Farrall v. AC & S. CO., INC.

586 A.2d 662, 1990 Del. Super. LEXIS 12
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 10, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 586 A.2d 662 (Farrall v. AC & S. CO., INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farrall v. AC & S. CO., INC., 586 A.2d 662, 1990 Del. Super. LEXIS 12 (Del. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

CONSOLIDATED OPINION

TAYLOR, Judge.

Following jury verdict judgment was entered in favor of each plaintiff in amounts which reflected the jury awards adjusted to reflected amounts which plaintiffs received in settlement with other asbestos manufacturers and suppliers. The total damages awarded to plaintiffs was $2,550,000. After reductions for amounts received by plaintiffs from settlements with others who may have contributed to plaintiffs’ asbestos-related diseases, judgments were entered in the total amount of $627,250.

Plaintiffs and defendant Celotex Corporation [Celotex] have moved to alter or amend the judgments and briefs have been submitted. The objective is to determine the amount of Celotex’s liability to plaintiffs by applying reductions mandated by 10 Del.C. Ch. 63 with respect to tortfeasors which have been released by plaintiffs.

The factual setting against which the issues must be considered is that plaintiffs asserted claims based on asbestos-related diseases against many manufacturers and suppliers of asbestos containing products. Plaintiffs dismissed or released all defendants except Celotex. Jury verdict interrogatories established the amount of each plaintiffs damages and the percentage of fault of various released tortfeasors and of defendant Celotex.

I

Historically, a plaintiff who was injured by the tortious conduct of more than one tortfeasor could sue one or all of the tort-feasors and could recover his damages totally from one or more of the tortfeasors. If he released any of the tortfeasors, all were released. The tortfeasor who paid more than his share of the damages could not obtain contribution from other tort-feasors for payment beyond his share.

The Delaware Uniform Contribution Among Tortfeasors Law, 10 Del.C. Ch. 63 [Law], abolished the harsh common law rules in that area and substituted new methods governing recovery by an injured party and liability of tortfeasors.

Methods of determining the liability of non-released tortfeasors are set forth in 10 Del.C. § 6304.

Subsection (a) provides a simple reduction of the award to plaintiff by the amount paid for the release of a tortfeasor. If more than one tortfeasor is released, the reduction under that subsection is the total amount paid by all released tortfeasors. 1

*664 Subsection (b) provides another method of reduction which is applicable if the effect of the release is to protect the released tortfeasor from contribution claims of non-released tortfeasors. 2

It has been noted above that one of the objectives of Chapter 63 is to permit contribution among tortfeasors. Raughley v. Delaware Coach Co., Del.Super., 91 A.2d 245 (1952). Section 6304(b) provides a mechanism whereby a released tortfeasor can be protected against contribution claims by non-released tortfeasors. Where a plaintiff has released a tortfeasor for an amount less than its pro rata share the non-released tortfeasor is protected against having to bear the portion of the released tortfeasor’s share which plaintiff failed to collect in the settlement. It preserves the non-released tortfeasor’s right to recover contribution from a settling tortfeasor unless plaintiff agrees to reduce his recovery against the non-released tortfeasor by that portion. To this end, § 6304(b) requires, as a condition for eliminating the released tortfeasor’s liability for contribution, that the risk that the pro rata share of recovery attributable to the released tortfeasor is greater than the settlement amount must be assumed by the plaintiff by agreeing to reduce his recovery against the non-released tortfeasor in the amount of the released tortfeasor’s pro rata share.

The next consideration is the relationship between the reduction mandated by subsection (a) and the reduction under subsection (b) where the release document invokes the reduction under that subsection. The answer is not found in the statutory language. Clearly, the statute, which was intended to apply equitable considerations in the relationships of injured parties and tortfeasors, could not have intended double reduction. The proper application is to compare the amount received by the injured party from released tortfeasors (subsection (a)) with the pro rata share of the released tortfeasors (subsection (b)). The greater of those amounts satisfies each subsection and is the method accepted by the Court. The liability of the non-released tortfeasors is calculated by subtracting the greater amount determined in the preceding sentence from the amount of the award to plaintiff.

II

The parties are in disagreement as to the applicability of subsection (b) to releases which plaintiffs delivered to certain tort-feasors.

Plaintiffs executed two different types of releases. One type was provided to the settling defendants who were manufacturers of asbestos products and a different type was provided to defendant Delaware Insulation Company. Because of the fundamental difference in wording, these will be discussed separately.

A.

The release which plaintiffs executed and provided to released tortfeasors other than Delaware Insulation provides:

In the event the Releasee is adjudicated to be a Joint Tortfeasor, then the payment herein shall constitute a reduction to the extent of the pro rata share of liability of Releasee found liable, from the damage recoverable by us from the other tortfeasors. Specifically, this release is intended to comply with 10 Del.C. Section 6304(b) so as to preclude liability of the Releasees to any other Tortfeasor, if any, for contribution and any language *665 inconsistent with the intent of 10 Del.C. Section 6304(b) shall be void.

The quoted language departs from the language of 10 Del.C. § 6304(b) in that the statutory language requires that the damages reduction must be “to the extent of the pro rata share of the released tort-fea-sor,” while the release language provides that “the payment herein shall constitute a reduction to the extent of the pro rata share of liability of Releasee found liable.” The difference is that the release limits the releasee’s “pro rata share” to the “payment herein”, while the statute contains no such ceiling.

The last sentence of the quoted release language declares “this release is intended to comply with 10 Del.C. Section 6304(b) so as to preclude liability of the Releasees to any other Tortfeasor, if any, for contribution and any language inconsistent with the intent of 10 Del.C. § 6304(b) shall be void.” It has been noted above that one of the two functions of § 6304(b) is to specify the manner in which the settling tortfeasor can escape liability for contribution. Since the non-settling tortfeasors are not parties to the settlement, the only way in which the settling tortfeasor can be relieved of liability for contribution is to comply with the specifications in § 6304(b).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
586 A.2d 662, 1990 Del. Super. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrall-v-ac-s-co-inc-delsuperct-1990.