Ex parte TruckMax, Inc., and Babco Engineering, LLC. PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS: CIVIL ( 2023 )


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  • Rel: February 17, 2023
    Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern
    Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts,
    300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other
    errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is printed in Southern Reporter.
    SUPREME COURT OF ALABAMA
    OCTOBER TERM, 2022-2023
    _________________________
    SC-2022-0957
    _________________________
    Ex parte TruckMax, Inc., and Babco Engineering, LLC
    PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS
    (In re: Latosha Caster-Harris and Ella Thomas-Harris
    v.
    TruckMax, Inc., et al.)
    (Jefferson Circuit Court, CV-21-900024)
    SELLERS, Justice.
    SC-2022-0957
    TruckMax, Inc., and its wholly owned subsidiary, Babco
    Engineering, LLC (collectively referred to as "TruckMax"), petitioned this
    Court for a writ of mandamus directing the Jefferson Circuit Court ("the
    trial court") to allow TruckMax to amend its answer in this workers'
    compensation/wrongful-death action so that TruckMax may assert as a
    defense that one of the plaintiffs, Latosha Caster-Harris, who is the wife
    of the decedent involved in this case, lacks the capacity to pursue claims
    against TruckMax. The parties agree that TruckMax's lack-of-capacity
    defense is an affirmative defense that will be waived if not pleaded. See
    Ex parte Tyson Foods, Inc., 
    146 So. 3d 1041
    , 1044 (Ala. 2013)
    ("[S]urviving dependents of a deceased employee have the capacity to
    bring an action and … a defendant waives the challenge to capacity by
    not raising it."). Because we conclude that TruckMax has not established
    that the trial court's ruling denying its motion for leave to amend its
    answer should be reviewed pursuant to a mandamus petition, we deny
    the petition.
    In October 2020, Joseph Harris was killed when he was struck by a
    litter truck while cleaning up trash on Interstate 22. The truck was being
    driven by Nekoile Bolton, who was an employee of Sweeping Corporation
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    SC-2022-0957
    of America ("SCA").    At the time of the accident, Joseph had been
    assigned to SCA by a temporary-employment agency called StaffZone to
    provide trash-collection services for SCA. SCA owned the truck that
    Bolton was driving. TruckMax has been accused of improperly designing
    and manufacturing the truck. TruckMax, however, claims that it acted
    only as the dealer that sold the truck to SCA and that the truck was
    designed and manufactured by an entity that is not a party to this action.
    That issue has not been resolved.
    On January 5, 2021, Joseph's wife Latosha sued TruckMax,
    StaffZone, SCA, Bolton, and Bolton's supervisor, Shellie Waites. Joseph's
    mother Ella Thomas-Harris was also named as a plaintiff in the action.
    The plaintiffs alleged a workers' compensation claim against StaffZone,
    Joseph's employer; negligence, wantonness, and wrongful-death claims
    against SCA and its employees Bolton and Waites; and negligence,
    wantonness, and wrongful-death claims and a claim under the Alabama
    Extended Manufacturer's Liability Doctrine against TruckMax.            It
    appears that all the defendants except TruckMax eventually settled with
    the plaintiffs and were dismissed from the action.
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    SC-2022-0957
    In March 2021, TruckMax filed a motion to dismiss the claims
    against it pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), Ala. R. Civ. P., but it did not
    challenge either plaintiff's capacity to sue. In September 2021, the trial
    court denied the motion to dismiss and gave TruckMax seven days to file
    an answer to the complaint. TruckMax timely answered but did not
    assert that either plaintiff lacked the capacity to sue. A little less than a
    year later, on August 15, 2022, TruckMax filed a motion for leave to
    amend its answer to assert that Latosha lacked the capacity to pursue
    her claims against TruckMax. 1
    In support of its motion for leave to amend, TruckMax asserted that
    Latosha had recently given deposition testimony indicating that she is
    not Joseph's dependent under the Alabama Workers' Compensation Act
    ("the Act"), § 25-5-1 et seq., Ala. Code 1975. TruckMax claimed that
    Latosha's testimony conflicted with allegations in the complaint and with
    1TruckMax's    petition for a writ of mandamus does not request any
    relief with respect to the claims asserted by Joseph's mother. Rather, the
    petition concentrates on evidence of Latosha's alleged lack of capacity to
    pursue the action and states that TruckMax is "seeking to add a single
    affirmative defense based on newly-discovered evidence that Latosha
    lacked capacity to sue." Petition at 2.
