United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
F I L E D
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS June 16, 2003
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT Charles R. Fulbruge III
Clerk
_____________________
No. 02-10642
_____________________
MARY VIRGINIA ACRIDGE, Individually and as
Independent Executrix of the Estate of
LOUIS E ACRIDGE, Deceased; DANIEL ACRIDGE BROYLES
Plaintiffs - Appellees
v.
THE EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN GOOD SAMARITAN SOCIETY, ET AL
Defendants
THE EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN GOOD SAMARITAN SOCIETY;
JERRY L ADAMS; ELAINE MORROW; SHERRI LUNSFORD HARRIS
Defendants - Appellants
_________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Texas
_________________________________________________________________
Before KING, Chief Judge, and DAVIS, Circuit Judge, and VANCE,
District Judge.*
KING, Chief Judge:
*
District Judge of the Eastern District of Louisiana,
sitting by designation.
Asserting diversity jurisdiction, the plaintiffs filed suit
in federal court seeking damages under Texas law for the death of
Louis Acridge in a Texas nursing home. The defendants
Evangelical Lutheran Good Samaritan Society, Jerry Adams, Elaine
Morrow, and Sheri Lunsford Harris appeal the denial of their
motion for summary judgment on official immunity grounds. They
also raise the issue of whether there is federal subject matter
jurisdiction over the underlying proceeding. Because we conclude
that complete diversity among the parties is lacking, we vacate
the district court’s order denying summary judgment and remand
with instructions to dismiss the case for lack of subject matter
jurisdiction.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In 1968, Louis Acridge moved from Colorado to New Mexico,
where he was employed as a sheriff and lived with his wife,
Plaintiff-Appellee Mary Acridge. In 1996, Mary placed Louis in a
retirement center in New Mexico as a result of a rapid
deterioration in his mental status caused by Alzheimer’s
dementia. Mary became dissatisfied with the treatment Louis was
receiving and, in 1997, transferred him to the Farwell
Convalescent Center in Farwell, Texas.1 By that time, Louis was
1
Defendant Evangelical Lutheran Good Samaritan Society
(“Good Samaritan”) operated the Farwell Convalescent Center.
Defendant Jerry Adams was an administrator at the Center;
defendants Elaine Morrow and Sherri Lunsford Harris were the
directors of nursing at the Center during times relevant to this
case.
2
completely unable to take care of himself, was disoriented as to
time and place, had little memory, and was virtually unaware of
his surroundings. When Mary moved Louis to Texas, she applied
for and received Medicaid benefits from the Texas Department of
Human Services. The Texas Medicaid statute states:
Texas Residence Requirements
(a) General requirements. To be eligible for the
Texas Title XIX Medical Assistance Program, an individual
must be a resident of the State of Texas; that is, he
must have established residence in Texas and he must
intend to remain in Texas.
. . .
(b) Eligibility requirements for persons from
another state. If a client is eligible for Title XIX
benefits in another state and receives benefits in that
state, he is not eligible for Title XIX benefits from the
state of Texas.
40 TEX. ADMIN. CODE. § 15.301 (West 2000).
After being at the Center for more than a year, Louis
Acridge was placed in a room with Henry Plyler, another resident.
Plyler had a history of abusive behavior toward past roommates.
On June 23, 1999, staff members at the Center discovered Acridge
in his bed, covered in blood; a ballpoint pen protruded from his
right eye. An investigation revealed that Plyler had beaten
Acridge on the head with a coffee mug and then stabbed him in the
eye with a pen. The pen penetrated Acridge’s brain; he died
eight hours later as a result of this wound.
In their First Amended Complaint filed June 7, 2001, the
plaintiffs alleged that the defendants negligently failed to
protect Louis Acridge from Plyler and that this failure was the
3
proximate cause of Acridge’s death. The plaintiffs also claimed
that the defendants were negligent in failing to warn Acridge and
his family of the known risks that Plyler presented to his
roommates. The defendants filed a motion to dismiss the suit on
the grounds that no federal subject matter jurisdiction existed;
the plaintiffs brought suit in federal court under diversity
jurisdiction, but the defendants argued that complete diversity
was lacking because both Louis Acridge and the defendants were
Texas domiciliaries. The district court denied this motion
without stated reasons.
The defendants also moved for summary judgment, claiming
that each defendant was entitled to official immunity from suit.
The defendants further asserted that Plyler’s unforeseeable
criminal conduct was a superceding cause of Acridge’s death that
absolved the defendants of liability for any alleged negligent
conduct. The district court, again without stated reasons,
denied the defendants’ motion for summary judgment.
