Wood v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.

123 Misc. 2d 812, 475 N.Y.S.2d 735, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3085
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 9, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 123 Misc. 2d 812 (Wood v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., 123 Misc. 2d 812, 475 N.Y.S.2d 735, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3085 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Thomas E. Mercure, J.

The plaintiff Anthony N. Wood, in the above-entitled actions, here moves for an order apportioning legal fees and expenses pursuant to subdivision 1 of section 29 of the Workers’ Compensation Law.

On July 14, 1978, Anthony N. Wood sustained a severe and permanent injury while an employee of the Town of Stillwater Highway Department. Plaintiff Anthony N. Wood brought an action against the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company who, as third-party plaintiffs, brought [813]*813the Town of Stillwater into the action. The plaintiff’s action was settled after five days of trial for $1,100,000 without obtaining the consent of the workers’ compensation carrier or the board. Prior to that time, the workers’ compensation carrier had paid $63,069.71 in both compensation and medical payments, for which the carrier has a lien.

Anthony N. Wood, the petitioner herein, contends that the facts and law of the instant case lie fully and squarely within the precepts of Matter of Kelly v State Ins. Fund (60 NY2d 131).

Said precepts being, in essence, as follows:

1) It is proper to take into consideration, and accept in assessing the carrier’s equitable share of the cost of litigation, the present value of estimated future benefits to the claimant.

2) The value of future benefits is not so speculative that it cannot be estimated.

3) The court can equitably determine the offset against a carrier’s lien.

In opposition, the Saratoga County Self-Insured Plan, the respondent, by its attorneys, contends:

1) The “total benefit theory” espoused in the Kelly case (supra), must also take into consideration the theory of future risk and liability of the carrier in the nature of payment for the consequential death of an employee.

2) The assumptions made by plaintiff’s expert in computing equitable apportionment are not realistic or supported by the record.

3) To rigidly apply the plaintiff’s analysis and methodology would compel the court to extinguish the Self-Insured County’s lien in its entirety, posing a message to the insurance industry as a whole that payment of medical bills and compensation benefits create a litigation fund for the plaintiff and an inducement of the trial bar to prolong litigation.

A fundamental principle of section 29 of the Workers’ Compensation Law is to protect the worker, not his employer. The statute is remedial and must be construed [814]*814liberally in favor of an employee. (Matter of Illaqua v Barr-Llewellyn Buick Co., 81 AD2d 708.) The primary legislative intent in drafting the statute was fairness to the employee. (McKinney’s Session Laws of NY, 1975, p 1551.)

This court, in its interpretation of section 29 and its application herein, must be guided by Matter of Kelly v State Ins. Fund (supra), wherein the facts are similar and the relief requested is also the same.

In Matter of Kelly (supra), petitioner, executrix of her deceased husband’s estate, received workers’ compensation death benefits after her husband was killed in a construction accident. She later brought actions for wrongful death and for conscious pain and suffering against the City of New York, the general contractor for the construction project, and several other contractors. Damages were recovered in the amount of $315,000. Petitioner applied to the Surrogate’s Court for a distribution of the recovery proceeds. At the time of the application, the compensation carrier had made periodic payments to petitioner totaling, with interest, $54,127.56. The court determined that, pursuant to section 29 of the Workers’ Compensation Law, the compensation carrier had a lien on petitioner’s recovery in this amount. Under this same statute, petitioner was deemed to be entitled to have the costs she incurred in bringing the action, including her attorney’s fees, apportioned between herself and the carrier according to the relative benefit derived by each party from the recovery. Petitioner’s costs in bringing the action constituted 34.27% of the total recovery. The carrier’s equitable share of the litigation costs was held to be a pro rata share of the total amount of the recovery inuring to the benefit of the carrier, and the carrier’s lien on petitioner’s recovery was offset by 34.27% of past benefits and the present value of estimated future benefit payments that were not necessary due to the recovery. The Appellate Division affirmed, for the reasons stated by the Surrogate’s Court.

The Court of Appeals affirmed the order of the Appellate Division, holding, in an opinion by Chief Judge Cooke, that when a workers’ compensation claimant recovers damages in a third-party action, the compensation carrier’s equitable share of litigation costs incurred by the claimant may [815]*815be apportioned on the basis of the total benefit that the carrier derives from the claimant’s recovery, and that accordingly, the carrier’s equitable share of the costs of litigation was properly assessed as a percentage of the total of the amount of past benefits paid (which the carrier will recoup by enforcing its lien in that amount on the recovery) and the present value of estimated future benefits to claimant (which the carrier would not have to pay because of claimant’s recovery). There is nothing in the statute limiting assessment of costs against a carrier’s relief from its obligation to pay future benefits, and the purpose of the statute is served by an allocation formula that considers the full benefit a carrier receives from an employee’s third-party recovery. The value of future compensation payments that a carrier has been relieved of paying due to a third-party recovery is not so speculative that it is improper to estimate and to assess litigation costs against this benefit to the carrier, and permitting courts when apportioning litigation costs to consider the extinguishment of a carrier’s future obligation to make compensation payments as a relative benefit to a carrier does not compromise the principle behind the granting of a carrier’s lien.

Petitioner has tendered, at the time of argument on the motion, a sworn affidavit from an economist, Thomas R. Kershner, who concluded upon calculation that the present value of estimated future benefits to the plaintiff which the Saratoga Self-Insurance Plan will not have to pay is $278,322. Mr. Kershner, in his analysis of the replacement of Mr. Wood’s compensation payments, notes that the petitioner would receive $6,947 per year for his life expectancy of 49 years. Utilizing a discount rate of 9.4% (said rate determined by the calculated rates of return on prime paper for the past 10 years) resulted in the discounted present value of the cost of providing $6,947 per year as $76,855. This figure is not refuted by respondent.

The expected cost of petitioner’s future medical costs were treated in a similar manner by Mr. Kershner, but further factored in an anticipated rise in medical costs of 9.9% per annum. Discounting the whole by 9.4%, Mr. Kershner arrived at a discounted present value of anticipated cost of medical expenses at $201,457. This figure is [816]*816contested by respondent in its attorney’s affidavit on two grounds: (1) that the base annual medical expense figure is exaggerated by incorporating visits to doctors at the request of attorneys, and (2) that the increase in medical expense of 9.9% is not justified.

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Bluebook (online)
123 Misc. 2d 812, 475 N.Y.S.2d 735, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-firestone-tire-rubber-co-nysupct-1984.