Lead Opinion
The opinion entered in this cause on November 1, 1995, has been withdrawn, and the following opinion has been entered in its place.
We render this opinion not only to decide the case before us, but also to resolve an intra-circuit conflict on an important and recurring issue implicating removal from and remand to state court. For the reasons set forth below, we hold that a covered employee’s claims and the claims of those asserting rights through the employee against the employer’s workers’ compensation insurance carrier for breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing are not immunized against removal to federal court by the provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 1445(c). We conclude that such a claim is not a civil action “arising under” the state workers’ compensation law; rather, such a claim — basically an insurance malpractice tort — is separate from and independent of a claim for statutory workers’ compensation benefits, regardless of the fact that such a tort claim is “related to” a compensation benefits claim and to the workers’ compensation insurance coverage of the claimant’s employer.
I
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Plaintiff-Appellant Jimmy Charles Patín, Sr. sustained a work-related injury on October 2, 1990, while employed by Defendant Allied-Signal, Inc. (Allied). He continued to work for Allied without loss of time or compensation until he was discharged on November 2, 1990. As Allied’s workers’ compensation insurance earner, Defendant-Appellee Travelers Indemnity Company of Rhode Island (Travelers) paid medical bills for Patin’s treatment but never initiated payment of weekly workers’ compensation benefits because (1) Patín had lost no time as a result of his work-related injury, and (2) he had a preexisting physical limitation in his shoulder.
On March 21, 1991, Patín filed a workers’ compensation claim with the Texas Industrial Accidents Board (LAB), which awarded Patín $42,091.02 in connection with the October 1990 accident. Both parties to that administrative proceeding appealed in a suit de novo filed in state district court. At the completion of the jury trial that ensued, Patin’s award was increased to $75,021.88 for permanent partial disability; his claim for total temporary disability was rejected.
In another action, Patín sued Allied in federal court for age discrimination and wrongful discharge, claiming that Allied had retaliated against him for filing the workers’ compensation claim for the October 1990 accident. In that case, a federal jury rendered a verdict in favor of Allied, producing a take-nothing judgment adverse to Patín.
Yet a third lawsuit implicating Patin’s October 1990 accident — the suit from which this appeal arises — was filed by Patín and his wife, Margaret (collectively, the Patins), on July 23, 1993, in the 128th Judicial District Court, Orange County, Texas. It included, among others, a claim against Travelers for
In February 1994, Travelers filed a motion for summary judgment, insisting that the Patins’ claims were barred by both the statute of limitations and the doctrine of res judicata. In August 1994, subsequent to a full merits hearing on that motion, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of Travelers. The following month the Patins timely filed a motion for reconsideration, but it too was denied by the district court.
The Patins timely filed their notice of appeal from the district court’s denial of that post-judgment motion. On appeal the Patins insist that 28 U.S.C. § 1445(c) mandates remand to state court because their claims against Travelers arise under the TWCA.
II
ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
We review the district court’s grant of a motion for summary judgment de novo, applying the same standard as the district court applied.
B. Remand to State Coiirt
1. Jurisdictional Amount and De Facto Citizenship
In the district court the Patins, citizens of Louisiana, contended that subject matter jurisdiction was wanting in federal district court for the following reasons: (1) the summary judgment evidence was insufficient to demonstrate that the amount in controversy was equal to or exceeded $50,000, and (2) Travelers was a de facto citizen of Texas by virtue of the way it does business there.
Before us, the Patins rely solely on § 1445(c) as justification for remand. They contend that all of their claims against Travelers “aris[e] under Workmen’s Compensation laws” of Texas; as such, the removal of this case from state court was void, and the case therefore must be remanded to state court. In response, Travelers offers two theories on which it urges us to affirm the district court’s denial of remand and retention of jurisdiction: (1) The Patins have waived their right to insist on remand; and (2) the Patins’ common law claim that Travelers breached the duty of good faith and fair dealing, their Texas Insurance Code claim, and their claim of civil conspiracy, were all “separate and independent claims” from the claims for statutory workers’ compensation benefits that they advanced in their IAB/ state court litigation, confirming that the Pa-tins’ action cannot come within the purview of the non-removability provisions of § 1445(c). We address Travelers’ two theories in sequence.
a. Waiver
If Travelers is correct that the Pa-tins have waived their right to claim improper removal, our remand inquiry is at an end, and we need not consider non-removability under § 1445(c). Travelers insists that the Patins neither cited nor relied on § 1445(c) in their Motion to Remand or in their argument to the district court at the hearing on that motion. Rather, states Travelers, remand based on § 1445(c) was raised for the first time in the Patins’ motion for a new trial (reconsideration), thereby failing to comply with the requirement of § 1447(c) that “[a] motion to remand the case on the basis of any defect in removal procedure must be made within 30 days after the filing of the notice of removal under section 1446(a).”