    4
    SC-2022-0957
    Latosha's previous responses to interrogatories indicating that Latosha
    is Joseph's dependent.
    According to TruckMax, if Latosha is not Joseph's dependent under
    the Act, then she does not have the capacity to pursue claims against
    TruckMax. See § 25-5-11(a), Ala. Code 1975 (providing that, if a death
    that is compensable under the Act is "caused under circumstances also
    creating a legal liability for damages on the part of any party other than
    the employer," the deceased employee's "dependents" may, in addition to
    seeking compensation under the Act, "bring an action against the other
    party to recover damages for the … death"); Alabama Power Co. v. White,
    
    377 So. 2d 930
    , 932 (Ala. 1979) (construing § 25-5-11(a) and concluding
    that, if an employee's death is caused by a workplace accident covered by
    the Act, then § 25-5-11(a) gives the employee's dependents capacity to
    seek compensation from the employer and from any culpable third party).
    TruckMax also points to § 25-5-61(1), Ala. Code 1975, which provides
    that, although a wife typically is conclusively presumed to be her
    husband's   dependent    for   workers'   compensation   purposes, that
    presumption fails if it is shown that 1) "she was voluntarily living apart
    from her husband at the time of his injury or death" or 2) "the husband
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    SC-2022-0957
    was not in any way contributing to her support and had not in any way
    contributed to her support for more than 12 months next preceding the
    occurrence of the injury causing his death." Latosha testified during her
    deposition that she and Joseph had voluntarily lived apart for the 10
    years preceding the accident, even though her interrogatory responses,
    which were submitted months earlier, indicated that Joseph and Latosha
    had lived together.
    Twelve days after Latosha's deposition, TruckMax moved to amend
    its answer, pointing out that it had only recently learned that Latosha
    allegedly was not Joseph's dependent and therefore lacks the capacity to
    sue.    The trial court denied TruckMax's motion, concluding that
    TruckMax's effort to amend its answer was untimely. The trial court also
    questioned the merits of TruckMax's proposed lack-of-capacity defense.
    This mandamus petition followed.
    Pursuant to Rule 15(a), Ala. R. Civ. P., "a party may amend a
    pleading without leave of court, but subject to disallowance on the court's
    own motion or a motion to strike of an adverse party, at any time more
    than forty-two (42) days before the first setting of the case for trial." The
    first trial date set in this action was September 19, 2022. TruckMax
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    SC-2022-0957
    sought to amend its answer on August 15, 2022, 12 days after Latosha's
    deposition, but 35 days before the first trial date.     Thus, TruckMax
    missed the deadline to amend without leave by eight days.
    When a party seeks to amend a pleading after the expiration of the
    deadline to amend without leave, the party "may amend … only by leave
    of court, and leave shall be given only upon a showing of good cause."
    Rule 15(a). This Court has construed this portion of Rule 15(a) as follows:
    "[I]n light of the overarching liberal policy of allowing
    amendments under Rule 15, the appropriate way to view the
    request for leave to amend, if a party demonstrates 'good
    cause,' is as though the request had been brought more than
    42 days before trial, when the trial court does not have
    'unbridled discretion' to deny the leave to amend, but can do
    so only upon the basis of a 'valid ground' as stated above."
    Ex parte Liberty Nat'l Life Ins. Co., 
    858 So. 2d 950
    , 954 (Ala. 2003)
    (quoting Ex parte Bailey, 
    814 So. 2d 867
    , 869 (Ala. 2001)). If "good cause"
    is demonstrated, valid grounds nevertheless exist for refusing to allow an
    amendment when there is actual prejudice or undue delay. 
    Id. at 953
    .
    Trial courts have discretion in determining whether to allow a party
    to amend a pleading under Rule 15(a). Burkett v. American Gen. Fin.,
    Inc., 
    607 So. 2d 138
    , 141 (Ala. 1992). This Court, however, declines to
    decide whether the trial court in this case exceeded its discretion in
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    SC-2022-0957
    denying TruckMax's motion for leave to amend because TruckMax has
    not demonstrated that the filing of a mandamus petition is a proper
    method of seeking appellate review in this case.
