JOSEPH C. WILKINSON, JR., Magistrate Judge.
Plaintiff, Charles Anthony Simmons, was employed as a clean-up worker along the Florida Gulf Coast after the BP/Deepwater Horizon explosion and oil spill on April 20, 2010. Record Doc. No. 1 at ¶¶ 4, 10. Plaintiff seeks compensatory damages and related costs for later-manifested physical conditions that he allegedly suffered as a result of exposure to substances released after the oil spill. Record Doc. No. 1 at ¶¶ 10-17. Plaintiff's Notice of Intent to Sue and an attached death certificate indicate that he died on June 12, 2017, almost two years before the instant lawsuit was filed. Record Doc. No. 4-4 at pp. 4-5. Plaintiff's Notice of Intent to Sue was signed by Codell Gayden, purporting to be acting as plaintiff's Authorized Representative, but Gayden is not the named plaintiff and has not appeared in this action. Record Doc. No. 4-4 at pp. 3-4.
Defendants BP Exploration & Production Inc. and BP America Production Company (collectively "BP") filed a motion to dismiss plaintiff's complaint. Record Doc. No. 4. BP argues that plaintiff failed to comply with the prerequisites of the Medical Settlement Agreement because (1) plaintiff is deceased and therefore not a proper party; and (2) the proper documentation required by the BP/Deepwater Horizon Medical Benefits Class Action Settlement Agreement ("the Medical Settlement Agreement"), Record Doc. Nos. 6427-1 at 8218 in MDL No. 10-md-2179, confirming Codell Gayden's legal authority to file a lawsuit and proceed on his behalf has not been provided. Record Doc. No. 4-3 at pp. 1-2, 4-5.
Local Rule 7.5 requires that a memorandum in opposition to a motion must be filed no later than eight (8) days before the noticed submission date. Plaintiff did
Having considered the motion, the complaint, the record and the applicable law, I recommend that BP's motion to dismiss be GRANTED and that plaintiff's complaint be DISMISSED
The court-approved Medical Settlement Agreement is
The Case Management Order ("CMO") governs basic procedural matters at the outset of BELO cases. The CMO permits the parties to move to dismiss an individual BELO complaint without prejudice for failure to satisfy the conditions precedent to filing a lawsuit as required in the Medical Settlement Agreement. Record Doc. No. 3, CMO at ¶ IV(1)(A).
When a Medical Benefits Settlement Class Member is deceased, his or her Authorized Representative "may act on his or her behalf" and "shall be bound by the same terms and conditions" of the Medical Settlement Agreement as the decedent would have been "if he or she were acting on his or her own behalf." Record Doc. No. 6427-1 at § III(A) in 10-md-2179. Under the Medical Settlement Agreement,
The Medical Settlement Agreement enumerates the steps that an Authorized Representative must satisfy as conditions precedent to filing a BELO lawsuit on behalf of a deceased Medical Benefits Settlement Class Member. An Authorized Representative must submit a Notice of Intent to Sue
Plaintiff's purported Authorized Representative Codell Gayden did not comply with the Medical Settlement Agreement's clearly defined prerequisites for filing a BELO lawsuit on behalf of a deceased Medical Benefits Settlement Class Member. In plaintiff's Notice of Intent to Sue, Gayden signed the notice as plaintiff's "Authorized Representative" and identified himself as plaintiff's son. Record Doc. No. 4-4 at pp. 3-4. The death certificate attached to plaintiff's Notice of Intent to Sue indicates that plaintiff was not married and the "informant" is identified as his daughter, Mercedes Gayden.
The requirement to satisfy this condition precedent is not a mere case management tool, but is required by the court-approved Medical Settlement Agreement and is not subject to alteration. Because plaintiff is deceased and his purported Authorized Representative has neglected to submit documentation of his legal authority to act on plaintiff's behalf, plaintiff failed to satisfy the conditions precedent to filing a BELO complaint as required in the Medical Settlement Agreement.
For all the forgoing reasons, it is
A party's failure to file written objections to the proposed findings, conclusions, and recommendation in a magistrate judge's report and recommendation within fourteen (14) days after being served with a copy shall bar that party, except upon grounds of plain error, from attacking on appeal the unobjected-to proposed factual findings and legal conclusions accepted by the district court, provided that the party has been served with notice that such consequences will result from a failure to object.