Mastin v. Liberal Markets

674 S.W.2d 7, 1984 Ky. LEXIS 262
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 674 S.W.2d 7 (Mastin v. Liberal Markets) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mastin v. Liberal Markets, 674 S.W.2d 7, 1984 Ky. LEXIS 262 (Ky. 1984).

Opinion

LEIBSON, Justice.

Appellant, Melody Ann Mastín, seeks to reverse a decision of the Court of Appeals directing repayment of certain workers’ compensation benefits which she received *9 from the appellees. She suffered an illness resulting from inhaling an insecticide which was being sprayed in the area of her employment. She was working for Liberal Markets and the insecticide was being sprayed by Rose Exterminators, Inc.

The injury had its inception on September 26,1978. In December 1978 she filed a claim before the Workers’ Compensation Board. In May 1979 she and her husband filed a separate products liability claim in Kenton Circuit Court against three defendants, Rose Exterminators, Virginia Chemicals, Inc., and Prentiss Drug & Chemical Co., Inc.

In March 1981 she and her husband made a partial settlement of the circuit court action, accepting payment of $50,000 for a release of all claims against Rose Exterminators, Inc., “SPECIFICALLY RESERVING,” their claims against other defendants.

The release evidencing this transaction recited the following:

“The aforementioned Fifty Thousand ($50,000.00) shall be allocated as follows:
A) To Melody Mastín
1. For lost wages and destruction of earning capacity $ 5,000.00
2. For past, present and future medical expenses 5,000.00
3. For physical and mental pain and suffering 30,000.00
B) To Phillip Mastín
4. For loss of consortium 10,000.00
$50,000.00”

Four weeks after Mastin’s $50,000 settlement with Rose Exterminators, the Workers’ Compensation Board entered an award against the appellees, Liberal Markets, Travelers and the Special Fund, for 102 weeks total temporary disability to be followed by payments for 85% permanent partial disability, plus all related medical expenses. The Board also awarded a $6,500 attorney’s fee for Ms. Mastin’s attorney in the worker’s compensation action. Travelers commenced payments pursuant to the Board’s award.

Ten months later the appellees learned of the settlement between Ms. Mastín and Rose Exterminators, suspended further payments of worker’s compensation benefits and demanded immediate reimbursement of all sums previously paid pursuant to the worker’s compensation award. These payments were as follows:

$7,255.56 Total Temporary Disability (9/26/78 — 9/9/80)
1,772.39 Permanent Partial Disability (9/10/80 — 2/4/82)
596,50 Interest on Payments Due at the Time of the Award
15,532.95 Medical Expenses
6,500.00 Employee’s Attorney’s Fee
$30,657.10

Ms. Mastín then filed the present suit, which started as an enforcement action to require these appellees to pay off the balance of the worker’s compensation award. Appellees filed a response claiming that Ms. Mastín had obtained a double recovery in violation of KRS 342.700 (Remedies When Third Party is Legally Liable) and a counterclaim for reimbursement of the amounts previously paid pursuant to the worker’s compensation award.

The case was submitted to the trial court to decide without a jury on the basis of the pleadings, the record from the Workers’ Compensation Board, and an agreed statement of facts. The trial court entered findings and a judgment holding that the appel-lees were entitled to a “subrogation credit” which should be computed as follows:

$50,000.00 Civil Suit Settlement Received by Plaintiff
- 16,666.00 Plaintiff’s Attorney’s Fee in Her Civil Action
$33,334.00 Net

The trial court then held that this was a “front-end” credit against future payments of worker’s compensation, meaning that commencing from the time the appellees discovered the payment from Rose Exterminators the credit would be set off against unpaid worker’s compensation benefits as they would become due. The trial court denied the appellees any right of restitution for the sums already paid Ms. Mastín.

*10 Both sides appealed. Ms. Mastín claimed that KRS 342.700 does not apply to the sum paid to her by Rose Exterminators; that this was not a recovery from a third party legally liable triggering application of KRS 342.700, but only a partial payment or an advanced payment; and that legal liability remained an undecided question until all claims in the products liability case had been disposed of. She claimed she is entitled to keep the worker’s compensation benefits which she has been paid and to continue to enforce the Worker’s compensation award until her products liability case is fully adjudicated. On the other hand the appellees, Liberal Markets, Travelers and the Special Fund, claimed that they are entitled not only to a “front-end” credit from the date they discovered the settlement with Rose Exterminators and suspended future payments, but also to a common law judgment against Ms. Mastín for immediate repayment of benefits they paid after Ms. Mastín received the $50,000 settlement from Rose Exterminators but before the appellees learned of it.

The Court of Appeals affirmed the appel-lees’ right to a subrogation credit holding that the settlement with Rose Exterminators was a resolution of legal liability within the meaning of KRS 342.700, but reversed the trial court’s decision that the credit can be applied only against future payments. The Court of Appeals “remanded with instructions to enter a common law judgment against Ms. Mastín for worker’s compensation benefits received and to direct suspension of further benefits until subrogation of the entire $33,334.00 settlement from Rose Exterminators is effected.” 1 Ms. Mastín then petitioned this Court for discretionary review.

The issues presented by this appeal are as follows:

1)Is the payment from Rose Exterminators a recovery from a third party legally liable triggering subrogation rights under KRS 342.700?

2) If so, is appellees’ subrogation limited to a credit against future payments or are appellees entitled to restitution from Ms. Mastín for amounts previously paid?

3) Are appellees entitled to credit against the entire net amount after deduction of attorney’s fee ($33,334) or is subro-gation limited to those elements of Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
674 S.W.2d 7, 1984 Ky. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mastin-v-liberal-markets-ky-1984.