Di Meglio v. Hartford Insurance

116 Misc. 2d 191, 455 N.Y.S.2d 498, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3853
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 116 Misc. 2d 191 (Di Meglio v. Hartford Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Di Meglio v. Hartford Insurance, 116 Misc. 2d 191, 455 N.Y.S.2d 498, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3853 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Harold Hyman, J.

In this application by petitioner, John Di Meglio, for an order equitably apportioning such expenditures and attorney’s fees incurred in effecting his third-party recovery pursuant to subdivision 1 of section 29 of the Workers’ Compensation Law, the issue to be determined is whether the compensation carrier’s release , from future liability effected by the employee’s successful prosecution of the underlying tort action constitutes a benefit upon which the apportionment of attorney’s fees may be based.

Petitioner had been injured in the course of his employment on February 11, 1979 and was receiving weekly payments from his employer’s compensation carrier in the sum of $105 per week. Subsequently, he brought a third-party action for personal injuries, which after seven days of trial was settled before this court on May 18, 1982 for $312,500. The amount of compensation payments aggregated $22,090.85 to the date of settlement, i.e., workers’ [192]*192compensation and medical benefits actually received by petitioner.1 Based upon the sliding scale retainer agreement approved by the Appellate Division, the attorney’s fee amounted to $80,528.07 plus disbursements of $1,387.74.

The petitioner urges that this court, in exercising its discretion in apportioning the attorney’s fee and expenditures between the employee and the lienor, adopt the “total benefit theory”, which concept holds that a necessary component of the total benefit which the carrier derives from the third-party recovery includes consideration of the value to the carrier in having its liability for future payments to the employee extinguished.2 Applying these facts and the so-called total benefit theory to the accepted formula for computing the carrier’s share of the attorney’s fees (i.e., multiplying the amount of the total legal fees by the ratio of the lien to the total recovery [Wargo v Longo, 85 Misc 2d 898]), the portion of the attorney’s fees and disbursements to be borne by the carrier is calculated as follows:

Total Settlement .................... $312,500.00
Compensation Benefits Actually paid
(lien as of May 18, 1982) ............ 22,090.85
Estimated Future Compensation Benefits of $202,860 — discounted to Present
Value ................................ 45,077.00
Total Benefits (past and future) .. 67,167.85
Compensation Carrier’s Share of Attorney’s
Fees or 21.5% x 81,915.81 = 17,611.90 312,500.00

[193]*193Under the theory espoused by the petitioner, therefore, 21.5% of the attorney’s fees would be apportioned against the carrier, leaving a balance of $4,478.95 to be recouped by the carrier from the settlement proceeds.

Petitioner contends that the carrier’s monetary benefits from the judgment far exceed the lien paid to date and that its share of the fees should be commensurate with the benefit it derived from the third-party judgment. If the third-party action had not been prosecuted, resulting in a settlement of $312,500, argues petitioner, the carrier would have been confronted with paying out $202,860 rather than the meagre share of $17,611.90 of the attorney’s fees incurred in effecting recovery.

In opposition to petitioner’s position, the respondent carrier avers that its proportionate share of the attorney’s fees and expenses should be limited to the workers’ compensation and medical benefits actually paid to the employee up to the time of the third-party settlement or judgment. In the carrier’s view, the inclusion of potential future benefits in this calculation runs contrary to the express language of subdivision 1 of section 29 of the Workers’ Compensation Law, as amended in 1975, and the purposes for its adoption by the Legislature. This view would translate into a 7% share of the attorney’s fees apportioned against the carrier, or $5,734.11, a sum less than one third the compensation lien.

Faced with the choice of providing for a fixed statutory formula or a more flexible “equitable” apportionment, the Legislature opted for the latter approach, based largely upon the recommendation of the Law Revision Commission. (See Recommendation of Law Revision Comm to Legislature, McKinney’s Session Laws of NY, 1974, pp 1904-1906.) However well intentioned this open-ended approach was, or the precedent for its adoption, the trial courts were put in the unenviable position of establishing the proper standards to be applied in apportionment and the relative benefits upon which the apportionment was to be based.

The first case to consider the operation of the apportionment provision was decided by the Appellate Division, Second Department, in Castleberry v Hudson Val. Asphalt [194]*194Corp. (70 AD2d 228). In Castleberry, the plaintiff settled his third-party action against the defendant for $75,000 without obtaining the carrier’s consent or a compromise order, as provided in subdivision 5 of section 29 of the Workers’ Compensation Law. The compensation payments to plaintiff aggregated $20,402 to the date of settlement. The reasonable attorney’s fees were found to be $25,000. Based on plaintiff’s life expectancy and his $80 per week rate of compensation, the carrier conceded that the probable total amount of its compensation obligation would have exceeded $100,000. Plaintiff argued and the trial court agreed that, since the full amount of the settlement inured to the carrier’s benefit, it should absorb all the attorney’s fees, thereby extinguishing the entire lien.

Because the statutory lien of the carrier was compromised completely, the Appellate Division reversed, observing that the Law Revision Commission did not intend to wipe the lien out. In construing the apportionment provision, the appellate court held that the compensation carrier should contribute to the payment of attorney’s fees and expenses only in proportion to the actual benefit it derives from the recovery in satisfying its outstanding lien.

Whatever its theoretical underpinning, the majority in Castleberry drew its justification for repudiating the total benefit theory from its treatment of the case as a deficiency judgment case (Workers’ Compensation Law, § 29, subd 4) described by the court as one “where the employee’s recovery is less than ‘the sum of lien plus the estimated liability of the carrier extinguished by the recovery’.” (Castleberry v Hudson Val. Asphalt Corp., supra, p 235.) Under subdivision 4 of section 29 of the Workers’ Compensation Law, the compensation carrier is obliged to cover “the deficiency, if any, between the amount of the [third-party] recovery * * * actually collected, and the compensation provided or estimated by this chapter for such case.” (Emphasis added.) The use of the term “actually collected” refers to the employee’s net recovery — i.e., the total recovery less the expenses reasonably and necessarily incurred in obtaining the recovery (Matter of Curtin v City of New York, 287 NY 338).

[195]*195As the attorney’s fees in the settlement ($25,000) were one third of the recovery, the Castleberry

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Bluebook (online)
116 Misc. 2d 191, 455 N.Y.S.2d 498, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/di-meglio-v-hartford-insurance-nysupct-1982.