Filed: Jun. 04, 2007
Latest Update: Feb. 21, 2020
Summary: United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit F I L E D June 4, 2007 IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT Charles R. Fulbruge III Clerk )))))))))))))))))))))))))) No. 05-11329 )))))))))))))))))))))))))) GINA VAUGHN, Individually and as Next Friend to Joshua Vaughn, Brenden Vaughn and Amber Vaughn, Minors; NICHOLAS VAUGHN, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. FEDDERS CORPORATION; FEDDERS NORTH AMERICA INC., Defendants-Appellees. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Nort
Summary: United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit F I L E D June 4, 2007 IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT Charles R. Fulbruge III Clerk )))))))))))))))))))))))))) No. 05-11329 )))))))))))))))))))))))))) GINA VAUGHN, Individually and as Next Friend to Joshua Vaughn, Brenden Vaughn and Amber Vaughn, Minors; NICHOLAS VAUGHN, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. FEDDERS CORPORATION; FEDDERS NORTH AMERICA INC., Defendants-Appellees. Appeal from the United States District Court for the North..
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United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
F I L E D
June 4, 2007
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT Charles R. Fulbruge III
Clerk
))))))))))))))))))))))))))
No. 05-11329
))))))))))))))))))))))))))
GINA VAUGHN, Individually and as Next Friend to Joshua Vaughn,
Brenden Vaughn and Amber Vaughn, Minors; NICHOLAS VAUGHN,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
FEDDERS CORPORATION; FEDDERS NORTH AMERICA INC.,
Defendants-Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Texas
No. 4:04-CV-313-Y
Before DAVIS, DENNIS, and PRADO, Circuit Judges.
Per Curiam:*
Plaintiffs-Appellants Gina Vaughn (“Vaughn”) and Nicholas
Vaughn (collectively, “the Vaughns”) appeal from the district
court’s August 31, 2005 order granting summary judgment to
Defendants-Appellees Fedders Corporation and Fedders North
America, Inc. (collectively, “Fedders”). For the reasons that
*
Pursuant to 5TH CIRCUIT RULE 47.5, the court has determined
that this opinion should not be published and is not precedent
except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH CIRCUIT
RULE 47.5.4.
1
follow, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Vaughn and her husband, Gary Vaughn, purchased a home in
Wautauga, Texas, in July 2002. The home contained a gas-fired
furnace that was manufactured by Defendant Fedders Corporation in
1979 and sold in 1979 or 1980. In January 2003, Vaughn, her
husband, and her daughter were exposed to carbon monoxide fumes,
which resulted in injuries to Vaughn and her daughter and in the
death of her husband. Vaughn claims that the source of the carbon
monoxide fumes was the allegedly faulty furnace manufactured by
Fedders. Several days after the injuries and death occurred,
Vaughn filed a claim with her homeowners’ insurer, Fire Insurance
Exchange (“FIE”), which denied her claim on the basis that her
loss was not covered by the policy.
On June 2, 2003, the Texas legislature passed a bill that
modified Texas Civil Practices & Remedies Code § 16.012.1 Section
16.012 is a statute of repose. It requires that a products-
liability action be brought against a manufacturer or seller of a
product within fifteen years of the date of the sale of the
product by the defendant. While this requirement formerly applied
only to suits against manufacturers and sellers of manufacturing
equipment, the 2003 modifications extended the fifteen-year bar
to suits against all manufacturers or sellers of any product. On
1
Act of June 2, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S., Ch. 204 § 5.01, 2003
Tex. Gen. Laws 847, 859-60.
2
June 11, 2003, the governor of Texas signed the bill into law,
and it went into effect ninety days after the adjournment of the
legislature, or September 1, 2003. See TEX. CONST. art. III, § 39.
The modified § 16.012 applies to actions filed on or after July
1, 2003. See § 16.012, 2003 note.
