JACOBS, Justice:
Todd Miller (“Miller”) and his wife— Victoria Miller, the plaintiffs, appeal from two Superior Court orders denying their motions to exclude evidence in a personal injury action in which State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (“State Farm”), Millers’ underinsured motorist carrier, was a codefendant. On appeal, the Millers claim that the Superior Court erred by admitting evidence, in violation of the collateral source rule, that Miller had received workers’ compensation benefits and had entered into a settlement with his employer’s workers’ compensation carrier (the “WC Carrier”). We reverse the judgment of the Superior Court and remand for a new trial.
FACTS
On March 11, 2005, Miller, while driving a car owned by his employer, was struck by a car operated by Jennifer King (“King”). Because Miller was working when the accident occurred, the WC Carrier paid most of his medical expenses.
The Millers filed a Superior Court action against two defendants: King for personal injuries and loss of consortium, and State Farm for underinsured motorist coverage under the Millers’ State Farm automobile
insurance policy.
Under 19
Del. C.
§ 2363(e), the WC Carrier was entitled to be reimbursed from any, amounts recovered by the Millers in their action against King.
Before trial, King’s insurance carrier paid Miller the bodily injury liability coverage limit under King’s policy ($50,000) in settlement of Miller’s claims against King.
Contemporaneously, Miller entered into a settlement with the WC Carrier, in which: (1) the WC Carrier accepted $24,000 of the $50,000 settlement proceeds in satisfaction of its reimbursement right; and (2) Miller released the WC Carrier from all claims arising out of the accident. That left only the Millers’ action against State Farm for underinsured motorist coverage, which went to trial.
On November 24, 2008, the Millers filed a motion
in limine
to exclude from evidence any reference to Miller having received workers’ compensation benefits, including the fact that Miller was working at the time of the accident. Miller argued that admission of that evidence was precluded by the collateral source rule.
The Superior Court denied the motion by order dated January 27, 2009, which stated that “[t]he Court shall advise the jury of the workers comp, benefits and plaintiffs legal obligation to repay them from any verdict, consistent with
Spencer v. Wal-Mart Stores East,
LP.”
On February 2, 2009, the Millers moved for reargument. On April 1, 2009, the Superior Court ruled that “[ajfter considering the authorities submitted by the parties, including
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company v.
Nalbone
... the Court will instruct the jury that the plaintiff received workers compensation benefits, the carrier asserted a lien, and that lien was satisfied for approximately $24,000.” Accordingly, during the trial, State Farm mentioned Miller’s settle
ment with the WC Carrier repeatedly before the jury.
During the trial, State Farm did not contest King’s underlying liability.
State Farm disputed only the damages (if any) that Miller should be entitled to recover.
Specifically, State Farm contended that the medical treatments Miller had received (most of which his WC Carrier paid for), were not “reasonable and necessary.” The Superior Court instructed the jury as follows:
Medical bills have been submitted in evidence totaling $73,707.35. Mr. Miller’s workers’ compensation carrier paid $71,893.07, a difference of $1,814.28. Mr. Miller paid the workers’ compensation carrier the sum of $24,000. State Farm does not agree that the bills in evidence were for reasonably necessary medical treatment. You may award Todd Miller the amount of the medical bills if you find those bills reflecting the medical treatment of Mr. Miller were reasonable and necessary.
The jury awarded no ($0) damages to the Millers. This appeal followed.
ANALYSIS
On appeal, the Millers claim that the Superior Court erred by admitting into evidence the fact that Miller had received workers’ compensation benefits. The Millers claim that that evidentiary ruling violated the collateral source rule, under which “a tortfeasor has no right to any mitigation of damages because of payments or compensation received by the injured person from an independent source.”
The Millers argue that State Farm, which was “standing in the shoes” of the tortfeasor (King), should not be permitted to benefit from the jury being told that, because of his settlement with the WC Carrier, Miller had no further obligation to repay the WC Carrier and would retain any damages that the jury awarded.
State Farm responds that under
State Farm v. Nalbone,
Miller was not entitled to a double recovery. Put differently, State Farm contends that the collateral source rule does not apply to claims to recover under the underinsured motorist provision of an automobile insurance policy. State Farm also argues that it should not be treated as if it were the tortfeasor (here, King) for purposes of applying the collateral source rule. Finally, State Farm urges that any error in admitting collateral source evidence was harmless, because the Superior Court’s jury instructions, which were consistent with
Spencer v. Wal-Mart Stores East, LP,
eliminated any potential jury confusion over double recovery.
