed ARCO, Inc. as the general contractor for this project which employed CARLCO Trucking, Inc. as a sub-contractor. On October 9, 1997, a CARLCO employee drove a tractor-trailer truck to the City's work site to remove equipment. As he crossed CSX's tracks, his truck stalled on the tracks where it was hit by a National Railroad Passenger Corporation (Amtrak) passenger train. CSX paid damages to passengers on the train and sued Garden City for indemnification under their agreement. Garden City filed a third-party claim against its contractor, ARCO.
Sometime later, the City filed a motion for summary judgment against CSX, asserting that it was *2 immune to CSX's claim for damages for a number of reasons. The district court agreed with the City and, on July 12, 1999, granted it summary judgment. The court noted, however, that Garden City's third-party complaint against ARCO for indemnification was still pending and "the Clerk should not close this case." Subsequently, Garden City with the consent of ARCO and approval of the court, voluntarily dismissed without prejudice its third-party claim against ARCO. CSX and Amtrak filed this appeal.
Concerned about the finality of the summary judgment, this court, on its own motion, directed the parties to brief and argue the issue of our jurisdiction to hear this case.
II.
To be appealable, an order must either be final or fall into a specific class of interlocutory orders that
are made appealable by statute or jurisprudential exception.
See
28 U.S.C. §§ 1291, 1292;
Atlantic Fed. Sav.
& Loan Ass'n v. Blythe Eastman Paine Webber, Inc.,
We have held many times that a partial adjudication on the merits, followed by a voluntary dismissal
without prejudice of a pending claim, does not effectively terminate the litigation and, therefore, does not
satisfy the finality requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
Ryan v. Occidental Petroleum Corp.,
Inasmuch as neither party had the court certify the July 12 summary judgment for appeal under Rule 54(b), we do not have jurisdiction to hear this appeal unless there is some other reason why the judgment should be considered final.
CSX argues that we have jurisdiction under the
Jetco
exception to the finality rule.
Jetco Electronic
Industries, Inc. v. Gardiner,
Furthermore, CSX argues that this series of orders should be considered a final judgment because if they are not, Garden City and ARCO will receive a windfall. If there is no final judgment, CSX will forever lose its right to appeal in this case. [2]
This result, CSX argues, is not required by
Ryan
and its progeny. The common theme of these cases
is that jurisdiction cannot be manufactured. For example, when a district court enters an adverse, but
otherwise non-appealable, ruling against a party, that party may seek to appeal the ruling immediately by
dismissing without prejudice his remaining claims—sort of warehousing them for later revival if
needed—attempting to manufacture a final, appealable judgment. We have consistently rejected such
attempts to obtain appellate review of an otherwise non-final order.
See State Treasurer,
CSX points out that it is not guilty here of such an attempt to manufacture jurisdiction. After the
summary judgment, it had no remaining claims. Nor did it participate in any way in Garden City and ARCO's
CSX could ask the district court to certify the July 12 order and judgment as final under Fed.R.Civ.P.
54(b), but there is no guarantee that the court will grant their request.
See State Treasurer,
agreement to dismiss without prejudice Garden City's remaining third-party claim.
This case is the mirror image of Ryan, where the parties attempted to manufacture appealability. Here, Garden City and ARCO appear to have undertaken to manufacture non-appealability. If there is no final appealable order in the case, CSX will be deprived of any appellate review of the dismissal of its lawsuit and will be left holding the proverbial (and unenviable) "bag."
We have noted this possibility before. In
State Treasurer,
we expressed concern that under the
Ryan
rule, an appellant not involved in the decision to dismiss a remaining claim without prejudice and, therefore,
not guilty of conspiring to create jurisdiction, would nonetheless lose his right to appeal.
There is some authority for this result. In
Schoenfeld v. Babbitt,
In this case, however, the voluntary dismissal followed the entry of the non-final order and, therefore, is asserted to come under the rule of Ryan. Even if the rule is harsh, we are bound to follow it if it applies to this case. The issue is whether it does apply. We conclude that it does not.
In this case, a summary judgment was entered against the plaintiff. Then, the defendant and the third-party defendant stipulated to the dismissal of the remaining third-party claim. The plaintiff did not participate in any way in the voluntary dismissal of the third-party claim. The defendant and third-party defendant agreed to that disposition. As nothing remained pending in the lawsuit, the district court ordered the Clerk to close the case. The plaintiff then filed a notice of appeal of the judgment which had been entered against it prior to the voluntary dismissal.
Under these circumstances, the rule of Ryan is inapplicable. Because the appellant did not participate in the voluntary dismissal of the remaining claims, there was no collusion between it and the parties dismissing the remaining claim. Therefore, there was no attempt to manufacture jurisdiction. On the contrary, the plaintiff/appellant stands to lose all right to appeal if the rule of Ryan applies under these Garden City concedes that whether the rule of Ryan applies to render voluntary dismissals of third-party claims non-final is an issue of first impression in this circuit.
circumstances. Additionally, in the future, parties could deliberately manipulate the proceedings to make the rule of Ryan apply to cut off their adversary's right to appeal. [4]
We conclude that
Ryan
was not intended to apply to the circumstances of this case. The voluntary
dismissal, with or without prejudice, of a defendant's remaining third-party claim in an otherwise terminated
lawsuit does not bar the plaintiff's right to appeal a judgment against it. Under these circumstances, the
summary judgment plus the voluntary dismissal of the remaining claim in the case satisfies the finality
requirement of Rule 54(b) for the purpose of terminating the litigation.
