Karen DEARLOVE, Appellant and Cross-Appellee, v. Patricia CAMPBELL, Appellee and Cross-Appellant.
Nos. S-13772, S-13792.
Supreme Court of Alaska.
May 31, 2013.
307 P.3d 1230
The statute applies to findings of fault, whereas awards of attorney‘s fees and costs pursuant to Civil Rule 82 are not indicative of or dependent upon findings of fault. Civil Rule 82(e) states, “In a case in which damages are apportioned among the parties under
AS 09.17.080 , the fees awarded to the plaintiff under (b)(1) of this rule must also be apportioned among the parties according to their respective percentages of fault.” The clear implication is that, in types of litigation whereAS 09.17.080 is not invoked, attorney‘s fees need not be apportioned by fault. Here there were no damages awarded pursuant to09.17.080 , and it follows that the statute is inapplicable to the award of attorney‘s fees and costs in this case.33
This was not a case in which
Because the superior properly exercised its discretion, we affirm the award of attorney‘s fees to GEICO.
V. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the decision of the superior court in all respects.
Michael W. Flanigan, Walther & Flanigan, Anchorage, for Appellee and Cross-Appellant.
Before: CARPENETI, Chief Justice, FABE, WINFREE, and STOWERS, Justices.
OPINION
WINFREE, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
A driver caused injury to the passenger of another car in a two-car accident. The passenger brought suit for damages, including her insurer‘s subrogated claim for medical expenses. The driver made an early offer of judgment, which the passenger did not accept. The driver‘s insurer then made a direct payment to the subrogated insurer, thereby removing that amount from the passenger‘s potential recovery. The driver then made a second offer of judgment, which the passenger did not accept. After trial both parties claimed prevailing party status; the driver sought attorney‘s fees under
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
This case arises from a two-car collision—Karen Dearlove was driving one vehicle and Patricia Campbell was a passenger in the
Campbell‘s insurer never directed her not to pursue its subrogation claim as part of her lawsuit against Dearlove.2 To the contrary, Campbell‘s insurer repeatedly called Campbell‘s attorney for progress reports. Campbell‘s counsel stated that the insurer “expected [him] to protect [its] subrogation interest in PIP benefits paid.”
Dearlove made an early Rule 68 offer of judgment for $18,000, inclusive of prejudgment interest, Rule 82(b)(1) attorney‘s fees, and Rule 79 costs; the offer required Campbell to satisfy her insurer‘s outstanding subrogation claim. Campbell did not accept this offer of judgment.
When Dearlove was deposed, she accepted full responsibility for the accident. Dearlove later formally stipulated to liability, leaving damages the only issue for trial.
After Dearlove‘s deposition her insurer paid $20,000 directly to Campbell‘s insurer. Dearlove then sought a ruling that Campbell could not recover the $20,000 in medical expenses originally paid by Campbell‘s insurer. Campbell did not oppose the motion, except to request recovery of attorney‘s fees and costs on the $20,000 payment. The superior court ruled Campbell could not include the medical expenses in her claim for damages at trial, but reserved the question whether Campbell could recover fees and costs on the $20,000 payment.
Dearlove subsequently made a Rule 68 offer of judgment for $5,000 plus prejudgment interest, Rule 82(b)(1) attorney‘s fees, and Rule 79 costs. The offer provided that Campbell would be “responsible for satisfying any and all accident-related liens and expenses with the exception of the [PIP] Lien of $20,000.00 which [Dearlove already had] satisfied.” Campbell did not accept this offer of judgment.
At trial the jury was shown an exhibit itemizing Campbell‘s medical expenses. The expenses covered by Dearlove‘s insurer‘s $20,000 payment to Campbell‘s insurer appeared in a separate column marked “PAID.” The court instructed the jury that “[a] portion of the expenses for [the] medical treatment is not at issue because it has been paid. You are not to make an economic award for those expenses that have already been paid.” The jury returned a verdict for $2,370 in economic damages and $1,500 in non-economic damages, for a total award of $3,870. Both parties claimed prevailing party status and moved for attorney‘s fees.
The superior court reasoned that Dearlove‘s first Rule 68 offer of $18,000 would have resulted in a net $2,000 loss to Campbell because under its terms Campbell remained responsible for her insurer‘s $20,000 subrogation claim. From this, the superior court concluded that Dearlove was not entitled to fees under the first Rule 68 offer.
