Case: 18-31158 Document: 00516164985 Page: 1 Date Filed: 01/12/2022
United States Court of Appeals
for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
January 12, 2022
No. 18-31158 Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
Tarsia Williams; Breck Williams,
Plaintiffs—Appellants,
versus
Boeing Company,
Defendant—Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Louisiana
USDC No. 2:09-CV-65
Before Southwick, Graves, and Engelhardt, Circuit Judges.
Leslie H. Southwick, Circuit Judge:
This case involves mesothelioma, nationwide multidistrict litigation
consolidated in Pennsylvania, and a plaintiff-decedent whose claim was
rejected on summary judgment in the centralized litigation. The appeal
follows a remand from the Pennsylvania district court to the Louisiana
district court where this particular federal suit began over a decade ago.
Our task is to determine whether discovery was improperly judicially
truncated and whether fact questions remain that should have prevented
summary judgment. We conclude that the MDL court engaged in improper
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weighing of the evidence on summary judgment relative to the survival
action. We therefore REVERSE IN PART and REMAND to the
Louisiana district court. Further, we consider it appropriate case
management for the Louisiana district court also to reconsider the Plaintiffs’
motion for additional discovery. We AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal
of the wrongful death claim.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This MDL consolidated claims about asbestos exposure at a wide
variety and large number of locations around the country. The district judge
who has presided over this litigation since 2008 wrote a law journal article
that provides useful background on how these myriad asbestos claims ended
up in the MDL and what procedures the court followed. 1 Of some relevance,
the article indicates that after common discovery in the MDL, cases are
either resolved on summary judgment by that court and then remanded to
the originating court for entry of final judgment, or — if they cannot be
settled — are remanded to the originating district court for trial or other
proceedings. 2 This case was resolved by the MDL court on summary
judgment, and we are giving appellate review to that judgment, which was
entered as final by the Louisiana district court on remand from the MDL
court.
The plaintiff-decedent, Frank Williams, worked at the Michoud
Assembly Facility (“MAF”) near New Orleans from 1974 to 2008 as an
employee of Lockheed Martin Corporation and its predecessor corporation,
Martin Marietta (together, “Lockheed”). The MAF is a design and
1
Eduardo C. Robreno, The Federal Asbestos Product Liability Multidistrict Litigation
(MDL–875): Black Hole or New Paradigm?, 23 Widener L.J. 97, 126 (2013).
2
Id. at 141–43
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manufacturing site for NASA. Such projects as the production of the first
stage of the Saturn V rocket for the Apollo program and the external fuel tank
for the Space Shuttle program were conducted at the MAF. While at the
MAF, Williams worked as a mechanical engineer, primarily at a desk,
“drafting and computing.”
The record contains evidence that asbestos had been used in different
locations in the facility, and that asbestos caused some workers to contract
mesothelioma. The MDL court found that Williams failed to prove
causation, specifically, that he did not prove when and where he was present
in one of the buildings that would have exposed him to respirable asbestos.
There was some relevant evidence tending to show that Williams was
exposed to asbestos. A co-worker testified that Williams worked “primarily
on the second floor of Building 350, although he also frequently visited
building 351 and the cafeteria, and sometimes visited Buildings 101, 102, and
103, and possibly others.” The same co-worker testified that “during the
mid-to-late 1980s, there was asbestos abatement work on the second floor of
Building 350.” A medical expert, Dr. K. Barton Farris, wrote a declaration
and expert report stating that it was his opinion that Williams’s exposures to
asbestos at the MAF were “substantial contributing factors in the causation
of [Williams’s] mesothelioma.” An affidavit and expert report from
industrial hygienist Frank Parker stated that “the asbestos in the facility
would have been deteriorating by the time [Williams] worked there, and that
his employment would have exposed him frequently to above-average
ambient background levels of asbestos.” Additional evidence produced by
the Plaintiffs included project proposals, contracts, reports, a solicitation for
bids, and various other documents that the Plaintiffs “contend indicate that
asbestos was used at the facility during the time of Boeing’s custody.”
