Patterson v. Sharp

10 Cal. App. 3d 990, 89 Cal. Rptr. 396, 35 Cal. Comp. Cases 761, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 1909
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 31, 1970
DocketCiv. 26200
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 10 Cal. App. 3d 990 (Patterson v. Sharp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patterson v. Sharp, 10 Cal. App. 3d 990, 89 Cal. Rptr. 396, 35 Cal. Comp. Cases 761, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 1909 (Cal. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

Opinion

RATTIGAN, J.

the entry of judgment upon a jury verdict in this wrongful death action, the trial court entered a second judgment purporting to adjust the rights and obligations of plaintiff, of defendant (a third party tortfeasor), and of the decedent’s employer’s workmen’s compensation insurance carrier (who had intervened in the action as a party plaintiff). Plaintiff and the insurance carrier appeal, separately, from the second judgment. The record 1 shows the following facts:

*993 Albert Patterson, while on the job on April 15, 1965, received an injury which caused his death on July 18 of the same year. The injury having been covered by the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Lab. Code, div. 4 [commencing with § 3201]) and insured against by his employer in compliance therewith, an appropriate workmen’s compensation proceeding was commenced. In March, 1967, this proceeding resulted in an award of the following benefits payable by the decedent’s employer’s workmen’s compensation insurance carrier: (1) a death benefit in the amount of $17,500, payable to the widow from and after July 18, 1965, at the rate of $70 per week (less her attorney’s fees, fixed in the award at $850), (2) “[b]urial expenses in the amount of $600.00,” (3) the decedent’s “self-procured medical expenses” and (4) temporary disability payments, for the period between the dates of the decedent’s injury and his death, “less credit for any sums theretofore [fi'c] paid on account thereof.”

In February 1966, the widow (hereinafter “plaintiff”) also brought this negligence action, pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 377 (see fn. 11, post) and against defendant as a third party tortfeasor, seeking damages for the decedent’s allegedly wrongful death. In her complaint, she pleaded and prayed general damages in the amount of $200,000 for the loss of the decedent’s “care, comfort, society, protection and support,” plus “reasonable funeral and burial expenses.” In his answer, defendant pleaded among other things that concurrent negligence on the part of the decedent’s employer was a proximate cause of the death.

In January 1968, pursuant to Labor Code section 3853, the employer’s insurance carrier was permitted to intervene in the action relative to certain payments it had made, and was still making, in compliance with the workmen’s compensation award made in March 1967. (We hereinafter refer to the insurance carrier as “intervener.”) Answering the complaint in intervention, defendant again pleaded that the negligence of the decedent’s employer had been a proximate cause of the decedent’s injury and the damages sustained therefrom.

At the time of intervention, the total amount expended by intervener pursuant to the 1967 workmen’s compensation award was $12,934.04. The complaint in intervention, seeking recovery of this amount from defendant, alleged chat its components were $2,901.90 in medical expenses, $332.14 paid as “disability indemnity,” and $9,700 paid in death benefits; it also prayed recovery of death benefits to be paid in the future. When plaintiff’s action came to jury trial three months later (in April 1968), continuing *994 payments of death benefits to plaintiff had increased the total amount of intervener’s expenditures to $14,404.04. There was, at the trial, a stipulation that intervener had paid out the latter amount, but the stipulation did not include an itemization thereof. 2

The jury was instructed concerning the measure of plaintiff’s general wrongful-death damages, if any, and of her special damages, if any, representing the decedent’s funeral and burial expenses. 3 The trial court also instructed the jurors that, if they found for plaintiff, they were to fix the damages “without regard to the amount of . . . compensation benefits paid to or for the plaintiff” and to “render one figure as to the total amount of damages”; and that the court would “do” any “deducting” required if they should find, in response to a special interrogatory submitted to them, concurrent negligence on the part of the decedent’s employer. No other instructions on damages were given.

The jury returned a verdict for $35,000, in favor of plaintiff and against defendant. (According to the stipulated facts in the agreed statement on appeal, the verdict was “supported in all respects by substantial evidence.”) In response to the special interrogatory, the jury further found that the decedent’s employer had been concurrently negligent, and that such negligence was a proximate cause of the wrongful death.

Judgment having been entered on the jury verdict, defendant moved the trial court for an order reducing its amount by the full sum ($17,500) 4 of *995 the workmen’s compensation death benefits awarded plaintiff in 1967 or, in the alternative, by the $14,404.04 paid'by intervener up to the time of trial. At the hearing on the motion, it was established that the $14,404.04 had consisted, not of death benefits only (as intervener’s counsel had represented prior to the trial stipulation concerning that figure [see fn. 2, ante]), but of death-benefit and other payments made by intervener pursuant to the 1967 award. 5

Granting defendant’s motion, the trial court made formal findings of fact that (1) intervener had paid “to plaintiff” 6 pursuant to the 1967 award and prior to the trial, (2) that intervener owed her additional sums thereunder, (3) “[t]hat a double recovery will result herein if plaintiff enforces the judgment entered on the verdict herein without reduction thereof in the amount of the compensation benefits paid ... as of the time trial commenced herein,” and (4) “[tjhat a double recovery will also result if the monies owed by intervener under said award in the future are paid to plaintiff after payment and satisfaction of the judgment herein.”

The findings were followed by conclusions of law that the judgment entered on the verdict should be reduced to $20,595.96 ($35,000 less $14,404.04), and that the remaining monies due under the 1967 workmen’s compensation award “should be paid directly to the defendant . . . and that no further payments thereunder be made to plaintiff.” A new judgment was entered accordingly. 7

Upon plaintiff’s and intervener’s separate appeals from the new judgment, we have concluded that the trial court was correct in reducing the amount *996 of the first judgment, but that it erred, in the respects hereinafter discussed, in fixing the amount of the reduction; and that, for the latter reason, the judgment must be reversed with directions as hereinafter ordered.

The parties agree that a reduction of the $35,000 judgment was required, in principle, under the rule established in Witt v. Jackson (1961) 57 Cal.2d 57 [17 Cal.Rptr. 369, 366 P.2d 641

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Cal. App. 3d 990, 89 Cal. Rptr. 396, 35 Cal. Comp. Cases 761, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 1909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-sharp-calctapp-1970.