IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
September 8, 2008
No. 07-10711
Charles R. Fulbruge III
Clerk
CADLES OF GRASSY MEADOWS II, L.L.C.,
by Assignment from Olney Savings Association,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
Intervenor Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
DAVID GOLDNER; ROBERT GOLDNER,
Defendants-Appellees.
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Texas
Before DAVIS, SMITH, and DeMOSS, Circuit Judges.
JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge.
Cadles of Grassy Meadows II, L.L.C. (“Cadles”), sued David and Robert
Goldner to recover on a debt. The court dismissed the suit as time-barred, hold-
ing that a Texas provision tolling the statute of limitations against out-of-state
No. 07-10711
defendants violates the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution. We
affirm the dismissal.
I.
The Goldners were partners in Equivest Properties, a Texas general part-
nership. In 1985 and 1988, Equivest executed promissory notes in Texas to pay
about $2.7 million to Olney Savings Association. In their individual capacities,
the Goldners agreed to guarantee Equivest’s debt to Olney, and they listed a
Texas address in the guarantees. The notes were further secured by deeds of
trust that created liens on real property owned by Equivest in Texas. The notes
were due on December 31, 1988, at which time a claim for recovery on the debt
accrued.
By the end of 1988, the Goldners had left Texas and did not return. The
full debt was not paid, and the Goldners resided in New York. In 1992, Olney,
now doing business as AmWest Savings Association, sued Equivest and the
Goldners in Texas state court to recover unpaid portions of the debt. In 1994,
the court rendered a judgment against the defendants for the unpaid principal,
interest, costs, and attorneys’ fees. Equivest became defunct,1 and the state
court granted the Goldners’ motion to void the judgment as to themselves.2
Through a series of assignments, Cadles in 2004 acquired all interest in
the debt and judgment and in 2006 sued the Goldners for unpaid amounts due.
Cadles maintained that its suit to recover on the almost eighteen-year-old debt
was timely, because the applicable statute of limitations3 was tolled by a Texas
1
The remaining defendant, who had been an Equivest partner, had died.
2
The judgment was voided because of insufficient service of process on the ground that
process was sent to the wrong New York addresses.
3
In diversity cases involving state-law claims, federal courts apply applicable state limi-
tations statutes. Tex. Soil Recycling, Inc. v. Intercargo Ins. Co., 273 F.3d 644, 649 (5th Cir.
(continued...)
2
No. 07-10711
statute extending limitations against out-of-state defendants: “The absence from
this state of a person against whom a cause of action may be maintained
suspends the running of the applicable statute of limitations for the period of the
person’s absence.” TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 16.063. Judicial gloss on that
statute has clarified that tolling applies to Texas residents who are not present
in Texas and to nonresidents who are not present in Texas but were present
there when they contracted the debt or when the cause of action accrued. See
Jackson v. Speer, 974 F.2d 676, 678-79 (5th Cir. 1992) (citing state cases).
Whether applied to a resident or nonresident, however, the provision tolls
limitations against defendants for as long as they are not present in Texas. It
is undisputed that the Goldners were present in Texas when they incurred the
debt but have been absent from Texas and have not been there for an aggregate
period of four years since accrual of the cause of action.
On diversity grounds, the Goldners removed the suit to federal court and
moved for judgment on the pleadings, arguing that the claim is barred by limi-
tations because the Texas tolling provision violates the dormant commerce
clause. Cf. U.S. CONST., art. I, § 8, cl. 3. The State of Texas intervened to defend
the statute’s constitutionality. Finding the tolling statute unconstitutional, the
district court deemed the suit time-barred and entered judgment for the Gold-
ners.
II.
A.
We review a judgment on the pleadings de novo. Nunez v. Simms, 341
3
(...continued)
2001). The parties disagree about whether the applicable limitations period is four years, per
TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 16.004(a)(3), or two years, per TEX. PROP. CODE § 51.003(a).
All parties, however, concede that Cadles’ cause of action accrued in 1988 and that the applica-
ble limitations periodSSbe it two years or fourSShas long since run.
3
No. 07-10711
F.3d 385, 388 (5th Cir. 2003). We accept the complaint’s well-pleaded facts as
true and view them in the light most favorable to the non-movant. Johnson v.
Johnson, 385 F.3d 503, 529 (5th Cir. 2004).
B.