    " 'The standard governing our review of an
    issue presented in a petition for the writ of
    mandamus is well established:
    " ' "[M]andamus is a drastic and
    extraordinary writ to be issued only
    where there is (1) a clear legal right in
    the petitioner to the order sought; (2)
    an imperative duty upon the
    respondent to perform, accompanied by
    a refusal to do so; (3) the lack of another
    adequate remedy; and (4) properly
    invoked jurisdiction of the court." '
    "Ex parte Cupps, 
    782 So. 2d 772
    , 774-75 (Ala. 2000) (quoting
    Ex parte Edgar, 
    543 So. 2d 682
    , 684 (Ala. 1989))."
    Ex parte Webber, 
    157 So. 3d 887
    , 891 (Ala. 2014) (emphasis added).
    TruckMax points to Ex parte Liberty National Life Insurance Co.,
    supra, in support of the assertion in its mandamus petition that "[a] party
    lacks another adequate remedy where, as here, a trial court denies a
    motion for leave to amend to assert an affirmative defense to which it is
    entitled." Petition at 11. In Liberty National, this Court did indeed issue
    a writ of mandamus directing a trial court to allow the defendant to
    amend its answer to plead a previously omitted affirmative defense. The
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    SC-2022-0957
    Court, however, did not explain why a petition for a writ of mandamus,
    and not an appeal, was appropriate. More recently, in Ex parte Gulf
    Health Hospitals, Inc., 
    321 So. 3d 629
     (Ala. 2020), a defendant sought
    mandamus relief after the trial court in that case had allowed the
    plaintiff to amend his complaint to allege additional facts in support of a
    medical-malpractice/wrongful-death action.       This Court denied the
    mandamus petition, concluding that the defendant had failed to establish
    that an appeal would not be an adequate means of reviewing a trial
    court's alleged error with respect to allowing a party to amend a pleading.
    In doing so, the Court stated as follows regarding the lack-of-another-
    adequate-remedy element necessary for mandamus review:
    "Parties often try to satisfy this element by citing caselaw in
    which this Court has determined that the issue being raised
    by the party is recognized for interlocutory appellate review.
    Although that may be sufficient in those cases in which it is
    well established that the issue being raised is appropriate for
    mandamus review (e.g., immunity), it is not sufficient here,
    where [the defendant] is challenging the trial court's ruling
    on a motion to amend a complaint. More is needed."
    Gulf Health Hosps., 321 So. 3d at 632.        In its mandamus petition,
    TruckMax simply cites to Liberty National in support of its assertion that
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    SC-2022-0957
    mandamus review is proper in this case. But, as stated in Gulf Health
    Hospitals, "[m]ore is needed." Id.2
    In response to TruckMax's mandamus petition, the plaintiffs rely
    substantially on Gulf Health Hospitals, but TruckMax ignores that case
    in its reply brief. Instead, TruckMax points to Ex parte Yarbrough, 
    788 So. 2d 128
     (Ala. 2000), decided 20 years before Gulf Health Hospitals. In
    Yarbrough, this Court considered the filing of a mandamus petition an
    appropriate method of seeking appellate review of a trial court's refusal
    to allow a defendant to amend his counterclaim and third-party claim
    based on information he had learned during last-minute depositions. The
    Court appears to have based its decision to engage in mandamus review
    on the likelihood that an appeal would have resulted in a holding that
    the trial court had erred and the fact that the remedy would have been
    to order a new trial. But the same could be said about multiple types of
    trial-court error that are not normally subject to mandamus review.
    2By  providing a citation to one case in which this Court engaged in
    mandamus review with respect to a trial court's ruling on a motion for
    leave to amend an answer to raise a previously omitted affirmative
    defense, TruckMax has not demonstrated that it is "well established that
    the issue being raised [in this case] is appropriate for mandamus review."
    Gulf Health Hosps., 321 So. 3d at 632.
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    SC-2022-0957
    Moreover, the Court in Yarbrough made sure to note that, "[i]f the
    remedy by way of appeal is adequate, as is usually the case with rulings
    allowing or disallowing amendments, we will decline to grant the writ."
    
    788 So. 2d at 132
     (emphasis added). See also Gulf Health Hosps., 321 So.
