Travelers Insurance Co. v. McCluskey

483 S.W.2d 179, 252 Ark. 1045, 1972 Ark. LEXIS 1728
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 10, 1972
Docket5-5999
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 483 S.W.2d 179 (Travelers Insurance Co. v. McCluskey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travelers Insurance Co. v. McCluskey, 483 S.W.2d 179, 252 Ark. 1045, 1972 Ark. LEXIS 1728 (Ark. 1972).

Opinion

John A. Fogleman Justice.

Appellee McCluskey was injured by reason of the breaking of a wrench he was using on a construction job at Reynolds Metals Company plant at Patterson as an employee of Erection Service Company for which Travelers Insurance Company was the workmen’s compensation insurer. Travelers paid workmen’s compensation benefits to McCluskey, who later filed suit against Reynolds, Clarence Weiman, the job superintendent who furnished the wrench, and Proto Tool Company, the manufacturer of the wrench, as third-party tortfeasors. He was represented in this suit by Judge Sam Robinson, who associated the firm of McMath, Leather-man, Woods and Youngdahl. The firm of Terral, Rawlings, Matthews and Purtle represented Travelers in connection with its subrogation claim against the third-party tortfeasors. Mr. Gail O. Matthews of the Terral firm had a telephone conversation with Mr. Henry Woods of the McMath firm about Travelers’ subrogation claim. Matthews followed up the conversation with a letter dated May 30, 1968, which read as follows:

This will confirm our telephone conversation of May 28, 1968, wherein I advised you that I represent Travelers, the Workmen’s Compensation carrier for your client, and further confirm that you would honor our subrogation rights.
To date, Travelers had paid the sum of $1,870.00 temporary total and temporary partial and $3,469.00 medical. It looks like we will be paying for a long time to come.
Please call me prior to settlement or trial so I can advise you of our exact amount of interest in the case.

There was no response to this letter, but there was further correspondence between the law firms, to some of which we will later make reference.

Eventually the case came to trial in the United States District Court in Little Rock. McCluskey and his attorneys encountered unforeseen difficulties in the trial, and a verdict in favor of Proto Tool Company was directed. When this occurred the liability insurance carrier for Reynolds made an offer of $23,000 to settle the claim of McCluskey. The offer was accepted by appellee 'upon the condition that none of it would have to be paid to Travelers, and specified that payment be made under circumstances that would protect Travelers’ interest by permitting it to proceed with the lawsuit. Travelers had not filed any intervention in the suit and no notice of the offer or the settlement was given to it or its attorneys, either before or after it was effectuated. The release of Weimán and Reynolds Metals executed by McCluskey and his wife contained a reservation of McCluskey’s rights to workmen’s compensation benefits and a recognition by the parties that all rights of the employer and Travelers by way of subrogation or otherwise against any party except George McCluskey and wife remained unimpaired and unaffected by the release and settlement.

After the settlement was made, McCluskey filed a claim for additional workmen’s compensation benefits with the Workmen’s Compensation Commission, but it was resisted by appellant, which claimed a lien upon the net proceeds of the settlement made by McCluskey. The Workmen’s Compensation referee held for appellant on the basis of estoppel and by holding that there had been a “recovery” by McCluskey under Ark. Stat. Ann. § 81-1340 (Repl. 1960). The Workmen’s Compensation Commission reversed the referee’s decision, holding that appellant had no lien, because it did not intervene, and that the agreement between the attorneys was carried out. The circuit court affirmed the commission.

Appellant relies upon three points for reversal. They are:

I. That appellee is estopped to deny that appellant is entitled to a two-thirds lien upon appellee’s net recovery.

II. This case is not controlled by Si. Paul vs. Wood.

III. The court should overrule or modify St. Paul vs. Wood.

For these reasons hereinafter stated we affirm the judgment.

We shall first treat appellant’s second and third points before considering its first point.

Points II. and III.

Appellant argues that our holding in St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Wood, 242 Ark. 879, 416 S.W. 2d 322, does not control here because the workmen’s compensation carrier intervened in that action and was present during all negotiations, while no offer was ever made to appellant by the carrier in this case. Our decision in the cited case did not wholly turn upon this consideration. The question there was stated in the first paragraph of the opinion, thus:

This appeal calls for construction of § 40 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act (Ark. Stat. Ann. § 81-1340 Repl. 1960) to determine whether an employee can settle his common law cause of action in negligence against a tortfeasor free of any claims of his employer’s Workmen’s Compensation carrier, where the settlement documents specifically preserve all rights of the carrier.

The workmen’s compensation carrier’s position, on appeal, was thus stated:

For reversal, St. Paul relies on one point — i.e., the court should have denied the action of plaintiff for a declaratory judgment and granted St. Paul’s statutory lien against the settlement proceeds.

Our holding was based largely upon our determination that the word “recovery” in the sense that it and the verb form “recovered” are used in Ark. Stat. Ann. § 81-1340 (a) and (b), relates to restoration or vindication of a right existing in a person by the formal judgment or decree of a competent court, at his instance and suit, unless specifically qualified by accompanying words. We pointed out the distinction made between a recovery under § 81-1340 (a) and (b) and a settlement under § 81-1340 (c) in Winfrey & Carlile v. Nickles, Admr., 223 Ark. 894, 270 S.W. 2d 923. We also said that a compromise settlement that extinguished the rights of the compensation carrier was tantamount to a recovery, under § 81-1340 (a) and (b), citing Maxcy v. John F. Beasley Construction Co., 228 Ark. 306 S.W. 2d 849. Ultimately, in affirming the trial court we said that the compensation carrier in Wood had no lien upon the proceeds of the settlement negotiated, that the workmen’s compensation carrier had all the right of subrogation against the third party that was given it by law and all that it would have had if Wood had taken no action whatsoever. We noted that nothing in Ark. Stat. Ann. § 81-1340 prevented Wood from taking a nonsuit. We also pointed out that to interpret § 81-1340 as the carrier argued would require us to hold that the statute gives the employer or his compensation carrier a first lien upon receipts of any monies received from the third party by suit or otherwise, but that the statute does not so read.

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Bluebook (online)
483 S.W.2d 179, 252 Ark. 1045, 1972 Ark. LEXIS 1728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travelers-insurance-co-v-mccluskey-ark-1972.