On April 28, 2004, the Vaughns commenced a personal injury
action against Fedders. In its answer, Fedders argued as an
affirmative defense that § 16.012 barred the Vaughns’ claim
because their suit was filed more than fifteen years after the
date of sale of the furnace by Fedders. The Vaughns filed a
motion for partial summary judgment on Fedders’ affirmative
defense. They contended that the application of § 16.012 to their
claim violated Article I, § 16, of the Texas Constitution, which
provides that no “retroactive law” shall be made.2 The Vaughns
also argued that the application of § 16.012 to their claim
violated the Due Process Clause of the United States
Constitution. Fedders then moved for summary judgment on the
basis of § 16.012.3
The district court granted Fedders’ summary judgment motion
2
Article I, § 16, states: “No bill of attainder, ex post
facto law, retroactive law, or any law impairing the obligation
of contracts, shall be made.”
3
Fedders also filed a third-party action against FIE for
spoliation of evidence, on the basis that FIE had Vaughn’s
furnace destroyed after it was inspected. The district court
dismissed this action in its August 31, 2005 order, and Fedders
has not appealed.
3
in its August 31, 2005 order, concluding that § 16.012 barred the
Vaughns’ claim and rejecting the Vaughns’ argument that this
application of § 16.012 was unconstitutional. The district court
explained that accrued causes of action were not vested rights
and that, while “a reasonable time must be afforded within which
existing causes of action may be commenced,” “Vaughn had over
five months to file her claims before the statute of repose went
into effect,” which constituted a reasonable period of time. The
district court also concluded that § 16.012 did not violate the
Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution because the
rights protected by that clause are defined by state law, and an
accrued cause of action was not a protected right under Texas
law. The Vaughns filed this timely appeal.
II. APPELLATE JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, this court has jurisdiction over the
Vaughns’ appeal from the district court’s August 31, 2005 final
order and judgment, which disposed of all the parties’ claims.
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de
novo. Dallas County Hosp. Dist. v. Assocs. Health & Welfare
Plan,
293 F.3d 282, 285 (5th Cir. 2002). Summary judgment is
proper when the “pleadings, depositions, answers to
interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the
affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any
material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment
as a matter of law.” FED. R. CIV. P. 56(c). A dispute about a
4
material fact is genuine if the evidence is such that a
reasonable fact-finder could return a verdict for the non-moving
party. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
477 U.S. 242, 248
(1986). When deciding whether there is a genuine issue of
material fact, this court must view all evidence in the light
most favorable to the non-moving party. Daniels v. City of
Arlington,
246 F.3d 500, 502 (5th Cir. 2001).
III. DISCUSSION
A. As applied to the Vaughns, § 16.012 violates Article I,
§ 16, of the Texas Constitution
1. A plaintiff with an accrued claim must be afforded a
reasonable time in which to file her claim
There is a long line of Texas cases addressing the
constitutional limits on retroactive laws, mainly new statutes of
limitations. In essence, these cases declare that a newly enacted
statute of limitations may not bar all remedies for an existing
cause of action and must allow a reasonable period for its
prosecution. One of the earliest cases to announce this principle
is DeCordova v. City of Galveston,
4 Tex. 470 (1849). In
interpreting Article I, § 16, of the Texas Constitution,
DeCordova stated:
Laws are deemed retrospective and within the
constitutional prohibition which by retrospective
operation destroy or impair vested rights or rights to “do
certain actions or possess certain things, according to
the laws of the land,” (3 Dall. 349,) but laws which
affect the remedy merely are not within the scope of the
inhibition unless the remedy be taken away altogether or
incumbered with conditions that would render it useless or
impracticable to pursue it. (Bronson v. McKinzie,
1 How.
5
R. 315.) Or, if the provisions regulating the remedy be so
unreasonable as to amount to a denial of right, as, for
instance, if a statute of limitations applied to existing
causes barred all remedy or did not afford a reasonable
period for their prosecution, or if an attempt were made
by law, either by implication or expressly, to revive
causes of action already barred, such legislation would be
retrospective within the intent of the prohibition, and
would therefore be wholly inoperative.