If a plaintiff initially could have filed his action in federal court, yet chose to file in state court, even if a statutory provision prohibits the defendant from removing the action and the defendant removes despite a statutory proscription against such removal, the plaintiff must object to the improper removal within thirty days after the removal, or he waives his objection.8
Although Travelers correctly recites the applicable law when it asserts that the Pa-tins’ removal complaint is procedural in nature and thus waivable, the facts eschew waiver. True, § 1445(c) was neither quoted nor cited by section number in the Patins’ removal motion or in their argument to the district court at the hearing on that motion. Nevertheless, the substantive concept embodied in § 1445(c) — non-removability of claims arising under state workmen’s compensation laws — was adverted to in the motion and was discussed, however briefly, in the hearing. Moreover, in contesting removal Travelers apparently addressed briefly the issue of non-removability and referred to § 1445(c) by number, thereby eliminating any question whether that ground for remand was before the district court. Thus, we reject Travelers’ contention that the Pa-tins waived their right to insist on remand to state court.
b. “Arising Under” the Texas Workers’ Compensation Act
The intra-circuit conflict alluded to in the introductory portion of this opinion was created by diametrically opposed jurisprudential answers to the question whether an employee’s claim against his employer’s workers’ compensation insurance carrier for the breach of its duty of good faith and fair dealing “arises under” the workers’ compen
We begin by reiterating a basic rule of this circuit that the “arising under” standard expressed in § 1445(c) should be interpreted broadly and in a manner consistent with our interpretation of that standard under § 1331, which governs federal question jurisdiction.
Travelers distinguishes the situation in Jones v. Roadtvay Express, Inc.
Historically, workers injured in Texas could not recover more than the statutory remedies contained in the compensation statute.
Even if we were inclined to stop at this point, though, our inquiry could not be deemed complete. For, although state law may create the cause of action and define the claim, federal law governs whenever our consideration involves construction of a removal statute.
Walker v. Health Benefit Management Cost Containment, Inc.,
Indeed, as most states have enacted expedient and less expensive administrative procedures for adjudicating claims of injured workers,
Given (1) the cogent analysis of the Texas Supreme Court that claims against insurers “arise under” the common law, not under the
C. Res Judicata
Recall that Patin initiated three lawsuits in the wake of his work-related accident and employment termination by Allied. In addition to the instant suit against Travelers and to the employment discrimination suit against Allied, the Patins also filed a lawsuit in the state district court in Orange County, Texas, arising out of the Patins’ successful (but, in his opinion, undercompensated) claim with the IAB. In the Orange County suit, Patin successfully increased his benefit award against Travelers from $45,091.02 to $75,021.88.
The district court in the instant case concluded that, even though the Patins did not assert the good faith and fair dealing claim against Travelers in their state court suit for compensation benefits, they could have and should have done so. We agree.
In federal court, the preclusive effect of a prior state court judgment is governed by state law.
The Patins dispute neither that rule nor its applicability in federal court; instead, they insist that Patin’s attempt to amend his pleadings in the employment discrimination suit against Allied immunizes the Patins’ claims against Travelers in the instant suit from the doctrine of res judicata. In advancing this theory, the Patins rely on Turner v. Richardson I.S.D.
We find Turner inapposite, affording no support for Patin’s contention. Regardless of Patin’s failed efforts to include the instant good faith and fair dealing claim in his erstwhile discrimination suit against Allied, the Patins clearly made no attempt, either originally or subsequently, to include the breach of good faith and fair dealing claim against Travelers in the state court compensation benefit suit against that insurer; neither is there any showing that the state trial judge
In that state court compensation suit against Travelers, the Patins could have included or added claims for breach of that insurer’s duty of good faith and fair dealing — a cause of action that arose from the same subject matter as did their benefits claims, i.e., Travelers’ failure or refusal to pay compensation to Patín following his work-related October 1990 accident.
Ill
CONCLUSION
The Patins could have brought their claim against Travelers for its alleged breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing by filing suit in federal district court in the first place. It follows, then, that the Patins’ objection that the removal of their state court suit violated § 1445(c) implicates a procedural defect in that removal. As such, their objection was waivable. Nevertheless, the record on appeal demonstrates that the Pa-tins’ timely — if inartfully — placed non-removability under § 1445(c) before the district court in their Motion to Remand and again in their argument at the hearing on that motion. Thus, they did not waive their right to contest removal on grounds of a violation of § 1445(c).
We hold, however, that the breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing by a carrier of workers’ compensation insurance is an independent tort created by — and thus “arising under” — the common law, and is at most “related to” the workers’ compensation laws that create the basic benefit rights of the covered employee and those claiming through him.
As we affirm the rulings of the district court on both removal and res judicata, we affirm that court’s dismissal of the Patins’ claims against Travelers.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Patins’ reconsideration motion was styled as a motion for new trial, pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 59(a), but was correctly analyzed and decided in the district court as a Rule 59(e) motion to reconsider entry of summary judgment.
. "A civil action in any State court arising under the workmen’s compensation laws of such State may not be removed to any district court of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 1445(c) (emphasis added).
