Eduardo Chaverri v. Dole Food Company, Inc. , 546 F. App'x 409 ( 2013 )


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  •       Case: 12-31026          Document: 00512379325              Page: 1      Date Filed: 09/19/2013
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT  United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    September 19, 2013
    No. 12-31026                             Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    EDUARDO ALVARADO CHAVERRI; JAVIER ANTONIO C. MENA; FELIZ
    PEDRO CHEVEZ; VICTOR JULIA LORIA RAMIREZ; OLMA MATARRITA;
    ET AL
    Plaintiffs - Appellants
    v.
    DOLE FOOD COMPANY INCORPORATED; DOLE FRESH FRUIT
    COMPANY; STANDARD FRUIT COMPANY; STANDARD FRUIT &
    STEAMSHIP COMPANY; DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY; OCCIDENTAL
    CHEMICAL CORPORATION, individually & successor to Occidental
    Chemical Company, & Occidental Chemical Agricultural Products,
    Incorporated, Hooker Chemical & Plastics, Occidental Chemical of Texas,
    Best Fertilizer Company; AMVAC CHEMICAL CORPORATION; SHELL OIL
    COMPANY; CHIQUITA BRANDS INTERNATIONAL INCORPORATED;
    CHIQUITA BRANDS INCORPORATED; MARITROP TRADING
    CORPORATION; DEL MONTE FRESH PRODUCE, N.A.,
    Defendants - Appellees
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    TOBIAS BERMUDEZ CHAVEZ; GERARDO ANTONIO FONSECA TORRES;
    FRANKLIN GUILLEN SALAZAR; GARCIA MONTES JOSE GABINO;
    MARIANO DE LOS ANGELESS OBANDO PIZARRO; ET AL,
    Plaintiffs - Appellants
    v.
    DOLE FOOD COMPANY INCORPORATED; DOLE FRESH FRUIT
    COMPANY; STANDARD FRUIT COMPANY; STANDARD FRUIT &
    Case: 12-31026          Document: 00512379325              Page: 2      Date Filed: 09/19/2013
    No. 12-31026
    STEAMSHIP COMPANY; DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY; OCCIDENTAL
    CHEMICAL CORPORATION, individually & successor to Occidental
    Chemical Company, & Occidental Chemical Agricultural Products,
    Incorporated, Hooker Chemical & Plastics, Occidental Chemical of Texas,
    Best Fertilizer Company; AMVAC CHEMICAL CORPORATION; CHIQUITA
    BRANDS INTERNATIONAL INCORPORATED; CHIQUITA BRANDS
    INCORPORATED; MARITROP TRADING CORPORATION; DEL MONTE
    FRESH PRODUCE, N.A., INCORPORATED; SHELL OIL COMPANY,
    Defendants - Appellees
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    BERNARDO ABREGO JORIETO; SIMON ABREGO PINEDA; ONCHI
    ABREGO QUINTERO; DILVIO ALVAREZ MORENO; JUAN CHOLY
    APARICIO; ET AL,
    Plaintiffs - Appellants
    v.
    DOLE FOOD COMPANY INCORPORATED; DOLE FRESH FRUIT
    COMPANY; STANDARD FRUIT COMPANY; STANDARD FRUIT &
    STEAMSHIP COMPANY; DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY; OCCIDENTAL
    CHEMICAL CORPORATION, individually & successor to Occidental
    Chemical Company, & Occidental Chemical Agricultural Products,
    Incorporated, Hooker Chemical & Plastics, Occidental Chemical of Texas,
    Best Fertilizer Company; AMVAC CHEMICAL CORPORATION; SHELL OIL
    COMPANY; CHIQUITA BRANDS INTERNATIONAL INCORPORATED;
    CHIQUITA BRANDS INCORPORATED; MARITROP TRADING
    CORPORATION; DEL MONTE FRESH PRODUCE, N.A., INCORPORATED,
    Defendants - Appellees
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    ALVARADO ALFARO MIGUEL FRANCISCO; EDGAR ARROYO
    GONZALEZ; MARCELO COREA COREA; JOSE DIAZ BENAVIDEZ;
    GONZALEZ MARIN MARVIN, ET AL,
    Plaintiffs - Appellants
    v.
    2
    Case: 12-31026          Document: 00512379325              Page: 3      Date Filed: 09/19/2013
    No. 12-31026
    DOLE FOOD COMPANY INCORPORATED; DOLE FRESH FRUIT
    COMPANY; STANDARD FRUIT COMPANY; STANDARD FRUIT &
    STEAMSHIP COMPANY; DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY; OCCIDENTAL
    CHEMICAL CORPORATION, individually & successor to Occidental
    Chemical Company, & Occidental Chemical Agricultural Products,
    Incorporated, Hooker Chemical & Plastics, Occidental Chemical of Texas,
    Best Fertilizer Company; AMVAC CHEMICAL CORPORATION; SHELL OIL
