Metz v. Fireman's Fund Insurance

289 A.2d 830, 15 Md. App. 179, 1972 Md. App. LEXIS 211
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 20, 1972
Docket298, September Term, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 289 A.2d 830 (Metz v. Fireman's Fund Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metz v. Fireman's Fund Insurance, 289 A.2d 830, 15 Md. App. 179, 1972 Md. App. LEXIS 211 (Md. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

Morton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

As a result of an action in tort brought by appellant-employee in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County to his own use and to the use of Fireman’s Fund American Insurance Company (Fireman’s Fund), the jury returned a judgment in his favor for the sum of $30,000 and a separate judgment in his favor to the use of Fireman’s Fund for the sum of $4,465. The latter judgment represented sums paid to appellant-employee by Fireman’s Fund upon his application for workmen’s compensation payments to cover injuries he received in a motor vehicle accident involving the defendant below.

The defendant below has paid the judgment of $30,000 in favor of the appellant-employee and has paid into court funds to cover the judgment rendered to the use of Fireman’s Fund. The trial judge ordered that these latter funds be paid directly to the attorney for Fireman’s Fund less $17.50, representing the proportion of court costs allocable to Fireman’s Fund. From that order the appellant-employee appeals, contending that these funds should have been paid to his attorney rather than to the attorney for Fireman’s Fund. Essentially, the issue presented in this appeal is whether Fireman’s Fund, the employer’s insurance carrier, has a statutory obligation to contribute a proportionate share of the employee’s attorney’s fee.

The action below was brought in accordance with the provisions of Md. Code, Art. 101, § 58. The scope of this statute was described by Chief Judge Hall Hammond (then Associate Judge) in Transit Company v. Harroll, 217 Md. 169, stating at 176: “It provides that where injury or death for which compensation is payable occurs under circumstances creating a legal liability in a person *182 other than the employer, the employee * * may proceed either by law against that other person to recover damages or against the employer for compensation under this article * * *’ and says that if compensation is awarded or paid, the employer may enforce the liability of the tortfeasor and keep the amount of the compensation already paid and the amount of medical and hospital services paid for before paying any excess to the injured employee. It goes on to provide that if an employer shall not, within two months from the passage of an award, start proceedings to enforce the liability of a third person, the injured employee may enforce the liability of such other person, provided, that * * * the employer * *. * shall be reimbursed for the compensation already paid or awarded and' any amount or amounts paid for medical or surgical services * *

In the case at bar, the employee, Metz, instituted the suit below after his employer, or more accurately, the employer’s insurance carrier, Fireman’s Fund, had failed to assert its right to bring suit against the third party tortfeasor within two months from the date of the compensation award.

Md. Code, Art. 101, § 58, contains the further provision that “if damages are recovered the injured employee * * * may first retain therefrom the expenses and costs of action incurred by the said employee * * * and the employer, [or] insurance company, * * * as the case may be, shall be reimbursed for the compensation already paid or awarded and any amount or amounts paid for medical or surgical services, funeral expenses * * * except court costs and counsel or attorney’s fees, which shall be paid by the injured employee * * * and the employer, [or] insurance company * * * in the proportion that the amount received by each shall bear to the whole amount paid in * * * satisfaction of any judgment obtained in the case, and the balance in excess of these items shall inure to the injured employee * *.

In brief, under, the statute the employer or his insurance carrier is reimbursed for compensation, medical *183 expenses, etc., previously paid to the employee, except court costs and counsel fees. These latter expenses shall be paid by the injured employee and by the employer or his insurance carrier in the proportion that the amount received by each shall bear to the whole amount of damages awarded. Thus, if there be only one attorney representing both the employee and the employer, or his insurance carrier, it is clear that if the fee, for example, were to be based upon one-third of the entire amount of damages recovered, then the employee would pay the attorney one-third of the amount the employee received upon distribution of the judgment funds and the employer or his insurance carrier would pay the attorney one-third of its distributive share. This much is clear under the statute.

It is not clear, however, what happens where the employee is represented by an attorney selected by him and the employer or his insurance carrier is represented in the same action against the third party by an attorney of its own choice.

In 1927 the Court of Appeals held in Barrett v. Indemnity Ins. Co., 152 Md. 253, that an employee who recovered a judgment for damages against a third party tortfeasor was required under the then existing statute to reimburse the employer or his insurance carrier from the judgment obtained any monies advanced to the employee as compensation payments. The Court specifically held, however, that the employer or his insurance carrier was not liable, under the then existing statute, to pay counsel fees or any part thereof incurred by the employee.

Sec. 58 [then Sec. 59] of Art. 101 of the Md. Code was later amended by the Legislature with the obvious intent to make the employer or his insurance carrier liable for a share of the counsel fees incurred by the employee and a formula was developed under which each party would be responsible for counsel fees and court costs in the proportion that the amount recovered by each should bear to the whole amount recovered. See Ch. *184 608, Laws of 1947, also Oleszczuk v. Calmar Steamship Corp., 163 F. Supp. 370.

In the case at bar, the action was brought by the employee in his name and that of Fireman’s Fund. It is clear, therefore, that Fireman’s Fund was a formal party to the suit and as such entitled to be represented, to the extent of its interest in the litigation, by counsel of its own choice. Md. Rule 3 a. Taking the combined judgments of $34,465 as a starting point, it seems clear under the statute that the employee and Fireman’s Fund are jointly responsible for the over-all attorneys’ fees incurred in conducting the litigation and that the proportion of their responsibility is fixed by the formula enunciated in the statute. If the ordinary fee arrangement in cases of this nature is based upon one-third of the amount recovered, the total fee payable to the attorneys would be one-third of $34,465, or $11,488.33. The employee would be obligated, under the statutory formula, to contribute to the over-all employees’ fees one-third of the amount he received and Fireman’s Fund would be required to contribute one-third of the amount it received. Ordinarily, it would then be up to the attorneys who represented the parties below to agree among themselves what proportion of the entire fees contributed by the employer and Fireman’s Fund they were to receive based upon the efforts that they had respectively contributed to the entire litigation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
289 A.2d 830, 15 Md. App. 179, 1972 Md. App. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metz-v-firemans-fund-insurance-mdctspecapp-1972.