Cooper v. Argonaut Insurance Companies

556 P.2d 525, 1976 Alas. LEXIS 349
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1976
Docket2527, 2473
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 556 P.2d 525 (Cooper v. Argonaut Insurance Companies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. Argonaut Insurance Companies, 556 P.2d 525, 1976 Alas. LEXIS 349 (Ala. 1976).

Opinions

OPINION

Before BOOCHEVER, C. J., and RABI-NOWITZ, CONNOR, ERWIN and BURKE, JJ.

ERWIN, Justice.

In this case the court has been asked to reconsider the position we adopted by a 2-2 vote in Stafford v. Westchester Fire Ins. Co. of New York.1 In Stafford the prevailing opinion held that there could be no reduction from the amount of compensation reimbursed to the employer or its compensation carrier for a pro rata share of attorney’s fees incurred by the injured workman in recovering from a third-party tort-feasor.2 A majority of the court now holds that such a pro rata reduction is proper.

On January 22, 1971, Millard H. Cooper was fatally injured during the course of his employment with J. M. Covington Corporation, appellee’s insured. As required by appellee’s contract of insurance with Cooper’s employer and pursuant to the Alaska Workmen’s Compensation Act,3 ap-pellee Argonaut Insurance paid workmen’s compensation benefits to appellant Elean-ora Cooper.

In 1971 appellant filed suit in United States District Court against Collier Carbon and Chemical Corporation and others [526]*526for damages resulting from Millard Cooper’s injuries and death. This suit was settled on April 1, 1974.

On May 16, 1974, appellee Argonaut Insurance filed this action pursuant to AS 23.30.015(g) 4 to recover amounts paid in benefits to appellant.

In appellant’s answer, filed November 7, 1974, appellant denied that appellee was entitled to full reimbursement of all benefits paid by appellee to her. Appellant asserted that she was entitled to withhold an amount equal to Argonaut’s pro rata share of the attorney’s fees expended by her in litigation of her claim against the third-party tort-feasors. She asserted that Argonaut’s pro rata share was $7,400, plus interest from April 1, 1974. Funds in that amount were placed in escrow until resolution of this appeal. The parties agreed that the prevailing party would receive the funds in escrow plus attorney’s fees to be awarded by the trial court in its discretion.

Believing the opinion of this court in Stafford to be controlling, the trial court granted Argonaut’s motion for summary judgment. The court ordered disbursal of the $7,400 to Argonaut and awarded $1,150 in attorney’s fees to Argonaut pursuant to Civil Rule 82. This appeal followed.

Alaska Statutes section 23.30.015(g) provides that the employee shall promptly pay to the employer out of the third-party recovery all amounts paid out by the employer or the compensation carrier, “insofar as the recovery is sufficient after deducting all litigation costs and expenses.”5 The section may be construed in two ways. It could be construed to require a deduction from the amount reimbursed to the employer for the litigation expenses attributable to his share of the recovery, or it could be construed to require deduction of all litigation expenses from the total recovery, with the remainder applied first toward reimbursement to the employer of all amounts expended by him. While grammatically the disputed phrase lends itself more to the second construction, for the reasons set forth below, we feel that the first alternative more accurately conforms to the legislative intent.

The construction we have adopted makes our interpretation of subsection (g) harmonious with provisions of the Act which permit such a deduction by the employer when he brings suit.6 It also gives meaning to the Legislature’s addition of a new subsection (g) 7 when it enacted legislation otherwise intended to bring the Alaska act [527]*527in substantial conformity with the Longshoremen’s and Harborworkers’ Compensation Act. The federal act has been construed as not requiring the proration of attorney’s fees. 8 By not following the federal act provisions for third-party actions, the Alaska Legislature indicated an intent that a different, more just rule apply.

Further, we do not think that the Legislature intended the employer’s compensation carrier to secure a windfall profit at the employee’s expense. Compensation premiums are based on actuarial estimates of the number of accidents of each type in a given industry. They are not usually computed with any possible recovery from third-party sources in mind because the mathematical probability of such a recovery is difficult to determine.9 Even when third party recoveries are included in compensation premium calculations, the amount of estimated recovery must, of necessity, be conservative. Thus, when the carrier recovers from a third-party tort-feasor as a result of the employee’s suit, the recovery is an unexpected return because the premium paid by the employer is normally based on a projected injury loss without regard to possible third-party claims.

If an employer or compensation carrier is not required to pay its pro rata share to recover this unanticipated return, the entire burden of the litigation would be borne by the employee. The carrier would take the benefit of both the employer’s premium and the employee’s litigation effort. This would result in the carrier’s unjust enrichment.10 In order to insure that the employer’s compensation carrier is not unjustly enriched at the expense of the employee, we read AS 23.30.015(g) to require the proration between the carrier and the employee of litigation costs and attorney’s fees incurred by the employee in recovering from a third-party tort-feasor.11 The proration must be according to the ratio of [528]*528the total compensation payments to the total recovery.12

[527]*527In the cases which hold that the subro-gated property insurer is obligated to pay a fee to the insured’s attorney, who recovered damages from a third party, the courts generally rely on general equitable principles, and, in some cases, point out that the insurer did not participate in the action against the third party.

[528]*528The decision of the trial court is reversed, and the case is remanded to the superior court with directions to order disbursal of the funds in escrow and to award attorney’s fees according to the terms of the stipulation and consistent with this opinion.

RABINOWITZ, J., dissents.

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Bluebook (online)
556 P.2d 525, 1976 Alas. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-argonaut-insurance-companies-alaska-1976.