    3d at 633 (" 'It is not to be assumed or understood, however, that
    mandamus will be allowed as a method of reviewing all rulings denying
    the right to amend a complaint or other pleading. In accord with the
    weight of authority and sound reasoning, it may well be that review of
    the great majority of rulings allowing or disallowing amendments will be
    only by appeal.' " (quoting Ex parte Miller, 
    292 Ala. 554
    , 557-58, 
    297 So. 2d 802
    , 805 (1974))). In light of the recent admonishment in Gulf Health
    Hospitals, we are not convinced by the citation to Yarbrough that
    mandamus review is appropriate in the present case.3
    3TruckMax    suggests that the Court in Yarbrough also considered
    mandamus review appropriate in part because the parties opposing the
    defendant's request for leave to amend his counterclaim and third-party
    claim contributed to the delay in the defendant's discovering the
    information underlying his desire to amend his claims. According to
    TruckMax, the plaintiffs in the present case contributed to TruckMax's
    not learning that Latosha might not be Joseph's dependent until shortly
    before the first trial setting. Although the Court in Yarbrough
    acknowledged that the delay was not completely the defendant's fault, it
    did not clearly state that that circumstance was a justification for
    reviewing the trial court's actions pursuant to a mandamus petition.
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    SC-2022-0957
    The Court does acknowledge precedent wherein we have reviewed
    by way of a mandamus petition a trial court's refusal to allow a defendant
    to pursue a particular affirmative defense for reasons other than
    tardiness. For example, the Court in Ex parte Teal, 
    336 So. 3d 165
    , 168
    (Ala. 2021), granted a petition for a writ of mandamus challenging a
    summary judgment in favor of a shooting victim on the defendant's
    affirmative defenses alleging self-defense and statutory immunity to
    liability.   TruckMax, however, does not discuss that precedent or
    otherwise explain why it might establish that mandamus relief is
    appropriate here. Moreover, in Ex parte Tahsin Industrial Corp., U.S.A.,
    
    4 So. 3d 1121
     (Ala. 2008), this Court concluded that mandamus review
    was not available to challenge a trial court's order striking a particular
    affirmative defense because that defense, if successful, would not have
    completely resolved the action against the defendant; it would have only
    reduced the available damages:
    "By asserting that it is not subject to the statutory claim for
    three times the damages allegedly sustained by [the plaintiff]
    plus reasonable attorney fees and court costs under [a
    statutory scheme dealing with sales commissions], [the
    defendant] only partially avoids judgment because its
    defense, if upheld, would not be determinative of the action.
    See Ex parte Employers Mut. Cas. Co., 
    845 So. 2d 773
    , 776
    (Ala. 2002) ('Likewise, governed by the particular concerns of
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    SC-2022-0957
    judicial economy raised by the scenario involved here -- a trial
    court's pretrial decision to strike a potentially determinative
    affirmative defense -- we have previously issued the writ [of
    mandamus] after holding that the trial court's decision was
    erroneous, focusing mainly on the inherent prejudice on the
    petitioner.'). We find no basis for relief by way of mandamus
    stemming from [the defendant's] reliance on authority dealing
    with striking an affirmative defense."
    4 So. 3d at 1123-24. In the present case, although lack of capacity would
    seem to resolve Latosha's claims in favor of TruckMax, it does not appear
    to have a substantial probability of resolving the claims of Joseph's
    mother, which, for all that appears, will still need to be tried. 4
    Mandamus is a drastic and extraordinary writ. Ex parte Webber,
    
    supra.
        It is TruckMax's burden to establish that such relief is
    appropriate here. 
    Id.
     Because it has not met that burden under the
    reasoning of Gulf Health Hospitals, we deny the petition. By doing so,
    however, the Court does not suggest that mandamus relief can never be
    appropriate with respect to a trial court's refusal to allow a defendant to
    amend an answer to raise a previously omitted affirmative defense. For
    4We  note that the parties do not provide significant discussion
    regarding how this action would be affected if only Joseph's mother, and
    not Latosha, were allowed to proceed against TruckMax. For example,
    they do not discuss whether damages, or apportionment thereof, might
    be affected by that circumstance.
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    example, mandamus review might be appropriate if a defendant
    establishes that a disallowed affirmative defense could completely
    resolve the action and an appeal would most likely result in a new trial
    and the waste of judicial resources.
    PETITION DENIED.
    Parker, C.J., and Wise, Bryan, Mendheim, Stewart, and Mitchell,
    JJ., concur.
    Shaw and Cook, JJ., concur in the result.
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