Id. at 479-80. Subsequently, Mellinger v. Mayor of Houston,
68
Tex. 37, 48 (1887), quoted the above passage and stated, “[w]e
have no doubt that the law is thus correctly stated.” In 1895,
the Supreme Court of Texas declared:
The Legislature may provide a shorter period of limitation
for existing causes of action. It may make a statute of
limitation for causes when none existed before. But it can
not, by so abbreviating the time in which suit must be
brought, take away the right of action altogether. It must
allow a reasonable time after the law goes into effect to
bring suit upon actions which are not then barred.
Wright v. Hardie,
88 Tex. 653, 655 (1895).
This principle has been reaffirmed by more recent decisions
of the Texas courts. Citing Wright, among other cases, the Corpus
Christi Court of Civil Appeals stated that:
Generally, statutes of limitation go to matters of remedy
and not to matters of fundamental rights unless the
limitation period set is so manifestly unjust that it
constitutes a denial of justice or it amounts to a
practical denial of the right itself. The legislature may
without violating constitutional guarantees enact statutes
which limit the time within which actions to enforce
demands may be brought even though there existed no
previous period of limitation; provided that such statute
allows a reasonable time within which to bring suit. The
determination of what constitutes a reasonable time is
reviewable by the courts.
Alvarado v. Gonzales,
552 S.W.2d 539, 542 (Tex. Civ. App.–Corpus
6
Christi 1977, no writ) (internal citations omitted).
In City of Tyler v. Likes,
962 S.W.2d 489, 502 (Tex. 1997),
the Supreme Court of Texas declared:
laws affecting a remedy are not unconstitutionally
retroactive unless the remedy is entirely taken away. See
De Cordova,
4 Tex. 470, 480. . . . The Legislature can
affect a remedy by providing a shorter limitations period
for an accrued cause of action without violating the
retroactivity provision of the Constitution if it affords
a reasonable time or fair opportunity to preserve a
claimant’s rights under the former law, or if the
amendment does not bar all remedy.
Most recently, the Fort Worth Court of Appeals held that:
The legislature can pass legislation affecting a remedy
for an accrued cause of action without violating article
I, section 16 if it affords a reasonable time or fair
opportunity to preserve a claimant’s rights under the
former law. When the legislature shortens an existing
statute of limitations or creates one where none had
existed, it must provide a reasonable time for plaintiffs
to bring suit after the enactment of the new law . . . .
In the Interest of K.N.P.,
179 S.W.3d 717, 720 (Tex. App.–Fort
Worth 2005, pet. denied) (citations omitted).
The majority of the above-cited decisions addressed the
constitutionality of new or amended statutes of limitations. The
exceptions are Wright, which involved the length of time
available for application for a writ of error, and Likes, which
involved the reclassification of the operation of storm sewers as
a government function. None of these cases involves a statute of
repose, but it is not apparent why the same principles should not
apply to a statute of repose. Statutes of limitations and
statutes of repose have similar purposes and similar effects.
7
Just like a statute of limitations, § 16.012 cuts off the right
to sue after a certain length of time, only the time runs from
the sale of the manufactured product, rather than from the time
of injury.
Based on the above-cited decisions, therefore, we can
conclude that when Texas passes a new statute of repose, it may
not entirely deprive a party with an accrued cause of action of
the right to sue, and must afford that party a reasonable time in
which to bring suit. This circuit adopted this view in a recent
case very similar to the present one, Burlington Northern & Santa
Fe Railway Co. v. Skinner Tank Co.,
419 F.3d 355 (5th Cir. 2005),
which also addresses the retroactive effect of § 16.012. Citing
Likes, this court held that “[t]he Texas legislature can restrict
the time for filing a claim without violating the retroactivity
provision of the Texas constitution so long as ‘it affords a
reasonable time or fair opportunity to preserve a claimant’s
rights under the former law, or if the amendment does not bar all
remedy.’”
