Our questions are (1) whether an inter-pleading stakeholder, who admits liability and offers to pay money into court but does not actually do so, is protected against further liability by payment of the money to one of the claimants under a judgment which has since been reversed, and (2) whether a recognized illegitimate child is entitled to the death benefits provided for a child of a deceased employee under the Workmen’s Compensation Act by virtue of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth ' Amendment. We hold that the stakeholder’s liability is not discharged by such payment and that a recognized illegitimate child is entitled to the same benefits as any other child. Accordingly, we reverse a summary judgment for the defendant stakeholder and remand with instructions to grant the motion for summary judgment presented on behalf of the alleged illegitimate child.
The present appeal is a sequel to our decision in Flores Gonzalez v. Viuda de Gonzalez,
On September 9, 1970, the trial court granted the motion for summary judgment of the deceased employee’s mother and rendered judgment in her favor against the Association for the full amount of benefits on the ground that as a matter of law no common-law marriage existed and the employee’s daughter was illegitimate. The alleged common-law wife perfected an appeal on behalf of herself and her daughter, but filed no supersedeas bond. On October 29, 1970, the Association paid the full amount of the judgment to the employee’s mother and obtained a release from her. The alleged common-law wife proceeded with the appeal and this court reversed the judgment and remanded the case for further proceedings on the ground that a fact issue existed with respect to common-law marriage.
After the case was returned to the trial court the employee’s mother, who had received the money, nonsuited her claim. *425 The alleged common-law widow also non-suited her individual claim and disclaimed any right to the benefits on her own behalf, but she continued to prosecute the suit as next friend for her daughter, on whose behalf she claimed the entire benefits as the only statutory beneficiary. The Association then filed a motion for summary judgment, alleging that payment of the benefits under the former judgment discharged it as a matter of law from any further liability. The trial court granted this motion and rendered judgment that the next friend take nothing on behalf of her daughter. She appeals, contending in her single point of error that the trial court erred because the daughter was entitled to the benefits as a matter of law.
The Association seeks to uphold the summary judgment in its favor on the theory that in absence of any objection to its pleading admitting liability and offering to pay the money into court, that pleading was equivalent to actual payment of the money and its later payment in compliance with the judgment effected a full discharge of its liability. In support of the contention that the offer is equivalent to payment, the Association cites Williams v. Wright,
Likewise, in Royal Neighbors of America v. Fletcher,
The Association points out that it was in the position of a stakeholder with no right to appeal and no right to supersede the judgment by giving a bond under Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, rule 364(a), but that the appellant on the former appeal did have the right to supersede, as held in Burch v. Johnson,
The crucial question is whether payment to a party under a judgment pending appeal is equivalent to payment into court. We hold that it is not, and, more particularly, that payment to one party under a judgment does not discharge liability to a different party that may be established after reversal of that judgment. A judgment is not final so long as an appeal is pending, whether or not it has been superseded. Texas Trunk R. Co. v. Jackson,
The Association “points out that if it had paid the money into court, the court or its clerk would have had the same problem concerning payment of the money when the appeal was taken without superseding the judgment. We need not consider what measures would have been available to the court to protect the funds in its hands and the interests of the minor claimant pending appeal. Regardless of whether the court would have had to pay out the funds in the absence of a supersedeas bond filed on behalf of the minor claimant, no additional liability could have been imposed on the Association if it had actually placed the money in the custody of the court. Since the Association chose not to do that but to pay it to one of the parties under a judgment, and that judgment has been reversed, we hold that its liability has not been discharged.
Claim of illegitimate child
The next friend contends that the trial court erred not only in rendering judgment for the Association, but also in failing to grant the next friend’s motion for summary judgment because the only fact issue remaining is that of common-law marriage and that issue is no longer material because the alleged common-law wife has disclaimed and the minor daughter is entitled to recover the statutory benefits whether legitimate or not under Weber v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.,
The Association contends that
Weber
is not controlling because of the difference between the Texas Workmen’s Compensation Act and the Louisiana Act considered in
Weber.
It points out that under the Louisiana Act benefits are available only to children shown to be dependent, while under Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 8306, § 8a (Vernon Supp.1974) death benefits are payable to minor children “without regard to the question of dependency.” The Association argues further that § 8a provides that death benefits “shall be distributed among the beneficiaries as may be entitled to the same as hereinbefore provided according to the laws of descent and distribution of this State,” and that the Texas law of descent and distribution provides that an illegitimate child shall inherit from his mother but not from his father unless legitimated by the marriage of his parents. Tex.Prob.Code Ann. § 42 (Vernon 1956). Consequently, the Association argues, this case is controlled not by
Weber
but by Labine v. Vincent,
This argument is not persuasive. It bears too close a resemblance to those “finely carved distinctions” advanced unsuccessfully in
Weber
to distinguish the Supreme Court’s previous holding in Levy
*427
v. Louisiana,
The Association also insists that we should not apply the
Weber
ruling retrospectively to this case. It points out that
Weber
was decided on April 24, 1972, three years after the deceased employee in this case was killed and more than a year after the judgment for the employee’s mother was paid by the Association, and that under the Texas Workmen’s Compensation Act as construed before
Weber,
illegitimate children were not recognized as beneficiaries. The only authority cited against retrospective application is Stokes v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.,
Even if we were at liberty to accept the reasoning in
Stokes,
it cannot prevail here because no rights of the Association became vested before the date of the
Weber
ruling. The occurrence of this accident before the ruling in
Weber
does not prevent retrospective application of that decision because, of course, the same situation was presented in the
Weber
case itself. The judgment of September 9, 1970, in this case created no vested rights so long as it was subject to reversal on appeal, and the Association’s payment under that judgment provided no protection for reasons discussed earlier in this opinion. Decisions of the Supreme Court invalidating state laws on “novel constitutional grounds” can be refused retrospective operation only when a judgment based on a law subsequently declared unconstitutional has become final.
See
Linkletter v. Walker,
For the reasons stated, we hold that the trial court erred in sustaining the Association’s motion for summary judgment and in failing to sustain the motion of the minor claimant. Accordingly, the case is reversed and remanded to the trial court with instructions to sustain the motion for summary judgment of the minor claimant and to render judgment in her favor for the amount of death benefits admitted to be payable, together with interest as pro-1 vided by law.
Reversed and remanded with instructions.
