Hudson v. Uwekoolani

653 P.2d 783, 65 Haw. 468, 1982 Haw. LEXIS 240
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1982
DocketNO. 7517
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 653 P.2d 783 (Hudson v. Uwekoolani) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hudson v. Uwekoolani, 653 P.2d 783, 65 Haw. 468, 1982 Haw. LEXIS 240 (haw 1982).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

This is an interlocutory appeal from the denial of a motion for summary judgment.

On December 16, 1977, the plaintiffs’ decedent, Michael Hudson, then eleven years of age, was riding a bicycle when he was struck by an automobile driven by defendant Betty Uwekoolani. Michael died as a result of his injuries. His parents filed a benefit application with defendant Hawaiian Insurance Guaranty Company, Limited (“HIG”) which insured defendant Uwekoolani. HIG paid all medical and funeral expenses but declined to pay the parents’ claim for other statutory no-fault benefits. Thereafter Michael’s parents, David and Frances Hudson, individually, and Mr. Hudson as the personal representative of Michael’s estate, filed suit against Mrs. Uwekoolani and HIG. HIG filed a motion for summary judgment [469]*469which was denied. The trial court, however, granted the insurance company leave to file an interlocutory appeal. The plaintiffs’ claims against Mrs. Uwekoolani are not at issue on this appeal.

The additional no-fault benefits sought by the plaintiffs consisted of the loss of wages Michael might have earned but for his death. It is their theory that the decedent would eventually have been gainfully employed and had thus sustained a loss of earnings.

HIG argues that only where the deceased leaves a spouse or dependent surviving him will loss of earnings benefits be payable to his estate. The insurance company is relying upon HRS § 294-4(1)(B) which provides as follows:

(B) In the case of death arising out of a motor vehicle accident of any person, including the owner, operator, occupant, or user of the insured motor vehicle, or any pedestrian (including a bicyclist) who sustains accidental harm as a result of the operation, maintenance, or use of said vehicle, the insurer shall pay, without regard to fault, to the legal representative of such person, for the benefit of the surviving spouse and any dependent, as defined in section 152 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, of such person, an amount equal to the no-fault benefits payable to such spouse and dependent as a result of the death of such person, subject, however, to the provisions of section 294-2(10).1 [Emphasis added]

Section 152 oí the Internal Revenue Code oí 1954(26U.S.C. § 152) defines the term “dependent” as any one of a number of relatives of a taxpayer “over half of whose support, for the calendar year in which the taxable year pf the taxpayer begins, was received from the taxpayer....”

HIG then points out that Michael Hudson had no dependents at the time of his death; that he was unmarried and had no issue, legitimate or otherwise.

In response, the plaintiffs call this court’s attention to the concluding language of the statute upon which HIG relies. HRS § 294-4(l)(B) concludes with the proviso: “subject, however, to the provisions of section 294-2(10).”

[470]*470HRS § 294-2(10) in its entirety provides:

(10) “No-fault benefits” with respect to any accidental harm shall be subject to an aggregate limit of $15,000 per person or his. survivor and means:
(A) All appropriate and reasonable expenses, necessarily incurred for medical, hospital, surgical, professional nursing, dental, optometric, ambulance, prosthetic services, products and accommodations furnished, x-ray and may include any non-medical remedial care and treatment rendered in accordance with the teachings, faith or belief of any group which depends for healing upon spiritual means through prayer;;
(B) All appropriate and reasonable expenses necessarily incurred for psychiatric, physical, and occupational therapy and rehabilitation;
(C) Monthly earnings loss measured by an amount equal to the lesser of:
(i) $800 per month, or
(ii) The monthly earnings for the period during which the accidental harm results in the inability to engage in available and appropriate gainful activity, or.
(iii) A monthly amount equal to the amount, if any, by which the lesser of (i) and (ii) exceeds any lower monthly earnings of the person sustaining injury at the time he resumes gainful activity:
(D) All appropriate and reasonable expenses necessarily incurred as a result of such accidental harm, including, but, not limited to, (i) expenses incurred in obtaining services in substitution of those that the injured or deceased person would have performed for the benefit of himself or his family up to $800 per month, (ii) funeral expenses not to exceed $1,500, and (iii) attorney’s fees and costs to the extent provided in section 294-30(a);

provided that the term, when applied to persons described in section 294-22(b)(2)(A), shall not include benefits under sub-paragraph (A), (B), and (C).2 [Emphasis added]

[471]*471The plaintiffs further point out that the no-fault statute expressly provides that “every person, insured under this chapter, and his survivors, suffering loss from accidental harm arising out of the operation, maintenance or use of a motor vehicle has a right to no-fault benefits.” HRS § 294-3(a). (Emphasis added) No-fault benefits are those enumerated in HRS § 294-2(10) which also refers to the “person or his survivor” as the beneficiaries of those benefits.

Nowhere in the statute is the term “survivor” or “survivors” defined. Under the Hawaii wrongful death statute, however, survivors with standing to sue are the surviving spouse, children, father, mother, and any other person wholly or partly dependent upon the deceased person. HRS § 663-3. Damages for wrongful death, even in the case of an unemployed minor having no spouse or dependents, would include damages based on loss of future earnings. HRS § 663-8. Such damages would be recoverable by the minor’s estate, and where he leaves no issue and surviving spouse, his parents would be the sole beneficiaries of his estate. HRS § 560:2-103.

HIG’s argument is not without basis when the section of the statute upon which it relies is viewed in isolation from the rest of the statute. But when carried to its logical conclusion, the result would be the disallowance of all no-fault benefits where the person suffering accidental harm dies, leaving neither surviving spouse nor dependent. The medical reimbursement benefits provided under HRS § 294-2

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Hudson v. Uwekoolani
653 P.2d 783 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1982)

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Bluebook (online)
653 P.2d 783, 65 Haw. 468, 1982 Haw. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudson-v-uwekoolani-haw-1982.