I. Standard of Review
This Court reviews a trial judge’s decision to admit or exclude evidence for
abuse of discretion.
The applicability of the collateral source rule, however, is a question of law that we review
de novo.
Accordingly, we review
de novo
the Superior Court’s decision to admit or exclude evidence premised upon a determination, as a matter of law, that the collateral source rule is inapplicable.
II. The Collateral Source Rule
The collateral source rule is “firmly embedded” in Delaware law.
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JACOBS, Justice:
Todd Miller (“Miller”) and his wife— Victoria Miller, the plaintiffs, appeal from two Superior Court orders denying their motions to exclude evidence in a personal injury action in which State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (“State Farm”), Millers’ underinsured motorist carrier, was a codefendant. On appeal, the Millers claim that the Superior Court erred by admitting evidence, in violation of the collateral source rule, that Miller had received workers’ compensation benefits and had entered into a settlement with his employer’s workers’ compensation carrier (the “WC Carrier”). We reverse the judgment of the Superior Court and remand for a new trial.
FACTS
On March 11, 2005, Miller, while driving a car owned by his employer, was struck by a car operated by Jennifer King (“King”). Because Miller was working when the accident occurred, the WC Carrier paid most of his medical expenses.
The Millers filed a Superior Court action against two defendants: King for personal injuries and loss of consortium, and State Farm for underinsured motorist coverage under the Millers’ State Farm automobile
insurance policy.
Under 19
Del. C.
§ 2363(e), the WC Carrier was entitled to be reimbursed from any, amounts recovered by the Millers in their action against King.
Before trial, King’s insurance carrier paid Miller the bodily injury liability coverage limit under King’s policy ($50,000) in settlement of Miller’s claims against King.
Contemporaneously, Miller entered into a settlement with the WC Carrier, in which: (1) the WC Carrier accepted $24,000 of the $50,000 settlement proceeds in satisfaction of its reimbursement right; and (2) Miller released the WC Carrier from all claims arising out of the accident. That left only the Millers’ action against State Farm for underinsured motorist coverage, which went to trial.
On November 24, 2008, the Millers filed a motion
in limine
to exclude from evidence any reference to Miller having received workers’ compensation benefits, including the fact that Miller was working at the time of the accident. Miller argued that admission of that evidence was precluded by the collateral source rule.
The Superior Court denied the motion by order dated January 27, 2009, which stated that “[t]he Court shall advise the jury of the workers comp, benefits and plaintiffs legal obligation to repay them from any verdict, consistent with
Spencer v. Wal-Mart Stores East,
LP.”
On February 2, 2009, the Millers moved for reargument. On April 1, 2009, the Superior Court ruled that “[ajfter considering the authorities submitted by the parties, including
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company v.
Nalbone
... the Court will instruct the jury that the plaintiff received workers compensation benefits, the carrier asserted a lien, and that lien was satisfied for approximately $24,000.” Accordingly, during the trial, State Farm mentioned Miller’s settle
ment with the WC Carrier repeatedly before the jury.
During the trial, State Farm did not contest King’s underlying liability.
State Farm disputed only the damages (if any) that Miller should be entitled to recover.
Specifically, State Farm contended that the medical treatments Miller had received (most of which his WC Carrier paid for), were not “reasonable and necessary.” The Superior Court instructed the jury as follows:
Medical bills have been submitted in evidence totaling $73,707.35. Mr. Miller’s workers’ compensation carrier paid $71,893.07, a difference of $1,814.28. Mr. Miller paid the workers’ compensation carrier the sum of $24,000. State Farm does not agree that the bills in evidence were for reasonably necessary medical treatment. You may award Todd Miller the amount of the medical bills if you find those bills reflecting the medical treatment of Mr. Miller were reasonable and necessary.
The jury awarded no ($0) damages to the Millers. This appeal followed.
