LaPerriere v. Shrum

721 P.2d 630, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 347
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1986
DocketS-993
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 721 P.2d 630 (LaPerriere v. Shrum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LaPerriere v. Shrum, 721 P.2d 630, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 347 (Ala. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

MOORE, Justice.

This case raises the issue whether an offer of judgment made under AS 09.30.-065 included costs and attorney’s fees not expressly mentioned in the offer. The of-ferees filed a written notice of acceptance and moved to enforce the judgment requesting that costs and attorney’s fees be awarded in addition to the $10,000 offered. The trial court denied the motion and held that the $10,000 offer of judgment included costs and attorney’s fees. We conclude the trial court erred and reverse.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Steven and Judith Shrum (the Shrams), through their attorney Richard L. Yospin (Yospin), made an offer of judgment for $10,000 pursuant to AS 09.30.065 1 to Mar *632 cel and Connie LaPerriere (the LaPerri-eres), through their attorney A. Fred Miller (Miller). A clerk from Yospin’s office delivered the offer, dated March 15, 1985, to Miller’s court receptacle that same day. It is accepted local practice in Ketchikan to effectuate service of process using the court receptacles. Later in the afternoon on March 15, Yospin informed Miller during a telephone conversation that his clerk had placed an offer of judgment in Miller’s court receptacle. They did not discuss the amount of the offer of judgment.

Geoffrey Currall, an attorney in Yospin’s office, had discussed the offer of judgment with Yospin shortly after Yospin’s first telephone conversation with Miller. Cur-rall had suggested that Yospin redraft the offer to indicate that the $10,000 offer was inclusive of all costs, interest, and attorney’s fees. This discussion prompted Yos-pin to send Nettie Ellis to the courthouse to retrieve the original offer.

Immediately after his conversation with Yospin, Miller spoke briefly by telephone with his client Marcel LaPerriere. He mentioned the offer of judgment but still did not know the dollar amount. Miller then went to the courthouse where he encountered Ellis, a clerk from Yospin’s office. Ellis informed Miller that Yospin had sent her to retrieve the offer of judgment from Miller’s receptacle. Miller refused her request to retrieve the offer and instructed her to have Yospin call him concerning the matter.

Shortly after returning to his office, Miller received a second telephone call from Yospin. He informed Miller that he had mistakenly failed to indicate that the amount of $10,000 was inclusive of all costs and attorney’s fees. Yospin indicated to Miller that the offer was either revoked or should be interpreted as including all costs and fees. Miller’s response was noncommittal; he informed Yospin he would discuss the matter with his client. Immediately after this telephone conversation, Yospin typed a letter to Miller, reiterating what he had just said over the telephone. This letter was hand delivered to Miller’s office late in the afternoon on March 15, 1985. Shortly after receiving the letter, Miller informed Yospin he was accepting the offer on behalf of his clients.

The LaPerrieres filed a motion to enforce the offer of judgment for the stated amount of $10,000 plus costs and attorney’s fees accrued to date. Superior Court Judge Schulz determined that the offer of judgment was irrevocable for ten days. He held that the $10,000 offer included costs and attorney’s fees and was enforceable against the Shrums. Judge Schulz stated in his decision:

This offer was to enter judgment, have judgment entered against them, entered against the defendants, for $10,000.00, period. It didn’t say $10,000.00 plus costs, it didn’t say $10,000 plus costs and attorneys fees and pre-judgment interests, it didn’t say $10,000.00 plus anything. It said $10,000.00 and the plaintiffs accepted it.

The LaPerrieres appeal the superior court decision. They argue that Alaska Civil Rule 68 2 is practically identical to AS *633 09.30.065 and that Alaska cases allowing an award of costs and attorney’s fees under Rule 68 apply also to AS 09.30.065. The Shrums counter that the rule and the statute are distinguishable and our case law does not apply.

II. DISCUSSION

A. Should an offer of judgment pursuant to AS 09.30.065 be construed differently than an offer of judgment made under Alaska Civil Rule 68?

Whether an offer of judgment pursuant to AS 09.30.065 is inclusive or exclusive of costs and attorney fees not mentioned in the offer is an issue of first impression for this court. We have addressed analogous issues in our interpretation of Alaska Civil Rule 68, however, so initially we must decide whether our construction of Rule 68 is applicable to statutory offers of judgment.

Alaska Statute 09.30.(165 differs from Civil Rule 68 in two respects. First, Rule 68 does not contain the statutory language “to be entered in complete satisfaction of the claim.” The Shrums argue that this difference in language indicates that the offeror shall have control over the terms of the offer and that the result achieved would be different from an acceptance of an offer made under Rule 68. The Shrums have not referred to any cases that hold that an acceptance of an offer of judgment under Civil Rule 68 does not result in a complete satisfaction of the claim. Furthermore, the legislative history of AS 09.30.065 3 expressly states: “This Act does not amend Rule 68 of the Alaska Rules of Civil Procedure.” Ch. 107, § 5, SLA 1980. We find no inconsistency between the statute and the rule.

The second difference is that AS 09.30.-065 allows a rate of interest adjustment by 2% a year to the prevailing party if the offer is filed within the time constraints set forth in the statute. The Shrums do not argue this language difference has any application to the issue at hand. We find as a matter of law that it does not.

We hold that our case decisions construing Alaska Civil Rule 68 apply also to interpretation of AS 09.30.065 in the instant case.

B. Did the trial court err in not awarding costs and attorney’s fees in addition to the principal sum of $10,000 specified in the offer of judgment?

In the case at bar the settlement offer provided:

OFFER OF JUDGMENT
Pursuant to AS 09.30.065, defendants hereby offer to have judgment entered against them in the amount of Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00).
Dated this 15th day of March, 1985.
KEENE & CURRALL Attorneys for Defendants
By /s/_
Richard L. Yospin

Under Alaska Civil Rule 68 when a written notice of acceptance of the offer is served on the offeror, the clerk enters a judgment for the money specified in the offer, i.e., $10,000. In addition to any unconditional offer of money, an award of costs and attorney’s fees is mandated by Rule 68 and our case law.

In Davis v. Chism, 513 P.2d 475 (Alaska 1973), we observed:

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Bluebook (online)
721 P.2d 630, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laperriere-v-shrum-alaska-1986.