Southern Pacific Transportation Company v. Earline Chabert

973 F.2d 441, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 24332, 1992 WL 220993
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 30, 1992
Docket91-3256
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 973 F.2d 441 (Southern Pacific Transportation Company v. Earline Chabert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Pacific Transportation Company v. Earline Chabert, 973 F.2d 441, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 24332, 1992 WL 220993 (5th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

POLITZ, Chief Judge:

Earline Chabert appeals a judgment against her for $132,000 in favor of Southern Pacific Transportation Company (SO-PAC). She also appeals the amount awarded on her counterclaim for attorney’s fees and costs. For the reasons assigned, we affirm.

Background

On November 3, 1982, Chabert’s husband, Thomas Chabert, was killed in an automobile accident on the Greater New Orleans Bridge. At the time of his death Thomas Chabert was acting within the scope of his employment with SOPAC. On February 16, 1983, SOPAC paid a $132,000 death benefit to Chabert under the National Agreement between SOPAC and the union of which her husband was a member. Contemporaneous with the payment, SO-PAC and Chabert signed a contract which provided:

In consideration of the payment of $132,-000 as aforementioned both parties agree to be governed by ... the subrogation provision....
Subrogation: The carrier shall be subro-gated to any right of recovery an employee or his personal representative may have against any party for loss to the extent that the carrier has made payments pursuant to this Article.

Chabert filed a wrongful death suit against various defendants which she settled, individually and on behalf of her two minor children, for $825,000. In the settlement she released all defendants from any claim arising out of her husband’s accident and death. SOPAC did not participate in the suit or settlement. It filed the instant suit seeking reimbursement of the $132,000 it had paid to Chabert. Chabert counterclaimed for the attorney’s fees and costs she had incurred in securing the $825,000 settlement.

After a bench trial, the district court concluded that the $825,000 payment fully compensated Chabert for her losses. The court also found that the agreement between her and SOPAC was a conventional subrogation and that Chabert and her counsel were fully aware of SOP AC’s subroga *444 tion claim when they settled for $825,000 and released the tortfeasors. The court awarded Chabert $19,425.06 on her counterclaim for expenses incurred in obtaining the settlement. The offset was calculated based on the court’s estimate of the amount of the legal fees attributable to the settlement, an hourly-based total of $121,-406.65. This expense item was multiplied by 16%, considered SOPAC’s percentage share of the recovery. Chabert timely appealed the SOPAC award and the amount awarded on her counterclaim.

Analysis

Findings of fact made pursuant to a bench trial are subject to the clearly erroneous standard of review. 1 Legal conclusions are subject to plenary review. The parties agree that Louisiana law controls the instant dispute.

1. Subrogation

Subsequent to the SOPAC/Chabert agreement the articles of the Louisiana Civil Code pertaining to subrogation were extensively amended by La. Acts 1984, No. 331, Sec. 1, effective January 1, 1985. In the absence of legislative expression to the contrary, substantive laws are not given retroactive effect. 2 With one exception discussed below, the pre-revision articles in effect at the time of SOPAC’s payment to Chabert control the instant dispute. 3

Under Louisiana law, subrogation may be either conventional or legal. 4 Conventional subrogation occurs when the creditor or obligee, receiving payment from a third person, subrogates his rights, actions, privileges, and mortgages against the debtor or obligor; this subrogation must be express and contemporaneous with the payment. 5 A conventional subrogation may also be partial if the payment to an obligee represents only part of the total debt owed. 6 In a partial subrogation the debt is divided between the subrogor and the subrogee, making them either joint or several obligees. 7 Historically, Louisiana law has given a preference to the original creditor or subrogor over the partial subrogee. 8 This preference derives from the legal presumption that one does not act against ones own interest when subrogating another to one’s rights. 9

The Sonnier court applied this maxim to a conventional, partial subrogation between an insurer and its insured. The court held that an insurer cannot recover funds advanced to its insured unless the insured has been fully compensated for the loss. 10 SOPAC makes the converse argument that if the subrogor, Chabert, has been fully compensated by her $825,000 settlement, then SOPAC, the partial subrogee, can recoup its entire $132,000 payment. We find this argument consistent with Sonnier and its progeny. In Smith v. *445 Manville Forest Products Corp., 11 the court held that if an employee who received medical benefits was subsequently fully compensated, then the employer who had paid the benefits could recoup the payment pursuant to a conventional subrogation agreement. Similarly, in Provident Life and Accident Insurance Co. v. Turner, 12 the court stated that pursuant to Sonnier, an insurer could collect the amount of a subrogation claim from insureds who had recovered the full amount of damages from the tortfeasors. The Turner court also relied upon the plurality opinion in Audubon Insurance Co. v. Farr 13 Because the Audubon insured had breached a subrogation agreement by settling with the tortfeasors without the insurer’s knowledge or consent, the insurer was awarded judgment in the amount it had paid as a partial, conventional subrogation. 14

The Audubon plurality confirmed the rule that an insured holds excess recovery in trust for the insurer. 15 This rule, rooted in insurance law, was explained thusly:

When the insured recovers from the tort-feasor an amount which, with the amount already received from his insurer, exceeds the loss actually sustained by him, he holds the. excess as trustee for his insurer for whom it belongs[.] 16

Whether SOPAC is considered a partial subrogee, as described in Sonnier and the civilian tradition, or is analogized to an insurer, the result is the same: if Chabert has received full compensation, then she must reimburse SOPAC. Chabert argues that the Sonnier and Audubon

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973 F.2d 441, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 24332, 1992 WL 220993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pacific-transportation-company-v-earline-chabert-ca5-1992.