St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Wood Et Al

416 S.W.2d 322, 242 Ark. 879, 1967 Ark. LEXIS 1336
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 5, 1967
Docket5-4148
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 416 S.W.2d 322 (St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Wood Et Al) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Wood Et Al, 416 S.W.2d 322, 242 Ark. 879, 1967 Ark. LEXIS 1336 (Ark. 1967).

Opinions

CoNley Byed, Justice.

This appeal calls for construction of § 40 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Ark. Stat. Ann. § 81-1340 [Repl. 1960]) to determine whether an employee can settle his common law cause of action in negligence against a tort feasor free of any claims of his employer’s Workmen’s Compensation carrier, where the settlement documents specifically preserve all rights of the carrier.

The facts giving rise to this litigation show that on November 17, 1964, appellee Hershel Wayne Wood was injured while employed as a truck driver by Southern Farmers Association when a hydraulically operated auger on his truck came into contact with a high voltage line maintained by appellee First Electric Cooperative Corporation. As a result of the injury Wood was horribly and terribly burned, shocked, and injured; both feet have been amputated; and a hole was burned in his skull, with undetermined effects on his mind. Appellant St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, the Workmen ’s Compensation carrier for Southern Farmers Association, has expended in weekly benefits and medical payments through May 4, 1966, the sum of $26,116.68. In its pleading, St. Paul estimates that its expenditures will reach $50,000.

Following the injury, Wood filed an action against First Electric Cooperative Corporation for the sum of $500,000, alleging negligence on its part in the construetion and maintenance of its power lines in many respects. Appellee, Employers Mntnals of Wansan, is the liability carrier of First Electric and as such is the real party in interest as between it and First Electric.

Appellant St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company intervened in Wood’s suit against First Electric under § 40 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, seeking a lien in accordance with the act upon any recovery by Wood for compensation paid and to be paid him.

Before trial of Wood’s suit against First Electric, Wood and First Electric agreed on a figure which to their minds represented a fair settlement of the Wood phase of the case, but First Electric and St. Paul were unable to agree on a fair settlement of St. Paul’s subrogation claim. It was and is St. Paul’s position that it is entitled to receive, after payment of litigation costs and counsel fees, two thirds of any amount Wood might receive, up to the amount of St. Paul’s obligations under the Workmen’s Compensation Act.

The figure which Wood was willing to receive and Employers Mutuals was willing to pay for Wood’s end of the case was $78,000, provided Wood did not have to repay to St. Paul the Workmen’s Compensation benefits paid, and provided further that this would not affect his right to further compensation. Employers Mutuals was willing to pay said amount to Wood provided such payment would not make it automatically liable to St. Paul for compensation paid.

In an attempt to accomplish this purpose, Wood, First Electric and Employers Mutuals entered into an escrow agreement pursuant to which Employers Mutuals deposited with a bank at Batesville as Escrow Agent the sum of $78,000, and Wood deposited with the Escrow Agent his Release in the form hereinafter mentioned. The agreement provided in substance that, when it was determined by Wood and his attorney that Wood could receive this sum without being required to reimburse St. Paul for compensation paid and to be paid, then tbe Escrow Agent would deliver tbe $78,000 plus accrued interest to Wood, and tbe Belease to First Electric and its carrier. But if it be determined that Wood could not accept tbe money and deliver tbe Belease free of St. Paul’s claim, then tbe Escrow Agent would deliver tbe money plus interest back to First Electric and its carrier, and tbe Belease to Wood.

It was further provided in tbe Escrow Agreement that if it were determined that the effect of the proposed transaction would be to subject First Electric to liability to St. Paul for compensation paid or to be paid, without regard to negligence on tbe part of First Electric — that is, automatically — then the Escrow Agent would deliver tbe money plus accrued interest to Employers Mutuals and the Belease to Wood. It was also agreed that if these various determinations were not made until after the statute of limitations bad barred another suit by Wood against First Electric, then First Electric and its carrier, Employers Mutuals, would waive the defense of limitations; that .if the settlement was consummated, Wood would dismiss bis suit without prejudice, and such dismissal would not prejudice St. Paul’s right to pursue its claim against First Electric; that nothing in the agreement was intended to or should affect St. Paul’s right to do so, and that nothing in the agreement should constitute an admission of liability on the part of First Electric.

Finally, it was agreed that in any suit by Southern Farmers Association or St. Paul against First Electric to recover on its subrogation right under the Arkansas Workmen’s Compensation Act, First Electric would not plead as a defense the Belease referred to, except as it might be necessary to do so in order to avoid a recovery of more than had been and would be expended by St. Paul.

The proposed Belease is in conventional form, except that it contains recitals to the effect that the rights of Southern Farmers Association or St. Paul, which it may have by way of subrogation against First Electric, spe-eifically including all the rights given under § 40 of the Act, shall not be affected by the Release, and it recites the intention of the parties to leave unimpaired St. Paul’s right to litigate against First Electric in order to recover all Workmen’s Compensation benefits, past, present and future, paid to or for the benefit of Wood in discharge of its obligation under the Compensation Act.

Wood, to determine his rights under the escrow agreement, filed a cross-complaint, in the pending action, against St. Paul for a declaratory judgment. In this proceeding Wood sought to determine whether he could receive the settlement free of any claims of St. Paul; whether it would affect his rights to receive Workmen’s Compensation benefits in the future; and whether St. Paul would he free to assert its own cause of action against First Electric for compensation paid and to be paid.

The case was submitted upon a stipulation of the parties reciting, inter alia, the foregoing facts and also reciting that St. Paul took the position outlined in its letter of October 21, 1965, to the Workmen’s Compensation Commission, that there was a controversy between the parties as to the legal effect of the proposed settlement. St. Paul’s position in said letter was that it understood the case had been settled for $78,000; it claimed a lien thereon under the Act, for compensation paid and payable; and it requested permission to suspend payment of future compensation and future medical. The settlement, of course, has not as yet been consummated, but it is St. Paul’s position that if Wood accepts the money and executes the proposed Release, he will have to repay it for compensation paid and payable.

It was also stipulated that First Electric recognized St. Paul’s right to pursue its own statutory cause of action against First Electric as provided by law, and that if St. Paul did so, First Electric would not plead in bar of said cause, or as a defense thereto, the release from Wood, except as it might be necessary to prevent recovery for a sum in excess of compensation paid and to be paid.

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Bluebook (online)
416 S.W.2d 322, 242 Ark. 879, 1967 Ark. LEXIS 1336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-paul-fire-marine-ins-co-v-wood-et-al-ark-1967.