In Bendix Autolite Corp. v. Midwesco Enterprises, Inc., 486 U.S. 888
(1988), the Court invalidated an Ohio tolling provision similar to the Texas stat-
ute at issue here. Ohio, like Texas, tolled limitations for as long as a defendant
was not present in the state. The Court explained that when “a State denies or-
dinary legal defenses or like privileges to out-of-state persons or corporations
engaged in commerce, the state law will be reviewed under the Commerce
Clause to determine whether the denial is discriminatory on its face or an imper-
missible burden on commerce,” id. at 893, and “weigh[ed] and assess[ed] the
State’s putative interests against the interstate restraints to determine if the
burden imposed is an unreasonable one,” id. at 891. The Court concluded that
“the burden imposed on interstate commerce by the tolling statute exceeds any
local interest that the State might advance.” Id. Bendix compels the same con-
clusion here.
The dormant commerce clause analysis requires a “two -tiered approach.”
Brown-Forman Distillers Corp. v. N.Y. State Liquor Auth., 476 U.S. 573, 578
(1986). “When a state statute directly regulates or discriminates against inter-
state commerce, or when its effect is to favor in-state economic interests over
out-of-state interests, [the Court has] generally struck down the statute without
further inquiry.” Id. at 579. “When, however, a statute has only indirect effects
on interstate commerce and regulates evenhandedly, we have examined whether
the State’s interest is legitimate and whether the burden on interstate commerce
4
No. 07-10711
clearly exceeds the local benefits.” Id.4 In Bendix, 486 U.S. at 891, the Court
observed that the Ohio tolling statute “might have been held to be a discrimina-
tion that invalidates without extended inquiry,” i.e., at the first tier, but the
Court nevertheless chose to apply the balancing test, and we do the same here.
As an initial matter, however, Cadles maintains that the Goldners were
not “out-of-state persons . . . engaged in commerce,” id. at 893, so the Commerce
Clause does not even reach the activities in question. In the parlance of the bal-
ancing test, this argument amounts to a claim that applying the Texas tolling
statute to the Goldners has no effects on interstate commerce, be they direct or
indirect. We disagree.
The Texas provision deprives defendants of a limitations defense by virtue
of the fact that they are out of state.5 It thus restricts one’s freedom to incur bus-
iness obligations in Texas and then to leave the state without detriment. That
is what the Goldners did: They obtained a loan in Texas and left for New York,
carrying the debt obligations with them. The transportation of persons between
states falls within the ambit of the Commerce Clause, see, e.g., Heart of Atlanta
Motel, Inc. v. United States, 379 U.S. 241, 253-57 (1964); Edwards v. California,
314 U.S. 160, 173 (1941), and though Cadles maintains that the Goldners “trans-
4
This balancing approach was first set forth in Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc., 397 U.S. 137,
142 (1970) (citation omitted), in which the Court explained,
Where the statute regulates even-handedly to effectuate a legitimate local pub-
lic interest, and its effects on interstate commerce are only incidental, it will be
upheld unless the burden imposed on such commerce is clearly excessive in rela-
tion to the putative local benefits. If a legitimate local purpose is found, then
the question becomes one of degree. And the extent of the burden that will be
tolerated will of course depend on the nature of the local interest involved, and
on whether it could be promoted as well with a lesser impact on interstate activ-
ities.
5
The tolling statute eliminates “the defense of limitations in all suits against nonresi-
dents who incur an obligation in Texas and go back to their home state without returning to
Texas. In such cases, the statute is tolled indefinitely.” Dicker v. Binkley, 555 S.W.2d 495, 497
(Tex. App.SSDallas 1997, writ ref’d n.r.e.).
5
No. 07-10711
ported nothing from Texas to New York except themselves,” Cadles overlooks
that the Goldners brought their debt along with themSSi.e., they effectively
“transported” a commercial obligation.6 The Goldners’ actions plainly affected
interstate commerce and therefore implicated the Commerce Clause.
Turning to burdens and benefits, the effects of the Texas tolling statute
are substantially similar to those of the Ohio statute struck down in Bendix.
The Bendix Court first assessed the Ohio statute’s burden on interstate com-
merce and observed that “[a]lthough statute of limitations defenses are not a
fundamental right,” a state “may not withdraw such defenses on conditions re-
pugnant to the Commerce Clause.” Bendix, 486 U.S. at 893.
Because the Ohio statute tolled the statute of limitations while defendants
were not present in Ohio, the Court held that it burdened out-of-staters. Al-
though an out-of-state business could have established a presence in Ohio and
avoided tolling by appointing a resident agent for service of process in that state,
doing so would have subjected the business to the general jurisdiction of the
Ohio courts. That resulted in a Hobson’s choice: “The Ohio statutory scheme
thus forces a foreign corporation to choose between exposure to the general juris-
diction of Ohio courts or forfeiture of the limitations defense, remaining subject
to suit in Ohio in perpetuity.” Id. That choice was a “significant burden” on in-
terstate commerce. Id.