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In August 2008, Williams was diagnosed with mesothelioma. In
November 2008, he filed suit in Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans
asserting claims arising from his alleged exposure to asbestos at the MAF
against Lockheed and other defendants. Lockheed removed to the United
States District Court, Eastern District of Louisiana under the Federal Officer
Removal Statute. Early in the litigation, Frank Williams died. His children
Tarsia and Breck Williams initially proceeded with the case without filing a
formal substitution. On February 6, 2009, the Plaintiffs filed their first
motion in the Eastern District of Louisiana to remand to state court. At that
point, the Plaintiffs stated that they wished to amend their complaint, but
they did not do so. The Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation then
transferred the action to the Asbestos MDL court in the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania. In 2011, the Plaintiffs finally filed a motion to substitute
themselves for Williams, which the MDL court granted in May 2012. In early
2013, after several years of proceedings in the MDL court, the Plaintiffs filed
an amended pleading for damages that named Boeing as a defendant for the
first time. 3
On February 13, 2013, the MDL court set a date of June 30, 2013 for
the close of discovery. The Plaintiffs finally obtained service on Boeing on
April 12, two months after the February 13 scheduling order and two months
before the June 30 scheduled close of discovery. The Plaintiffs served their
first set of interrogatories and document requests on Boeing on May 24.
Then, on June 14, they noticed Boeing’s deposition for a date of June 24 —
one week prior to the scheduled close of discovery. At the time Boeing’s
deposition was noticed, Boeing’s motion to dismiss — filed on February 14
3
Boeing was first named as a defendant in the “First Amended Petition for
Damages” filed on January 24, 2013. It was then named in the Second Amended Petition
of February 6, 2013.
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— was pending, so Boeing sought a protective order and stay of discovery.
The MDL court granted Boeing’s motion to dismiss on June 24. Despite the
Plaintiffs’ pending motion for reconsideration, the court subsequently
granted the protective order on July 22, 2013, as Boeing was dismissed at that
time. Upon reconsideration, the MDL court reinstated the suit against
Boeing. When the Plaintiffs sought to reopen discovery and reconsider the
deadlines pertaining to Boeing, though, the magistrate judge found the first
set of discovery requests “overly broad and improper” and declined to
reopen discovery.
Subsequently, the MDL court granted motions for summary
judgment as to several defendants, including Boeing. In particular, the MDL
court concluded that Boeing was entitled to summary judgment on the
survival action since “no reasonable jury could conclude from the evidence
that [Williams] was exposed to asbestos at the Michoud Assembly Facility
such that it was a substantial factor in the development of [his] illness,” and
that Boeing was entitled to summary judgment on the Plaintiffs’ wrongful
death claims because they were time-barred. Thereafter, the case was
returned to the Eastern District of Louisiana for entry of judgment.
Upon remand to the Eastern District of Louisiana, the Plaintiffs
sought entry of final judgments for their claims against Boeing and other
defendants in order to allow this appeal to be taken. Their efforts were
initially unsuccessful. See Williams v. Seidenbach, 748 F. App’x 584, 585 (5th
Cir. 2018). After considerable maneuvering by the Plaintiffs to remedy their
jurisdictional defects, we placed this case in abeyance pending the resolution
of similar jurisdictional appeals concerning other defendants. The Plaintiffs’
jurisdictional issues were ultimately resolved favorably by Williams v.
Seidenbach, Inc., 958 F.3d 341 (5th Cir. 2020) (en banc). We removed this
case from abeyance in March 2021 and now consider the merits of the
Plaintiffs’ appeal.
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DISCUSSION
I. Summary judgment on the survival action
This court reviews a district court’s summary judgment decision de
novo, applying the same legal standards employed by the trial court. Mills v.
Davis Oil Co., 11 F.3d 1298, 1301 (5th Cir. 1994). To be clear, it is the
Pennsylvania MDL court’s summary judgment that we review, but Louisiana
substantive law controls. Under Louisiana law, to prevail in an asbestos
injury case, “the claimant must show . . . he had significant exposure to the
product complained of to the extent that it was a substantial factor in bringing
about his injury.” Rando v. Anco Insulations, Inc., 16 So. 3d 1065, 1091 (La.
2009). A claimant’s evidence may be direct or circumstantial. Id. at 1089.