. Berry v. Armstrong Rubber Co.,
. Walker v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
. Complete diversity would still exist even if the Patins had successfully argued that Travelers was a citizen of Texas. Under these circumstances, however, removal would have been improper because the Patins brought the action in Texas state court. See 28 U.S.C. § 1441(b).
. 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c).
. Williams v. AC Spark Plugs,
.Williams v. AC Spark Plugs,
. Compare Warner v. Crum & Forster Commercial Ins. Co.,
. Jones v. Roadway Express, Inc.,
. Almanza v. Transcontinental Ins. Co.,
. Id. at 1477 (quoting Jones,
. Id. at 1479.
.
. See also Haines,
. See Aranda v. Insurance Co. of N. Am.,
. Id.
. Aranda,
. Moriel,
. Jones,
. See, e.g., Haines,
.
. Id. at 439 n. 5.
. Id. at 439.
.
. Walker,
. Id. at 1169.
. S.Rep. No. 1830, 85th Cong., 2d Scss. (1958), reprinted in 1958 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3099, 3106.
.This court recently reached the same conclusion in the context of removal and remand of an action instituted by an employee seeking to set aside a compromise settlement agreement (CSA) with the employer's workers’ compensation carrier. See Ehler v. St. Paul Fire and Marine Ins. Co.,
. Kurzweg v. Marple,
. Getty Oil Co. v. Insurance Co. of N. Am.,
.
. Id. at 560.
. Tcx.R.Civ.P. 51(a) permits joinder of "as many claims cither legal or equitable or both as [plaintiff! may have against an opposing party."
. The Patins' contention that their bad faith claim did not ripen until they won their compensation suit in state court is simply wrong, and is not supported by Marino v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Ins. Co.,
. Non-rctroactive amendments to the Texas Workers' Compensation Statute post-dated the accrual of the Patins’ cause of action and thus could not affect the § 1445(c) issue in this case. See Acts 1989, 71st Leg., 2nd C.S., eh. 1, § 10.41 (repealed and codified at Tex.Lab.Code Ann. § 416.001) (providing that certain actions taken by the carrier in reliance on the Commission or the benefit review officer are not actionable for breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing); and § 416.002 (placing a cap on the quantum of damages recoverable from a compensation carrier on a claim for breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing). Even if these amendments had been in effect when the Patins’ cause of action accrued, they would not change our conclusion that a cause of action for breach of that duty "arises under" the common law; these statutory amendments at most "relate to” that common law cause of action, and therefore do not affect the § 1445(c) question.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I concur with the conclusion reached in Part 2(a) of the majority opinion, which rejects Travelers’ contention that the Patins waived their right to insist on remand to state court. However, I am unable to concur with the conclusion reached by the majority in Part 2(b), that claims for breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing do not “arise under” the state workers’ compensation statutes, and thus do not come within the ambit of the nonremovability provision of § 1445(c).
(c)A civil action in any State court arising under the workmen’s compensation Irnos of such State may not be removed to any district court of the United States,
(emphasis added.) The critical error which I believe the majority makes is to read the underlined word “laws” as if it were “statutes”. Section 1445 subparts (a) and (b) both define actions that may not be removed by reference to specific sections in the United States Code. However, in subsection (c) the Congress used the broad generic term “laws”. The majority opinion recognizes that “the ‘arising under’ standard expressed in § 1445(c) should be interpreted broadly and in a manner consistent with our interpretation of that standard under § 1331, which governs federal question jurisdiction;” and cites as precedent Jones v. Roadway Express, Inc.,
(a) that the Texas Workers’ Compensation Act sets forth a compensation scheme that is based on a three-party agreement entered into by the employer, the employee and the compensation carrier;
(b) that the constitutionality of the Workers’ Compensation Act rests on the contractual nature of this agreement;
(c) that the injured employee is a party to the contract and therefore entitled to recover in that capacity;
(d) that the contract between the compensation carrier and the injured employee creates the same type of special relationship that arises under other insurance contracts; and
(e) that there is a duty on the workers’ compensation carrier to deal fairly and in good faith with injured employees in the processing of compensation claims.
Aranda,
Finally, it seems to me that whether or not a compensation carrier did in fact deal fairly and in good faith with the injured employee is a determination which will be inextricably intertwined with the determination of what the injured employee was entitled to in the way of compensation benefits under the Texas Compensation Act. In Aranda, the Texas Supreme Court made this expressly clear by specifying that an injured employee who asserts that a compensation carrier has breached the duty of good faith and fair dealing by refusing to pay or delaying payment of a claim must establish:
(1) the absence of a reasonable basis for denying or delaying payment of the benefits of the policy; and (2) that the carrier knew or should have known that there was not a reasonable basis for denying the claim or delaying payment of the claim.
Aranda,
I would vacate the judgment of the district court and remand the case to the district court with instructions to remand to the state court from whence it was removed.
