Robinson v. Murlin Phillips & MFA Insurance Co.

557 S.W.2d 202, 1977 Ky. LEXIS 532
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 557 S.W.2d 202 (Robinson v. Murlin Phillips & MFA Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Murlin Phillips & MFA Insurance Co., 557 S.W.2d 202, 1977 Ky. LEXIS 532 (Ky. 1977).

Opinion

*203 LUKOWSKY, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Henderson Circuit Court in which Robinson recovered $11,000.00 from Phillips and MFA. The Court of Appeals reversed in an opinion published at 548 S.W.2d 511 (1977). We granted discretionary review.

On Saturday night, November 14, 1971 Robinson attended a wedding party at the Sportsman’s Club located in rural Henderson County. About 11:00 p.m. the party broke up but Robinson, together with a small group of friends, remained until after midnight. During the course of the party Robinson consumed at least four highballs. As he left he felt a call of nature and upon investigation found that the restroom was occupied. He gave his car keys to his wife and told her that he thought he would walk home. He then walked out into an adjacent field, empty but for growth similar to sagebrush, to urinate.

Some five to ten minutes later Mrs. Robinson asked Phillips and one of the passengers in his car for assistance in locating her husband. Phillips then drove his car at a slow rate of speed into the field with his headlights on searching for Robinson. In doing so he ran over Robinson who was in the process of relieving himself. Robinson was facing away from the Sportsman’s Club in a “half knee” position (which we assume to be somewhere between erect and squatting). As a result of this incident Robinson suffered extensive bodily injuries.

Phillips was uninsured. MFA was Robinson’s automobile liability insurance carrier. In accord with the requirements of KRS 304.20-020 his policy contained uninsured motorist coverage in the amount of $10,-000.00. It also contained medical payments coverage in the amount of $1,000.00. MFA paid the full amount of the medical payments coverage to Robinson without complaint. Robinson sued Phillips for negligence and MFA on the policy. He sought judgment against Phillips for $50,000.00 and judgment against MFA for $10,000.00. MFA cross-claimed against Phillips and sought indemnity for any sums which it had paid or might be required to pay Robinson.

Phillips’ defense was a denial of negligence on his part and a plea of contributory negligence on the part of Robinson. MFA’s defense was that Robinson was not legally entitled to recover from Phillips and that, consequently, there was no liability under the provisions of the uninsured motorist coverage. MFA did not question the issuance of the policy, its limits or any of its terms and conditions.

The case was tried to a jury. The trial judge submitted these contested issues of fact to the jury:

1. The negligence of Phillips.
2. Whether Phillips’ negligence, if any, was a substantial factor in causing the accident and injuries.
3. The negligence of Robinson.
4. Whether Robinson’s negligence, if any, was a substantial factor in causing the accident and injuries.
5. The nature and extent of damages.

The trial judge also instructed the jury, over the objection of MFA alone, that if they made an award in favor of Robinson it should be against Phillips and MFA jointly and severally in any sum not to exceed $11,000.00, solely against Phillips for any amount in excess of $11,000.00 and that the $1,000.00 previously paid by MFA would be credited against the award for the benefit of MFA. He refused MFA’s request to instruct the jury on MFA’s right to recover from Phillips any sums that they might be required to pay to Robinson, maintaining that there was no factual dispute as to this matter and that it would be handled in the judgment. 1

The only assigned error worthy of discussion is whether the trial judge prejudiced the rights of MFA when he required the jury to make the first $11,000.00 of any *204 award it might make joint and several against MFA and Phillips. The Court of Appeals seized on this as a ground for reversal and an opportunity to gratuitously articulate rules of technique for the trial of uninsured motorist cases with the alacrity and vigor of a bass taking the bait.

In Anglo-American jurisprudence the function of the jury is to decide contested issues of fact. In order to perform this function there is no need for jurors to know the legal effect of their resolution of contested issues of fact. 2 Palmore, Kentucky Instructions to Juries, sec. 13.01. The questions of whether an award should be joint or several or joint and several or whether there should be indemnity are questions of law once the issues of contested fact have been determined by the jury. They are properly subject to solution by the trial court in its judgment. The real issue here is not whether mentioning joint and several to the jury is an error but rather, conceding that this material has no place before the jury, whether such surplusage had any prejudicial effect of which MFA could properly complain.

In order to find this prejudice the Court of Appeals opined:

A. The limits of uninsured motorist coverage should not have been disclosed to the jury because such disclosure constitutes an open invitation to the jury to fix damages at the amount of the policy.

We concede that the policy limits are immaterial when, as here, there is no dispute about them and there is, consequently, no contested issue of fact for the jury to decide. But how this disclosure can be considered an error, much less a prejudicial error, is beyond us when this evidence was introduced by MFA through one of its own witnesses without any objection from Phillips.

B. The mention of joint and several liability permitted the attorney for the plaintiff to state in his final argument such phrases as: “ . . . if your judgment exceeds $11,000.00 . . . then the rest of it is against Mert, individually. We don’t want that.” And “He paid the premium and they took his premium to protect himself if he was injured by someone who did not have insurance. His own insurance now, he bought and paid for it and this is exactly what happened.”

These quotations are badly out of context. Putting these gems in their proper setting they read as follows: “Okay, they have refused to pay any part of the $10,-000.00. All right, the first instruction will tell you here that if your judgment exceeds $11,000.00, or the second instruction, then the rest of it is against Mert, individually. We don’t want that. The first instructions would authorize you to find $11,000.00. $11,000.00. Of which MFA Insurance Company will receive a credit, if you find $11,-000.00 they will receive a credit of $1,000.00, leaving the $10,000.00 which he bought and paid for. I think we are being extremely reasonable by simply asking you to return an amount which will not go anywhere toward putting him back on his feet but which is entirely reasonable as far as the defendant goes.” “Mason Robinson bought insurance. He bought insurance and paid for it to protect him in case he was injured by the negligence of someone who did not have insurance and that’s exactly what happened.

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Bluebook (online)
557 S.W.2d 202, 1977 Ky. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-murlin-phillips-mfa-insurance-co-ky-1977.