Maida Ludvik Sheris v. The Travelers Insurance Company, Maida Ludvik Sheris v. The Travelers Insurance Comapny

491 F.2d 603, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 10098
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 12, 1974
Docket73-1462, 73-1463
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 491 F.2d 603 (Maida Ludvik Sheris v. The Travelers Insurance Company, Maida Ludvik Sheris v. The Travelers Insurance Comapny) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maida Ludvik Sheris v. The Travelers Insurance Company, Maida Ludvik Sheris v. The Travelers Insurance Comapny, 491 F.2d 603, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 10098 (4th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

BUTZNER, Circuit Judge:

This appeal questions the apportionment of an attorney’s fee between a workmen’s compensation carrier and the administratrix of an estate who recovered damages for the wrongful death of an employee. The district court used only the compensation installments actually paid as a basis for assessing the carrier’s proportionate share of the fee. We conclude that the entire compensation award furnished the appropriate basis for apportionment, subject to a credit allowable to the carrier. Accordingly, we vacate the judgment and remand the ease for further proceedings.

William T. Sheris perished in the crash of a transatlantic aircraft. Because his death occurred during the course of his employment, the Industrial Commission of Virginia awarded his widow and minor children compensation payable by his employer’s insurance carrier, the Travelers Insurance Company, in 400 weekly installments of $45, totaling $18,000. Mrs. Sheris, suing in district court as administratrix of her husband’s estate, also received $75,000 from the airline responsible for his death. From her share of the recovery against the airline, she paid an attorney’s fee of $25,000. Thus, while this litigation is cast in terms of apportioning an attorney’s fee, it is really an attempt by Mrs. *605 Sheris to obtain from Travelers partial reimbursement for her outlay.

Before the court made final distribution of the $75,000, a dispute over Travelers’ right to subrogation was submitted to the Industrial Commission. In that forum, Mrs. Sheris contended .that the subrogation provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act 1 were inapplicable because the airline’s liability rested on contractual aspects of the Warsaw Convention and the damages recovered by the estate were in the nature of insurance. The Industrial Commission ruled against Mrs. Sheris, holding that Travelers was subrogated to the estate’s rights against the airline. Consequently, it ordered that Travelers should be reimbursed for the weekly installments it had already paid, aggregating $5,040, and it relieved the company of future payments. Thus, Travelers was saved harmless from liability on the entire $18,000 award. The Supreme Court of Virginia affirmed, Sheris v. Sheris Co., 212 Va. 825, 188 S.E.2d 367 (1972). Neither the Commission nor the Court apportioned counsel fees.

Returning to the district court, the parties sought distribution of the award. Travelers asked to be repaid the sum of $5,040 without contribution for counsel fees, because Mrs. Sheris had opposed its right of subrogation. Mrs. Sheris urged that the carrier be assessed a fee of $6,000 based on the entire compensation award of $18,000. The court accepted neither party’s position. It ruled Travelers’ contribution for fees should be based on $5,040, the amount of compensation it had paid, rather than its potential liability of $18,000. It made no adjustment for Travelers on account of Mrs. Sheris’ opposition to subrogation. Accordingly, from the $75,000 recovery against the airline, the court awarded Travelers $5,040 less 33%% which it deducted for Travelers’ share of the fee. Dissatisfied, both parties appealed.

The Virginia Workmen’s Compensation Act allows either the employer or the employee to sue the person responsible for the employee’s injury except for reasons not pertinent to this case. If the employer sues, he may retain from the damages he recovers a sum sufficient to reimburse himself for the compensation paid, or payable, to the employee, but he must account to the employee for money collected in excess of the award. 2 If the employee sues, the employer is entitled to be reimbursed for compensation already paid and to be discharged from liability for future payments to the extent that the judgment against the wrongdoer is sufficient to satisfy the compensation award. The balance may be retained by the employee. 3 In either instance, the employer’s workmen’s compensation insurance carrier stands in the shoes of the employer. 4

For many years an employer who sued the wrongdoer has been authorized to deduct reasonable attorney’s fees before remitting to the employee. 5 But before 1960 an employee who brought suit was not entitled to charge any attorney’s fees against the employer’s share of the recovery. 6 Frequently these rules placed all of the expense of suing a wrongdoer on the injured employee or his survivors even though the employer or his compensation carrier benefited substantially. To remedy this inequity, the legislature amended the Workmen’s Compensation *606 Act by apportioning attorney’s fees between the employer and employee as their respective interests may appear regardless of who instituted the suit. 7

The Supreme Court of Virginia has not been called upon to decide the correct basis for apportioning an attorney’s fee when the employee’s recovery against the wrongdoer is in excess of both the paid and unpaid portions of a compensation award. Several courts, however, have interpreted apportionment statutes similar, though not identical,-to Virginia’s. They have ruled that apportionment must be based on the full liability of the employer—the compensation it has paid in the past and the amount that it would be required to pay in the future were it not for the employee’s successful suit. 8

The reasoning of these cases is sound. It rests on the conclusion that there is no rational distinction between the benefit an employer enjoys from being reimbursed for compensation payments already made and the benefit of being released from the obligation to make future compensation payments. Therefore, as one court has pointed out, it is reasonable to assume that the legislature intended the attorney’s fee to be prorated to the extent of the benefits the employer received from the recovery against the wrongdoer. 9 Stated negatively, there is nothing to indicate that when the Virginia legislature directed proration of the fees as the interests of the parties may appear, it intended that only part of the interest of the compensation carrier should be taken into account.

While some compensation awards may be modified with respect to future payments, the employee’s right of apportionment should not be defeated. 10 The prospect of modification, however, is a factor that a court should consider in light of the contingency that may affect the award. In the case before us, the possibility of modification of the award presents no problem. Upon Travelers’ application, the Industrial Commission released it from future payments because Mrs. Sheris and her children recovered $75,000 from the airline.

Travelers asserts that cases from other jurisdictions are not persuasive because Va.Code Ann.

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491 F.2d 603, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 10098, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maida-ludvik-sheris-v-the-travelers-insurance-company-maida-ludvik-sheris-ca4-1974.