ORDER
Geraldine Torre worked as a clerk for the J.C. Penney Co. until she was fired in late 1991. She claims that Penney fired her in retaliation for her filing of a worker’s compensation claim in 1990, and that Liberty Mutual, Penney’s worker’s compensation insurаnce carrier, handled her claim in various ways forbidden by the state compensation statutes. Her husband, Paul Torre, claims that he suffered a loss of his wife’s consortium as a result of these events.
The Torres filed suit in the Nevada stаte court in October 1994, and, as all parties are diverse, the defendants removed the case to this court. The complaint contains three claims for relief, all sounding in tort: one against Penney for discharge in violatiоn of “public policy”; one against Liberty Mutual for bad faith handling of the worker’s compensation claim; and one against both defendants for loss of consortium. Penney has moved for summary judgment (Doc. # 15), the Torres have opрosed (Doe. #23), and Penney has replied. (Doc. #25.) Liberty Mutual, too, has moved for summary judgment (Doe. # 17), the Torres have opposed (Doc. # 24), and Liberty Mutual has replied. (Doc. # 26.)
I. Discharge in violation of “public policy”
Employment in Nevada is presumptively “at will,” but there arе certain considerations which may not form the basis for a decision to fire an at will employee. One of these is the employee’s filing of a worker’s compensation claim, and an employee fired in retaliation for filing a such a claim may bring an action in tort for discharge in violation of “public policy.”
Hansen v. Harrak’s,
Under state law, however, there is a two-year limitation period on such a claim,
Palmer v. State,
II. “Bad faith” handling of Torre’s worker’s compensation claim
Penney is self-insured under the state’s industrial insurance system, and Liberty Mutual is its third-party administrator. The state legislature recently made significаnt changes to the state’s worker’s compensation laws. One of those changes is embodied in N.R.S. § 616D.030, which took effect on July 1, 1995. It provides that “[n]o cause of action may be brought or maintained against an insurer or a third-party administrator who violates any provision of [Nevada’s industrial insurance statutes],” and that the administrative fines provided for in the statutes shall be the “exclusive remedies” for any such violation.
The statute thus bars the tort claim against Liberty Mutuаl. Torre argues that the statute does not apply here, because it is not, by its terms, retroactive, and she filed suit before it was enacted. That is incorrect.
A. What law governs
1. The view that federal courts apply new state law to pending cases, whether or not the state itself would give retroactive effect to the new state law
Some decisions suggest that a federal court, sitting in diversity, must apply a new state statute as it exists at the time of the suit — i.e., must always аpply a new state statute to cases pending in the federal court — without regard to whether the highest state court would itself apply the statute to pending cases. That view was suggested by the Court’s decision in
Vandenbark v. Owens-Illinois Glass Co.,
2. The view that federal courts in diversity follow state law in deciding whether to apply a new state rule to pending cases
The better view, however, is that a federal court sitting in a pending diversity case, and faced with a new state rule of law, which has arisen while the case is pending, should apply the new rule tо the pending case only if the state courts would do so. As the Fifth Circuit has explained, the question is
how Vandenbark is to be understood when the intervening change of state law would not have been applied retroactively by the state courts themselves. There are two schools of thought on this issue. The ‘hard and fast’ rule ... uses the new state rule regardless of its non-retroactive application in the state courts. It is based on the proposition that ‘the Vandenbark decisiоn does not on its face seem to contemplate an independent determination of whether the state will apply a change in its rules of decision retroactively in ascertaining the law of a state.’ Critics of the ‘hard and fast’ rule point out that this interpretationundercuts Vandenbark’s own reliance on the Rules of Decision Act. If a federal court really is required to use a state’s rules of decision, it should also use the state’s rules as to whether a new doctrine is to be retroactively of prospectively applied. Moreover, the ‘hard and fast’ rule seems inconsistent with general Erie principles since it creates a divergence between the substantive law applied by state courts and that applied by federal courts sitting in diversity.
Royal Bank of Canada v. Trentham Corp.,
This may explain then-Circuit Judge Kennedy’s statement in
Plyler v. Wheaton Van Lines,
Commentators take the same view:
[i]f during the pendency of a ease in the federal courts state law changes ... the federal courts must take this intо account and reverse or revise their determination of state law accordingly. When, however, a state court announces that a change in state law is to have prospective effect only, the logic of Erie and Vandenbark seems to dictate that a federal court abide by that determination of state policy and decide a pending case according to the rule of law formerly in effect.
19 Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper,
Federal Practice & Procedure
§ 4507, at 106-07 (1982) (footnotes omitted).
See also
1A Pt. 2 James Wm. Moore & Brett A. Ringle,
Moore’s Federal Practice
¶ 0.307[3], at 3074 (2d ed. 1995) (“a change in state law during the pendency of the district court trial requires recognition by the district court of the change”). Most important, of course, is that this was how Justice Harlan thought the problem ought to be resolved.
See United States v. Estate of Donnelly,
B. Whether the Nevada Supreme Court would apply N.R.S. § 616D.030 to pending cases
Section 616D.030, to reiterate, was enacted while this case was pending. The ‘hard and fast’ rule suggested in Nelson would require us, as noted above, simply to apply the new statute to this case, without asking whether the Nevada courts would do so. The result is the sаme, however, if we do ask what a Nevada court would do in this case, because it seems clear that the Nevada courts themselves would apply the statute to pending cases.
Torre argues that the statute is not retroactive because, as a general matter, statutes are presumptively prospective only,
see McKellar v. McKellar,
It is true, as Torre points out, that, generally speаking, statutes apply only prospectively. But that presumption holds only when the statute goes to substance — to vested rights or to penalties. It does not hold when the new statute affects only remedies.
Truckee River Gen. Elec. Co. v. Durham,
Nevada’s approach thus mirrors the general apрroach. In general, the presumption against application of a new statute to pending cases does not apply to statutes affecting remedies or procedure.
See In re Arrowhead Estates Dev. Co (Arrowhead Estates Dev. Co. v. United States
Trustee),
The federal cases make clear that a statute of the sort at issue here would be applied to pending cases. The rule was stated best in
Bruner v. United States,
III. Loss of consortium
Paul Torre-s loss of consortium is de_ rivatiye of Mg claims.
See Leslie
v.
J.A. Tiberti Constr. Co.,
99 Nev.
494,
IV. Summary
Geraldine Torre’s clаim against Penney is barred by the statute of limitations. Her claim against Liberty Mutual is barred by N.R.S. § 616D.030, which we believe would clearly be applied by Nevada courts to pending suits. Because her claims fail, so does Paul Torre’s claim for loss of consortium.
IT IS THEREFORE HEREBY ORDERED that J.C. Penney Co.’s motion (Doc. # 15) for summary judgment is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.’s motion (Doc. # 17) for summary judgment is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the clerk shall enter judgment accordingly.