Even if the plaintiff was only exposed to asbestos for a “short period for an
employer and he had longer exposure working for others, it cannot be said
the relatively short asbestos exposure was not a substantial factor in causing
his mesothelioma.” Id. at 1091.
The plaintiff has the burden of proof and “must establish his claim to
a reasonable certainty[;] mere possibility, and even unsupported probability,
are not sufficient to support a judgment in plaintiff’s favor.” Vodanovich v.
A.P. Green Indus., Inc., 2003–1079, p. 6 (La. App. 4 Cir. 3/3/04); 869 So. 2d
930, 934. To defeat an asbestos defendant’s motion for summary judgment,
which is the relevant motion here, the Plaintiffs need only show that a
reasonable jury could conclude that it is more likely than not that Williams
inhaled defendant’s asbestos fibers, even if there were only “slight
exposures.” See Held v. Avondale Indus., Inc., 95-1788, p. 5 (La. App. 4 Cir.
4/3/96); 672 So. 2d 1106, 1109.
The Plaintiffs’ legal argument can be summarized as this: (1) the MDL
court misapplied Louisiana law in granting summary judgment and (2) the
MDL court weighed improperly weighed evidence.
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First, the allegedly misapplied or ignored state law is a civil law
concept premised on custody that is referred to as garde. The concept is now
established in Civil Code article 2317, which states that parties “are
responsible, not only for the damage occasioned by [their] own act, but for
that which is caused by the act of persons for whom [they] are answerable, or
of the things which [they] have in [their] custody.” La. Civ. Code art.
2317. The Code continues:
[t]he owner or custodian of a thing is answerable for damage
occasioned by its ruin, vice, or defect, only upon a showing that
he knew or, in the exercise of reasonable care, should have
known of the ruin, vice, or defect which caused the damage,
that the damage could have been prevented by the exercise of
reasonable care, and that he failed to exercise such reasonable
care.
Id. art. 2317.1
Although the MDL court did not explicitly mention garde in its
opinion, it analyzed evidence relevant to garde when granting summary
judgment to Boeing. This is clear from three main facts taken as true by the
MDL court: it accepted Boeing as the “custodian of the facility;”
acknowledged Boeing’s responsibility for various services (including
maintenance); and accepted as true certain evidence that Boeing was
responsible for the design, approval, and installation of substantial amounts
of asbestos at the facility as early as 1963. We are satisfied that the MDL
court considered the proper legal concept of garde and analyzed whether
Boeing had the necessary relationship to the facility. We reject the Plaintiffs’
argument that the MDL Court did not consider garde.
Thus, we consider whether we can uphold this ruling about garde,
expressed by the district court in equivalent terms. The MDL court
considered the following facts: Williams worked in Building 350, primarily on
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the second floor, and frequently visited Building 103. As early as 1963, there
was “substantial” asbestos at the facility, including in Buildings 103 and 350.
There was asbestos abatement work in Building 350 in the mid-to-late 1980s.
Williams saw men in “moon suits” at the facility, and it was reasonably
inferable that their use was as a result of asbestos remediation.
In the summary judgment context, “inferences to be drawn from the
underlying facts . . . must be viewed in the light most favorable to the party
opposing the motion.” Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
475 U.S. 574, 587 (1986) (quotation marks and citation omitted). We
consider three findings by the MDL court particularly troubling.
First, the MDL court accepted that Williams worked, for some
amount of time, in a building that had asbestos, and expert testimony
indicates the asbestos was deteriorating and becoming airborne during his
tenure. An inference taken in favor of the non-moving party would be that
Williams, who for some amount of time had to breathe in the spaces where
asbestos was deteriorating, was exposed to this airborne asbestos. The MDL
court, though, found that there was “no evidence that [Williams] was ever
exposed to respirable asbestos dust at any location in the facility.”
Second, in a summary judgment order rendered that same day
regarding another defendant, the MDL court relied on evidence that
Williams saw individuals in moon suits to assume he was present during the
asbestos remediation. Just the opposite seems to have been inferred here, as
the MDL court in Boeing’s summary judgment order stated that there was
“no evidence that [Williams] was working nearby (or in that building at all)
when that [remediation] work was performed,” despite the fact that Williams
also had witnessed the likely remediation efforts.
