Feight v. Farm Bureau Property and Casualty Insurance Company

CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedMarch 29, 2023
Docket6:21-cv-01208
StatusUnknown

This text of Feight v. Farm Bureau Property and Casualty Insurance Company (Feight v. Farm Bureau Property and Casualty Insurance Company) 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
Feight v. Farm Bureau Property and Casualty Insurance Company, (D. Kan. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS

ROBERT FEIGHT, ) ) Plaintiff, ) v. ) Case No. 21-1208-KGG ) FARM BUREAU PROPERTY & ) CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY, ) ) Defendant. ) _____ ______________________________ )

MEMORANDUM & ORDER DENYING MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT

Now before the Court is Defendant’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment wherein Defendant asks the Court to grant summary judgment in favor of Defendant as to the issue of whether Plaintiff can claim increased expenses as a category of damages. (See generally Docs. 52, 53.) For the reasons set forth below, the Court finds that calculating Plaintiff’s damages requires a determination of fact for the jury and, thus, Defendant’s motion is DENIED. FACTUAL BACKGROUND I. Introduction. Plaintiff brings this underinsured lawsuit against his automobile insurance carrier. This lawsuit stems from an open-intersection automobile collision at a rural intersection in Cloud County, Kansas, in which underinsured motorist, Kevin Wurm, collided with the vehicle driven by Plaintiff, resulting in injuries to Plaintiff. (See generally Doc. 1.) Liability insurance limits were paid by Mr. Wurm’s insurance company. In this lawsuit, Plaintiff alleges Defendant Farm

Bureau has breached the Underinsurance provisions of the relevant policy. (Id.) The issue before the Court relates to a category of Plaintiff’s claimed damages resulting from his alleged injury. Defendant has filed a Motion for Partial

Summary Judgment as to Plaintiff’s claims for past and future economic damages. (See Docs. 52, 53.) Defendant argues that Plaintiff can recover only lost profits resulting from the accident – not a separate category of business expenses that, according to Defendant, has no connection to the profitability of Plaintiff’s

business. (Id., at 12-13.) Defendant contends that Plaintiff does not claim his income has decreased as a result of this accident. He only claims that a component of his farm expenses has increased. The uncontroverted facts show that Plaintiff has not incurred substitute labor costs since 2021 and that Plaintiff’s overall income has not decreased after this accident as a result of the alleged increased labor costs.

(Doc. 53, at 2, 13-14.) Plaintiff counters that he has paid and/or agreed to pay others for labor that he was able to do himself before sustaining injuries in the accident. According to Plaintiff, these amounts “are the best estimate of the monetary value of his diminished earning capacity.” (Doc. 55, at 3.) Plaintiff continues that a determination of the appropriateness of this damage estimate “is a material fact issue to be determined by the jury, based largely on the credibility of testimony and evidence presented at trial.” (Id.) He argues that this method of computation has a

reasonable basis, enabling the jury to arrive at an estimate of the amount of loss. (Doc. 55, 8-10.) Defendant replies that Plaintiff’s recovery can only be based on the reasonable sum of his lost profits, not a separate category of expenses that have

not resulted in a decrease of his net profits. (Doc. 56, at 12-13.) Within this context, the Court will summarize the relevant uncontested facts. For purposes of a summary judgment Order, the Court will “construe the factual record and reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the

nonmovant.” Janny v. Gamez, 8 F.4th 883, 899 (10th Cir. 2021) (citation omitted). That stated, the party opposing summary judgment cannot create a genuine issue of material factual by making purely conclusory allegations, id., or

allegations that are unsupported by the record as a whole, Scott v. Harris, 550 U.S. 372, 380 (2007). See also Heard v. Dulayev, 29 F.4th 1195, 1202 (10th Cir. 2022). II. Uncontroverted Facts.

Plaintiff is “not making a lost wages claim,” but instead claims substitute labor expenses consisting of compensation paid to others for work Plaintiff would have performed himself had he not been injured. In the 7 years before this

accident Plaintiff did not have any hired help or hired hands. Up to the time of the subject accident on June 8, 2020, Plaintiff had his own farming operation and also worked on his father’s farm. At times before the accident, Plaintiff and his father

had a revenue and cost sharing agreement for certain properties and also farmed based on a proportionate share of costs and incomes. Since sustaining injuries in the accident, Plaintiff has needed assistance

performing the farm and ranch work he performed himself prior to the accident. Plaintiff’s treating neuro-ophthalmologist, Dr. Riggins, opined that there are techniques and/or a combination of surgeries that potentially could correct or alleviate Plaintiff’s complaints of double vision, although this would not correct

his issues with depth perception.1 Plaintiff’s father died on June 10, 2021. From June 9, 2020, to December 31, 2020, Plaintiff paid his father $39,375.03 for substitute labor expenses.

Defendant is not seeking summary judgment as to this amount. Plaintiff’s brother, Bryan Feight, has been helping Plaintiff with farming and ranching work. Prior to this accident, Plaintiff and Bryan Feight were not engaged in any combination of farming operations together.

Plaintiff describes his economic loss in this suit as constituting money that was paid to my father for his labor since I couldn’t do the work myself. My father has since passed and now my

1 Facts in this paragraph were gleaned from Plaintiff’s response brief and Defendant’s reply thereto; where Defendant has attempted to controvert the same, facts are taken in the light most favorable to Plaintiff. Janny, 8 F.4th at 899 (citation omitted). brother helps me. My brother gets paid roughly the same amount so if you take the total my father got paid from June 9, 2020[,] to December 31, 2020[,] and multiply it by three, you will get what I am claiming to date for loss of income.

(Doc. 53-3, at 2.) Plaintiff extrapolates the annual amount of substitute labor expenses from the six months of payments he alleges made to his father in the sum of $39,375.03 x 2 = $78,750.06 per year or $157,500.12 for the two years after his father passed away at the time of the pretrial conference. (Doc. 49, at 12; Doc. 53-3, at 2.) In Plaintiff’s supplemental interrogatory responses, he claimed damages for substitute labor in 2021 in the amount of $62,744.03. (Doc. 53-4, at 3.) Plaintiff no longer lists this amount as damages, but rather, in the Pretrial Order lists as $157,500.12 for the category of “Lost Wages/Reimbursement” under economic

damages to date. (Doc. 49, p. 12.) Plaintiff claims $1,968,751.50 for future lost wages/reimbursement. (Id.) The latter amount encompasses Plaintiff’s claim that he will continue to experience annual substitute labor costs of $78,750 for the next twenty-five years ($1,968,751.50).

Plaintiff has not made payments to anyone for substitute labor since November 21, 2021. That stated, his uncontroverted testimony is that he needs help, has received help, and owes monetary payment his brother Bryan Feight for

the help he has been receiving. Plaintiff estimated that in the 5 years leading up to the accident, he made approximately $25,000 per year. According to his tax returns, Plaintiff’s had a net

farming loss of $18,199 in 2014 and a net loss of $10,979 in 2015. He had net profits of $8,493 in 2016, $7,951 in 2017, $16,352 in 2018, $23,648 in 2019, $39,622 in 2020, and $6,169 in 2021. Thus, Plaintiff’s total net income from his

farming operation for 2014 through 2019 was $27,266, resulting in an average annual net income of $4,544. Looking at only 2020 and 2021, Plaintiff’s average annual net income was $22,896.

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Feight v. Farm Bureau Property and Casualty Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feight-v-farm-bureau-property-and-casualty-insurance-company-ksd-2023.