The defendants now bring this interlocutory appeal of the
district court’s denial of their summary judgment motion, arguing
that the court should have granted their motion claiming official
immunity. The defendants also urge us to examine whether there
is diversity jurisdiction over these claims.
II. WHETHER DIVERSITY JURISDICTION EXISTS OVER THESE CLAIMS
Federal court jurisdiction here hinges on the domicile of
Mary Acridge in her capacity as Independent Executrix of the
4
Estate of Louis Acridge. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(c)(2) (2000),
the legal representative of the estate of a decedent is deemed to
be a citizen of the same state as the decedent for diversity
purposes. Jurisdiction in this case rests on a single question:
when Mary Acridge moved Louis Acridge into a Texas nursing home,
did he become a Texas domiciliary? If he did, then complete
diversity among the parties is lacking and the case cannot be
heard in federal court. Temple Drilling Co. v. La. Ins. Guar.
Ass’n, 946 F.2d 390, 393 (5th Cir. 1991). If not, then he
remained a New Mexico domiciliary and complete diversity with the
defendants exists.2
A. General Law of Domicile
A brief overview of the law of domicile will be helpful in
our exploration of this question. First, while we may look to
state law for guidance, the question of a person’s domicile is a
matter of federal common law. Coury v. Prot, 85 F.3d 244, 248
(5th Cir. 1996); see also 15 Moore’s Federal Practice
§ 102.34[3][a] (3d ed. 2001) (reporting cases from eight circuits
taking this position). A person acquires a “domicile of origin”
at birth, and this domicile is presumed to continue absent
sufficient evidence of change. See, e.g., Palazzo v. Corio, 232
F.3d 35, 42 (2d Cir. 2000). There is a presumption of continuing
2
Mary Acridge is a Colorado domiciliary and her son, also
a plaintiff, is a New Mexico domiciliary. The individual
defendants are all Texas domiciliaries; Good Samaritan is a North
Dakota corporation.
5
domicile that applies whenever a person relocates. Coury, 85
F.3d at 250. In order to defeat the presumption and establish a
new domicile (the “domicile of choice”), the person must
demonstrate both (1) residence in a new state, and (2) an
intention to remain in that state indefinitely. Id. (“Mere
presence in a new location does not effect a change of domicile;
it must be accompanied with the requisite intent.”). There is no
durational residency requirement in the establishment of
domicile; once presence in the new state and intent to remain are
met, the new domicile is instantaneously established. 15 Moore’s
Federal Practice, § 102.34[10] (3d ed. 2001).
In determining whether a person has changed his domicile,
courts have identified many factors which should be considered.
Coury, 81 F.3d at 251 (“The factors may include the places where
the litigant exercises civil and political rights, pays taxes,
owns real and personal property, has driver’s and other licenses,
maintains bank accounts, belongs to clubs and churches, has
places of business or employment, and maintains a home for his
family.”). The court should, when undertaking this examination,
weigh all factors equally; no single factor is determinative.
Id. Additionally, statements of intent, either to remain in a
previous domicile or to establish a new one, are “entitled to
little weight” if they conflict with the objective facts. Id.
B. Law of Domicile for Incompetent Persons
6
Of course, the intent inquiry becomes more problematic when
the person in question has, like Louis Acridge, become mentally
incompetent. Only minimal competency is required to choose a new
domicile; even if the person in question has been adjudged
incompetent by a court and is incapable of managing his own
affairs, he can change his domicile so long as “he understands
the nature and effect of his act.” Juvelis by Juvelis v. Snider,
68 F.3d 648, 655 (3d Cir. 1995). However, an incompetent is
presumed to lack the mental capacity to change his own domicile.
Id. at 654.
Where someone acting on an incompetent’s behalf moves the
incompetent to another state, the question becomes whether that
move (coupled with the trappings of intent for the incompetent to
remain in the new state indefinitely) should be permitted to
change the incompetent’s domicile. There is a split in the
circuits (and no Fifth Circuit precedent) on the question of
whether someone acting on behalf of an incompetent can change the
incompetent’s state of domicile.
