Monroe Froman, and v. Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company, a Mississippi Corporation, Intervenor-Appellant

528 F.2d 24
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 21, 1976
Docket75--1265
StatusPublished

This text of 528 F.2d 24 (Monroe Froman, and v. Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company, a Mississippi Corporation, Intervenor-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monroe Froman, and v. Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company, a Mississippi Corporation, Intervenor-Appellant, 528 F.2d 24 (8th Cir. 1976).

Opinion

HENLEY, Circuit Judge.

On March 31, 1975 the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas, Eastern Division, 1 entered an order approving a settlement of a personal injury suit brought by Monroe Fro-man and Imogene Froman, his wife, citizens of Arkansas, against Three Way Trucking Company, a Missouri corporation, Horace W. Johnson, d/b/a Horace W. Johnson Produce Company, and Rickie C. Headley, both citizens of Missouri. 2 The settlement was approved over the objection of appellant, Southern Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company, which had intervened in the case as the workmen’s compensation insurance carrier of Froman’s employer, Bill Norman’s Service Station of Brinkley, Arkansas, and the intervenor appeals from the order of approval. The appellees are the original parties to the litigation in the district court; all parties will be referred to as they appeared in that court.

The suit arises out of the fact that on December 18, 1972 plaintiff, Monroe Fro-man, while covered by workmen’s compensation insurance issued by intervenor, and while in the course of his employment, was seriously and apparently permanently injured when the defendant, Headley, crashed the tractor-trailer vehicle which he was operating into the pumps of the Norman Service Station.

The vehicle just mentioned was owned by the defendant Three Way Trucking Company, but had been leased by that corporation to the individual defendant, Horace W. Johnson. Johnson was the sole stockholder of the corporate defendant. At the time of the accident either Three Way or Johnson held an automobile liability insurance policy that was applicable to the accident; the limit of liability under that policy was $50,000.00.

As permitted by § 40(a) of the Arkansas Workmen’s Compensation Act, Ark. Stat.Ann. § 81-1340(a), Froman filed suit against all three defendants alleging that he had sustained damages far in excess of the $50,000.00 available to the defendants as liability insurance. Fro-man was joined in the suit by his wife, Imogene Froman, who claimed a large sum of money as compensation for the loss of the consortium of her husband.

The defendants answered the complaint and denied liability. Defense of the case was undertaken by the liability insurance carrier.

Under the statute above cited the intervenor, as the workmen’s compensation insurance carrier of Froman’s employer, was entitled to notice of the suit and was entitled to intervene therein to assert “a first lien upon two-thirds (2/3) of the net proceeds recovered in [the] action that remain after the payment of the reasonable costs of collection, for the payment to [the carrier] of the amount paid and to be paid by [the carrier] as compensation to the injured employee or his dependents.”

The suit was filed on February 8, 1974, and the intervenor was given notice of the filing. On August 29, 1974 the intervenor was granted leave to intervene in the case and filed its intervention claiming its statutory subrogation lien.

The original parties to the suit undertook settlement negotiations, and in view of the presence of workmen’s compensation, the negotiations had to be conducted in the light of three ruling decisions of the Supreme Court of Arkansas construing § 81-1340(a) in the context of compromise settlements of tort claims after the filing of suits on those claims in which suits workmen’s compensation *26 carriers had intervened. Those decisions should be mentioned at this point.

In St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Wood, 242 Ark. 879, 416 S.W.2d 322 (1967), the Supreme Court of Arkansas gave a somewhat narrow construction to the term “net proceeds recovered” in a tort action brought by an employee, and limited that term to the proceeds recovered by way of final judgment in such an action. It was held that so long as the subrogation rights of the compensation carrier, established by § 81-1340(b), were not impaired by the settlement, the original parties to the action could settle the case without the consent of, or “around” as it is frequently called, the workmen’s compensation carrier, and that the carrier had no lien on the proceeds of the settlement.

Recognizing the potential unfairness of such a procedure to a compensation carrier in a case in which the tortfeasor was of limited means or had no resources other than liability insurance, the Arkansas court held in the later case of Travelers Ins. Co. v. McCluskey, 252 Ark. 1045, 483 S.W.2d 179 (1972), that a settlement “around” a compensation carrier must have judicial approval, and that before such approval can be given, the carrier is entitled to notice and to an opportunity to be heard.

However, in the still later case of Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Billingsley, 256 Ark. 945, 511 S.W.2d 476 (1974), the court held that a workmen’s compensation insurance carrier has no right to veto a settlement which it deems to be disadvantageous or unfair to it, and that in the last analysis the question of whether a proposed settlement is to be approved is addressed to the discretion of the court in which the action is pending subject to appellate review.

The plaintiffs and the defendants first worked out a settlement in which the intervenor would have participated. That agreement contemplated a total settlement figure of $77,5.00.00, part of which was to be paid in cash and the balance of which was to be evidenced by promissory notes secured by a lien on certain crops grown on Missouri land owned by the defendant Johnson and his wife.

Under the terms of that settlement the intervenor was to be paid $7500.00 in cash and was to receive notes totalling $10,000.00. The plaintiffs were to receive $45,000.00 in cash and $15,000.00 in notes.

That settlement was rejected by the intervenor, and the plaintiffs and defendants then worked out a new agreement, which is the one that the district court approved and which is now before this court for consideration.

The settlement in question does not involve the participation of the intervenor; however, it expressly recognizes that it does not impair the subrogation rights of the intervenor or the right of Mr. Froman to receive further compensation payments from the intervenor. Under the terms of the settlement Mr. and Mrs. Froman are to receive ultimately the sum of $60,000.00 of which sum the liability carrier is to pay $45,-000.00 in cash; the remaining $15,000.00 is to be paid, one way or another, by the defendant, Johnson.

Under the terms of that settlement $5,000.00 of liability insurance money would be available to the intervenor for the satisfaction of its subrogation claim and for the balance of that claim, which is much in excess of $5,000.00, the intervenor would have to look to the assets, if any, of the individual defendants.

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Related

Travelers Insurance Co. v. McCluskey
483 S.W.2d 179 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1972)
Liberty Mutual Insurance Company v. Billingsley
511 S.W.2d 476 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1974)
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Wood Et Al
416 S.W.2d 322 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
528 F.2d 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monroe-froman-and-v-southern-farm-bureau-casualty-insurance-company-a-ca8-1976.