Ayre v. Outlaw Decoys, Inc

664 N.W.2d 263, 256 Mich. App. 517
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 2003
DocketDocket 234826
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 664 N.W.2d 263 (Ayre v. Outlaw Decoys, Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ayre v. Outlaw Decoys, Inc, 664 N.W.2d 263, 256 Mich. App. 517 (Mich. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

*519 Cavanagh, J.

Plaintiff Susanne Burnside, personal representative of the estate of Bradley H. Burnside, deceased, appeals as of right the trial court’s order awarding $232,794 in case evaluation sanctions to defendant Attwood Corporation. We vacate and remand.

On November 11, 1995, James O. Ayre; Howard G. Swift, III; Rodney G. Burnside; and Bradley H. Bum-side, Rodney’s fourteen-year-old son, died when Ayre’s eighteen-foot recreational boat capsized on Saginaw Bay while they were duck hunting. This consolidated wrongful death and products liability action was filed against the manufacturer of the boat, Outlaw Decoys, Inc., and Wingset Company, doing business as Outlaw Marine (hereinafter referred to collectively as Outlaw), and Attwood Corporation (Attwood), the manufacturer of a fuel system component of the boat. The matter proceeded to case evaluation 1 where separate, unanimous awards were rendered in each plaintiff’s favor, with seventy percent of the liability assigned to Outlaw and thirty percent apportioned to Attwood. The Ayre, Swift, and Rodney Burnside estates accepted their awards, conditioned on the acceptance of all defendants. Plaintiff rejected the case evaluation award, and Outlaw and Attwood rejected all the awards.

On the eve of trial, Outlaw entered into a settlement agreement with all the plaintiffs. Thereafter, a thirty-day jury trial commenced against Attwood, and resulted in a verdict of no cause of action in Attwood’s favor. A motion for new trial was denied, *520 which this Court affirmed. See Ayre v Attwood Corp, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued March 16, 2001 (Docket Nos. 217911, 218064). Subsequently, the trial court granted Attwood’s motion for case evaluation sanctions in the amount of $232,794 against plaintiff only, on the ground that plaintiff rejected the case evaluation award, while her coplaintiffs accepted their awards. Plaintiff appeals from the trial court’s order.

Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in assessing as sanctions all of Attwood’s attorney fees accrued following case evaluation, because the fees were not incurred as a result of plaintiff’s rejection of the case evaluation award. We agree. A trial court’s interpretation of a court rule and decision to award case evaluation sanctions are questions of law we review de novo. Marketos v American Employers Ins Co, 465 Mich 407, 412; 633 NW2d 371 (2001); Elia v Hazen, 242 Mich App 374, 376-377; 619 NW2d 1 (2000). The amount of case evaluation sanctions awarded is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Id. at 377.

MCR 2.403(G)(1) provides:

If a party has rejected an evaluation and the action proceeds to verdict, that party must pay the opposing party’s actual costs unless the verdict is more favorable to the rejecting party than the case evaluation. However, if the opposing party has also rejected the evaluation, a party is entitled to costs only if the verdict is more favorable to that party than the case evaluation.

Whether “the verdict is more favorable” to a party is determined after appropriate adjustments are made to the verdict. MCR 2.403(O)(3). However, in cases *521 involving multiple parties, MCR 2.403(O)(4)(a) provides:

Except as provided in subrule (0)(4)(b), in determining whether the verdict is more favorable to a party than the case evaluation, the court shall consider only the amount of the evaluation and verdict as to the particular pair of parties, rather than the aggregate evaluation or verdict as to all parties.

Further, pursuant to MCR 2.403(O)(6), reimbursable “actual costs” include:

(a) those costs taxable in any civil action, and
(b) a reasonable attorney fee based on a reasonable hourly or daily rate as determined by the trial judge for services necessitated by the rejection of the case evaluation.

Here, plaintiff does not contest that Attwood is entitled to recover its actual costs under MCR 2.403(0) following a jury verdict of no cause of action in Attwood’s favor. Plaintiff does, however, contend that Attwood is not entitled to recover all its attorney fees incurred as a consequence of proceeding to trial because plaintiff’s rejection of the case evaluation award, alone, did not force the trial since Attwood rejected all of the case evaluation awards. In other words, the trial would have occurred even if plaintiff had accepted the award because Attwood rejected the awards with regard to all four plaintiff's. Although we repudiate plaintiff’s reasoning in this matter of first impression, we agree that plaintiff is not liable for all of Attwood’s attorney fees that accrued following plaintiff’s rejection of the case evaluation.

Plaintiff correctly claims that Attwood’s rejection of all the case evaluation awards was a determinative factor in the entire matter proceeding to trial because *522 the three other plaintiffs accepted their awards; however, that factor is not dispositive. If any one or all three of the plaintiffs who had accepted their case evaluation awards had received verdicts more favorable than the amount of their award, as determined under MCR 2.403(O)(4)(a), Attwood would have been liable for their actual costs under MCR 2.403(O)(6). Conversely, because those three plaintiffs accepted their case evaluation awards, they are not liable under MCR 2.403(0) for any portion of Attwood’s actual costs, although Attwood prevailed against them at trial. This result is consistent with the purpose of the case evaluation rule “to place the burden of litigation costs upon the party who insists upon a trial by rejecting a proposed mediation award.” See Bien v Venticinque, 151 Mich App 229, 232; 390 NW2d 702 (1986); see, also, Taylor v Anesthesia Assoc of Muskegon, PC, 179 Mich App 384, 387; 445 NW2d 525 (1989).

The issue here, however, is the scope of one rejecting plaintiffs liability, by operation of MCR 2.403(0), in a multiple-plaintiff action, when the defendant prevailed against all the plaintiffs. Is the rejecting plaintiff liable for all of a defendant’s attorney fees that accrued after case evaluation, including those associated with defending against the claims of the other plaintiffs that were also litigated in the same trial? The answer is no. The rejecting plaintiff is only liable for those attorney fees that accrued as a consequence of that plaintiff’s rejection, which is determined by examining the rejecting plaintiff’s theories of liability and damage claims.

The rejecting plaintiff is only liable for attorney fees associated with the defense against that plain *523 tiffs theories of liability. If coplaintiffs asserted different theories of liability than the rejecting plaintiff, only the attorney fees associated with the defense against the rejecting plaintiff’s theories of liability are taxable.

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Bluebook (online)
664 N.W.2d 263, 256 Mich. App. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ayre-v-outlaw-decoys-inc-michctapp-2003.