During trial, the plaintiffs settled with one of the defendants, Trailmaster Tanks, Inc. (Trailmaster). As part of this settlement, Trailmaster assigned to the plaintiffs all its rights of contribution and/or indemnity against the third-party defendant, Betts Industries, Inc. (Betts). The district court granted Betts’s motion to dismiss on
I.
Dexter S. Jackson was killed when the truck he was driving struck a cow in the middle of a roadway and burst into flames. Plaintiffs, Jackson’s surviving wrongful death beneficiaries, filed suit against Freightliner Corporation (Freightliner), the manufacturer of the truck, and Trailmas-ter, the manufacturer of the gasoline tank trailer, alleging products liability causes of action. They also sued Newell Tate, the owner of the cow, on a negligence theory. Trailmaster filed a third-party complaint against Betts, alleging that it was entitled to full indemnity and/or contribution against Betts in the event that the manhole cover manufactured by Betts and attached to Trailmaster’s gasoline tanker trailer was determined to be defective and the cause of the accident.
Prior to trial, the plaintiffs settled their claims against Freightliner and Tate and proceeded to trial against Trailmaster. After the trial began, the two parties reached a settlement under which Trailmaster assigned to the plaintiffs all of its contribution and indemnity causes of action against Betts, whether contractual, statutory, or common law.
Betts moved to disallow any further prosecution of the plaintiffs’ claims under Trailmaster’s assignment of its contribution or indemnity causes of action. To support its motion, Betts maintained that, under Texas law, Trailmaster lost any rights of contribution or indemnity against Betts when it settled and that thus it had no rights that could be assigned to the plaintiffs. The district court granted Betts’s motion and dismissed with prejudice all causes of action asserted by the plaintiffs against Betts. Final judgment was then entered.
II.
The plaintiffs argue that the Texas cases holding that a settling defendant does not have any contribution rights against a non-settling defendant do not apply to the facts of this case and that consequently the issue should be certified to the Texas Supreme Court. Also, they assert that Trailmaster’s right to indemnity against Betts was not affected by its settlement with the plaintiffs. They thus believe that these indemnity rights could be validly assigned to and asserted by them, either in the same or an independent action.
The plaintiffs’ contribution argument does not comport with Texas law. A settling tortfeasor has no right of contribution against non-settling tortfeasors “ ‘under either the common law or the comparative negligence statute....’” Texas Distribs., Inc. v. Texas College,
Although the aforementioned cases dealt with assignments from a plaintiff to a settling defendant, the court’s rationale applies equally to attempts to preserve contribution rights by way of assignment from a settling defendant to a plaintiff. While Trailmaster’s settlement with the plaintiffs resolves plaintiffs’ remaining claim against their defendant-tortfeasors, it impermissi-
Since the plaintiffs failed directly to allege any wrongdoing on behalf of Betts, as manufacturer of the manhole covers, the settlement reached between the plaintiffs and Trailmaster for the defective gasoline tank presumably includes compensation for the faulty manhole cover. Thus, the assignment of Trailmaster’s contribution claim to the plaintiffs would cause only unnecessary additional litigation, confuse the jury as to the role of these “surrogate plaintiffs,” prejudice Betts, and possibly result in a prohibited double recovery of the same damages. See K-Mart Corp. v. Martinez,
The plaintiffs’ argument regarding Trail-master’s assignment of its common law
In order for the instant plaintiffs, as Trailmaster’s assignees, to establish a common law claim for indemnity against Betts, they must demonstrate that Trailmaster had a valid and assignable cause of action for indemnity against Betts and that such an assignment occurred. Esco Elevators, Inc. v. Brown Rental Equip. Co.,
The main reason for the invalidity of the assignment is that Trailmaster lacked independent culpability according to W.R. Grace. Under Texas law, the circumstances in which common law indemnity is available is very narrow. In comparative negligence cases, common law indemnity survives only when there has been purely vicarious liability. See B & B Auto Supply, Sand Pit, & Trucking Co. v. Central Freight Lines, Inc.,
Since the plaintiffs did not sue Betts directly, they can recover from the manufacturer only by establishing that Trailmas-ter is liable to them and that this liability was purely vicarious on Trailmaster’s behalf or that Trailmaster was an innocent distributor of Betts’s product. The plaintiffs requested issues against Trailmaster at trial on theories of negligence, marketing defect, and design defect, all of which could have proved Trailmaster’s liability to them. They failed to demonstrate, however, how these theories, under any circumstances, would demonstrate that Trailmas-ter was purely vicariously liable. Indeed, under each of these theories the plaintiffs alleged various acts of independent culpability that would defeat any claim that Trailmaster was merely a conduit for Betts’s allegedly faulty manhole cover.
The judgment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In the alternative, the plaintiffs aver that this second question also should be certified to the Texas Supreme Court.
. Trailmaster did not assert any contractual basis for its indemnity claim against Betts.
