Patricia Sparks v. James Wiley Craft, Cross-Appellee

75 F.3d 257
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 12, 1996
Docket94-5801, 94-5838
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 75 F.3d 257 (Patricia Sparks v. James Wiley Craft, Cross-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patricia Sparks v. James Wiley Craft, Cross-Appellee, 75 F.3d 257 (6th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

JOHN R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge.

James Wiley Craft, an attorney, appeals from the malpractice award entered against him in favor of Patricia Sparks. After Sparks’s son was killed in a ear wreck, she hired Craft to sue the other driver. Craft allowed the statute of limitations to expire without perfecting Sparks’s suit against the other driver. Craft argues that Sparks improperly sued him in her personal capacity, rather than as representative of her son’s estate, and that the malpractice damage award was too great because the district court overestimated the amount of insurance Sparks could have collected if Craft had prosecuted her case properly. Sparks cross-appeals, arguing that the district court erroneously concluded that the other driver’s liability would have been reduced by sixty percent because the accident was partly caused by an act of God. Sparks also argues that the court should have taken into account assets of the other driver in addition to available insurance in determining how much money Sparks lost because of Craft’s malpractice. We reject Craft’s standing arguments, but reverse part of the district court’s calculation of Sparks’s damages. We also reverse that part of the decision reducing Sparks’s recovery because the accident resulted in part from an act of God. Finally, we remand for a factual determination of the amount of the other driver’s assets that would have been available to satisfy a judgment in the car wreck case.

Sparks’s son, Ivan Michael Cook, was driving his car on a Kentucky highway on February 8, 1987. Sara Marshall, the driver of an oncoming truck, hit a patch of ice, lost control of her truck, and hit Cook head on, killing him.

Sparks contacted attorney Craft about a week after the accident. Craft agreed to file a lawsuit to enable Sparks to recover for her son’s death. Under Kentucky law, the appropriate cause of action against Marshall was a wrongful death suit, Ky.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 411.130(1) (Michie 1994 Supp.), which must be prosecuted by the personal representative of the deceased, id. Craft prepared an order appointing Sparks as her son’s personal representative, which Judge Larry Collins signed and dated February 18, 1987. 1 The order was not entered in the court clerk’s office until November 30,1989. Craft filed a lawsuit against Marshall and Allstate Insurance Company on behalf of Sparks as Cook’s personal representative. The court dismissed the case because Sparks had not been validly appointed as personal representative of her son’s estate within the applicable statute of limitations. Craft took an appeal from the dismissal of the wrongful death suit, but he did not file the notice of appeal in time. This Court dismissed the appeal as untimely.

Craft did not tell Sparks that her wrongful death case had been dismissed, but Sparks eventually learned of it from a stranger. She then brought this suit for malpractice, in her individual capacity. Although she and her son had been residents of Kentucky at the time of the accident, she moved to Virginia after the accident. Since Craft was still a resident of Kentucky, Sparks filed her malpractice case in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky, alleging diversity jurisdiction.

After a bench trial, the court held that Craft committed malpractice in failing to have Sparks appointed as personal representative of Cook’s estate within the limitations period and in failing to file the appeal on time.

The amount of Craft’s liability depends on the value of the claim Sparks lost because of *260 the malpractice. The value of the wrongful death claim was the amount Sparks could have actually collected on it. Therefore, the district court had to take evidence on the issues in the wrongful death case, including liability for the wreck; what the amount of the wrongful death judgment would have been; and how much of the judgment would have been collectable.

In determining liability on the wrongful death claim, the court found, “The ice on the roadway was the major contributing factor to the cause of the accident.” The court did not explicitly discuss whether Marshall was negligent, but assigned her a share of liability: “In apportioning liability in the underlying wrongful death case, the Court finds as follows:

Sara Mills Ogan Marshall - 40%

Act of God - 60%

TOTAL - 100%”

The court found that Ivan Michael Cook’s lost wages were $850,000. Because the court only assigned forty percent of the fault for the accident to Marshall, it calculated the Cook estate’s claim against Marshall to be $340,000, forty percent of $850,000.

‘ Under the Kentucky wrongful death statute, the surviving mother and father were each entitled to half the proceeds of the claim, Ky.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 411.130(2)(d). Cook’s father was living.but was not a party to the action. Therefore, the court reduced the $340,000 claim by half to arrive at Sparks’s share of the wrongful death damages ($170,000 plus $1,000 burial expenses). 2

The final step was to determine how much of Sparks’s $171,000 claim she could have recovered from Marshall and how much she could have recovered from her own insurer, Allstate. Sara Marshall had $25,000 in liability insurance. Sparks had underinsured motorist insurance on her own car and on the car her son drove. The policy stated a liability coverage limit of $100,000 per person. The district court held that under Simon v. Continental Insurance Co., 724 S.W.2d 210 (Ky.1986), the amount of underinsured motorist coverage should be construed to be the same as the liability limit, $100,000. Further, the court held that Sparks would have been able to recover underinsured motorist benefits for each ear she insured, citing State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Mattox, 862 S.W.2d 325 (Ky.1993), and Allstate Insurance Co. v. Dicke, 862 S.W.2d 327 (Ky.1993). Finally, the court held that the resulting $200,000 in underinsured motorist benefits from Allstate should not be reduced by the amount of Marshall’s liability coverage, citing Ky.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 304.39-320 (Michie 1994). Based on these three legal conclusions, the court held that there would have been $225,000 available in insurance proceeds to cover Sparks’s $171,000 wrongful death claim. Thus, the district court concluded Craft’s malpractice cost Sparks $171,-000 and entered judgment for Sparks in that amount.

I.

Craft’s first argument on appeal is that Sparks lacks standing to bring this case because she sued in her personal capacity, while she asserts a claim for loss of a cause of action belonging to Cook’s estate.

This standing argument has no merit.

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Bluebook (online)
75 F.3d 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patricia-sparks-v-james-wiley-craft-cross-appellee-ca6-1996.