Id. at 359-60. The court then applied this “reasonable
time” analysis to § 16.012’s effect on the plaintiff’s claim, and
concluded that a reasonable time had been afforded.
2. The Vaughns were not afforded a reasonable time to file
We agree with the Vaughns that, contrary to the mandate of
DeCordova, Wright, Likes, et al., they were not allowed a
reasonable time in which to file their accrued personal injury
claim before § 16.012 took effect.
8
We measure the length of time that the Vaughns were afforded
to file suit from the date at which the new statute became law,
which is the date at which persons may be charged with
constructive notice of its provisions. The date at which § 16.012
became law is ninety days after the adjournment of the Texas
legislature, or September 1, 2003. See TEX. CONST. art. III, § 39.
There are numerous cases that support this proposition that
the “reasonable time” runs from the date that the new statute
becomes law, rather than from some earlier date. Popham v.
Patterson,
51 S.W.2d 680, 683 (Tex. 1932), states that “[n]o Act
of the Legislature is operative as notice until it becomes a law,
but it is so operative as soon as it does become law.” Popham
further noted that the act in question became a law “ninety days
after the adjournment of the legislature.”
Id. In Wright, the
Texas Supreme Court stated that the Texas legislature “must allow
a reasonable time after the law goes into effect to bring suit”
and held that the “amended act . . . did not take effect until
the expiration of ninety days from the day on which the
Legislature
adjourned.” 88 Tex. at 655 (emphasis added).
The Dallas Court of Civil Appeals noted that “[s]ome states
have adopted the rule that the reasonable time which the statute
must allow dates from the passage of the act and not from the
effective date;” however, the court concluded that “the sounder
rule--that announced by Justice Gaines in Wright v. Hardie”--is
“that the reasonable time allowed by the statute must run from
9
the effective date of the act.” Highland Park Indep. Sch. Dist.
v. Loring,
323 S.W.2d 469, 471 (Tex. Civ. App.–Dallas 1959, no
writ). In Alvarado, the Corpus Christi Court of Civil Appeals
used the effective date to measure the reasonable
time, 552
S.W.2d at 540, 542, and recently, in In the Interest of K.N.P.,
the Fort Worth Court of Appeals also used the effective
date. 179
S.W.3d at 721.
We acknowledge that there are cases that use a different
measuring stick. In Likes, without addressing its precedent that
used the effective date, the Texas Supreme Court measured whether
a “reasonable time” had been allowed for the filing of an accrued
claim from the date of the statute’s
enactment. 962 S.W.2d at
502. In Burlington Northern, however, this court measured the
“reasonable time” under Texas law from “the September 1, 2003
effective date of the amendment to §
16.012.” 419 F.3d at 360. We
therefore follow that approach here.
Section 16.012 operates on claims filed on or after July 1,
2003, but did not become law until September 1, 2003. Thus we may
charge the Vaughns with constructive notice of § 16.012 on
September 1, 2003, but by that time their suit had already been
barred.4 It is therefore evident that § 16.012 allowed the
Vaughns no time at all within which to file suit, and the
4
In contrast, the plaintiff in Burlington Northern had “at
least one month and 28 days following the September 1, 2003
effective date of the amendment to § 16.012” in which to file
suit before the fifteen-year period permitted by § 16.012
expired, barring its
claim. 419 F.3d at 360.
10
requirement stated in DeCordova, Wright, Likes, and Burlington
Northern that they be afforded a reasonable time within which to
file their accrued claim was clearly violated.5
3. Fedders’ arguments
Fedders points to a number of Texas cases in which the
constitutionality of statutes of repose has been upheld.
