Falconer v. Adams

974 P.2d 406, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 39, 1999 WL 164050
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1999
DocketS-7637, S-7657
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 974 P.2d 406 (Falconer v. Adams) 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
Falconer v. Adams, 974 P.2d 406, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 39, 1999 WL 164050 (Ala. 1999).

Opinions

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

Karla Taylor-Welch was driving a vehicle that rear-ended a stopped vehicle driven by Charlie Falconer; Falconer sued Taylor-Welch and a third driver, Donald Adams, who had allegedly forced Falconer to stop. A jury, finding Adams not negligent and Taylor-Welch and Falconer both partially negligent, awarded Falconer damages against Taylor-Welch. The trial court granted Falconer a judgment notwithstanding the verdict (JNOV) on the issue of his own negligence, denied him attorney’s fees against Adams, and entered a final judgment reducing the net award of damages by the amount of medical payments Falconer had received from his own insurer. These rulings are now challenged. We conclude: (1) because Taylor-Welch failed to prove that Falconer received unsubrogated collateral-source benefits, the jury verdict should not have been reduced; (2) Falconer failed to establish that he was entitled to prevailing-party fees against Adams; and (3) Taylor-Welch’s cursory discussion of her challenge to the JNOV amounts to a waiver of the point.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. The Collision, the Trial, and the Verdict

On February 3,1992, Falconer was driving north on Cushman Street in Fairbanks. He began to turn left onto Seventh Avenue, but stopped abruptly. Taylor-Welch was following Falconer; she applied her brakes but slid on the icy pavement and collided with Falconer’s car. Falconer claimed that he was forced to stop because he saw Adams’s car on Seventh Avenue facing him in the wrong lane of traffic. Falconer sued Taylor-Welch and Adams for personal injuries sustained in the collision, seeking, among other things, reimbursement of $8038.24 in medical expenses.1

At trial, Taylor-Welch confirmed Falconer’s version of events. She testified that she saw Falconer signal prior to turning; when Falconer stopped, she hit her brakes but her car slid into Falconer’s. When she got out of her car and approached Falconer, she saw that he had been unable to complete his turn because Adams’s car was in the wrong lane and was blocking him.

Adams denied being in the wrong lane of traffic. He testified that he was stopped in the middle lane — the designated left-turn lane — on Seventh Avenue when the collision occurred. He did not actually see the collision, but he heard the sound of impact, looked up, and saw the stopped cars.

Officer Haydon Bartholomew of the Fairbanks Police Department investigated the collision. At trial, Bartholomew testified from his original investigation report; he had no independent recollection of the incident. Bartholomew testified that neither Taylor-Welch nor Falconer told him that Adams had been in the wrong lane, but he confirmed that Falconer reported that “there was an obstacle or a vehicle, something in front of him, that caused him to brake — apply his brake.” According to Bartholomew, this was essentially what Taylor-Welch and Adams reported, also. Bartholomew’s understanding was that Falconer had stopped to avoid something on Seventh Avenue. Bartholomew knew of no witnesses apart from Falconer, Taylor-Welch, and Adams.

The jury returned a verdict finding Taylor-Welch forty percent negligent, Falconer sixty percent comparatively negligent, and Adams not negligent. The jury further determined that Falconer’s total damages were limited to $5064 in past medical expenses and $510 in past non-economic loss (pain and suffering).

B. The JNOV on Comparative Negligence

During the trial, Falconer moved for a directed verdict establishing Taylor-Welch’s negligence and his own lack of comparative [409]*409negligence. Taylor-Welch resisted these motions. Relying on Officer Bartholomew’s conclusion that the major factor contributing to the collision was an obstruction in the roadway that precluded Falconer from turning, Taylor-Welch argued that reasonable jurors could find that she had not been negligent. And based on the possibility that the jury might find that “Adams was where he was supposed to be,” Taylor-Welch argued that Falconer’s abrupt stop might itself support a finding of negligence on Falconer’s part. The trial judge, noting a desire “to present as much to the jury as I can,” declined to direct the verdict but indicated that he would likely overturn a jury verdict actually finding Falconer comparatively negligent.

Immediately upon the jury’s return of its verdict finding him sixty percent negligent, Falconer requested a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, pointing out that the court “already ... had reached a tentative decision.” The judge deferred the issue pending a formal motion but indicated “that if the motion[ ] come[s] in I will likely grant that motion.” Falconer later filed a formal motion for JNOV against Taylor-Welch on comparative negligence; Taylor-Welch filed opposition, and the court granted the motion, without comment, upon entry of the final judgment.

C. Reduction of the Jury Award for Medical Loss

Falconer’s trial began on January 18,1996, and culminated in a verdict on January 30. On January 18, as the court addressed legal issues to be resolved before jury selection was completed, Adams informed the court that Falconer’s insurer, State Farm, had paid Falconer $5000 in medical bills and that Falconer had admitted receiving the payment in answer to a request for admissions. Adams claimed that the payment was “not a recoverable expense in this litigation.” Falconer responded that the payment was “a collateral source” and that State Farm was “subrogat-ed to our recovery.” Falconer further asserted that if the defendants “wanted to pay State Farm they should have done [that] a long time ago and under AS 09.16.070, [sic, apparently referring to AS 09.17.070] ... the court’s suppose[d] to take that up after the trial and decide whether or not that’s a recoverable damage.” Adams disagreed, insisting that Falconer had earlier admitted that he was not trying to recover the expense. The trial court dismissed the argument, however, commenting that “all I know is that’s not an issue that we have to resolve before the jury is instructed.”

In the midst of trial, on January 23, Adams returned to the medical payment issue, supplying the court with a copy of the request for admission that he had mentioned on January 18 and arguing that it was “conclusive proof of the plaintiffs position in this case.” Falconer acknowledged the apparent admission but insisted that in later discovery he had made it clear that he did in fact intend to seek recovery of all medical expenses, including those for which he had received payment from his own carrier, State Farm. This prompted the following comment by Adams:

Now my understanding is State Farm, as its typical practice is, is inclined and will recover on its own right, its damages with regard to its $5,000 dollars. I’ve seen nothing the plaintiff has provided which says that State Farm intends to have lien rights so they could attempt to get the money allocated here. So what we have here is the potential of a double recovery. ...

In response, Falconer insisted that “we’ve already told the court ... in open court, that they are subrogated to that $5,000 and that we have to pay that back.

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Bluebook (online)
974 P.2d 406, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 39, 1999 WL 164050, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/falconer-v-adams-alaska-1999.