Hope Flooring & Lumber Company v. Boulden

215 F.2d 731, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2883
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 3, 1954
Docket14895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 215 F.2d 731 (Hope Flooring & Lumber Company v. Boulden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hope Flooring & Lumber Company v. Boulden, 215 F.2d 731, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2883 (8th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

215 F.2d 731

HOPE FLOORING & LUMBER COMPANY and Commercial Standard Insurance Company, Interveners, Appellants,
v.
Mrs. Lee E. BOULDEN, Administratrix of the Estate of Lee E. Boulden, Deceased, Appellee.

No. 14895.

United States Court of Appeals Eighth Circuit.

September 3, 1954.

Shields M. Goodwin, Little Rock, Ark. (Riddick Riffel, Little Rock, Ark., with him on the brief), for appellants.

John H. Lookadoo, Arkadelphia, Ark. (Lookadoo & Lookadoo, Arkadelphia, Ark., with him on the brief), for appellee.

Before SANBORN, JOHNSEN and COLLET, Circuit Judges.

JOHNSEN, Circuit Judge.

This case involves a somewhat important question of Arkansas procedural law, which had not been settled by the courts of that State when the appeal was argued to us, but which was then the subject of pending litigation between other parties in those courts. Under the circumstances, we deemed it advisable to withhold our disposition, until expression had been made upon the question in that litigation by the Arkansas Supreme Court. That Court has now spoken. Winfrey & Carlile v. Nickles, Adm'r, 270 S.W.2d 923.

The question is whether a lawyer is entitled to charge, or a court has the right to allow, without an order on the part of the Arkansas Workmen's Compensation Commission, an attorney's fee on that portion of the funds of a settlement or a recovery, obtained by a workman or his personal representative from a third party, to which the workman's employer and the latter's insurance carrier are subrogated, under Ark.Stats. 1947, § 81-1340, as revised by Acts 1949, No. 4, § 40, p. 1420, by virtue of such employer's and carrier's liability to the workman or his dependents for benefits under the Workmen's Compensation Law of that State, Ark.Stats.1947, § 81-1301 et seq., as revised, which liability they have duly admitted.

The Arkansas Workmen's Compensation Commission had made the administrative construction of § 81-1340, as revised, in connection with a distribution of proceeds of that character, in the case which became the subject of review by the Arkansas Supreme Court, that "an attorney entering a third party action, being aware of, or chargeable with, the knowledge of the rights of all the parties thereto, where a fee is to be contracted for upon a percentage basis, must limit his percentage to the amount of the recovery effected over and above that amount that must be reimbursed to the employer, or compensation carrier, for the amount of their compensation liability paid, or to be paid, by reason of the accidental injury or death, and * * no fee can be charged against that amount representing the reimbursement fund against which the employer or his compensation insurance carrier has a lien for their compensation liability, except upon petition for, and allowance of same by the Commission."1

The state trial court in that case, where a contested trial and jury submission had been involved, had refused to follow the Commission's administrative ruling on the distribution necessary under the statute of such part of the proceeds and, without the approval of the Commission, had allowed the attorneys for the employee's personal representative a fee out of the portion of the recovery to which the employer and his insurance carrier were subrogated by reason of their admitted compensation liability, in addition to an allowance out of the share of the recovery to which the personal representative was directly entitled. The insurance carrier appealed, and the Arkansas Supreme Court affirmed the trial court's order. See Winfrey & Carlile v. Nickles, Adm'r, 270 S.W.2d 923.

The basis of the Court's affirmance was the fact that the proceeds in question, as indicated above, were shown to be the product of a contested trial and jury submission, and its view that the provisions of subsection (c) of § 81-1340, supra, as to procuring the approval of the Commission to distributions of any proceeds, representing compensation reimbursement, obtained from a third party, and as to not deducting any costs of collection from such proceeds, "except upon direction and approval of the Commission", where the employer or the insurance carrier had admitted liability for compensation, were without application to funds which had had to be thus contestedly recovered. The Court said that, in having made the requirement in subsection (c) for obtaining the approval of the Commission, "the legislature meant compromise settlements only", and that the subsection "does not apply to a contested case." 270 S.W.2d at page 926.

The present situation is like that case, to the extent that it is one where, without the approval of the Arkansas Workmen's Compensation Commission, the trial court allowed, to the attorney for the personal representative of a deceased employee, an attorney's fee out of the portion of some funds, collected from a third party, that represented subrogated compensation reimbursement to the employer and his insurance carrier, in addition to an allowance out of the share of the funds to which the personal representative was directly entitled, and also entered a conforming order of distribution. The appeal here is taken by the employer and the insurance carrier.

The abbreviated printed record before us does not enable us to tell whether the trial court, in viewing it as unnecessary for the personal representative's attorney to seek the approval of the Workmen's Compensation Commission to the allowance of an attorney's fee out of the compensation reimbursement funds, did so on the basis of the distinction drawn by the Arkansas Supreme Court or on some other basis. Statements contained in the brief of appellee (prepared before the Arkansas Supreme Court decision) suggest that appellee, at that time at least, viewed the trial court's holding as being one to the broad effect that § 81-1340, supra, did not intend that the Workmen's Compensation Commission should have anything whatsoever to say or do about funds collected by an employee or his personal representative from a third party, no matter how they had been obtained, until "after [the] attorneys had been paid." Whether this was in fact the construction and application which the court made of the statute, we are not able to determine from the printed record.

Since the decision of the Arkansas Supreme Court, however, appellee, by supplementary written expression, has argued that the situation involved should be held by us to be one that is within the category of what that Court referred to as "a contested case." Appellants, on the other hand, contend that the funds in question are in actual nature and fact merely proceeds of a compromise settlement. The record, in its present state, does not enable us to make an absolute answer to the question, one way or the other.

The record does indicate that an action had been instituted by appellee (the deceased employee's personal representative) against the third party involved, and that the third party had filed an answer, and the employer and the insurance carrier a petition of intervention, in that suit.

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Related

Boulden v. Herring
126 F. Supp. 885 (W.D. Arkansas, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
215 F.2d 731, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hope-flooring-lumber-company-v-boulden-ca8-1954.