Specifically, Fedders cites Texas Gas Exploration Corp. v. Fluor
Corp.,
828 S.W.2d 28 (Tex App.-Texarkana 1991, writ denied),
Sowders v. M.W. Kellogg Co.,
663 S.W.2d 644 (Tex. App.–Houston
[1st Dist.] 1983, writ ref’d n.r.e.), and Ellerbe v. Otis
Elevator Co.,
618 S.W.2d 870, 873 (Tex. App.–Houston [1st Dist.]
1981, writ ref’d n.r.e.).6 These cases, however, are
distinguishable from the case at hand. First, in none of these
decisions did the Texas court analyze the effect of the statute
of repose under Article I, § 16’s prohibition on retroactive
5
We would reach the same result if we were to measure the
time from the date of enactment instead of the effective date.
Using the enactment date, the Vaughns would only have had 19 days
in which to file their suit. This is not a reasonable time. See
Alvarado, 552 S.W.2d at 542-43 (where retroactive application of
the limitations statute allowed the appellant only 21 days in
which to file suit, such application “would not give the
appellant a fair opportunity to file suit”).
6
Ellerbe and Sowders addressed challenges to Texas Revised
Civil Statutes article 5536a, a statute of repose barring suits
against engineers or architects for damages arising out of the
defective or unsafe condition of real property or any attached
equipment or improvement ten years after its substantial
completion.
See 618 S.W.2d at 871; 663 S.W.2d at 646. Texas Gas
addressed a challenge to Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code
§§ 16.008 and 16.009, the successors to Article
5536a. 828 S.W.2d
at 30.
11
laws. Instead, these decisions examined whether the statutes of
repose violated the open courts provision of the Texas
Constitution.7 Second, in each of these cases the statute of
repose had cut off the plaintiff’s right to sue before the injury
occurred, and therefore before the plaintiff’s claim accrued. It
follows that these cases have little relevance to our analysis of
the Vaughns’ claim.
Fedders also argues, relying on Ellerbe, Texas Gas, and
several additional cases, that Article I, § 16, protects only
vested rights and that the Vaughns do not have a vested right in
their accrued claim. We conclude, however, that we are not
required to wade into Texas’s difficult vested rights
jurisprudence to decide this appeal. Because the decisions
setting forth the “reasonable time” requirement did not employ a
7
This provision states, “[a]ll courts shall be open, and
every person for an injury done him, in his lands, goods, person
or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law.” TEX.
CONST. art. I, § 13.
In Texas Gas, the plaintiff cited Article I, § 16, as well,
see 828 S.W.2d at 31, but it does not appear that the plaintiff
was relying on that section’s prohibition on retroactive laws. If
the plaintiff did make an argument based on that prohibition, the
court did not address it. Rather, in rejecting the plaintiff’s
claim, the court stated that “[t]he retroactive application of
Sections 16.008 and 16.009 does not violate the right of access
to court of the constitution or the constitutional prohibition
against ex post facto laws.”
Id. It is possible that the court
simply confused Article I, § 16’s prohibition on ex post facto
laws with its prohibition on retroactive laws, but clearly the
two are not the same.
12
vested rights analysis, we need not determine whether the Vaughns
had a vested right in their accrued claim. Rather, we may simply
rely on decisions, such as DeCordova, Wright, and Likes, which
hold that where a claim has accrued, a reasonable time must be
afforded for filing suit. For the same reason, we need not
address the caselaw, also cited by Fedders, indicating that where
a statute infringes on a vested right, the statute is not
unconstitutionally retroactive if it is a valid exercise of the
Texas legislature’s police power.
Because we conclude that § 16.012 did not afford the Vaughns
a reasonable time in which to file suit, in violation of Article
I, § 16, of the Texas Constitution, we hold that the district
court erred by granting Fedders’ summary judgment motion.
B. The Vaughns’ argument under the Due Process Clause
Because we hold that the application of § 16.012 to the
Vaughns’ claim violated the Texas Constitution, we need not reach
the question of whether this application also violated the United
States Constitution.
IV. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED, and the case
REMANDED for further proceedings not inconsistent with this
opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
13