Marquardt v. Federal Old Line Insurance

658 P.2d 20, 33 Wash. App. 685, 1983 Wash. App. LEXIS 2136
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 17, 1983
Docket9592-7-I
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 658 P.2d 20 (Marquardt v. Federal Old Line Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marquardt v. Federal Old Line Insurance, 658 P.2d 20, 33 Wash. App. 685, 1983 Wash. App. LEXIS 2136 (Wash. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

Durham, A.C.J.

Washington Life and Disability Insurance Guaranty Association (Guaranty Association) appeals a determination that fringe benefits are part of the "compensation" paid to special deputy insurance commissioners acting as receivers for insolvent insurance companies. It also appeals the court's denial of an injunction to prevent the State from seeking reimbursement from it for fringe *687 benefit expenses.

The Guaranty Association is a statutory nonprofit entity created to assure performance of insolvent insurers. Under RCW 48.32A, it is responsible for the obligations of the insolvent insurers, including obligations under the special deputy commissioner statute. It assesses its member insurance companies to provide funds to meet these obligations.

When an insurance company is adjudged insolvent, the Insurance Commissioner (Commissioner) is by statute named the receiver. RCW 48.31.120(1). The Commissioner may in turn appoint special deputies to act for him in the day-to-day duties of a delinquency proceeding. RCW 48.31.120(6). The statute also provides that:

The compensation of the special deputies . . . and all expenses of taking possession of the insurer and of conducting the proceedings shall be fixed by the receiver, subject to the approval of the court, and shall be paid out of the funds or assets of the insurer.

The dispute between the Guaranty Association and the Commissioner on the scope of the Guaranty Association's obligation to pay insolvency expenses is long standing.

In 1976, the Guaranty Association was one of several defendants in a suit by the State against then Commissioner Karl Herrmann for problems arising in the rehabilitation and insolvency proceedings 1 of Federal Old Line Insurance Company. As its eighth cause of action, the State alleged that from December 1966 through February 1975, the State had expended over $41,000 in the Federal Old Line proceedings. In settlement of this eighth cause of action, the Guaranty Association agreed to pay $32,500; the State agreed not to pursue its eighth cause of action and to dismiss the Guaranty Association from the suit without prejudice. The parties also agreed to forgo any additional claims based on facts "involved in or . . . incident to" three related suits covered by the settlement. The settlement *688 documents consisted of an agreement, a covenant not to sue, and a release and discharge of claims.

The dispute in the proceeding below involved the fringe benefits paid to Special Deputy Commissioner Virgil McQueen, who represented the Commissioner as receiver in three insolvency proceedings: that of Federal Old Line Insurance Company, decreed insolvent in December 1971; Rainier National Life Insurance Company, decreed insolvent in March 1977; and Protective American Life Insurance Company, decreed insolvent in November 1979. McQueen had served on the payroll of the companies in receivership, although the State continued to include him as an employee under the State's fringe benefit programs and had paid those expenses itself. 2

In 1978, the Commissioner (through the special deputy commissioner) petitioned the court acting in the Rainier receivership for reimbursement of fringe benefit expenses paid by the State from March 1975 through September 1978. The request apparently included expenses in both the Rainier and Federal Old Line proceedings. The court initially issued an order approving this reimbursement, but in February 1979 set aside the order. In March 1980, the Guaranty Association petitioned the Rainier receivership court for a declaratory judgment that payment of fringe benefits was the obligation of the State. Thereafter, the parties agreed that the question was best resolved in the Protective American Life proceeding, and in June 1980, the Guaranty Association filed a similar petition for declaratory judgment and for injunctive relief in that proceeding. It is from the orders entered by the court acting in the Protective American Life proceeding that the Guaranty Association now appeals.

*689 The Guaranty Association first contends that the responsibility for payment of fringe benefits was decided by the settlement of the eighth cause of action in the 1976 suit. Its attempt to invoke principles of res judicata and collateral estoppel, however, is unsound. The 1976 suit was for expenses incurred over a specific time and the Commissioner has not attempted to obtain reimbursement for fringe benefits paid during this period. Any attempts to hold the Guaranty Association liable for fringe benefits paid at a different time, in different receivership proceedings, or under different factual situations would not be barred by res judicata because different evidence would be required to prosecute the new claims. See Meder v. CCME Corp., 7 Wn. App. 801, 806, 502 P.2d 1252 (1972). Even assuming that the same issue—the inclusion of fringe benefits within "compensation"—arose in both cases, 3 res judicata does not bar successive suits on successive causes of action involving the same legal issues. Farnandis v. Seattle, 95 Wash. 587, 164 P. 225 (1917). It is true that collateral estoppel may bar relitigation of the same issue in a later suit for a different cause of action. Seattle First Nat'l Bank v. Kawachi, 91 Wn.2d 223, 588 P.2d 725 (1978). But collateral estoppel should not be applied to judgments of dismissal, even when based on settlement agreements, since the parties could settle for myriad reasons not related to the resolution of the issues they are litigating. See Annot., 91 A.L.R.3d § 6(a), at 1183 (1979).

Nor can we find in the settlement documents themselves any suggestion that the State agreed to release all future claims it might have against the Guaranty Association for fringe benefits. The documents unambiguously relate to the *690 specific, liquidated, and time-bound claim made in the eighth cause of action and to other "consequences" of the specific lawsuit. We will not interpret these documents to hold that a "consequence" of that suit was to decide an issue of statutory interpretation neither framed in the pleadings nor mentioned in the documents.

The fundamental issue raised in this appeal is if the word "compensation", as used in RCW 48.31.120(6), includes fringe benefits. The statute itself does not define the term compensation and our research reveals that this is a question of first impression in Washington. 4

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Bluebook (online)
658 P.2d 20, 33 Wash. App. 685, 1983 Wash. App. LEXIS 2136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marquardt-v-federal-old-line-insurance-washctapp-1983.