Third, the Williams’ expert, Frank Parker, testified that Williams
would have been exposed “frequently to above-average ambient background
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levels of asbestos (as a result of maintenance and repair work occurring in the
facility in buildings in which he worked/visited).” The MDL court, though,
inferred that the presence of ambient asbestos could not have contributed to
Williams’s illness. Based on this record, whether Williams was exposed to
respirable asbestos is a disputed issue of fact.
These inferences made in favor of Boeing, the moving party, are
particularly significant in light of the MDL court’s conclusion that the
evidence was “insufficient to support a finding of causation.” The MDL
court found that, “[a]lthough the evidence makes clear that there was
asbestos throughout the facility during and prior to Decedent’s work there,
there is no evidence that Decedent was ever exposed to respirable asbestos
dust at any location in the facility.” In support of this finding, the MDL court
also found that the evidence that Williams primarily worked in Building 350
was not “sufficiently specific” to allow a jury to conclude he was exposed to
asbestos during an abatement project because “[t]he evidence that Decedent
primarily worked in Building 350 does not exclude the possibility that he was
not working there during the asbestos abatement project.” Finding to the
contrary, the MDL court found, “would be impermissibly speculative.”
We conclude that “speculation” would not be involved, only a
potentially reasonable inference. Although the MDL court concluded that
the record did not support a finding that Williams was exposed, we cannot
say that, taking all inferences in favor of Williams, the non-moving party, that
no reasonable juror could have found for him on the evidence before the
court. We reverse summary judgment on this claim.
II. Discovery decisions
The district court limited discovery as to Boeing. We are loath to
inject ourselves into such case management decisions absent compelling
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reasons. We have examined the record closely on this and are left with
uncertainties about the limitations. We explain.
Discovery decisions are reviewed for abuse of discretion. See, e.g., HC
Gun & Knife Shows, Inc. v. City of Houston, 201 F.3d 544, 549 (5th Cir. 2000).
This court “will reverse a discovery ruling only if it is ‘arbitrary or clearly
unreasonable,’ and the complaining party demonstrates that it was
prejudiced by the ruling.” Id. (quoting Mayo v. Tri-Bell Indus., Inc., 787 F.2d
1007, 1012 (5th Cir. 1996)) (emphasis in original) (citations omitted).
The Plaintiffs appeal the MDL court’s denial of their request for a six
month’s reopening of discovery. At the time the magistrate judge for the
MDL court denied the Plaintiffs’ request to reopen discovery, the suit had
been docketed in the MDL court for years. The Plaintiffs had only named
Boeing as a defendant in the preceding six months and had delayed serving
their discovery requests and notice of deposition on Boeing until a little over
a month from the close of discovery. Boeing argues that the Plaintiffs were
“clearly given the chance to engage in meaningful discovery” and wasted
that opportunity “over the course of five years of litigation.” Boeing also
states that Plaintiffs’ efforts to reopen discovery are inappropriate because
they have not been able to identify any “arbitrary or clearly unreasonable”
action by the magistrate judge, that their notice of deposition was deficient,
and the motion to compel discovery was filed “six months after the close of
discovery.”
The Plaintiffs explain their delay in joining Boeing as a defendant by
arguing that Boeing’s alleged role at the MAF had only become apparent in
documents received shortly before they added Boeing to the suit. Further,
even though the Plaintiffs gave no explanation for their initial delay in serving
discovery requests on Boeing after naming it as a party, they are correct that
Boeing avoided turning over documents by filing various motions that
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delayed discovery until dispositive motions had been decided after the
scheduled close of discovery. We next summarize the motions.
After the Plaintiffs served their discovery request and interrogatories,
Boeing first filed a motion to dismiss, and then sought a protective order as
well as a stay of discovery while the motion was pending. The MDL court
then granted Boeing’s motion to dismiss on June 24. Discovery closed on
June 30, 2013. The protective order/stay was then formally granted on July
22, 2013 because, although Boeing was dismissed at that time, the Plaintiffs
had filed a motion for reconsideration of the dismissal on the pleadings.
Upon reconsideration, the MDL court reinstated the suit against Boeing.