    COMPANY; CHIQUITA BRANDS INTERNATIONAL INCORPORATED;
    CHIQUITA BRANDS INCORPORATED; MARITROP TRADING
    CORPORATION; DEL MONTE FRESH PRODUCE, N.A., INCORPORATED,
    Defendants - Appellees
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    JORGE LUIS AGUILAR MORA; CARLOS AGUIRRE ALVAREZ, also known
    as Carlos Aguirre Flores Alvarez; JUAN JOSE ARGUELLO JIMINEZ;
    JORGE BUSTOS OSES; RAFAEL BUSTOS BUSTOS; ET AL,
    Plaintiffs - Appellants
    v.
    DOLE FOOD COMPANY INCORPORATED; DOLE FRESH FRUIT
    COMPANY; STANDARD FRUIT COMPANY; STANDARD FRUIT &
    STEAMSHIP COMPANY; DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY; OCCIDENTAL
    CHEMICAL CORPORATION, individually & successor to Occidental
    Chemical Company, & Occidental Chemical Agricultural Products,
    Incorporated, Hooker Chemical & Plastics, Occidental Chemical of Texas,
    Best Fertilizer Company; AMVAC CHEMICAL CORPORATION; SHELL OIL
    COMPANY; CHIQUITA BRANDS INTERNATIONAL INCORPORATED;
    CHIQUITA BRANDS INCORPORATED; MARITROP TRADING
    CORPORATION; DEL MONTE FRESH PRODUCE, N.A., INCORPORATED,
    Defendants - Appellees
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    GERMAN EDUARDO BRAVO VALDERRAMOS; EDWIN CERDAS MASIS;
    JORGE LUIS CORDERO BAQUERO; JOHNNY ESPINOZA GAMBOA;
    ESNEY HERNANDEZ FAJARDO; ET AL,
    Plaintiffs - Appellants
    3
    Case: 12-31026          Document: 00512379325              Page: 4      Date Filed: 09/19/2013
    No. 12-31026
    v.
    DOLE FOOD COMPANY INCORPORATED; DOLE FRESH FRUIT
    COMPANY; STANDARD FRUIT COMPANY; STANDARD FRUIT &
    STEAMSHIP COMPANY; DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY; OCCIDENTAL
    CHEMICAL CORPORATION, individually & successor to Occidental
    Chemical Company, & Occidental Chemical Agricultural Products,
    Incorporated, Hooker Chemical & Plastics, Occidental Chemical of Texas,
    Best Fertilizer Company; AMVAC CHEMICAL CORPORATION; SHELL OIL
    COMPANY; CHIQUITA BRANDS INTERNATIONAL INCORPORATED;
    CHIQUITA BRANDS INCORPORATED; MARITROP TRADING
    CORPORATION; DEL MONTE FRESH PRODUCE, N.A., INCORPORATED,
    Defendants - Appellees
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    EDWIN AGUERO JIMENEZ; JORGE AGUERO RETANA; ALBERTO
    CONEJO CHACON; DIDIER CORDERO CISNEROS; ESTANISLAO CRUZ;
    ET AL,
    Plaintiffs - Appellants
    v.
    DOLE FOOD COMPANY INCORPORATED; DOLE FRESH FRUIT
    COMPANY; STANDARD FRUIT COMPANY; STANDARD FRUIT &
    STEAMSHIP COMPANY; DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY; OCCIDENTAL
    CHEMICAL CORPORATION, individually & successor to Occidental
    Chemical Company, & Occidental Chemical Agricultural Products,
    Incorporated, Hooker Chemical & Plastics, Occidental Chemical of Texas,
    Best Fertilizer Company; AMVAC CHEMICAL CORPORATION; SHELL OIL
    COMPANY; CHIQUITA BRANDS INTERNATIONAL INCORPORATED;
    CHIQUITA BRANDS INCORPORATED; MARITROP TRADING
    CORPORATION; DEL MONTE FRESH PRODUCE, N.A., INCORPORATED,
    Defendants - Appellees
    4
    Case: 12-31026       Document: 00512379325         Page: 5     Date Filed: 09/19/2013
    No. 12-31026
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Louisiana
    USDC No. 2:11-CV-1289
    Before JOLLY, DeMOSS, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    The plaintiffs appeal the district court’s order dismissing their suit as
    time-barred under Louisiana’s one-year prescriptive period. We AFFIRM.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    The plaintiffs claim they were injured by the pesticide dibromo
    chloropropane (“DBCP”), to which they were exposed when working on banana
    farms in Costa Rica, Ecuador, and Panama between 1960 and 1992. The
    relevant background of the DBCP litigation across the United States as well as
    in other countries beginning in 1993 is described in significant detail in the
    district court’s order dismissing this suit. See Chaverri v. Dole Food Co., Inc.,
    