Like the Ohio statute, the Texas statute tolls limitations while a defendant
is not present in Texas. The state, however, contends that its statute does not
6
Cf. Heart of Atlanta Motel, 379 U.S. at 357 (“‘Commerce among the states . . . includes
the transportation of . . . p[ro]perty.’”) (quoting Hoke v. United States, 227 U.S. 308, 320
(1913)). The Goldners originally transacted with a federally insured bank, and the financial
instruments were transferred in a series of assignments from that bank to a Delaware limited
partnership located in Georgia and then to a West Virginia company located in Ohio. See Citi-
zens Bank v. Alafabco, Inc., 539 U.S. 52, 58 (2003) (“No elaborate explanation is needed to
make evident the broad impact of commercial lending on the national economy or Congress’
power to regulate that activity pursuant to the Commerce Clause.”).
6
No. 07-10711
burden out-of-staters because, unlike the situation in Ohio, out-of-staters can be
present in Texas without subjecting themselves to the general jurisdiction of the
Texas courts. In other words, Texas maintains that it has no Hobson’s choice:
To avoid tolling, an out-of-state defendant need only appoint a resident agent
and need not thereby be subject to the state’s general jurisdiction.
The state’s argument relies on the assumption that individuals such as the
Goldners can establish presence in Texas for tolling purposes by appointing
resident agents. The state cites two cases holding that a corporation that estab-
lishes a “registered agent for service of process” in Texas is “present” for purposes
of the tolling provision.7 The Goldners, however, point out that no Texas court
has applied the tolling provision to individuals who appoint resident agents, as
distinguished from corporations that register resident agents with the state.8 In
the cases addressing what constitutes “presence” for individuals, the courts have
7
G. Richard Goins Constr. Co. v. S.B. McLaughlin Assocs., Inc., 930 S.W.2d 124, 128
(Tex. App.SSTyler 1996, writ denied) (“The absence from this state of a person against whom
a cause of action may be maintained suspends the running of the applicable statute of limita-
tions for the period of the person’s absence. However, a defendant that maintains a registered
agent for service of process within the state is not absent from the state for purposes of [the
tolling provision].”) (citations and quotations omitted) (emphasis added); see also Davis v. B.E.
& K., Inc., 595 S.W.2d 895, 896 (Tex. Civ. App.SSEastland 1980, writ ref’d n.r.e.) (“[B.E. & K.
corporation] maintains an authorized agent for service within this state. Such a defendant is
not ‘without the limits of this State’ within the meaning of the tolling statute.”) (emphasis add-
ed).
8
The state does point to one Texas decision that did not distinguish between individual
and corporate defendants when determining whether the defendants were present for tolling
purposes. The court observed in a single breath that “the Brown entities [individuals] and
D.H. Morgan [corporation] are nonresidents, do not maintain an agent for service of process
within Texas, and were not present within the state of Texas on May 17, 1992.” Howard v.
Fiesta Tex. Show Park, Inc., 980 S.W.2d 716, 722 (Tex. App.SSSan Antonio 1998, pet. denied).
Without specifying whether it was speaking about the individuals or the corporation, the court
also observed, “‘Presence’ within the state of Texas occurs if an agent, employee, or other repre-
sentative was within the territorial limits of the state.” Id. at 723.
The cited case is ambiguous at best. Its only plain holding is that the tolling statute
applies where an individual or corporate defendant neither has a physical presence in Texas
nor appoints a resident agent. That is of course true, but relatively unilluminating, because
it is consistent with both the Goldners’ and the state’s arguments.
7
No. 07-10711
focused exclusively on physical presence and have not discussed the possibility
of individuals’ appointing agents.9
Although an individual may appoint an agent to accept process, he cannot
formally register that agent for service of process with the state. The Goldners
advance a plausible case that this distinction makes a difference, because the
registration makes the out-of-state business readily identifiable as an entity
amenable to service within the state. There is reason to think that the animat-
ing principle behind the Texas courts’ understanding of “presence,” for tolling
purposes, is the open and notorious nature of a defendant’s amenability to ser-
vice.10 The state suggests that the Goldners could have put Cadles on notice of
their appointment of a Texas agent by designating that agent in the debt instru-
ments. But Texas courts had not made plain at the time those instruments were
signed, and have not made plain since, that an individual who designates a resi-
dent agent in the instruments can avoid tolling.
