State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, (A14-132), (A14-224) v. Angela Mary Lennartson, (A14-132), Katie Foss, (A14-224).

857 N.W.2d 713, 2014 Minn. App. LEXIS 104
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 1, 2014
DocketA14-132,A14-224
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 857 N.W.2d 713 (State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, (A14-132), (A14-224) v. Angela Mary Lennartson, (A14-132), Katie Foss, (A14-224).) 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 Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, (A14-132), (A14-224) v. Angela Mary Lennartson, (A14-132), Katie Foss, (A14-224)., 857 N.W.2d 713, 2014 Minn. App. LEXIS 104 (Mich. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

CHUTICH, Judge.

In these consolidated appeals, appellant Angela Lennartson and respondent Katie Foss (insureds) were involved in separate car accidents, recovered awards in negligence actions, and then received awards in arbitration proceedings under the Minnesota No-Fault Insurance Act (no-fault act) from State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, their insurer. State Farm, respondent in the Lennartson appeal and appellant in the Foss appeal, challenges the arbitration awards. It contends that the no-fault act’s purpose and collateral estoppel prevent the insureds from seeking economic-loss awards in no-fault arbitration when the same damages were litigated in a prior negligence action. Because neither the plain language of the no-fault act nor collateral estoppel prevent an insured from seeking economic-loss *716 benefits in no-fault arbitration after litigating the same damages in a negligence action, we reverse the vacation of Lennart-son’s arbitration award and affirm Foss’s arbitration award.

FACTS

In November 2009, Katie Foss was injured in a ear accident. Foss sought medical treatment for her injuries and submitted a claim for no-fault benefits to her insurer, State Farm. Foss’s insurance policy had a no-fault medical coverage limit of $50,000 and a wage loss limit of $20,000. State Farm discontinued Foss’s no-fault benefits in June 2012, after an independent medical examination. At the time her no-fault benefits were terminated, State Farm had reimbursed $89,667.92 of Foss’s past medical expenses.

Foss next sued the driver of the other car in a negligence action, claiming $46,641.29 in past medical expenses and $7,574.42 in past wage loss. In January 2018, a jury awarded Foss $19,760.40 for past medical expenses and $1,662.00' in past mileage expenses. Foss received nothing "for past wage loss. Minnesota Statutes section 65B.51, subdivision 1 (2012) required the district court to deduct the $39,667.92 in no-fault medical benefits that State Farm had already paid Foss from her total jury award. Because State Farm had paid Foss more no-fault benefits than the jury awarded, she recovered no additional reimbursement for past medical expenses. Shortly after her trial, Foss petitioned for no-fault arbitration, seeking wage loss and medical expense benefits for losses that were not reimbursed in her negligence action.

In June 2013, the arbitrator awarded Foss $8,284.41 for medical expenses and $3,783.44 for wage loss. The arbitrator found Foss’s testimony to be very credible, and he specifically criticized the independent medical examiner’s opinion that led State Farm to terminate her no-fault benefits.

State Farm moved to vacate the arbitration award, claiming that collateral estop-pel barred the arbitration and that the arbitrator exceeded his powers when he granted the arbitration award with full knowledge that Foss had previously recovered past medical expenses in her negligence case. The district court denied State Farm’s motion. It found that the arbitrator did not exceed his powers because the arbitrator explicitly reserved the issue of collateral estoppel for the district court, and the district court held that collateral estoppel does not apply.

In the second appeal, Angela Lennart-son was injured in a car accident in August 2008. Lennartson sought medical treatment for her injuries and submitted a claim for no-fault benefits to her insurer, State Farm. At the time of the accident, Lennartson was covered by her parent’s State Farm insurance policy; the policy had stackable no-fault benefits for two vehicles, with a no-fault medical coverage limit of $40,000. In January 2010, State Farm discontinued Lennartson’s no-fault benefits based on the results of an independent medical examination. When State Farm terminated Lennartson’s no-fault benefits, it had reimbursed her $11,671.16 for medical expenses.

Lennartson sued the driver of the other vehicle in a negligence action. In November 2012, a jury awarded Lennartson, among other relief, $23,910.11 for past medical expenses. As required by Minnesota Statutes section 65B.51, subdivision 1, the district court deducted the no-fault benefits that State Farm had already paid Lennartson. Lennartson then petitioned for no-fault arbitration, seeking reimbursement for the same past medical expenses that the jury had awarded in her previous negligence action.

*717 In October 2013, the arbitrator awarded Lennartson $11,790.31 in past medical expenses and interest. State Farm moved to vacate the arbitration award, claiming that the award gave Lennartson a double recovery that contradicts the public policy behind the no-fault act and that collateral estoppel bars Lennartson from arbitrating to obtain the same medical expenses that she had already litigated and recovered in her negligence action.

The district court agreed and vacated the arbitration award. It found that the arbitrator exceeded his authority because the public policy behind the no-fault act prevents Lennartson from seeking recovery in arbitration for the same medical expenses that she had been awarded in her negligence action. In support of this conclusion, the district court relied on one of the purposes of the no-fault act — the prevention of double recovery — as the policy that conclusively barred Lennartson’s arbitration award. The district court also found that Lennartson had no “economic loss” within the meaning of Minnesota Statutes section 65B.43, subdivision 7 (2012), permitting her to recover under the no-fault act. And finally, the district court concluded that collateral estoppel bars Lennartson from arbitrating the same past medical expenses that she had already litigated in her negligence action.

These consolidated appeals followed.

ISSUE

Does the Minnesota No-Fault Insurance Act or collateral estoppel prevent an insured from seeking economic-loss benefits in a no-fault arbitration proceeding if the insured has already litigated economic-loss damages in a negligence action?

ANALYSIS

This court reviews statutory interpretation questions of the no-fault act de novo. Pepper v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 813 N.W.2d 921, 925 (Minn.2012). “The goal of all statutory interpretation is to ascertain and effectuate the intent of the Legislature.” Hous. & Redevelopment Auth. of Duluth v. Lee, 852 N.W.2d 683, 687 (Minn.2014).

State Farm argues that the insureds cannot arbitrate their no-fault claims because they fully litigated their claims for economic-loss benefits in separate negligence actions and the arbitration awards would be a double recovery contrary to the no-fault act’s purposes. The insureds contend that the arbitration awards compensate them for a “loss”- consistent with the no-fault act’s stated purposes and that nothing in the no-fault act prohibits them from recovering an arbitration award after a jury trial.

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857 N.W.2d 713, 2014 Minn. App. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-farm-mutual-automobile-insurance-company-a14-132-a14-224-v-minnctapp-2014.