See Jetco,
CSX was not involved in any way in the voluntary dismissal of Garden City's remaining third-party claim against ARCO. Accordingly, Garden City's voluntary dismissal of its third-party claim against ARCO effectively terminated this case in the district court. [5] Accordingly, we conclude that Ryan does not apply to this case. Nor shall we extend it to apply to this case. We have jurisdiction over this appeal.
III.
The indemnification contract between CSX and Garden City provided that the City would assume liability for all claims arising out of its construction in CSX's rights-of-way. It, in effect, required the City to waive its sovereign immunity vis-a-vis CSX in connection with any claims against CSX arising out of the City's construction project.
Georgia law, however, forbids a city from waiving its sovereign immunity unless it has insurance to fund any liability it might thereby incur. [6] The relevant statute provides:
[a] municipal corporation shall not waive its immunity by the purchase of liability insurance ... unless the policy of insurance issued covers an occurrence for which the defense of sovereign immunity is available, and then only to the extent of the limits of such insurance policy.
O.C.G.A. § 36-33-1.
The district court concluded, therefore, that "the indemnification agreement here is barred by
4 In
State Treasurer,
Judge Cox hypothesized just such a possibility: a plaintiff who seeks to cut off
her opponent's right to appeal, files a meritless claim along with her valid one. Before the court can rule
on her claims, she voluntarily dismisses the meritless claim. After judgment in her favor, her opponent is
left with no right to appeal because, under
Ryan,
the voluntary dismissal is not a final order.
municipal immunity—except to the extent that the City obtained insurance to cover it." Because CSX made
no showing in the district court that Garden City procured or had any such insurance, the district court held
that its agreement to indemnify CSX was
ultra vires
and null and void.
See Precise v. City of Rossville,
261
Ga. 210,
While on appeal, CSX moved to supplement the record in this case to show that Garden City participates in the Georgia Interlocal Risk Management Agency (GIRMA) fund which provides it coverage up to $1,000,000 against "all sums which [Garden City] shall be obligated to pay as money damages by reason of liability imposed upon [Garden City] by law or assumed by [Garden City] under contract or agreement." CSX argued in its motion that the grant of summary judgment was in error because the City does have the requisite insurance to enable it effectively to waive its sovereign immunity. A panel of this court denied the motion. CSX renewed this motion on appeal in its brief and at oral argument.
We rarely enlarge the record on appeal to include material not before the district court which has
labored without the benefit of the proffered material.
See Hormel v. Helvering,
A primary factor which we consider in deciding a motion to supplement the record is whether
acceptance of the proffered material into the record would establish beyond any doubt the proper resolution
of the pending issues.
Dickerson,
necessary to make an informed and final decision).
Garden City objects to this supplementation on the grounds that CSX knew of the GIRMA coverage prior to the entry of summary judgment and could have introduced it into the record in opposition to the City's motion for summary judgment. The City, however, never argued to the district court that its contract to indemnify CSX was void because it had not honored its agreement to procure the requisite insurance. In its motion for summary judgment, the City cited a host of reasons why its agreement to indemnify CSX was void, but lack of insurance was not one of them. [8]
The district court's opinion, which found the lack of insurance fatal to the agreement, was the first time the issue was clearly raised. Relying on an affidavit by a former mayor who stated that Garden City "did not appropriate any monies to fund the City's indemnification obligation," the trial court concluded that no insurance existed to cover the City's potential liability to CSX. Summary judgment was entered on July 12, 1999. CSX appealed on August 6, 1999, and filed the motion to supplement the record on September 23, 1999.
While we rarely exercise our authority to enlarge the appellate record, the Supreme Court has reminded the appellate courts that:
[T]he rules of practice and procedure are devised to promote the ends of justice, not to defeat them. A rigid and undeviating judicially declared practice under which courts of review would invariably and under all circumstances decline to consider all questions which had not previously been specifically urged would be out of harmony with this policy. Orderly rules of procedure do not require sacrifice of the rules of fundamental justice.
Hormel,
Under the circumstances of this case, we conclude that the motion to supplement the record should be granted. Since the district court never had the opportunity to consider what effect, if any, the City's participation in the GIRMA fund has on the City's indemnification agreement with CSX, we shall remand the case to the district court so that it may consider this fact before determining whether Garden City effectively waived its immunity by its agreement to indemnify CSX. We express no opinion on the outcome of that review.
The City argued that the indemnity agreement was void because it: unlawfully waives the City's municipal immunity; creates an unlawfully lengthy obligation of Garden City; creates an unlawful public debt; impermissibly grants a gratuity; and violates public policy. Since we shall remand this case for reconsideration of the issue of immunity in view of the existence of the GIRMA policy, we shall not consider the issues of unlawful obligation and public debt as they may depend on the existence of insurance coverage. We find no merit in the remaining arguments advanced by the City.
IV.
We hold that the summary judgment and the voluntary dismissal considered together effectively terminated this litigation in the district court, and we have jurisdiction over this appeal. We hold that CSX's motion to supplement the record on appeal is due to be granted. Accordingly, the motion to supplement the record is GRANTED, the entry of summary judgment is VACATED and the case is REMANDED to the district court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