9
See Dicker, 555 S.W.2d at 497 (“[S]ince [the defendant] was thus physically present
in Texas at the time the obligation arose, his subsequent absence from the state tolled the run-
ning of limitations . . . . We recognize that the practical effect of this holding is to eliminate
the defense of limitations in all suits against nonresidents who incur an obligation in Texas
and go back to their home state without returning to Texas. In such cases, the statute is tolled
indefinitely.”); Wise v. Anderson, 359 S.W.2d 876, 879 (Tex. 1962) (“[The tolling statute] does
apply to nonresidents who were present in the state at the time the cause of action accrued or
had its inception and who later leave the state.”); Stone v. Phillips, 176 S.W.2d 932, 933 (Tex.
1944) (holding that though defendant “never abandoned her home in Texas” and “always con-
sidered herself a citizen of Texas,” the fact that “the defendant was absent at the time the right
to sue accrued, and remained absent until only a short time prior to the filing of the suit,”
triggered the tolling provision).
10
In an old case construing the predecessor to the current tolling statute, a Texas court
noted the following:
If [the defendant] came into the state openly and publicly, under circumstances
which afforded [the plaintiff] reasonable and fair opportunity, by the exercise of
ordinary diligence, to obtain personal service upon him, we think the time he so
remained should be counted in his favor [for tolling purposes], whether [the
plaintiff] had actual knowledge thereof or not.
Montgomery v. Brown, 28 S.W. 834, 834 (Tex. Civ. App.SSFort Worth 1894, no writ).
8
No. 07-10711
We cannot know whether the Texas courts will ever deem appointment of
a resident agent sufficient for an individual to establish “presence” under the
tolling statute, and we need not wager an answer today. It is enough for our
purposes to recognize that it remains an open question. So long as that is so, it
would be mistaken to say that the Goldners were unburdened by the tolling pro-
vision just because they could have done something the Texas courts mightSSor
might notSSin the future deem sufficient to avoid tolling.11 At the time the in-
struments were signed, and now, the Texas courts have explicitly recognized on-
ly two ways to avoid tollingSSeither an individual’s physical presence in Texas
or a corporation’s registration of an agent in Texas. To require the Goldners to
guess, ex ante, that the courts would recognize a third way, ex post, would impose
too great a burden.12
We conclude, therefore, that the burden the Texas statute imposes on the
Goldners is at least as great as the one that the Ohio statute imposed in Bendix.
Indeed, it would have been even more difficult for the Goldners to avoid tolling
than it was for the Bendix defendants: Not only would the Goldners have had
to subject themselves to the general jurisdiction of Texas courts, but they would
also have had to move physically back to Texas.13
We must next weigh that burden against the local benefit of the Texas
tolling statute. In Bendix, which involved a corporate defendant, the Ohio stat-
11
In the event the Texas courts do create an exception for individuals who appoint resi-
dent agents, we make no judgment as to whether such exception would be sufficient to satisfy
the dormant commerce clause.
12
See Bendix, 486 U.S. at 894-95 (deriding as “speculative” the suggestion that defen-
dant could have avoided tolling merely by designating an agent for service of process in its con-
tract with plaintiff, because “there is no statutory support” for that option).
13
Because the Goldners were burdened with having to move back to Texas, we need not
address the state’s argument that there is a fact issue regarding whether the Goldners took
any actions that would have subjected them in any case to the general jurisdiction of the Texas
courts regardless of the tolling statute. The burden here is having to move back to Texas, not
the burden of subjecting oneself to jurisdiction.
9
No. 07-10711
ute advanced the state’s interest in ensuring plaintiffs had the “ability to execute
service of process on foreign corporations and entities.” Bendix, 486 U.S. at 894.
Though it recognized such interest as “important,” id. at 893, the Court conclud-
ed that the Ohio tolling statute was not necessary to satisfy it:
Ohio cannot justify its statute as a means of protecting its residents
from corporations who become liable for acts done within the State
but later withdraw from the jurisdiction, for it is conceded by all
parties that the Ohio long-arm statute would have permitted service
on [the defendant] throughout the period of limitations.
Id. at 894. The Court acknowledged that “serving foreign corporate defendants
may be more arduous than serving domestic corporations or foreign corporations
with a designated agent for service,” id. at 893, but that interest in easing the
difficulty of service is “insufficient to withstand Commerce Clause scrutiny,” id.
at 894. In sum, the Bendix Court deemed the tolling statute unnecessary to ad-
vance Ohio’s interest in ensuring that it be possible for residents to sue out-of-
state defendants, and the Court found it unjustified to advance an interest in
merely making it less arduous to sue out-of-state defendants.
