This case involves a suit against a third-party tortfeasor by an employee injured on the job. On appeal we hold that the district court erred, under Alabama law, by refusing to limit the participation at trial of the intervening workmen’s compensation carrier and by allowing the jury to learn that the employee had received workmen’s compensation benefits, and that such was not harmless error.
Liberty Mutual’s role as intervening plaintiff consisted of describing its payment of benefits to Southern on his employer’s behalf and its entitlement to reimbursement should he recover at trial. The case was tried before a jury, which returned a defendant’s verdict for Plumb.
Alabama law precludes the introduction of evidence that a plaintiff in such a case has received workmen’s compensation benefits.
Coleman
v.
Hamilton Storage Co.,
Although the parties dispute whether intervention of right or permissive was appropriate under Fed.R.Civ.P. 24, we need not decide that question since we conclude that conditions can be imposed even when a party intervenes as a matter of right under Rule 24(a)(2). There was no evidence of collusion in this case which might have been sufficient grounds for totally denying intervention by Liberty Mutual as intervening plaintiff when it was the defendant’s liability carrier.
Rule 24(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure itself does not mention conditions or restrictions. The Advisory Committee Note to the 1966 Amendment of Rule 24(a), however, provides: “An intervention of right under the amended rule may be subject to appropriate conditions or restrictions responsive among other things to the requirements of efficient conduct of the proceedings.” There apparently were no decided cases which provided authority for this assertion. Even so, several courts have followed its lead and imposed restrictions on an intervenor of right. 7A C. Wright & A. Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure,
§ 1922 at 624-25 (1972);
cf. McDonald v. E.J. Lavino Co.,
Discretion under Rule 24(b) to grant or deny intervention
in toto
necessarily implies the power to condition intervention upon cértain particulars. 7A C. Wright & A. Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 1922 at 623 (1972). Indeed, several courts have so conditioned their grant.
See Van Hoomissen v. Xerox Corp.,
Imposing the conditions plaintiff sought in this case would have been an appropriate method of keeping evidence of the payment of workmen’s compensation benefits from the jury. The. liability of the employer or its insurance company, is not a defense against the liability of a third-party tortfeasor.
Jones
v.
Crawford,
These rules of state substantive law must be applied by federal courts in diversity cases.
Erie Railroad v. Tompkins,
We can identify no strong federal interest requiring us to uphold a procedural ruling that severely undermines Alabama’s substantive law,
see Byrd v. Blue Ridge Electrical Cooperative, Inc.,
We have considered whether the judgment should be affirmed on the ground that the error was harmless because the evidence would normally effect a decision on damages and should not be of concern as to liability. We reject this notion, however, and decide the judgment must be reversed for the following reasons.
First, we note the Supreme Court in
Tip-ton v. Socony Mobil Oil Co.
concluded that the prejudice would not be limited to the issue of damages and could infect the determination of liability.
Third, the Alabama court disapproves of unencumbered intervention when the insurance company occupies the dual role we see here because it gives the jury the impression that plaintiff has already been compensated and is now attempting to recover again from defendants.
Jones v. Crawford,
Fourth, counsel for Plumb told the jury that even if Southern lost his case he would be compensated for his injury since he could keep the workmen’s compensation payments. This is the precise line of reasoning which made the information prejudicial, particularly when the issue of liability was close.
Fifth, the appellee has cited no Alabama case, nor has our research revealed any, which holds that it might be harmless to erroneously admit such evidence. We have seen no Alabama opinions that have even considered that it could be harmless, and it is apparent that an Alabama reviewing court would not hold it to be so. The plaintiff was entitled to the benefit of Alabama law in this case, a benefit he would have received had the case not been removed to federal court on defendant’s motion.
Finally, the district court gave no limiting instruction that the jury was not to consider, in deciding liability, that the plaintiff had received compensation. We cannot conclude that the evidence did not influence an uninstructed jury.
Southern has carried his burden to establish that the error affected his substantial rights. 28 U.S.C.A. § 2111; Fed.R.Civ.P. 61. Appellee has failed to show the error had no prejudicial effect. 1
REVERSED AND REMANDED FOR A NEW TRIAL.
Notes
. After final preparation of this opinion and just prior to its being forwarded to the clerk for publication, counsel for appellant called to our attention the recent opinion in
Moring v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.,
17 Ala.Bar Rep. 400,
