Dewey v. Allstate Insurance

525 F. Supp. 857, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15553
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedNovember 6, 1981
DocketCiv. A. 79-2265
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 525 F. Supp. 857 (Dewey v. Allstate Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dewey v. Allstate Insurance, 525 F. Supp. 857, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15553 (D. Kan. 1981).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

SAFFELS, District Judge.

This case raises novel questions of law under the Kansas Automobile Reparations Act [hereinafter No-Fault Act]. The issue is whether a person who is a partner in a business that is suffering a tax loss is entitled to disability benefits under personal injury protection [hereinafter PIP coverage] of his automobile accident insurance, and if such benefits are due, how they are to be measured. The case was tried to the Court on October 21 and 22, 1981. Pursuant to F.R.C.P. Rule 52, the Court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

I

Plaintiff, Jack Dewey, is a young man, self-employed as a partner in the partnership of Chauncey Dewey & Sons, LV Ranch, Brewster, Kansas. Plaintiff’s father, Chauncey Dewey, has been associated with the cattle-ranching business for more than fifty years. Plaintiff was insured under a standard automobile insurance policy with defendant Allstate Insurance Company [hereinafter Allstate] on December 11,1977, when he was injured in a single car accident in Rawlins County, Kansas.

The father and son partnership was formed in 1973, and is actively engaged in the ranching of cattle and the management of grazing land. Some grain is raised, but the partners both testified that grain production was insubstantial in relation to the cattle raising business. When the partnership was formed, the father contributed capital in the form of land and cattle, while the son contributed his labor to the partnership. The evidence was uncontradicted that the father had performed little manual work on the ranch since 1967, when his kneecap was removed.

The partnership owns some 6,000 acres of land and maintains a herd of 368 head of cattle, not counting bulls and calves. From the start of the partnership, the bulk of day-to-day work was performed by plaintiff. Typically in the winter, plaintiff worked a 7 or 8-hour day, loading 100-200 bales of hay, feeding it to the cattle, and checking on their condition twice or more a day. Late winter and early spring brought the calving season, the busiest time of the year at the ranch. During calving season, the cattle were fed and the cows checked more or less constantly, because the time of birth and soon thereafter is the most precarious time for a new calf. Difficult births have to be handled promptly, calves must be constantly checked for signs of disease and distress, and quickly taken in under cover and warmed up when sick or threatened by adverse weather. A rancher *860 works intermittently around the clock during calving season. During calving season, the calves were checked from the back of a horse. Plaintiff’s father could no longer ride because of his knee, so all the riding fell to plaintiff. During the late spring and summer, the bulk of work involved fencing and watching the cattle and maturing calves. Plaintiff worked 7 to 8 hours a day, mostly inspecting cattle and fence from a pick-up truck. The late fall was the lightest time around the ranch. The herds were checked, and the calves made ready for sale.

Plaintiff was injured in December, 1977, when he broke his right femur in a single car accident in Rawlins County, Kansas. As a result of his injury, plaintiff couldn’t ride at all until June, 1978, and thereafter for only short periods of time. Apparently there is no serious dispute about plaintiff’s injury and its consequences, because Allstate stipulated orally at trial that plaintiff was disabled for six months following his injury, and partially disabled for three months after that. Furthermore, the evidence was that for the full nine-month period following the accident, plaintiff performed little productive work around the ranch.

With plaintiff disabled, responsibility for work on the ranch fell to his father and stepmother. Plaintiff was disabled at a particularly bad time, because the calving season was commencing. Several neighbors, as well as plaintiff’s uncle, came to help with work around the ranch during the calving season, and at other times during plaintiff’s disability. There was considerable testimony on this point. Some of the people who worked on the ranch did so without compensation in the form of cash. In the past, it was the custom for the extended Dewey family, including Chauncey Dewey’s brother, Otis, to work at the ranch, sometimes for pay, sometimes not. Similarly, other neighbors worked at the LV Ranch without pay, but plaintiff would at a later time perform some work at their ranch. Both plaintiff and his father agreed at the trial that there was never any agreement among them before or after plaintiff’s injury that work on the LV Ranch would be traded for work on another ranch on an equivalent basis or any other basis. It simply was customary for neighbors and family to help each other from time to time on a trade-work basis. Further complicating matters is the fact that plaintiff’s disability was not the sole motivating force in many of the decisions of neighbors to work at the LV Ranch during this period. The testimony was that some of these people would have come when they did and done the work they did even if plaintiff had not been disabled by his broken leg. Consequently, the Court is unable to conclude that the expenses incurred by the partnership for labor during this period can be solely attributed to plaintiff’s disability. By having family and neighbors work on their ranch, the Deweys incurred little cash expenditure and, if anything, became only morally obligated to work for their neighbors and family when their time, work and inclination moved them to do so.

A few conclusions are inescapable, however. The calving season passed in 1978 without any person on the ranch available to constantly check on cows and calves. Furthermore, in 1978, the LV Ranch lost sixty-five to sixty-eight calves in a winter not remembered for its severity. Normal calf loss was usually around thirty-six calves per season. Both plaintiff and his father attributed the high mortality to the fact that the calves weren’t being watched. The testimony was uncontradicted that if discovered early enough, a weak calf can be brought back to strength by being brought inside and warmed up. Thus, even though none of the calves were autopsied or otherwise examined to determine cause of death, at least some of the unusual number of deaths that season must be attributed to the lack of being watched.

The pretrial order shows the gross income of the LV Ranch partnership, of which plaintiff was a fifty percent partner, was as follows for the years indicated:

1974 $33,432.16

1975 $29,048.82

1976 $34,333.87

*861 1977 $43,716.28

1978 $91,018.23

In each year, however, the partnership showed a net loss for tax purposes. Gross income varied each year due to the number of calves, but more importantly due to differences in market price for calves each year. In the case of the LV Ranch, income depended upon more than the hard work of the ranchers.

Plaintiff and his father were fifty percent partners, and shared equally in all losses. At the time of his accident, plaintiff lived on the ranch, and most, if not all, of his living expenses were paid by the ranch. Both plaintiff and his father took a draw from the partnership. Plaintiff drew $200 each month, and his father drew $380 per month.

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Bluebook (online)
525 F. Supp. 857, 1981 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dewey-v-allstate-insurance-ksd-1981.