Lois SILVERLIGHT and Irwin Silverlight
v.
James HUGGINS and Government of the Virgin Islands.
Appeal of GOVERNMENT OF the VIRGIN ISLANDS. (D. C. Civil
Action No. 39-1972)
Brendan CONROY
v.
GOVERNMENT OF the VIRGIN ISLANDS, Appellant in No. 73-1009,
et al. (D. C. Civil Action No. 21-1972)
Denise I. GARCIA, etc., et al.
v.
MANNASSAH BUS LINES, INC., et al.
v.
GOVERNMENT OF the VIRGIN ISLANDS, Appellant in No. 73-1010.
(D. C. Civil Action No. 262-1971)
Nos. 73-1008 to 73-1010.
United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.
Argued April 10, 1973.
Decided Nov. 27, 1973.
Ronald H. Tonkin, Atty. Gen. of the Virgin Islands, Henry L. Feuerzeig, Asst. Atty. Gen. of the Virgin Islands, St. Thomas, V. I., for appellant.
Norman Schulaner, Nichols & Silverlight, Christiansted, St. Croix, V. I., for appellees Lois Silverlight and Irwin Silverlight in Appeal No. 73-1008, and William H. Evans, James A. Evans, Jr. and Elliott Layfield, d/b/a Jebco Services, and Reginald Whyte in Appeal No. 73-1010.
Alexander A. Farrelly, Birch, De Jongh & Farrelly, St. Thomas, V. I., for appellees Eugene H. Smith, d/b/a Smitty's Mechanical and Rental, in Appeal No. 73-1009, and Denise I. Garcia, et al. in Appeal No. 73-1010.
John E. Stout, Grunert, Stout, Hymes & Mayer, St. Thomas, V. I., for appellee Brendan Conroy in Appeal No. 73-1009.
Before ADAMS, GIBBONS, Circuit Judges, and LORD, District Judge.
OPINION OF THE COURT
JOSEPH S. LORD, III, District Judge.
These are interlocutory appeals from orders of the District Court of the Virgin Islands of the United States,
Lois Silverlight was allegedly involved in an accident with a Government-owned vehicle on August 27, 1970. Brendan Conroy's claim grew out of an alleged accident on October 20, 1971. Denise Garcia claims to have been injured while alighting from a bus on October 24, 1969, for which she filed suit against various defendants (not including the Government) on June 22, 1971. Several of the Garcia defendants have asserted third-party plaintiff actions against the Government for contribution or indemnification. The Silverlight and Conroy actions and the third-party complaints in Garcia under the 1971 Tort Claims Act were all filed after the enactment date of November 15, 1971.
The 1971 Tort Claims Act is a general waiver of sovereign immunity and assumption of liability for torts caused by employees of the Government. The district court concluded that the 1971 Act, which is silent as to retrospective or prospective application, had been enacted in response to the legal and constitutional infirmity of the prior practice whereby the sovereign immunity of the Virgin Islands was waived on an individual basis pursuant to special legislation. That special legislation procedure was struck down as a denial of equal protection and a violation of 48 U.S.C. Sec. 1471 in Thomas v. Government of Virgin Islands,
In May, 1971, before the decision in Thomas, supra, Governor Melvin H. Evans wrote a letter to the Legislature of the Virgin Islands expressing his doubts as to the continued legality of the existing procedure of passing special acts.1 One month later, Governor Evans submitted to the legislature Bill #5117 which was to become the 1971 Tort Claims Act. His accompanying message voiced his desire to eliminate the then current but questionable practice of special bills and to waive sovereign immunity in all tort liability actions against the Government. While the bill was pending before the legislature, on September 2, 1971, the district court struck down the special act procedure, as Governor Evans had feared. Thomas, supra. Shortly thereafter, on October 6, 1971, the bill was presented to the legislature by Peter O'Dea of the Office of the Attorney General, with an explanation of why the decision in Thomas necessitated its enactment.2 The Act was passed and signed into law by the Governor on November 15, 1971.