When the Plaintiffs sought to reopen discovery and reconsider the deadlines
pertaining to Boeing, though, their request was denied. In ruling on the
discovery motion, the magistrate judge for the MDL court found the first set
of discovery requests “overly broad and improper,” and based its denial on
“the circumstances of the case.”
Perhaps the magistrate judge was correct that the discovery that the
Plaintiffs sought was overly broad, but at least some of what the Plaintiffs
sought may have been outcome determinative. Prior to summary judgment,
the Plaintiffs sought considerable written discovery from Boeing and
attempted to depose a corporate representative. Included in their written
discovery requests was information regarding Boeing’s contracts with
NASA, Boeing’s role at the MAF, Boeing’s asbestos policies, documents
related to asbestos at the buildings that Williams was alleged to frequent, and
the identity of persons and organizations involved in asbestos-related activity
at the MAF. At the time, Boeing characterized the requests as “overly broad
and improper” and “unrestrained as to scope, time, and location such that
they constitute[d] an egregious violation [of the district court’s discovery
order.]”
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Boeing is correct that the discovery requests are expansive. Some of
the information, though, might have advanced the Plaintiffs’ case across two
dimensions and may not have been available from other sources. First,
evidence showing Boeing’s control of the relevant workspaces could have
shown whether Boeing was responsible for installing or maintaining asbestos
in the buildings that Williams was known to have frequented. Second, and
relatedly, it could have decreased the uncertainty about Williams’s
connection to Boeing by way of showing the extent of Boeing’s involvement
at the MAF.
Without knowing more about what was already available to the
Plaintiffs by way of other parties or through discovery sharing tools set up by
the MDL court, we do not know if denying the motion to reopen discovery
was either “arbitrary or clearly unreasonable” or even if it prejudiced the
Plaintiffs. To reverse this discovery decision, both must be true. If the
Plaintiffs were denied the opportunity to seek discovery from Boeing and had
no other means for acquiring information concerning Boeing’s relationship
with the relevant buildings, they would meet this stringent test. In light of
our conclusion that summary judgment was improperly granted, the district
court will have the benefit of the holding we have already made about the
evidence when re-evaluating the need for discovery.
We REMAND to the district court to ascertain what responsive
information the Plaintiffs could have reasonably accessed as part of the MDL
and whether additional discovery is appropriate.
III. Wrongful death claims
Finally, the Plaintiffs claim that the district court erred as a matter of
law in dismissing their wrongful death claims as untimely filed and thus
prescribed.
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The relevant procedural facts are as follows. Frank Williams brought
suit against Lockheed on November 12, 2008, then died on January 1, 2009.
On February 6, 2009, the Plaintiffs filed a motion to remand to state court,
announcing their intent to amend their claims, and asserting that the court
did not have valid subject matter jurisdiction. The motion announced the
Plaintiffs’ intent to be substituted as proper party plaintiffs, but it did not
formally request leave to substitute. The case was then transferred to the
MDL court prior to a ruling by the Louisiana district court on the remand
motion. In June 2010, counsel notified the MDL court that Frank Williams
had died. In February 2011, the Plaintiffs filed a motion to substitute, which
was granted in May 2012. The Plaintiffs finally described their wrongful
death claim in their First Amended Petition for Damages filed in January of
2013. At this point, Frank Williams had been deceased for nearly four years.
In determining whether the Plaintiffs had preserved their wrongful
death claims, the MDL court applied the substantive law of Louisiana
regarding prescription. The MDL court dismissed the claims as time-barred.
It did so because the prescriptive period for wrongful death claims in
Louisiana is one year, but the Plaintiffs amended their complaint to include a
wrongful death claim more than three years after Mr. Williams’s death
without identifying any justification for such a delay.
On appeal, the Plaintiffs argue that they were “asserting Mr.
Williams’ claims ‘as well as their own’” when they stated in their January
2013 First Amended Petition for damages that they would “be substituted as
proper party plaintiffs in a forthcoming amended petition for damages.”
They argue this was sufficient to preserve their wrongful death claims under
Louisiana law. They also claim that the wrongful death action relates back to
the original complaint. Boeing responds that the Plaintiffs’ argument under
the relation back doctrine is improper because under Louisiana law “survival
and wrongful death actions are totally separate and distinct causes of action,”
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citing Walls v. American Optical Corp., 98-0455, p. 14 (La. 1999); 740 So. 2d
1262, 1273.