The superior court then concluded that Dearlove was entitled to Rule 68 fees under her second offer. To compare Campbell‘s $3,870 recovery at trial with the $5,000 second offer of judgment, the court made several preliminary rulings. First, because the second offer added prejudgment interest, attorney‘s fees, and costs to the offer amount—as would a judgment after the jury‘s verdict—the superior court concluded those additions did not change the comparison‘s out
Based on these rulings, the superior court calculated that Campbell‘s recovery at trial ($3,870 plus interest, fees, and costs) was at least five percent less favorable than the second offer of judgment ($5,000 plus interest, fees, and costs). Accordingly, the court ruled that Dearlove was entitled to recover Rule 68 attorney‘s fees incurred after the second offer of judgment.
Dearlove appeals the superior court‘s decision regarding her first offer of judgment. Campbell cross-appeals the superior court‘s decision regarding Dearlove‘s second offer of judgment.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo whether the superior court correctly applied the law in awarding attorney‘s fees.4 We exercise our independent judgment in reviewing the superior court‘s interpretation of Rule 68,5 as well as in calculating a judgment‘s value to determine whether it exceeded an offer of judgment.6
IV. DISCUSSION
A. The Subrogation Claim
A subrogation claim arises when an insurer compensates its insured for an injury caused by a third party and obtains the “right to proceed against [the] third party responsible for [the] loss which the insurer has compensated pursuant to its contractual obligation under [the] policy.”7 An insurer with a subrogation claim “may pursue a direct action against the tortfeasor, discount and settle its claim, or determine that the claim should not be pursued.”8 Unless the insurer objects, the insured may include the subrogation claim in the insured‘s claim against a third-party tortfeasor.9 Here, Campbell‘s insurer indicated that it wanted Campbell to pursue recovery of its subrogation claim. Consequently, the subrogation claim was part of the damages Campbell sought from Dearlove at the start of this litigation.
B. Alaska Civil Rule 68
When there is a single defendant, Rule 68(b) provides in relevant part:
If the judgment finally rendered by the court is at least 5 percent less favorable to the offeree than the offer, ... the offeree ... shall pay all costs as allowed under the Civil Rules and shall pay reasonable actual attorney‘s fees incurred by the offeror from the date the offer was made....
The offer of judgment must not be conditional or joint, though it can acknowledge the existence of a lien and require the party accepting the offer to pay the lien from the
C. Dearlove‘s First Offer Of Judgment
Dearlove first offered $18,000 inclusive of interest, attorney‘s fees, and costs; this offer required Campbell to pay all outstanding medical liens. The superior court reasoned that this offer would have resulted in a $2,000 net loss to Campbell after paying the $20,000 subrogation claim. Because Campbell received $3,870 at trial, the court concluded that the jury award was more favorable than the first offer of judgment.
Dearlove argues the court erred by considering the $20,000 subrogation claim when it assessed the value of her first settlement offer. She notes that on reconsideration the superior court speculated that had the jury considered the subrogation claim, it “likely would have awarded $23,800 in total damages.” She maintains that the correct comparison was between the $18,000 offer, standing alone, and the $3,870 award (plus interest, attorney‘s fees, and costs). Although we agree it was error to compare a hypothetical net recovery to the offer, we reject Dearlove‘s argument that the $20,000 payment to Campbell‘s insurer is irrelevant to the Rule 68(b) analysis.
We have refused to label an offer as “worthless” simply because it was for less than the value of a subrogated claim.13 Simply put, a Rule 68 offer of judgment can be for less than the value of subrogated claims. But contrary to Dearlove‘s broader position, requiring courts to consider only the final award is “an overly technical reading” of Rule 68.14 In Progressive Corp. v. Peter ex rel. Peter, the defendant offered the plaintiffs $52,501 plus prejudgment interest, costs, and fees, for a total value of just over $70,000.15 The plaintiffs did not accept the offer.16 The superior court subsequently ruled on a key liability issue against the defendant, and the defendant then voluntarily paid a little more than $75,000 into the court registry for the plaintiffs’ benefit.17 Because the plaintiffs did not recover additional damages and were awarded only $8,555 in attorney‘s fees, the defendant sought Rule 68 fees, claiming that “[v]oluntary payments and partial settlements are not the benchmark by which offers of judgment should be evaluated.”18 The superior court disagreed, and we affirmed the superior court‘s ruling.19 We looked to the total amount recovered rather than just the amount awarded at trial and held that the superior court did not err by including the defendant‘s voluntary payment in its calculation of the “judgment finally rendered.”20