Curative legislation is legislation designed to rectify a governmental scheme which has failed in purpose, and is generally intended to operate on past transactions. Fullilove v. U. S. Casualty Co. of New York,
The Government raises the additional argument that a waiver of sovereign immunity is not to be implied. But that is not the question here; the Government has now explicitly waived its immunity to tort claims. The application of that general waiver to a limited number of additional plaintiffs is not the sort of interference with the sovereign which must be cautiously avoided. As Justice Cardozo said in Anderson v. John L. Hayes Construction Co.,
While holding the statute retroactive in application, the district court failed to consider the extent of retroactivity. However, implicit in the district court's orders denying the motions to dismiss, including that of the third-party defendants, is a holding that the Act has unrestricted retroactive application. In order to determine whether those interlocutory orders should be affirmed or reversed, we must decide how far back in time the Act reaches. With little guidance on this question either from the court below, or from counsel on either side, we look to the provisions for the time of filing claims of the 1971 Tort Claims Act itself. The same bases for imposing a reasonable statute of limitations on actions arising after the date of the Act apply to restrict its retroactive effect to a similarly reasonable period of time. Furthermore, appellees apparently concede these provisions as the applicable limitation to their actions. Appellees' brief pp. 32-33.
Section 3409 of 33 V.I.C. provides that an action to recover damages for injury to property or for personal injury against the Government shall be filed within ninety days of the accrual of such claim. In the alternative, a notice of intention to file a claim shall be filed within ninety days, and a claim filed within two years of accrual of such claim. However, even if no notice or claim has been filed within ninety days, the court in its discretion may allow suit to be brought within two years if (1) there is a reasonable excuse for failure to file sooner, (2) the Government or the appropriate subdivision had actual knowledge of the facts constituting the claim within ninety days after the accrual of such claim, and (3) the Government has not been substantially prejudiced by the failure to give notice within ninety days.
Plaintiff Silverlight filed suit seventeen months after her alleged accident. Plaintiff Conroy filed suit three months and four days after his claim arose. As to these two claimants we remand to the district court to determine whether their actions should be allowed to proceed based on the criteria outlined above.4
As to plaintiff Garcia, her claim arose on October 24, 1969, over two years before the enactment of the Tort Claims statute. Defendants and third-party plaintiffs, William H. Evans, James A. Evans, Jr., Elliott Layfield, d/b/a Jebco Services and Reginald Whyte seek to hold the Government liable for contribution and indemnification, regardless of the validity of plaintiff Garcia's claim against the Government. They cite Keleket X-Ray Corp. v. United States,
Here we are not concerned with a claim against the sovereign which once existed, but became timebarred. Rather, because we hold the waiver of immunity retroactive only to causes of action which accrued within two years before November 15, 1971, Denise Garcia never had a valid cause of action against the Government. If plaintiff Garcia could not have sued the Government directly, defendants as thirdparty plaintiffs are barred from maintaining an action against the Government for contribution or indemnification.
The third-party claims of William H. Evans, James A. Evans, Jr., Elliott Layfield, d/b/a Jebco Services, and Reginald Whyte will be remanded to the district court with directions to dismiss. The claims of Lois and Irwin Silverlight and Brendan Conroy will be remanded for consideration in light of this opinion.
Reversed in part and remanded for further proceedings in light of this opinion.
Notes
These doubts were based primarily on the Attorney General's interpretation of Smith v. Government of Virgin Islands,
(Comments by Peter O'Dea, Office of the Attorney General, after reading of Bill No. 5117.)
"* * * Senator Maduro and members of the Legislature, this bill was prepared by the Office of the Attorney General some time before Judge Christian entered a decision in a case, about two months ago, where he held specifically that the practice of the Legislature in passing special bills allowing individuals named therein to bring actions against the Government of the Virgin Islands in cases involving torts, were no longer, in his opinion, valid. The case that he ruled on, however, he made an exception so that that particular case can go forward, and he would not apply his ruling to that case. Now, even before he entered this decision, about two months ago, as I said, our office had started working on such a bill, because in an earlier case cited some two years ago by the Third Circuit [sic]. The Third Circuit also hinted at the fact they do not think that this type of special legislation was valid. However, as I said, the Third Circuit only hinted at the point. Judge Christian nailed it down without any hesitation. So that we are now faced with a situation that all that-in the future the court will strike down special bills. And for that reason basically this bill has been prepared. The bill itself is patterned after the Federal Tort Claims Law."
(Cited in Appellees' brief, pp. 7-8.)
Judge Christian made the Thomas decision prospective only:
"To require these plaintiffs, who relying on the customary practice, obtained the consent of the Legislature to now wait upon the enactment of a valid general consent statute would be to cause them unnecessary hardship." [Emphasis added.]
F.Supp. at 965
Judge Christian was powerless to cure the problems of unequal treatment by special laws except by forbidding any such acts; he could not effectuate a general waiver. Only the legislature could, and in response to his apparent entreatment, they did.
We leave to the district court to determine whether an application or petition for a private bill within ninety days, even though denied, should be considered as a substitute for a notice of intent to file suit within the terms of the Tort Claims statute
