Dudley v. Cash

82 Va. Cir. 1
CourtAugusta County Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 25, 2010
DocketCase No. CL08000443-00
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 82 Va. Cir. 1 (Dudley v. Cash) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Augusta County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dudley v. Cash, 82 Va. Cir. 1 (Va. Super. Ct. 2010).

Opinion

By Judge Victor V. Ludwig

This case involves a motor vehicle accident, which occurred on March 21, 2006. There was a collision between an automobile, driven by Matthew Payne, and a tractor trailer, owned by North & South Truck Lines, Inc. (North & South). Payne died in December 2008. Amanda Dudley (Dudley), the mother of two of Payne’s children and a passenger in the vehicle driven by him, was injured. As a result of her injuries, Dudley was rendered incapacitated, and the Court has appointed a guardian and conservator for her. The collision occurred when Payne struck the tractor trailer in the rear while traveling on the Interstate. At the time, as evidenced by subsequent convictions, Payne was driving recklessly and without an operator’s permit.

On March 19, 2008, Dudley, through her guardian and conservator, filed suit against (a) North & South, (b) Jim John Cash, the driver of the tractor trailer, (c) Roy Wayne Southers, an employee of North & South who was assigned to ride with Cash, and (d) Utility Trailer Co., Inc. (Utility), the manufacturer of the trailer which Payne struck. North & South, Cash, and Southers filed a third-party action against Payne for indemnification and contribution and to recover for property damage. They have since moved to file an amended motion to join Howard and Lugene Payne, Payne’s parents, as third-party defendants on a theory of negligent entrustment.

On February 4, 2009, the parties argued the defendants’ demurrers and a motion to approve a compromise settlement. At the end of that hearing, Mr. James Dungan was to file a brief within ten days (and did so on February 12), and Mr. Graves was to respond ten days later (and did so on February 24). In addition, because the plaintiff had filed three motions on February 3, Mr. Graves was to submit a brief on those matters (and did so on February 17). One motion was an objection to North & South’s assertion of a privilege log, one was a motion to strike the answers and affirmative defenses of North & South, and one was a motion to compel discovery regarding tangible evidence.

On June 9, 2009, the most recent hearing, the new issues before the Court were Dudley’s:

1. Motion to compel discovery from North & South;

2. Motion to compel discovery from North & South pursuant to its request for inspection of tangible evidence;

3. Objection to North & South’s withholding of documents under its assertion of the use of a privilege log;

4. Motion to strike the answer and evidence of North & South; and

5. Motion to compel discovery from Utility.

The last matter was deferred because Mr. Dungan said that, on the Friday prior to June 28, he had received information from Utility, which he had not yet had an opportunity to review.

[3]*3Initially at that hearing, I apologetically announced my (what I thought to be belated) conclusions with respect to all but one of the issues raised at the hearing on February 4 and that I was prepared to rule favorably on the amended motion for approval of the compromise settlement filed on behalf of Payne’s estate. The latter comment elicited from Mr. Beck a request that I not approve the settlement because his client, which had filed nothing to pursue any claim during the period between February and July, decided that it wanted to file a third-party action against Payne’s parents, the owners of the vehicle he was driving and the persons who entrusted it to him. Mr. Graves noted that his client had already filed a third-party complaint against Payne’s estate, but the issue of any party’s joining Payne’s parents was first raised at the July hearing.

Although (to my recollection) the other defendants did not join in the discussion on July 9 (perhaps on a theory that it was not the time to do so or perhaps recognizing it did not seem prudent to do so), within days of that hearing, there was a flurry of activity. Mr. Dungan wrote by letter of July 10, and he appeared to suggest that the compromise could be effected without releasing Payne’s parents. In his letter, Mr. Dungan acknowledged that there might be a recovery against Payne’s parents for negligent entrustment on an action for contribution brought by Utility, but he asserted that “such an action and such potential recovery for Utility are separate from the instant action____” Of course, if the parents were released from liability, any recovery in contribution would be lost, which was Mr. Beck’s point. Also by letter of July 10, an attorney in Mr. Graves’ firm sent a motion to amend the third-party complaint filed by North & South to include a claim of negligent entrustment against Payne’s parents. By letter of even date, Mr. Graves wrote to state that he had had inadequate time to respond to Mr. Dungan’s letter, but, by letter of July 13, he wrote to argue against approval of the compromise settlement and asked that his client be permitted to file a third-party action against Payne’s parents, which motion had already been submitted under letter of July 10. By letter of July 13, Mr. Botkins wrote to observe that Mr. Dungan’s letter of July 10 appeared to suggest that the compromise be approved without releasing Payne’s parents and to confirm that it was his client’s position that the compromise settlement was premised on their being released. By letter of July 14, Mr. Beck reiterated his arguments of July 9 and represented that he sent a motion for leave to file a third-party complaint (but which was not attached to his letter).

There, until recently, the matter ended. Neither of the filed or unfiled motions to add the Paynes as parties have been put on the docket, and, of course, I have been remiss in responding to the issues before the Court. To some extent, I wanted to wait to be sure that nothing else was going to arise so that I did not encounter the situation presented to me on July 9.1 hope [4]*4everyone has filed everything that needs to be filed, and I apologize for being so long in responding.

I. The Amended Motion for Approval of the Compromise Settlement (The Motion)

On October 16, 2008, Mr. Botkins filed a motion on behalf of Payne’s estate, to approve a compromise settlement negotiated between the conservators of Amanda Dudley and the estate of Matthew Payne, which motion Mr. Botkins amended by a second motion filed on January 23,2009 (the Amended Motion). The Amended Motion comes before the Court pursuant to Va. Code § 8.01-424, authorizing court approval of compromise settlements negotiated on behalf of persons under a disability. Presumably, the motion is pursuant to Paragraph B because Paragraph A refers to the court’s having the “power to approve and confirm a compromise of the matters in controversy” “[i]n any action or suit wherein a person under a disability is a party.” There is no action or suit against Payne’s estate in which Dudley is a party. Paragraph B, however, does not require that there be a pending action.

The Amended Motion avers that Rockingham Casualty Company (Rockingham)1 has agreed to pay, on its own behalf and on behalf of the estate of Matthew Payne, its policy limit of $100,000.00 in exchange for “full discharge of any and all claims which could be asserted by or on behalf of Amanda Dudley against Matthew Payne, the Estate of Matthew Payne, Howard Payne, Lugene Payne [collectively, Payne’s Estate], and Rockingham Casualty Company as a result of the March 21, 2006, motor vehicle accident.” Amended Motion, paragraph 7.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 Va. Cir. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dudley-v-cash-vaccaugusta-2010.