    896 F. Supp. 2d 556
    , 559-69 (E.D. La. 2012). The present appeal involves seven
    consolidated actions that 258 agricultural workers brought in the United States
    District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, filed between May 31 and
    June 2, 2011. We will use the lead plaintiff’s name, Chaverri, to refer to all. The
    defendants in this action, whom we will collectively call “Dole Food,” are entities
    alleged to have either manufactured, distributed, or used DBCP on the farms
    where the plaintiffs worked between 1960 and 1992.
    *
    Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 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 CIR.
    R. 47.5.4.
    5
    Case: 12-31026       Document: 00512379325     Page: 6    Date Filed: 09/19/2013
    No. 12-31026
    Dole Food filed a motion for summary judgment contending Chaverri’s
    claims were time-barred, or “prescribed,” under Louisiana law. The district
    court in this diversity suit applied Louisiana prescription rules. It determined
    that Chaverri’s claims were facially prescribed. Even if prescription had been
    temporarily interrupted, such interruption ended long ago. The suit was now
    time-barred in Louisiana.
    On appeal, Chaverri argues that a putative class action filed in Texas in
    1993, later dismissed but then reinstated, has sufficiently interrupted
    prescription.   Chaverri also asks for remand to the district court for
    consideration of a new decision by the Louisiana Supreme Court.
    DISCUSSION
    This court reviews a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo,
    applying the same standard as did the district court. Richard v. Wal-Mart
    Stores, Inc., 
    559 F.3d 341
    , 344 (5th Cir. 2009).             Summary judgment is
    appropriate if the moving party can show “that there is no genuine dispute as to
    any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
    FED. R. CIV. P. 56(a).
    I. Application of Louisiana’s prescription rules
    All plaintiffs allege they were exposed to DBCP at least 18 years before
    these lawsuits were filed in 2011. Accordingly, the district court held that all
    claims were facially prescribed under Louisiana’s governing one-year
    prescriptive period. See LA. CIV. CODE art. 3492. Chaverri then had the burden
    of proving “suspension, interruption, or some exception to prescription . . . .”
    Terrebonne Parish Sch. Bd. v. Mobil Oil, 
    310 F.3d 870
    , 877 (5th Cir. 2002). To
    meet this burden, Chaverri argued that Louisiana courts would recognize the
    filing of putative class actions in other states – what the parties have labeled
    6
    Case: 12-31026     Document: 00512379325       Page: 7   Date Filed: 09/19/2013
    No. 12-31026
    cross-jurisdictional tolling – as a basis for interrupting prescription. The district
    court assumed without holding that a putative class action filed in federal court
    in Texas in 1993 interrupted prescription.         The court held, though, that
    dismissal of that suit in 1995 would have caused the prescriptive period to begin
    anew. See LA. CIV. CODE ANN. art. 3463. After reviewing subsequent procedural
    events in that suit, the court concluded that Chaverri’s claims were filed in 2011
    well beyond Louisiana’s one-year prescriptive period. Largely for the reasons
    expressed in the district court’s well-reasoned opinion, we agree that Chaverri
    presented no facts relevant to any statute or caselaw to support that prescription
    was interrupted for a sufficient period of time. We will discuss below a new
    Louisiana Supreme Court precedent that Chaverri argues is relevant.
    On appeal, Chaverri renews the arguments about the interruption of
    prescription and also advances a claim – which Dole Food contends is waived by
    Chaverri’s failure to brief the issue in the district court – of issue preclusion.
    Chaverri argues that the Texas litigation has been interpreted by other courts
    around the country adversely to Dole Food, precluding the district court here
    from reaching a contrary decision. Issue preclusion, also known as collateral
    estoppel, requires that the same issue be presented in both the prior and
    current litigation. Pace v. Bogalusa City Sch. Bd., 
    403 F.3d 272
    , 290 (5th Cir.
    2005). The district court in its thorough ruling discussed many of the other
    DBCP decisions. See Chaverri, 896 F. Supp. 2d at 561-62. Chaverri’s arguments
    fail because none of the decisions address the specific issue presented in this
    case: did the putative class action in Texas interrupt prescription of Chaverri’s
    2011 claims under the specific Louisiana rules?
    The other argument raised by Chaverri, and which Dole Food also
    contends was not raised in the district court, is that the district court’s order
    violated the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. That doctrine prohibits a state-court
    loser from using a federal court to gain the equivalent of a reversal. See Exxon
    7
    Case: 12-31026     Document: 00512379325      Page: 8   Date Filed: 09/19/2013
    No. 12-31026
    Mobil Corp. v. Saudi Basic Indus. Corp., 
    544 U.S. 280
    , 283 (2005). The motion
    for summary judgment in this case did not invite the district court to reverse any
    state-court judgment addressing prescription in Louisiana.
    II. The Louisiana Supreme Court’s decision in Quinn
    In its order granting summary judgment, the district court assumed for
    the purposes of its analysis that Louisiana recognized cross-jurisdictional
    interruption of prescription.    After the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment but before the appellate briefing here, the Louisiana Supreme Court
    issued a decision rejecting cross-jurisdictional interruption of prescription.
    Quinn v. Louisiana Citizens Prop. Ins. Corp., – So.3d — , No. 2012-CC-0152,
    
