State Farm Insurance Companies v. Jolene Wuorenma

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 16, 2015
DocketA15-763
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Farm Insurance Companies v. Jolene Wuorenma (State Farm Insurance Companies v. Jolene Wuorenma) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Farm Insurance Companies v. Jolene Wuorenma, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A15-0763

State Farm Insurance Companies, Respondent,

vs.

Jolene Wuorenma, Appellant.

Filed November 16, 2015 Affirmed Chutich, Judge

Hennepin County District Court File No. 27-CV-14-17026

Kelly F. Sofio, Oskie & Sofio, PLLC, St. Paul, Minnesota (for respondent)

Isaac I. Tyroler, TSR Injury Law, Bloomington, Minnesota (for appellant)

Considered and decided by Ross, Presiding Judge; Chutich, Judge; and Hooten,

Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

CHUTICH, Judge

Appellant Jolene Wuorenma contends the district court erred by vacating a no-

fault arbitration award in her favor, based on its determination that a settlement she

entered into with her workers’ compensation carrier precluded her later recovery of no-

fault benefits. Because the workers’ compensation settlement was final at the time of the no-fault arbitration, and because the settlement’s global release barred recovery of similar

no-fault benefits, we affirm.

FACTS

On February 3, 2011, appellant Jolene Wuorenma was rear-ended and injured

while driving her car in the scope of her employment with State Farm Insurance

Companies. Wuorenma’s initial medical bills were paid by State Farm’s workers’

compensation insurance. In February 2012, State Farm arranged an independent medical

examination of Wuorenma, after which it denied Wuorenma’s ongoing claims under the

workers’ compensation policy.

In November 2013, Wuorenma initiated a claim for additional workers’

compensation benefits against State Farm as her employer and its workers’ compensation

insurance carrier. She also sought benefits from State Farm as her no-fault automobile

insurance carrier for ongoing medical costs and lost wages. No-fault benefits were

denied on the basis of medical evidence.

On February 10, 2014, Wuorenma filed a Petition for No-Fault Arbitration with

the American Arbitration Association. She presented claims for $59,093 in medical

expenses, although the policy only provided coverage up to $20,000. Wuorenma also

presented $2,497 in wage-loss claims, which the policy provided for separately.

Between February 2012 and February 2014, Wuorenma was examined on several

occasions by different doctors contracted by one or both insurance carriers.1 In March

1 Because we do not have the record from the workers’ compensation case or details from the early phases of the no-fault claim dispute, we rely on information about

2 2012, one doctor opined that Wuorenma’s ongoing workers’ compensation claims were

not reasonable, necessary, or related to the accident. Another doctor warned that a

proposed spine surgery was unnecessary and “entirely inconsistent with the severity of

the injury sustained during the accident in question and the condition which is alleged to

have been caused by that event.” He added that Wuorenma’s complaints were “far out of

proportion to the pathology which has been demonstrated by imaging studies.” The same

doctor conducted another examination in January 2014, including neurologic and

orthopedic tests, and found normal results. Finally, he opined that only the first six

weeks of care would have been reasonably related to the accident.

On February 26, 2014, State Farm, as no-fault insurer, served Wuorenma with a

“notice of maximum medical improvement.” State Farm’s doctor opined that Wuorenma

achieved her maximum medical improvement from injuries resulting from the February

3, 2011 accident no later than March 13, 2011. Wuorenma nonetheless underwent

cervical spine surgery at St. John’s Hospital on July 21, 2014. The cost of the surgery

was $38,790.

About three weeks after the spine surgery, Wuorenma signed a stipulation for

settlement on the workers’ compensation claim, which did not reference the July 21

surgery bill. Wuorenma and her attorney signed the settlement agreement on August 12,

2014; the attorney for State Farm, as Wuorenma’s employer and its workers’

compensation insurance carrier, signed on September 19, 2014; two chiropractic clinics

Wuorenma’s medical records and the insurers’ medical reports from briefs and other secondary-source documents that are included in the record.

3 and the Center for Diagnostic Imaging also participated and signed as intervenors in the

agreement on or before September 19, 2014. Apparently no party notified St. John’s

Hospital or furnished the spine surgery bill.

The stipulation for settlement was submitted to the Office of Administrative

Hearings on September 22, 2014. A compensation judge signed and issued an award the

next day. The total award under the workers’ compensation settlement agreement was

$38,318, which included $7,000 in attorney’s fees and about $3,318 in other specified

medical bills.

The settlement agreement explicitly provided:

It is the intent of the parties hereto to permanently close out any and all known or reasonably discovered injuries that occurred during the employee’s work for the employer… … [T]he employee agrees to accept the foregoing sums as a full, final and complete settlement of any and all claims, past, present and future, she may have…including…medical expenses: past, present and future; all forms of treatment… and any and all other conceivable claims the employee may have pursuant to the Minnesota Workers’ Compensation Act without exception. NO CLAIMS REMAIN OPEN. ALL MEDICAL CLAIMS ARE CLOSED ON A FULL AND FINAL BASIS, PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE.

The settlement agreement reflects that Wuorenma was considering a “recommended

cervical spine surgery,” but the final agreement does not reflect that the surgery had

already happened at the time of signing by each party. Finally, the settlement agreement

clearly provides that Wuorenma waived her right to a hearing on the merits of her claims.

Also on September 22, 2014, Wuorenma and State Farm, as no-fault insurance

carrier, participated in an arbitration hearing. Wuorenma disclosed the workers’

4 compensation settlement at the arbitration hearing. Wuorenma’s attorney in the no-fault

claim was aware of the settlement but admitted that he did not know its “status” at the

time of the arbitration. The attorney representing State Farm as no-fault insurance carrier

at the arbitration was apparently unaware of the workers’ compensation settlement before

the arbitration.2

Following the hearing, the arbitrator invited written arguments about the legal

effect of the workers’ compensation settlement on the no-fault arbitration. Wuorenma’s

attorney argued that Wuorenma’s eligibility for no-fault benefits was unaffected by the

settlement because it was “not a fully-executed, filed, approved agreement” since it had

not been signed by a compensation judge at the time of the no-fault arbitration hearing.

Wuorenma’s attorney additionally argued that State Farm would remain liable for the

outstanding bill at St. John’s Hospital, notwithstanding a finalized settlement, because St.

John’s was not properly notified of its right to intervene in the workers’ compensation

settlement. State Farm’s attorney argued that the settlement was effective and final at the

time of the arbitration and that it closed out any outstanding claims against State Farm,

including the outstanding bill at St. John’s Hospital. The $38,790 spine surgery bill was

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