In Rishell v. Jane Phillips Episcopal Mem’l Med. Ctr., 12
F.3d 171 (10th Cir. 1993), the legal guardian of a person
rendered incompetent while living in Oklahoma relocated the
person to Louisiana in order to obtain better medical care. Id.
at 172. When the guardian then attempted to sue an Oklahoma
hospital in federal court on behalf of the patient, the hospital
moved to dismiss on the grounds that, because the guardian lacked
7
the authority to change the patient’s domicile, no diversity
jurisdiction existed. Id. The Tenth Circuit concluded that,
where the incompetent will never regain sufficient mental
capacity to choose his own domicile, “the law must allow another,
vested with legal authority, to determine domicile for the best
interests of that person.” Id. at 174; see also Restatement
(Second) of Conflict of Laws § 23 cmt. f (1988) (noting that a
court-appointed guardian can shift the domicile of an incompetent
to another state “if this shift of domicile would be in the best
interests of the incompetent and was not made to achieve some
selfish purpose of the guardian”). As the court in Rishell
pointed out, to refuse to permit a guardian to change the
domicile of the person entrusted to his care would essentially
“leave the incompetent in a never-ending limbo where the
presumption against changing domicile becomes more important than
the interests of the person the presumption was designed to
protect.” Rishell, 12 F.3d at 174. The Seventh Circuit agreed
with this conclusion. Dakuras v. Edwards, 312 F.3d 256, 258 (7th
Cir. 2002) (“The responsibility for making the essential life
choices of children and wards is vested not in them but in their
parents or guardians, and we cannot see why the choice of
domicile should not be treated as one of those life choices.”).
However, the Fourth Circuit takes the opposite position. In
Long v. Sasser, 91 F.3d 645 (4th Cir. 1996), the court concluded
that a guardian could not change the domicile of an incompetent,
8
even if the move was made in the best interests of the
incompetent. Id. at 647-48 (citing Foster v. Carlin, 200 F.2d
943 (4th Cir. 1952)). The court rejected the reasoning proffered
in Rishell, finding that such a “best interests” inquiry required
speculating both as to what was in the best interests of the
incompetent as well as to whether the incompetent would ever
regain sufficient mental capacity to choose a domicile of his own
volition. Id. at 647. Some commentators have agreed with this
reasoning. Larry L. Teply, The Elderly and Civil Procedure:
Service and Default, Capacity Issues, Preserving and Giving
Testimony, and Compulsory Physical or Mental Examinations, 30
Stetson L. Rev. 1273, 1278-80 & n. 33 (2001) (citing Long with
approval and rejecting the Rishell approach as introducing
“undesirable uncertainties into subject matter determinations”).
The defendants urge us to adopt the position taken by the
Seventh and Tenth Circuits (and rejected by the Fourth Circuit)
that someone acting in the “best interests” of an incompetent may
change the incompetent’s domicile.3 After carefully considering
the arguments set forth in each case, we agree with the Seventh
3
Each of the prior cases dealing with this question has
involved a court-appointed guardian with recognized legal
capacity to act on behalf of the incompetent; the record in this
case does not reveal that Mary Acridge took the step of having
herself appointed her husband’s legal guardian. However, neither
party argued, here or in the district court, that Rishell, Long,
or Dakuras should be distinguishable on that basis; as such, we
will treat the arguments to that effect as having been waived.
Trevino v. Johnson, 168 F.3d 173, 181 n.3 (5th Cir. 1999).
9
and Tenth Circuits and hold that Mary Acridge had the authority
to change the domicile of Louis Acridge so long as she was acting
in his best interests.
An incompetent sits in an unenviable position in society,
unable to fend for himself and completely dependent upon those
closest to him. We agree with the Tenth Circuit: To hold that
the person charged with making decisions on behalf of an
incompetent lacks the authority to change the incompetent’s state
of domicile in his best interests leaves the incompetent “in a
never-ending limbo where the presumption against changing
domicile becomes more important than the interests of the person
the presumption was designed to protect.” Rishell, 12 F.3d at
174. Further, the principal argument put forth in Long that such
a standard introduces unwanted uncertainty into the domicile
analysis is unpersuasive. Long, 91 F.3d at 647. No more
uncertainty exists in determining whether someone is acting in
the best interests of an incompetent than exists when a court
must consider and weigh the multitude of relevant factors in
determining the domicile of a competent adult. Coury, 85 F.3d at
251. We see no reason for a per se rule against changing
domicile in this situation; in examining the domicile of both
competent and incompetent adults, analysis of the facts and
circumstances of the case presents the court with the best
opportunity to reach the appropriate conclusion. See 15 Moore’s
Federal Practice, § 102.34[4] (3d ed. 2001) (noting that some
10
courts consider the question of domicile to be a mixed question
of law and fact which is so fact-dependent that it is reviewed
under the clearly erroneous standard reserved for questions of
fact); Coury, 81 F.3d at 251 (adopting this position in the Fifth
Circuit).