    2012 WL 5374255
     (La. Nov. 2, 2012).
    The Quinn court analyzed Article 596 of the Louisiana Code of Civil
    Procedure, which was adopted in 1997 and provides for suspension of
    prescription by the filing of class actions. Quinn, 
    2012 WL 5374255
    , at *6. The
    court held that the text of Article 596 was so closely tied to the specific
    procedures of Louisiana class actions that prescription could be suspended only
    by “putative class actions filed in Louisiana state courts.” Id. at *7. At least
    since 1997, then, cross-jurisdictional tolling has not existed in Louisiana. Dole
    Food would have us go further and hold that the Quinn court’s policy reasoning
    indicates such tolling has never been recognized. See id. at *8-9. It is not
    necessary to decide whether Quinn clearly addressed the state’s law prior to
    1997. It is enough that Quinn provides no analytical assistance to Chaverri. On
    the face of the complaint, Louisiana’s one-year prescriptive period has expired.
    Under Louisiana law, Chaverri had the burden of establishing some rule of
    suspension, interruption, or other exception to save these facially-prescribed
    claims. See Terrebonne Parish Sch. Bd., 
    310 F.3d at 877
    . Quinn makes it clear
    that class actions filed in other states no longer interrupt prescription and gives
    8
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    No. 12-31026
    no support to an argument that such suits ever would have done so. Therefore,
    Chaverri’s burden remains unmet.
    Chaverri seeks a remand to permit the district court to determine the
    relevance of Quinn and engage in a choice-of-law analysis. Chaverri contends
    that Quinn is expressly premised on a Louisiana statute and thus leaves open
    the question of its applicability to a federal court proceeding. We see no basis for
    remand. The district court sitting in diversity properly applied Louisiana’s
    substantive law of prescription. See, e.g., Orleans Parish Sch. Bd. v. Asbestos
    Corp., 
    114 F.3d 66
    , 68 (5th Cir. 1997). Therefore a new choice-of-law analysis
    would be superfluous. There is no need for the district court to review the effect
    of Quinn as we have done so after full briefing by the parties.
    AFFIRMED.
    9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 12-31026

Citation Numbers: 546 F. App'x 409

Judges: Jolly, Demoss, Southwick

Filed Date: 9/19/2013

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/6/2024