ANALYSIS
On appeal, the Millers claim that the Superior Court erred by admitting into evidence the fact that Miller had received workers’ compensation benefits. The Millers claim that that evidentiary ruling violated the collateral source rule, under which “a tortfeasor has no right to any mitigation of damages because of payments or compensation received by the injured person from an independent source.”
The Millers argue that State Farm, which was “standing in the shoes” of the tortfeasor (King), should not be permitted to benefit from the jury being told that, because of his settlement with the WC Carrier, Miller had no further obligation to repay the WC Carrier and would retain any damages that the jury awarded.
State Farm responds that under
State Farm v. Nalbone,
Miller was not entitled to a double recovery. Put differently, State Farm contends that the collateral source rule does not apply to claims to recover under the underinsured motorist provision of an automobile insurance policy. State Farm also argues that it should not be treated as if it were the tortfeasor (here, King) for purposes of applying the collateral source rule. Finally, State Farm urges that any error in admitting collateral source evidence was harmless, because the Superior Court’s jury instructions, which were consistent with
Spencer v. Wal-Mart Stores East, LP,
eliminated any potential jury confusion over double recovery.
I. Standard of Review
This Court reviews a trial judge’s decision to admit or exclude evidence for
abuse of discretion.
The applicability of the collateral source rule, however, is a question of law that we review
de novo.
Accordingly, we review
de novo
the Superior Court’s decision to admit or exclude evidence premised upon a determination, as a matter of law, that the collateral source rule is inapplicable.
II. The Collateral Source Rule
The collateral source rule is “firmly embedded” in Delaware law.
It provides that “a person deemed legally responsible to another cannot claim the benefit of the ability of the injured party to recover[ ] from a third party expenses related to [the] injury.”
Therefore, the rule “prohibits the admission of evidence of an injured party receiving compensation or payment for tort-related injuries from a source other than the tortfeasor.”
The rule has two underlying rationales. The first is that “a tortfeasor has no interest in ... monies received by the injured person from sources unconnected with the defendant.”
The second, which is particularly relevant here, is “a concern for prejudice that may result to an injured party in the minds of the jury from knowledge of any ‘double recovery.’ ”
The issue before us — whether the collateral source rule applies in the under-insured motorist context — is of first impression. We conclude that that issue must be answered in the affirmative. The collateral source — here, Miller’s WC Carrier — had no connection to the defendant, State Farm. The State Farm insurance policy was purchased and paid for by the Millers, whereas Miller’s workers’ compensation insurance was paid for by his employer. Because State Farm contributed nothing to the fund that created the collateral source and had no interest in that fund, State Farm should not have been allowed to benefit from it. That Miller’s action is based upon a contract (the State Farm insurance policy), or that State Farm was not the actual tortfeasor, do not alter that conclusion. Under the underinsured motorist provision of the insurance contract between the Millers and State Farm, State Farm was required to pay Miller whatever damages that Miller was “legally entitled to recover” from King. That is, State Farm’s contractual obligation to pay the Millers derived from King’s liability in tort.
Under the collateral source rule (which clearly applied to Miller’s separate claim against King), Miller’s entitlement to recover from King
would not have been diminished by payments he received from a collateral source. Consequently, State Farm’s derivative contractual obligation to Miller should likewise have been unaffected by the collateral source payments.
Because the Superior Court, in concluding otherwise, relied on
Nalbone v. State Farm,
we must address the impact of
Nalbone
on actions to recover underinsured motorist proceeds. In
Nal-bone,
this Court interpreted the Delaware No-Fault Statute
as precluding an insured from recovering Personal Injury Protection (PIP) benefits as compensation for wage losses to the extent those losses had already been satisfied by a collateral
source
— unless the collateral source payments were supported by actual consideration or by some detriment to the insured.
That is, under
Nalbone
“the collateral source rule applies in the no-fault insurance context only to the extent that the plaintiff has paid consideration or sustained some detriment for the payments from the collateral source; collateral payments received
gratis
bar a double recovery.”
Because Nalbone’s wage losses were recovered under her employer’s non-contributory wage continuation plan, we held that Nalbone could not recover those losses (again) from State Farm, in the form of PIP benefits.
State Farm (and the Superior Court) read
Nalbone
as applying to all contract actions where the plaintiff seeks a double recovery of damages, including underin-sured motorist cases. That reading is overbroad.
Our ruling in
Nalbone
was limited to the no-fault insurance context.