C. Analysis of Louis Acridge’s Domicile
Before turning to the “best interests” inquiry, we must
first contend with arguments made by each party that Louis
Acridge’s domicile has already been determined as a matter of
law. The defendants rely on the fact that Mary Acridge applied
for and received Medicaid benefits in the state of Texas.
According to the Texas statute, only someone who has both
“established residence in Texas” and has an “inten[t] to remain
in Texas” is eligible for Medicaid benefits. 40 TEX. ADMIN. CODE.
§ 15.301(a). The defendants conclude, therefore, that Louis
Acridge’s domicile changed “through operation of law” when he
applied for and received benefits that he could only be eligible
for as a Texas domiciliary. See, e.g., Gilmore v. Kinglsey, 243
A.2d 263, 268 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1968) (remarking that “a
person who lacks capacity to acquire a new domicile by choice”
can acquire a domicile “through operation of law” if that
person’s actions, regardless of her lack of intent, demonstrate
that her domicile has actually changed).
If we were to accept this argument, we would be expanding
the general rule that a “domicile by operation of law” can be
11
established only where “the law confers upon one party the
control of the domicile of another because of the lack of
competence of the latter.” Eugene F. Scales & Peter Hay,
Conflict of Laws, § 4.42 (1st ed. 1984). “Domicile by operation
of law” typically limits itself to domestic relations situations,
such as the common law rule that a married woman took the
domicile of her husband or the rule that an unemancipated child
has the domicile of his parents. 8 C.J.S. Domicile, § 9 (2002)
(“Domicile by operation of law . . . ordinarily results from
legal domestic relations.”). Nothing in the Texas Medicaid
statute purports to create a domicile based upon the act of
applying for benefits – the statute merely limits eligibility to
Texas domiciliaries.
However, while the defendants cannot argue that Louis
Acridge’s domicile changed by operation of law, their reliance on
Mary’s application for Texas Medicaid benefits for Louis as a
factor favoring a finding of changed domicile is persuasive.
According to the federal regulations governing state Medicaid
eligibility:
(3) For any institutionalized individual who became
incapable of indicating intent at or after age 21, the
State of residence [for purposes of Medicaid eligibility]
is the State in which the individual is physically
present, except where another State makes a placement.
(4) For any other institutionalized individual, the
State of residence is the State where the individual is
living with the intention to remain there permanently or
for an indefinite period.
12
42 C.F.R. § 435.403(i)(3)-(4) (2002). The definition of “State
of residence” in subsection (4) mimics the generally understood
definition of “domicile” – including the definition set forth in
the Texas Medicaid statute. See Restatement (Second) of Conflict
of Laws § 11 cmt. k (1988) (“Statutes in the United States rarely
speak in terms of domicil but use ‘residence’ instead. Residence
is an ambiguous word whose meaning in a legal phrase must be
determined in each case. Frequently it is used in a sense
equivalent to domicil.”); see also Martinez v. Bynum, 461 U.S.
321, 330 (1983) (stating that “residence” requires both “physical
presence and an intention to remain”); Arredondo v. Brockette,
648 F.2d 425, 431 (5th Cir. 1981) (“The word ‘residence’ has many
meanings in the law, largely determined by the statutory context
in which it is used.”). Thus, the use of the term “State of
residence” in subsection (3) can be understood to mean
“domicile”; it follows that, for Medicaid purposes, someone who
is over the age of 21, lives in an institution, and is incapable
of forming intent is considered to be a domiciliary of the state
in which he physically resides. Thus, under the applicable
Medicaid regulations, Louis Acridge was a Texas domiciliary for
Medicaid purposes.
However, we decline to accept the defendants’ related
argument that, because Louis Acridge was a Texas domiciliary for
purposes of Medicaid law, he must also be a Texas domiciliary for
purposes of determining diversity jurisdiction. The general rule
13
is that “[a] person has only one domicile at a particular time.”
Knapp v. State Farm Ins., 584 F.Supp. 905, 907 (E.D. La. 1984).
However, more specifically, the rule is that a person may not
have more than one domicile at a time “at least for the same
purpose.” Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 11(b) &
cmts. m & n (1988) (“A person may have no more than one domicil
at a time, at least for the same purpose. . . . [T]he core of
domicil everywhere is the same. But in close cases, decision of
a question of domicil may sometimes depend upon the purpose for
which the domicil concept is used in the particular case.”).
Thus, while the fact that Medicaid law makes someone a Texas
domiciliary for Medicaid purposes could be a factor to be
considered in determining domicile for diversity purposes, it is
not conclusive on that question.
