In re YRC Inc. d/b/a YRC Freight
No. 21-0846
Supreme Court of Texas
June 17, 2022
2022 WL 2184655
Relator
On Petition for Writ of Mandamus
Section
Under our recent decision in In re Coppola, 535 S.W.3d 506 (Tex. 2017), the motion was timely filed more than sixty days before the then-pending trial date, and we conclude it pleads sufficient facts. In addition, we hold there was no applicable limitations period for the plaintiff to join the third-party employer as a defendant on his tort cause of action because his exclusive remedy—which he successfully pursued—was workers’ compensation. For these reasons, the trial court‘s ruling was a clear abuse of discretion. Because the defendant lacks an adequate remedy by appeal, we conditionally grant mandamus relief and direct the trial court to vacate its order denying defendants’ motion for leave to designate a third party and
In 2015, plaintiff and real party in interest James Curry was loading a trailer parked at a freight dock owned by his employer, Eaton Corpоration. Eaton authorized defendant-relator YRC, Inc. d/b/a YRC Freight, the operating freight carrier, to move the trailer. According to Curry, YRC‘s driver began to pull the trailer away while Curry was still actively loading it, causing him to fall out. Curry was injured and filed a successful workers’ compensation claim.
A year after the incident, Curry filed this suit, alleging negligence by YRC and its driver (named in the suit as John Doe). YRC first identified Eaton as a potential responsible third party in a supplemental discovery response in May 2019. On January 5, 2021, YRC (together with John Doe) filed a motion to designate Eaton as a responsible third party pursuant to
Curry objected to the motion. He contended that YRC did not plead sufficient facts supporting Eaton‘s responsibility for his injuries. Additionally, he argued that YRC‘s motion was untimely because it was filed less than 60 days before the original trial date and because the statute of limitations for any of Curry‘s claims against Eaton had expired.
The trial court agreed with Curry and denied YRC‘s motion to designate Eaton a
Mandamus relief is warranted when a trial court clearly abuses its discretion and the relator has no adequate remedy by appeal. In re Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., 148 S.W.3d 124, 135-36 (Tex. 2004). We conclude that the trial court clearly abused its discretion on each ground.
First, YRC‘s motion was timely.
Here, YRC filed its motiоn on January 5, 2021. The operative docket control order at the time of YRC‘s motion set the case for trial on March 8, 2021. Thus, YRC‘s motion was filed 62 days before the trial setting at the time, making it timely under Coppola and
Second, the trial court was incorrеct in concluding that the motion was filed after the applicable limitations period had expired.
We disagree because the statute of limitations for “the cause of action” in this suit does not apply “with respect to the responsible third party.” Curry has alleged a cause of action for common-law nеgligence against YRC and John Doe to recover damages for his personal injuries. But there is no “applicable limitations period on th[is] cause of action . . . with respect to” third party Eaton because the Legislature has eliminated the cause of action by statute. Eaton is a subscriber to workers’ compensation insurance, and Curry‘s negligence cause of action seeks recovery for work-related injury. As a matter of law, thеrefore, recovery of workers’ compensation is Curry‘s exclusive remedy against Eaton. See
This interpretation of
For these reasons,
Third, the trial court clearly abused its discretion in concluding that YRC did not plead sufficient facts to support its motion.
To plead sufficient facts on a motion for leave to designate a responsible third party under
YRC‘s motion clears this bar. The motion devotes almost five pages to setting out the facts surrounding Curry‘s injury. In particular, YRC identifies specific facts in support of its allegations that Eaton owed Curry a duty as his employer to create a safe workplace on its loading doсk, that Eaton breached that duty when one of its employees permitted YRC‘s driver “to pull the trailer from the dock without confirming that [Curry] had finished loading the trailer,” and that this breach caused Curry‘s injuries. The motion provides fair notice to Curry of the nature of the controversy, its basic issues, and the type of evidence that might be relevant to Eaton‘s responsibility for his injuries. Thus, YRC‘s motion satisfied the requirements of
Moreover, even if the motion had failed to satisfy these рleading requirements, subsection
In Coppola, we held that there is ordinarily no adequate remedy by appeal from the erroneous denial of a timely filed motion to designate a responsible third party. Id. at 509-10. Allowing a case to proceed to trial without the third party would defeat the defendant‘s right to have the jury determine the proportionate responsibility of all potential responsible parties, requiring a second trial. See id.
Accordingly, without hearing oral argument, see
OPINION DELIVERED: June 17, 2022
