State Office of Risk Management v. Christy Carty, Individually and as Next Friend for B.C., J.C. and M.C., Minors and as Representative of the Estate of Jimmy Carty Jr.

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 2014
Docket13-0639
StatusPublished

This text of State Office of Risk Management v. Christy Carty, Individually and as Next Friend for B.C., J.C. and M.C., Minors and as Representative of the Estate of Jimmy Carty Jr. (State Office of Risk Management v. Christy Carty, Individually and as Next Friend for B.C., J.C. and M.C., Minors and as Representative of the Estate of Jimmy Carty Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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State Office of Risk Management v. Christy Carty, Individually and as Next Friend for B.C., J.C. and M.C., Minors and as Representative of the Estate of Jimmy Carty Jr., (Tex. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS 444444444444 NO . 13-0639 444444444444

STATE OFFICE OF RISK MANAGEMENT, APPELLANT v.

CHRISTY CARTY, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS NEXT FRIEND FOR B.C., J.C. AND M.C., MINORS AND AS REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF JIMMY CARTY JR., DECEASED, APPELLEE

4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444 ON CERTIFIED QUESTIONS FROM THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT 4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444

Argued February 5, 2014

JUSTICE LEHRMANN delivered the opinion of the Court.

When a workers’ compensation beneficiary recovers from a third party for injuries

compensable under the Texas Workers’ Compensation Act (Act), the insurance carrier is entitled to

be reimbursed from that recovery for benefits paid to the beneficiary and to treat any excess proceeds

as an advance against future benefits owed. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has

certified the following three questions regarding the carrier’s right to excess proceeds recovered by

multiple beneficiaries:

1. In a case involving a recovery by multiple beneficiaries, how should the excess net settlement proceeds above the amount required to reimburse a workers’ compensation carrier for benefits paid be apportioned among the beneficiaries under section 417.002 of the Texas Labor Code?

2. How should a workers’ compensation carrier’s right under section 417.002 to treat a recovery as an advance of future benefits be calculated in a case involving multiple beneficiaries? Should the carrier’s right be determined on a beneficiary-by-beneficiary basis or on a collective-recovery basis?

3. If the carrier’s right to treat a recovery as an advance of future benefits should be determined on a beneficiary-by-beneficiary basis, does a beneficiary’s nonbinding statement that she will use her recovery to benefit another beneficiary make the settlement allocation invalid?

Because our answer to Question 2 is dispositive, we answer it only. We hold that, when

multiple beneficiaries recover compensation benefits through the same covered employee, the

carrier’s rights to a third-party settlement are determined by treating it as a single, collective recovery

rather than separate recoveries by each beneficiary.

I. Legal and Factual Background

Because the underlying case involves the extent of a workers’ compensation carrier’s right

to reimbursement of death benefits paid and owed to a legal beneficiary, an overview of the Act’s

general provisions governing payment of death benefits is helpful in introducing the facts at hand.

A. Summary of Workers’ Compensation Death Benefits

Under the Act, “if a compensable injury to [an] employee results in death,” the carrier is

required to pay death benefits to the employee’s legal beneficiary equal to 75% of the employee’s

average weekly salary. TEX . LAB. CODE § 408.181(a), (b). As is relevant to this case, if the

employee is survived by an eligible spouse and one or more eligible children, half of the benefits are

paid to the spouse and half to the children in equal shares. Id. § 408.182(a). The spouse is eligible

2 for benefits “for life or until remarriage.” Id. § 408.183(b). Upon remarriage, the spouse is entitled

to an additional 104 weeks of benefits, payable in a lump sum. Id.; 28 TEX . ADMIN . CODE

§ 132.7(b). Following the expiration of 104 weeks from the date of remarriage, the spouse’s share

of benefits is redistributed to the children. TEX . LAB. CODE § 408.184(b). Minor children are

eligible for benefits until they reach the age of eighteen or, so long as they remain a full-time student,

until the age of twenty-five. Id. § 408.183(c), (d).

B. Facts

Jimmy Carty died in a training accident at the Texas Department of Public Safety Training

Academy. He was survived by his wife, Christy, and their three minor children. State Office of Risk

Management (SORM), the workers’ compensation carrier for state employees, paid Jimmy’s medical

and funeral benefits1 and began paying death benefits to Christy and the children.

Christy, individually, as representative of Jimmy’s estate, and as next friend of the children,

brought suit in federal court against Ringside, Inc., and Kim Pacific Martial Arts, asserting product

liability claims and claims under the Texas wrongful death and survival statutes. While that suit was

pending, Christy remarried and is thus no longer eligible for death benefits.

The Cartys settled with Ringside for $100,000, agreeing to pay SORM $20,000 from the

settlement proceeds in partial satisfaction of SORM’s reimbursement claim for benefits paid. The

Cartys then settled with Kim Pacific for $800,000, and SORM intervened to assert its right to

reimbursement from those funds. Following a hearing at which Christy testified that she intended

1 An employee who sustains a compensable injury “is entitled to all health care reasonably required by the nature of the injury.” T EX . L AB . C OD E § 408.021(a). If the compensable injury results in the employee’s death, the carrier must pay up to $6,000 in burial costs to the person who incurred liability for those costs. Id. § 408.186(a).

3 to use her portion of the settlement for the care and well-being of the children, the district court

approved the settlement and apportioned it among the parties. The court determined that SORM’s

gross claim for benefits paid to date was $153,306.62, representing the amount SORM had paid in

funeral and medical benefits, weekly death benefits to Christy and the children, and a lump sum

payment to Christy for the remaining death benefits to which she was entitled following her

remarriage. After reducing the gross amount by SORM’s portion of the Ringside settlement and its

share of the attorney’s fees and expenses,2 the trial court calculated SORM’s net reimbursement as

$78,295.55. The remainder of the settlement was apportioned $290,316.87 for attorney’s fees and

expenses,3 $351,278.91 to Christy (individually and as representative of Jimmy’s estate), and

$80,108.67 to the children.

The district court also determined that the recovery that SORM was entitled to treat as an

advance against future benefits owed to the children equaled their share of the settlement. In other

words, as soon as the amount of suspended benefits equaled $80,108.67, SORM was required to

resume payment to the children. The district court made the apportionment between Christy and the

children based on the relative ratio of benefits they had already received. SORM challenged the

apportionment on appeal.

2 The Act requires a “carrier whose interest is not actively represented by an attorney in a third-party action” to pay a fee to the claimant’s attorney in the agreed-upon amount or, absent an agreement, to pay “a reasonable fee for recovery of the insurance carrier’s interest that may not exceed one-third of the insurance carrier’s recovery,” plus “a proportionate share of expenses.” T EX . L AB . C O D E § 417.003(a).

3 Amicus Texas Mutual Insurance Company argues that the district court erred in calculating the attorney’s fee on the gross settlement amount before deducting SORM’s lien. The parties have not briefed this issue, which is well beyond the scope of the certified questions. Accordingly, we do not address it.

4 The Fifth Circuit disagreed with the district court’s apportioning the settlement funds among

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State Office of Risk Management v. Christy Carty, Individually and as Next Friend for B.C., J.C. and M.C., Minors and as Representative of the Estate of Jimmy Carty Jr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-office-of-risk-management-v-christy-carty-individually-and-as-next-tex-2014.