Cadles and the state do not contest that the Texas long-arm statute, like
the Ohio statute, makes it possible for residents to sue out-of-state defendants.
See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 17.041 et seq. As in Bendix, modern personal
jurisdiction doctrine and the existence of a long-arm statute make the Texas toll-
ing provision no longer necessary to advance the provision’s traditional pur-
pose.14 And as in Bendix, it will not suffice to defend the statute on the ground
14
Indeed, the Texas courts long ago acknowledged the tolling provision’s original pur-
pose, in the days before the existence of long-arm jurisdiction. The tolling provision was “in-
tended to protect [domestic creditors] from the inconvenience and loss, to which they would be
exposed by the absence of their debtors and consequent immunity of the latter from process
and judgment.” Ayres v. Henderson, 9 Tex. 539, 539 (1853).
10
No. 07-10711
that it makes serving out-of-state defendants less arduous.15
The state suggests that the conclusion would be different if the Goldners
could not be found for service, thus making it effectively impossible for Cadles
to serve them. That sort of factual impossibility of service might be analogous
to the legal impossibility of service that would have existed absent a long-arm
statute. Indeed, Justice Scalia suggested that possibility in his Bendix concur-
rence, observing, “A tolling statute that operated only against persons beyond
the reach of Ohio’s long-arm statute, or against all persons that could not be
found for mail service, would be narrowly tailored to advance the legitimate pur-
pose of preserving claims.” Bendix, 486 U.S. at 898 (Scalia, J., concurring in the
judgment). Two courts have upheld the constitutionality of Mississippi and New
Jersey tolling statutes that tolled limitations where it was impossible, or at least
very difficult, for out-of-state defendants to be found for service.16
The Mississippi and New Jersey cases, however, involved narrowly written
statutes that triggered tolling only where the defendants could not be served be-
cause their whereabouts were unknown. The Texas statute, like the Ohio stat-
ute in Bendix, is not so narrowly drawn.17 That is perhaps why the seven-mem
15
Cadles and the state argue that the local interest here is an interest merely in mak-
ing it easier for domestic plaintiffs to serve out-of-state defendants, because “distance adds
expense and difficulty,” and Cadles “may have been unable to procure valid contact informa-
tion for the Goldners despite diligent efforts.” As explained above, however, that argument
was acknowledged in Bendix and was rejected as insufficient.
16
See Vice v. Danvid Window Co., 2007 WL 1668637, at *2 (S.D. Miss. 2007) (“The
Court finds that Miss. Code Ann. § 15-1-63 does not violate the Commerce Clause since the
statute only tolls the statute of limitations when the defendant is not amenable to service of
process because his whereabouts are unknown . . . .”); Blyth v. Marcus, 517 S.E.2d 433, 435
(S.C. 1999) (“We held the period of limitations may be tolled only when the name and location
of the defendant are not known to the plaintiff. Since we have limited the application of § 15-3-
30 [in that previous case], the statute is now substantially different than the Ohio statute
struck down in Bendix.”).
17
Nor can we narrow the statute by construing it to avoid a constitutional question,
because the statute is not ambiguous on this point. See Crowell v. Benson, 285 U.S. 22, 62
(continued...)
11
No. 07-10711
ber majority opinion in Bendix never mentioned the impossibility-of-service
argument, and even Justice Scalia rejected it as applied to the Ohio statute,
which was substantially the same as the Texas statute at issue here .
In sum, the tolling statute’s balance of burdens and benefits in this case
is not materially different from the balance deemed unconstitutional in Bendix.
As the Court did in Bendix, we conclude that the “the burden imposed on inter-
state commerce by the tolling statute exceeds any local interest that the State
might advance.” Bendix, 486 U.S. at 891. Accordingly, the judgment of dismis-
sal is AFFIRMED.
17
(...continued)
(1932) (“[W]hen the validity of an Act of Congress is drawn in question, and even if a serious
doubt of constitutionality is raised, it is a cardinal principle that this Court will first ascertain
whether a construction of the statute is fairly possible by which the question may be avoided.”)
(emphasis added). To accept the state’s argument, we would have to rewrite the statute, a job
the federal courts are wise to leave to the legislature.
The state contends that we should construe and weigh the local benefits of the tolling
provision in an “as applied” manner, determining whether the state has an interest in tolling
limitations against the particular defendants in this case because there is a fact question about
whether it was effectively impossible to serve the Goldners with process. But there is no such
fact question: As applied to the Goldners, the Texas statute would toll limitations against the
Goldners regardless of whether, as discussed above, they were effectively impossible to serve.
And we cannot read the statute to make an exception, as applied to the Goldners, that the
statute does not make.
12