Boeing further argues that the notice from the Williams children that
they were pursing their father’s claims as well as their own establishes only
that that they were the proper plaintiffs to pursue survival action claims.
They failed, though, to include any actual wrongful death claims. Thus,
Boeing argues that what was said in the motion to substitute “cannot, and
does not, serve as notice of an intention to file wrongful death claims, and
therefore did not interrupt prescription with respect to these claims.”
Both parties consider a 1996 district court opinion to be helpful to their
arguments. See Lagan v. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp., No. 80–4338, 1996
WL 445350 (E.D. La., Aug. 5, 1996). In that suit, a man was exposed to
asbestos in his employment and sued his employer for damages. Id. at *1.
That plaintiff’s wife also sought damages “for loss of her husband’s society,
services, and support as a result of his illness.” Id. The man died. Three
years later, his widow amended her complaint to substitute herself as the
plaintiff and explicitly to assert a claim for wrongful death. Id. The district
court distinguished Louisiana Supreme Court precedent favoring
prescription by stating that “because those cases involved additional
plaintiffs’ filing amended complaints,” and because “Mrs. Lagan was an
original plaintiff in the suit[,] . . . the [c]ourt need only determine if the
amendment relates back to Mrs. Lagan’s pending claim.” Id. Because Mrs.
Lagan’s wrongful death claim arose out of the “same conduct, transaction or
occurrence” as originally alleged — and because the original petition notified
the defendant that Mrs. Lagan was seeking recovery for “the loss of her
husband’s society, support, and services” — the court found that “[a]dding
the wrongful death claim [did] not affect the issue of liability, nor [did] it
significantly affect the type of evidence needed to establish damages.” Id.
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at *2. The court thus found that the amended complaint related back to the
filing date of the original pleading and was not prescribed. Id.
The Lagan court’s analysis of similar issues is certainly worth
considering, though of course the decision is not precedential. Whatever the
merits of that decision, the Plaintiffs in this case were not original parties in
the suit as was Mrs. Lagan, nor did Williams initially bring suit to recover for
loss of society, support, and services. Even though the wrongful death claim
arises from the same conduct, transaction, or occurrence of the survival
claim, the evidence required to establish damages for Breck and Tarsia
Williams would almost certainly be different from the evidence required to
establish damages for Frank Williams.
The only additional decision cited by the Plaintiffs did allow a relation
back of the claims. See Giroir v. South La. Med. Ctr., Div. of Hospitals, 475 So.
2d 1040 (La. 1985) (Dennis, J., now a member of this court). In a suit that
was timely only by a few days, the plaintiff’s husband brought a wrongful
death suit after she died. Id. at 1041–42. Then the children of these parents
filed suit, ten days after their father had filed but after prescription had run.
Id. at 1041. The Louisiana Supreme Court allowed the suit because one
plaintiff (the husband) had already brought a timely wrongful death claim; it
found that certainly “the defendant either knew or should have known of the
existence and involvement of the new plaintiff, the new and the old plaintiffs
are sufficiently related so that the added or substituted party is not wholly
new or unrelated, and the defendant will not be prejudiced in preparing and
conducting his defense.” Id. at 1041. Here, of course, no wrongful death
claim by anyone was brought until after the prescription period.
Much more applicable is a case in which a plaintiff filed suit against
his employer for being exposed to free silica while still living and a subsequent
suit by his widow and children for a wrongful death was deemed prescribed
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as not relating back due to the separate nature of wrongful death and survival
actions. See Ducre v. Mine Safety Appliances Co., 634 F. Supp. 696, 698 (E.D.
La. 1986) (citing Guidry v. Theriot, 377 So. 2d 319, 322 (La. 1979)). We agree
with that court’s reasoning.
The district court properly determined that the Plaintiffs’ wrongful
death claims are time-barred.
We REVERSE IN PART and REMAND to the district court for
further proceedings on the survival action. We REMAND for the district
court to RECONSIDER plaintiffs’ motion for further discovery. We
AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of the wrongful death claims.
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