Brown v. Richard A. Murphy, Inc.

862 P.2d 406, 261 Mont. 275, 50 State Rptr. 1330, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 318
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1993
Docket92-623
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 862 P.2d 406 (Brown v. Richard A. Murphy, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Richard A. Murphy, Inc., 862 P.2d 406, 261 Mont. 275, 50 State Rptr. 1330, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 318 (Mo. 1993).

Opinion

JUSTICE TRIEWEILER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Clifford Brown appeals from a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Court in which his request to rescind a compromise settlement that the parties had agreed upon was denied. The court concluded that Brown was not entitled to reopen the settlement agreement and that the insurer was not required to provide him with additional benefits.

We reverse.

The dispositive issue on appeal is whether the Workers’ Compensation Court erred when it concluded that there were no grounds to allow rescission of the compromise settlement agreement.

Claimant Clifford Brown was injured during the course of his employment on two separate occasions-Februaiy 21,1978, and December 2,1985, while employed by Richard A. Murphy, Inc. The State Compensation Mutual Insurance Fund accepted liability and paid various benefits.

*277 Following the 1985 injury, the State Fund notified Brown that it elected not to participate in the cost of a possible third-party claim for damages, but that, pursuant to § 39-71-414(2)(c), MCA (1983), it retained a 50 percent subrogation interest in any recovery.

Brown did pursue a third-party claim in California and subsequently settled that claim for $55,000, which was less than policy limits.

In March 1990, following that settlement, Brown’s counsel approached the State Fund about settling the workers’ compensation claims. At this time, Brown’s entitlement to permanent partial disability benefits had not been determined by either agreement or adjudication, and there had been no determination of the State Fund’s subrogation interest, if any, in the third-party settlement. However, based on the settlement amount and the attorney fees and costs associated with the settlement, the State Fund determined that the maximum subrogation interest it was entitled to was $18,666.67.

The parties eventually compromised Brown’s claim, as well as the State Fund’s subrogation interest. The State Fund agreed to pay to Brown $30,000 of “new money” and, as part of the compromise, the State Fund waived any subrogation interest in the third-party settlement. The petition for full and final compromise settlement which was submitted to the Department of Labor and Industry stated that Brown agreed to accept $33,662.50, of which $3,662.50 had already been paid, as a full and final compromise of his claim. Additionally, the State Fund stated that it waived its subrogation interest in the amount of $17,382.78. There is no explanation for the seventeen thousand dollar figure, as opposed to the $18,666.67 which the State Fund had previously calculated as its maximum subrogation interest. This agreement was signed by Brown on April 7,1990, and the State Fund on May 1,1990.

The department approved this compromise agreement on May 10, 1990, but altered some of the terms. The final order approving the compromise settlement stated that Brown was to receive in settlement of his claims the amount of $52,329.17, less $18,666.67 which “is subrogation due the State Fund.” After deducting the amount previously paid to Brown, he was to receive a net settlement of $30,000. The language added by the department, while not materially altering the agreement, clarified that the settlement agreement took into account the subrogation interest that the State Fund believed it was entitled to receive.

*278 Prior to the issuance of this order, however, the State Fund initiated a second agreement entitled “Compromise Settlement of Insurer’s Subrogation Interest” which Brown signed on April 30, 1990. This agreement purported to settle a controversy regarding the State Fund’s subrogation interest and stated that the insurer agreed to accept as its subrogation interest “the sum of zero dollars.” This agreement was approved by the Department of Labor on June 29, 1990.

On June 7, 1990, one month after the Department of Labor’s approval of the settlement agreement, but prior to its approval of the subrogation “waiver,” this Court issued its decision in Zacher v. American Insurance Company (1990), 243 Mont. 226, 794 P.2d 335. Zacher construed the 1983 subrogation provision of the Workers’ Compensation Act, which the parties agree is the controlling statute in this case. Applying the theory of equitable limitation on legal subrogation, this Court held that an insurer has no subrogation rights until a claimant has been made whole for his entire loss and any costs of recovery, including attorney fees. Zacher, 794 P.2d at 338.

Approximately a year later, on April 10,1991, Larry Thomas, the supervising claims examiner for the State Fund, responded to an inquiry from Brown’s attorney in which the terms of the settlement agreement were clarified. Thomas explained that Brown’s case had been settled for $52,329.17, and from this the State Fund deducted its subrogation interest of $18,666.67, and the amounts already paid out in partial benefits. This left a net settlement of $30,000 which had been paid to Brown.

On September 3,1991, Brown submitted a claim to the State Fund to recoup the $18,666.67 subrogation interest which Brown claimed was deducted and withheld by the State Fund in the compromise settlement. He asserted that he had to pay his attorney fees from the third-party recovery, and therefore, had not been made whole, which is a prerequisite for subrogation according to the decision in Zacher.

The State Fund denied Brown’s claim on the basis that it had expressly waived any subrogation interest in Brown’s third-party settlement and that there was nothing for it to refund.

Brown then petitioned the Workers’ Compensation Court in December 1991, alleging that a subrogation interest in the amount of $18,666.67 hadbeen “deducted” from the compromise settlement, and that, pursuant to the Zacher decision, this amount should be returned to him. Brown contended that the settlement agreement should be set aside on the basis that the parties were mutually mistaken regarding the State Fund’s right to a subrogation interest in Brown’s *279 third-party recovery when they entered into the agreement. Brown also added a claim for attorney fees alleging that the State Fund had acted unreasonably when it refused to pay his claim.

The Workers’ Compensation Court entered its judgment on December 11, 1992, in which the court accepted the hearing examiner’s findings of fact, conclusions of law, and proposed judgment. The court determined that Brown was not entitled to reopen the May 10,1990, settlement agreement and was not entitled to further compensation or attorney fees. From this judgment, Brown appeals.

Did the Workers’ Compensation Court err when it concluded that there were no grounds to allow rescission of the compromise settlement agreement?

Brown contends that the Workers’ Compensation Court erred when it did not allow rescission of the settlement agreement and did not order the State Fund to reimburse Brown for the subrogation interest it retained. He argues on appeal that the Zacher

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Bluebook (online)
862 P.2d 406, 261 Mont. 275, 50 State Rptr. 1330, 1993 Mont. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-richard-a-murphy-inc-mont-1993.