Nalbone
does not reach fault-based scenarios, including actions to recover under-insured motorist benefits.
In
Nalbone
we accepted certification of a legal question that required us to interpret the statutory term “net amount of lost earnings.”
The applicable statute carved out a limited exception to the collateral source rule in no-fault insurance claims (i
e.,
claims based on 21
Del. C.
§ 2118), because “the policy goals of no-fault insurance can best be served by application of principles of contract rather than tort law.”
Here, however, the determination of the insured’s damages in an underinsured motorist claim is governed not by contract principles, but by tort law — which includes the “firmly embedded” collateral source rule.
18
Del. C.
§ 3902 — the statute that governs underin-sured motorist coverage, has no legislative provision that eliminates or modifies the collateral source rule.
Nor do the policy considerations underlying the Delaware underinsured motorist coverage regime support State Farm’s argued-for limitation of the collateral source rule.
In cases involving underinsured motorist benefits, public policy supports applying the rule, because that will encourage motorists to purchase underinsured motorist coverage.
Unlike no-fault insurance, underin-sured motorist coverage is not compulsory,
but supplemental in nature.
The public policy underlying 18
Del. C.
§ 3902 is to
permit
an insured as a “rational and informed consumer” — to contract for supplemental insurance protecting him from an irresponsible driver who causes death
or injury.
In that sense, the underin-sured motorist carrier — not the WC Carri
er
— was
the collateral source
for which the insured paid independent consideration.
Restricting a double recovery in underin-sured motorist cases would frustrate the reasonable expectations of the insured (created by the payment of insurance premiums) to recover under the policy,
and thereby would defeat the General Assembly’s purpose in enacting Section 3902. That result also would contravene
Nal-bone’s
explicit holding that “the extent to which the collateral source rule should be applied to permit double recovery
should depend upon the contractual expectations”
of the insured to recover from a source for which he has paid.
We therefore conclude that the Superior Court erred as a matter of law by failing to apply the collateral source rule, which required excluding all evidence of Miller’s workers’ compensation benefits.
That brings us to the final question, which is whether or not that error was harmless.
III. Prejudice
Although State Farm was allowed to introduce collateral source evidence at trial, before the jury began its deliberations, the Superior Court instructed the jury that they “may award Todd Miller the amount of the medical bills if [they] find those bills reflecting the medical treatment of Mr. Miller were reasonable and necessary.” That instruction, State Farm claims, rendered harmless any error by the Superior Court, because it informed the jury that Miller was entitled to a double recovery. State Farm argues that the jury’s zero ($0) damages verdict was based solely on the jury’s determination that Miller’s medical expenses were not “reasonable and necessary.” That is possible. But, it is equally possible that the verdict flowed from the jury’s reluctance to award Miller a double recovery. That is so, because the instruction did not
explicitly
inform the jury that Miller was
legitimately entitled
to seek a double recovery.
The Superior Court opined that its jury instruction was consistent with
Spencer v.
Wal-Mart.
In
Spencer
this Court upheld a jury instruction “designed to inform the jury that if it finds for the plaintiff, it should award the full amount of [damages] that it finds to exist by a preponderance of evidence, without deducting any amount paid by workers’ compensation.”
We upheld the instruction in
Spencer
because “there was a significant risk that evidence that Spencer had received workers compensation could mislead the jury to conclude that Spencer was seeking double recovery,” to which she was not entitled.
But here, Miller was entitled to a double recovery. Moreover, the
Spencer
instruction explicitly required the jury
not to consider
the fact that some of the plaintiffs losses had been paid by her workers’ compensation carrier. Here, the jury was not told what it should not consider. Rather, the jury was instructed only to determine whether Miller’s expenses were “reasonable and necessary.” Finally, the Superior Court’s reliance on
Spencer
was misplaced, because in
Spencer
we ultimately determined that no prejudice resulted to the plaintiff because the jury found no liability on the part of defendant; therefore, the
Spencer
jury never reached the damages issue.
Here, however, liability was conceded, and the only issue to be determined by the jury was the amount of Miller’s damages. Therefore, the Superior Court’s erroneous admission of the collateral source evidence materially prejudiced the Millers and was not harmless.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of the Superior Court and remand this case for a new trial.