Yeiser v. Ferrellgas, Inc.

214 P.3d 458, 2008 WL 4330265
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 31, 2009
Docket06CA0494
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 214 P.3d 458 (Yeiser v. Ferrellgas, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yeiser v. Ferrellgas, Inc., 214 P.3d 458, 2008 WL 4330265 (Colo. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge VOGT.

In this breach of contract action, plaintiff, Ellen Yeiser, appeals the judgment entered on a jury verdict against defendant, Ferrell-gas, Inc., after the trial court set off certain sums from the jury's award. Defendant *460 cross-appeals. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand with directions.

Defendant entered into a contract with plaintiff to deliver propane gas to plaintiff's home in Silverthorne, Colorado. When the propane was not timely delivered, the pipes in the home froze, causing extensive damage.

Plaintiff sued defendant for breach of contract. Defendant admitted lability but contested plaintiff's claimed damages. At the conclusion of the trial, the jury awarded plaintiff $314,323.21.

Before this action was filed, plaintiff had received $212,071.94 under her homeowners insurance policy to pay for repairs to her home. The insurer claimed a right to subro-gation, and defendant paid it $172,657.55 to settle its subrogation claim. After the trial, the court set off the $212,071.94 from the jury award.

Defendant sought an award of costs on the basis that plaintiff's recovery, after the set-off, did not exceed defendant's statutory offer of settlement. The trial court agreed, awarded defendant $30,841.62 in costs, and, after calculating prejudgment interest, entered judgment for plaintiff in the amount of $145,812.85.

APPEAL

I. Setoff

Plaintiff contends that the trial court's set-off of $212,071.94 violates the common law collateral source rule. We conclude that the collateral source rule did not bar a setoff in this case, but that the amount of the setoff should have been limited to the $172,657.55 paid by defendant to plaintiff's insurance company.

A. The Collateral Source Rule Does Not Preclude Setoff

Under the common law collateral source rule, "compensation or indemnity received by an injured party from a collateral source, wholly independent of the wrongdoer and to which he has not contributed, will not diminish the damages otherwise recoverable from the wrongdoer." Kistler v. Halsey, 178 Colo, 540, 545, 481 P.2d 722, 724 (1971); accord Technical Computer Services, Inc. v. Buckley, 844 P2d 1249, 1253 (Colo.App. 1992).

Where the collateral source rule applies, a plaintiff may recover compensation from two different sources for the same injury, as long as the "collateral source" was "wholly independent of the wrongdoer." Smith v. Zufelt, 880 P.2d 1178, 1184 (Colo.1994). Benefits from collateral sources have traditionally included payments from insurance policies, employee benefits, gratuities, and social legislation. Id.

In Van Waters & Rogers, Inc. v. Keelan, 840 P.2d 1070, 1074-75 (Colo.1992), the supreme court explained that the purpose of the rule was to prevent defendants from receiving credit for compensation from collateral sources to which they did not contribute, "thereby reducling] the amount payable as damages to the injured party. To the extent that either party received a windfall, it was considered more just that the benefit be realized by the plaintiff in the form of double recovery rather than by the tortfeasor in the form of reduced liability." As relevant here, under the rule, amounts received as proceeds under an insurance policy purchased by the plaintiff were generally not to be set off against the damages for which the defendant was obligated. Id. at 1075.

The common law collateral source rule has been codified at section 13-21-111.6, C.R.S.2008. However, the statute by its terms applies in actions "to recover damages for a tort resulting in death or injury to person or property." See Colorado Permanente Medical Group, P.C. v. Evans, 926 P.2d 1218, 1230 (Colo.1996). Thus, in this contract case, we apply the common law rule rather than its statutory codification, which contains specific limitations on recovery that are not applicable in contract cases. See id.; see also Van Waters, 840 P.2d at 1077; Technical Computer Services, 844 P.2d at 1254.

Plaintiff argued in the trial court that, under the collateral source rule, the jury should not learn of the payments she had received from her insurance company, and her damages should not be offset by such payments. The trial court agreed with de *461 fendant that the collateral source rule was inapplicable because, by reimbursing the insurer for its payment to plaintiff, "(defendant] did actually 'contribute' to the collateral source of payments at issue here." Thus, the court ruled, any award of damages on plaintiff's breach of contract claim would be "set off by any prior payments made by [defendant]" to the insurer to reimburse plaintiff's damages. The court later concluded that defendant was entitled to set off the entire amount plaintiff received from her insurer, not just the amount defendant paid to the insurer.

We agree with the trial court that the collateral source rule did not preclude a set-off in this case. Although plaintiff received payments from her homeowners insurer pursuant to her policy, the insurer had a subro-gation claim that entitled it to be reimbursed, out of plaintiff's recovery against defendant, for the sums it had paid her under the policy. That subrogation claim was extinguished by defendant's payment. Thus, this is not a case in which plaintiff's compensation was "wholly independent of the wrongdoer and to which [the wrongdoer] has not contributed." Kistler, 173 Colo. at 545, 481 P.2d at 724; see also John G. Fleming, The Collateral Source Rule and Contract Damages, 71 Cal. L.Rev. 56, 82 (1988) (recognizing that availability of subrogation "is widely considered the optimal solution for the whole problem of collateral benefits on the ground that it prevents both the defendant from taking an undeserved advantage of the benefit and the plaintiff from being overcompensated"); Van Waters, 840 P.2d at 1080 (Rovira, C.J., specially concurring) (noting that majority's construction of section 18-21-111.6 would not ordinarily result in a windfall recovery for plaintiffs because, "[glenerally, an insurance policy will provide for subrogation or refund of benefits upon a tort recovery. Thus, the plaintiff will receive no double recovery.").

B. Defendant Was Entitled to Set Off Only the Amount It Paid, Not the Total Amount Plaintiff Received from Her Insurer

Our conclusion that defendant was entitled to a setoff from the jury award does not end the inquiry. We must still decide whether the setoff should have been for the $212,071.94 plaintiff received from her insurer or only for the $172,657.55 that defendant paid the insurer to settle its subrogation claim. We conclude that defendant was entitled to set off only the amount it paid the insurer, and that the trial court therefore erred in setting off $212,071.94 from the damages award.

1. The Issue Is Preserved

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 P.3d 458, 2008 WL 4330265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yeiser-v-ferrellgas-inc-coloctapp-2009.