In re Estate of Infant Fontaine

519 A.2d 227, 128 N.H. 695, 1986 N.H. LEXIS 370
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedOctober 3, 1986
DocketNo. 86-033
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 519 A.2d 227 (In re Estate of Infant Fontaine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Estate of Infant Fontaine, 519 A.2d 227, 128 N.H. 695, 1986 N.H. LEXIS 370 (N.H. 1986).

Opinion

KING, C.J.

This appeal from a denial by the Sullivan County Probate Court (Spanos, J.) of a petition for distribution presents the question of how to distribute a wrongful death award to the estate of a viable fetus, when one of the estate’s two beneficiaries was found to be fifty percent negligent in causing the death of the fetus. We hold that the liability of the defendant insurance company is not reduced by the beneficiary’s comparative negligence. We also hold that, after allowable expenses have been deducted, the award is to be distributed in equal halves to the two beneficiaries. Accordingly, we reverse and remand to the probate court for a final accounting of allowable expenses and entry of a decree of distribution consistent with this opinion.

This case arises from an automobile collision between the decedent’s mother, Cindra Fontaine, and Evie Etta Stevens. Infant Fontaine, the plaintiff’s decedent, died in útero as an eight-month-old fetus as a result of the collision. After exhaustion of Stevens’s insurance, the present claim was made against the defendant, as automobile liability insurer for Cindra Fontaine and her husband Peter, under the uninsured motorist provision of the policy. This claim was arbitrated through the American Arbitration Association. The probate court upheld the arbitrator’s award.

In his memorandum of law to the arbitrator, the plaintiff requested the arbitrator to determine both the degree, if any, to which Cindra Fontaine was negligent, and the damages to which the estate was entitled. The plaintiff also requested the arbitrator to refer the matter to the probate court for determination of allowable expenses, then to deduct those expenses from the award, then finally to deduct “from one-half of the remainder an amount equal to the percentage of fault found attributable to Cindra Fontaine times one-[697]*697half of the remainder.” The arbitrator awarded $15,000, and found Cindra Fontaine fifty percent negligent. The arbitrator’s award reads, “The $15,000.00 damages shall be reduced by one-half of the residue after deducting the allowable expenses as found by the Court.” However, we must infer that the arbitrator made an error in translating his arithmetic into a verbal formula. The result of the arbitrator’s language would be to deprive Cindra Fontaine of her entire portion, a result which is precluded by the comparative negligence statute, RSA 507:7-a. In any event, on appeal both parties have interpreted the arbitrator to have meant that the defendant’s liability is to be reduced by half of Cindra Fontaine’s one-half share.

In his petition for distribution filed in the probate court, the plaintiff changed the position he had taken before the arbitrator and asked the probate court to disregard Cindra Fontaine’s negligence and award the full amount of damages to the estate. The probate court denied the plaintiff’s request, thereby sustaining the arbitrator’s award. Accordingly, Cindra Fontaine’s share would be calculated by deducting expenses of $6,105.88 from the $15,000 total, dividing the remaining $8,894.12 by two, yielding $4,447.06 for each beneficiary, and then deducting fifty percent of that. Thus, after payment of expenses, Peter Fontaine as a non-negligent beneficiary would receive $4,447.06 and Cindra Fontaine only $2,223.53. The defendant’s liability would thus be reduced to $12,776.48. The present appeal contests the reduction both of the defendant’s liability and of Cindra Fontaine’s share.

At the outset, we disagree with the defendant’s argument that the plaintiff should have been estopped in the probate court from changing his position from the one he took in his request to the arbitrator. The parties apparently intended the arbitrator to make a factual assessment of the damages and of the comparative negligence of Evie Etta Stevens and Cindra Fontaine. What complicates the picture is that the parties also essentially stipulated to the arbitrator, as if it were a fact, a rule of law concerning how to distribute the award. Parties cannot bind a court by such a stipulation, see Butterick v. Butterick, 127 N.H. 731, 734, 506 A.2d 335, 337 (1986), and such a stipulation cannot prevent the plaintiff from raising a different legal argument in the probate court.

The probate court has jurisdiction to decide questions of law concerning descent and distribution. See RSA 547:3. At oral argument before us, the defendant conceded that the plaintiff raised his claim before the first forum that could decide whether the law of distribution in the circumstances of this case had changed. We agree with that concession.

[698]*698 We proceed to address the merits of the plaintiff’s claim. The plaintiff’s action is controlled by RSA 556:9-:14. An action for recovery of damages for wrongful death exists purely as a statutory creation. See Kelley v. Volkswagenwerk, 110 N.H. 369, 268 A.2d 837 (1970). The defendant argues that Niemi v. Railroad, 87 N.H. 1, 173 A. 361 (1934) and Martineau v. Waldman, 93 N.H. 386, 42 A.2d 735 (1945) (awarding attorney fees and reaffirming the substantive decision ordered at 93 N.H. 147, 42 A.2d 386) settled that the share of contributorily negligent beneficiaries must be deducted from the defendant’s liability in a wrongful death action. We believe that the 1971 amendment of RSA 556:14 negates the rational of Niemi and Martineau. Because RSA 556:14'now makes the wrongful death action exclusively for the benefit of the decedent’s estate, we hold that the comparative negligence of the decedent’s mother is not a relevant consideration in assessing the defendant’s liability.

Prior to 1971, RSA 556:14 read in pertinent part that the damages, after deducting allowable expenses,

“shall belong and be distributed as follows:...
IV. If there be no child and no widow or widower, to the heirs at law of the deceased according to the laws of distribution.”

RSA 556:14 (1955); PL 302, § 14 (1926). Niemi declared that the real parties in interest in a death action were the statutory distributees and that the administrator was merely an agent for the distributees. Niemi, supra at 6, 173 A. at 364. We concluded in that case t!hat, “[t]o takeaway the defence of contributory negligence because of the intervention of a fiduciary having no personal interest at stake and with but slight interest of authority is to give outward appearance virtue at the expense of inner realities.” Niemi, supra at 6, 173 A. at 364. Martineau extended Niemi by denying a contributorily negligent distributee his proportionate share when there were also innocent distributees. In that case, we deducted the reduced share from the defendant’s liability. Martineau, supra at 388, 42 A.2d at 736.

The present form of RSA 556:14 has deleted the crucial language “shall belong and be distributed as follows” and the concomitant classes of distributees. The new language is “shall become a part of the decedent’s estate and be distributed in accordance with the applicable provisions of law.”

The meaning of this language is amplified by the legislative history and by case law decided after the 1971 amendment. House Bill 149,

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519 A.2d 227, 128 N.H. 695, 1986 N.H. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-infant-fontaine-nh-1986.