Swanson v. Champion International Corp.

646 P.2d 1166, 197 Mont. 509
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1982
Docket81-229
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 646 P.2d 1166 (Swanson v. Champion International Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swanson v. Champion International Corp., 646 P.2d 1166, 197 Mont. 509 (Mo. 1982).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case comes to us on appeal from the Workers’ Compensation Court, which entered an order affirming a determination by the Workers’ Compensation Division that Liberty Mutual Insurance Company was entitled to $24,000 out of a settlement of $56,250 that Earn Swanson had received for claims arising out of the death of her husband Gary P. Swanson.

Gary P. Swanson, an employee of Champion International Corporation, died in an airplane crash on July 14, 1976 in the course of performing an aerial timber cruise for his employer. At the time of the accident, Champion was insured for its Workers’ Compensation liabilities by Liberty Mutual. The insurer paid a total amount of $37,862.75 in benefits to Kim R. Swanson, the surviving spouse of the decedent, in full satisfaction of the Workers’ Compensation obligations of Champion and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company.

The airplane in which the decedent Gary P. Swanson was killed was owned by Stockhill Aviation of Kalispell. Stockhill’s insurer, National Aviation Underwriters, Inc. brought a declaratory judgment action contesting coverage. On April 12, 1978, counsel for Kim Swanson wrote to counsel for Liberty [513]*513Mutual “tendering” participation under section 39-71-414(2), MCA, in the declaratory judgment suit, and asking for further participation by Liberty Mutual in a proposed action against Cessna Aircraft, on a products liability claim against the manufacturer. On May 5, 1978, Liberty Mutual, through its counsel, pointed out that it was already participating in the declaratory judgment action and that it would thereafter participate in any subsequent action by the widow against Stockhill Aviation. Liberty Mutual declined to participate in a proposed lawsuit against Cessna upon the ground that it had only a remote chance of success.

While the declaratory judgment action was pending, Kim R. Swanson, through her attorney, settled with National Aviation Underwriters, Inc., the insurer for Stockhill, all of her claims against Stockhill for the sum of $56,250. As between Stockhill and Kim R. Swanson, the settlement was allocated $3,000 to the survival action, and $53,250 to the wrongful death action.

It is not clear in the record that suit, as distinguished from claim, had been instituted against Stockhill Aviation, Inc., by Kim R. Swanson either on the survival action or the wrongful death action.

Liberty Mutual filed a petition before the Workers’ Compensation Division asking the Division to determine Liberty Mutual’s subrogation rights in the settlement that had been effectuated. The division by order determined that Liberty Mutual was entitled to a subrogation interest out of the settlement of $24,000.

Kim R. Swanson appealed the decision of the Workers’ Compensation Division to the Workers’ Compensation Court. There Kim R. Swanson contended that the settlement included payment by the responsible third party for noneconomic as well as economic losses sustained by the claimant and that such noneconomic losses were the property right of Kim R. Swanson and not subject to the subrogation claims of Liberty Mutual. The Workers’ Compensation Court, relying on Fisher v. Missoula White Pine Sash Co. (1974), 164 Mont. 41, 518 [514]*514P.2d 795, concluded that the Workers’ Compensation Act does not provide a differentiation between those portions of the settlement allocated to wrongful death and survival claims, or to econimic and noneconomic losses, or to the wife and children. On that basis, the Workers’ Compensation Court affirmed the division order that Liberty Mutual was entitled to subrogation of $24,000 from the settlement.

Kim R. Swanson duly appealed the order of the Workers’ Compensation Court to this Court.

We frame the issue before us thus: where the death of an employee in the course of his employment is caused by the neglect of a party other than his employer or fellow employees (section 39-71-412, MCA) and the heirs of the decedent employee receive proceeds from settlement or judgment from the responsible third party, does the Workers’ Compensation lien of decedent’s employer or its insurer attach to that portion of the proceeds which may represent noneconomic damages to the heirs?

Counsel for Kim R. Swanson has carefully limited the issue to those noneconomic damages that she would have received in her personal right which may be part of the settlement.

At first blush, it would seem that this case is controlled by this Court’s earlier holding in Fisher, supra. There, we held that the Workers’ Compensation Act does not in its subrogation clause differentiate between survival actions and actions for wrongful death. Therefore, this Court reasoned, all recoveries made through either claim of action were subject to the subrogation interest of the employer or the insurer if the death of the decedent arose out of or in the course of his employment.

The case at bar presents a facet slightly different than the court faced in Fisher. Here the claimant widow contends squarely that the noneconomic damages recovered by her as a part of the settlement of both causes of action against the responsible third party are not subject to subrogation by the employer or its insurer. It is a contention that leads us to reexamine the totality of the holding in Fisher for two reasons: (1) the intrinsic differences in the sources and effect of [515]*515recoveries between survival actions and wrongful death actions were not discussed in Fisher, and, (2) the changes in the subrogation provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Act since Fisher which require a reassessment of the bases on which Fisher is grounded.

We look first at the causes of action that are open in Montana to the survivors of a decedent whose death is caused by the negligence of another.

One cause of action is the “survival” action. It arises from section 27-1-501, MCA, the Montana version of Lord Campbell’s Act. By this statute, a cause of action, including tort actions existing during the lifetime of a person survive his death, and the cause may be pursued against the responsible party by his personal representative. See section 72-3-604, MCA. The damages that may be recovered in the survival cause of action for the death of the decedent through tort include his lost earnings from the time of his injury to his death; the present value of his reasonable earnings during his life expectancy, Krohmer v. Dahl (1965), 145 Mont. 491, 402 P.2d 979; the medical and funeral expenses incurred by him as a result of the tort; reasonable compensation for his pain and suffering, and other special damages. Beeler v. Butte and London Copper Development Co. (1910), 41 Mont. 465, 478, 110 P. 528.

Note that the source of the damages recoverable in the survival action are personal to the decedent. They do not include any damages suffered by the decedent’s widow, children or other heirs. Marinkovich v. Tierney (1932), 93 Mont. 72, 86, 17 P.2d 93, 96.

Note further the effect of recovery of such damages,by settlement or satisfaction of judgment for the survival claim. Such damages belong to the decedent’s estate. They are subject to the claims of his creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
646 P.2d 1166, 197 Mont. 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swanson-v-champion-international-corp-mont-1982.