Wood v. Caudle-Hyatt, Inc.

444 S.E.2d 3, 18 Va. App. 391, 10 Va. Law Rep. 1373, 1994 Va. App. LEXIS 293
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 17, 1994
DocketRecord No. 2238-92-2
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 444 S.E.2d 3 (Wood v. Caudle-Hyatt, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Caudle-Hyatt, Inc., 444 S.E.2d 3, 18 Va. App. 391, 10 Va. Law Rep. 1373, 1994 Va. App. LEXIS 293 (Va. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

Opinion

COLEMAN, J.

In this workers’ compensation appeal, we hold that an injured worker who settles his common law tort claim against a third party, with his employer having knowledge of the specific terms of settlement and an opportunity to enforce its subrogation rights, is not barred from proceeding with his workers’ compensation claim.

In 1987, Harold Ray Wood was diagnosed as suffering from stage one asbestosis. He filed a workers’ compensation claim pursuant to Code § 65.2-503(B)( 17) with the Industrial Commission 1 against Caudle-Hyatt, by whom he was regularly employed as an asbestos insulator between 1966 and 1983. Caudle-Hyatt received notice of the claim and denied liability. At Wood’s request, the commission placed the claim on its inactive docket while Wood pursued common law tort actions against various asbestos manufacturers. Through his attorney, Wood negotiated offers of settlement totalling $88,000 for the tort claims. Wood notified Caudle-Hyatt in writing by certified mail of the terms of the settlement offers and stated that he intended to accept them unless Caudle-Hyatt objected within ten days. 2 Caudle-Hyatt re *394 sponded by denying that it was liable for Wood’s asbestosis claim, including medical expenses. Caudle-Hyatt also stated that it would not pay any portion of his attorney’s fees for obtaining the tort settlement. Caudle-Hyatt’s response, thus, did not agree or object to Wood’s proposed tort settlement, nor did it mention any subrogation rights. Wood settled the tort claims for $88,000, an amount that exceeded the sum that Wood might receive in workers’ compensation benefits for stage one asbestosis, exclusive of whatever medical expenses he might incur.

Wood then requested that his workers’ compensation claim for asbestosis be placed on the commission’s hearing docket. After a hearing, the deputy commissioner entered a compensation award against Caudle-Hyatt, finding that Wood was last injuriously exposed to asbestos while working for Caudle-Hyatt. The award, which required Caudle-Hyatt to assume responsibility for Wood’s future reasonable medical expenses, was suspended, at the request of Wood’s counsel, until the amount of the monthly benefits under an award exhausted the net proceeds that Wood had received from the third-party tort recovery. The deputy commissioner also ordered Caudle-Hyatt to pay $1250 as a reasonable attorney’s fee for representing the claimant before the commission on the compensation claim. The deputy commissioner made no allowance, however, for claimant’s request pursuant to the holding in Sheris v. Travelers, for a pro rata share of reasonable costs and attorney’s fees to the extent that the tort recovery had relieved the employer of its workers’ compensation liability up to the net amount of Wood’s third-party recovery.

Wood sought review of the deputy’s award to the commission because it did not grant benefits for stage one asbestosis and did not order Caudle-Hyatt to pay its reasonable pro rata share of attorney’s fees and costs for being relieved of its workers’ compensation liability.

On review, the commission reversed the deputy’s award for medical benefits, finding that all of Wood’s compensation benefits were barred because he had settled his third-party tort claim prior to the entry of a compensation award. The commission accepted Caudle-Hyatt’s position that the employer could not have participated in the third-party tort settlement because its workers’ compensation liability had not been determined and, therefore, it had no subrogation rights to assert at the time. In support of its find *395 ing, the commission relied on our holding in Streich v. Tidewater Dock & Structures, 14 Va. App. 779, 780, 418 S.E.2d 913, 914 (1992), to support its conclusion that an employer’s subrogation rights do not exist until a compensation award is entered against it. The commission reasoned that by settling the tort claims before obtaining a workers’ compensation award, Wood had elected to pursue his common law remedy and thereby had impaired or destroyed the inchoate subrogation rights that Caudle-Hyatt would have obtained. The commission held that, under Streich, the employer had no interest in the third-party claim” because no “ruling establishing . . . entitlement to compensation” had been made at “the time of [the third-party] settlement.” Id. at 781, 418 S.E.2d at 914. The commission ruled that “Code §§ 65.2-309, -310, and -311 [creating employer’s subrogation rights and providing for apportionment of reasonable expenses and attorney’s fees] do not become operative” because no subrogation claim existed. Thus, the commission held that Wood was not entitled to a compensation award, including medical benefits, nor was Caudle-Hyatt required to pay its pro rata share of Wood’s reasonable expenses and attorney’s fees for the tort case, but only a fee for representing Wood before the commission on the compensation claim.

At the review hearing before the commission, Caudle-Hyatt alternatively contended that, even if it had subrogation rights, it did not consent to Wood’s third-party tort settlement and, thus, he had prejudiced their subrogation rights by settling the claims without their consent. The commission found that if Caudle-Hyatt had subrogation rights, Wood’s settlement of the tort claims without their consent would have prejudiced those rights. Thus, Wood’s claim for compensation would also be barred on that theory.

I.

An employee injured in the course of employment by a negligent third party may pursue a common law remedy against the tort-feasor and a claim for compensation benefits under the Workers’ Compensation Act, but may obtain only one full recovery for the injury. Noblin v. Randolph Corp., 180 Va. 345, 358-59, 23 S.E.2d 209, 214 (1942). If the employee pursues both remedies, at such time that the employee makes a claim for workers’ compensation benefits, the “claim . . . shall operate as an assignment to *396 the employer of any right to recover damages,” Code § 65.2-309(A), and the employer “shall be subrogated to [the right to recover damages] in his own name or in the name of the injured employee.” Id. Thus, making a “claim” for workers’ compensation benefits works as an assignment under Code § 65.2-309 of the employee’s “right to recover damages” from the tort-feasor. The commission’s basic premise—that an employer has no subrogation right in its employee’s third-party tort claim until a compensation award has been entered against it—is, therefore, erroneous.

In reaching its conclusion, the commission relied on language from the Streich decision. In Streich, a claimant who was receiving compensation benefits under an award was barred from receiving further benefits because he settled his third-party tort claims without the employer consenting to or having notice of the terms of the settlement.

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Bluebook (online)
444 S.E.2d 3, 18 Va. App. 391, 10 Va. Law Rep. 1373, 1994 Va. App. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-caudle-hyatt-inc-vactapp-1994.