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Kroemer v. Omaha Track Equip.
296 Neb. 972
Neb.
2017
Read the full case

Background

  • Norman Kroemer, a Ribbon Weld employee, suffered a severe eye injury while using tools in Omaha Track Equipment (OTE)’s shop; Ribbon Weld paid workers’ compensation and obtained court-approved lump-sum benefits, leaving a subrogation interest of $207,555.01.
  • Kroemer sued OTE and others for negligence; Kroemer and OTE mediated and agreed to a $150,000 settlement, which Ribbon Weld contested because it received nothing from the settlement.
  • At the § 48-118.04 hearing, experts offered divergent views: some placed Kroemer’s damages well over $800,000 but also testified a jury might rule for defendants or assign high comparative negligence; risk of losing at trial was a key reason Kroemer accepted the $150,000.
  • The district court approved the settlement as fair and reasonable, allocated $94,834.27 to Kroemer, $55,165.73 to attorneys/expenses, and $0 to Ribbon Weld; Ribbon Weld appealed.
  • The Nebraska Supreme Court affirmed the fairness/reasonableness of the $150,000 settlement but reversed the allocation of $0 to Ribbon Weld, holding the court abused its discretion by denying any subrogation recovery and remanded for a fair and equitable distribution of the remaining $94,834.27.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument (Kroemer) Defendant's Argument (Ribbon Weld) Held
Whether the $150,000 third-party settlement was fair and reasonable under § 48-118.04 Settlement appropriate given high trial risk and potential for complete loss if jury found ≥50% comparative negligence Settlement undervalued claim given damages estimates and likelihood of plaintiff verdict Affirmed: settlement was fair and reasonable (no abuse of discretion)
Whether allocating $0 to Ribbon Weld was a "fair and equitable" distribution under § 48-118.04(2) Employee argued needs and damages justify keeping net recovery Employer argued statutory subrogation entitles it to reimbursement of compensation paid; $0 allocation ignores statute Reversed: allocation of $0 was an abuse of discretion; remand to allocate a fair and equitable share to Ribbon Weld
Whether factors like insurer premiums and comparative risk may justify denying insurer/employer subrogation recovery Not controlling; employee-focused equities matter Court relied on premiums, comparative risk, and insurer’s nonparticipation to justify $0 allocation Court held such factors are improper bases to wholly deny statutory subrogation; disapproved In re Estate of Evertson to that extent
Standard of review applicable to settlement approval and allocation N/A — parties disputed outcomes under statutory scheme N/A — court must apply independent statutory interpretation and defer to district court discretion unless abused Court: statutory interpretation reviewed de novo; allocation reviewed for abuse of discretion

Key Cases Cited

  • Burns v. Nielsen, 273 Neb. 724 (explaining employer statutory subrogation and standards for allocation under § 48-118.04)
  • Bacon v. DBI/SALA, 284 Neb. 579 (favoring liberal construction of employer's subrogation rights under the Act)
  • Turco v. Schuning, 271 Neb. 770 (rejecting "made whole" rule as required allocation approach)
  • In re Estate of Evertson, 23 Neb. App. 734 (Court of Appeals decision disapproved in part for considering premiums and comparative risk when allocating zero to insurer)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: Kroemer v. Omaha Track Equip.
Court Name: Nebraska Supreme Court
Date Published: Jun 16, 2017
Citation: 296 Neb. 972
Docket Number: S-16-856
Court Abbreviation: Neb.