Cordell v. Chanhassen Auto Body

130 N.W.2d 362, 269 Minn. 103, 1964 Minn. LEXIS 757
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 7, 1964
Docket39256
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 130 N.W.2d 362 (Cordell v. Chanhassen Auto Body) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cordell v. Chanhassen Auto Body, 130 N.W.2d 362, 269 Minn. 103, 1964 Minn. LEXIS 757 (Mich. 1964).

Opinion

Frank T. Gallagher, C.

Certiorari to review an order of the Industrial Commission denying a motion of relators, Chanhassen Auto Body and The Home Indemnity Company, to vacate a previous order of the commission awarding benefits to the dependents of James Cordell, deceased former employee of Chanhassen.

The basic facts have been stipulated and incorporated in the order of the Industrial Commission determining the settled case. The decedent, James Cordell, sustained fatal injuries on November 29, 1962, arising out of and in the course of his employment with relator Chan-hassen under a Minnesota contract of hire at a wage which would entitle his dependents to compensation at the maximum rate of $45 per week during dependency, not to exceed a total payment of $17,500. Decedent left as surviving dependents within the Workmen’s Compensation Act his widow and four minor children ranging from 2 to 6 years of age. The dependent widow paid on behalf of the deceased employee medical and hospital expenses of $428.50 and burial expenses of $875.50. The employee’s fatal injuries gave rise to a cause of action against a third party, which was compromised and settled for $22,500. After deducting from the $22,500 the sums of $177.69 costs, $7,500 attorney’s fees, and the medical, hospital, and burial expenses referred to, totaling in all $8,981.69, the dependents received a net recovery of $13,518.31.

After the district court ordered distribution and settlement of the wrongful death action, the dependents requested the Industrial Commission’s determination of the relators’ liability, and the commission determined that attorney’s fees and costs represented 34.12 percent of the total recovery against the third party and that in order for the *105 relators to obtain credit against their compensation liability they are obligated to pay a proportionate share of said fees and 1 costs, amounting to $6,305.38, computed in the following manner:

18,478.50

-of 7,677.69=$6,305.38 1

22,500.00

The commission ordered relators to pay the $6,305.38 by a payment of $610.16 to the dependent widow representing their proportionate share of fees and costs on the compensation to April 3, 1963, and the medical expense and statutory burial allowance. It also required that they pay the dependents the further amount, at the rate of $15.35 per week, payments to be made at 26-week intervals in the sum of $399.10, to apply on their proportionate share of fees and costs incurred in making the recovery against the third party until the $6,305.38 has been paid (371 weeks to May 13,1970).

Thereafter, the commission denied relators’ request for vacation of the above order, and in a memorandum attached to its denial, the commission stated:

“The issue here is the method or formula for determining the proportionate share of attorney fees to be paid by a workmen’s compensation insurer when it has subrogation rights in a so-called third party settlement or award in a court action. (Section 176.061, subd. 6, M. S. 1961.)

“The insurer contends that compensation payments must be suspended until the net amount of the recovery is exhausted. The dependents assert the proportionate share of the attorney fees can be paid, as the Commission ordered on this particular case, as the liability for dependency payments accrues.

“The alternative methods are discussed in the case of Tople v. Mar *106 shall Produce, 20 W. C. D. 359. In the instant case the number of minor children — four—all under the age of six years, makes it virtually certain that the maximum liability, $17,500, will be paid by the insurer. Therefore there is no compelling reason why the dependents should wait almost five years (248 weeks) until the compensation payments would be resumed.

“We are denying the insurer’s petition for vacation of the April 23, 1963 order and are reaffirming the method of payment provided therein as the most equitable under the facts of this case.”

Relators argue that they should not be required to pay benefits until the net third-party recovery is exhausted. They contend that the primary legal issue in this case involved the time and manner in which relators shall receive a credit when a third-party recovery has been made. As applied to them in this case, they claim that the question is whether or not they should be permitted to receive full credit for the $13,518.31 net third-party recovery hypothetically paid to the dependents at the rate of $45 per week, thereby permitting relators to suspend payments entirely for approximately 5 years and 40 weeks (September 1968) and thereafter resume payments at the rate of $45 per week until their remaining liability is paid, or whether they should be required to comply with the method of payment set out in the order of the commission referred to above. They claim that allowing a full credit for the net total recovery to the dependents, with a corresponding abatement of any further payments by the relators until said amount is exhausted, conforms with the Workmen’s Compensation Act and the decisions of this court and the Industrial Commission. They cite Minn. St. 176.061, subd. 6, which provides :

“As between employer and employee or his dependents, in all actions governed by this subdivision the employer shall bear that proportion of the costs, reasonable attorney’s fees, and reasonable expenses incurred in making collection from and enforcing liability against the party other than the employer which the amount claimed by the employer for deduction from, or to be retained against, compensation payable bears to the whole amount recovered from such other party.”

*107 Relators state that it is significant in this case that the attorney’s fees and all costs have been paid in full and that therefore § 176.061, subd. 6, has no application. They argue that had it not been for the full payment of attorney’s fees and costs herein the dependents would have netted $22,500 (less burial and medical expenses above described) in the third-party action, and that relators would have no remaining legal obligation whatsoever for payment of benefits. They therefore contend that inasmuch as the. attorney’s fees and costs were paid in full, the corresponding net recovery to the dependents was less than the relators’ total obligation under the Workmen’s Compensation Act. They then claim that in accordance with § 176.061, subd. 6, they are not required to pay attorney’s fees already paid but only to bear them. It is their- position that the attorney’s fees are “borne” by them “when they are deducted from the gross third party recovery, and the net third party recovery in turn deducted from the maximum statutory liability of relators to determine relators’ remaining obligation.” They argue that it is inaccurate to characterize the substance of this appeal as a question of the obligation of relators to bear their pro rata share of attorney’s fees and costs because such fees and costs have in fact been paid in full, and the credit for the third-party recovery otherwise available to relators was reduced from $22,500 by payment of the attorney’s fee of $7,500 and the costs of $177.69.

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Bluebook (online)
130 N.W.2d 362, 269 Minn. 103, 1964 Minn. LEXIS 757, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cordell-v-chanhassen-auto-body-minn-1964.