Thompson v. Gray & Co.
This text of 590 So. 2d 1318 (Thompson v. Gray & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
John Raymond THOMPSON
v.
GRAY & COMPANY, et al.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
Denis Gaubert, III, Gregg J. Graffagnino St. Martin, Lirette & Shea, Houma, for plaintiff John Raymond Thompson.
Philip E. Henderson, John F. Brou, Henderson, Hanemann & Morris, Houma, for defendant-appellant Gray & Co., Inc. and Danos & Curole Marine Cont., Inc.
Before COVINGTON, C.J., and SAVOIE and LeBLANC, JJ.
LeBLANC, Judge.
This appeal concerns a suit for attorney fees. The issue presented is whether the holding of Moody v. Arabie, 498 So.2d 1081 (La.1986), that the necessary and reasonable costs of recovery (including attorney fees) against a negligent third person should be apportioned between the injured employee and his employer (or worker's compensation carrier) according to their interests in the recovery, is applicable in cases where recovery is made without the filing of a suit.
The facts of this case are not in dispute. Plaintiff, John Raymond Thompson, was injured in a vehicular collision on May 1, *1319 1985, while in the course and scope of his employment with Danos & Curole Marine Contractors, Inc. Plaintiff's injuries included a herniated cervical disc, for which a discectomy and fusion surgery was performed in August, 1985. Consequently, plaintiff received worker's compensation benefits and medical expenses through Gray and Company, Inc., the managing underwriter for Danos & Curole's compensation carrier, North River Insurance Company.
The collision in question was caused solely by the fault of a third person, liability coverage for whom was provided by State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (State Farm). State Farm has never contested liability. On May 14, 1985, it paid Danos & Curole's claim for property damage to its vehicle. By letter dated May 27, 1985, Gray and Company notified Mr. Sonny LeBlanc, State Farm's claims representative, of its claim for reimbursement from any amount received by plaintiff. At approximately the same time, plaintiff retained his own counsel to pursue his claim against the negligent third party. On April 23, 1986, without suit being filed, State Farm paid its full $100,000.00 policy limits to settle this matter. Of this amount, Gray and Company received $23,217.32, which was full reimbursement for the compensation benefits and medical expenses it had paid, and plaintiff received the balance of $76,282.84. From this amount, plaintiff paid his attorney a fee of $22,000.00 and expenses of $35.00.
Thereafter, plaintiff filed this suit against defendants, Danos & Curole and Gray and Company, seeking a contribution of $5,114.32 as their proportionate share of these attorney fees and expenses.[1] Following a bench trial, the court awarded judgment as prayed for by plaintiff. Defendants have now appealed.
In rendering judgment for plaintiff, the trial court relied upon the authority of Moody v. Arabie and it progeny. Defendants argue this constituted error because Moody is limited to its own facts, which differ significantly from the facts in the instant case. We disagree with defendants' contention that Moody has no application to the present case.
In Moody an employee received worker's compensation benefits as a result of an injury he sustained during the course and scope of his employment. Because Moody's injury was caused by the negligence of a third party, Moody pursued a third party suit seeking damages from this person. The employer's compensation carrier intervened in this suit to recover the compensation benefits paid to Moody. After a jury trial, judgment was rendered in favor of Moody. The judgment recognized the right of the compensation carrier to be paid, in preference to Moody, out of the proceeds of the judgment. Subsequently, an issue arose as to whether the compensation carrier was obligated to pay a portion of the attorneys' fees owed to Moody's attorney from its share of the judgment. After noting that the workers' compensation law is silent on this issue[2], the Supreme Court concluded that the compensation carrier was obligated to pay a proportionate share of Moody's attorneys' fees based on the following rationale:
When an employer pays compensation to a worker who has been injured by the wrongful act of a third person, the employer and the worker become co-owners of a property right consisting of a right to recover damages from the third person. Since the Civil Code has not dealt in *1320 detail with co-ownership of single things, the task to construct a doctrine has fallen to the writers, using as help the statutory principles furnished by the titles on ownership, successions, and partnership contract. La.C.C. art. 480; Aubry & Rau, Property § 221, 329.
The interests of co-owners do not represent distinct material units. Therefore none of them can exercise without the consent of the other co-owners any physical or legal acts aimed at the whole or even the smallest specific portion of the thing, if such acts imply the present and direct exercise of ownership. Id. 331. No co-owner may cause any material changes, unless all the co-owners have consented, tacitly if necessary. Acts by a sole co-owner, if useful to all, are ratified as a defacto agency (negotiorum gestio). Id. Each co-owner may force the others to contribute to the costs of maintenance and conservation of the common thing in proportion to their interests; but they can acquit themselves of this duty by abandoning their co-ownership right. Id. 333, 338. Cf. Whatley v. McMillan, 152 La. 978, 94 So. 905 (1923); Scott v. Hunt Oil Co., 152 So.2d 599 (La.App. 2d Cir.1962); and Planiol, Treatise on the Civil Law, Vol. 1, Part 2, § 2512-13, 2523.
Applying this doctrine to the action and right against the third person, we conclude that, with respect to any cost necessary to the maintenance and conservation of the right, each co-owner is always obligated to contribute in proportion to his interest in the right, and that, with respect to any other litigation costs, each co-owner is responsible for his proportionate part of reasonable and necessary expenses and legal services that accrue to his benefit. [Footnote 1] Under the doctrine, each co-owner is liable for necessary maintenance and conservation costs, such as those involved in filing suit and interrupting prescription, regardless of whether he consented to them. Ordinarily he would not be bound for other litigation costs incurred without his consent, but the workers' compensation law dispenses with the requirement of his consent. The statute authorizes either the worker or the employer to affect and materially change the whole right by prosecuting a suit against the third person and by recovering for all damages sustained....
Under these principles the necessary and reasonable costs of recovery are to be apportioned between the worker and the employer according to their interest in the recovery. First the court must determine the employer's proportionate interest in the recovery by determining the ratio or percentage that the amount of compensation paid or due at the time of recovery bears to the total recovery....
The costs of recovery are the necessary and reasonable expenditures and obligations, including those for attorneys' fees, incurred in effecting recovery ... To qualify as a reasonable and necessary cost of recovery, however, the fee must relate to
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590 So. 2d 1318, 1991 WL 255272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-gray-co-lactapp-1991.