The plaintiffs argue that this court must find that Louis
Acridge is a New Mexico domiciliary because a New Mexico state
court, in probating Louis Acridge’s will, found that it had venue
over the case “because the Decedent’s domicile at the time of
death was Clovis, Curry County, New Mexico.” The plaintiffs seek
to rely upon the principles of collateral estoppel (combined with
the Full Faith and Credit Clause) to conclude that the defendants
are bound by that determination of Louis Acridge’s domicile and
may not relitigate the question in these proceedings.
Where a party seeks to use an issue decided in state court
to preclude relitigation in federal court, the federal court
14
must, under the full faith and credit doctrine, give that issue
the same preclusive effect that the courts of the state which
decided the issue would give it. 28 U.S.C. § 1738 (2000); see
also Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Epstein, 516 U.S. 367, 375
(1996). Under New Mexico law, a party seeking to invoke
collateral estoppel based upon a previous state court decision
must demonstrate: (1) the causes of action in the previous and
current suits are different; (2) the issue in question was
“actually litigated” in the previous suit; (3) the issue in
question was necessary to the outcome of the previous suit; and
(4) “the party to be bound by collateral estoppel had a full and
fair opportunity to litigate the issue in the prior suit.” Hyden
v. Law Firm of McCormick, Forbes, Caraway & Tabor, 848 P.2d 1086,
1091 (N.M. Ct. App. 1993).
While this suit certainly presents a different cause of
action than the probating of Acridge’s estate, the plaintiffs
cannot satisfy the remainder of the test. There is no evidence
that the issue of Louis Acridge’s domicile was ever fully
litigated in state court; all we have is the bare statement by
the court that Acridge was a New Mexico domiciliary.
Additionally, whether or not Louis Acridge was a New Mexico
domiciliary was not necessary to the determination that his
estate was eligible for probate in New Mexico; according to state
law, the estate of a non-domiciliary can be probated in New
Mexico “in any county where property of the decedent was located
15
at the time of his death.” N.M. STAT. ANN. § 45-3-201 (Michie
1978). Thus, even if the court found that Louis Acridge was a
Texas domiciliary, it still could have permitted probate of the
estate on the grounds that Acridge owned property located in New
Mexico (as, in fact, he did). Finally, none of the defendants
was a party to the probate proceedings, nor were his or her
interests represented by someone who was a party to those
proceedings. As such, none of the defendants had a full and fair
opportunity to litigate the question of Louis Acridge’s domicile.
Because the plaintiffs cannot satisfy the requirements for
collateral estoppel under New Mexico law, this court is not
required to give preclusive effect to the determination by the
New Mexico state court that Louis Acridge was domiciled in that
state.
Having disposed of these arguments, we can now turn to the
“best interests” analysis to determine Louis Acridge’s domicile,
keeping in mind that the burden of proof concerning change of
domicile rests with the party seeking to establish that domicile
has changed. Juvelis, 68 F.3d at 648. Because the defendants
have moved to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, they have the
burden of proving that Mary Acridge changed her husband’s
domicile when she placed him in Falwell Convalescent Center.
Since domicile is a fact-bound question, we would ordinarily
remand for the district court to make the necessary
determination. This record, however, permits of only one
16
conclusion. Mary Acridge admits that she removed her husband
from the Buena Vista Retirement Center in Clovis, New Mexico
because she was “dissatisfied with the care that Louis was
receiving.” There is no evidence in the record that Mary Acridge
gained any personal benefit from having her husband moved to
another state. Louis Acridge remained in the Farwell
Convalescent Center for more than two years before being stabbed
by Henry Plyler; there is no evidence in the record that, at any
point during his stay, Mary Acridge had grown unhappy with the
care her husband was receiving or considered relocating him to a
third retirement home in another state. In short, on the
evidence in the record, Mary Acridge moved her husband from New
Mexico to Texas in order to obtain, in his best interests, the
highest possible standard of care for the remainder of his life.
Because Mary Acridge was acting in the best interests of her
husband when she moved him to the Farwell Convalescent Center, it
is clear that, for purposes of diversity jurisdiction, Louis
Acridge was a Texas domiciliary at the time of his death. As
such, complete diversity among the parties in this action is
lacking. There is no federal subject matter jurisdiction over
this case.4
IV. CONCLUSION
4
Because we conclude that federal jurisdiction over these
claims is lacking, we decline to reach the defendants’ additional
contentions regarding the district court’s denial of their motion
for summary judgment on official immunity grounds.
17
We VACATE the district court’s order denying the defendants’
motion for summary judgment and REMAND the case with instructions
to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Costs shall
be borne by the plaintiffs.
18